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ALL SORTS AND CONDITIONS OF MEN

AN IMPOSSIBLE STORY

BY
WALTER BESANT
AND
JAMES RICE

NEW YORK
LOVELL, CORYELL & COMPANY
43, 45 AND 47 EAST 10TH STREET


TO
The Memory
OF
JAMES RICE




PREFACE.


The ten years' partnership of myself and my late friend Mr. James Rice
has been terminated by death. I am persuaded that nothing short of death
would have put an end to a partnership which was conducted throughout
with perfect accord, and without the least difference of opinion. The
long illness which terminated fatally on April 25th of this year began
in January of last year. There were intervals during which he seemed to
be recovering and gaining strength; he was, indeed, well enough in the
autumn to try change of air by a visit to Holland; but he broke down
again very shortly after his return: though he did not himself suspect
it, he was under sentence of death, and for the last six months of his
life his downward course was steady and continuous.

Almost the last act of his in our partnership was the arrangement, with
certain country papers and elsewhere, for the serial publication of this
novel, the subject and writing of which were necessarily left entirely
to myself.

The many wanderings, therefore, which I undertook last summer in
Stepney, Whitechapel, Poplar, St. George's in the East, Limehouse, Bow,
Stratford, Shadwell, and all that great and marvellous unknown country
which we call East London, were undertaken, for the first time for ten
years, alone. They would have been undertaken in great sadness had one
foreseen the end. In one of these wanderings I had the happiness to
discover Rotherhithe, which I afterward explored with carefulness; in
another, I lit upon a certain Haven of Rest for aged sea-captains, among
whom I found Captain Sorensen; in others I found many wonderful things,
and conversed with many wonderful people. The "single-handedness," so to
speak, of this book would have been a mere episode in the history of the
firm, a matter of no concern or interest to the general public, had my
friend recovered. But he is dead; and it therefore devolves upon me to
assume the sole responsibility of the work, for good or bad. The same
responsibility is, of course, assumed for the two short stories, "The
Captain's Room," published at Christmas last, and "They Were Married,"
published as the summer number of the _Illustrated London News_. The
last story was, in fact, written after the death of my partner; but as
it had already been announced, it was thought best, under the
circumstances, to make no change in the title.

I have been told by certain friendly advisers that this story is
impossible. I have, therefore, stated the fact on the title-page, so
that no one may complain of being taken in or deceived. But I have never
been able to understand why it is impossible.

WALTER BESANT.

UNITED UNIVERSITIES' CLUB, _August 19, 1882_.




CONTENTS.


CHAPTER                                             PAGE
          PROLOGUE--IN TWO PARTS,                      9

      I.--NEWS FOR HIS LORDSHIP,                      26

     II.--A VERY COMPLETE CASE,                       40

    III.--ONLY A DRESSMAKER,                          46

     IV.--UNCLE BUNKER,                               56

      V.--THE CARES OF WEALTH,                        67

     VI.--A FIRST STEP,                               76

    VII.--THE TRINITY ALMSHOUSE,                      88

   VIII.--WHAT HE GOT BY IT,                          99

     IX.--THE DAY BEFORE THE FIRST,                  108

      X.--THE GREAT DAVENANT CASE,                   116

     XI.--THE FIRST DAY,                             124

    XII.--SUNDAY AT THE EAST END,                    133

   XIII.--ANGELA'S EXPERIMENT,                       142

    XIV.--THE TENDER PASSION,                        153

     XV.--A SPLENDID OFFER,                          161

    XVI.--HARRY'S DECISION,                          169

   XVII.--WHAT LORD JOCELYN THOUGHT,                 176

  XVIII.--THE PALACE OF DELIGHT,                     182

    XIX.--DICK THE RADICAL,                          191

     XX.--DOWN ON THEIR LUCK,                        197

    XXI.--LADY DAVENANT,                             205

   XXII.--DANIEL FAGG,                               214

  XXIII.--THE MISSING LINK,                          223

   XXIV.--LORD JOCELYN'S TROUBLES,                   229

    XXV.--AN INVITATION,                             238

   XXVI.--LORD DAVENANT'S GREATNESS,                 247

  XXVII.--THE SAME SIGNS,                            257

 XXVIII.--HARRY FINDS LIBERTY,                       260

   XXIX.--THE FIGURE-HEADS,                          276

    XXX.--THE PROFESSOR'S PROPOSAL,                  285

   XXXI.--CAPTAIN COPPIN,                            292

  XXXII.--BUNKER AT BAY,                             303

 XXXIII.--MR. BUNKER'S LETTER,                       310

  XXXIV.--PROOFS IN PRINT,                           316

   XXXV.--"THEN WE'LL KEEP COMPANY,"                 323

  XXXVI.--WHAT WILL BE THE END?                      333

 XXXVII.--TRUTH WITH FAITHFULNESS,                   338

XXXVIII.--I AM THE DRESSMAKER,                       347

  XXXIX.--THRICE HAPPY BOY,                          356

     XL.--SWEET NELLY,                               363

    XLI.--BOXING-NIGHT,                              371

   XLII.--NOT JOSEPHUS, BUT ANOTHER,                 378

  XLIII.--O MY PROPHETIC SOUL!                       387

   XLIV.--A FOOL AND HIS MONEY,                      397

    XLV.--LADY DAVENANT'S DINNER-PARTY,              402

   XLVI.--THE END OF THE CASE,                       413

  XLVII.--A PALACE OF DELIGHT,                       418

 XLVIII.--MY LADY SWEET,                             425

   XLIX.--"UPROUSE YE THEN, MY MERRY, MERRY MEN,"    432




All Sorts and Conditions of Men




PROLOGUE.--PART I.


It was the evening of a day in early June. The time was last year, and
the place was Cambridge. The sun had been visible in the heavens, a
gracious presence, actually a whole week--in itself a thing remarkable;
the hearts of the most soured, even of landlords and farmers, were
coming to believe again in the possibility of fine weather; the clergy
were beginning to think that they might this year hold a real Harvest
Thanksgiving instead of a sham; the trees at the Backs were in full
foliage; the avenues of Trinity and Clare were splendid; beside them the
trim lawns sloped to the margin of the Cam, here most glorious and
proudest of English rivers, seeing that he laves the meadows of those
ancient and venerable foundations, King's, Trinity, and St. John's, to
say nothing of Queen's and Clare and Magdalen; men were lazily floating
in canoes, or leaning over the bridges, or strolling about the walks, or
lying on the grass; and among them--but not--oh! not with them--walked
or rested many of the damsels of learned Newnham, chiefly in pairs,
holding sweet converse


                  On mind and art,
     And labor and the changing mart,
     And all the framework of the land:


not neglecting the foundations of the Christian faith and other
fashionable topics, which ladies nowadays handle with so much learning,
originality, dexterity, and power.

We have, however, to do with only one pair, who were sitting together
on the banks opposite Trinity. These two were talking about a subject
far more interesting than any concerning mind, or art, or philosophy, or
the chances of the senate-house, or the future of Newnham: for they were
talking about themselves and their own lives, and what they were to do
each with that one life which happened, by the mere accident of birth,
to belong to herself. It must be a curious subject for reflection in
extreme old age, when everything has happened that is going to happen,
including rheumatism, that, but for this accident, one's life might have
been so very different.

"Because, Angela," said the one who wore spectacles and looked older
than she was, by reason of much pondering over books and perhaps too
little exercise, "because, my dear, we have but this one life before us,
and if we make mistakes with it, or throw it away, or waste it, or lose
our chances, it is such a dreadful pity. Oh, to think of the girls who
drift and let every chance go by, and get nothing out of their lives at
all--except babies" (she spoke of babies with great contempt). "Oh! it
seems as if every moment were precious: oh! it is a sin to waste an hour
of it."

She gasped and clasped her hands together with a sigh. She was not
acting, not at all; this girl was that hitherto rare thing, a girl of
study and of books; she was wholly possessed, like the great scholars of
old, with the passion for learning.

"Oh! greedy person!" replied the other with a laugh, "if you read all
the books in the University library, and lose the enjoyment of sunshine,
what shall it profit you, in the long run?"

This one was a young woman of much finer physique than her friend. She
was not short-sighted, but possessed, in fact, a pair of orbs of very
remarkable clearness, steadiness, and brightness. They were not soft
eyes, nor languishing eyes, nor sleepy eyes, nor downcast, shrinking
eyes; they were wide-awake, brown, honest eyes, which looked fearlessly
upon all things, fair or foul. A girl does not live at Newnham two years
for nothing, mind you; when she leaves that seat of learning, she has
changed her mind about the model, the perfect, the ideal woman. More
than that, she will change the minds of her sisters and her cousins;
and there are going to be a great many Newnhams, and the spread of this
revolution will be rapid; and the shrinking, obedient, docile,
man-reverencing, curate-worshipping maiden of our youth will shortly
vanish and be no more seen. And what will the curate do then, poor
thing? Wherefore let the bishop look to certain necessary changes in the
marriage service; and let the young men see that their own ideas change
with the times, else there will be no sweethearts for them. More could I
prophesy, but refrain.

This young lady owned, besides those mentioned above, many other points
which will always be considered desirable at her age, whatever be the
growth of feminine education (wherefore, courage, brothers!). In all
these points she contrasted favorably with her companion. For her face
was sunny, and fair to look upon; one of the younger clerical dons--now
a scanty band, almost a remnant--was reported to have said, after gazing
upon that face, that he now understood, which he had never understood
before, what Solomon meant when he compared his love's temples to a
piece of pomegranate within her locks. No one asked him what _he_ meant,
but he was a mathematical man, and so he must have meant something, if
it was only trigonometry. As to her figure, it was what a healthy,
naturally dressed, and strong young woman's figure ought to be, and not
more slender in the waist than was the figure of Venus or Mother Eve;
and her limbs were elastic, so that she seemed when she walked as if she
would like to run, jump, and dance, which, indeed, she would have
greatly preferred, only at Newnham they "take it out" at lawn tennis.
And whatever might be the course of life marked out by herself, it was
quite certain to the intelligent observer that before long Love the
invincible--Love that laughs at plots, plans, conspiracies, and
designs--would upset them all, and trace out quite another line of life
for her, and most probably the most commonplace line of all.

"Your life, Constance," she went on, "seems to me the most happy and the
most fortunate. How nobly you have vindicated the intellect of women by
your degree!"

"No, my dear." Constance shook her head sadly. "No: only partly
vindicated our intellect; remember I was but fifth wrangler, and there
were four men--men, Angela--above me. I wanted to be senior."

"Everybody knows that the fifth is always as good as the first."
Constance, however, shook her head at this daring attempt at
consolation. "At all events, Constance, you will go on to prove it by
your original papers when you publish your researches. You will lecture
like Hypatia; you will have the undergraduates leaving the men and
crowding to your theatre. You will become the greatest mathematician in
Cambridge; you will be famous for ever. You will do better than man
himself, even in man's most exalted level of intellectual strength."

The pale cheek of the student flushed.

"I do not expect to do better than men," she replied humbly. "It will be
enough if I do as well. Yes, my dear, all my life, short or long, shall
be given to science. I will have no love in it, or marriage,
or--or--anything of that kind at all."

"Nor will I," said the other stoutly, yet with apparent effort.
"Marriage spoils a woman's career; we must live our life to its utmost,
Constance."

"We must, Angela. It is the only thing in this world of doubt that is a
clear duty. I owe mine to science. You, my dear, to----"

She would have said to "Political Economy," but a thought checked her.
For a singular thing had happened only the day before. This friend of
hers, this Angela Messenger, who had recently illustrated the strength
of women's intellect by passing a really brilliant examination in that
particular science, astonished her friends at a little informal meeting
in the library by an oration. In this speech she went out of her way to
pour contempt upon Political Economy. It was a so-called science, she
said--not a science at all: a collection of theories impossible of
proof. It treated of men and women as skittles, it ignored the principal
motives of action, it had been put together for the most part by
doctrinaires who lived apart, and knew nothing about men and less about
women, and it was a favorite study, she cruelly declared, of her own
sex, because it was the most easily crammed and made the most show. As
for herself, she declared that for all the good it had done her, she
might just as well have gone through a course of æsthetics or studied
the symbols of advanced ritualism.

Therefore, remembering the oration, Constance Woodcote hesitated. To
what Cause (with a capital C) should Angela Messenger devote her life?

"I will tell you presently," said Angela, "how I shall begin my life.
Where the beginning will lead me, I cannot tell."

Then there was silence for a while. The sun sank lower and the setting
rays fell upon the foliage, and every leaf showed like a leaf of gold,
and the river lay in shadow and became ghostly, and the windows of
Trinity Library opposite to them glowed, and the New Court of St. John's
at their left hand became like unto the palace of Kubla Khan.

"Oh!" sighed the young mathematician. "I shall never be satisfied till
Newnham crosses the river. We must have one of these colleges for
ourselves. We must have King's. Yes, King's will be the best. And oh!
how differently we shall live from the so-called students who are now
smoking tobacco in each other's rooms, or playing billiards, or even
cards--the superior sex!"

"As for us, we shall presently go back to our rooms, have a cup of tea
and a talk, my dear. Then we shall go to bed. As regards the men, those
of your mental level, Constance, do not, I suppose, play billiards; nor
do they smoke tobacco. Undergraduates are not all students, remember.
Most of them are nothing but mere pass-men who will become curates."

Two points in this speech seem to call for remark. First, the singular
ignorance of mankind, common to all women, which led the girl to believe
that a great man of science is superior to the pleasures of weaker
brethren; for they cannot understand the delights of fooling. The second
point is--but it may be left to those who read as they run.

Then they rose and walked slowly under the grand old trees of Trinity
Avenue, facing the setting sun, so that when they came to the end and
turned to the left, it seemed as if they plunged into night. And
presently they came to the gates of Newnham, the newer Newnham, with its
trim garden and Queen Anne mansion. It grates upon one that the
beginnings of a noble and lasting reform should be housed in a palace
built in the conceited fashion of the day. What will they say of it in
fifty years, when the fashion has changed and new styles reign?

"Come," said Angela, "come into my room. Let my last evening in the dear
place be spent with you, Constance."

Angela's own room was daintily furnished and adorned with as many
pictures, pretty things, books, and _bric-à-brac_ as the narrow
dimensions of a Newnham cell will allow. In a more advanced Newnham
there will be two rooms for each student, and these will be larger.

The girls sat by the open window: the air was soft and sweet. A bunch of
cowslips from the Coton meadows perfumed the room; there was the jug-jug
of a nightingale in some tree not far off; opposite them were the lights
of the other Newnham.

"The last night!" said Angela. "I can hardly believe that I go down
to-morrow."

Then she was silent again.

"My life," she went on, speaking softly in the twilight, "begins
to-morrow. What am I to do with it? Your own solution seems so easy
because you are clever and you have no money, while I, who am--well,
dear, not devoured by thirst for learning--have got so much. To begin
with, there is the Brewery. You cannot escape from a big brewery if it
belong to you. You cannot hide it away. Messenger, Marsden & Company's
Stout, their XXX, their Old and Mild, their Bitter, their Family Ales
(that particularly at eight-and-six the nine-gallon cask, if paid for on
delivery), their drays, their huge horses, their strong men, whose very
appearance advertises the beer, and makes the weak-kneed and the
narrow-chested rush to Whitechapel--my dear, these things stare one in
the face wherever you go. I am that brewery, as you know. I am
Messenger, Marsden & Company, myself, the sole partner in what my lawyer
sweetly calls the Concern. Nobody else is concerned in it. It
is--alas!--my own Great Concern, a dreadful responsibility."

"Why? Your people manage it for you."

"Yes--oh! yes--they do. And whether they manage it badly or well I do
not know; whether they make wholesome beer or bad, whether they treat
their clerks and workmen generously or meanly, whether the name of the
company is beloved or hated, I do not know. Perhaps the very making of
beer at all is wickedness."

"But--Angela," the other interrupted, "it is no business of yours.
Naturally, wages are regulated by supply and----"

"No, my dear. That is political economy. I prefer the good old English
plan. If I employ a man and he works faithfully, I should like that man
to feel that he grows every day worth to me more than his marketable
value."

Constance was silenced.

"Then, beside the brewery," Angela went on, "there is an unconscionable
sum of money in the funds."

"There, at least," said her friend, "you need feel no scruple of
conscience."

"But indeed I do; for how do I know that it is right to keep all this
money idle! A hundred pounds saved and put into the funds mean three
pounds a year. It is like a perennial stream flowing from a hidden
reservoir in the hillside. But this stream, in my case, does no good at
all. It neither fertilizes the soil nor is it drunk by man or beast, nor
does it turn mills, nor is it a beautiful thing to look upon, nor does
its silver current flow by banks of flowers or fall in cascades. It all
runs away, and makes another reservoir in another hillside. My dear, it
is a stream of compound interest, which is constantly getting deeper and
broader and stronger, and yet is never of the least use, and turns no
wheels. Now, what am I to do with this money?"

"Endow Newnham; there, at least, is something practical."

"I will found some scholarships, if you please, later on, when you have
made your own work felt. Again, there are my houses in the East End."

"Sell them."

"That is only to shift the responsibility. My dear, I have streets of
houses. They all lie about Whitechapel way. My grandfather, John
Messenger, bought houses, I believe, just as other people buy apples, by
the peck, or some larger measure, a reduction being made on taking a
quantity. There they are, and mostly inhabited."

"You have agents, I suppose?" said Constance unsympathizingly. "It is
their duty to see that the houses are well kept."

"Yes, I have agents. But they cannot absolve me from responsibility."

"Then," asked Constance, "what do you mean to do?"

"I am a native almost of Whitechapel. My grandfather, who succeeded to
the brewery, was born there. His father was also a brewer: his
grandfather is, I believe, prehistoric: he lived there long after his
son, my father, was born. When he moved to Bloomsbury Square he thought
he was getting into quite a fashionable quarter, and he only went to
Portman Square because he desired me to go into society. I am so rich
that I shall quite certainly be welcomed in society. But, my dear,
Whitechapel and its neighborhood are my proper sphere. Why, my very
name! I reek of beer; I am all beer; my blood is beer. Angela Marsden
Messenger! What could more plainly declare my connection with Messenger,
Marsden & Company? I only wonder that he did not call me
Marsden-&-Company Messenger."

"But--Angela----"

"He would, Constance, if he had thought of it. For, you see, I was the
heiress from the very beginning, because my father died before my birth.
And my grandfather intended me to become the perfect brewer, if a woman
can attain to so high an ideal. Therefore I was educated in the
necessary and fitting lines. They taught me the industries of England,
the arts and manufactures, mathematics, accounts, the great outlets of
trade, book-keeping, mechanics--all those things that are practical. How
it happened that I was allowed to learn music I do not know. Then, when
I grew up, I was sent here by him, because the very air of Cambridge, he
thought, makes people exact; and women are so prone to be inexact. I
was to read while I was here all the books about political and social
economy. I have also learned for business purposes two or three
languages. I am now finished. I know all the theories about people, and
I don't believe any of them will work. Therefore, my dear, I shall get
to know the people before I apply them."

"Was your grandfather a student of political economy?"

"Not at all. But he had a respect for justice, and he wanted me to be
just. It is so difficult, he used to say, for a woman to be just. For
either she flies into a rage and punishes with excess, or she takes pity
and forgives. As for himself, he was as hard as nails, and the people
knew it."

"And your project?"

"It is very simple. I efface myself. I vanish. I disappear."

"What?"

"If anybody asks where I am, no one will know, except you, my dear; and
you will not tell."

"You will be in----"

"In Whitechapel, or thereabouts. Your Angela will be a dressmaker, and
she will live by herself and become--what her great-grandmother was--one
of the people."

"You will not like it at all."

"Perhaps not; but I am weary of theories, facts, statistics. I want
flesh and blood. I want to feel myself a part of this striving, eager,
anxious humanity, on whose labors I live in comfort, by whom I have been
educated, to whom I owe all, and for whom I have done nothing--no,
nothing at all, selfish wretch that I am!"

She clasped her hands with a fine gesture of remorse.

"O woman of silence!" she cried; "you sit upon the heights, and you can
disregard--because it is your right--the sorrows and the joys of the
world. But I cannot. I belong to the people--with a great big P, my
dear--I cannot bear to go on living by their toil and giving nothing in
return. What a dreadful thing is a she-Dives!"

"I confess," said Constance coldly, "that I have always regarded wealth
as a means for leading the higher life--the life of study and
research--unencumbered by the sordid aims and mean joys of the vulgar
herd."

"It is possible and right for you to live apart, my dear. It is
impossible, because it would be wrong for me."

"But--alone? You will venture into the dreadful region alone?"

"Quite alone, Constance."

"And--and--your reputation, Angela?"

Angela laughed merrily.

"As for my reputation, my dear, it may take care of itself. Those of my
friends who think I am not to be trusted may transfer their affection to
more worthy objects. The first thing in the emancipation of the sex,
Constance, is equal education. The next is----"

"What?" for Angela paused.

She drew forth from her pocket a small bright instrument of steel, which
glittered in the twilight. Not a revolver, dear readers.

"The next," she said, brandishing the weapon before Constance's eyes,
"is--the LATCH-KEY."


PROLOGUE.--PART II.

The time was eleven in the forenoon; the season was the month of roses;
the place was a room on the first floor at the Park-end of Piccadilly--a
noisy room, because the windows were open, and there was a great thunder
and rattle of cabs, omnibuses, and all kinds of vehicles. When this
noise became, as it sometimes did, intolerable, the occupant of the room
shut his double windows, and immediately there was a great calm, with a
melodious roll of distant wheels, like the buzzing of bees about the
marigold on a summer afternoon. With the double window a man may calmly
sit down amid even the roar of Cheapside, or the never-ending cascade of
noise at Charing Cross.

The room was furnished with taste; the books on the shelves were well
bound, as if the owner took a proper pride in them, as indeed was the
case. There were two or three good pictures; there was a girl's head in
marble; there were cards and invitations lying on the mantel-shelf and
in a rack beside the clock. Everybody could tell at the first look of
the room that it was a bachelor's den. Also because nothing was new, and
because there were none of the peacockeries, whims and fancies,
absurdities, fads and fashions, gimcrackeries, the presence of which
does always and infallibly proclaim the chamber of a young man; this
room manifestly belonged to a bachelor who was old in the profession. In
fact, the owner of the chambers, of which this was the breakfast,
morning, and dining-room, whenever he dined at home, was seated in an
armchair beside a breakfast-table, looking straight before him, with a
face filled with anxiety. An honest, ugly, pleasing, rugged, attractive
face, whose features were carved one day when Dame Nature was
benevolently disposed, but had a blunt chisel.

"I always told him," he muttered, "that he should learn the whole of his
family history as soon as he was three-and-twenty years of age. One must
keep such promises. Yet it would have been better that he should never
know. But then it might have been found out, and that would have been
far worse. Yet, how could it have been found out? No: that is
ridiculous."

He mused in silence. In his fingers he held a cigar which he had lit,
but allowed to go out again. The morning paper was lying on the table,
unopened.

"How will the boy take it?" he asked; "will he take it crying? Or will
he take it laughing?"

He smiled, picturing to himself the "boy's" astonishment.

Looking at the man more closely, one became aware that he was really a
very pleasant-looking person. He was about five-and-forty years of age,
and he wore a full beard and mustache, after the manner of his
contemporaries, with whom a beard is still considered a manly ornament
to the face. The beard was brown, but it began to show, as
wine-merchants say of port, the "appearance of age." In some light,
there was more gray than brown. His dark-brown hair, however, retained
its original thickness of thatch, and was as yet untouched by any streak
of gray. Seeing that he belonged to one of the oldest and best of
English families, one might have expected something of that delicacy of
feature which some of us associate with birth. But, as has already been
said, his face was rudely chiselled, his complexion was ruddy, and he
looked as robust as a plough-boy; yet he had the air of an English
gentleman, and that ought to satisfy anybody. And he was the younger son
of a duke, being by courtesy Lord Jocelyn Le Breton.

While he was thus meditating, there was a quick step on the stair, and
the subject of his thoughts entered the room.

This interesting young man was a much more aristocratic person to look
upon than his senior. He paraded, so to speak, at every point, the
thoroughbred air. His thin and delicate nose, his clear eye, his high
though narrow forehead, his well-cut lip, his firm chin, his pale cheek,
his oval face, the slim figure, the thin, long fingers, the spring of
his walk, the poise of his head--what more could one expect even from
the descendant of all the Howards? But this morning the pallor of his
cheek was flushed as if with some disquieting news.

"Good-morning, Harry," said Lord Jocelyn quietly.

Harry returned the greeting. Then he threw upon the table a small packet
of papers.

"There, sir, I have read them; thank you for letting me see them."

"Sit down, boy, and let us talk; will you have a cigar? No? A cigarette,
then? No? You are probably a little upset by this--new--unexpected
revelation?"

"A _little_ upset!" repeated the young man, with a short laugh.

"To be sure--to be sure--one could expect nothing else; now sit down,
and let us talk over the matter calmly."

The young man sat down, but he did not present the appearance of one
inclined to talk over the matter calmly.

"In novels," said Lord Jocelyn, "it is always the good fortune of young
gentlemen brought up in ignorance of their parentage to turn out, when
they do discover their origin, the heirs to an illustrious name; I have
always admired that in novels. In your case, my poor Harry, the reverse
is the case; the distinction ought to console you."

"Why was I not told before?"

"Because the boyish brain is more open to prejudice than that of the
adult; because, among your companions, you certainly would have felt at
a disadvantage had you known yourself to be the son of a----"

"You always told me," said Harry, "that my father was in the army!"

"What do you call a sergeant in a line regiment, then?"

"Oh! of course, but among gentlemen--I mean--among the set with whom I
was brought up, to be in the army means to have a commission."

"Yes: that was my pardonable deception. I thought that you would respect
yourself more if you felt that your father, like the fathers of your
friends, belonged to the upper class. Now, my dear boy, you will respect
yourself just as much, although you know that he was but a sergeant, and
a brave fellow who fell at my side in the Indian Mutiny."

"And my mother?"

"I did not know her; she was dead before I found you out, and took you
from your Uncle Bunker."

"Uncle Bunker!" Harry laughed, with a little bitterness. "Uncle Bunker!
Fancy asking one's Uncle Bunker to dine at the club! What is he by
trade?"

"He is something near a big brewery, a brewery boom, as the Americans
say. What he actually is, I do not quite know. He lives, if I remember
rightly, at a place an immense distance from here, called Stepney."

"Do you know anything more about my father's family?"

"No! The sergeant was a tall, handsome, well set-up man; but I know
nothing about his connections. His name, if that is any help to you,
was, was--in fact"--here Lord Jocelyn assumed an air of ingratiating
sweetness--"was--Goslett--Goslett; not a bad name, I think, pronounced
with perhaps a leaning to an accent on the last syllable. Don't you
agree with me, Harry?"

"Oh! yes, it will do. Better than Bunker, and not so good as Le Breton.
As for my Christian name, now?"

"There I ventured on one small variation."

"Am I not, then, even Harry?"

"Yes, yes, yes, you are--now; formerly you were Harry without the H. It
is the custom of the neighborhood in which you were born."

"I see! If I go back among my own people, I shall be, then, once more
'Arry?"

"Yes; and shout on penny steamers, and brandish pint bottles of stout,
and sing along the streets, in simple abandonment to Arcadian joy; and
trample on flowers; and break pretty things for wantonness; and exercise
a rude but effective wit, known among the ancients as Fescennine, upon
passing ladies; and get drunk o' nights; and walk the streets with a
pipe in your mouth. That is what you would be, if you went back, my dear
child."

Harry laughed.

"After all," he said, "this is a very difficult position. I can no
longer go about pretending anything; I must tell people."

"Is that absolutely necessary?"

"Quite necessary. It will be a deuce of a business, explaining."

"Shall we tell it to one person, and let him be the town-crier?"

"That, I suppose, would be the best plan; meantime, I could retire,
while I made some plans for the future."

"Perhaps, if you really must tell the truth, it would be well to go out
of town for a bit."

"As for myself," Harry continued, "I suppose I shall get over the wrench
after a bit. Just for the moment I feel knocked out of time."

"Keep the secret, then; let it be one between you and me only, Harry;
let no one know."

But he shook his head.

"Everybody must know. Those who refuse to keep up the acquaintance of a
private soldier's son--well, then, a non-commissioned officer's
son--will probably let me know their decision, some way or other. Those
who do not----" He paused.

"Nonsense, boy; who cares nowadays what a man is by birth? Is not this
great city full of people who go anywhere, and are nobody's sons? Look
here, and here"--he tossed half a dozen cards of invitation across the
table--"can you tell me who these people were twenty years ago--or
these--or these?"

"No: I do not care in the least who they were. I care only that they
shall know who I am; I will not, for my part, pretend to be what I am
not."

"I believe you are right, boy. Let the world laugh if they please, and
have done with it."

Harry began to walk up and down the room; he certainly did not look the
kind of a man to give in; to try hiding things away. Quite the contrary.
And he laughed--he took to laughing.

"I suppose it will sound comic at first," he said, "until people get
used to it. Do you know what he turns out to be? That kind of thing:
after all, we think too much about what people say--what does it matter
what they say or how they say it? If they like to laugh, they can. Who
shall be the town-crier?"

"I was thinking," said Lord Jocelyn slowly, "of calling to-day upon Lady
Wimbledon."

The young man laughed, with a little heightening of his color.

"Of course--a very good person, an excellent person, and to-morrow it
will be all over London. There are one or two things," he went on after
a moment, "that I do not understand from the papers which you put into
my hands last night."

"What are those things?" Lord Jocelyn for a moment looked uneasy.

"Well--perhaps it is impertinent to ask. But--when Mr. Bunker, the
respectable Uncle Bunker, traded me away, what did he get for me?"

"Every bargain has two sides," said Lord Jocelyn. "You know what I got,
you want to know what the honorable Bunker got. Harry, on that point I
must refer you to the gentleman himself."

"Very good. Then I come to the next difficulty--a staggerer. What did
you do it for? One moment, sir"--for Lord Jocelyn seemed about to reply.
"One moment. You were rich, you were well born, you were young. What on
earth made you pick a boy out of the gutter and bring him up like a
gentleman?"

"You are twenty-three, Harry, and yet you ask for motives. My dear boy,
have you not learned the golden rule? In all human actions look for the
basest motive, and attribute that. If you see any reason for stopping
short of quite the lowest spurs to action, such as revenge, hatred,
malice, and envy, suppose the next lowest, and you will be quite safe.
That next lowest is--_son altesse, ma vanité_."

"Oh!" replied Harry, "yet I fail to see how a child of the lowest
classes could supply any satisfaction for even the next lowest of human
motives."

"It was partly in this way. Mind, I do not for one moment pretend to
answer the whole of your question. Men's motives, thank Heaven, are so
mixed up, that no one can be quite a saint, while no one is altogether a
sinner. Nature is a leveller, which is a comfort to us who are born in
levelling times. In those days I was by way of being a kind of Radical.
Not a Radical such as those who delight mankind in these happier days.
But I had Liberal leanings, and thought I had ideas. When I was a boy of
twelve or so, there were the '48 theories floating about the air; some
of them got into my brain and stuck there. Men used to believe that a
great time was coming--perhaps I heard a whisper of it; perhaps I was
endowed with a greater faculty for credulity than my neighbors, and
believed in humanity. However, I do not seek to explain. It may have
occurred to me--I do not say it did--but I have a kind of recollection
as if it did--one day after I had seen you, then in the custody of the
respectable Bunker, that it would be an instructive and humorous thing
to take a boy of the multitude and bring him up in all the culture, the
tastes, the ideas of ourselves--you and me, for instance, Harry. This
idea may have seized upon me, so that the more I thought of it, the
better pleased I was with it. I may have pictured such a boy so taught,
so brought up, with such tastes, returning to his own people. Disgust, I
may have said, will make him a prophet; and such a prophet as the world
has never yet seen. He would be like the follower of the Old Man of the
Mountain. He would never cease to dream of the paradise he had seen: he
would never cease to tell of it; he would be always leading his friends
upward to the same levels on which he had once stood."

"Humph!" said Harry.

"Yes, I know," Lord Jocelyn went on. "I ought to have foretold that the
education I prepared for you would have unfitted you for the rôle of
prophet. I am not disappointed in you, Harry--quite the reverse. I now
see that what has happened has been only what I should have expected. By
some remarkable accident, you possess an appearance such as is generally
believed to belong to persons of long-continued gentle descent. By a
still more remarkable accident, all your tastes prove to be those of the
cultured classes; the blood of the Bunkers has, in yourself, assumed the
most azure hue."

"That is very odd," said Harry.

"It is a very remarkable thing, indeed," continued Lord Jocelyn gravely.
"I have never ceased to wonder at this phenomenon. However, I was unable
to send you to a public school on account of the necessity, as I
thought, of concealing your parentage. But I gave you instruction of the
best, and found for you companions--as you know, among the----"

"Yes," said Harry. "My companions were gentlemen, I suppose; I learned
from them."

"Perhaps. Still, the earthenware pot cannot become a brass pot, whatever
he may pretend. You were good metal from the beginning."

"You are now, Harry," he went on, "three-and-twenty. You are master of
three foreign languages; you have travelled on the Continent and in
America; you are a good rider, a good shot, a good fencer, a good
dancer. You can paint a little, fiddle a little, dance a great deal, act
pretty well, speak pretty well; you can, I dare say, make love as
becomes a gentleman; you can write very fair verses; you are
good-looking, you have the _air noble_; you are not a prig; you are not
an æsthete; you possess your share of common sense."

"One thing you have omitted which, at the present juncture, may be more
useful than any of these things."

"What is that?"

"You were good enough to give me a lathe, and to have me instructed in
the mysteries of turning. I am a practical cabinet-maker, if need be."

"But why should this be of use to you?"

"Because, Lord Jocelyn"--Harry ran and leaned over the table with a
sweet smile of determination on his face--"because I am going back to my
own people for a while, and it may be that the trade of cabinet-making
may prove a very backbone of strength to me among them----"

"Harry--you would not--indeed, you could not go back to Bunker?" Lord
Jocelyn asked this question with every outward appearance of genuine
alarm.

"I certainly would. My very kind guardian and patron, would you stand in
my way? I want to see those people from where I am sprung: I want to
learn how they differ from you and your kin. I must compare myself with
them--I must prove the brotherhood of humanity."

"You will go? Yes--I see you will--it is in your eyes. Go, then, Harry.
But return to me soon. The slender fortune of a younger son shall be
shared with you so long as I live, and given to you when I die. Do not
stay among them. There are, indeed--at least, I suppose so--all sorts
and conditions of men. But to me, and to men brought up like you and me,
I do not understand how there can be any but one sort and one condition.
Come back soon, boy. Believe me--no--do not believe me--prove it
yourself: in the social pyramid, the greatest happiness, Harry, lies
near the top."




CHAPTER I.

NEWS FOR HIS LORDSHIP.


"I have news for your lordship," said Mrs. Bormalack, at the
breakfast-table, "something that will cheer you up a bit. We are to have
an addition to our family."

His lordship nodded his head, meaning that he would receive her news
without more delay than was necessary, but that at present his mind was
wholly occupied with a contest between one of his teeth and a crust.
The tooth was an outlying one, all its lovely companions having withered
and gone, and it was undefended; the crust was unyielding. For the
moment no one could tell what might be the result.

Her ladyship replied for him.

Lady Davenant was a small woman, if you go by inches; her exalted rank
gave her, however, a dignity designed for very much larger persons; yet
she carried it with ease. She was by no means young, and her hair was
thin as well as gray; her face, which was oval and delicately curved,
might formerly have been beautiful; the eyes were bright and eager, and
constantly in motion, as is often the case with restless and nervous
persons; her lips were thin and as full of independent action as her
eyes; she had thin hands, so small that they might have belonged to a
child of eight, when inclined for vaunting, the narrowest and most
sloping shoulders that ever were seen, so sloping that people
unaccustomed to her were wont to tremble lest the whole of her dress
should suddenly slide straight down those shoulders, as down a slope of
ice; and strange ladies, impelled by this apprehension, had been known
to ask her in a friendly whisper if she could thoroughly depend upon the
pins at her throat. As Mrs. Bormalack often said, speaking of her noble
boarders among her friends, those shoulders of her ladyship were "quite
a feature." Next to the pride of having at her table such guests--who,
however, did not give in to the good old English custom of paying double
prices for having a title--was the distinction of pointing to those
unique shoulders and of talking about them.

Her ladyship had a shrill, reedy voice, and spoke loudly. It was
remarked by the most superficial observer, moreover, that she possessed
a very strong American accent.

"At our first boarding-house," she said, replying indirectly to the
landlady's remark, "at our first boarding-house, which was in Wellclose
Square, next to the Board Schools, there was a man who once _actually_
slapped his lordship on the back. And then he laughed! To be sure, he
was only a Dane, but the disrespect was just the same."

"My dear," said his lordship, who now spoke, having compromised matters
with the crust, "the ignominy of being slapped on the back by a powerful
sea-captain is hardly to be weighed in comparison with the physical pain
it causes."

"We are quite sure, however, Mrs. Bormalack," the lady went on, "that
you will admit none under your roof but those prepared to respect rank;
we want no levellers or mischievous Radicals for our companions."

"It is to be a young lady," said Mrs. Bormalack.

"Young ladies, at all events, do not slap gentlemen on the back, whether
they are noblemen or not," said his lordship kindly. "We shall be happy
to welcome her, ma'am."

This ornament of the Upper House was a big, fat man, with a face like a
full moon. His features were not distinctly aristocratic; his cheeks
were flabby and his nose broad; also he had a double chin. His long hair
was a soft, creamy white, the kind of white which in old age follows a
manhood of red hair. He sat in an arm-chair at the end of the table,
with his elbows on the arms, as if he desired to get as much rest out of
the chair as possible. His eyes were very soft and dreamy; his
expression was that of a man who has been accustomed to live in the
quieter parts of the world. He, too, spoke with a marked American accent
and with slowness, as if measuring his words, and appreciating himself
their importance. The dignity of his manner was not wholly due to his
position, but in great measure to his former profession. For his
lordship had not always rejoiced in his present dignity, nor, in fact,
had he been brought up to it. Persons intending to become peers of Great
Britain do not, as a rule, first spend more than forty years as
schoolmasters in their native town. And just as clergymen, and
especially young clergymen, love to talk loud, because it makes people
remember that they are in the presence of those whose wisdom demands
attention, so old schoolmasters speak slowly because their words--even
the lightest, which are usually pretty heavy--have got to be listened
to, under penalties.

As soon, however, as he began to "enjoy the title," the ex-schoolmaster
addressed himself with some care to the cultivation of a manner which
he thought due to his position. It was certainly pompous; it was
intended to be affable; it was naturally, because he was a man of a most
kind disposition and an excellent heart, courteous and considerate.

"I am rejoiced, Mrs. Bormalack," he went on grandly, and with a bow,
"that we are to be cheered in our domestic circle by the addition of a
young lady. It is an additional proof, if any were needed, of the care
with which you consider the happiness of your guests." The professor,
who owed for five weeks, murmured that no one felt it more than himself.
"Sometimes, ma'am, I own that even with the delightful society of
yourself" ("O my lord, your lordship is too kind," said Mrs. Bormalack)
"and of the accomplished professor"--here he bowed to the professor, who
nodded and spread out his hands professionally--"and of the learned Mr.
Daniel Fagg"--here he bowed to Mr. Fagg, who took no notice at all,
because he was thinking of his triangles and was gazing straight before
him--"and of Mr. Josephus Coppins"--here he bowed to Josephus Coppins,
who humbly inclined his head without a smile--"and of Mr.
Maliphant"--here he bowed to Mr. Maliphant, who with a breakfast knife
was trying to make a knobly crust assume the shape of a human head, in
fact the head of Mr. Gladstone--"and of Mr. Harry Goslett, who is not
with us so much as we could desire of so sprightly a young man; and
surrounded as we are by all the gayety and dissipation and splendor of
London, I sometimes suspect that we are not always so cheerful as we
might be."

"Give me," said his wife, folding her little hands and looking round her
with a warlike expression, as if inviting contradiction--"give me Canaan
City, New Hampshire, for gayety."

Nobody combated this position, nor did anybody reply at all, unless the
pantomime of the professor was intended for a reply by gesture, like the
learned Thaumast. For, with precision and abstracted air, he rolled up a
little ball of bread, about as big as a marble, placed it in the palm of
his left hand, closed his fingers upon it, and then opened them, showing
that the ball had vanished. Then he executed the slightest possible
shrug of his shoulders, spread out his hands, and nodded to his
lordship, saying, with a sweet smile:

"Pretty thing, isn't it?"

"I hope, sir, that she will be pretty," said his lordship, thinking of
the young lady. "To look at a pretty face is as good as a day of
sunshine."

"She is a beautiful girl," Mrs. Bormalack replied with enthusiasm, "and
I am sure she must be as good as she is pretty; because she paid three
months in advance. With a piano, too, which she will play herself. She
is a dressmaker by trade, and she wants to set herself up in a genteel
way. And she's got a little money, she says;" a sweet smile crossed her
face as she thought that most of this little money would come into her
own pocket.

"A dressmaker!" cried her ladyship. "Do tell! I was in that line myself
before I married. That was long before we began to enjoy the title. You
don't know, ma'am"--here she dropped her voice--"you don't know how
remarkably fond his lordship is of a pretty face; choice with them, too.
Not every face pleases him. Oh! you wouldn't believe how particular.
Which shows his aristocratic descent; because we all know what his
ancestors were."

"To be sure," said the landlady, nodding significantly. "We all know
what they were. Rovers to a man--I mean a lord. And as for the young
lady, she will be here this evening, in time for tea. Shrimps and Sally
Lunn, my lord. And her name is Miss Kennedy. Respectable, if poor; and
illustrious ancestors is more than we can all of us have, nor yet
deserve."

Here the professor rose, having finished his breakfast. One might have
noticed that he had extremely long and delicate fingers, and that they
seemed always in movement; also that he had a way of looking at you as
if he meant you to look straight and steady into his eyes, and not to go
rolling your eyes about in the frivolous, irresponsible way affected by
some people. He walked slowly to the window; then, as if seized with an
irresistible impulse to express his feelings in pantomime, or else, it
may be, to try an experiment, returned to the table, and asked for the
loan of his lordship's pocket-handkerchief, which was a large red silk
one, well fitted for the purpose. How he conveyed a saucer unseen from
the table into that handkerchief, and how that saucer got into the
nobleman's coat-tail pocket, were things known only to himself. Yet
familiarity breeds contempt, and though everybody looked on, nobody
expressed delight or astonishment, for this exhibition of magic and
spells went on every day, and whenever the professor was among them. He
moved about accompanied, so to speak, by a legion of invisible
attendants and servants, who conveyed, hid, brought back, uncovered,
discovered, recovered, lost, found, rapped, groaned, cried, whistled,
sang, moved chairs and tables, and, in fact, behaved as only a troop of
well-drilled elves can behave. He was a young man of twenty-five, and he
had a great gift of silence. By trade he was a professor of legerdemain.
Other professors there are who hold up the light of this science, and
hand it down to posterity undimmed; but none with such an ardent love
for their work as Professor Climo. For he practised all day long, except
when he was reading the feats of the illustrious conjurers, sorcerers,
necromancers, and wizards of old time, or inventing new combinations,
traps for the credulous, and contrivances to make that which was not
seen like unto that which was. The East End of London is not the richest
field for such performers; but he was young, and he lived in hope--very
often, when there were no engagements--upon it. At such times he became
a simple lodger, instead of a boarder, at Mrs. Bormalack's, and went
without any meals.

The situation of this boarding-house, poetically described by his
lordship as in the midst of the gayety of London, was in the far East,
in that region of London which is less known to Englishmen than if it
were situated in the wildest part of Colorado, or among the pine forests
of British Columbia. It stood, in fact, upon Stepney Green, a small
strip of Eden which has been visited by few, indeed, of those who do not
live in its immediate vicinity. Yet it is a romantic spot.

Two millions of people, or thereabouts, live in the East End of London.
That seems a good-sized population for an utterly unknown town. They
have no institutions of their own to speak of, no public buildings of
any importance, no municipality, no gentry, no carriages, no soldiers,
no picture-galleries, no theatres, no opera--they have nothing. It is
the fashion to believe that they are all paupers, which is a foolish and
mischievous belief, as we shall presently see. Probably there is no such
spectacle in the whole world as that of this immense, neglected,
forgotten great city of East London. It is even neglected by its own
citizens, who have never yet perceived their abandoned condition. They
are Londoners, it is true, but they have no part or share of London; its
wealth, its splendors, its honors exist not for them. They see nothing
of any splendors; even the Lord Mayor's show goeth westward: the city
lies between them and the greatness of England. They are beyond the
wards, and cannot become aldermen; the rich London merchants go north
and south and west; but they go not east. Nobody goes east; no one wants
to see the place; no one is curious about the way of life in the east.
Books on London pass it over; it has little or no history; great men are
not buried in its church-yards, which are not even ancient, and crowded
by citizens as obscure as those who now breathe the upper airs about
them. If anything happens in the east, people at the other end have to
stop and think before they can remember where the place may be.

The house was old, built of red bricks with a "shell" decoration over
the door. It contained room for about eight boarders, who had one
sitting-room in common. This was the breakfast-room, a meal at which all
were present; the dining-room--but nobody except his lordship and wife
dined at home; the tea-room--but tea was too early for most of the
boarders; and the supper-room. After supper tobacco was tolerated. The
boarders were generally men, and mostly elderly men of staid and quiet
manners, with whom the evening pipe was the conclusion and solace of the
day. It was not like the perpetual incense of the tap-room, and yet the
smell of tobacco was never absent from the room, lingering about the
folds of the dingy curtain, which served for both summer and winter,
clinging to the horsehair sofa, to the leather of the chairs, and to the
rusty table-cloth.

The furniture was old and mean. The wall-paper had once been crimson,
but now was only dark; the ceiling had for many years wanted
whitewashing badly; the door and windows wanted painting; the windows
always wanted cleaning; the rope of one of the blinds was broken; and
the blind itself, not nearly so white as it might have been, was pinned
half-way up. Everything was shabby; everything wanted polishing,
washing, brightening up.

A couple of arm-chairs stood, when meals were not going on, one on
either side of the fireplace--one being reserved for his lordship, and
the other for his wife; they were, like the sofa, of horsehair, and
slippery. There was a long table covered by a faded red cloth; the
carpet was a Brussels once of a warm crimson, now worn threadbare; the
hearth-rug was worn into holes; one or two of the chairs had broken out
and showed glimpses of stuffing. The sideboard was of old-fashioned
build, and a shiny black by reason of its age; there were two or three
hanging shelves filled with books, the property of his lordship, who
loved reading, the mantel-shelf was decorated by a small collection of
pipes; and above it hung the portrait of the late Samuel Bormalack,
formerly a collector in the great brewing house of Messenger, Marsden &
Company.

His widow, who carried on the house, was a comfortable--a serenely
comfortable woman, who regarded the world from the optimist's point of
view. Perfect health and a tolerably prosperous business, where the
returns are regular though the profits are small, make the possessor
agree with Pope and Candide that everything is for the best in this best
of all possible worlds. Impossible not to be contented, happy, and
religious, when your wishes are narrowed to a tidy dinner, a comfortable
supper with a little something hot, boarders who pay up regular, do not
grumble, and go to bed sober; and a steady hope that you will not get
"something," by which of course is meant that you may not fall ill of
any disagreeable or painful disease. To "get something" is one of the
pretty euphemisms of our daily speech.

She had had one or two unlucky accidents, such as the case of Captain
Saffrey, who stayed two months, and drank enough beer to float a
three-decker, and then sailed away, promising to pay, and would have
done so--for he was an honest man--but had the misfortune to fall
overboard while in liquor. But her present boarders seemed most
respectable, and she was at ease.

Of course, the persons of greatest consideration among them were the
noble pair who enjoyed the title. Rank is respected, if you please, even
at the East End of London, and perhaps more there than in fashionable
quarters, because it is so rare. King John, it is true, had once a
palace at Stepney; but that is a long time to look back upon, and even
the oldest inhabitant can now not remember to have been kicked by the
choleric monarch. Then the Marquis of Worcester had once a great house
here, what time the sainted Charles was ripening things for a row royal.
That house is gone too, and I do not know where it used to stand. From
the time of this East End marquis to the arrival of Lord and Lady
Davenant, last year, there have been no resident members of the English
aristocracy, and no member of the foreign nobility, with the exception
of a certain dusky Marquis of Choufleur, from Hayti, who is reported on
good authority to have once lived in these parts for six months,
thinking he was in the politest and most fashionable suburb of London.
He is further said to have carried on with Satanic wildness in Limehouse
and the West India Dock Road of an evening. A Japanese, too, certainly
once went to a hotel in America Square, which is not quite the East End,
and said he was a prince in his own country. He stayed a week, and drank
champagne all day long. Then he decamped without paying the bill; and
when the landlord went to the embassy to complain, he thought it was the
ambassador himself, until he discovered that all Japanese are exactly
alike. Wherefore he desisted from any further attempt to identify the
missing prince for want of the missing link, namely, some distinctive
feature.

The illustrious pair had now been in the house for six weeks. Previously
they had spent some time in Wellclose Square, which is no doubt well
known to fashionable readers, and lies contiguous to St. George's
Street. Here happened that accident of the back-slapping so frequently
alluded to by her ladyship. They were come from America to take up an
old family title which had been in abeyance for two or three
generations. They appeared to be poor, but able to find the modest
weekly sum asked by Mrs. Bormalack; and in order to secure her
confidence and good-will, they paid every week in advance. They drank
nothing but water, but, to make up, his lordship ate a great deal,
especially at breakfast, and they asked for strange things, unknown to
English households. In other respects they gave no kind of trouble, were
easily satisfied, never grumbled, and were affable. For their rank they
certainly dressed shabbily, but high social station is sometimes found
coupled with eccentricity. Doubtless Lord Davenant had his reasons for
going about in a coat white at the seams and shiny at the back, which,
being made of sympathetic stuff, and from long habit, had assumed the
exact shape of his noble back and shoulders, with a beautiful model of
his illustrious elbows. For similarly good and sufficient reasons Lady
Davenant wore that old black gown and those mended gloves and--but it is
cruel to enumerate the shortcomings of her attire.

Perhaps on account of this public character, the professor would rank in
the house after his lordship. Nothing confers greatness more quickly
than an unabashed appearance upon a platform. Mr. Maliphant, however,
who had travelled and could relate tales of adventure, might dispute
precedence with him. He was now a carver of figure-heads for ships. It
is an old and honorable trade, but in these latter days it has decayed.
He had a small yard at Limehouse, where he worked all by himself,
turning out heads in the rough so that they might be transformed into a
beauteous goddess, or a Saucy Poll, or a bearded Neptune, as the owners
might prefer. He was now an old man with a crumpled and million-lined
face, but active still and talkative. His memory played him tricks, and
he took little interest in new things. He had a habit, too, which
disconcerted people unaccustomed to him, of thinking one part of the
reminiscence to himself and saying the rest aloud, so that one got only
the torso or mangled trunk of the story, or the head, or the feet, with
or without the tail, which is the point.

The learned Daniel Fagg, wrapt always in contemplation, was among them
but not of them. He was lately arrived from Australia, bringing with him
a discovery which took away the breath of those who heard it, and filled
all the scholars and learned men of Europe with envy and hatred, so that
they combined and formed a general conspiracy to keep him down, and to
prevent the publication of his great book, lest the world should point
the finger of scorn at them, and laugh at the blindness of its great
ones. Daniel himself said so, and an oppressed man generally knows his
oppressor. He went away every morning after breakfast, and returned for
tea. He was believed to occupy the day in spreading a knowledge of his
discovery, the nature of which was unknown at the boarding-house, among
clergymen and other scholars. In the evening he sat over a Hebrew Bible
and a dictionary, and spoke to no one. A harmless man, but soured and
disappointed with the cold reception of his great discovery.

Another boarder was the unfortunate Josephus Coppin, who was a clerk in
the great brewing-house of Messenger, Marsden & Company. He had been
there for forty years, being now fifty-five years of age, gray and sad
of face, because, for some reason unknown to the world, he was not
advanced, but remained forever among the juniors at a salary of thirty
shillings a week. Other men of his own standing were chief brewers,
collectors, and chief accountants. He was almost where he had started.
The young men came and mounted the ladder of promotion, passing him one
after the other; he alone remained upon the rung which he had reached
one day, now thirty years bygone, when a certain thing happened, the
consequences of which were to keep him down, to ruin his prospects, to
humiliate and degrade him, to sadden and embitter his whole life.
Lastly, there was a young man, the only young man among them, one Harry
Goslett by name, who had quite recently joined the boarding-house. He
was a nephew of Mr. Coppin, and was supposed to be looking for a place
of business.

But he was an uncertain boarder. He paid for his dinner but never dined
at home; he had brought with him a lathe, which he set up in a little
garden-house, and here he worked by himself, but in a fitful, lazy way,
as if it mattered nothing whether he worked or not. He seemed to prefer
strolling about the place, looking around him as if he had never seen
things before, and he was wont to speak of familiar objects as if they
were strange and rare. These eccentricities were regarded as due to his
having been to America. A handsome young man and cheerful, which made it
a greater pity that he was so idle.

On this morning the first to start for the day's business was Daniel
Fagg. He put his Hebrew Bible on the book-shelf, took out a
memorandum-book and the stump of a pencil, made an entry, and then
counted out his money, which amounted to eight-and-sixpence, with a
sigh. He was a little man, about sixty years of age, and his thin hair
was sandy in color. His face was thin, and he looked hungry and
underfed. I believe, in fact, that he seldom had money enough for
dinner, and so went without. Nothing was remarkable in his face, except
a pair of very large and thick eyebrows, also of sandy hue, which is
unusual, and produces a very curious effect. With these he was wont to
frown tremendously as he went along, frightening the little children
into fits; when he was not frowning he looked dejected. It must have
been an unhappy condition of things which made the poor man thus
alternate between wrath and depression. There were, however,
moments--those when he got hold of a new listener--in which he would
light up with enthusiasm as he detailed the history of his discovery.
Then the thin, drawn cheek would fill out, and his quivering lips would
become firm, and his dejected eyes would brighten with the old pride of
discovery, and he would laugh once more, and rub his hands with pride,
when he described the honest sympathy of the people in the Australian
township where he first announced the great revelation he was to make to
the world, and received their enthusiastic cheers and shouts of
encouragement.

Harry Goslett was his last listener, and, as the enthusiast thought, his
latest convert.

As Daniel passed out of the dining-room, and was looking for his hat
among the collection of hats as bad as was ever seen out of Canadian
backwoods, Harry Goslett himself came downstairs, his hands in his
pockets, as slowly and lazily as if there was no such thing as work to
do or time to keep. He laughed and nodded to the discoverer.

"Oho! Dan'l," he said; "how are the triangles? and are you really going
back to the lion's den?"

"Yes, Mr. Goslett, I am going back there! I am not afraid of them; I am
going to see the head of the Egyptian department. He says he will give
me a hearing; they all said they would, and they have. But they won't
listen; it's no use to hear unless you listen. What a dreadful thing is
jealousy among the learned, Mr. Goslett!"

"It is indeed, my prophet; have they subscribed to the book?"

"No! they won't subscribe. Is it likely that they will help to bring out
a work which proves them all wrong? Come, sir, even at your age you
can't think so well of poor humanity."

"Daniel"--the young man laid his hands impressively upon the little
man's shoulders--"you showed me yesterday a list of forty-five
subscribers to your book, at twelve shillings and sixpence apiece.
_Where is that subscription-money?_"

The poor man blushed and hung his head.

"A man must live," he said at length, trying to frown fiercely.

"Yes, but unpleasant notice is sometimes taken of the way in which
people live, my dear friend. This is not a free country; not by any
means free. If I were you, I would take the triangles back to Australia,
and print the book there, among your friends."

"No!" The little man stamped on the ground, and rammed his head into his
hat with determination. "No, Mr. Goslett, and no again. It shall be
printed here. I will hurl it at the head of the so-called scholars here,
in London--in their stronghold, close to the British Museum.
Besides"--here he relaxed, and turned a pitiful face of sorrow and shame
upon his adviser--"besides, can I forget the day when I left Australia?
They all came aboard to say good-by. The papers had paragraphs about it.
They shouted one after the other, and nobblers went around surprising,
and they slapped me on the back and said, 'Go, Dan'l,' or 'Go, Fagg,'
or 'Go, Mr. Fagg,' according to their intimacy and the depth of their
friendship--'Go where honor and glory and a great fortune, with a
pension on the Queen's civil-list, are waiting for you.' On the voyage I
even dreamed of a title; I thought Sir Daniel Fagg, knight or baronet,
or the Right Reverend Lord Fagg, would sound well to go back to
Australia with. Honor? Glory? Fortune? where are they?
Eight-and-sixpence in my pocket; and the head of the Greek department
calls me a fool, because I won't acknowledge that truth--yes, TRUTH--is
error. Laughs at the triangles, Mr. Goslett!"

He laughed bitterly and went out, slamming the door behind him.

Then Harry entered the breakfast-room, nodding pleasantly to everybody;
and without any apology for lateness, as if breakfast could be kept
about all the morning to suit his convenience, sat down and began to
eat. Jonathan Coppin got up, sighed, and went away to his brewery. The
professor looked at the last comer with a meditative air, as if he would
like to make him disappear, and could do it, too, but was uncertain how
Harry would take it. Mrs. Bormalack hurried away on domestic business.
Mr. Maliphant laughed and rubbed his hands together, and then laughed
again as if he were thinking of something really comic, and said, "Yes,
I knew the sergeant very well; a well set-up man he was, and Caroline
Coppin was a pretty girl." At this point his face clouded and his eyes
expressed doubt. "There was," he added, "something I wanted to ask you,
young man, something"--here he tapped his forehead--"something about
your father or your mother, or both; but I have forgotten--never mind.
Another time--another time."

He ran away with boyish activity and a schoolboy's laugh, being arrived
at that time of life when one becomes light of heart once more, knowing
by experience that nothing matters very much. There were none left in
the room but the couple who enjoyed the title.

His lordship sat in his arm-chair, apparently enjoying it, in meditation
and repose; this, one perceives, is quite the best way of enjoying an
hereditary title, if you come to it late in life.

His wife had, meanwhile, got out a little shabby portfolio in black
leather, and was turning over the papers with impatience; now and then
she looked up to see whether this late young man had finished his
breakfast. She fidgeted, arranged, and worried with her papers, so that
any one whose skull was not six inches thick might have seen that she
wanted to be alone with her husband. It was also quite clear to those
who thought about things, and watched this little lady, that there may
be meaning in certain proverbial expressions touching gray mares.

Presently Harry Goslett finished his coffee, and, paying no attention to
her little ladyship's signals of distress, began to open up conversation
on general subjects with the noble lord.

She could bear it no longer. Here were the precious moments wasted and
thrown away, every one of which should be bringing them nearer to the
recognition of their rights.

"Young man," she cried, jumping up in her chair, "if you've got nothing
to do but to loll and lop around, all forenoon, I guess we hev, and this
is the room in which we do that work."

"I beg your pardon, Lady Davenant----"

"Young man--Git----"

She pointed to the door.




CHAPTER II.

A VERY COMPLETE CASE.


His lordship, left alone with his wife, manifested certain signs of
uneasiness. She laid the portfolio on the table, turned over the papers,
sorted some of them, picked out some for reference, fetched the ink, and
placed the penholder in position.

"Now, my dear," she said, "no time to lose. Let us set to work in
earnest."

His lordship sighed. He was sitting with his fat hands upon his knees,
contented with the repose of the moment.

"Clara Martha," he grumbled, "cannot I have one hour of rest?"

"Not one, till you get your rights." She hovered over him like a little
falcon, fierce and persistent. "Not one. What? You a British peer? You,
who ought to be sitting with a coronet on your head--you to shrink from
the trouble of writing out your case? And such a case!"

He only moaned. Certainly he was a very lethargic person.

"You are not the carpenter, your father. Nor even the wheelwright, your
grandfather, who came down of his own accord. You would rise, you would
soar--you have the spirit of your ancestors."

He feebly flapped with his elbows, as if he really would like to take a
turn in the air, but made no verbal response.

"Cousin Nathaniel," she went on, "gave us six months at six dollars a
week. That's none too generous of Nathaniel, seeing we have no children,
and he will be the heir to the title. I guess Aurelia Tucker set him
against the thing. Six months, and three of them gone already, and
nothing done! What would Aurelia say if we went home again, beaten?"

The little woman gasped, and would have shrugged her shoulders, but they
were such a long way down--shoulders so sloping could not be shrugged.

Her remonstrances moved the heavy man, who drew his chair to the table
with great deliberation.

"We are here," she continued--always the exhorter and the strengthener
of faith--"not to claim a title, but to assume it. We shall present our
case to Parliament, or the Queen, or the House of Lords, or the Court of
Chancery, or whosoever is the right person, and we shall say, 'I am Lord
Davenant.' That is all."

"Clara Martha," said her husband, "I wish that were all we had to do.
And, on the whole, I would as soon be back in Canaan City, New
Hampshire, and the trouble over. The memoranda are all here," he said.
"Can't we get some one else to draw up the case?"

"Certainly not. You must do it. Why, you used to think nothing of
writing out a Fourth of July speech."

He shook his head.

"And you know that you have often said, yourself, that there wasn't a
book written that could teach you anything up to quadratic equations.
And self-raised, too!"

"It isn't that, Clara Martha. It isn't that. Listen!" he sank his voice
to a whisper. "_It's the doubt._ That's the point. Every time I face
that doubt it's like a bucket of cold water down my back."

She shivered. Yes: there was always the doubt.

"Come, my dear," she said presently; "we must get the case drawn up, so
that any one may read it. That is the first thing--never think of any
doubt."

He took up one of the loose papers, which was covered with writing.

"Timothy Clitheroe Davenant," he read with a weary sigh, "died at Canaan
City, New Hampshire, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred
and ninety-four. By trade he was a wheelwright. His marriage is recorded
in the church-register of July 1, 1773. His headstone still stands in
the old church-yard, and says that he was born in England in the year
one thousand seven hundred and thirty-two--it does not say where he was
born--and that he was sixty-two years of age at the day of his death.
Also, that long time he bore----"

"Yes, yes, but you needn't put that in. Go on with your case. The next
point is your own father. Courage, my dear; it is a very strong case."

"The case _is_ very strong." His lordship plucked up courage, and took
up another paper. "This is my father's record. All is clear: Born in
Canaan City on October 10, 1774, the year of Independence, the eldest
son of the aforesaid Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, wheelwright, and Dinah,
his wife--here is a copy of the register. Married on May 13, 1810, which
was late in life, because he didn't somehow get on so fast as some, to
Susanna Pegley, of the same parish. Described as carpenter--but a poor
workman, Clara Martha, and fond of chopping yarns, in which he was
equalled by none. He died in the year 1830, his tombstone still
standing, like his father's before him. It says that his end was peace.
Wal--he always wanted it. Give him peace, with a chair in the veranda,
and a penknife and a little bit of pine, and he asked for no more. Only
that, and his wife wouldn't let him have it. His end was peace."

"You all want peace," said his wife. "The Davenants always did think
that they only had to sit still and the plums would drop in their
mouths. As for you, I believe you'd be content to sit and sit in Canaan
City till Queen Victoria found you out and sent you the coronet herself.
But you've got a wife as well as your father."

"I hev," he said, with another sigh. "Perhaps we were wrong to come
over--I think I was happier in the schoolroom, when the boys were gone
hum. It was very quiet there, for a sleep in the afternoon by the stove.
And in summer the trees looked harnsome in the sunlight."

She shook her head impatiently.

"Come," she cried. "Where are the 'Recollections' of your grandfather?"

He found another paper, and read it slowly.

"My grandfather died before I was born. My father, however, said that he
used to throw out hints about his illustrious family, and that if he
chose to go back to England some people would be very much surprised.
But he never explained himself. Also he would sometimes speak of a great
English estate, and once he said that the freedom of a wheelwright was
better than the gilded chains of a British aristocrat--that was at a
Fourth of July meetin'."

"Men talk wild at meetin's," said his wife. "Still, there may have been
a meanin' behind it. Go on, Timothy--I mean my lord."

"As for my father, it pleased him, when he could put up his feet and
crack with his friends, to brag of his great connections in England. But
he never knew rightly who they were, and he was too peaceful and restful
a creature to take steps to find out."

"Waitin' for King George," observed his wife. "Just what you would be
doin', but for me."

"That's all the recollection. Here comes my own declaration:

"'I, Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, make affidavit on oath, if
necessary--but I am not quite clear as to the righteousness of
swearing--that I am the son of the late Timothy Clitheroe Davenant,
sometime carpenter of the City of Canaan, New Hampshire, U. S. A., and
Susanna his wife, both now deceased; that I was born in the year of
grace one thousand eight hundred and fifteen, and that I have been for
forty years a teacher in my native town.' That is all clean and
above-board, Clara Martha; no weak point so far, father to son, marriage
certificates regularly found, and baptism registers. No one can ask
more. 'Further, I, the above-named Timothy, do claim to be the lawful
and legitimate heir to the ancient barony of Davenant, supposed to be
extinct in the year 1783 by the death of the last lord, without male
issue.' Legally worded, I think," he added with a little proud smile.

"Yes: it reads right. Now for the connection."

"Oh! the connection." His lordship's face clouded over. His consort,
however, awaited the explanation, for the thousandth time, in
confidence. Where the masculine mind found doubt and uncertainty, the
quick woman's intellect, ready to believe and tenacious of faith, had
jumped to certainty.

"The connection is this." He took up another paper, and read:

"'The last Lord Davenant had one son only, a boy named Timothy
Clitheroe. All the eldest sons of the house were named Timothy
Clitheroe, just as all the Ashleys are named Anthony. When the boy
arrived at years of maturity he was sent on the Grand Tour, which he
made with a tutor. On returning to England, it is believed that he had
some difference with his father, the nature of which has never been
ascertained. He then embarked upon a ship sailing for the American
Colonies. Nothing more was ever heard about him; no news came to his
father or his friends, and he was supposed to be dead.'"

"Even the ship was never heard of," added her ladyship, as if this was a
fact which would greatly help in lengthening the life of the young man.

"That, too, was never heard of again. If she had not been thrown away,
we might have learned what became of the Honorable Timothy Clitheroe
Davenant." There was some confusion of ideas here, which the
ex-schoolmaster was not slow to perceive.

"I mean," he tried to explain, "that if she got safe to Boston, the
young man would have landed there, and all would be comparatively clear.
Whereas, if she was cast away, we must now suppose that he was saved and
got ashore somehow."

"Like Saint Paul," she cried triumphantly, "on a piece of wreck--what
could be more simple?"

"Because," her husband continued, "there is one fact which proves that
he _did_ get ashore, that he concluded to stay there, that he descended
so far into the social scale as to become a wheelwright; and that he
lived and died in the town of Canaan, New Hampshire."

"Go on, my dear. Make it clear. Put it strong. This is the most
interesting point of all."

"And this young man, who was supposed to be cast away in the year one
thousand seven hundred and fifty-four, aged twenty-two, was exactly the
same age as my grandfather, Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, who _bore the
same name_, which is proved by the headstone and the church-books."

"Could there," asked his wife, springing to her feet, "could there have
been two Englishmen----?"

"Of the same illustrious and historic surname, both in America?" replied
her husband, roused into a flabby enthusiasm.

"Of the same beautiful Christian name?--two Timothys?"

"Born both in the same year?"

The little woman with the bright eyes and the sloping shoulders threw
her arms about her husband's neck.

"You _shall_ have your rights, my dear," she said; "I will live to see
you sitting in the House of Lords with the hereditary statesmen of
England. If there is justice in the land of England, you shall have your
rights. There is justice, I am sure, and equal law for poor and rich,
and encouragements for the virtuous. Yes, my dear, the virtuous.
Whatever your faults may be, your virtues are many, and it can't but do
the House of Lords good to see a little virtue among them. Not that I
hold with Aurelia Tucker that the English House of Lords are wallowers
in sin; whereas, Irene Pascoe once met a knight on a missionary platform
and found he'd got religion. But virtue you can never have too much of.
Courage, my lord; forget the carpenter, and think only of the nobleman,
your grandfather, who condescended to become a wheelwright."

He obediently took up the pen and began. When he seemed fairly absorbed
in the task of copying out and stating the case, she left him. As soon
as the door was closed, he heaved a gentle sigh, pushed back his chair,
put his feet upon another chair, covered his head with his red silk
pocket-handkerchief--for there were flies in the room--and dropped into
a gentle slumber. The carpenter was, for the moment, above the
condescending wheelwright.




CHAPTER III.

ONLY A DRESSMAKER.


Harry Goslett returned to the boarding-house that evening, in a mood of
profound dejection; he had spent a few hours with certain cousins, whose
acquaintance he was endeavoring to make. "Hitherto," he said, writing to
Lord Jocelyn, "the soil seems hardly worth cultivating." In this he
spoke hastily, because every man's mind is worth cultivating as soon as
you find out the things best fitted to grow in it. But some minds will
only grow turnips, while others will produce the finest strawberries.

The cousins, for their part, did not as yet take to the new arrival,
whom they found difficult to understand. His speech was strange, his
manner stranger: these peculiarities, they thought in their ignorance,
were due to residence in the United States, where Harry had found it
expedient to place most of his previous years. Conversation was
difficult between two rather jealous workmen and a brother artisan, who
greatly resembled the typical swell--an object of profound dislike and
suspicion to the working-classes.

He had now spent some three weeks among his kinsfolk. He brought with
him some curiosity, but little enthusiasm. At first he was interested
and amused; rapidly he became bored and disgusted; for as yet he saw
only the outside of things. There was an uncle, Mr. Benjamin Bunker,
the study of whom, regarded as anybody else's uncle, would have been
pleasant. Considered as his own connection by marriage--Benjamin and the
late Sergeant Goslett having married sisters--he was too much inclined
to be ashamed of him. The two cousins seemed to him--as yet he knew them
very little--a pair of sulky, ill-bred young men, who had taken two
opposite lines, neither of which was good for social intercourse. The
people of the boarding-house continued to amuse him, partly because they
were in a way afraid of him. As for the place--he looked about him,
standing at the north entrance of Stepney Green--on the left hand, the
Whitechapel Road; behind him, Stepney, Limehouse, St. George's in the
East, Poplar and Shadwell; on the right, the Mile End Road, leading to
Bow and Stratford; before him, Ford, Hackney, Bethnal Green. Mile upon
mile of streets with houses--small, mean, and monotonous houses; the
people living the same mean and monotonous lives, all after the same
model. In his ignorance he pitied and despised those people, not knowing
how rich and full any life may be made, whatever the surroundings, and
even without the gracious influences of art. Under the influence of this
pity and contempt, when he returned in the evening at half-past nine, he
felt himself for the first time in his life run very low down indeed.

The aspect of the room was not calculated to cheer him up. It was lit
with a mean two-jet gas-burner; the dingy curtain wanted looping up, the
furniture looked more common and mean than usual. Yet, as he stood in
the doorway, he became conscious of a change.

The boarders were all sitting there, just as usual, and the supper cloth
was removed; Mr. Maliphant had his long pipe fixed in the corner of his
mouth, but he held it there with an appearance of constraint, and he had
let it go out. Mr. Josephus Coppin sat in the corner in which he always
put himself, so as to be out of everybody's way; also with a pipe in his
hand unlighted. Daniel Fagg had his Hebrew Bible spread out before him,
and his dictionary, and his copy of the Authorized Version--which he
used, as he would carefully explain, not for what schoolboys call a
crib, but for purpose of comparison. This was very grand! A man who can
read Hebrew at all inspires one with confidence; but the fact is the
more important when it is connected with a discovery; and to compare
versions--one's own with the collected wisdom of a royal commission--is
a very grand thing indeed. But to-night he sat with his head in his
hands, and his sandy hair pushed back, looking straight before him; and
Mrs. Bormalack was graced in her best black silk dress, and "the
decanters" were proudly placed upon the table with rum, gin, and brandy
in them, and beside them stood the tumblers, hot water, cold water,
lemons, and spoons, in the most genteel way. The representative of the
Upper House, who did not take spirits and water, sat calmly dignified in
his arm-chair by the fireplace, and in front of him, on the other side,
sat his wife, with black thread mittens drawn tightly over her little
hands and thin arms, bolt upright, and conscious of her rank. All
appeared to be silent, but that was their custom, and all, which was not
their custom, wore an unaccustomed air of company manners which was very
beautiful to see.

Harry, looking about him, perplexed at these phenomena, presently
observed that the eyes of all, except those of Daniel Fagg, were fixed
in one direction; and that the reason why Mr. Maliphant held an
unlighted pipe in his mouth, and Josephus one in his hand, and that
Daniel was not reading, and that his lordship looked so full of dignity,
and that ardent spirits were abroad, was nothing less than the presence
of a young lady.

In such a house, and, in fact, all round Stepney Green, the word "lady"
is generally used in a broad and catholic spirit; but in this case Harry
unconsciously used it in the narrow, prejudiced, one-sided sense
peculiar to Western longitudes. And it was so surprising to think of a
young lady in connection with Bormalack's, that he gasped and caught his
breath. And then Mrs. Bormalack presented him to the new arrival in her
best manner. "Our youngest!" she said, as if he had been a son of the
house--"our youngest and last--the sprightly Mr. Goslett. This is Miss
Kennedy, and I hope--I'm sure--that you two will get to be friendly with
one another, not to speak of keeping company, which is early days yet
for prophecies."

Harry bowed in his most superior style. What on earth, he thought
again, did a young lady want at Stepney Green?

She had the carriage and the manner of a lady; she was quite simply
dressed in a black cashmere; she wore a red ribbon around her white
throat, and had white cuffs. A lady--unmistakably a lady; also young and
beautiful, with great brown eyes, which met his own frankly, and with a
certain look of surprise which seemed an answer to his own.

"Our handsome young cabinet-maker, Miss Kennedy," went on the
landlady--Harry wondered whether it was worse to be described as
sprightly than as handsome, and which adjective was likely to produce
the more unfavorable impression on a young lady--"is wishful to
establish himself in a genteel way of business, like yourself."

"When I was in the dressmaking line," observed her ladyship, "I stayed
at home with mother and Aunt Keziah. It was not thought right in Canaan
City for young women to go about setting up shops by themselves. Not
that I say you are wrong, Miss Kennedy, but London ways are not New
Hampshire ways."

Miss Kennedy murmured something softly, and looked again at the handsome
cabinet-maker, who was still blushing with indignation and shame at Mrs.
Bormalack's adjectives, and ready to blush again on recovery to think
that he was so absurd as to feel any shame about so trifling a matter.
Still, every young man likes to appear in a good light in the presence
of beauty.

The young lady, then, was only a dressmaker. For the moment she dropped
a little in his esteem, which comes of our artificial and conventional
education; because--Why not a dressmaker? Then she rose again,
because--WHAT a dressmaker! Could there be many such in Stepney? If so,
how was it that poets, novelists, painters, and idle young men did not
flock to so richly endowed a district? In this unexpected manner does
nature offer compensations. Harry also observed with satisfaction the
novel presence of a newly arrived piano, which could belong to no other
than the new-comer; and finding that the conversation showed no signs of
brightening, he ventured to ask Miss Kennedy if she would play to them.

Now, when she began to play, a certain magic of the music fell upon
them all, affecting every one differently. Such is the power of music,
and thus diverse is it in its operation. As for his lordship, he sat
nodding his head and twinkling his eyes and smiling sweetly, because he
was in imagination sitting among his peers in the Upper House with a
crown of gold and a robe of fur, and all his friends of Canaan City,
brought across the Atlantic at his own expense for this very purpose,
were watching him with envy and admiration from the gallery. Among them
was Aurelia Tucker, the scoffer and thrower of cold water. And her
ladyship sat beating time with head and hand, thinking how the family
estates would probably be restored, with the title, by the Queen. She
had great ideas on the royal prerogative, and had indeed been accustomed
to think in the old days that Englishmen go about in continual terror
lest her Majesty, in the exercise of this prerogative, should order
their heads to be removed. This gracious vision, due entirely to the
music, showed her in a stately garden entertaining Aurelia Tucker and
other friends, whom she, like her husband, had imported from Canaan City
for the purpose of exhibiting the new greatness. And Aurelia was green
with envy, though she wore her best black silk dress.

The other boarders were differently affected. The melancholy Josephus
leaned his head upon his hand, and saw himself in imagination the
head-brewer, as he might have been, but for the misfortune of his early
youth. Head-brewer to the firm of Messenger, Marsden & Company! What a
position!

Daniel Fagg, for his part, was dreaming of the day when his discovery
was to be received by all and adequately rewarded. He anticipated the
congratulations of his friends in Australia, and stood on deck in port
surrounded by the crowd, who shook his hand and cheered him, in good
Australian fashion, as Daniel the Great, Daniel the Scourge of Scholars,
Daniel the Prophet--a second Daniel. The professor took advantage of
this general rapture or abstraction from earthly things to lay the plans
for a _grand coup_ in legerdemain--a new experiment, which should
astonish everybody. This he afterward carried through with success.

Mrs. Bormalack, for her part, filled and slowly drank a large tumbler
of hot brandy-and-water. When she had finished it she wiped away a tear.
Probably, stimulated by the brandy, which is a sentimental spirit, she
was thinking of her late husband, collector for the brewery, who was
himself romantically fond of brandy-and-water, and came to an early end
in consequence of overrating his powers of consumption.

Mr. Maliphant winked his eyes, rolled his head, rubbed his hands, and
laughed joyously, but in silence. Why, one knows not. When the music
finished, he whispered to Daniel Fagg. "No," he said, "this is the third
time in the year that you have asked leave to bury your mother. Make it
your grandmother, young man." Then he laughed again, and said that he
had been with Walker in Nicaragua. Harry heard this communication, and
the attempt to fill up the story from these two fragments afterward gave
him nightmare.

Miss Kennedy played a gavotte, and then another, and then a sonata.
Perhaps it is the character of this kind of music to call up pleasant
and joyous thoughts; certainly there is much music, loved greatly by
some people, which makes us sad, notably the strains sung at places of
popular resort. They probably become favorites because they sadden so
much. Who would not shed tears on hearing "Tommy Dodd"?

She played without music, gracefully, easily, and with expression. While
she played Harry sat beside the piano, still wondering on the same
theme. She, a Stepney dressmaker! Who, in this region, could have taught
her that touch? She "wistful to establish herself in a genteel way of
business"? Was art, then, permeating downward so rapidly? Were the
people just above the masses, the second or third stratum of the social
pyramid, taught music, and in such a style? Then he left off wondering,
and fell to the blissful contemplation of a beautiful woman playing
beautiful music. This is an occupation always delightful to young
Englishmen, and it does equal credit to their heads and to their hearts
that they never tire of so harmless an amusement. When she finished
playing, everybody descended to earth, so to speak.

The noble pair remembered that their work was still before them--all to
do: one of them thought, with a pang, about the drawing of the case, and
wished he had not gone to sleep in the morning.

The clerk in the brewery awoke to the recollection of his thirty
shillings a week, and reflected that the weather was such as to
necessitate a pair of boots which had soles.

The learned Daniel Fagg bethought him once more of his poverty and the
increasing difficulty of getting subscribers, and the undisguised
contempt with which the head of the Egyptian department had that morning
received him.

Mr. Maliphant left off laughing, and shook his puckered old face with a
little astonishment that he had been so moved.

Said the professor, breaking the silence:

"I like the music to go on, so long as no patter is wanted. They listen
to music if it's lively, and it prevents 'em from looking round and
getting suspicious. You haven't got an egg upon you, Mrs. Bormalack,
have you? Dear me, one in your lap! Actually in a lady's lap! A common
egg, one of our 'selected,' at tenpence the dozen. Ah! In your lap, too!
How very injudicious! You might have dropped it, and broken it. Perhaps,
miss, you wouldn't mind obliging once more with 'Tommy, make room for
your uncle' or 'Over the garden wall,' if you please."

Miss Kennedy did not know either of these airs, but she laughed and said
she would play something lively, while the professor went on with his
trick. First, he drew all eyes to meet his own like a fascinating
constrictor, and then he began to "palm" the egg in the most surprising
manner. After many adventures it was ultimately found in Daniel Fagg's
pocket. Then the professor smiled, bowed, and spread out his hands as if
to show the purity and honesty of his conjuring.

"You play very well," said Harry to Miss Kennedy, when the conjuring was
over and the professor returned to his chair and his nightly occupation
with a pencil, a piece of paper, and a book.

"Can you play?"

"I fiddle a little. If you will allow me, we will try some evening a
duet together."

"I did not know----" she began, but checked herself. "I did not expect
to find a violinist here."

"A good many people of my class play," said Harry, mendaciously, because
the English workman is the least musical of men.

"Few of mine," she returned, rising, and closing the piano, "have the
chance of learning. But I have had opportunities."

She looked at her watch, and remarked that it was nearly ten o'clock,
and that she was going to bed.

"I have spoken to Mr. Bunker about what you want, Miss Kennedy," said
the landlady. "He will be here to-morrow morning about ten on his
rounds."

"Who is Mr. Bunker?" asked Angela.

They all seemed surprised. Had she never, in whatever part of the world
she had lived, heard of Mr. Bunker--Bunker the Great?

"He used to be a sort of factotum to old Mr. Messenger," said Mrs.
Bormalack. "His death was a sad blow to Mr. Bunker. He's a general agent
by trade, and he deals in coal, and he's a house agent, and he knows
everybody round Stepney and up to the Mile End Road as far as Bow. He's
saved money, too, Miss Kennedy, and is greatly respected."

"He ought to be," said Harry; "not only because he was so much with Mr.
Messenger, whose name is revered for the kindred associations of beer
and property, but also because he is my uncle--he ought to be
respected."

"Your uncle?"

"My own--so near, and yet so dear--my uncle Bunker. To be connected with
Messenger, Marsden & Company, even indirectly through such an uncle, is
in itself a distinction. You will learn to know him, and you will learn
to esteem him, Miss Kennedy. You will esteem him all the more if you are
interested in beer."

Miss Kennedy blushed.

"Bunker is great in the company. I believe he used to consider himself a
kind of a partner while the old man lived. He knows all about the big
brewery. As for that, everybody does round Stepney Green."

"The company," said Josephus gloomily, "is nothing but a chit of a
girl." He sighed, thinking how much went to her and how little came to
himself.

"We are steeped in beer," Harry went on. "Our conversation turns for
ever on beer; we live for beer; the houses round us are filled with the
company's servants; we live _by_ beer. For example, Mrs. Bormalack's
late husband----"

"He was a collector for the company," said the landlady, with natural
pride.

"You see, Miss Kennedy, what a responsible and exalted position was held
by Mr. Bormalack." (The widow thought that sometimes it was hard to know
whether this sprightly young man was laughing at people or not, but it
certainly was a very high position, and most respectable.) "He went
round the houses," Harry went on. "Houses, here, mean public-houses; the
company owns half the public-houses in the East End. Then here is my
cousin, the genial Josephus. Hold up your head, Josephus. He, for his
part, is a clerk in the house."

Josephus groaned. "A junior clerk," he murmured.

"The professor is not allowed in the brewery. He might conjure among the
vats, and vats have never been able to take a practical joke; but he
amuses the brewery people. As for Mr. Maliphant, he carves figure-heads
for the ships which carry away the brewery beer; and perhaps when the
brewery wants cabinets made they will come to me."

"It is the biggest brewery in all England," said the landlady. "I can
never remember--because my memory is like a sieve--how much beer they
brew every year; but somebody once made a calculation about it, compared
with Niagara Falls, which even Mr. Bunker said was surprising."

"Think, Miss Kennedy," said Harry, "of an Entire Niagara of Messenger's
Entire."

"But how can this Mr. Bunker be of use to me?" asked the young lady.

"Why!" said Mrs. Bormalack. "There is not a shop or a street nor any
kind of place within miles Mr. Bunker doesn't know, who they are that
live there, how they make their living, what the rent is, and
everything. That's what made him so useful to old Mr. Messenger."

Miss Kennedy for some reason changed color. Then she said that she
thought she would like to see Mr. Bunker.

When she was gone Harry sat down beside his lordship and proceeded to
smoke tobacco in silence, refusing the proffered decanters.

Said the professor softly:

"She'd be a fortune--a gem of the first water--upon the boards. As
pianoforte-player between the feats of magic, marvel, and mystery, or a
medium under the magnetic influence of the operator, or a clairvoyant,
or a thought-reader--or----" Here he relapsed into silence without a
sigh.

"She looks intelligent," said Daniel Fagg. "When she hears about my
discovery she will----" Here he caught the eye of Harry Goslett, who was
shaking a finger of warning, which he rightly interpreted to mean that
dressmakers must not be asked to subscribe to learned books. This
abashed him.

"Considered as a figure-head," began Mr. Maliphant, "I remember----"

"As a dressmaker, now----" interrupted Harry. "Do Stepney dressmakers
often play the piano like--well, like Miss Kennedy? Do they wear gold
watches? Do they talk and move and act so much like real ladies, that no
one could tell the difference? Answer me that, Mrs. Bormalack."

"Well, Mr. Goslett, all I can say is, that she seems a very proper young
lady to have in the house."

"Proper, ma'am? If you were to search the whole of Stepney, I don't
believe you could find such another. What does your ladyship say?"

"I say, Mr. Goslett, that in Canaan City the ladies who are dressmakers
set the fashions to the ladies who are not; I was myself a dressmaker.
And Aurelia Tucker, though she turns up her nose at our elevation, is, I
must say, a lady who would do credit to any circle, even yours, Mrs.
Bormalack. And such remarks about real ladies and dressmakers I do not
understand, and I expected better manners, I must say. Look at his
lordship's manners, Mr. Goslett, and his father was a carpenter, like
you."




CHAPTER IV.

UNCLE BUNKER.


"My uncle!"

It was the sprightly young cabinet-maker who sprang to his feet and
grasped the hand of the new-comer with an effusion not returned.

"Allow me, Miss Kennedy, to present to you my uncle, my uncle Bunker,
whose praise you heard us sing with one consent last night. We did,
indeed, revered one! Whatever you want bought, Miss Kennedy, from a
piano to a learned pig, this is the man who will do it for you. A
percentage on the cost, with a trifling charge for time, is all he seeks
in return. He is generally known as the Benevolent Bunker; he is
everybody's friend; especially he is beloved by persons behindhand with
their rents, he is----"

Here Mr. Bunker drew out his watch, and observed with severity that his
time was valuable, and that he came about business.

Angela observed that the sallies of his nephew were received with
disfavor.

"Can we not," pursued Harry, regardless of the cloud upon his uncle's
brow--"can we not escape from affairs of urgency for one moment? Show us
your lighter side, my uncle. Let Miss Kennedy admire the gifts and
graces which you hide as well as the sterner qualities which you
exhibit."

"Business, young lady," the agent repeated, with a snort and a scowl. He
took off his hat and rubbed his bald head with a silk
pocket-handkerchief until it shone like polished marble. He was short of
stature and of round figure. His face was red and puffy as if he was
fond of hot brandy-and-water, and he panted, being a little short of
breath. His eyes were small and close together, which gave him a cunning
look; his whiskers were large and gray; his lips were thick and firm,
and his upper lip was long: his nose was broad, but not humorous; his
head was set on firmly, and he had a square chin. Evidently he was a man
of determination, and he was probably determined to look after his own
interests first.

"I want," said Angela, "to establish myself in this neighborhood as a
dressmaker."

"Very good," said Mr. Bunker. "That's practical. It is my business to do
with practical people, not sniggerers and idle gigglers." He looked at
his nephew.

"I shall want a convenient house, and a staff of workwomen, and--and
some one acquainted with business details and management."

"Go on," said Mr. Bunker. "A forewoman you will want, of course."

"Then, as I do not ask you to give me your advice for nothing, how are
you generally paid for such services?"

"I charge," he said, "as arranged for beforehand. Time for talking,
arranging, and house-hunting, half-a-crown an hour. That won't break
you. And you won't talk too much, knowing you have to pay for it.
Percentage on the rent, ten per cent. for the first year, nothing
afterward; if you want furniture, I will furnish your house from top to
bottom on the same terms, and find you work-girls at five shillings a
head."

"Yes," said Angela. "I suppose I must engage a staff. And I
suppose"--here she looked at Harry, as if for advice--"I suppose that
you _are_ the best person to go to for assistance."

"There is no one else," said Mr. Bunker. "That is why my terms are so
low."

His nephew whistled softly.

Mr. Bunker, after an angry growl at people who keep their hands in their
pockets, proceeded to develop his views. Miss Kennedy listened
languidly, appearing to care very little about details, and agreeing to
most expensive things in a perfectly reckless manner. She was afraid,
for her part, that her own ignorance would be exposed if she talked. The
agent, however, quickly perceived how ignorant she was, from this very
silence, and resolved to make the best of so promising a subject. She
could not possibly have much money--who ever heard of a Stepney
dressmaker with any?--and she evidently had no experience. He would get
as much of the money as he could, and she would be the gainer in
experience. A most equitable arrangement, he thought, being one of
those--too few, alas!--who keep before their eyes a lofty ideal, and
love to act up to it.

When he had quite finished and fairly embarked his victim on a vast
ocean of expenditure, comparatively, and with reference to Stepney and
Mile End customs, he put up his pocketbook and remarked, with a smile,
that he should want references of respectability.

"That's usual," he said: "I could not work without."

Angela changed color. To be asked for references was awkward.

"You can refer to me, my uncle," said Harry.

Mr. Bunker took no notice of this proposition.

"You see, miss," he said, "we don't know you, nor where you come from,
nor what money you've got, nor how you got it. No doubt it is all right,
and I'm sure you look honest. Perhaps you've got nothing to hide, and
very likely there's good reasons for wanting to settle here."

"My grandfather was a Whitechapel man by birth," she replied. "He left
me some money. If you must have references, of course I could refer you
to the lawyers who managed my little affairs. But I would rather, to
save trouble, pay for everything on the spot, and the rent in advance."

Mr. Bunker consented to waive his objection on payment of a sum of ten
pounds down, it being understood and concluded that everything bought
should be paid for on the spot, and a year's rent when the house was
fixed upon, paid in advance; in consideration for which he said the
young lady might, in subsequent transactions with strangers, refer to
himself, a privilege which was nothing less than the certain passport to
fortune.

"As for me," he added, "my motto is, 'Think first of your client.' Don't
spare yourself for him; toil for him, think for him, rise up early and
lie down late for him, and you reap your reward from grateful hearts.
Lord! the fortunes I have made!"

"Virtuous Uncle Bunker!" cried Harry with enthusiasm. "Noble, indeed!"

The good man for the moment forgot the existence of his frivolous
nephew, who had retired up the stage, so to speak. He opened his mouth
as if to say something in anger, but refrained, and snorted.

"Now that we've settled that matter, Mr. Bunker," the girl said without
noticing the interruption, "let us talk about other matters."

"Are they business matters?"

"Not exactly; but still----"

"Time is money; an hour is half-a-crown." He drew out his watch, and
made a note of the time in his pocketbook. "A quarter to eleven, miss.
If I didn't charge for time, what would become of my clients? Neglected;
their interests ruined; the favorable moment gone. If I could tell you
of a lady I established two years ago in one of the brewery-houses and
what she's made of it, and what she says of me, you would be astonished.
A grateful heart! and no better brandy-and-water, hot, with a slice of
lemon, in the Whitechapel Road. But you were about to say, miss----"

"She was going to begin with a hymn of praise, Uncle Bunker, paid in
advance, like the rest. Gratitude for favors to come. But if you like to
tell about the lady, do. Miss Kennedy will only charge you half-a-crown
an hour. I'll mark time."

"I think, young man," said Mr. Bunker, "that it is time you should go to
your work. Stepney is not the place for sniggerin' peacocks; they'd
better have stayed in the United States."

"I am waiting till you have found me a place, too," the young man
replied. "I too would wish to experience the grateful heart. It is
peculiar to Whitechapel."

"I was going to say," Angela went on, "that I hear you were connected
with old Mr. Messenger for many years."

"I was," Mr. Bunker replied, and straightened his back with pride. "I
was--everybody knows that I was his confidential factotum and his
familiar friend, as David was unto Jonathan."

"Indeed! I used to--to--hear about him formerly a great deal."

"Which made his final behavior the more revolting," Mr. Bunker
continued, completing his sentence.

"Really! How did he finally behave?"

"It was always--ah! for twenty years, between us, 'Bunker, my friend,'
or 'Bunker, my trusted friend,' tell me this, go there, find out that. I
bought his houses; I let his houses; I told him who were responsible
tenants; I warned him when shooting of moons seemed likely; I found out
their antecedents and told him their stories. He had hundreds of houses,
and he knew everybody that lived in them, and what their fathers were
and their mothers were, and even their grandmothers. For he was a
Whitechapel man by birth, and was proud of it."

"But--the shameful behavior?"

"All the time"--he shook his head and looked positively terrible in his
wrath--"all the time I was piling up his property for him, houses here,
streets there, he would encourage me in his way. 'Go on, Bunker,' he
would say, 'go on. A man who works for duty, like yourself, and to
please his employers, and not out of consideration for the pay, is one
of a million;' as I certainly was, Miss Kennedy. 'One of a million,' he
said; 'and you will have your reward after I am gone.' Over and over
again he said this, and of course I reckoned on it, and only wondered
how much it would tot up to. Something, I thought, in four figures; it
couldn't be less than four figures." Here he stopped and rubbed his bald
head again.

Angela caught the eyes of his nephew, who in his seat behind was
silently laughing. He had caught the situation which she herself now
readily comprehended. She pictured to herself this blatant Professor of
Disinterestedness and Zeal buzzing and fluttering about her grandfather,
and the quiet old man egging him on to more protestations.

"Four figures, for certain it would be. Once I asked his advice as to
how I should invest that reward when it did come. He laughed, miss. Yes,
for once he laughed, which I never saw him do before or after. I often
think he must be sorry now to think of that time he laughed. Yah! I'm
glad of it."

So far as Angela could make it, his joy grew out of a persuasion that
this particular fit of laughter was somehow interfering with her
grandfather's present comforts, but perhaps she was wrong.

"He laughed," continued Mr. Bunker, "and he said that house property,
in a rising neighborhood, and if it could be properly looked after, was
the best investment for money. House property, he said, as far as the
money would go."

"And when he died?" asked the listener, with another glance at Harry,
the unsympathetic, whose face expressed the keenest enjoyment.

"Nothing, if you please; not one brass farthing. Hunks! Hunks!" He grew
perfectly purple, and clutched his fist as if he would fain be punching
of heads. "Not one word of me in his will. All for the girl:
millions--millions--for her; and for me who done his work--nothing."

"You have the glow of virtue," said his nephew.

"It seems hard," said Angela quickly, for the man looked dangerous, and
seemed capable of transferring his wrath to his nephew; "it seems hard
to get nothing if anything was promised."

"It seems a pity," Harry chimed in, "that so much protesting was in
vain. Perhaps Mr. Messenger took him at his word. What a dreadful thing
to be believed!"

"A Hunks," replied Mr. Bunker; "a miserly Hunks."

"Let me write a letter for you," said Harry, "to the heiress; we might
forward it with a deputation of grateful hearts from Stepney."

"Mind your own business," growled his uncle. "Well, miss, you wanted to
hear about Mr. Messenger, and you have heard. What next?"

"I should very much like, if it were possible," Angela replied, "to see
this great brewery, of which one hears so much. Could you, for instance,
take me over, Mr. Bunker?"

"At a percentage," whispered his nephew, loud enough for both to hear.

"Messenger's brewery," he replied, "is as familiar to me as my own
fireside. I've grown up beside it. I know all the people in it. They all
know me. Perhaps they respect me. For it was well known that a handsome
legacy was promised and expected. And nothing, after all. As for taking
you over, of course I can. We will go at once. It will take time; and
time is money."

"May I go too?" asked Harry.

"No, sir; you may not. It shall not be said in the Mile End Road that an
industrious man like myself, a worker for clients, was seen in
working-time with an idler."

The walk from Stepney Green to Messenger & Marsden's Brewery is not far.
You turn to the left if your house is on one side, and to the right if
it is on the other; then you pass a little way down one street, and a
little way, turning again to the left, up another--a direction which
will guide you quite clearly. You then find yourself before a great
gateway, the portals of which are closed; beside it is a smaller door,
at which, in a little lodge, sits one who guards the entrance.

Mr. Bunker nodded to the porter and entered unchallenged. He led the way
across a court to a sort of outer office.

"Here," he said, "is the book for the visitors' names. We have them from
all countries; great lords and ladies; foreign princes; and all the
brewers from Germany and America, who come to get a wrinkle. Write your
name in it, too. Something, let me tell you, to have your name in such
noble company."

She took a pen and wrote hurriedly.

Mr. Bunker looked over her shoulder.

"Ho! ho!" he said, "that is a good one! See what you've written."

In fact, she had written her own name--Angela Marsden Messenger.

She blushed violently.

"How stupid of me! I was thinking of the heiress--they said it was her
name."

She carefully effaced the name, and wrote under it, "A. M. Kennedy."

"That's better. And now come along. A good joke, too! Fancy their
astonishment if they had come to read it!"

"Does she often come--the heiress?"

"Never once been anigh the place; never seen it; never asks after it;
never makes an inquiry about it. Draws the money and despises it."

"I wonder she has not got more curiosity."

"Ah! It's a shame for such a property to come to a girl--a girl of
twenty-one. Thirteen acres it covers--think of that! Seven hundred
people it employs, most of them married. Why, if it was only to see her
own vats, you'd think she'd got off of her luxurious pillows for once,
and come here."

They entered a great hall remarkable at first for a curious smell, not
offensive, but strong and rather pungent. In it stood half-a-dozen
enormous vats, closed by wooden slides, like shutters, fitting tightly.
A man standing by opened one of these, and presently Angela was able to
make out, through the volumes of steam, something bright going round,
and a brown mess going with it.

"That is hops. Hops for the biggest brewery, the richest, in all
England. And all belonging to a girl who, likely enough, doesn't drink
more than a pint and a half a day."

"I dare say not," said Angela; "it must be a dreadful thing indeed to
have so much beer, and to be able to drink so little."

He led the way upstairs into another great hall, where there was the
grinding of machinery and another smell, sweet and heavy.

"This is where we crush the malt," said Mr. Bunker--"see!" He stooped,
and picked out of a great box a handful of the newly-crushed malt. "I
suppose you thought it was roasted. Roasting, young lady," he added with
severity, "is for stout, not for ale!"

Then he took her to another place and showed her where the liquor stood
to ferment; how it was cooled, how it was passed from one vat to
another, how it was stored and kept in vats, dwelling perpetually on the
magnitude of the business, and the irony of fortune in conferring this
great gift upon a girl.

"I know now," she interrupted, "what the place smells like. It is fusel
oil." They were standing on a floor of open iron bars, above a row of
long covered vats, within which the liquor was working and fermenting.
Every now and then there would be a heaving of the surface, and a
quantity of the malt would then move suddenly over.

"We are famous," said Mr. Bunker; "I say _we_, having been the
confidential friend and adviser of the late Mr. Messenger, deceased; we
are famous for our Stout; also for our Mild; and we are now reviving our
Bitter, which we had partially neglected. We use the artesian well,
which is four hundred feet deep, for our Stout, but the company's water
for our ales; and our water rate is two thousand pounds a year. The
artesian well gives the ale a gray color, which people don't like. Come
into this room, now"--it was another great hall covered with sacks.
"Hops again, Miss Kennedy; now, that little lot is worth ten thousand
pounds--ten--thousand--think of that; and it is all spoiled by the rain,
and has to be thrown away. We think nothing of losing ten thousand
pounds here, nothing at all!"--he snapped his fingers--"it is a mere
trifle to the girl who sits at home and takes the profits!"

He spoke as if he felt a personal animosity to the girl. Angela told him
so.

"No wonder," he said; "she took all the legacy that ought to have been
mine: no man can forgive that. You are young, Miss Kennedy, and are only
beginning business; mark my words, one of these days you will feel how
hard it is to put a little by--work as hard as you may--while here is
this one having it put away for her, thousands a day, and doing for
it--nothing at all."

Then they went into more great halls, and up more stairs, and on to the
roof, and saw more piles of sacks, more malt, and more hops. When they
smelt the hops, it seemed as if their throats were tightened; when they
smelt the fermentation, it seemed as if they were smelling fusel oil;
when they smelt the plain crushed malt, it seemed as if they were
getting swiftly but sleepily drunk. Everywhere and always the steam
rolled backward and forward, and the grinding of the machinery went on,
and the roaring of the furnaces; and the men went about to and fro at
their work. They did not seem hard worked, nor were they pressed; their
movements were leisurely, as if beer was not a thing to hurry; they were
all rather pale of cheek, but fat and jolly, as if the beer was good and
agreed with them. Some wore brown paper caps, for it was a pretty
draughty place; some went bareheaded, some wore the little round hat in
fashion. And they went to another part, where men were rolling barrels
about, as if they had been skittles, and here they saw vats holding
three thousand barrels; and one thought of giant armies--say two hundred
and fifty thousand thirsty Germans--beginning the loot of London with
one of these royal vats. And they went through the stables, where
hundreds of horses were stalled at night, each as big as an elephant,
and much more useful.

In one great room, where there was the biggest vat of all, a man brought
them beer to taste; it was Messenger's Stout. Angela took her glass and
put it to her lips with a strange emotion--she felt as if she should
like a quiet place to sit down in and cry. The great place was hers--all
hers; and this was the beer with which her mighty fortune had been made.

"Is it," she asked, looking at the heavy foam of the frothing stout, "is
this Messenger's Entire?"

Bunker sat down and drank off his glass before replying. Then he laid
his hands upon his stick and made answer, slowly, remembering that he
was engaged at half-a-crown an hour, which is one halfpenny a minute.

"This is not Entire," he said. "You see, Miss Kennedy, there's fashions
in beer, same as in clothes; once it was all Cooper, now you never hear
of Cooper. Then was it all Half-an-arf--you never hear of any one
ordering Half-an-arf now. Then it was Stout. Nothing would go down but
Stout, which I recommend myself, and find it nourishing. Next Bitter
came in, and honest Stout was despised; now, we're all for Mild. As for
Entire, why--bless my soul!--Entire went out before I was born. Why, it
was Entire which made the fortune of the first Messenger that was--a
poor little brewery he had, more than a hundred years ago, in this very
place, because it was cheap for rent. In those days they used to brew
Strong ale, Old and Strong; Stout, same as now; and Twopenny, which was
small beer. And because the Old ale was too strong, and the Stout too
dear, and the Twopenny too weak, the people used to mix them all three
together, and they called them 'Three Threads;' and you may fancy the
trouble it was for the pot-boys to go to one cask after another, all day
long, because they had no beer engines then. Well, what did Mr.
Messenger do? He brewed a beer as strong as the Three Threads, and he
called it Messenger's Entire Three Threads, meaning that here you had
'em all in one, and that's what made his fortune; and now, young lady,
you've seen all I've got to show you, and we will go."

"I make bold, young woman," he said, as they went away, "to give you a
warning about my nephew. He's a good-looking chap, for all he's
worthless, though it's a touch-and-go style that's not my idea of good
looks. Still, no doubt some would think him handsome. Well, I warn you."

"That is very good of you, Mr. Bunker. Why do you warn me?"

"Why, anybody can see already that he's taken with your good looks.
Don't encourage him. Don't keep company with him. He's been away a good
many years--in America--and I fear he's been in bad company."

"I am sorry to hear that."

"You saw his sniggerin', sneerin' way with me, his uncle. That doesn't
look the right sort of man to take up with, I think. And as for work, he
seems not to want any. Says he can afford to wait a bit. Talks about
opening a cabinet-makin' shop. Well, he will have none of my money. I
tell him that beforehand. A young jackanapes! A painted peacock! I
believe, Miss Kennedy, that he drinks. Don't have nothing to say to him.
As for what he did in the States, and why he left the country, I don't
know; and if I were you, I wouldn't ask."

With this warning he left her, and Angela went home trying to realize
her own great possessions. Hundreds of houses; rows of streets; this
enormous brewery, working day after day for her profit and advantage;
and these invested moneys, these rows of figures which represented her
personal property. All hers! All her own! All the property of a girl!
Surely, she thought, this was a heavy burden to be laid upon one frail
back.




CHAPTER V.

THE CARES OF WEALTH.


It is, perhaps, a survival of feudal customs that in English minds a
kind of proprietorship is assumed over one's dependents, those who labor
for a man and are paid by him. It was this feeling of responsibility
which had entered into the mind of Angela, and was now firmly fixed
there. All these men, this army of seven hundred brewers, drivers,
clerks, accountants, and the rest, seemed to belong to her. Not only did
she pay them the wages and salaries which gave them their daily bread,
but they lived in her own houses among the streets which lie to the
right and to the left of the Mile End Road. The very chapels where they
worshipped, being mostly of some Nonconformist sect, stood on her own
ground--everything was hers.

The richest heiress in England! She repeated this to herself over and
over again, in order to accustom herself to the responsibilities of her
position, not to the pride of it. If she dwelt too long upon the subject
her brain reeled. What was she to do with all her money? A man--like her
grandfather--often feels joy in the mere amassing of wealth; to see it
grow is enough pleasure; other men in their old age sigh over bygone
years, which seem to have failed in labor or effort. Then men sigh over
bygone days in which more might have been saved. But girls cannot be
expected to reach these heights. Angela only weakly thought what an
immense sum of money she had, and asked herself what she could do, and
how she should spend her wealth to the best advantage.

The most pitiable circumstance attending the possession of wealth is
that no one sympathizes with the possessor. Yet his or her sufferings
are sometimes very great. They begin at school, where a boy or girl, who
is going to be very rich, feels already set apart. He loses the greatest
spur to action. It is when they grow up, however, that the real trouble
begins. For a girl with large possessions is always suspicious lest a
man should pretend to love her for the sake of her money; she has to
suspect all kinds of people who want her to give, lend, advance, or
promise them money; she is the mere butt of every society, hospital, and
institution; her table is crowded every morning with letters from
decayed gentlewomen and necessitous clergymen, and recommenders of
"cases;" she longs to do good to her generation, but does not know how;
she is expected to buy quantities of things which she does not want, and
to pay exorbitant prices for everything; she has to be a patron of art:
she is invited to supply every woman throughout the country who wants a
mangle, with that useful article; she is told that it is her duty to
build new churches over the length and breadth of the land: she is
earnestly urged to endow new Colonial bishoprics over all the surface of
the habitable globe. Then she has to live in a great house and have
troops of idle servants. And, whether she likes it or not, she has to go
a great deal in society.

All this, without the least sympathy or pity from those who ought to
feel for her, who are in the happy position of having no money. Nobody
pities an heiress; to express pity would seem like an exaggerated
affectation of virtue, the merest pedantry of superiority; it would not
be believed. Therefore, while all the world is agreed in envying her,
she is bemoaning her sad fate. Fortunately, she is rare.

As yet, Angela was only just at the commencement of her troubles. The
girls at Newnham had not spoiled her by flattery or envy; some of them
even pitied her sad burden of money; she had as yet only realized part
of the terrible isolation of wealth; she had not grown jealous, or
suspicious, or arrogant, as in advancing years often happens with the
very rich; she had not yet learned to regard the whole world as composed
entirely of money-grabbers. All she had felt hitherto was that she went
in constant danger from interested wooers, and that youth, combined with
money-bags, is an irresistible attraction to men of all ages. Now,
however, for the first time she understood the magnitude of her
possessions, and felt the real weight of her responsibilities. She saw,
for the first time, the hundreds of men working for her; she saw the
houses whose tenants paid rent to her; she visited her great brewery,
and she asked herself the question, which Dives no doubt frequently
asked--What she had done to be specially set apart and selected from
humanity as an exception to the rule of labor? Even Bunker's complaint
about the difficulty of putting by a little, and his indignation because
she herself could put by so much, seemed pathetic.

She walked about the sad and monotonous streets of East London,
reflecting upon these subjects. She did not know where she was, nor the
name of any street; in a general way she knew that most of the street
probably belonged to herself, and that it was an inexpressibly dreary
street. When she was tired she asked her way back again. No one insulted
her; no one troubled her; no one turned aside to look at her. When she
went home she sat silently, for the most part, in the common
sitting-room. The boarding-house was inexpressibly stupid except when
the sprightly young mechanic was present, and she was even angry with
herself for finding his society pleasant. What could there be, she
asked, in common between herself and this workman? Then she wondered,
remembering that so far she had found nothing in her own mind that was
not also in his. Could it be that two years of Newnham had elevated her
mentally no higher than the level of a cabinet-maker?

Her meditation brought her, in the course of a few days, to the point of
action. She would do something. She therefore wrote a letter instructing
her solicitors to get her, immediately, two reports, carefully drawn up.

First, she would have a report on the brewery, its average profits for
the last ten years, with a list of all the employees, the number of
years' service, the pay they received, and, as regards the juniors, the
characters they bore.

Next she wanted a report on her property at the East End, with a list of
her tenants, their occupations and trades, and a map showing the
position of her houses.

When she had got these reports she would be, she felt, in a position to
work upon them.

Meantime, Mr. Bunker not having yet succeeded in finding a house
suitable for her dressmaking business, she had nothing to do but to go
on walking about and to make herself acquainted with the place. Once or
twice she was joined by the idle apprentice, who, to do him justice, was
always ready to devote his unprofitable time to these excursions, which
his sprightliness enlivened.

There is a good deal to see in and about Stepney, though it can hardly
be called a beautiful suburb. Formerly it was a very big place, so big
that, though Bethnal Green was once chopped off at one end and Limehouse
at the other, not to speak of Shadwell, Wapping, Stratford, and other
great cantles, there still remains a parish as big as St. Pancras. Yet,
though it is big, it is not proud. Great men have not been born there or
lived there; there are no associations. Stepney Green has not even got
its Polly, like Paddington Green and Wapping Old Stairs; the streets are
all mean, and the people for the most part stand upon that level where
respectability--beautiful quality!--begins.

"Do you know the West End?" Angela asked her companion when they were
gazing together upon an unlovely avenue of small houses which formed a
street. She was thinking how monotonous must be the daily life in these
dreary streets.

"Yes, I know the West End. What is it you regret in your comparison?"

Angela hesitated.

"There are no carriages here," said the workman; "no footmen in powder
or coachmen in wigs; there are no ladies on horseback, no great squares
with big houses, no clubs, no opera-houses, no picture-galleries. All
the rest of life is here."

"But these things make life," said the heiress. "Without society and
art, what is life?"

"Perhaps these people find other pleasures; perhaps the monotony gets
relieved by hope and anxiety, and love, and death, and such things." The
young man forgot how the weight of this monotony had fallen upon his own
brain; he remembered, now, that his companion would probably have to
face this dreariness all her life, and he tried in a kindly spirit to
divert her mind from the thought of it. "You forget that each life is
individual, and has its own separate interests; and these are apart
from the conditions which surround it. Do you know my cousin, Tom
Coppin?"

"No: what is he?"

"He is a printer by trade. Of late years he has been engaged in setting
up atheistic publications. Of course, this occupation has had the effect
of making him an earnest Christian. Now he is a captain of the Salvation
Army."

"But I thought----"

"Don't think, Miss Kennedy; look about and see for yourself. He lives on
five-and-twenty shillings a week, in one room, in just such a street as
this. I laughed at him at first; now I laugh no longer. You can't laugh
at a man who spends his whole life preaching and singing hymns among the
Whitechapel roughs, taking as a part of the day's work all the rotten
eggs, brickbats, and kicks that come in his way. Do you think his life
would be less monotonous if he lived in Belgrave Square?"

"But all are not preachers and captains in the Salvation Army."

"No: there is my cousin Dick. We are, very properly, Tom, Dick, and
Harry. Dick is, like myself, a cabinet-maker. He is also a politician,
and you may hear him at his club denouncing the House of Lords, and the
Church, and monarchical institutions, and hereditary everything, till
you wonder the people do not rise and tear all down. They don't, you
see, because they are quite accustomed to big talk, and it never means
anything, and they are not really touched by the dreadful wickedness of
the peers."

"I should like to know your cousins."

"You shall. They don't like me, because I have been brought up in a
somewhat different school. But that does not greatly matter."

"Will they like me?" It was a very innocent question, put in perfect
innocence, and yet the young man blushed.

"Everybody," he said, "is bound to like you."

She changed color and became silent, for a while.

He went on presently.

"We are all as happy as we deserve to be, I suppose. If these people
knew what to do in order to make themselves happier, they would go and
do that thing. Meantime, there is always love for everybody, and
success, and presently the end--is not life everywhere monotonous?"

"No," she replied stoutly; "mine is not."

He was thinking at the moment that of all lives a dressmaker's must be
one of the most monotonous. She remembered that she was a dressmaker,
and explained:

"There are the changes of fashion, you see."

"Yes, but you are young," he replied, from his vantage-ground of
twenty-three years, being two years her superior. "Mine is monotonous
when I come to think of it. Only, you see, one does not think of it
oftener than one can help. Besides, as far as I have got I like the
monotony."

"Do you like work?"

"Not much, I own. Do you?"

"No."

"Yet you are going to settle down at Stepney."

"And you, too?"

"As for me, I don't know." The young man colored slightly. "I may go
away again soon and find work elsewhere."

"I was walking yesterday," she went on, "in the great, great church-yard
of Stepney Church. Do you know it?"

"Yes--that is, I have not been inside the walls. I am not fond of
church-yards."

"There they lie--acres of graves. Thousands upon thousands of dead
people, and not one of the whole host remembered. All have lived,
worked, hoped much, got a little, I suppose, and died. And the world
none the better."

"Nay, that you cannot tell."

"Not one of all remembered," she repeated. "There is an epitaph in the
church-yard which might do for every one:


     "'Here lies the body of Daniel Saul--
     Spitalfields weaver; and that is all.'


That is all."

"What more did the fellow deserve?" asked her companion. "No doubt he
was a very good weaver. Why, he has got a great posthumous reputation.
You have quoted him."

He did not quite follow her line of thought. She was thinking in some
vague way of the waste of material.

"They had very little power of raising the world, to be sure. They were
quite poor, ill-educated, and without resource."

"It seems to me," replied her companion, "that nobody has any power of
raising the world. Look at the preachers and the writers and the
teachers. By their united efforts they contrive to shore up the world
and keep it from falling lower. Every now and then down we go, flop--a
foot or two of civilization lost. Then we lose a hundred years or so
until we can get shoved up again."

"Should not rich men try to shove up, as you call it?"

"Some of them do try, I believe," he replied; "I don't know how they
succeed."

"Suppose, for instance, this young lady, this Miss Messenger, who owns
all this property, were to use it for the benefit of the people, how
would she begin, do you suppose?"

"Most likely she would bestow a quantity of money to a hospital, which
would pauperize the doctors, or she would give away quantities of
blankets, bread, and beef in the winter, which would pauperize the
people."

Angela sighed.

"That is not very encouraging."

"What you could do by yourself, if you pleased, among the working-girls
of the place, would be, I suppose, worth ten times what she could do
with all her giving. I'm not much in the charity line myself, Miss
Kennedy, but I should say, from three weeks' observation of the place
and conversation with the respectable Bunker, that Miss Messenger's
money is best kept out of the parish, which gets on very well without
it."

"Her money! Yes, I see. Yet she herself----" She paused.

"We working men and women----"

"You are not a working-man, Mr. Goslett." She faced him with her steady,
honest eyes, as if she would read the truth in his. "Whatever else you
are, you are not a working-man."

He replied without the least change of color:

"Indeed, I am the son of Sergeant Goslett, of the --th Regiment, who
fell in the Indian Mutiny. I am the nephew of good old Benjamin Bunker,
the virtuous and the disinterested. I was educated in rather a better
way than most of my class, that is all."

"Is it true that you have lived in America?"

"Quite true." He did not say how long he had lived there.

Angela, with her own guilty secret, was suspicious that perhaps this
young man might also have his.

"Men of your class," she said, "do not as a rule talk like you."

"Matter of education--that is all."

"And you are really a cabinet-maker?"

"If you will look into my room and see my lathe, I will show you
specimens of my work, O thou unbeliever! Did you think that I might have
'done something,' and so be fain to hide my head?"

It was a cruel thing to suspect him in this way, yet the thought had
crossed her mind that he might be a fugitive from the law and society,
protected for some reason by Bunker.

Harry returned to the subject of the place.

"What we want here," he said, "as it seems to me, is a little more of
the pleasure and graces of life. To begin with, we are not poor and in
misery, but for the most part fairly well off. We have great works
here--half a dozen breweries, though none so big as Messenger's;
chemical works, sugar refineries, though these are a little depressed at
present, I believe; here are all the docks; then we have silk-weavers,
rope-makers, sail-makers, match-makers, cigar-makers; we build ships; we
tackle jute, though what jute is, and what to do with it, I know not; we
cut corks; we make soap, and we make fireworks; we build boats. When all
our works are in full blast, we make quantities of money. See us on
Sundays, we are not a bad-looking lot; healthy, well-dressed, and
tolerably rosy. But we have no pleasures."

"There must be some."

"A theatre and a music-hall in Whitechapel Road. That has to serve for
two millions of people. Now, if this young heiress wanted to do any
good, she should build a Palace of Pleasure here."

"A Palace of Pleasure!" she repeated. "It sounds well. Should it be a
kind of a Crystal Palace?"

"Well!" It was quite a new idea, but he replied as if he had been
considering the subject for years. "Not quite--with modifications."

"Let us talk over your Palace of Pleasure," she said, "at another time.
It sounds well. What else should she do?"

"That is such a gigantic thing that it seems enough for one person to
attempt. However, we can find something else for her--why, take schools.
There is not a public school for the whole two millions of East London.
Not one place in which boys--to say nothing of girls, can be brought up
in generous ideas. She must establish at least half a dozen public
schools for boys and as many for girls."

"That is a very good idea. Will you write and tell her so?"

"Then there are libraries, reading-rooms, clubs, but all these would
form part of the Palace of Pleasure."

"Of course. I would rather call it a Palace of Delight. Pleasure seems
to touch a lower note. We could have music-rooms for concerts as well."

"And a school for music." The young man became animated as the scheme
unfolded itself.

"And a school for dancing."

"Miss Kennedy," he said with enthusiasm, "you _ought_ to have the
spending of all this money! And--why, you would hardly believe it--but
there is not in the whole of this parish of Stepney a single dance given
in the year. Think of that! But perhaps----" He stopped again.

"You mean that dressmakers do not, as a rule, dance? However, I do, and
so there must be a school for dancing. There must be a great college to
teach all these accomplishments."

"Happy Stepney!" cried the young man, carried out of himself. "Thrice
happy Stepney! Glorified Whitechapel! Beautiful Bow! What things await
ye in the fortunate future!"

He left her at the door of Bormalack's, and went off on some voyage of
discovery of his own.

The girl retreated to her own room. She had now hired a sitting-room all
to herself, and paid three months in advance, and sat down to think.
Then she took paper and pen and began to write.

She was writing down, while it was hot in her head, the three-fold
scheme which this remarkable young workman had put into her head.

"We women are weak creatures," she said with a sigh. "We long to be up
and doing, but we cannot carve out our work for ourselves. A man must be
with us to suggest or direct it. The College of Art--yes, we will call
it the College of Art; the Palace of Delight; the public schools. I
should think that between the three a good deal of money might be got
through. And oh! to think of converting this dismal suburb into a home
for refined and cultivated people!"

In blissful revery she saw already the mean houses turned into red brick
Queen Anne terraces and villas; the dingy streets were planted with
avenues of trees; art flourished in the house as well as out of it; life
was rendered gracious, sweet, and lovely.

And to think that this result was due to the suggestion of a common
working-man!

But then, he had lived in the States. Doubtless in the States all the
working-men---- But was that possible?




CHAPTER VI.

A FIRST STEP.


With this great programme before her, the responsibilities of wealth
were no longer so oppressive. When power can be used for beneficent
purposes, who would not be powerful? And beside the mighty shadow of
this scheme, the smaller project for which Bunker was finding a house
looked small indeed. Yet was it not small, but great, and destined
continually to grow greater?

Bunker came to see her from day to day, reporting progress. He heard of
a house here or a house there, and went to see it. But it was too large;
and of another, but it was too small; and of a third, but it was not
convenient for her purpose; and so on. Each house took up a whole day in
examination, and Bunker's bill was getting on with great freedom.

The delay, however, gave Angela time to work out her new ideas on paper.
She invoked the assistance of her friend the cabinet-maker with ideas;
and, under the guise of amusing themselves, they drew up a long and
business-like prospectus of the proposed new institutions. First, there
were the High Schools, of which she would found six--three for boys and
three for girls. The great feature of these schools was to be that they
should give a liberal education for a very small fee, and that in their
play-grounds, their discipline, and, as far as possible, their hours,
they were to resemble the great public schools.

"They must be endowed for their masters' and mistresses' salaries, and
with scholarships; and--and--I think the boys and girls ought to have
dinner in the school, so as not to go home all day; and--and--there will
be many things to provide for each school."

She looked as earnest over this amusement, Harry said, as if she were
herself in possession of the fortune which they were thus administering.
They agreed that when the schools were built, an endowment of £70,000
each, which would yield £2,000 a year, ought to be enough, with the
school fees, to provide for the education of five hundred in each
school. Then they proceeded with the splendid plan of the new college.
It was agreed that learning, properly so called, should be entirely kept
out of the programme. No political economy, said the Newnham student,
should be taught there. Nor any of the usual things--Latin, Greek,
mathematics, and so forth--said the young man from the United States.
What, then, remained?

Everything. The difficulty in making such a selection of studies is to
know what to omit.

"We are to have," said Harry, now almost as enthusiastic as Angela
herself, "a thing never before attempted. We are to have a College of
Art. What a grand idea! It was yours, Miss Kennedy."

"No," she replied, "it was yours. If it comes to anything, we shall
always remember that it was yours."

An amiable contest was finished by their recollecting that it was only a
play, and they laughed and went on, half ashamed, and yet both full of
enthusiasm.

"The College of Art!" he repeated; "why, there are a hundred kinds of
art; let us include accomplishments."

They would; they did.

They finally resolved that there should be professors, lecturers, or
teachers, with convenient class-rooms, theatres and lecture-halls in the
following accomplishments and graces: Dancing, but there must be the old
as well as the new kinds of dancing. The waltz was not to exclude the
minuet, the reel, the country dance, or the old square dances; the
pupils would also have such dances as the _bolero_ and the _tarantella_,
and other national jumperies. Singing, which was to be a great feature,
as anybody could sing, said Angela, if they were taught. "Except my
Uncle Bunker!" said Harry. Then there were to be musical instruments of
all kinds. Skating, bicycling, lawn tennis, racquets, fives, and all
kinds of games; rowing, billiards, archery, rifle-shooting. Then there
was to be acting, with reading and recitation; there were to be classes
on gardening, on cookery, and on the laws of beauty in costume.

"The East End shall be independent of the rest of the world in fashion,"
said Angela; "we will dress according to the rules of Art!"

"You shall," cried Harry, "and your own girls shall be the new
dressmakers to the whole of glorified Stepney."

Then there were to be lectures, not in literature, but in
letter-writing, especially in love-letter writing, versifying,
novel-writing, and essay-writing; that is to say, on the more delightful
forms of literature--so that poets and novelists should arise, and the
East End, hitherto a barren desert, should blossom with flowers. Then
there was to be a Professor of Grace, because a graceful carriage of the
body is so generally neglected; and Harry, who had a slim figure and
long legs, began to indicate how the professor would probably carry
himself. Next there were to be Professors of Painting, Drawing,
Sculpture and Design; and lectures on Furniture, Color, and
Architecture. The arts of photography, china painting, and so forth were
to be cultivated; and there were to be classes for the encouragement of
leather-work, crewel-work, fret-work, brass-work, wood and ivory
carving, and so forth.

"There shall be no house in the East End," cried the girl, "that shall
not have its panels painted by one member of the family; its woodwork
carved by another, its furniture designed by a third, its windows
planted with flowers by another."

Her eyes glowed, her lips trembled.

"You _ought_ to have had the millions," said Harry.

"Nay, you, for you devised it all," she replied. She was so glowing, so
rosy red, so soft and sweet to look upon; her eyes were so full of
possible love--though of love she was not thinking--that almost the
young man fell upon his knees to worship this Venus.

"And all these beautiful things," she went on, breathless, "are only
designed for the sake of the Palace of Delight.

"It shall stand somewhere near the central place, this Stepney Green, so
that all the East can get to it. It shall have many halls," she went on.
"One of them shall be for concerts, and there shall be an organ; one of
them shall be for a theatre, and there will be a stage and everything;
one shall be a dancing-hall, one a skating rink, one a hall for
lectures, readings and recitations; one a picture gallery, one a
permanent exhibition of our small arts. We will have our concerts
performed from our School of Music; our plays shall be played by our
amateurs taught at our School of Acting; our exhibitions shall be
supplied by our own people; the things will be sold, and they will soon
be sold off and replaced, because they will be cheap. Oh! oh! oh!" She
clasped her hands, and fell back in her chair, overpowered with the
thought.

"It will cost much money," said Harry weakly, as if money was any
object--in dreams.

"The college must be endowed with £30,000 a year, which is a million of
money," Angela replied, making a little calculation. "That money must be
found. As for the palace, it will require nothing but the building, and
a small annual income to pay for repairs and servants. It will be
governed by a board of directors, elected by the people themselves, to
whom the Palace will belong. And no one shall pay or be paid for any
performance. And the only condition of admission will be good behavior,
with exclusion as a penalty."

The thing which she contemplated was a deed the like of which makes to
tingle the ears of those who hear it. To few, indeed, is it given to
communicate to a whole nation this strange and not unpleasant sensation.

One need not disguise the fact that the possession of this power, and
the knowledge of her own benevolent intentions, gave Angela a better
opinion of herself than she had ever known before. Herein, my friends,
lies, if you will rightly regard it, the true reason of the feminine
love for power illustrated by Chaucer. For the few who have from time to
time wielded authority have ever been persuaded that they wielded it
wisely, benevolently, religiously, and have of course congratulated
themselves on the possession of so much virtue. What mischiefs, thought
Elizabeth of England, Catharine of Russia, Semiramis of Babylon, and
Angela of Whitechapel, might have followed had a less wise and virtuous
person been on the throne!

It was not unnatural, considering how much she was with Harry at this
time, and how long were their talks with each other, that she should
have him a great deal in her mind. For these ideas were certainly his,
not hers. Newnham, she reflected humbled, had not taught her to
originate. She knew that he was but a cabinet-maker by trade. Yet, when
she involuntarily compared him, his talk, his manners, his bearing, with
the men whom she had met, the young Dons and the undergraduates of
Cambridge, the clever young fellows in society who were reported to
write for the _Saturday_, and the Berties and the Algies of daily life,
she owned to herself that in no single point did this cabinet-maker
fellow compare unfavorably with any of them. He seemed as well taught as
the last-made Fellow of Trinity who came to lecture on Literature and
Poetry at Newnham; as cultivated as the mediæval Fellow who took
Philosophy and Psychology, and was supposed to entertain ideas on
religion so original as to amount to a Fifth Gospel: as quick as the
most thorough-going society man who has access to studios, literary
circles, musical people, and æsthetes; and as careless as any Bertie or
Algie of the whole set. This it was which made her blush, because if he
had been a common man, a mere Bunker, he might, with his knowledge of
his class, have proved so useful a servant to her; so admirable a
vizier. Now, unfortunately, she felt that she could only make him useful
in this way after she had confided in him; and that to confide in him
might raise dangerous thoughts in the young man's head. No: she must not
confide in him.

It shows what a thoughtful young person Angela was, that she would blush
all by herself only to think of danger to Harry Goslett.

She passed all that night and the whole of the next day and night in a
dream over the Palace of Delight and the college for educating people in
the sweet and pleasant things--the College of Art.

On the next morning a cold chill fell upon her, caused I know not how;
not by the weather, which was the bright and hot weather of last July;
not by any ailment of her own, because Angela owned the most perfect
mechanism ever constructed by Nature; nor by any unpleasantness in the
house, because, now that she had her own room, she generally breakfasted
alone; nor by anything in the daily papers--which frequently, by their
evil telegrams and terrifying forebodings, do poison the spring and the
fountain-head of the day; nor by any letter, because the only one she
had was from Constance Woodcote at Newnham, and it told the welcome news
that she was appointed Mathematical Lecturer with so much a head for
fees, and imploring Angela to remember her promise that she would endow
Newnham with a scholarship. Endow Newnham! Why, she was going to have a
brand-new college of her own, to say nothing of the high schools for
boys and girls. Perhaps the cause of her depression was the appearance
of Bunker, who came to tell her that he had at last found the house
which would suit her. No other house in the neighborhood was in any way
to compare with it; the house stood close by, at the southwest corner
of Stepney Green. It was ready for occupation, the situation was as
desirable as that of Tirzah the Beautiful; the rent was extremely low,
considering the many advantages; all the nobility and gentry of the
place, he declared, would flock around a dressmaker situated in Stepney
Green itself; there were rooms for show-rooms, with plenty of other
rooms and everything which would be required; finally, as if this were
an additional recommendation, the house _belonged to himself_.

"I am ready," he said, with a winning smile, "to make a sacrifice of my
own interests in order to oblige a young lady, and I will take a lower
rent from you than I would from anybody else."

She went with him to "view" the house. One looks at a picture, a horse,
an estate, a book, but one "views" a house. Subtle and beautiful
distinction, which shows the poetry latent in the heart of every house
agent! It was Bunker's own. Surely that was not the reason why it was
let at double the rent of the next house, which belonged to Angela
herself, nor why the tenant had to undertake all the repairs, paper, and
painting, external and internal, nor why the rent began from that very
day, instead of the half-quarter or the next quarter-day. Bunker himself
assured Miss Kennedy that he had searched the whole neighborhood for a
suitable place, but could find none so good as his own house. As for the
houses of the Messenger property, they were liable, he said, to the
demands of a lawyer's firm, which had no mercy on a tenant, while, as
for himself, he was full of compassion, and always ready to listen to
reason. He wanted no other recommendation than a year's rent paid in
advance, and would undertake to execute, at the tenant's cost, the whole
of the painting, papering, whitewashing, roofing, pipes, chimneys, and
general work himself; "whereas, young lady," he added, "if you had taken
one of those Messenger houses, you cannot tell in what hands you would
have found yourself, nor what charges you would have had to pay."

He shook his fat head, and rattled his keys in his pocket. So strong is
the tendency of the human mind to believe what is said, in spite of all
experience to the contrary, that his victim smiled and thanked him,
knowing very well that the next minute she would be angry with herself
for so easily becoming a dupe to a clumsy rogue.

She thanked him for his consideration, she said, yet she was uneasily
conscious that he was overreaching her in some way, and she hesitated.

"On the Green," he said. "What a position! Looking out on the garden!
With such rooms! And so cheap!"

"I don't know," she replied; "I must consult some one."

"As to that," he said, "there may be another tenant; I can't keep offers
open. Take it, miss, or leave it. There!"

While she still hesitated, he added one more recommendation.

"An old house it is, but solid, and will stand forever. Why, old Mr.
Messenger was born here."

"Was he?" she cried, "was my--was Mr. Messenger actually born here?"

She hesitated no longer. She took the house at his own price; she
accepted his terms, extortionate and grasping as they were.

When the bargain was completed--when she had promised to sign the
agreement for a twelvemonth, pay a year in advance, and appoint the
disinterested one her executor of repairs, she returned to Bormalack's.
In the doorway, a cigarette in his mouth, lounged the idle apprentice.

"I saw you," he said, "with the benevolent Bunker. You have fallen a
prey to my uncle?"

"I have taken a house from him."

"The two phrases are convertible. Those who take his houses are his
victims. I hope no great mischief is done."

"Not much, I think."

The young man threw away his cigarette.

"Seriously, Miss Kennedy," he said, "my good uncle will possess himself
of all the money he can get out of you. Have a care."

"He can do me no harm, thank you all the same. I wanted a house soon,
and he has found me one. What does it matter if I pay a little more than
I ought?"

"What does it matter?" Harry was not versed in details of trade, but he
knew enough to feel that this kind of talk was unpractical. "What does
it matter? My dear young lady, if you go into business, you must look
after the sixpences."

Miss Kennedy looked embarrassed. She had betrayed herself, she thought.
"I know--I know. But he talked me over."

"I _have_ heard," said the practical man, looking profoundly wise, "that
he who would save money must even consider that there is a difference
between a guinea and a sovereign; and that he shouldn't pay a cabman
more than twice his fare, and that it is wrong to pay half-a-guinea for
Heidsieck Monopole when he can get Pommery and Greno at
seven-and-sixpence."

Then he, too, paused abruptly, because he felt as if he had betrayed
himself. What have cabinet-makers to do with Pommery and Greno?
Fortunately, Angela did not hear the latter part of the speech. She was
reflecting on the ease with which a crafty man--say Bunker--may compass
his ends with the simple--say herself.

"I do not pretend," he said, "to know all the ropes, but I should not
have allowed you to be taken in quite so readily by this good uncle. Do
you know----" His eyes, when they were serious, which was not often,
were really good. Angela perceived they were serious now: "Do you know
that the name of the uncle who was indirectly, so to speak, connected
with the Robin Redbreasts was originally Bunker? He changed it after the
children were dead, and he came into the property."

"I wish you had been with me," she said simply. "But I suppose I must
take my chance, as other girls do."

"Most other girls have got men to advise them. Have you no one?"

"I might have"--she was thinking of her lawyers, who were paid to advise
her if required. "But I will find out things for myself."

"And at what a price! Are your pockets lined with gold, Miss Kennedy?"
They certainly were, but he did not know it.

"I will try to be careful. Thank you."

"As regards going with you, I am always at your command. I will be your
servant, if you will accept me as such."

This was going a step further than seemed altogether safe. Angela was
hardly prepared to receive a cabinet-maker, however polite and refined
he might seem, as a lover.

"I believe," she said, "that in our class of life it is customary for
young people to 'keep company,' is it not?"

"It is not uncommon," he replied, with much earnestness. "The custom has
even been imitated by the higher classes."

"What I mean is this, that I am not going to keep company with any one;
but, if you please to help me, if I ask your advice, I shall be
grateful."

"Your gratitude," he said with a smile, "ought to make any man happy!"

"Your compliments," she retorted, "will certainly kill my gratitude; and
now, Mr. Goslett, don't you really think that you should try to do some
work? Is it right to lounge away the days among the streets? Are _your_
pockets, I may ask, lined with gold?"

"I am looking for work. I am hunting everywhere for work. My uncle is
going to find me a workshop. Then I shall request the patronage of the
nobility and gentry of Stepney, Whitechapel, and the Mile End Road. H.
G. respectfully solicits a trial." He laughed as if there could be no
doubt at all about the future, and as if a few years of looking around
were of no importance. Then he bowed to Angela in the character of the
Complete Cabinet-maker. "Orders, madame, orders executed with neatness
and despatch. The highest price given for second-hand furniture."

She had got her house, however, though she was going to pay far too much
for it. That was a great thing, and, as the more important schemes could
not be all commenced at a moment's notice, she would begin with the
lesser--her dressmaker's shop.

Here Mr. Goslett could not help her. She applied, therefore, again to
Mr. Bunker, who had a registry office for situations wanted. "My terms,"
he said, "are five shillings on application and five shillings for each
person engaged."

He did not say that he took half a crown from each person who wanted a
place and five shillings on her getting the place. His ways were ways of
pleasantness, and on principle he never spoke of things which might
cause unpleasant remarks. Besides, no one knew the trouble he had to
take in suiting people.

"I knew," he said, "that you would come back to me. People will only
find out my worth when I am gone."

"I hope you will be worth a great deal, Mr. Bunker," said Angela.

"Pretty well, young lady. Pretty well. Ah! my nephews will be the
gainers. But not what I might have been if it had not been for the
meanness, the--the--Hunxiness of that wicked old man."

"Do you think you can find me what I want, Mr. Bunker?"

"_Can_ I?" He turned over the leaves of a great book. "Look at this long
list; all ready to better themselves. Apprentices anxious to get through
their articles, and improvers to be dressmakers, and dressmakers to be
forewomen, and forewomen to be mistresses. That is the way of the world,
young lady. Sweet contentment, where art thou?" The pastoral simplicity
of his words and attitude were inexpressibly comic.

"And how are you going to begin, Miss Kennedy?"

"Quietly at first."

"Then you'll want a matter of one or two dressmakers, and half a dozen
improvers. The apprentices will come later."

"What are the general wages in this part of London?"

"The dressmakers get sixteen shillings a week; the improvers six. They
bring their own dinners, and you give them their tea. But, of course,
you know all that."

"Of course," said Angela, making a note of the fact, notwithstanding.

"As for one of your dressmakers, I can recommend you Rebekah Hermitage,
daughter of the Rev. Percival Hermitage. She cannot get a situation,
because of her father's religious opinions."

"That seems strange. What are they?"

"Why, he's minister of the Seventh-Day Independents. They've got a
chapel in Redman's Row; they have their services on Saturday because,
they say--and it seems true--that the Fourth Commandment has never been
abolished any more than the rest of them. I wonder the bishops don't
take it up. Well, there it is. On Saturdays she won't work, and on
Sundays she don't like to, because the other people don't."

"Has she any religious objection," asked Angela, "to working on Monday
and Tuesday?"

"No; and I'll send her over, Miss Kennedy, this evening, if you will see
her. You'll get her cheap, because no one else will have her. Very good.
Then there is Nelly Sorensen. I know she would like to go out, but her
father is particular. Not that he's any right to be, being a pauper. If
a man like me or the late Mr. Messenger, my friend, chooses to be
particular, it's nothing but right. As for Captain Sorensen--why, it's
the pride after the fall, instead of before it. Which makes it, to a
substantial man, sickenin'."

"Who is Captain Sorensen?"

"He lives in the asylum along the Whitechapel Road, only ten minutes or
so from here. Nelly Sorensen is as clever a work-woman as you will get.
If I were you, Miss Kennedy, I would go and find her at home. Then you
can see her work and talk to her. As for her father, keep him in his
right place. Pride in an almshouse! Why, you'd hardly believe it; but I
wanted to put his girl in a shop where they employ fifty hands, and he
wouldn't have it, because he didn't like the character of the
proprietor. Said he was a grinder and an oppressor. My answer to such
is, and always will be, 'Take it or leave it.' If they won't take it,
there's heaps that must. As old Mr. Messenger used to say, 'Bunker, my
friend,' or 'Bunker, my only friend,' sometimes, 'Your remarks is true
wisdom.' Yes, Miss Kennedy, I will go with you to show you the way." He
looked at his watch. "Half-past four. I dare say it will take half an
hour there and back, which with the last quarter of an hour's talk, we
shall charge as an hour's time, which is half a crown. Thank you. An
hour," he added, with great feeling; "an hour, like a pint of beer,
cannot be divided. And on these easy terms, Miss Kennedy, you will find
me always ready to work for you from sunrise to sunset, thinking of
your interests, even at meals, so as not to split an hour or waste it,
and to save trouble in reckoning up."




CHAPTER VII.

THE TRINITY ALMSHOUSE.


From Stepney Green to the Trinity Almshouse is not a long way; you have,
in fact, little more than to pass through a short street and to cross
the road. But the road itself is noteworthy; for, of all the roads which
lead into London or out of it, this of Whitechapel is the broadest and
the noblest by nature. Man, it is true, has done little to embellish it.
There are no avenues of green and spreading lime and plane trees, as,
one day, there shall be; there are no stately buildings, towers, spires,
miracles of architecture--but only houses and shops, which, whether
small or big, are all alike mean, unlovely, and depressing. Yet, in
spite of all, a noble road.

This road, which is the promenade, breathing-place, place of resort,
place of gossip, place of amusement, and place of business for the
greater part of East London, stretches all the way from Aldgate to
Stratford, being called first Whitechapel Road, and then the Mile End
Road, and then the Stratford Road. Under the first name the road has
acquired a reputation of the class called, by moralists, unenviable. The
history of police courts records, under the general heading of
Whitechapel Road, shows so many free fights, brave robberies, gallant
murders, dauntless kickings, cudgellings, pummellings, pocket-pickings,
shop-liftings, watch-snatchings, and assaults on constables, with such a
brave display of disorderly drunks, that the road has come to be
regarded with admiration as one of those Alsatian retreats, growing
every day rarer, which are beyond and above the law. It is thought to be
a place where manhood and personal bravery reign supreme. Yet the road
is not worthy this reputation; it has of late years become orderly; its
present condition is dull and law-abiding, brilliant as the past has
been, and whatever greatness may be in store for the future. Once out
of Whitechapel, and within the respectable regions of Mile End, the road
has always been eminently respectable; and as regards dangers, quite
safe, ever since they built the bridge over the river Lea, which used
now and again to have freshets, and at such times tried to drown
harmless people in its ford. Since that bridge was built, in the time of
Edward I., it matters not for the freshets. There is not much in the Bow
Road when the stranger gets there, in his journey along this great
thoroughfare, for him to visit, except its almshouses, which are many;
and the beautiful old church of Bow, standing in the middle of the road,
crumbling slowly away in the East End fog, with its narrow strips of
crowded church-yard. One hopes that before it has quite crumbled away
some one will go and make a picture of it--an etching would be the best.
At Stratford the road divides, so that you may turn to the right and get
to Barking, or to the left and get to Epping Forest. And all the way,
for four miles, a broad and noble road, which must have been carved
originally out of No Man's Land, in so generous a spirit is it laid out.
Angela is now planting it with trees; beneath the trees she will set
seats for those who wish to rest. Here and there she will erect
drinking-fountains. Whitechapel Road, since her improvements begun, has
been transformed; even the bacon shops are beginning to look a little
less rusty; and the grocers are trying to live up to the green avenues.

Angela's imagination was fired by this road from the very first, when
the idle apprentice took her into it as into a new and strange country.
Here, for the first times she realized the meaning of the universal
curse, from which only herself and a few others are unnaturally
exempted; and this only under heavy penalties and the necessity of
finding out their own work for themselves, or it will be the worse for
them. People think it better to choose their own work. That is a great
mistake. You might just as well want to choose your own disease. In the
West End, a good many folk do work--and work pretty hard, some of
them--who need not, unless they please; and a good many others work who
must, whether they please or no: but somehow the forced labor is pushed
into the background. We do not perceive its presence: people drive about
in carriages, as if there were nothing to do; people lounge; people have
leisure; people do not look pressed or in a hurry, or task-mastered, or
told to make bricks without straw.

Here, in the East End, on the other hand, there are no strollers. All
day long the place is full of passengers, hasting to and fro, pushing
each other aside, with set and anxious faces, each driven by the
invisible scourge of necessity which makes slaves of all mankind. Do you
know that famous picture of the Israelites in Egypt? Upon the great
block of stone, which the poor wretches are painfully dragging, while
the cruel lash goads the weak and terrifies the strong, there sits one
in authority. He regards the herd of slaves with eyes terrible from
their stony gaze. What is it to him whether the feeble suffer and
perish, so that the Pharaoh's will be done? The people of the East
reminded Angela, who was an on-looker, and had no work to do, of these
builders of pyramids: they worked under a taskmaster as relentless as
that stony-hearted captain or foreman of works. If the Israelites
desisted, they were flogged back to work with cats of many tails; if our
workmen desist, they are flogged back by starvation.

"Let us hope," said Harry, to whom Angela imparted a portion of the
above reflection and comparison--"let us hope the Pharaoh himself means
well and is pitiful." He spoke without his usual flippancy, so that
perhaps his remark had some meaning for himself.

All day long and all the year round there is a constant fair going on in
Whitechapel Road. It is held upon the broad pavement, which was
benevolently intended, no doubt, for this purpose. Here are displayed
all kinds of things: bits of second-hand furniture, such as the head of
a wooden bed, whose griminess is perhaps exaggerated, in order that a
purchaser may expect something extraordinarily cheap. Here are lids of
pots and saucepans laid out, to show that in the warehouse, of which
these things are specimens, will be found the principal parts of the
utensils for sale; here are unexpected things, such as rows of skates,
sold cheap in summer; light clothing in winter; workmen's tools of
every kind, including, perhaps, the burglarious jimmy; second-hand
books--a miscellaneous collection, establishing the fact that the
readers of books in Whitechapel--a feeble and scanty folk--read nothing
at all except sermons and meditations among the tombs; second-hand boots
and shoes; cutlery; hats and caps; rat-traps and mouse-traps and
bird-cages; flowers and seeds; skittles; and frames for photographs.
Cheap-jacks have their carts beside the pavement, and with strident
voice proclaim the goodness of their wares, which include in this
district bloaters and dried haddocks, as well as crockery. And one is
amazed, seeing how the open-air fair goes on, why the shops are kept
open at all.

And always the same. It saddens one, I know not why, to sit beside a
river and see the water flowing down with never a pause. It saddens one
still more to watch the current of human life in this great thoroughfare
and feel that, as it is now, so it was a generation ago, and so it will
be a generation hence. The bees in the hive die, and are replaced by
others exactly like them, and the honey-making goes on merrily still.
So, in a great street, the wagons always go up and down; the passengers
never cease; the shopboy is always behind the counter; the work-girl is
always sewing; the workman is always carrying his tools as he goes to
his work; there are always those who stay for half a pint, and always
those who hurry on. In this endless drama, which repeats itself like a
musical box, the _jeune premier_ of to-day becomes to-morrow the lean
and slippered pantaloon. The day after to-morrow he will have
disappeared, gone to join the silent ones in the grim, unlovely cemetery
belonging to the Tower Hamlets, which lies beyond Stepney, and is the
reason why on Sundays the "frequent funeral blackens all the road.

"One can moralize," said Harry one day, after they had been exchanging
sentiments of enjoyable sadness, "at this rate forever. But it has all
been done before."

"Everything, I suppose," replied Angela, "has been done before. If it
has not been done by me, it is new--to me. It does not make it any
better for a man who has to work all the days of his life, and gets no
enjoyment out of it, and lives ignobly and dies obscurely, that the
same thing happens to most people."

"We cannot help ourselves." This time it was the cabinet-maker who spoke
to the dressmaker. "We belong to the crowd, and we must live with the
crowd. You can't make much glory out of a mercenary lathe nor out of a
dressmaker's shop, can you, Miss Kennedy?"

It was by such reminders, one to the other, that conversations of the
most delightful kind, full of speculations and comparisons, were
generally brought up short. When Angela remembered that she was talking
to an artisan, she froze. When Harry reflected that it was a dressmaker
to whom he was communicating bits of his inner soul, he checked himself.
When, which happened every day, they forgot their disguises for a while,
they talked quite freely, and very prettily communicated all sorts of
thoughts, fancies, and opinions to each other; insomuch that once or
twice a disagreeable feeling would cross the girl's mind that they were
perhaps getting too near the line at which "keeping company" begins; but
he was a young workman of good taste, and he never presumed.

She was walking beside her guide, Mr. Bunker, and pondering over these
things as she gazed down the broad road, and recollected the talk she
had held in it; and now her heart was warm within her, because of the
things she thought and had tried to say.

"Here we are, miss," said Mr. Bunker, stopping. "Here's the Trinity
Almshouse."

She awoke from her dream. It is very odd to consider the strange
thoughts which flash upon one in walking. Angela suddenly discovered
that Mr. Bunker possessed a remarkable resemblance to a bear. His walk
was something like one, with a swing of the shoulders, and his hands
were big and his expression was hungry. Yes, he was exactly like a bear.

She observed that she was standing at a wicket-gate, and that over the
gate was the effigy of a ship in full sail done in stone. Mr. Bunker
opened the door, and led the way to the court within.

Then a great stillness fell upon the girl's spirit.

Outside the wagons, carts, and omnibuses thundered and rolled. You could
hear them plainly enough; you could hear the tramp of a thousand feet.
But the noise outside was only a contrast to the quiet within. A wall of
brick with iron railings separated the tumult from the calm. It seemed
as if, within that court, there was no noise at all, so sharp and sudden
was the contrast.

She stood in an oblong court, separated from the road by the wall above
named. On either hand was a row of small houses containing, apparently,
four rooms each. They were built of red brick, and were bright and
clean. Every house had an iron tank in front for water; there was a
pavement of flags along this row, and a grass lawn occupied the middle
of the court. Upon the grass stood the statue of a benefactor, and at
the end of the court was a chapel. It was a very little chapel, but was
approached by a most enormous and disproportionate flight of stone
steps, which might have been originally cut for a portal of St. Paul's
Cathedral. The steps were surmounted by a great doorway, which occupied
the whole west front of the chapel. No one was moving about the place
except an old lady, who was drawing water from her tank.

"Pretty place, ain't it?" asked Mr. Bunker.

"It seems peaceful and quiet," said the girl.

"Place where you'd expect pride, ain't it?" he went on scornfully. "Oh
yes! Paupers and pride go together, as is well known. Lowliness is for
them who've got a bank and money in it. Oh, yes, of course. Gar! The
pride of an inmate!"

He led the way, making a most impertinent echo with the heels of his
boots. Angela observed, immediately, that there was another court beyond
the first. In fact, it was larger: the houses were of stone, and of
greater size; and it was if anything more solemnly quiet. It was
possessed of silence.

Here there is another statue erected to the memory of the founder, who,
it is stated on the pedestal, died, being then "Comander of a Shipp" in
the East Indies, in the year 1686. The gallant captain is represented in
the costume of the period. He wears a coat of many buttons, large cuffs,
and full skirts; the coat is buttoned a good way below the waist,
showing the fair doublet within, also provided with many buttons. He
wears shoes with buckles, has a soft silk wrapper round his neck, and a
sash to carry his sword. On his head there is an enormous wig, well
adapted to serve the purpose for which solar toupées were afterward
invented. In his right hand he carries a sextant, many sizes bigger than
those in modern use, and at his feet dolphins sport. A grass lawn covers
this court, as well as the other, and no voice or sound ever comes from
any of the houses, whose occupants might well be all dead.

Mr. Bunker turned to the right, and presently rapped with his knuckles
at a door. Then, without waiting for a reply, he turned the handle, and
with a nod invited his companion to follow him.

It was a small but well-proportioned room with low ceiling, furnished
sufficiently. There were clean white curtains with rose-colored ribbons.
The window was open, and in it stood a pot of mignonette, now at its
best. At the window sat, on one side, an old gentleman with silvery
white hair and spectacles, who was reading, and on the other side a girl
with work on her lap, sewing.

"Now, Cap'n Sorensen," said Mr. Bunker, without the formality of
greeting, "I've got you another chance. Take it or leave it, since you
can afford to be particular. I can't; I'm not rich enough. Ha!" He
snorted and looked about him with the contempt which a man who has a
banker naturally feels for one who hasn't, and lives in an almshouse.

"What is the chance?" asked the inmate meekly, looking up. When he saw
Angela in the doorway he rose and bowed, offering her a chair. Angela
observed that he was a very tall old man, and that he had blue eyes and
a rosy face--quite a young face it looked--and was gentle of speech and
courteous in demeanor.

"Is the chance connected with this young lady, Mr. Bunker?"

"It is," said the great man. "Miss Kennedy, this is the young woman I
told you of. This young lady"--he indicated Angela--"is setting herself
up, in a genteel way, in the dressmaking line. She's taken one of my
houses on the Green, and she wants hands to begin with. She comes here,
Cap'n Sorensen, on my recommendation."

"We are obliged to you, Mr. Bunker."

The girl was standing, her work in her hands, looking at Angela, and a
little terrified by the sight of so grand a person. The dressmakers of
her experience were not young and beautiful; mostly they were pinched
with years, troubles, and anxieties. When Angela began to notice her,
she saw that the young work-girl, who seemed about nineteen years of
age, was tall, rather too thin, and pretty. She did not look strong, but
her cheeks were flushed with a delicate bloom; her eyes, like her
father's, were blue; her hair was light and feathery, though she brushed
it as straight as it would go. She was dressed, like most girls of her
class, in a frock of sober black.

Angela took her by the hand. "I am sure," she said kindly, "that we
shall be friends."

"Friends!" cried Mr. Bunker, aghast. "Why, she's to be one of your
girls! You _can't_ be friends with your own girls."

"Perhaps," said the girl, blushing and abashed, "you would like to see
some of my work." She spread out her work on the table.

"Fine weather here, cap'n," Mr. Bunker went on, striking an attitude of
patronage, as if the sun was good indeed to shine on an almshouse. "Fine
weather should make grateful hearts, especially in them as is provided
for--having been improvident in their youth--with comfortable roofs to
shelter them."

"Grateful hearts, indeed, Mr. Bunker," said the captain quietly.

"Mr. Bunker"--Angela turned upon him with an air of command, and pointed
to the door--"you may go now. You have done all I wanted."

Mr. Bunker turned very red. "He could go!" Was he to be ordered about by
every little dressmaker? "He could go!"

"If the lady engages my daughter, Mr. Bunker," said Captain Sorensen, "I
will try to find the five shillings next week."

"Five shillings!" cried Angela. "Why, I have just given him five
shillings for his recommendation."

Mr. Bunker did not explain that his practice was to get five shillings
from both sides, but he retreated with as much dignity as could be
expected.

He asked, outside, with shame, how it was that he allowed himself thus
to be sat upon and ordered out of the house by a mere girl. Why had he
not stood upon his dignity? To be told he might go, and before an
inmate--a common pauper!

There is one consolation always open, thank Heaven, for the meanest
among us poor worms of earth. We are gifted with imaginations; we can
make the impossible an actual fact, and can with the eye of the mind
make the unreal stand before us in the flesh. Therefore, when we are
down-trodden, we may proceed, without the trouble and danger of turning
(which has been known to bring total extinction upon a worm), to take
revenge upon our enemy in imagination. Mr. Bunker, who was at this
moment uncertain whether he hated Miss Kennedy more than he hated his
nephew, went home glowing with the thought that but a few short months
would elapse before he should be able to set his foot upon the former
and crush her. Because, at the rate she was going on, she would not last
more than that time. Then would he send in his bills, sue her, sell her
up, and drive her out of the place stripped of the last farthing. "He
might go!" He, Bunker, was told that he might go! And in the presence of
an inmate. Then he thought of his nephew, and while he smote the
pavement with the iron end of his umbrella, a cold dew appeared upon his
nose, the place where inward agitation is frequently betrayed in this
way, and he shivered, looking about him suddenly as if he was
frightened. Yet what harm was Harry Goslett likely to do him?

"What is your name, my dear?" asked Angela softly, and without any
inspection of the work on the table. She was wondering how this pretty,
fragile flower should be found in Whitechapel. O ignorance of Newnham!
For she might have reflected that the rarest and most beautiful plants
are found in the most savage places--there is beautiful botanizing, one
is told, in the Ural Mountains; and that the sun shines everywhere,
even, as Mr. Bunker remarked, in an almshouse; and that she herself had
gathered in the ugliest ditches round Cambridge the sweetest flowering
mosses, the tenderest campion, the lowliest little herb-robert.

"My name is Ellen," replied the girl.

"I call her Nelly," her father answered, "and she is a good girl. Will
you sit down, Miss Kennedy?"

Angela sat down and proceeded to business. She said, addressing the old
man, but looking at the child, that she was setting up a dressmaker's
shop; that she had hopes of support, even from the West End, where she
had friends; that she was prepared to pay the proper wages, with certain
other advantages, of which more would be said later on; and that, if
Captain Sorensen approved, she would engage his daughter from that day.

"I have only been out as an improver as yet," said Nelly. "But if you
will really try me as a dressmaker--O father, it is sixteen shillings a
week!"

Angela's heart smote her. A poor sixteen shillings a week! And this girl
was delighted at the chance of getting so much.

"What do you say, Captain Sorensen? Do you want references, as Mr.
Bunker did? I am the granddaughter of a man who was born here and
made--a little--money here, which he left to me. Will you let her come
to me?"

"You are the first person," said Captain Sorensen, "who ever, in this
place, where work is not so plentiful as hands, offered work as if
taking it was a favor to you."

"I want good girls--and nice girls," said Angela. "I want a house where
we shall all be friends."

The old sailor shook his head.

"There is no such house here," he said sadly. "It is 'take it or leave
it'--if you won't take it, others will. Make the poor girls your
friends, Miss Kennedy? You look and talk like a lady born and bred, and
I fear you will be put upon. Make friends of your servants? Why, Mr.
Bunker will tell you that Whitechapel does not carry on business that
way. But it is good of you to try, and I am sure you will not scold and
drive like the rest."

"You offended Mr. Bunker, I learn, by refusing a place which he
offered," said Angela.

"Yes: God knows if I did right. We are desperately poor, else we should
not be here. That you may see for yourself. Yet my blood boiled when I
heard the character of the man whom my Nelly was to serve. I could not
let her go. She is all I have, Miss Kennedy"--the old man drew the girl
toward him and held her, his arm round her waist. "If you will take her
and treat her kindly, you will have--it isn't worth anything,
perhaps--the gratitude of one old man in this world--soon in the next."

"Trust your daughter with me, Captain Sorensen," Angela replied, with
tears in her eyes.

"Everybody round here is poor," he went on. "That makes people
hard-hearted; there are too many people in trade, and that makes them
mean; they are all trying to undersell each other, and that makes them
full of tricks and cheating. They treat the work-girls worst because
they cannot stand up for themselves. The long hours, and the bad food,
and the poisonous air--think a little of your girls, Miss Kennedy. But
you will--you will."

"I will, Captain Sorensen."

"It seems worse to us old sailors," he went on. "We have had a hardish
life, but it has been in open air. Old sailors haven't had to cheat and
lie for a living. And we haven't been brought up to think of girls
turning night into day, and working sixteen hours on end at twopence an
hour. It is hard to think of my poor girl----" He stopped and clinched
his fist. "Better to starve than to drive such a mill!" He was thinking
of the place which he had refused.

"Let us try each other, Nelly," she said, kissing her on the forehead.

The captain took his hat to escort her as far as the gate.

"A quiet place," he said, looking round the little court, "and a happy
place for the last days of improvident old men like me. Yet some of us
grumble. Forgive my plain speech about the work."

"There is nothing to forgive, indeed, Captain Sorensen. Will you let me
call upon you sometimes?"

She gave him her hand. He bowed over it with the courtesy of a captain
on his own quarter-deck. When she turned away she saw that a tear was
standing in his eyes.

"Father!" cried Nelly, rushing into his arms, "did you ever see anybody
like her? Oh! oh! do you think I really shall do for her?"

"You will do your best, my dear. It is a long time, I think, since I
have seen and spoken with any one like that. In the old days I have had
passengers to Calcutta like her; but none more so, Nelly--no, never one
more so."

"You couldn't, father." His daughter wanted no explanation of this
mysterious qualification. "You couldn't. She is a lady, father;" she
looked up and laughed.

"It's a funny thing for a real lady to open a dressmaker's shop on
Stepney Green, isn't it?"

Remark, if you please, that this girl had never once before, in all her
life, conversed with a lady; using the word in the prejudiced and narrow
sense peculiar to the West End. Yet she discovered instantly the truth.
Whence this instinct? It is a world full of strange and wonderful
things; the more questions we ask, the more we may; and the more things
we consider, the more incomprehensible does the sum of things appear.
Inquiring reader, I do not know how Nelly divined that her visitor was a
lady.




CHAPTER VIII.

WHAT HE GOT BY IT.


A dressmaker's shop, without a dressmaker to manage it, would be, Angela
considered, in some perplexity, like a ship without a steersman. She
therefore waited with some impatience the promised visit of Rebekah
Hermitage, whom she was to "get cheap," according to Mr. Bunker, on
account of her Sabbatarian views.

She came in the evening, while Angela was walking on the Green with the
sprightly cabinet-maker. It was sunset, and Angela had been remarking to
her companion, with a sort of irrational surprise, that the phenomena
coincident with the close of the day are just as brilliantly colored and
lavishly displayed for the squalid East as for the luxurious West.
Perhaps, indeed, there are not many places in London where sunset does
produce such good effects as at Stepney Green. The narrow strip, so
called, in shape resembles too nearly a closed umbrella or a thickish
walking-stick; but there are trees in it, and beds of flowers, and seats
for those who wish to sit, and walks for those who wish to walk. And the
better houses of the Green--Bormalack's was on the west, or dingy
side--are on the east, and face the setting sun. They are of a good age,
at least a hundred and fifty years old; they are built of a warm red
brick, and some have doors ornamented with the old-fashioned shell, and
all have an appearance of solid respectability, which makes the rest of
Stepney proud of them. Here, in former days, dwelt the aristocracy of
the parish; and on this side was the house taken by Angela for her
dressmaking institution, the house in which her grandfather was born.
The reason why the sunsets are more splendid and the sunrises brighter
at Stepney than at the opposite end of London, is, that the sun sets
behind the great bank of cloud which forever lies over London town. This
lends his departure to the happy dwellers of the East strange and
wonderful effects. Now, when he rises, it is naturally in the East,
where there is no cloud of smoke to hide the brightness of his face.

The Green this evening was crowded: it is not so fashionable a promenade
as Whitechapel Road, but, on the other hand, it possesses the charm of
comparative quiet. There is no noise of vehicles, but only the shouting
of children, the loud laughter of some _gaillard_ 'prentice, the coy
giggle of the young lady to whom he has imparted his last merry jape,
the loud whispers of ladies who are exchanging confidences about their
complaints and the complaints of their friends, and the musical laugh of
girls. The old people had all crept home; the mothers were at home
putting their children to bed; the fathers were mostly engaged with the
evening pipe, which demands a chair within four walls and a glass of
something; the Green was given up to youth; and youth was principally
given up to love-making.

"In Arcadia," said Harry, "every nymph is wooed, and every swain----"

He was interrupted by the arrival of his uncle, who pushed his way
through the crowd with his usual important bustle, followed by a "young
person."

"I looked for you at Mrs. Bormalack's," he said to Angela
reproachfully, "and here you are--with this young man, as usual. As if
my time was no object to you!"

"Why not with this young man, Mr. Bunker?" asked Angela.

He did not explain his reasons for objecting to her companion, but
proceeded to introduce his companion.

"Here she is, Miss Kennedy," he said. "This is Rebekah Hermitage; I've
brought her with me to prevent mistakes. You may take her on my
recommendation. Nobody in the neighborhood of Stepney wants a better
recommendation than mine. One of Bunker's, they say, and they ask no
more."

"What a beautiful, what an enviable reputation!" murmured his nephew.
"Oh, that I were one of Bunker's!"

Mr. Bunker glared at him, but answered not; never, within his present
experience, had he found himself at a loss to give indignation words. On
occasion, he had been known to swear "into shudders" the immortal gods
who heard him. To swear at this nephew, however, this careless,
sniggering youth, who looked and talked like a "swell," would, he felt,
be more than useless. The boy would only snigger more. He would have
liked knocking him down, but there were obvious reasons why this was not
to be seriously contemplated.

He turned to the girl who had come with him.

"Rebekah," he said with condescension, "you may speak up; I told your
father I would stand by you, and I will."

"Do not, at least," said Angela, in her stateliest manner, "begin by
making Miss Hermitage suppose she will want your support."

She saw before her a girl about two- or three-and-twenty years of age.
She was short of stature and sturdy. Her complexion was dark, with black
hair and dark eyes, and these were bright. A firm mouth and square chin
gave her a pugnacious appearance. In fact, she had been fighting all her
life, more desperately even than the other girls about her, because she
was heavily handicapped by the awkwardness of her religion.

"Mr. Bunker," said this young person, who certainly did not look as if
she wanted any backing up, "tells me you want a forewoman."

"You want a forewoman," echoed the agent, as if interpreting for her.

"Yes, I do," Angela replied. "I know, to begin with, all about your
religious opinions."

"She knows," said the agent, standing between the two parties, as if
retained for the interests of both--"she knows, already, your religious
opinions."

"Very well, miss." Rebekah looked disappointed at losing a chance of
expounding them. "Then, I can only say, I can never give way in the
matter of truth."

"In truth," said the agent, "she's as obstinate as a pig."

"I do not expect it," replied Angela, feeling that the
half-a-crown-an-hour man was really a stupendous nuisance.

"She does not expect it," echoed Mr. Bunker, turning to Rebekah. "What
did I tell you? Now you see the effect of my recommendations."

"Take it off the wages," said Rebekah, with an obvious effort, which
showed how vital was the importance of the pay. "Take it off the wages,
if you like; and, of course, I can't expect to labor for five days and
be paid for six; but on the Saturday, which is the Sabbath-day, I do no
work therein, neither I, nor my man-servant, nor my maid-servant, nor my
ox, nor my ass."

"Neither her man-servant, nor her maid-servant, nor her ox, nor her
ass," repeated the agent solemnly.

"There is the Sunday, however," said Angela.

"What have you got to say about Sunday now?" asked Mr. Bunker, with a
change of front.

"Of all the days that's in the week," interpolated the sprightly one, "I
dearly love but one day--and that's the day----"

Rebekah, impatient of this frivolity, stopped it at once.

"I do as little as I can," she said, "on Sunday, because of the weaker
brethren. The Sunday we keep as a holiday."

"Well----" Angela began rather to envy this young woman, who was a clear
gainer of a whole day by her religion; "well, Miss Hermitage, will you
come to me on trial? Thank you; we can settle about deductions
afterward, if you please. And if you will come to-morrow--that is right.
Now, if you please to take a turn with me, we will talk things over
together; goodnight, Mr. Bunker."

She took the girl's arm and led her away, being anxious to get Bunker
out of sight. The aspect of this agent annoyed and irritated her almost
beyond endurance; so she left him with his nephew.

"One of Bunker's!" Harry repeated softly.

"You here!" growled the uncle, "dangling after a girl when you ought to
be at work! How long, I should like to know, are we hard-working Stepney
folk to be troubled with an idle, good-for-nothing vagabond? Eh, sir?
How long? And don't suppose that I mean to do anything for you when your
money is all gone. Do you hear, sir? do you hear?"

"I hear, my uncle!" As usual, the young man laughed; he sat upon the arm
of a garden-seat, with his hands in his pockets, and laughed an
insolent, exasperating laugh. Now, Mr. Bunker in all his life had never
seen the least necessity or occasion for laughing at anything at all,
far less at himself. Nor, hitherto, had any one dared to laugh at him.

"Sniggerin' peacock!" added Mr. Bunker fiercely, rattling a bunch of
keys in his pocket.

Harry laughed again, with more _abandon_. This uncle of his, who
regarded him with so much dislike, seemed a very humorous person.

"Connection by marriage," he said. "There is one question I have very
much wished to put to you. When you traded me away, now three-and-twenty
years ago, or thereabouts--you remember the circumstances, I dare say,
better than I can be expected to do--_what did you get for me?_"

Then Bunker's color changed, his cheeks became quite white. Harry
thought it was the effect of wrath, and went on.

"Half a crown an hour, of course, during the negotiations, which I dare
say took a week--that we understand; but what else? Come, my uncle, what
else did you get?"

It was too dark for the young man to perceive the full effect of this
question--the sudden change of color escaped his notice; but he observed
a strange and angry light in his uncle's eyes, and he saw that he opened
his mouth once or twice as if to speak, but shut his lips again without
saying a word; and Harry was greatly surprised to see his uncle
presently turn on his heel and walk straight away.

"That question seems to be a facer; it must be repeated whenever the
good old man becomes offensive. I wonder what he _did_ get for me?"

As for Mr. Bunker, he retired to his own house in Beaumont Square,
walking with quick steps and hanging head. He let himself in with his
latch-key, and turned into his office, which, of course, was the first
room of the ground-floor.

It was quite dark now, save for the faint light from the street-gas, but
Mr. Bunker did not want any light.

He sat down and rested his face on his hands, with a heavy sigh. The
house was empty, because his housekeeper and only servant was out.

He sat without moving for half an hour or so; then he lifted his head
and looked about him--he had forgotten where he was and why he came
there--and he shuddered.

Then he hastily lit a candle, and went upstairs to his own bedroom. The
room had one piece of furniture, not always found in bedrooms; it was a
good-sized fireproof safe, which stood in the corner. Mr. Bunker placed
his candle on the safe, and stooping down began to grope about with his
keys for the lock. It took some time to find the keyhole; when the safe
was opened, it took longer to find the papers which he wanted, for these
were at the very back of all. Presently, however, he lifted his head
with a bundle in his hand.

Now, if we are obliged to account for everything, which ought not to be
expected, and is more than one asks of scientific men, I should account
for what followed by remarking that the blood is apt to get into the
brains of people, especially elderly people, and, above all, stout,
elderly people, when they stoop for any length of time; and that history
records many remarkable manifestations of the spirit world which have
followed a posture of stooping too prolonged. It produces, in fact, a
condition of brain beloved by ghosts. There is the leading case of the
man at Cambridge, who, after stooping for a book, saw the ghost of his
own bed-maker at a time when he knew her to be in the bosom of her
family eating up his bread-and-butter and drinking his tea. Rats have
been seen by others--troops of rats--as many rats as followed the piper,
where there were no rats; and there is even the recorded case of a man
who saw the ghost of himself, which prognosticated dissolution, and, in
fact, killed him exactly fifty-two years after the event. So that,
really, there is nothing at all unusual in the fact that Mr. Bunker saw
something when he lifted his head. The remarkable thing is that he saw
the very person of whom he had been thinking ever since his nephew's
question--no other than his deceased wife's sister; he had never loved
her at all, or in the least desired to marry her, which makes the case
more remarkable still; and she stood before him just as if she was
alive, and gazed upon him with reproachful eyes.

He behaved with great coolness and presence of mind. Few men would have
shown more bravery. He just dropped the candle out of one hand and the
papers out of the other, and fell back upon the bed with a white face
and quivering lips. Some men would have run--he did not; in fact, he
could not. His knees instinctively knew that it is useless to run from a
ghost, and refused to aid him.

"Caroline!" he groaned.

As he spoke the figure vanished, making no sign and saying no word.
After a while, seeing that the ghost came no more, Mr. Bunker pulled
himself together. He picked up the papers and the candle and went slowly
downstairs again, turning every moment to see if his sister-in-law came
too. But she did not, and he went to the bright gas-lit back parlor,
where his supper was spread.

After supper he mixed a glass of brandy-and-water, stiff. After drinking
this he mixed another, and began to smoke a pipe while he turned over
the papers.

"He can't have meant anything," he said. "What should the boy know? What
did the gentleman know? Nothing. What does anybody know? Nothing. There
is nobody left. The will was witnessed by Mr. Messenger and Bob Coppin.
Well, one of them is dead, and as for the other----" [he paused and
winced]--"as for the other, it is five-and-twenty years since he was
heard of, so he's dead, too; of course, he's dead."

Then he remembered the spectre and he trembled. For suppose Caroline
meant coming often; this would be particularly disagreeable. He
remembered a certain scene where, three-and-twenty years before, he had
stood at a bedside while a dying woman spoke to him; the words she said
were few, and he remembered them quite well, even after so long a time,
which showed his real goodness of heart.

"You are a hard man, Bunker, and you think too much of money; and you
were not kind to your wife. But I'm going too, and there is nobody left
to trust my boy to, except you. Be good to him, Bunker, for your dead
wife's sake."

He remembered, too, how he had promised to be good to the boy, not
meaning much by the words, perhaps, but softened by the presence of
death.

"It is not as if the boy was penniless," she said; "his houses will pay
you for his keep, and to spare. You will lose nothing by him. Promise me
again."

He remembered that he had promised a second time that he would be good
to the boy; and he remembered, too, how the promise seemed then to
involve great expense in canes.

"If you break the solemn promise," she said, with feminine prescience,
"I warn you that he shall do you an injury when he grows up. Remember
that."

He did remember it now, though he had quite forgotten this detail a long
while ago. The boy had returned; he was grown up; he could do him an
injury, _if he knew how_. Because he only had to ask his uncle for an
account of those houses. Fortunately, he did not know. Happily, there
was no one to tell him. With his third tumbler Mr. Bunker became quite
confident and reassured; with his fourth he felt inclined to be merry,
and to slap himself on the back for wide-awakedness of the rarest kind.
With his fifth, he resolved to go upstairs and tell Caroline that unless
she went and told her son, no one would. He carried part of this
resolution into effect; that is to say, he went to his bedroom, and his
housekeeper, unobserved herself, had the pleasure of seeing her master
ascending the stairs on his hands and feet--a method which offers great
advantages to a gentleman who has had five tumblers of brandy-and-water.

When he got there, and had quite succeeded in shutting the door--not
always so easy a thing as it looks--Caroline was no longer visible. He
could not find her anywhere, though he went all round the room twice, on
all-fours, in search of her.

The really remarkable part of this story is, that she has never paid a
visit to her son at all.


Meantime, the strollers on the green were grown few. Most of them had
gone home; but the air was warm, and there were still some who lingered.
Among them were Angela and the girl who was to be her forewoman.

When Rebekah found that her employer was not apparently of those who try
to cheat, or bully or cajole her subordinates, she lost her combative
air, and consented to talk about things. She gave Angela a great deal of
information about the prospects of her venture, which were gloomy, as
she thought, as the competition was so severe. She also gave her an
insight into details of a practical nature concerning the conduct of a
dressmakery, into which we need not follow her.

Angela discovered before they parted that she had two sides to her
character: on one side she was a practical and practised woman of work
and business; on the other she was a religious fanatic.

"We wait," she said, "for the world to come round to us. Oh! I know we
are but a little body and a poor folk. Father is almost alone; but what
a thing it is to be the appointed keepers of the truth! Come and hear
us, Miss Kennedy. Father always converts any one who will listen to him.
Oh, do listen!"

Then she, too, went away, and Angela was left alone in the quiet place.
Presently she became aware that Harry was standing beside her.

"Don't let us go home yet," he said; "Bormalack's is desperately
dull--you can picture it all to yourself. The professor has got a new
trick; Daniel Fagg is looking as if he had met with more disappointment;
her ladyship is short of temper, because the case is getting on so
slowly; and Josephus is sighing over a long pipe; and Mr. Maliphant is
chuckling to himself in the corner. On the whole, it is better here.
Shall we remain a little longer in the open air, Miss Kennedy?"

He looked dangerous. Angela, who had been disposed to be expansive,
froze.

"We will have one more turn, if you please, Mr. Goslett." She added
stiffly, "Only remember--so long as you don't think of 'keeping
company.'"

"I understand perfectly, Miss Kennedy. 'Society' is a better word than
'company;' let us keep that, and make a new departure for Stepney
Green."




CHAPTER IX.

THE DAY BEFORE THE FIRST.


Mr. Bunker, _en bon chrétien_, dissembled his wrath, and continued his
good work of furnishing and arranging the house for Angela, insomuch
that before many days the place was completely ready for opening.

In the mean time, Miss Kennedy was away--she went away on business--and
Bormalack's was dull without her. Harry found some consolation in
superintending some of the work for her house, and in working at a grand
cabinet which he designed for her: it was to be a miracle of
wood-carving; he would throw into the work all the resources of his art
and all his genius. When she came back, after the absence of a week, she
looked full of business and of care. Harry thought it must be money
worries, and began to curse Bunker's long bill; but she was gracious to
him in her queenly way. Moreover, she assured him that all was going on
well with her, better than she could have hoped. The evening before the
"Stepney Dressmakers' Association" was to open its doors, they all
gathered together in the newly furnished house for a final
inspection--Angela, her two _aids_ Rebekah and Nelly, and the young man
against whose companionship Mr. Bunker had warned her in vain. The
house was large, with rooms on either side the door. These were
showrooms and workrooms. The first floor Angela reserved for her own
purposes, and she was mysterious about them. At the back of the house
stretched a long and ample garden. Angela had the whole of it covered
with asphalt; the beds of flowers or lawns were all covered over. At the
end she had caused to be built a large room of glass, the object of
which she had not yet disclosed.

As regards the appointments of the house, she had taken one
precaution--Rebekah superintended them. Mr. Bunker, therefore, was fain
to restrict his enthusiasm, and could not charge more than twenty or
thirty per cent. above the market value of the things. But Rebekah,
though she carried out her instructions, could not but feel disappointed
at the lavish scale in which things were ordered and paid for. The
show-rooms were as fine as if the place were Regent Street; the
workrooms were looked after with as much care for ventilation as if, Mr.
Bunker said, work-girls were countesses.

"It is too good," Rebekah expostulated, "much too good for us. It will
only make other girls discontented."

"I want to make them discontented," Angela replied. "Unless they are
discontented, there will be no improvement. Think, Rebekah, what it is
that lifts men out of the level of the beasts. We find out that there
are better things, and we are fighting our way upward. That is the
mystery of discontent--and perhaps pain, as well."

"Ah!" Rebekah saw that this was not a practical answer. "But you don't
know yet the competition of the East End, and the straits we are put to.
It is not as at the West End."

The golden West is ever the Land of Promise. No need to undeceive; let
her go on in the belief that the three thousand girls who wait and work
about Regent Street and the great shops are everywhere treated
generously, and paid above the market-value of their services. I make no
doubt, myself, that many a great mercer sits down, when Christmas warms
his heart, in his mansion at Finchley, Campden Hill, Fitz John's Avenue,
or Stoke Newington, and writes great checks as gifts to the
uncomplaining girls who build up his income.

"She would learn soon," said Rebekah, hoping that the money would last
out till the ship was fairly launched.

She was not suspicious, but there was something "funny," as Nelly said,
in a girl of Miss Kennedy's stamp coming among them. Why did she choose
Stepney Green? Surely, Bond Street or Regent Street would be better
fitted for a lady of her manners. How would customers be received and
orders be taken? By herself, or by this young lady, who would certainly
treat the ladies of Stepney with little of that deferential courtesy
which they expected of these dressmakers? For, as you may have remarked,
the lower you descend, as well as the higher you climb, the more
deference do the ladies receive at the hands of their trades-folk. No
duchess sweeps into a milliner's showroom with more dignity than her
humble sister at Clare Market on a Saturday evening displays when she
accepts the invitation of the butcher to "Rally up, ladies," and selects
her Sunday piece of beef. The ladies of Stepney and the Mile End Road,
thought Rebekah, looked for attentions. Would Miss Kennedy give it to
them? If Miss Kennedy herself did not attend to the showroom, what would
she do?

On this evening, after they had walked over the whole house, visited the
asphalted garden, and looked into the great glass-room, Angela unfolded
her plans.

It was in the workroom. She stood at the head of the table, looking
about her with an air of pride and anxiety. It was her own design--her
own scheme; small as it was, compared with that other vast project, she
was anxious about it. It _had_ to succeed; it _must_ succeed.

All its success, she thought, depended upon that sturdy little fanatical
seventh-day young person. It was she who was to rule the place and be
the practical dressmaker. And now she was to be told.

"Now," said Angela, with some hesitation, "the time has come for an
explanation of the way we shall work. First of all, will you, Rebekah,
undertake the management and control of the business?"

"I, Miss Kennedy? But what is your department?"

"I will undertake the management of the girls"--she stopped and
blushed--"_out of their work-time_."

At this extraordinary announcement the two girls looked blankly at their
employer.

"You do not quite understand," Angela went on. "Wait a little. Do you
consent, Rebekah?"

The girl's eyes flashed and her cheeks became aflame. Then she thought
of the sudden promotion of Joseph, and she took confidence. Perhaps she
really was equal to the place; perhaps she had actually merited the
distinction.

"Very well, then," Miss Kennedy went on, as if it was the most natural
thing in the world that a humble workwoman should be suddenly raised to
the proud post of manager. "Very well; that is settled. You, Nelly, will
try to take care of the workroom when Rebekah is not there. As regards
the accounts----"

"I can keep them, too," said Rebekah. "I shall work--on Sundays," she
added with a blush.

Miss Kennedy then proceeded to expound her views as regards the
management of her establishment.

"The girls will be here at nine," she said.

Rebekah nodded. There could be no objection to that.

"They will work from nine till eleven," Rebekah started. "Yes, I know
what I mean. The long hours of sitting and bending the back over the
work are just as bad a thing for girls of fifteen or so as could be
invented. At eleven, therefore, we shall have, all of us, half an hour's
exercise."

Exercise? Exercise in a dressmaker's shop? Was Miss Kennedy in her
senses?

"You see that asphalt. Surely some of you can guess what it is for?" She
looked at Harry.

"Skittles?" he suggested frivolously.

"No. Lawn tennis. Well! why not?"

"What is lawn tennis?" asked Nelly.

"A game, my dear; and you shall learn it."

"I never play games," said Rebekah. "A serious person has no room in her
life for games."

"Then call it exercise, and you will be able to play it without wounding
your conscience." This was Harry's remark. "Why not, indeed, Miss
Kennedy? The game of lawn tennis, Nelly," he went on to explain, "is
greatly in vogue among the bloated aristocracy, as my cousin Dick will
tell you. That it should descend to you and me and the likes of us is
nothing less than a social revolution."

Nelly smiled, but she only half understood this kind of language. A man
who laughed at things, and talked of things as if they were meant to be
laughed over, was a creature she had never before met with. My friends,
lay this to heart, and ponder. It is not until a certain standard of
cultivation is reached that people do laugh at things. They only began
in the last century, and then only in a few _salons_. When all the world
laughs, the perfection of humanity will have been reached, and the
comedy will have been played out.

"It is a beautiful game," said Angela--meaning lawn tennis, not the
comedy of humanity. "It requires a great deal of skill and exercises a
vast quantity of muscles; and it costs nothing. Asphalt makes a perfect
court, as I know very well." She blushed, because she was thinking of
the Newnham courts. "We shall be able to play there whenever it does not
rain. When it does, there is the glass-house."

"What are you going to do in the glass-house?" asked Harry; "throw
stones at other people's windows? That is said to be very good
exercise."

"I am going to set up a gymnasium for the girls."

Rebekah stared, but said nothing. This was revolutionary indeed.

"If they please, the girls can bring their friends; we will have a
course of gymnastics as well as a school for lawn tennis. You see, Mr.
Goslett, that I have not forgotten what you said once."

"What was that, Miss Kennedy? It is very good of you to remember
anything that I have said. Do you mean that I once, accidentally, said a
thing worth hearing?"

"Yes: you said that money was not wanted here so much as work. That is
what I remembered. If you can afford it, you may work with us, for there
is a great deal to do."

"I can afford it for a time."

"We shall work again from half-past eleven until one. Then we shall
stop for dinner."

"They bring their own dinner," said Rebekah. "It takes them five minutes
to eat it. You will have to give them tea."

"No: I shall give them dinner too. And because growing girls are dainty
and sometimes cannot fancy things, I think a good way will be for each
of them, even the youngest, to take turns in ordering the dinner and
seeing it prepared."

Rebekah groaned. What profits could stand up against such lavish
expenditure as this?

"After an hour for dinner we shall go to work again. I have thought a
good deal about the afternoon, which is the most tedious part of the
day, and I think the best thing will be to have reading aloud."

"Who is to read?" cried Rebekah.

"We shall find somebody or other. Tea at five, and work from six to
seven. That is my programme."

"Then, Miss Kennedy," cried her forewoman, "you will be a ruined woman
in a year."

"No"--she shook her head with her gracious smile--"no, I hope not. And I
think you will find that we shall be very far from ruined. Have a little
faith. What do you think, Nelly?"

"Oh, I think it beautiful!" she replied, with a gaze of soft worship in
her limpid eyes. "It is so beautiful that it must be a dream, and cannot
last."

"What do you say, Mr. Goslett?"

"I say that cabinet-making ought to be conducted in the same liberal
spirit. But I'm afraid it won't pay."

Then Miss Kennedy took them to the room on the first floor. The room at
the back was fitted as a dining-room, quite simply, with a dozen chairs
and a long table. Plates, cups, and things were ranged upon shelves as
if in a kitchen.

She led them to the front room. When her hand was on the lock she turned
and smiled, and held up her finger as if to prepare them for a surprise.

The floor was painted and bare of carpet; the windows were dressed with
pretty curtains. There were sconces on the walls for candles; in the
recess stood her piano; and for chairs there were two or three
rout-seats ranged along the wall.

"What is this?" asked Rebekah.

"My dear, girls want play as well as work. The more innocent play they
get, the better for them. This is a room where we shall play all sorts
of things: sometimes we shall dance; sometimes we shall act; sometimes
we shall sing; sometimes we shall read poetry or tales; sometimes we
shall romp; the girls shall bring their friends here as well as to the
gymnasium and the lawn tennis, if they please."

"And who is to pay for all this?" asked Rebekah.

"My friends," said Angela, coloring, because this was a crisis, and to
be suspected at such a point would have been fatal--"my friends, I have
to make a confession to you. I have worked out the design by myself. I
saw how the girls in our workshops toil for long hours and little pay.
The great shops, whose partners are very rich men, treat them no better
than do the poor traders whose living has to be got by scraping it off
their wages. Now, I thought that if we were to start a shop in which
there was to be no mistress, but to be self-governed, and to share the
proceeds among all in due order and with regard to skill and industry,
we might adjust our own hours for the general good. This kind of shop
has been tried by men, but I think it has never succeeded, because they
wanted the capital to start with. What could we three girls have done
with nothing but our own hands to help us? So I wrote to a young lady
who has much money. Yes, Mr. Goslett, I wrote to that Miss Messenger of
whom we have so often talked."

"Miss Messenger!" Rebekah gasped; "she who owns the great brewery?"

"The same. She has taken up our cause. It is she who finds the funds to
start us, just as well as if we had capital. She gives us the rent for a
year, the furniture, the glass-house--everything, even this piano. I
have a letter from her in my pocket." She took it out and read it. "Miss
Messenger begs to thank Miss Kennedy for her report of the progress made
in her scheme. She quite approves of the engagements made, particularly
those of Rebekah Hermitage and Nelly Sorensen. She hopes, before long,
to visit the house herself and make their acquaintance. Meanwhile she
will employ the house for all such things as she requires, and begs Miss
Kennedy to convey to Miss Hermitage the first order for the workshop."
This gracious letter was accompanied by a long list of things, at sight
of which the forewoman's eyes glittered with joy.

"Oh, it is a splendid order!" she said. "May we tell everybody about
this Miss Messenger?"

"I think," Angela replied, considering carefully, "that it would be
better not. Let people only know that we have started; that we are a
body of workwomen governing ourselves, and working for ourselves. The
rest is for our private information."

"While you are about it," said Harry, "you might persuade Miss Messenger
to start the Palace of Delight and the College of Art."

"Do you think she would?" asked Angela. "Do you really think it would be
of any use at all?"

"Did she haggle about your Co-operative Association?"

"No, not at all. She quite agreed with me from the beginning."

"Then, try her for the palace. See, Miss Kennedy--" the young man had
become quite earnest and eager over the palace--"it is only a question
of money. If Miss Messenger wants to do a thing unparalleled among the
deeds of rich men, let her build the Palace of Delight. If I were she, I
should tremble for fear some other person with money got to hear of the
idea, and should step in before her. Of course, the grand thing in these
cases is to be the first."

"What is a Palace of Delight?" asked Nelly.

"Truly wonderful it is," said Harry, "to think how monotonous are the
gifts and bequests of rich men. Schools, churches, almshouses,
hospitals--that is all; that is their monotonous round. Now and again, a
man like Peabody remembers that men want houses to live in, not hovels;
or a good woman remembers that they want sound and wholesome food, and
builds a market; but, as a rule, schools, churches, almshouses,
hospitals. Look at the lack of originality. Miss Kennedy, go and see
this rich person; ask her if she wants to do the grandest thing ever
done for men; ask her if she will, as a new and startling point of
departure, remember that men want joy. If she will ask me, I will
deliver a lecture on the necessity of pleasure, the desirableness of
pleasure, the beauty of pleasure."

"A Palace of Delight!" Rebekah shook her head. "Do you know that half
the people never go to church?"

"When we have got the palace," said Harry, "they will go to church,
because religion is a plant that flourishes best where life is happiest.
It will spring up among us, then, as luxuriantly as the wild
honeysuckle. Who are the most religious people in the world, Miss
Hermitage?"

"They are the worshippers in Red Man's Lane, and they are called the
Seventh-Day Independents."

The worst of the Socratic method of argument is that, when the wrong
answer is given, the whole thing comes to grief. Now, Harry wanted her
to say that the people who go most to church are the wealthy classes.
Rebekah did not say so, because she knew nothing of the wealthy classes;
and in her own circle of sectarian enthusiasts, nobody had any money at
all.




CHAPTER X.

THE GREAT DAVENANT CASE.


"Oh! you obstinate old man! Oh! you lazy old man!"

It was the high-pitched voice of her ladyship in reediest tones, and the
time was eleven o'clock in the forenoon, when, as a rule, she was
engaged in some needlework for herself, or assisting Mrs. Bormalack with
the pudding, in a friendly way, while her husband continued the
statement of the case, left alone in the enjoyment of the
sitting-room--and his title.

"You lazy old man!"

The words were overheard by Harry Goslett. He had been working at his
miraculous cabinet, and was now, following the example of Miss Kennedy's
work-girls, "knocking off" for half an hour, and thinking of some excuse
for passing the rest of the morning with that young lady. He stood in
the doorway, looking across the green to the sacred windows of the
Dressmakers' Association. Behind them at this moment were sitting, he
knew, the Queen of the Mystery, with that most beauteous nymph, the
matchless Nelly, fair and lovely to look upon; and with her, too,
Rebekah the downright, herself a mystery, and half a dozen more, some of
them, perhaps, beautiful. Alas! in working-hours these doors were
closed. Perhaps, he thought, when the cabinet was finished he might make
some play by carrying it backward and forward, measuring, fitting,
altering.

"You lazy, sinful, sleepy old man!"

A voice was heard feebly remonstrating.

"Oh! oh! oh!" she cried again in accents that rose higher and higher,
"we have come all the way from America to prove our case. There's four
months gone out of six--oh! oh!--and you with your feet upon a
chair--oh! oh!--do you think you are back in Canaan City?"

"Clara Martha," replied his lordship, in clear and distinct tones--the
window was wide open, so that the words floated out upon the summer air
and struck gently upon Harry's ear--"Clara Martha, I wish I was; it is
now holiday time, and the boys are out in the woods. And the
schoolroom----" [he stopped, sighed deeply, and yawned]--"it was very
peaceful."

She groaned in sheer despair.

"He is but a carpenter," she said; "he grovels in the shavings; he
wallows in the sawdust. Fie upon him! This man a British peer? Oh!
shame--shame!" Harry pictured the quivering shoulders and the finger of
reproach. "Oh! oh! He is not worthy to wear a coronet. Give him a chunk
of wood to whittle, and a knife, and a chair in the shade, and somethin'
to rest his feet upon. That's all he wants, though Queen Victoria and
all the angels was callin' for him across the ocean to take his seat in
the House of Lords. Shame on him! Shame upon him!"

These taunts, apparently, had no effect. His lordship was understood by
the listener to say something disrespectful of the Upper House, and to
express regret at having exchanged his humble but contented position of
a school-teacher and his breakfast, where a man could look around him
and see hot rolls and muffins and huckleberry pies, for the splendor of
a title, with the meagre fare of London and the hard work of drawing up
a case.

"I _will_ rouse him!" she cried, as she executed some movement, the
nature of which could only be guessed by the young man outside. The
windows, it is true, were open; but one's eyes cannot go outside to look
in without the rest of the head and body going too. Whatever it was that
she did, his lordship apparently sprang into the air with a loud cry,
and, if sounds mean anything, ran hastily round the table, followed by
his illustrious consort.

The listener says and always maintains--"Hairpin." Those who consider
her ladyship incapable of behavior which might appear undignified reject
that interpretation. Moral, not physical, were, according to these
thinkers, the means of awakening adopted by Lady Davenant. Even the
officers of the Salvation Army, they say, do not use hairpins.

"In the name of common humanity," said Harry to himself, "one must
interfere." He knocked at the door, and allowed time for the restoration
of dignity and the smoothing of ruffled plumes.

He found his lordship seated, it is true, but _in the wrong chair_, and
his whole frame was trembling with excitement, terror, or some other
strong emotion, while the effort he was making to appear calm and
composed caused his head to nod and his cheeks to shake. Never was a
member of the Upper House placed in a more uncomfortable position. As
for her ladyship, she was standing bolt upright at the other side of the
room at the window. There was a gleam in her eye and a quivering of her
lip which betokened wrath.

"Pardon me, Lady Davenant," said Harry, smiling sweetly. "May I
interrupt you for a few moments?"

"You may," replied her husband, speaking for her. "Go on, Mr. Goslett.
Do not hurry yourself, pray. We are glad to see you"--he cleared his
throat--"very glad, indeed."

"I came to say," he went on, still addressing the lady, "that I am a
comparatively idle man; that is, for the moment I have no work, and am
undecided about my movements, and that, if I can be of any help in the
preparation of the case, you may command my services. Of course, Lady
Davenant, everybody knows the importance of your labors and of his
lordship's, and the necessity of a clear statement of your case."

Lady Davenant replied with a cry like a sea-gull. "Oh! his lordship's
labors, indeed! Yes, Mr. Goslett, pretty labors! Day after day goes
on--I don't care, Timothy--I don't care who knows it--day after day goes
on, and we get no farther. Four months and two weeks gone of the time,
and the case not even written out yet."

"What time?" asked Harry.

"The time that nephew Nathaniel gave us to prove our claim. He found the
money for our passage; he promised us six dollars a week for six months.
In six months, he said, we should find whether our claim was allowed or
not. There it was, and we were welcome for six months. Only six weeks
left, and he goes to sleep!"

"But, Lady Davenant--only six weeks! It is impossible--you cannot send
in a claim and get it acknowledged in six weeks. Why, such claims may
drag on for years before a committee of the House of Lords."

"He wastes all the time; he has got no ambition: he goes to sleep when
he ought to be waking. If we have to go home again, with nothing done,
it will be because he is so lazy. Shame upon you, obstinate old man! Oh!
lazy and sleepy old man!" She shook her finger at him in so terrifying a
manner that he was fain to clutch at the arms of the chair, and his
teeth chattered.

"Aurelia Tucker," her ladyship went on, warming to her work as she
thought of her wrongs--"Aurelia Tucker always said that, lord or no
lord, my husband was too lazy to stand up for his rights. Everybody in
Canaan City knew that he was too lazy. She said that if she was me, and
trying to get the family title, she wouldn't go across the water to ask
for it, but she would make the American Minister in London tell the
British Government that they would just have to grant it, whether they
liked it or not, and that a plain American citizen was to take his place
in their House of Lords. Otherwise, she said, let the Minister tell
that Mr. Gladstone that Canada would be annexed. That's fine talkin',
but as for me I want things done friendly, an' I don't want to see my
husband walkin' into his proper place in Westminster with Stars and
Stripes flyin' over his head and a volunteer fire brigade band playin'
'Hail, Columbia,' before him. No. I said that justice was to be got in
the old country, and we only had to cross over and ask for it. Then
nephew Nathaniel said that he didn't expect much more justice was to be
expected in England than in New Hampshire. And that what you can't
always get in a free country isn't always got where there's lords and
bishops and a queen. But we might try if we liked for six months, and he
would find the dollars for that time. Now there's only six weeks left,
and we haven't even begun to ask for that justice."

"Clara Martha," said his lordship, "I've been thinking the matter over,
and I've come to the conclusion that Aurelia Tucker is a sensible woman.
Let us go home again, and send the case to the Minister. Let us frighten
them."

"It does not seem bad advice," said Harry. "Hold a meeting in Canaan
City, and promise the British Lion that he shall be whipped into a
cocked hat unless you get your rights. Make a national thing of it."

"No!" She stamped her foot, and became really terrible. "We are here,
and we will demand our rights on the spot. If the Minister likes to take
up the case, he may; if not, we will fight our own battles. But oh! Mr.
Goslett, it's a dreadful hard thing for a woman and a stranger to do all
the fightin' while her husband goes to sleep."

"Can't you keep awake till you have stated your case?" asked Harry.
"Come, old boy, you can take it out in slumber afterward; and if you go
on sleeping till the case is decided, I expect you will have a good long
refreshing rest."

"It was a beautiful morning, Clara Martha," his lordship explained in
apology, "quite a warm morning. I didn't know people ever had such warm
weather in England. And somehow it reminded me of Canaan City in July.
When I think of Canaan, my dear, I always feel sleepy. There was a
garden, Mr. Goslett, and trees and flowers, at the back of the
schoolhouse. And a bee came in. I didn't know there were bees in
England. While I listened to that bee, bummin' around most the same as
if he was in a free republic, I began to think of home, Clara Martha.
That is all."

"Was it the bee," she asked with asperity, "that drew your handkerchief
over your head?"

"Clara Martha," he replied with a little hesitation, "the bee was a
stranger to me. He was not like one of our New Hampshire bees. He had
never seen me before. Bees sting strangers."

Harry interrupted what promised to be the beginning of another lovers'
quarrel, to judge by the twitchings of those thin shoulders and the
frowning of those beadlike eyes.

"Lady Davenant," he said, "let us not waste the time in recrimination;
accept my services. Let me help you to draw up the statement of your
case."

This was something to the purpose: with a last reproachful glance upon
her husband, her ladyship collected the papers and put them into the
hands of her new assistant.

"I'm sure," she said, "it's more 'n kind of you, Mr. Goslett. Here are
all the papers. Mind, there isn't the least doubt about it, not the
shadow of a doubt; there never was a claim so strong and clear. Timothy
Clitheroe Davenant is as much Lord Davenant by right of lawful descent,
as--as--you are your father's son."

Harry spent the morning with the papers spread before him, arranging the
case. Lord Davenant, now undisturbed, slept quietly in his arm-chair.
Her ladyship left them alone.

About half-past twelve the sleeping claimant awoke and rubbed his eyes.
"I have had a most refreshing slumber, Mr. Goslett," he yawned; "a man
who is married wants it. Sometimes it is what we shall do when we get
the title confirmed; sometimes it's why we haven't made out our case
yet; sometimes it's why I don't go and see the Queen myself; sometimes
it is how we shall crow over Aurelia Tucker when we are established in
our rights ... but, whatever it is, it is never a quiet night. I think,
Mr. Goslett, that if she'd only hold her tongue and go to sleep, I
might make headway with that case in the morning."

"It seems straightforward enough," said Harry. "I can draw up the thing
for you without any trouble. And then you must find out the best way to
bring your claim before the House of Lords."

"Put it into the post-office, addressed to the Queen," suggested the
claimant.

"No--not quite that, I think," said Harry. "There's only one weak point
in the case."

"I knew you'd find out the weak point. She won't allow there's any weak
point at all. Says it's clear from beginning to end."

"So it is, if you make an admission."

"Well, sir, what is that admission? Let us make it at once, and go on.
Nothing can be fairer; we are quite prepared to meet you half-way with
that admission."

His lordship spoke as if conferring an immense advantage upon an
imaginary opponent.

"I do not mind," he said, "anybody else finding out the weak point,
because then I can tackle him. What vexes me, Mr. Goslett, is to find
out that weak point myself. Because then there is nobody to argue it out
with, and it is like cold water running down the back, and it keeps a
man awake."

"As for your admission----" said Harry, laughing.

"Well, sir, what is it?"

"Why, of course, you have to admit, unless you can prove it, that this
Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, wheelwright, was the Honorable Timothy
Clitheroe Davenant, only son of Lord Davenant."

His lordship was silent for a while.

"Do you think sir, that the Queen will see this weak point?"

"I am quite sure that her advisers will."

"And do you think--hush, Mr. Goslett, let us whisper. Do you think that
the Queen will refuse to give us the title because of this weak point?
Hush! she may be outside." He meant his wife, not Her Majesty.

"A committee of the House of Lords most undoubtedly may refuse to
consider your claim proved."

His lordship nodded his head in consideration of this possibility. Then
he laughed gently and rubbed his hands.

"It would be rough at first. That is so, for certain, sure. There would
be sleepless nights. And Aurelia Tucker would laugh. Clara Martha
would----" he shuddered. "Wal, if we hev to go home without our title, I
should be resigned. When a man is sixty years of age, sir, and, though
born to greatness, not brought up accordin' to his birth, he can't
always feel like settin' in a row with a crown upon his head; and though
I wouldn't own up before Clara Martha, I doubt whether the British peers
would consider my company quite an honor to the Upper House. Though a
plain citizen of the United States, sir, is as good as any lord that
lives."

"Better," said Harry. "He is much better."

"He is, Mr. Goslett, he is. In the land where the Bird of Freedom----"

"Hush, my lord. You forget that you are a British peer. No spread-eagle
for you."

Lord Davenant sighed.

"It is difficult," he said, "and I suppose there's no more loyal
citizens than us of Canaan City."

"Well, how are we to connect the wheelwright Timothy with the Honorable
Timothy who was supposed to be drowned?"

"There is his age, and there is his name. You've got those, Mr. Goslett.
And then, as we agreed before, we will agree to that little admission."

"But if everybody does not agree?"

"There is also the fact that we were always supposed to be heirs to
something in the old country."

"I am afraid that is not enough. There is this great difficulty: Why
should a young Englishman, the heir to a title and a great property,
settle down in America and practise a handicraft?"

"Wal, sir, I can't rightly say. My grandfather carried that secret with
him. And if you'll oblige me, sir, you'll tell her ladyship that we're
agreed upon that little admission which makes the connection complete.
It will be time enough to undeceive her when the trouble begins. As for
Aurelia Tucker, why----" here he smiled sweetly. "If I know Clara
Martha aright, she is quite able to tackle Aurelia by herself."

This was the way in which the conduct of the Great Davenant Case fell
into the hands of a mere working-man.




CHAPTER XI.

THE FIRST DAY.


Angela's genteel place of business, destined as it was to greatness,
came into the world with little pomp and no pretence. On the day
appointed, the work-girls came at nine, and found a brass plate on the
door and a wire blind in the windows, bearing the announcement that this
was the "Dressmakers' Association." This information gave them no
curiosity, and produced no excitement in their minds. To them it seemed
nothing but another artifice to attract the attention of a public very
hard to move. They were quite used to these crafty announcements; they
were cynically incredulous of low prices; they knew the real truth as to
fabrics of freshness unlasting and stuffs which would never wear out;
and as regards forced sales, fabulous prices, and incredible bargains,
they merely lifted the eyelid of the scoffer and went into the workroom.
Whatever was written or printed on bills in the window, no difference
was ever made to them. Nor did the rise and fall of markets alter their
wages one penny. This lack of interest in the success of their work is
certainly a drawback to this _métier_, as to many others. Would it not
be well if workmen of all kinds were directly interested in the
enterprise for which they hire out their labor?

If you have the curiosity to listen to the talk of work-girls in the
evenings when they walk home, or as they journey homeward slowly in the
crawling omnibus, you will be struck by a very remarkable phenomenon. It
is not that they talk without stopping, because that is common to
youthful woman in every rank. It is that in the evening they are always
exasperated. They snap their lips, they breathe quick, they flash their
eyes, they clinch their fingers, and their talk is a narrative of
indignation full of "sezee," "sezzi," and "seshee"--mostly the last,
because what "she" said is generally the cause of all this wrath. A
philosopher, who once investigated the subject, was fortunate enough to
discover why work-girls are always angry at eventide. He maintains that
it means nothing in the world but nagging; they all, he says, sit
together--forewomen, dressmakers, improvers, and apprentices--in one
room. The room, whether large or small, is always close, the hours are
long; as they sit at their work, head bent, back bent, feet still, they
gradually get the fidgets. This is a real disease while it lasts. In the
workroom it has got to last until the time to knock off. First it seizes
the limbs, so that the younger ones want to get up and jump and dance,
while the other ones would like to kick. If not relieved, the patient
next gets the fidgets in her nerves, so that she wriggles in her chair,
gets spasmodic twitchings, shakes her head violently, and bites her
thread with viciousness. The next step is extreme irritability; this is
followed by a disposition on the part of the forewoman to find fault,
and by a determination on the part of the work-girls not to be put upon,
with an intention of speaking up should the occasion arise. Then comes
nagging, which is, in fact, nothing but fidgets translated into English
prose. Some forewomen are excellent translators. And the end is general
exasperation, with fines, notices to leave, warnings, cheekiness,
retorts, accusations, charges, denials, tears, fault-findings, sneers,
angry words, bitter things, personal reflections, innuendos, disrespect,
bullying, and every element of a row-royal. Consequently, when the girls
go home they are exasperated.

We know how Angela proposed to prevent the outbreak of this contagious
disorder by ventilation, exercise, and frequent rests.

She took her place among the girls, and worked with them, sitting beside
Nelly Sorensen, who was to have charge of the workroom. Rebekah, with
Miss Messenger's magnificent order on her mind, sat in the showroom
waiting for visitors. But none came except Mrs. Bormalack, accompanied
by her ladyship, who stepped over to offer their congratulations and
best wishes, and to see what Miss Messenger was going to have.

At eleven o'clock, when the first two hours' pull is beginning to be
felt by the younger hands, Angela invited everybody to rest for half an
hour. They obeyed with some surprise, and followed her with considerable
suspicion, as if some mean advantage was going to be taken of them, some
trick "sprung" upon them.

She took them into a kind of court, which had been the back garden,
paved with asphalt and provided with nets, rackets, and all the gear for
lawn tennis. She invited them to play for half an hour. It was a fine
morning in early September, with a warm sun, a bright sky, and a cool
breeze--the very day for lawn tennis. The girls, however, looked at the
machinery and then at each other, and showed no inclination for the
game. Then Angela led the way into the great glass-room, where she
pointed out the various bars, ropes, and posts which she had provided
for their gymnastic exercises. They looked at each other again, and
showed a disposition to giggle.

They were seven girls in all, not counting Rebekah, who remained in the
showroom; and Nelly, who was a little older than the rest, stood rather
apart. The girls were not unhealthy-looking, being all quite young, and
therefore not as yet ruined as to the complexion by gas and bad air. But
they looked dejected, as if their work had no charms for them--indeed,
one can hardly imagine that it had--they were only surprised, not
elated, at the half-hour's recreation; they expected that it would be
deducted from their wages, and were resentful.

Then Angela made them a speech. She said, handling a racket to give
herself confidence, that it was highly necessary to take plenty of
exercise in the open air; that she was sure work would be better done
and more quickly done if the fingers did not get too tired; therefore,
that she had had this tennis-court prepared for them and the gymnasium
fitted up, so that they might play in it every day. And then selecting
Nelly and two others, who seemed active young creatures, she gave them
their first lesson in lawn tennis.

The next day she gave a lesson to another set. In a few days tennis
became a passion with the girls. The fashion spread. Lawn tennis is not
an expensive game; shortly there will be no bit of square garden or
vacant space in Stepney but will be marked out into its lawn-tennis
courts.

The gymnasium took longer to become popular. Girls do not like feats of
strength; nor was it until the spell of wet weather last October, when
outdoor games became impossible, that the gymnasium began to attract at
all. Then a spirit of emulation was set up, and bodily exercises became
popular. After becoming quite sure that no deduction was made on account
of the resting time, the girls ceased to be suspicious, and accepted the
gift with something like enthusiasm. Yet, Miss Kennedy was their
employer; therefore, a natural enemy; therefore, gifts from her
continued, for some time, to be received with doubt and suspicion. This
does not seem, on the whole, a healthy outcome of our social system; yet
such an attitude is unfortunately common among work-girls.

At half-past eleven they all resumed work.

At one o'clock another astonishment awaited them.

Miss Kennedy informed them that one of the reforms introduced by her was
the providing of dinner every day, without deducting anything from their
wages. Those to whom dinner was, on most days, the mockery of a piece of
bread and butter, or a bun, or some such figment and pretence of a meal,
simply gasped, and the stoutest held her breath for a while, wondering
what these things might mean.

Yes, there was dinner laid for them upstairs on a fair white cloth; for
every girl a plentiful dish of beef with potatoes and other good things,
and a glass of Messenger's Family Ale--that at eight-and-six the
nine-gallon cask--and bread _à discrétion_. Angela would have added
pudding, but was dissuaded by her forewoman, on the ground that not only
would pudding swallow up too much of the profits, but that it would
demoralize the girls. As it was, one of them, at the mere aspect and
first contemplation of the beef, fell a-weeping. She was lame, and she
was the most dejected among them all. Why she wept, and how Angela
followed her home, and what that home was like, and why she and her
mother and her sisters do now continually praise and pray for Angela,
belong to another story, concerned with the wretchedness and misery
which are found at Whitechapel and Stepney, as well as in Soho and
Marylebone and the back of Regent Street. I shall not write many
chapters of that story, for my own part.

Truly a most wonderful workshop. Was ever such an association of
dressmakers?

After dinner they frolicked and romped, though as yet in an untaught
way, until two, when they began work again.

Miss Kennedy then made them another speech.

She told them that the success of their enterprise depended in great
measure upon their own industry, skill, and energy; that they were all
interested in it, because they were to receive, besides their wages, a
share in the profits; this they only partly understood. Nor did they
comprehend her scheme much more when she went on to explain that they
had the house and all the preliminary furniture found for them, so that
there would be nothing, at first, to pay for rent. They had never
considered the question of rent, and the thing did not go home to them.
But they saw in some vague way that here was an employer of a kind very
much unlike any they had ever before experienced, and they were
astonished and excited.

Later on, when they might be getting tired again, they had a visitor. It
was no other than Captain Sorensen. He said that by permission of Miss
Kennedy he would read to them for an hour, and that, if she permitted
and they liked, as he was an old man with nothing to do, he would come
and read to them often.

So this astonishing day passed on.

They had tea at five, with another half-hour's rest. As the evening was
so fine, it was served in the garden.

At seven they found that it was time to strike work--an hour at least
earlier than at any other house. What _could_ these things mean?

And then fresh marvels. For when the work was put away, Miss Kennedy
invited them all to follow her upstairs. There she formally presented
them with a room for their own use in the evening if they pleased. There
was a piano in it; but, unfortunately, nobody could play. The floor was
polished for dancing, but then no one could dance; and there was a table
with games upon it, and magazines and illustrated papers. In this room,
Miss Kennedy told them, they could sing, dance, play, read, talk, sit,
or do anything else in reason, and within the limits of modest
recreation. They might also, on Saturday evenings, bring their friends,
brothers, and so forth, who would also be expected to behave within the
limits of modesty and good breeding. In short, the place was to be a
drawing-room, and Angela proposed to train the girls by example and
precept into a proper feeling as regards the use of a drawing-room.
There was to be no giggling, no whispering in corners, nor was there to
be any horseplay. Good manners lie between horseplay on the one hand and
giggling on the other.

The kind of evening proposed by their wonderful mistress struck the
girls at first with a kind of stupefaction. Outside, the windows being
open, they could hear the steps of those who walked, talked, and laughed
on Stepney Green. They would have preferred to be among that throng of
idle promenaders; it seemed to them a more beautiful thing to walk up
and down the paths than to sit about in a room and be told to play.
There were no young men. There was the continual presence of their
employer. They were afraid of her; there was also Miss Hermitage, of
whom also they were afraid; there was, in addition, Miss Sorensen, of
whom they might learn to be afraid. As for Miss Kennedy, they were the
more afraid of her because not only did she walk, talk, and look like a
person out of another world, but, oh, wonderful! she knew
nothing--evidently nothing--of their little tricks. Naturally one is
afraid of a person who knows nothing of one's wicked ways. This is the
awkwardness in entertaining angels. They naturally assume that their
entertainers stand on the same elevated level as themselves; this causes
embarrassment. Most of us, like Angela's shop-girls, would, under the
circumstances, betray a tendency to giggle.

Then she tried to relieve them from their awkwardness by sitting down to
the piano and playing a lively galop.

"Dance, girls," she cried.

In their early childhood, before they went to school or workshop, the
girls had been accustomed to a good deal of dancing. Their ballroom was
the street; their floor was the curbstone; their partners had been other
little girls; their music the organ-grinder's. They danced with no step
but such as came by nature, but their little feet struck true and kept
good time. Now they were out of practice; they were grown big, too; they
could no longer seize each other by the waist and caper round and round.
Yet the music was inspiriting; eyes brightened, their heels became as
light as air. Yet, alas! they did not know the steps.

Angela stopped playing and looked round her. The girls were crowded
together.

Rebekah Hermitage sat apart at the table. There was that in her face
which betokened disapproval, mingled with curiosity, for she had never
seen a dance, and never, except on a barrel-organ, heard dance music.
Nelly Sorensen stood beside the piano watching the player with the
devotion which belongs to the disciple who loves the most. Whatever Miss
Kennedy did was right and sweet and beautiful. Also, whatever she did
filled poor Nelly with a sense of humiliation, because she herself felt
so ignorant.

"Rebekah! Nelly!" cried Angela. "Can you not help me?"

Both shook their heads.

"I cannot dance," said Rebekah, trying to show a little scorn, or, at
least, some disapprobation. "In our Connection we never dance."

"You never dance?" Angela forgot for the moment that she was in Stepney,
and among a class of girls who do not dance. "Do you sing?"

"If any is merry," replied Rebekah, "let him sing hymns."

"Nelly, can you help me?"

She, too, shook her head. But, she said, "her father could play the
fiddle. Might he come?"

Angela begged her to invite him immediately, and on her way to ask Mr.
Goslett, at Mrs. Bormalack's, to bring his fiddle too. Between them they
would teach the girls to dance.

Then she sat down and began to sing. First she sang, "By the Banks of
Allen Water," and then "The Bailiff's Daughter of Islington," and next,
"Drink to me only with thine eyes"--sweet and simple ditties all. Then
came Captain Sorensen, bearing his fiddle, and happy to help, and while
he played, Angela stood all the girls in a row before her, headed by
Nelly, and gave them their first lesson in the giddy dance.

Then came Harry Goslett, and at the sight of his cheerful countenance
and at the mere beholding how he bowed to Miss Kennedy, and asked to be
allowed, and put his arm round her waist and whirled her round in a
galop, their hearts were lifted up, and they longed no more for Stepney
Green. Then he changed Miss Kennedy for Nelly; and though she was
awkward at first, she soon fell into the step, while Miss Kennedy danced
with another; and then Mr. Goslett with another, and so on till all had
had a practical lesson. Then they ceased altogether to long for the jest
of the gallant 'prentice; for what were jests to this manly, masterful
seizure by the waist, this lifting almost off the feet, this whirl round
and round to the music of the fiddle which the brave old captain played
as merrily as any bo's'n's mate or quartermaster on an East Indiaman? In
half an hour the feet of all but one--the one who, poor girl, was
lame--felt that noble sympathy with the music so readily caught by those
intelligent organs, and--_they could dance_. Perhaps for the first time
in the annals of Stepney, her daughters had learned to dance.

The rest would be easy. They tried a quadrille, then another galop.
Harry endeavored to do his duty, but there were some who remarked that
he danced twice, that second galop, with Nelly Sorensen, and they were
jealous. Yet it was only an unconscious tribute paid to beauty. The
young fellow was among a bevy of dressmakers; an uncommon position for a
man of his bringing-up. One of them, somehow, was, to all appearance,
and to any but perhaps the most practised eye, a real genuine lady--not
a copy at all; the other was so graceful and sweet that she seemed to
want but a touch to effect the transformation. As for the other girls,
they were simple young persons of the workroom and counter--a common
type. So common, alas! that we are apt to forget the individuality of
each, her personal hopes, and her infinite possibilities. Yet, however
insignificant is the crowd, the individual is so important.

Then he was interested in the dark-eyed girl who sat by herself at the
table, looking on, anxiously, at an amusement she had always heard of as
"soul-destroying." She was wondering why her ears were pleased with the
playing, and why her brain was filled with strange images, and why it
was so pleasant to watch the girls dancing, their eyes aglow and their
cheeks flushed.

"Do not tempt me," she said, when Harry ventured to invite her, too, to
join the giddy throng. "Do not tempt me--no--go away!"

Her very brusqueness showed how strong was the temptation. Was she,
already, giving way to the first temptation?

Presently the evening was over, the girls had all trooped noisily out of
the house, and Angela, Captain Sorensen, Nelly, and the young workman
were walking across the green in the direction of the Almshouse.

When Angela got home to the boarding-house the dreariness of the evening
was in full blast. The boarders were sitting in silence, each wrapped in
his own thoughts. The professor lifted his head as she entered the room,
and regarded her with thoughtful eyes, as if appraising her worth as a
_clairvoyante_. David Fagg scowled horribly. His lordship opened his
mouth as if to speak, but said nothing. Mr. Maliphant took his pipe out
of his mouth, and began a story. "I remember," he said, "the last time
but one that he was ruined"--he did not state the name of the
gentleman--"the whole town was on fire, and his house with them. What
did he do? Mounted his horse and rode around, and bought up all the
timber for twenty miles around. And see what he's worth now!" When he
had told this story he relapsed into silence. Angela thought of that
casual collection of unsympathetic animals put into a cage and called a
"Happy Family."




CHAPTER XII.

SUNDAY AT THE EAST END.


Sunday morning in and about the Whitechapel and Mile End roads Angela
discovered to be a time of peculiar interest. The closing of the shops
adds to the dignity of the broad thoroughfares, because it hides so many
disagreeable and even humiliating things. But it by no means puts a stop
to traffic, which is conducted with an ostentatious disregard of the
Fourth Commandment or Christian custom. At one end, the city end, is
Houndsditch, crowded with men who come to buy and sell; and while the
bells of St. Botolph call upon the faithful with a clanging and clashing
which ring like a cry of despair, the footpath is filled with the busy
loungers, who have long since ceased to regard the invitation as having
anything at all to do with them.

Strange and wonderful result of the gathering of men in great cities! It
is not a French, or an English, or a German, or an American result--it
is universal. In every great city of the world, below a certain level,
there is no religion--men have grown dead to their higher instincts;
they no longer feel the possibilities of humanity; faith brings to them
no more the evidence of things unseen. They are crowded together, so
that they have ceased to feel their individuality. The crowd is
eternal--they are part of that eternity; if one drops out, he is not
missed; nobody considers that it will be his own turn some day so to
drop out. Life is nothing for ever and ever, but work in the week with
as much beer and tobacco as the money will run to, and loafing on
Sundays with more beer and tobacco. This, my friends, is a truly
astonishing thing, and a thing unknown until this century. Perhaps,
however, in ancient Rome the people had ceased to believe in their gods;
perhaps, in Babylon, the sacred bricks were kicked about by the
unthinking mob; perhaps, in every great city, the same loss of
individual manhood may be found.

It was on a Sunday morning in August that Angela took a little journey
of exploration, accompanied by the young workman who was her companion
in these excursions. He led her into Houndsditch and the Minories, where
she had the pleasure of inspecting the great mercantile interest of old
clothes, and of gazing upon such as buy and sell therein. Then she
turned her face northward, and entered upon a journey which twenty years
ago would have been full of peril, and is now, to one who loves his
fellow-man, full of interest.

The great boulevard of the East was thronged with the class of men who
keep the Sabbath in holy laziness with tobacco. Some of them lounge,
some talk, some listen, all have pipes in their mouths. Here was a
circle gathered round a man who was waving his arms and shouting. He was
an Apostle of Temperance; behind him stood a few of his private friends
to act as a _claque_. The listeners seemed amused but not convinced.
"They will probably," said Harry, "enjoy their dinner beer quite as much
as if they had not heard this sermon." Another circle was gathered round
a man in a cart, who had a flaming red flag to support him. He belonged,
the flag told the world, to the Tower Hamlets Magna Charta Association.
What he said was listened to with the same languid curiosity and tepid
amusement. Angela stopped a moment to hear what he had to say. He was
detailing, with immense energy, the particulars of some awful act of
injustice committed upon a friend unknown, who got six months. The law
of England is always trampling upon some innocent victim, according to
this sympathizer with virtue. The working-men have heard it all before,
and they continue to smoke their pipes, their blood not quickened by a
single beat. The ear of the people is accustomed to vehemence; the case
must be put strongly before it will listen at all; and listening, as
most brawlers discover, is not conviction.

Next to the Magna Charta brethren a cheap-jack had placed his cart. He
drove a roaring trade in two-penn'orths, which, out of compliment to a
day which should be devoted to good works, consisted each of a bottle of
sarsaparilla, which he called "sassaple," and a box of pills. Next to
him the costers stood beside their carts loaded with cheap ices,
ginger-beer, and lemonade--to show that there was no deception, a great
glass jar stood upon each cart with actual undeniable slices of lemon
floating in water and a lump of ice upon the top; there were also piles
of plums, plums without end, early August apples, and windfall pears;
also sweet things in foot-long lumps sticky and gruesome to look upon;
Brazil nuts, also a favorite article of commerce in certain circles,
though not often met with at the tables of the luxurious; late oranges,
more plums, many more plums, plums in enormous quantities; and
periwinkles, which last all the year round, with whelks and vinegar, and
the toothsome shrimp. Then there came another circle, and in the midst
stood a young man with long fair hair and large blue eyes. He was
preaching the Gospel, as he understood it; his face was the face of an
enthusiast: a little solitude, a little meditation among the mountains,
would have made this man a seer of visions and a dreamer of dreams. He
was not ridiculous, though his grammar was defective and his
pronunciation had the cockney twang and his aspirates were wanting:
nothing is ridiculous that is in earnest. On the right of the street
they had passed the headquarters of the Salvation Army; the brave
warriors were now in full blast, and the fighting, "knee-drill,"
singing, and storming of the enemy's fort were at their highest and most
enjoyable point; Angela looked in and found an immense hall crammed with
people who came to fight, or look on, to scoff, or gaze. Higher up, on
the left, stands a rival in red-hot religion, the Hall of the Jubilee
Singers, where another vast crowd was worshipping, exhorting, and
singing.

"There seems," said Angela, "to be too much exhorting; can they not sit
down somewhere in quiet for praise and prayer?"

"We working-people," replied her companion, "like everything loud and
strong. If we are persuaded to take a side, we want to be always
fighting on that side."

Streams of people passed them, lounging or walking with a steady
purpose. The former were the indifferent and the callous, the hardened
and the stupid, men to whom preachers and orators appealed in vain; to
whom Peter the Hermit might have bawled himself hoarse, and Bernard
would have thrown all his eloquence away; they smoked short pipes, with
their hands in their pockets, and looked good-tempered; with them were
boys, also smoking short pipes, with their hands in their pockets. Those
who walked were young men dressed in long frock-coats of a shiny and
lustrous black, who carried Bibles and prayer-books with some
ostentation. They were on their way to church; with them were their
sisters, for the most part well-dressed, quiet girls, to whom the noise
and the crowds were a part of life--a thing not to be avoided, hardly
felt as a trouble.

"I am always getting a new sensation," said Angela.

"What is the last?"

"I have just realized that there are thousands and thousands of people
who never, all their lives, get to a place where they can be quiet.
Always noise, always crowds, always buying and selling."

"Here, at least," said Harry, "there is no noise."

They were at the wicket-gate of the Trinity Almshouse.

"What do you think, Miss Kennedy?"

"It is a haven of rest," she replied, thinking of a certain picture.
"Let us, too, seek peace awhile."

It was just eleven o'clock, and the beadsmen were going to their chapel.
They entered the square, and joined the old men in their weekly service.
Angela discovered, to her disappointment, that the splendid flight of
steps leading to the magnificent portal was a dummy, because the real
entrance to the chapel was a lowly door beneath the stone steps, suited,
Mr. Bunker would have said, to the humble condition of the moneyless.

It is a plain chapel, with a small organ in the corner, a tiny altar,
and over the altar the ten commandments in a black wood frame--rules of
life for those whose life is well-nigh done--and a pulpit, which serves
for reading the service as well as delivering the sermon. The
congregation consisted of about thirty of the almsmen, with about half
as many old ladies; and Angela wondered why these old ladies were all
dressed in black, and all wore crape. Perhaps they desired by the use of
this material to symbolize mourning for the loss of opportunities for
making money; or for the days of beauty and courtship, or for children
dead and gone, or to mark the humility which becomes an inmate, or to do
honor to the day which is still revered by many Englishwomen as a day of
humiliation and rebuke, or in the belief that crape confers dignity. We
know not, we know nothing; the love which women bear for crape is a
mystery; man can but speculate idly on their ways. We are like the
philosopher picking up pebbles by the seaside. Among the old people sat
Nelly Sorensen, a flower of youth and loveliness, in her simple black
dress, and her light hair breaking out beneath her bonnet. The Catholics
believe that no church is complete without a bone of some dead saint or
beatified person. Angela made up her mind, on the spot, that no act of
public worship is complete without the assistance of youth as well as of
age.

The men were all dressed alike in blue coats and brass buttons, the
uniform of the place; they seemed all, with the exception of one who was
battered by time, and was fain to sit while the rest stood, to be of the
same age, and that might be anything between a hearty sixty-five and a
vigorous eighty. After the manner of sailors, they were all exact in the
performance of their share in public worship, following the prayers in
the book and the lessons in the Bible. When the time came for listening
they straightened themselves out, in an attitude comfortable for
listening. The Scotch elder assumes, during the sermon, the air of a
hostile critic; the face of the British rustic becomes vacant; the eyes
of the ordinary listener in church show that his thoughts are far away;
but the expression of a sailor's face, while he is performing the
duty--part of the day's duty--of listening to the sermon, shows
respectful attention, although he may have heard it all before.

Angela did not listen much to the sermon: she was thinking of the old
men for whom that sermon was prepared. There was a fresh color upon
their faces, as if it was not so very long since their cheeks had been
fanned by the strong sea-breeze; their eyes were clear, they possessed
the bearing which comes of the habit of command, and they carried
themselves as if they were not ashamed of their poverty. Now Bunker,
Angela reflected, would have been very much ashamed, and would have
hung his head in shame. But then Bunker was one of the nimble-footed
hunters after money, while these ignoble persons had contented
themselves with the simple and slavish record of duty done.

The service over, they were joined by Captain Sorensen and his daughter,
and for half an hour walked in the quiet court behind the church, in
peaceful converse. Angela walked with the old man, and Nelly with the
young man. It matters little what they talked about, but it was
something good, because when the Captain went home to his dinner he
kissed his daughter, and said it seemed to him that it was the best
day's work he ever did when he let her go to Miss Kennedy.

In the evening Angela made another journey of exploration with the same
escort. They passed down Stepney Green, and plunged among the labyrinth
of streets lying between the Mile End Road and the Thames. It is as
unlovely a collection of houses as may be found anywhere, always
excepting Hoxton, which may fairly be considered the Queen of
Unloveliness. The houses in this part are small, and they are almost all
of one pattern. There is no green thing to be seen; no one plants trees,
there seem to be no gardens; no flowers are in the windows; there is no
brightness of paint or of clean windows; there is nothing of joy,
nothing to gladden the eye.

"Think," said Harry, almost in a whisper, as if in homage to the Powers
of Dirt and Dreariness, "think what this people could be made if we
could only carry out your scheme of the Palace of Delight."

"We could make them discontented, at least," said Angela. "Discontent
must come before reform."

"We should leave them to reform themselves," said Harry. "The mistake of
philanthropists is to think that they can do for people what can only be
done by the people. As you said this morning, there is too much
exhorting."

Presently they struck out of a street rather more dreary than its
neighbors, and found themselves in a broad road with a great church.

"This is Limehouse Church," said Harry. "All round you are sailors.
There is East India Dock Road. Here is West India Dock Road. There is
the Foreign Sailors' Home; and we will go no farther, if you please,
because the streets are all full, you perceive, of the foreign sailors
and the English sailors and the sailors' friends."

Angela had seen enough of the sailors. They turned back. Harry led her
through another labyrinth into another broad street, also crowded with
sailors.

"This is Shadwell," said her guide; "and if there is anything in
Shadwell to interest you, I do not know what it is. Survey Shadwell!"

Angela looked up the street and down the street; there was nothing for
the eye in search of the beautiful or the picturesque to rest upon. But
a great bawling of rough voices came from a great tent stuck up, oddly,
beside the road. A white canvas sheet with black letters proclaimed this
as the place of worship of the "Happy Gypsies." They were holding their
Sunday Function.

"More exhorting!" said Angela.

"Now, this," he said, as they walked along, "is a more interesting
place. It used to be called Ratcliffe Highway, and had the reputation of
being the wickedest place in London. I dare say it was all brag, and
that really it was not much worse than its neighbors."

It is a distinctly squalid street, that now called St.
George's-in-the-East. But it has its points; it is picturesque, like a
good many dirty places; the people are good-tempered, though they do not
wash their faces even on Sundays. They have quite left off knocking
down, picking pockets, kicking, and robbing the harmless stranger; they
are advancing slowly toward civilization.

"Come this way," said Harry.

He passed through a narrow passage, and led the way into a place at the
sight of which Angela was fain to cry out in surprise.

In it was nothing less than a fair and gracious garden planted with
flowers, and these in the soft August sunshine showed sweet and lovely.
The beds were well kept; the walks were of asphalt; there were seats set
about, and on them old women and old men sat basking in the evening sun.
The young men and maidens walked along the paths--an Arcadian scene.

"This little strip of Eden," said Harry, "was cut out of the old
church-yard."

The rest of the church-yard was divided from the garden by a railing,
and round the wall were the tombstones of the departed obscure. From the
church itself was heard the rolling of the organ and the soft singing of
a hymn.

"This," said Angela, "is better than exhortation. A garden for
meditation and the church for prayer. I like this place better than the
Whitechapel Road."

"I will show you a more quiet place still," said her guide. They walked
a little way farther down the main street; then he turned into a narrow
street on the north, and Angela found herself in a square of clean
houses round an inclosure of grass. Within the inclosure was a chapel,
and tombs were dotted on the grass.

They went into the chapel, a plain edifice of the Georgian kind with
round windows, and the evening sun shone through the window in the west.
The high pews were occupied by a congregation of forty or fifty, all
men. They all had light-brown hair, and as they turned round to look at
the new-comers, Angela saw that they all had blue eyes. The preacher,
who wore a black gown and bands, was similarly provided as to hair and
eyes. He preached in a foreign tongue, and as it is difficult to be
edified by a sermon not in one's native speech, they shortly went out
again. They were followed by the verger, who seemed not indisposed to
break the monotony of the service by a few minutes' walk.

He talked English imperfectly, but he told them that it was the church
of the Swedes. Angela asked if they were all sailors. He said, with some
seeming contempt for sailors, that only a few of them were sailors. She
then said that she supposed they were people engaged in trade. He shook
his head again, and informed her with a mysterious air that many of the
Swedish nobility lived in that neighborhood. After this they came away,
for fear of greater surprises.

They followed St. George's-in-the-East to the end of the street. Then
they turned to the right, and passed through a straight and quite
ignoble road leading north. It is a street greatly affected by Germans.
German names are over every shop and on every brass plate. They come
hither, these honest Germans, because to get good work in London is
better than going after it to New York or Philadelphia, and nearer home.
In the second generation their names will be Anglicized, and their
children will have become rich London merchants, and very likely Cabinet
ministers. They have their churches, too, the Reformed and the Lutheran,
with nothing to choose between them on the score of ugliness.

"Let us get home," said Angela; "I have seen enough."

"It is the joylessness of the life," she explained, "the ignorant,
contented joylessness, which weighs upon one. And there is so much of
it. Surely there is no other city in the world which is so utterly
without joy as this East London."

"No," said Harry, "there is not in the whole world a city so devoid of
pleasant things. They do not know how to be happy. They are like your
work-girls when you told them to dance."

"Look!" she cried, "what is that?"

There was a hoarse roar of many voices from a court leading out of the
main road; the roar became louder; Harry drew the girl aside as a mob of
men and boys and women rushed headlong out of the place. It was not a
fight apparently, yet there was beating with sticks and kicking. For
those who were beaten did not strike back in return. After a little the
beaters and kickers desisted, and returned to their court as to a
stronghold whose rights they had vindicated.

Those who had been beaten were a band of about a dozen, men and women.
The women's shawls were hanging in tatters, and they had lost their
bonnets. The men were without hats, and their coats were grievously
torn. There was a thing among them which had been a banner, but the pole
was broken and the flag was dragged in the dirt and smirched.

One of them who, seemed to be the leader--he wore a uniform coat
something like a volunteer's coat--stepped to the front and called upon
them all to form. Then with a loud voice he led off a hymn, in which all
joined as they marched down the street.

He was hatless, and his cheek was bleeding from an open wound. Yet he
looked undaunted, and his hymn was a song of triumph. A wild-set-up
young fellow with thick black hair and black beard, but pale cheeks. His
forehead was square and firm; his eyes were black and fierce.

"Good heavens!" cried Harry. "It is my cousin Tom, captain in the
Salvation Army. And that, I suppose, is his regiment. Well, if standing
still to be kicked means a victory, they have scored one to-night."

The pavement was even more crowded than in the morning. The political
agitators bawled more fiercely than in the forenoon to their circle of
apathetic listeners; the preachers exhorted the unwilling more fervently
to embrace the faith. Cheap-jacks was dispensing more volubly his two
penn'orths of "sassaple." The workmen lounged along, with their pipes in
their mouths, more lazily than in the morning. The only difference was
that the shop-boys were now added to the crowd, every lad with a
"twopenny smoke" between his lips; and that the throng was increased by
those who were going home from church.

"Let us, too, go home," said Angela; "there is too much humanity here;
we shall lose ourselves among the crowd."




CHAPTER XIII.

ANGELA'S EXPERIMENT.


"No, Constance," Angela wrote, "I cannot believe that your lectures will
be a failure, or that your life's work is destined to be anything short
of a brilliant success--an 'epoch-making' episode in the history of
Woman's Rise. If your lectures have not yet attracted reading men, it
must be because they are not yet known. It is unworthy of faith in your
own high mission to suppose that personal appearance or beauty has
anything to do with popularity in matters of mind. Who asks--who can
ask?--whether a woman of genius is lovely or not? And to take lower
ground: every woman owns the singular attractiveness of your own face,
which has always seemed to me, apart from personal friendship, the face
of pure intellect. I do not give up my belief that the men will soon
begin to run after your lectures as they did after those of Hypatia, and
yet will become in the University as great a teacher of mathematics as
Sir Isaac Newton himself. Meantime, it must be, I own, irksome to
lecture on vulgar fractions, and the First Book of Euclid, and
unsatisfactory to find, after you have made a research and arrived at
what seemed a splendid result, that some man has been before you.
Patience, Constance!"

At this point the reader, who was of course Constance Woodcote, paused
and smiled bitterly. She was angry because she had advertised a course
of lectures on some desperately high mathematical subject and no one
came to hear them. Had she been, she reflected, a pink-and-white girl
with no forehead and soft eyes, everybody would have rushed to hear her.
As it was, Angela, no doubt, meant well, but she was always disposed to
give men credit for qualities which they did not possess. As if you
could ever persuade a man to regard a woman from a purely intellectual
point of view! After all, she thought, civilization was only just begun;
we live in a world of darkness; the reign of woman is as yet afar off.
She continued her reading with impatience. Somehow, her friends seemed
to have drifted away; their lines were diverging; already the old
enthusiasms had given place to the new, and Angela thought less of the
great cause which she had once promised to further with her mighty
resources.

"As regards the scholarship which I promised you, I must ask you to wait
a little, because my hands are full--so full of important things that
even a new scholarship at Newnham seems a small thing. I cannot tell you
in a letter what my projects are, and how I am trying to do something
new with my great wealth. This, at least, I may tell you, partly because
I am intoxicated with my own schemes, and, therefore, I must tell
everybody I speak to; and partly because you are perfectly certain not
to sympathize with me, and therefore you will not trouble to argue the
point with me. I have found out, to begin with, a great truth. It is
that would-be philanthropists and benefactors and improvers of things
have all along been working on a false assumption. They have taught and
believed that the people look up to the 'better class'--phrase invented
by the well-to-do in order to show riches and virtue go together--for
guidance and advice. My dear, it is the greatest mistake; they do not
look up to us at all; they do not want to copy our ways; they are
perfectly satisfied with their own ways; they will naturally take as
much money as we choose to give them, and as many presents; and they
consider the exhortations, preachings, admonitions, words of guidance,
and advice as uncomfortable but unavoidable accompaniments of this gift.
But we ourselves are neither respected nor copied. Nor do they want our
culture."

"Angela," said the mathematician, "is really very prolix."

"This being so, I am endeavoring to make such people as I can get at
discontented as a first step. Without discontent, nothing can be done. I
work upon them by showing, practically, and by way of example, better
things. This I can do because I am here as simply one of themselves--a
workwoman among other workwomen. I do not work as much as the others in
our newly formed association, because I am supposed to run the machine,
and to go to the West End for work. Miss Messenger is one of our
customers. So much am I one of them, that I take my wages on Saturday,
and am to have the same share, and no more, in the business as my
dressmakers. I confess to you that in the foundation of my Dressmakers'
Association I have violated most distinctly every precept of political
and social economy. I have given them a house rent-free for a year; I
have fitted it up with all that they want; I have started them with
orders from myself; I have resolved to keep them going until they are
able to run alone; I give wages, in money and in food, higher than the
market-value. I know what you will say. It is all quite true
scientifically. But outside the range of science there is humanity. And
only think what a great field my method opens for the employment of the
unfortunate rich--the unhappy, useless, heavily burdened rich. They will
all follow my example and help the people to help themselves.

"My girls were at first and for the most part uninteresting, until I
came to know them individually: every one, when you know her, and can
sympathize with her, becomes interesting. Some are, however, more
interesting than others; there are two or three, for instance, in whom I
feel a special interest. One of them, whom I love for her gentleness and
for her loyalty to me, is the daughter of an old ship-captain now in an
almshouse. She is singularly beautiful, with an air of fragility which
one hopes is not real; she is endowed by nature with a keenly sensitive
disposition, and has had the advantage, rare in these parts, of a father
who learned to be a gentleman before he came to the almshouse. The other
is a religious fanatic, a sectarian of the most positive kind. She knows
what is truth more certainly than any Professor of Truth we ever
encountered; she is my manager and is good at business. I think she has
come to regard me with less contempt, from a business point of view,
than she did at first, because in the conduct of the showroom and the
trying-on room she has all her own way.

"My evenings are mostly spent with the girls in the garden and
'drawing-room.' Yes, we have a drawing-room over the workroom. At first
we had tea at five and struck work at seven; now we strike work at half
past six and take tea with lawn tennis. I assure you my dressmakers are
as fond of lawn tennis as the students of Newnham. When it is too dark
to play, we go upstairs and have music and dancing."

Here followed a word which had been erased. The mathematical lecturer
held the letter to the light and fancied the word was "Harry." This
could hardly be; it must be Hetty, or Kitty, or Lotty, or some such
feminine abbreviation. There could be no Harry. She looked again.
Strange! It certainly _was_ Harry. She shook her head suspiciously and
went on with the letter.

"The girls' friends and sisters have begun to come, and we are learning
all kinds of dances. Fortunately my dear old captain from the almshouse
can play the fiddle, and likes nothing better than to play for us. We
place him in the corner beside the piano and he plays as long as we
please, being the best of all old captains. We are not well off for
men, having at present to rely principally on a superior young
cabinet-maker, who can also play the fiddle on occasion. He dances very
well, and perhaps he will fall in love with the captain's daughter.

"What I have attempted is, in short, nothing less than the introduction
of a love of what we call culture. Other things will follow, but at
present I am contented with an experiment on a very humble scale. If I
were to go among the people in my name, most of them would try to borrow
or steal from me; as I am only a poor dressmaker, only those who have
business with me try to take me in. I do not go on a platform and
lecture the people; nor do I open a school to teach them; nor do I print
and circulate tracts. I simply say, 'My dears, I am going to dance and
sing, and have a little music, and play lawn tennis; come with me, and
we will dance together.' And they come. And they behave well. I think it
is a strange thing that young women of the lower class always prefer to
behave well _when they can_, while young men of their own station take
so much pleasure in noise and riot. We have no difficulty in our
drawing-room, where the girls behave perfectly and enjoy themselves in a
surprising manner. I find already a great improvement in the girls. They
have acquired new interests in life, they are happier: consequently,
they chatter like birds in spring and sunshine; and whereas, since I
came into these regions, it has been a constant pain to listen to the
querulous and angry talk of work-girls in omnibuses and in streets, I
rejoice that we have changed all this, and while they are with me my
girls can talk without angry snapping of the lips, and without the
'sezi' and 'sezee' and 'seshee' of the omnibus. This is surely a great
gain for them.

"Next, I observe that they are developing a certain amount of pride in
their own superiority; they are lifted above their neighbors, if only by
the nightly drawing-room. I fear they will become unpopular from
hauteur; but there is no gain without some loss. If only one felt
justified in doubling the number of the girls! But the Stepney ladies
have hitherto shown no enthusiasm in the cause of the Association. The
feeling in these parts is, you see, commercial rather than co-operative.

"The dinner is to me the most satisfactory as well as the most
unscientific part of the business. I believe I have no right to give
them a dinner at all; it is against the custom in dressmakers' shops,
where girls bring their own dinners, poor things; it costs quite a
shilling a head every day to find the dinner, and Rebekah, my forewoman,
tells me that no profits can stand against such a drain: but I must go
on with the dinner even if it swallows up all the profits.

"On Sundays the drawing-room is kept open all day long for those who
like to come. Some do, because it is quiet. In the evening we have
sacred music. One of the young men plays the violin"--the reader turned
back and referred to a previous passage--yes; she had already mentioned
a cabinet-maker in connection with a fiddle--no doubt it must be the
same--"and we have duets, but I fear the girls do not care much yet for
classical music----"

Here the reader crumpled up the letter in impatience.

"And this," she groaned, "is the result of two years at Newnham! After
her course of political economy, after all those lectures, after
actually distinguishing herself and taking a place, this is the end! To
play the piano for a lot of work-girls; with a cabinet-maker; and an old
sailor; and to be a dressmaker! That is, alas! the very worst feature in
the case: she evidently likes it; she has no wish to return to
civilization; she has forgotten her science; she is setting a most
mischievous example; and she has forgotten her distinct promise to give
us a mathematical scholarship.

"O Angela!"

She had imagined that the heiress would endow Newnham with great gifts,
and she was disappointed. She had imagined this so very strongly that
she felt personally aggrieved and injured. What did she care about
Stepney work-girls? What have mathematics to do with poor people in an
ugly and poor part of town?

Angela's letter did not convey the whole truth, because she herself was
ignorant of the discussions, gossips, rumors, and reports which were
flying about in the neighborhood of Stepney Green concerning her
venture. There were some, for instance, who demonstrated that such an
institution must fail for reasons which they learnedly expounded; among
these was Mr. Bunker. There were some who were ready to prove, from the
highest authorities, the wickedness of trying to do without a
proprietor, master, or boss; there were some who saw in this
revolutionary movement the beginning of those troubles which will
afflict mankind toward the coming of the end; there were others, among
whom was also Mr. Bunker, who asked by what right this young woman had
come among them to interfere, where she had got her money, and what were
her antecedents? To Bunker's certain knowledge, and no one had better
sources of information, hundreds had been spent by Miss Kennedy in
starting the association; while, whether it was true that Miss Messenger
supported the place or not, there could never be enough work to get back
all that money, pay all the wages, and the rest, and the dinners, and
hot dinners every day! There was even talk of getting up a memorial
praying Miss Messenger not to interfere with the trade of the place, and
pointing out that there were many most respectable dressmakers where the
work could be quite as well done as by Miss Kennedy's girls, no doubt
cheaper, and the profit would go to the rightful claimant of it, not to
be divided among the workwomen.

As for the privileges bestowed upon the girls, there was in certain
circles but one opinion--they were ridiculous. Recreation time, free
dinner of meat and vegetables, short hours, reading aloud, and a
club-room or drawing-room for the evening; what more could their betters
have? For it is a fixed article of belief, one of the Twenty-nine
Articles in certain strata of society, that people "below them" have no
right to the enjoyment of anything. They do not mean to be cruel, but
they have always associated poverty with dirt, discomfort, disagreeable
companions, and the absence of pleasantness; for a poor person to be
happy is either to them an impossibility, or it is a flying in the face
of Providence. But then, these people know nothing of the joys which can
be had without money. Now, when the world discovers and realizes how
many these are and how great they are, the reign of the almighty dollar
is at an end. Whatever the Stepney folk thought, and however diverse
their judgment, they were all extremely curious, and after the place had
been open for a few weeks and began to get known, all the ladies from
Whitechapel Church to Bow Church began with one consent to call. They
were received by a young person of grave face and grave manners, who
showed them all they wanted to see, answered all their questions and the
showrooms, the dining-room and the drawing-room; they also saw most
beautiful dresses which were being made for Miss Messenger; those who
went there in the morning might see with their own eyes dressmaker girls
actually playing lawn tennis, if in the afternoon they might see an old
gentleman reading aloud while the girls worked; they might also observe
that there were flowers in the room; it was perfectly certain that there
was a piano upstairs, because it had been seen by many, and the person
in the showroom made no secret at all that there was dancing in the
evening, with songs, and reading of books, and other diversions.

The contemplation of these things mostly sent the visitors away in
sorrow. _They_ did not dance or sing or play; _they_ never wanted to
dance or sing; lawn tennis was not played by _their_ daughters; _they_
did not have bright-covered books to read. What did it mean, giving
these things to dressmaker girls? Some of them not only resolved not to
send their custom to the association, but directed tracts to the house.

They came, however, after a time, and had their dresses made there, for
a reason which will appear in the sequel. But at the outset they held
aloof.

Far different was the reception given to the institution by the people
for whose benefit it was designed. When they had quite got over their
natural suspicion of a strange thing; when the girls were found to bring
home their pay regularly on a Saturday; when the dinner proved a real
thing and the hours continued to be merciful; when the girls reported
continuously kind treatment; when the evenings spent in the drawing-room
were found to be delightful, and when other doubts and whisperings about
Miss Kennedy's motives, intentions, and secret character gradually died
away, the association became popular, and all the needle-girls of the
place would fain have joined Miss Kennedy. The thing which did the most
to create the popularity was the permission for the girls to bring some
of their friends and people on the Saturday evening. They "received" on
Saturday evening--they were at home; they entertained their guests on
that night; and, though the entertainment cost nothing but the lights,
it soon became an honor and a pleasure to receive an invitation. Most of
those who came at first were other girls; they were shy and stood about
all arms; then they learned their steps; then they danced; then the
weariness wore out of their eyes and the roses came back to their
cheeks; they forgot the naggings of the workroom, and felt for the first
time the joy of their youth. Some of them were inclined at first to be
rough and bold, but the atmosphere calmed them; they either came no more
or if they came they were quiet; some of them affected a superior and
contemptuous air, not uncommon with "young persons" when they are
jealous or envious, but this is a mood easily cured; some of them were
frivolous, but these were also easily subdued. For always with them was
Miss Kennedy herself, a Juno, their queen, whose manner was so kind,
whose smile was so sweet, whose voice was so soft, whose greeting was so
warm, and yet--yet ... who could not be resisted, even by the boldest or
the most frivolous. The first step was not to be afraid of Miss Kennedy;
at no subsequent stage of their acquaintance did any cease to respect
her.

As for Rebekah, she would not come on Saturday evening, as it was part
of her Sabbath; but Nelly proved of the greatest use in maintaining the
decorum and in promoting the spirit of the evenings, which wanted, it is
true, a leader.

Sometimes the girls' mothers would come, especially those who had not
too many babies; they sat with folded hands and wondering eyes, while
their daughters danced, while Miss Kennedy sang, and Mr. Goslett played
the fiddle. Angela went among them, talking in her sympathetic way, and
won their confidence so that they presently responded and told her all
their troubles and woe. Or sometimes the fathers would be brought, but
very seldom came twice. Now and then a brother would appear, but it was
many weeks before the brothers began to come regularly; when they did,
it became apparent that there was something in the place more attractive
than brotherly duty or the love of dancing. Of course, sweethearts were
bound to come whether they liked it or not. There were, at first, many
little hitches, disagreeable incidents, rebellious exhibitions of
temper, bad behavior, mistakes, social sins, and other things of which
the chronicler must be mute, because the general result is all that we
desire to record. And this was satisfactory. For the first time the
girls learned that there were joys in life, joys even within their
reach, with a little help, poor as they were; joys which cost them
nothing. Among them were girls of the very humblest, who had the
greatest difficulty in presenting a decent appearance, who lived in
crowded lodgings or in poor houses with their numerous brothers and
sisters; pale-faced girls, heavy-hearted girls; joyless maidens,
loveless maidens--girls who from long hours of work, and from want of
open air and good food, stooped their shoulders and dragged their
limbs--when Angela saw them first, she wished that she was a man to use
strong language against their employers. How she violated all principles
of social economy, giving clothes, secretly lending money, visiting
mothers, paying rent, and all without any regard to supply and demand,
marketable value, price current, worth of labor, wages rate, averages,
percentages, interest, capital, commercial rules, theory of trade,
encouragement of over-population, would be too disgraceful to narrate;
indeed, she blushed when she thought of the beautiful and heart-warming
science in which she had so greatly distinguished herself, and on which
she trampled daily. Yet if, on the one side, there stood cold science,
and on the other a suffering girl, it is ridiculous to acknowledge that
the girl always won the day.

Among the girls was one who interested Angela greatly, not because she
was pretty, for she was not pretty at all, but plain to look upon, and
lame, but because she bore a very hard lot with patience and courage
very beautiful to see. She had a sister who was crippled and had a weak
back, so that she could not sit up long, nor earn much. She had a mother
who was growing old and weak of sight, so that she could not earn much;
she had a young brother who lived like the sparrows; that is to say, he
ran wild in the streets and stole his daily bread, and was rapidly
rising to the dignity and rank of an habitual criminal. He seldom,
however, came home, except to borrow or beg for money. She had a father,
whose name was never mentioned, so that he was certainly an undesirable
father, a bad bargain of a father, a father impossible, viewed in
connection with the fifth commandment. This was the girl who burst into
tears when she saw the roast beef for the first time. Her tears were
caused by a number of reasons: first, because she was hungry and her
condition was low; secondly, because roasted beef to a hungry girl is a
thing too beautiful; thirdly, because while she was feasting, her sister
and mother were starving. The crippled sister presently came to the
house and remained in it all day. What special arrangements were made
with Rebekah, the spirit of commerce, as regards her pay, I know not;
but she came, did a little work, sat or lay down in the drawing-room
most of the time; and presently, under Miss Kennedy's instruction, began
to practise on the piano. A work-girl, actually a work-girl, if you
please, playing scales, with a one, two, three, four, one, two, three,
four, just as if she was a lady living in the Mile End Road and the
daughter of a clerk in the brewery!

Yes, the girls, who had formerly worked in unhealthy rooms till
half-past eight, now worked in well-ventilated rooms till half-past six;
they had time to rest and run about; they had good food, they had
cheerful talk, they were encouraged; Captain Sorensen came to read to
them; in the evening they had a delightful room to sit in, where they
could read and talk, or dance, or listen. While they read the books
which Miss Kennedy laid on the table for them, she would play and sing.
First, she chose simple songs and simple pieces, and as their taste for
music grew, so her music improved; and every day found the drawing-room
more attractive, and the girls more loath to go home. She watched her
experiment with the keenest interest; the girls were certainly growing
more refined in manner and in thought. Even Rebekah was softening daily;
she looked on at the dance without a shudder, even when the handsome
young workman clasped Nelly Sorensen by the waist and whirled her round
the room; and she owned that there was music in the world, outside her
little chapel, far sweeter than anything they had within it. As for
Nelly, she simply worshipped. Whatever Miss Kennedy did was right and
beautiful and perfect in her eyes; nor, in her ignorance of the world,
did she ponder any more over that first difficulty of hers, why a lady,
and such a lady, had come to Stepney Green to be a dressmaker.




CHAPTER XIV.

THE TENDER PASSION.


It is always a dangerous thing for two young persons of opposite sexes
to live together under the same roof, even when the lady is plain and at
first sight unattractive, and when the young man is stupid. For they get
to know one another. Now, so great is the beauty of human nature, even
in its second-rate or third-rate productions, that love generally
follows when one of the two, by confession or unconscious self-betrayal,
stands revealed to the other. It is not the actual man or woman, you
see, who is loved--it is the ideal, the possible, the model or type from
which the specimen is copied, and which it distinctly resembles. But
think of the danger when the house in which these young people find
themselves is not a large country-house, where many are gathered
together of like pursuits, but an obscure boarding-house in a
society-forgotten suburb, where these two had only each other to talk
to. Add to this that they are both interested in an experiment of the
greatest delicacy, in which the least false step would be fatal. Add,
further, the fact that each is astonished at the other: the one to find
in a dressmaker the refinement and all the accomplishments of a lady;
the other, to find in a cabinet-maker the distinguishing marks of a
gentleman; the same way of looking at things and talking about them; the
same bearing and the same courtesy.

The danger was even made greater by what seemed a preventive--namely, by
the way in which at the beginning Angela so very firmly put down her
foot on the subject of "keeping company;" there was to be no attempt at
love-making; on that understanding the two could, and did, go about
together as much as they pleased. What followed naturally was that more
and more they began to consider each the other as a problem of an
interesting character. Angela observed that the young workman, whom she
had at first considered of a frivolous disposition, seemed to be growing
more serious in his views of things, and even when he laughed there was
method in his folly. No men are so solemn, she reflected, as the dull of
comprehension; perhaps the extremely serious character of the place in
which they lived was making him dull, too. It is difficult, certainly,
for any one to go on laughing at Stepney; the children, who begin by
laughing, like children everywhere, have to give up the practice before
they are eight years of age, because the streets are so insufferably
dull; the grown-up people never laugh at all; when immigrants arrive
from livelier quarters, say Manchester or Sheffield, after a certain
time of residence--the period varies with the mercurial temperament of
the patient--they laugh no more. "Surely," thought Angela, "he is
settling down; he will soon find work; he will become like other men of
his class; and then, no doubt, he will fall in love with Nelly. Nothing
could be more suitable."

By saying to herself, over and over again, that this arrangement should
take place, she had got to persuade herself that it certainly would.
"Nelly possessed," she said, "the refinement of manner and nature,
without which the young man would be wretched; she was affectionate and
sensible; it would certainly do very well." And she was hardly
conscious, while she arranged this in her own head, of a certain uneasy
feeling in her mind, which in smaller creatures might have been called
jealousy.

So far, there had been little to warrant the belief that things were
advancing in the direction she desired. He was not much more attentive
to Nelly than to any other of the girls; worse still, as she reflected
with trepidation, there were many symptoms by which he showed a
preference for quite another person.

As for Harry, it was useless for him to conceal from himself any longer
the fact that he was by this time head-over-ears in love. The situation
offered greater temptations than his strength could withstand. He
succumbed--whatever the end might be, he was in love.

If one comes to think of it, this was rather a remarkable result of a
descent into the lower regions. One expects to meet in the Home of Dull
Ugliness things repellent, coarse; enjoying the freedom of nature,
unrestrained, unconventional. Harry found, on the contrary, the
sweetness of Eden, a fair garden of delights, in which sat a peerless
lady, the Queen of Beauty, a very Venus. All his life, that is, since he
had begun to think about love at all, he had stoutly held and
strenuously maintained that it was _lèse majesté_, high treason to love,
for a man to throw away--he used to say "throw away"--upon a maiden of
low degree the passion which should be offered to a lady--a demoiselle.
The position was certainly altered, inasmuch as he was no longer of
gentle birth. Therefore, he argued, he would no longer pretend to the
hand of a lady. At first he used to make resolutions, as bravely as a
board of directors: he would arise and flee to the desert--any place
would be a desert without her; he would get out of temptation; he would
go back to Piccadilly, and there forget her. Yet he remained; yet every
day he sought her again; every day his condition became more hopeless;
every day he continued to walk with her, play duets with her, sing with
her, dance with her, argue with her, learn from her, teach her, watch
over her, and felt the sunshine of her presence, and at meeting and
parting touched her fingers.

She was so well educated, he said, strengthening his faith; she was so
kindly and considerate; her manners were so perfect; she was so
beautiful and graceful; she knew so well how to command, that he was
constrained to own that no lady of his acquaintance was, or could be,
her superior. To call her a dressmaker was to ennoble and sanctify the
whole craft. She should be to that art what Cecilia is to music--its
patron saint; she should be to himself--yet, what would be the end? He
smiled grimly, thinking that there was no need to speculate on the end,
when as yet there had been no beginning. He could not make a beginning.
If he ventured on some shy and modest tentative in the direction
of--call it an understanding--she froze. She was always on the watch;
she seemed to say: "Thus far you may presume, but no farther." What did
it mean? Was she really resolved never to receive his advances? Did she
dislike him? That could hardly be. Was she watching him? Was she afraid
to trust him? That might be. Or was she already engaged to some other
fellow--some superior fellow--perhaps with a shop--gracious heavens!--of
his own? That might be, though it made him cold to think it possible. Or
did she have some past history, some unhappy complication of the
affections, which made her as cold as Dian? That, too, might be.

The ordinary young man, thrown into the society of half a dozen
working-girls, would have begun to flirt and talk nonsense with all of
them together, or with one after the other. Harry was not that kind of
young man. There is always, by the blessing of kind Heaven, left unto us
a remnant of those who hold woman sacred, and continually praise,
worship, and reverence the name of love. He was one of those young men.
To flirt with a milliner did not seem a delightful thing to him at any
time. And in this case there was another reason why he should not behave
in the manner customary to the would-be Don Juan; it was simply _foi de
gentilhomme_; he was tolerated among them all on a kind of unspoken but
understood parole. Miss Kennedy received him in confidence that he would
not abuse her kindness.

One Sunday afternoon when they were walking together--it was in one of
the warm days of last September--in Victoria Park, they had a
conversation which led to really important things. There are one or two
very pretty walks in that garden, and though the season was late, and
the leaves mostly yellow, brown, crimson, or golden, there were still
flowers, and the ornamental water was bright, and the path crowded with
people who looked happy, because the sun was shining; they had all dined
plentifully, with copious beer, and the girls had got on their best
things, and the swains were gallant with a flower in the buttonhole and
a cigar between the lips. There is, indeed, so little difference between
the rich and the poor--can even Hyde Park in the season go beyond the
flower and the cigar? In certain tropical lands, the first step in
civilization is to buy a mosquito-curtain, though your dusky epidermis
is as impervious as a crocodile's to the sting of a mosquito. In this
realm of England the first step toward gentility is the twopenny smoke,
to which we cling, though it is made of medicated cabbage, though it
makes the mouth raw, the tongue sore, the lips cracked, the eyes red,
the nerves shaky, and the temper short. Who would not suffer in such a
cause?

It began with a remark of Angela's about his continued laziness. He
replied, evasively, that he had intended to take a long holiday, in
order to look round and consider what was best to be done; that he liked
holidays; that he meant to introduce holidays into the next trade
dispute; that his holidays enabled him to work a little for Miss
Kennedy, without counting his lordship, whose case he had now drawn up;
that he was now ready for work whenever, he added airily, work was ready
for him; and that he was not, in fact, quite sure that Stepney and its
neighborhood would prove the best place for him to work out his life.

"I should think," said Angela, "that it would be as good a place as any
you would find in America."

"If you tell me to stay, Miss Kennedy," he replied, with a sudden
earnestness, "I will stay."

She instantly froze, and chillingly said that if his interests required
him to go, of course he would go.

Therefore Harry, after a few moments' silence, during which he battled
with the temptation to "have it out" there and then, before all the
happy shepherds and shepherdesses of Bethnal Green, returned to his
original form, and made as if those words had not been spoken and that
effect not been produced. You may notice the same thing with children
who have been scolded.

"Did you ever consider, Miss Kennedy, the truly happy condition of the
perfect cabinet-maker?"

"No: I never did. Is he happy above his fellows?"

"Your questions betray your ignorance. Till lately--till I returned from
America--I never wholly realized what a superior creature he is. Why, in
the first place, the cabinet-maker is perhaps the only workman who never
scamps his work; he is a responsible man; he takes pride in producing a
good and honest thing. We have no tricks in our trade. Then, if you care
to hear----"

"Pray go on: let me learn all I can."

"Then we were the first to organize ourselves. Our society was founded
eighty years ago. We had no foolish strike, but we just met the
employers and told them we were going to arrange with them what our
share should be; and we made a book about wages--I do not think so good
a book has been put together this century. Then, we are a respectable
lot; you never hear of a cabinet-maker in trouble at a police-court;
very few of us get drunk; most of us read books and papers, and have
opinions. My cousin Dick has very strong opinions. We are critical about
amusements, and we prefer Henry Irving to a music-hall; we do not allow
rough talk in the workshops; we are mostly members of some church, and
we know how to value ourselves."

"I shall know how to value your craft in future," said Angela,
"especially when you are working again."

"Yes. I do not want to work in a shop, you know; but one may get a
place, perhaps, in one of the railway-carriage depots, or a hotel, or a
big factory, where they always keep a cabinet-maker in regular pay. My
cousin Dick--Dick the radical--is cabinet-maker in a mangle-factory. I
do not know what he makes for his mangles, but that is what he is."

"I have seen your cousin Tom, when he was rolled in the mud and before
he led off the hymn and the procession. You must bring me your cousin
Dick."

"Dick is better fun than Tom. Both are terribly in earnest; but you will
find Dick interesting."

"Does he walk about on Sunday afternoons? Should we be likely to meet
him here?"

"Oh, no! Dick is forging his speech for to-night. He addresses the
Advanced Club almost every Sunday evening on the House of Lords, or the
Church, or the Country Bumpkin's Suffrage, or the Cape question, or
Protection, or the Nihilists, or Ireland, or America, or something. The
speech must be red-hot, or his reputation would be lost. So he spends
the afternoon sticking it into the furnace, so to speak. It doesn't
matter what the subject is, always provided that he can lug in the
bloated aristocrat and the hated Tory. I assure you Dick is a most
interesting person."

"Do you ever speak at the Advanced Club?"

"I go there; I am a member; now and then I say a word. When a member
makes a red-hot speech, brimful of insane accusations, and sits down
amid a round of applause, it is pleasant to get up and set him right on
matters of fact, because all the enthusiasm is killed when you come to
facts. Some of them do not love me at the club."

"They are real and in earnest, while you----"

"No, Miss Kennedy, they are not real, whatever I may be. They are quite
conventional. The people like to be roused by red-hot, scorching
speeches; they want burning questions, intolerable grievances; so the
speakers find them or invent them. As for the audience, they have had so
many sham grievances told in red-hot words that they have become
callous, and don't know of any real ones. The indignation of the
speakers is a sham; the enthusiasm of the listeners is a sham; they
applaud the eloquence, but as for the stuff that is said, it moves them
not. As for his politics, the British workman has got a vague idea that
things go better for him under the Liberals. When the Liberals come in,
after making promises by the thousand, and when, like their
predecessors, they have made the usual mess, confidence is shaken. Then
he allows the Conservatives, who do not, at all events, promise oranges
and beer all round, back again, and gives them another show. As if it
matters which side is in to the British workman!"

"And they are not discontented," asked Angela, "with their own lives?"

"Not one bit. They don't want to change their own lives. Why should
they?"

"All these people in the park to-day," she continued, "are they
working-men?"

"Yes: some of them--the better sort. Of course"--Harry looked round and
surveyed the crowd--"of course, when you open a garden of this sort for
the people, the well-dressed come, and the ragged stay away and hide.
There is plenty of ragged stuff round and about us, but it hides. And
there is plenty of comfort which walks abroad and shows itself. This end
of London is the home of little industries. Here, for instance, they
make the things which belong to other things."

"That seems a riddle," said Angela.

"I mean things like card-boxes, pill-boxes, ornamental boxes of all
kinds, for confectioners, druggists, and drapers; they make all kinds of
such things for wholesale houses. Why, there are hundreds of trades in
this great neglected city of East London, of which we know nothing. You
see the manufacturers. Here they are with their wives, and their sons,
and their daughters; they all lend a hand, and between them the thing is
made."

"And are they discontented?" asked Angela with persistence.

"Not they; they get as much happiness as the money will run to. At the
same time, if the Palace of Delight were once built----"

"Ah!" cried Angela with a sigh. "The Palace of Delight; the Palace of
Delight! We must have it, if it is only to make the people
discontented."

They walked home presently, and in the evening they played together, one
or two of the girls being present, in the "drawing-room." The music
softens--Angela repented her coldness of the afternoon. When the girls
were gone, and they were walking side by side beneath moonlight on the
quiet green, she made shyly a little attempt at compensation.

"If," she said, "you should find work here in Stepney, you would be
willing to stay?"

"I would stay," he replied, "if you bid me stay--or go, if you bid me
go."

"I would bid you stay," she replied, speaking as clearly and as firmly
as she could, "because I like your society, and because you have been,
and will still be, I hope, very helpful to us. But if I bid you stay,"
she laid her hand upon his arm, "it must be on no misunderstanding."

"I am your servant," he said, with a little agitation in his voice. "I
understood nothing but what you wish me to understand."




CHAPTER XV.

A SPLENDID OFFER.


It was a strange coincidence that only two days after this conversation
with Miss Kennedy, Harry received his first offer of employment.

It came from the brewery, and was in the first instance a mere note sent
by a clerk inviting "H. Goslett" to call at the accountant's office at
ten in the morning. The name, standing bare and naked by itself, without
any preliminary title of respect--Mister, Master, or Sieur--presented,
Harry thought, a very miserable appearance. Perhaps it would be
difficult to find a readier method of insulting a man than to hurl his
own name at his head. One may understand how Louis Capet must have felt
when thus reduced to a plain simplicity.

"What on earth," Harry asked, forgetting his trade, "can they want with
me?"

In business houses, working-men, even of the gentle craft of
cabinet-making, generally carry with them tools, sometimes wear an
apron, always have their trousers turned up, and never wear a
collar--using, instead, a red muffler, which keeps the throat warmer,
and does not so readily show the effect of London fog and smoke. Also,
some of their garments are made of corduroy and their jackets have
bulging pockets, and their hats not unfrequently have a pipe stuck into
them. This young working-man repaired to the trysting-place in the easy
attire in which he was wont to roam about the bowers of the East End.
That is to say, he looked like a carelessly-dressed gentleman.

Harry found at the office his uncle, Mr. Bunker, who snorted when he saw
his nephew.

"What are you doing here?" he asked. "Can't you waste your time and
bring disgrace on a hard-working uncle outside the place where he is
known and respected?"

Harry sighed.

"Few of us," he said, "sufficiently respect their uncles. And with
_such_ an uncle--ah!"

What more might have passed between them, I know not. Fortunately, at
this point, they were summoned to the presence of the chief accountant.

He knew Mr. Bunker and shook hands with him.

"Is this your nephew, Mr. Bunker?" he asked, looking curiously at the
very handsome young fellow who stood before him with a careless air.

"Yes; he's my nephew; at least, he says so," said Mr. Bunker surlily.
"Perhaps, sir, you wouldn't mind telling him what you want, and letting
him go. Then we can get to business."

"My business is with both of you."

"Both of us?" Mr. Bunker looked uneasy. What business could that be in
which he was connected with his nephew?

"Perhaps I had better read a portion of a letter received by me
yesterday from Miss Messenger. That portion which concerns you, Mr.
Bunker, is as follows."

Rather a remarkable letter had been received at the brewery on the
previous day from Miss Messenger. It was remarkable, and, indeed,
disquieting, because it showed a disposition to interfere in the
management of the great concern, and the interference of a young lady in
the brewery boded ill.

The chief brewer and the chief accountant read it together. They were a
grave and elderly pair, both in their sixties, who had been regarded by
the late Mr. Messenger as mere boys. For he was in the eighties.

"Yes," said the chief brewer, as his colleague read the missive with a
sigh, "I know what you would say. It is not the thing itself; the thing
is a small thing; the man may even be worth his pay; but it is the
spirit of the letter, the spirit, that concerns me."

"It is the spirit," echoed the chief accountant.

"Either," said the chief brewer, "we rule here, or we do not."

"Certainly," said the chief accountant, "and well put."

"If we do not"--here the chief brewer rapped the middle knuckle of the
back of his left-hand forefinger with the tip of his right-hand
forefinger--"if we do not, what then?"

They gazed upon each other for a moment in great sadness, having before
their eyes a hazy vision in which Miss Messenger walked through the
brewery, putting down the mighty and lowering salaries. A grateful
reward for long and faithful services! At the thought of it, these two
servants in their own eyes became patriarchal, as regards the length of
years spent in the brewery, and their long services loomed before them
as so devoted and so faithful as to place them above the rewarding power
of any salary.

The chief accountant was a tall old gentleman, and he stood in a
commanding position on the hearth-rug, the letter in one hand and a pair
of double eye-glasses in the other.

"You will see from what I am about to read to you, Mr. Bunker," he
began, "that your services, such as they were, to the late Mr. Messenger
will not go unrewarded."

Very good, so far; but what had his reward to do with his nephew?

"You were a good deal with Mr. Messenger at one time, I remember, Mr.
Bunker."

"I was, a great deal."

"Quite so--quite so--and you assisted him, I believe, with his house
property and tenants, and so forth."

"I did." Mr. Bunker cleared his throat. "I did, and often Mr. Messenger
would talk of the reward I was to have when he was took."

"He left you nothing, however, possibly because he forgot. You ought,
therefore, to be the more grateful to Miss Messenger for remembering
you; particularly as the young lady has only heard of you by some kind
of chance."

"Has she--has she--sent something?" he asked.

The chief accountant smiled graciously.

"She has sent a very considerable present indeed."

"Ah!" Mr. Bunker's fingers closed as if they were grappling with
bank-notes.

"Is it," he asked, in trembling accents--"is it a check?"

"I think, Mr. Bunker, that you will like her present better than a
check."

"There can be nothing better than one of Miss Messenger's checks," he
replied gallantly. "Nothing in the world, except, perhaps, one that's
bigger. I suppose it's notes, then?"

"Listen, Mr. Bunker----

"'Considering the various services rendered to my grandfather by Mr.
Bunker, with whom I believe you are acquainted, in connection with his
property in Stepney and the neighborhood, I am anxious to make him some
substantial present. I have therefore caused inquiries to be made as to
the best way of doing this. I learn that he has a nephew named Henry
Goslett, by trade a cabinet-maker'" [here Mr. Bunker made violent
efforts to suppress emotion], "'who is out of employment. I propose that
he should be received into the brewery, that a shop with all that he
wants should be fitted up for him, and that he attend daily until
anything better offers, to do all that may be required in his trade. I
should wish him to be independent as regards time of attendance, and
that he should be paid at the proper rate for piece-work. In this way, I
hope Mr. Bunker may feel that he has received a reward more appropriate
to the friendly relations which seem to have existed between my
grandfather and himself than a mere matter of money, and I am glad to be
able to gratify him in finding honorable employment for one who is, I
trust, a deserving young man.'"

"Then, Mr. Bunker, there is this--why, good heavens! man, what is the
matter?"

For Mr. Bunker was purple with wrath. Three times he essayed to speak,
three times he failed. Then he put on his hat and fled precipitately.

"What is the matter with him?" asked the chief accountant.

The young workman laughed.

"I believe," he replied "that my uncle expected the check."

"Well, well!" the chief accountant waved his hand. "There is nothing
more to be said. You will find your shop; one of the porters will take
you to it; you will have all the broken things that used to be sent out,
kept for you to mend, and--and--all that. What we want a cabinet-maker
for in the brewery, I do not understand. That will do. Stay--you seem a
rather superior kind of workman."

"I have had an education," said Harry, blushing.

"Good; so long as it has not made you discontented. Remember that we
want sober and steady men in this place, and good work."

"I am not certain yet," said Harry, "that I shall be able to take the
place."

"Not take the place? Not take a place in Messenger's brewery? Do you
know that everybody who conducts himself well here is booked for life?
Do you know what you are throwing away? Not take the place? Why, you may
be cabinet-maker for the brewery till they actually pension you off."

"I am--I am a little uncertain in my designs for the future. I must ask
for a day to consider."

"Take a day. If, to-morrow, you do not present yourself in the workshop
prepared for you, I shall tell Miss Messenger that you have refused her
offer."

Harry walked away with a quickened pulse. So far he had been posturing
only as a cabinet-maker. At the outset he had no intention of doing more
than posture for a while, and then go back to civilized life with no
more difference than that caused by the revelation of his parentage. As
for doing work, or taking a wage, that was very, very far from his mind.
Yet now he must either accept the place, with the pay, or he must stand
confessed a humbug. There remained but one other way, which was a worse
way than the other two. He might, that is to say, refuse the work
without assigning any reason. He would then appear in the character of a
lazy and worthless workman--an idle apprentice, indeed; one who would do
no work while there was money in the locker for another day of sloth.
With that face could he stand before Miss Kennedy, revealed in
these--his true colors?

It was an excellent opportunity for flight. That occurred to him. But
flight--and after that last talk with the woman whose voice, whose face,
whose graciousness had so filled his head and inflamed his imagination.

He walked away, considering.

When a man is very much perplexed, he often does a great many little odd
things. Thus, Harry began by looking into the office where his cousin
sat.

Josephus' desk was in the warmest part of the room, near the fire--so
much promotion he had received. He sat among half a dozen lads of
seventeen or twenty years of age, who did the mechanical work of making
entries in the books. This he did, too, and had done every day for forty
years. Beside him stood a great iron safe, where the books were put away
at night. The door was open. Harry looked in, caught the eye of his
cousin, nodded encouragingly, and went on his way, his hands in his
pockets.

When he came to Mrs. Bormalack's he went in there too, and found Lord
Davenant anxiously waiting for the conduct of the case to be resumed, in
order that he might put up his feet and take his morning nap.

"This is my last morning," Harry said. "As for your case, old boy, it is
as complete as I can make it, and we had better send it in as soon as we
can, unless you can find any more evidence."

"No--no," said his lordship, who found this familiarity a relief after
the stately enjoyment of the title, "there will be no more evidence.
Well, if there's nothing more to be done, Mr. Goslett, I think I
will"--here he lifted his feet--"and if you see Clara Martha, tell her
that--that----"

Here he fell asleep.

It was against the rules to visit the Dressmakers' Association in the
morning or afternoon. Harry therefore went to the room where he had
fitted his lathe, and began to occupy himself with the beautiful cabinet
he was making for Miss Kennedy. But he was restless; he was on the eve
of a very important step. To take a place, to be actually paid for
piece-work, is, if you please, a very different thing from pretending to
have a trade.

Was he prepared to give up the life of culture?

He sat down and thought what such a surrender would mean.

First, there would be no club; none of the pleasant dinners at the
little tables with one or two of his own friends; no easy-chair in the
smoking-room for a wet afternoon; none of the talk with men who are
actually in the ring--political, literary, artistic, and dramatic, none
of the pleasant consciousness that you are behind the scenes, which is
enjoyed by so many young fellows who belong to good clubs. The club in
itself would be a great thing to surrender.

Next, there would be no society.

He was at that age when society means the presence of beautiful girls;
therefore, he loved society, whether in the form of a dance, or a
dinner, or an at-home, or an afternoon, or a garden-party, or any other
gathering where young people meet and exchange those ideas which they
fondly imagine to be original. Well, he must never think any more of
society. That was closed to him.

Next, he must give up most of the accomplishments, graces, arts, and
skill which he had acquired by dint of great assiduity and much
practice. Billiards, at which he could hold his own against most;
fencing, at which he was capable of becoming a professor; shooting, in
which he was ready to challenge any American; riding, the talking of
different languages--what would it help him now to be a master in these
arts? They must all go; for the future he would have to work nine hours
a day for tenpence an hour, which is two pound a week, allowing for
Saturday afternoon. There would simply be no time for practising any
single one of these things, even if he could afford the purchase of the
instruments required.

Again, he would have to grieve and disappoint the kindest man in the
whole world--Lord Jocelyn.

I think it speaks well for this young man that one thing did not trouble
him--the question of eating and drinking. He would dine no more;
working-men do not dine--they stoke. He would drink no more wine; well,
Harry found beer a most excellent and delicious beverage, particularly
when you get it unadulterated.

Could he give up all these things? He could not conceive it possible,
you see, that a man should go and become a workman, receiving a wage and
obeying orders, and afterward resume his old place among gentlemen, as
if nothing had happened. Indeed, it would require a vast amount of
explanation.

Then he began to consider what he would get if he remained.

One thing only would reward him. He was so far gone in love, that for
this girl's sake he would renounce everything and become a workman
indeed.

He could not work; the quiet of the room oppressed him; he must be up
and moving while this struggle went on.

Then he thought of his uncle Bunker and laughed, remembering his
discomfiture and wrath. While he was laughing the door opened, and the
very man appeared.

He had lost his purple hue, and was now, in fact, rather pale, and his
cheeks looked flabby.

"Nephew," he said huskily, "I want to talk to you about this thing; give
over sniggerin', and talk serious now."

"Let us be serious."

"This is a most dreadful mistake of Miss Messenger's; you know at first
I thought it must be a joke. That is why I went away; men of my age and
respectability don't like jokes. But it was no joke. I see now it is
just a mere dreadful mistake which you can set right."

"How can I set it right?"

"To be sure, I could do it myself, very easily. I have only got to write
to her, and tell her that you've got no character, and nobody knows if
you know your trade."

"I don't think that would do, because I might write as well----"

"The best plan would be for you to refuse the situation and go away
again. Look here, boy; you come from no one knows where; you live no one
knows how; you don't do any work; my impression is you don't want any,
and you've only come to see what you can borrow or steal. That's my
opinion. Now, don't let's argue, but just listen. If you'll go away
quietly, without any fuss, just telling them at the brewery that you've
got to go, I'll give you--yes--I'll give you--twenty pounds down!
There!"

"Very liberal indeed! But I am afraid----"

"I'll make it twenty-five. A man of spirit can do anything with
twenty-five pounds down. Why, he might go to the other end of the world.
If I were you I'd go there. Large openings there for a lad of
spirit--large openings! Twenty-five pounds down, on the nail."

"It seems a generous offer, still----"

"Nothing," Mr. Bunker went on, "has gone well since you came. There's
this dreadful mistake of Miss Messenger's; then that Miss Kennedy's job.
I didn't make anything out of that compared with what I might, and
there's the----" He stopped, because he was thinking of the houses.

"I _want_ you to go," he added almost plaintively.

"And that, very much, is one of the reasons why I want to stay. Because,
you see, you have not yet answered a question of mine. What did you get
for me when you traded me away?"

For the second time his question produced a very remarkable effect upon
the good man.

When he had gone, slamming the door behind him, Harry smiled sweetly.

"I know," he said, "that he has done 'something,' as they call it.
Bunker is afraid. And I--yes--I shall find it out and terrify him still
more. But, in order to find it out, I must stay. And if I stay, I must
be a workman. And wear an apron! And a brown-paper cap! No. I draw the
line above aprons. No consideration shall induce me to wear an apron.
Not even--no--not if she were to make the apron a condition of
marriage."




CHAPTER XVI.

HARRY'S DECISION.


He spent the afternoon wandering about the streets of Stepney, full of
the new thought that here might be his future home. This reflection made
him regard the place from quite a novel point of view. As a mere
outsider, he had looked upon the place critically, with amusement, with
pity, with horror (in rainy weather), with wonder (in sunshiny days). He
was a spectator, while before his eyes were played as many little
comedies, comediettas, or tragedies or melodramas as there were
inhabitants. But no farces, he remarked, and no burlesques. The life of
industry contains no elements of farce or of burlesque. But if he took
this decisive step he would have to look upon the East End from an
inside point of view; he would be himself one of the actors; he would
play his own little comedy. Therefore he must introduce the emotion of
sympathy, and suppress the critical attitude altogether.

There was once an earl who went away and became a sailor before the
mast; he seems to have enjoyed sailoring better than legislating, but
was, by accident, ingloriously drowned while so engaged. There was also
the Honorable Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, who was also supposed to be
drowned, but in reality exercised until his death, and apparently with
happiness, the craft of wheelwright. There was another unfortunate
nobleman, well known to fame, who became a butcher in a colony, and
liked it. Precedents enough of voluntary descent and eclipse, to say
nothing of the involuntary obscurations, as when an _émigré_ had to
teach dancing, or the son of a royal duke was fain to become a village
schoolmaster. These historical parallels pleased Harry's fancy until he
recollected that he was himself only a son of the people, and not of
noble descent, so that they really did not bear upon his case, and he
could find not one single precedent in the whole history parallel with
himself. "Mine," he said, formulating the thing, "is a very remarkable
and unusual case. Here is a man brought up to believe himself of gentle
birth and educated as a gentleman, so that there is nothing in the most
liberal training of a gentleman that he has not learned, and no
accomplishment which becomes a gentleman that he has not acquired. Then
he learns that he is not a gentleman by birth, and that he is a pauper;
wherefore, why not honest work? Work is noble, to be sure, especially if
you get the kind of work you like, and please yourself about the time of
doing it; nothing could be a more noble spectacle than that of myself
working at the lathe for nothing, in the old days; would it be quite as
noble at the brewery, doing piece-work?"

These reflections, this putting of the case to himself, this grand
dubiety, occupied the whole afternoon. When the evening came, and it was
time for him to present himself in the drawing-room, he was no further
advanced toward a decision.

The room looked bright and restful; wherever Angela went, she was
accompanied and surrounded by an atmosphere of refinement. Those who
conversed with her became infected with her culture; therefore, the
place was like any drawing-room at the West End, save for the furniture,
which was simple. Ladies would have noticed, even in such little things,
in the way in which the girls sat and carried themselves, a note of
difference. To Harry these minutiæ were unknown, and he saw only a room
full of girls quietly happy and apparently well-bred; some were reading;
some were talking, one or two were "making" something for themselves,
though their busy fingers had been at work all day. Nelly and Miss
Kennedy were listening to the captain, who was telling a yarn of his old
East Indiaman. The three made a pretty group, Miss Kennedy seated on a
low stool at the captain's knee, while the old man leaned forward in his
arm-chair, his daughter beside him watching, in her affectionate and
pretty way, the face of her patron.

The quiet, peaceful air of the room, the happy and contented faces which
before had been so harassed and worn, struck the young man's heart. Part
of this had been his doing; could he go away and leave the brave girl
who headed the little enterprise to the tender mercies of a Bunker? The
thought of what he was throwing up--the club-life, the art-life, the
literary life, the holiday-time, the delightful roving in foreign lands,
which he should enjoy no more--all seemed insignificant considered
beside this haven of rest and peace in the troubled waters of the East
End. He was no philanthropist; the cant of platforms was intolerable to
him; yet he was thinking of a step which meant giving up his own
happiness for that of others; with, of course, the constant society of
the woman he loved. Without that compensation the sacrifice would be
impossible. Miss Kennedy looked up and nodded to him kindly, motioning
him not to interrupt the story, which the captain presently finished.

Then they had a little music and a little playing, and there was a
little dancing--all just as usual; a quiet, pleasant evening; and they
went away.

"You are silent to-night, Mr. Goslett," said Angela, as they took their
customary walk in the quiet little garden called Stepney Green.

"Yes. I am like the parrot; I think the more."

"What is in your mind?"

"This: I have had an offer--an offer of work--from the brewery. Miss
Messenger herself sent the offer, which I am to accept or to refuse
to-morrow morning."

"An offer of work? I congratulate you. Of course you will accept?" She
looked at him sharply, even suspiciously.

"I do not know."

"You have forgotten," she said--in other girls the words and the tone of
her voice would have sounded like an encouragement--"you have forgotten
what you said only last Sunday evening."

"No: I have not forgotten. What I said last Sunday evening only
increases my embarrassment. I did not expect, then--I did not think it
possible that any work here would be offered to me."

"Is the pay insufficient?"

"No: the pay is to be at the usual market-rate."

"Are the hours too long?"

"I am to please myself. It seems as if the young lady had done her best
to make me as independent as a man who works for money can be."

"Yet you hesitate. Why?"

He was silent--thinking what he should tell her. The whole truth would
have been best; but then, one so seldom tells the whole truth about
anything, far less about one's self. He could not tell her that he had
been masquerading all the time, after so many protestations of being a
real working-man.

"Is it that you do not like to make friends among the East End workmen?"

"No." He could answer this with truth. "It is not that. The working-men
here are better than I expected to find them. They are more sensible,
more self-reliant, and less dangerous. To be sure, they profess to
entertain an unreasoning dislike for rich people, and, I believe, think
that their lives are entirely spent over oranges and skittles. I wish
they had more knowledge of books, and could be got to think in some
elemental fashion about art. I wish they had a better sense of beauty,
and I wish they could be got to cultivate some of the graces of life.
You shall teach them, Miss Kennedy. Also, I wish that tobacco was not
their only solace. I am very much interested in them. That is not the
reason."

"If you please to tell me----" she said.

"Well, then"--he would tell that fatal half-truth--"the reason is this;
you know that I have had an education above what fortune intended for me
when she made me the son of Sergeant Goslett."

"I know," she replied. "It was my case, as well; we are companions in
this great happiness."

"The man who conferred this benefit upon me, the best and
kindest-hearted man in the world, to whom I am indebted for more than I
can tell you, is willing to do more for me. If I please, I may live with
him in idleness."

"You may live in idleness? That must be, indeed, a tempting offer!"

"Idleness," he replied, a little hurt at her contempt for what certainly
was a temptation for him, "does not always mean doing nothing."

"What would you do, then?"

"There is the life of culture and art----"

"Oh, no!" she replied. "Would you really like to become one of those
poor creatures who think they lead lives devoted to art? Would you like
to grow silly over blue china, to quarrel about color, to worship form
in poetry, to judge everything by the narrow rules of the latest
pedantic fashion?"

"You know this art world, then?"

"I know something of it, I have heard of it. Never mind me--think of
yourself. You would not, you could not, condemn yourself to such a
life."

"Not to such a life as you picture. But, consider, I am offered a life
of freedom instead of servitude."

"Servitude! Why, we are all servants one of the other. Society is like
the human body, in which all the limbs belong to each other. There must
be rich and poor, idlers and workers; we depend one upon the other; if
the rich do not work with and for the poor, retribution falls upon them.
The poor must work for the rich, or they will starve; poor or rich, I
think it is better to be poor; idler or worker, I know it is better to
be worker."

He thought of Lord Jocelyn; of the pleasant chambers in Piccadilly, of
the club, of his own friends, of society, of little dinners, of stalls
at the theatre; of suppers among actors and actresses; of artists and
the smoking-parties; of the men who write, and the men who talk, and the
men who know everybody, and are full of stories; of his riding, and
hunting, and shooting; of his fencing, and billiards, and cards.

All these things passed through his brain swiftly, in a moment. And then
he thought of the beautiful woman beside him, whose voice was the
sweetest music to him that he had ever heard.

"You must take the offer," she went on, and her words fell upon his ear
like the words of an oracle to a Greek in doubt. "Work at the brewery is
not hard. You will have no task-master set over you; you are free to go
and come, to choose your own time; there will be in so great a place,
there must be, work, quite enough to occupy your time. Give up yearning
after an idle life, and work in patience."

"Is there anything," he said, "to which you could not persuade me?"

"Oh, not for me!" she replied impatiently. "It is for yourself. You have
your life before you, to throw away or to use. Tell me," she hesitated a
little; "you have come back to your own kith and kin, after many years.
They were strange to you at first, all these people of the East
End--your own people. Now that you know them, should you like to go away
from them, altogether away and forget them? Could you desert them? You
know, if you go, that you will desert them, for between this end of
London and the other there is a great gulf fixed, across which no one
ever passes. You will leave us altogether if you leave us now."

At this point Harry felt the very strongest desire to make it clear that
what concerned him most would be the leaving her, but he repressed the
temptation and merely remarked that, if he did desert his kith and kin,
they would not regret him. His Uncle Bunker, he explained, had even
offered him five-and-twenty pounds to go.

"It is not that you have done anything, you know, except to help us in
our little experiment," said Angela. "But it is what you may do, what
you shall do, if you remain."

"What can I do?"

"You have knowledge; you have a voice; you have a quick eye and a ready
tongue; you could lead, you could preside. Oh! what a career you might
have before you!"

"You think too well of me, Miss Kennedy. I am a very lazy and worthless
kind of man."

"No." She shook her head and smiled superior. "I know you better than
you know yourself. I have watched you for these months. And then we must
not forget, there is our Palace of Delight."

"Are we millionaires?"

"Why, we have already begun it. There is our drawing-room; it is only a
few weeks old, yet see what a difference there is already. The girls are
happy; their finer tastes are awakened; their natural yearnings after
things delightful are partly satisfied; they laugh and sing now; they
run about and play. There is already something of our dream realized.
Stay with us, and we shall see the rest."

He made an effort and again restrained himself.

"I stay, then," he said, "for your sake--because you command me to
stay."

Had she done well? She asked herself the question in the shelter of her
bedroom, with great doubt and anxiety. This young workman, who might if
he chose be a--well--yes--a gentleman--quite as good a gentleman as most
of the men who pretend to the title--was going to give up whatever
prospects he had in the world, at her bidding, and for her sake. For
her sake! Yet what he wished was impossible.

What reward, then, had she to offer him that would satisfy him? Nothing.
Stay, he was only a man. One pretty face was as good as another; he was
struck with hers for the moment. She would put him in the way of being
attracted by another. Yes: that would do. This settled in her own mind,
she put the matter aside, and, as she was very sleepy, she only murmured
to herself, as her eyes closed, "Nelly Sorensen."




CHAPTER XVII.

WHAT LORD JOCELYN THOUGHT.


The subject of Angela's meditations was not where she thought him, in
his own bedroom. When he left his adviser, he did not go in at once, but
walked once or twice up and down the pavement, thinking. What he had
promised to do was nothing less than to reverse, altogether, the whole
of his promised life; and this is no light matter, even if you do it for
love's sweet sake. And, Miss Kennedy being no longer with him, he felt a
little chilled from the first enthusiasm. Presently he looked at his
watch; it was still early, only half-past ten.

"There is the chance," he said. "It is only a chance. He generally comes
back somewhere about this time."

There are no cabs at Stepney, but there are tramways which go quite as
fast, and, besides, give one the opportunity of exchanging ideas on
current topics with one's travelling companions. Harry jumped into one,
and sat down between a bibulous old gentleman, who said he lived in Fore
Street, but had for the moment mislaid all his other ideas, and a lady
who talked to herself as she carried a bundle. She was rehearsing
something dramatic, a monologue, in which she was "giving it" to
somebody unknown. And she was so much under the influence and emotion of
imagination that the young man trembled lest he might be mistaken for
the person addressed. However, happily, the lady so far restrained
herself, and Aldgate was reached in peace. There he took a hansom and
drove to Piccadilly.

The streets looked strange to him after his three months' absence; the
lights, the crowds on the pavements, so different from the East End
crowd; the rush of the carriages and cabs taking the people home from
the theatre, filled him with a strange longing. He had been asleep; he
had had a dream; there was no Stepney; there was no Whitechapel Road--a
strange and wondrous dream. Miss Kennedy and her damsels were only a
part of this vision. A beautiful and delightful dream. He was back again
in Piccadilly, and all was exactly as it always had been. So far all was
exactly the same, for Lord Jocelyn was in his chamber and alone.

"You are come back to me, Harry?" he said, holding the young man's hand;
"you have had enough of your cousins and the worthy Bunker. Sit down,
boy. I heard your foot on the stairs. I have waited for it a long time.
Sit down and let me look at you. To-morrow you shall tell me all your
adventures."

"It is comfortable," said Harry, taking his old chair and one of his
guardian's cigarettes. "Yes, Piccadilly is better, in some respects,
than Whitechapel."

"And there is more comfort the higher up you climb, eh?"

"Certainly, more comfort. There is not, I am sure, such an easy-chair as
this east of St. Paul's."

Then they were silent, as becomes two men who know what is in each
other's heart, and wait for it to be said.

"You look well," said Harry presently. "Where did you spend the summer?"

"Mediterranean. Yacht. Partridges."

"Of course. Do you stay in London long?"

And so on. Playing with the talk, and postponing the inevitable, Harry
learned where everybody had been, and who was engaged, and who was
married, and how one or two had joined the majority since his departure.
He also heard the latest scandal, and the current talk, and what had
been done at the club, and who had been blackballed, with divers small
bits of information about people and things. And he took up the talk in
the old manner, and fell into the old attitude of mind quite naturally,
and as if there had been no break at all. Presently the clock pointed to
one, and Lord Jocelyn rose.

"We will talk again to-morrow, Harry, my boy, and the day after
to-morrow, and many days after that. I am glad to have you back again."
He laid his hand upon the young man's shoulder.

"Do not go just yet," said Harry, blushing and feeling guilty, because
he was going to inflict pain on one who loved him. "I cannot talk with
you to-morrow."

"Why not?"

"Because--sit down again and listen--because I have made up my mind to
join my kith and kin altogether, and stay among them."

"What? Stay among them?"

"You remember what you told me of your motive in taking me. You would
bring up a boy of the people like a gentleman. You would educate him in
all that a gentleman can learn, and then you would send him back to his
friends, whom he would make discontented, and so open the way for
civilization."

"I said so--did I? Yes: but there were other things, Harry. You forget
that motives are always mixed. There was affection for my brave sergeant
and a desire to help his son; there were all sorts of things. Besides, I
expected that you would take a rough kind of polish only--like nickel,
you know, or pewter--and you turned out real silver. A gentleman, I
thought, is born, not made. This proved a mistake. The puddle blood
would show, I expected, which was prejudice, you see, because there is
no such thing as puddle blood. Besides, I thought you would be stupid
and slow to pick up ideas, and that you would pick up only a few;
supposing, in my ignorance, that all persons not 'born,' as the Germans
say, must be stupid and slow."

"And I was not stupid?"

"You? The brightest and cleverest lad in the whole world--you stepped
into the place I made for you as if you had been born for it. Now tell
me why you wish to step out of it."

"Like you, sir I have many motives. Partly, I am greatly interested in
my own people; partly, I am interested in the place itself and its
ways; partly, I am told, and I believe, that there is a great deal which
I can do there--do not laugh at me."

"I am not laughing, Harry; I am only astonished. Yes, you _are_ changed,
your eyes are different, your voice is different. Go on, my boy."

"I do not think there is much to say--I mean, in explanation. But of
course I understand--it is a part of the thing--that if I stay among
them I must be independent. I could no longer look to your bounty, which
I have accepted too long. I must work for my living."

"Work! And what will you do?"

"I know a lot of things, but somehow they are not wanted at Stepney, and
the only thing by which I can make money seems to be my lathe--I have
become a cabinet-maker."

"Heavens! You have become a cabinet-maker? Do you actually mean, Harry,
that you are going to work--with your hands--for money?"

"Yes; with my hands. I shall be paid for my work; I shall live by my
work. The puddle blood, you see."

"No, no," said Lord Jocelyn, "there is no proof of puddle blood in being
independent. But think of the discomfort of it."

"I have thought of the discomfort. It is not really so very bad. What is
your idea of the life I shall have to live?"

"Why," said Lord Jocelyn, with a shudder, "you will rise at six; you
will go out in working-clothes, carrying your tools, and with your apron
tied round and tucked up like a missionary bishop on his way to a
confirmation. You will find yourself in a workshop full of disagreeable
people, who pick out unpleasant adjectives and tack them on to
everything, and whose views of life and habits are--well, not your own.
You will have to smoke pipes at a street corner on Sundays; your tobacco
will be bad; you will drink bad beer--Harry! the contemplation of the
thing is too painful."

Harry laughed.

"The reality is not quite so bad," he said. "Cabinet-makers are
excellent fellows. And as for myself, I shall not work in a shop, but
alone. I am offered the post of cabinet-maker in a great place where I
shall have my own room to myself, and can please my own convenience as
to my hours. I shall earn about tenpence an hour--say seven shillings a
day, if I keep at it."

"If he keeps at it," murmured Lord Jocelyn, "he will make seven
shillings a day."

"Dinner in the middle of the day, of course." Harry went on, with a
cheerful smile. "At the East End everybody stokes at one. We have tea at
five and supper when we can get it. A simpler life than yours."

"This is a programme of such extreme misery," said Lord Jocelyn, "that
your explanations are quite insufficient. Is there, I wonder, a woman in
the case?"

Harry blushed violently.

"There _is_ a woman, then?" said his guardian triumphantly. "There
always is. I might have guessed it from the beginning. Come, Harry, tell
me all about it. Is it serious? Is she--can she be--at Whitechapel--a
lady?"

"Yes," said Harry, "it is quite true. There is a woman, and I am in love
with her. She is a dressmaker."

"Oh!"

"And a lady."

Lord Jocelyn said nothing.

"A lady." Harry repeated the words, to show that he knew what he was
saying. "But it is no use. She won't listen to me."

"That is more remarkable than your two last statements. Many men have
fallen in love with dressmakers, some dressmakers have acquired
partially the manners of a lady; but that any dressmaker should refuse
the honorable attentions of a handsome young fellow like you, and a
gentleman, is inconceivable."

"A cabinet-maker, not a gentleman. But do not let us talk of her, if you
please."

Then Lord Jocelyn proceeded, with such eloquence as was at his command,
to draw a picture of what he was throwing away compared with what he was
accepting. There was a universal feeling, he assured his ward, of
sympathy with him: everybody felt that it was rough on such a man as
himself to find that he was not of illustrious descent; he would take
his old place in society; all his old friends would welcome him back
among them, with much more to the same purpose.

It was four o'clock in the morning when their conversation ended and
Lord Jocelyn went to bed sorrowful, promising to renew his arguments in
the morning. As soon as he was gone, Harry went to his own room and put
together a few little trifles belonging to the past which he thought he
should like. Then he wrote a letter of farewell to his guardian,
promising to report himself from time to time, with a few words of
gratitude and affection. And then he stole quietly down the stairs and
found himself in the open street. Like a school-boy, he had run away.

There was nobody left in the streets. Half-past four in the morning is
almost the quietest time of any; even the burglar has gone home, and it
is too early for anything but the market-garden carts on their way to
Covent Garden. He strode down Piccadilly and across the silent Leicester
Square into the Strand. He passed through that remarkable thoroughfare,
and, by way of Fleet Street, where even the newspaper offices were
deserted, the leader-writers and the editor and the subeditors all gone
home to bed, to St. Paul's. It was then a little after five, and there
was already a stir. An occasional footfall along the principal streets.
By the time he got to the Whitechapel Road there were a good many up and
about, and before he reached Stepney Green the day's work was beginning.
The night had gone and the sun was rising, for it was six o'clock and a
cloudless morning. At ten he presented himself once more at the
accountant's office.

"Well?" asked the chief.

"I am come," said Harry, "to accept Miss Messenger's offer."

"You seem pretty independent. However, that is the way with you
working-men nowadays. I suppose you don't even pretend to feel any
gratitude?"

"I don't pretend," said Harry pretty hotly, "to answer questions outside
the work I have to do."

The chief looked at him as if he could, if he wished, and was not a
Christian, annihilate him.

"Go, young man," he said presently, pointing to the door, "go to your
work. Rudeness to his betters a working-man considers due to himself, I
suppose. Go to your work."

Harry obeyed without a word, being in such a rage that he could not
speak. When he reached his workshop, he found waiting to be mended an
office-stool with a broken leg. I regret to report that this unhappy
stool immediately became a stool with four broken legs and a kicked-out
seat.

Harry was for the moment too strong for the furniture.

Not even the thought of Miss Kennedy's approbation could bring him
comfort. He was an artisan, he worked by the piece--that was nothing.
The galling thing was to realize that he must now behave to certain
classes with a semblance of respect, because now he had his "betters."

The day before he was a gentleman who had no "betters." He was enriched
by this addition to his possessions, and yet he was not grateful.




CHAPTER XVIII.

THE PALACE OF DELIGHT.


There lies on the west and southwest of Stepney Green a triangular
district, consisting of an irregular four-sided figure--what Euclid
beautifully calls a trapezium--formed by the Whitechapel Road, the
Commercial Road, Stepney Green, and High Street, or Jamaica Street, or
Jubilee Street, whichever you please to call your frontier. This favored
spot exhibits in perfection all the leading features which characterize
the great Joyless City. It is, in fact, the heart of the East End. Its
streets are mean and without individuality or beauty; at no season and
under no conditions can they ever be picturesque; one can tell, without
inquiring, that the lives led in those houses are all after the same
model, and that the inhabitants have no pleasures. Everything that goes
to make a city, except the means of amusement, is to be found here.
There are churches and chapels--do not the blackened ruins of
Whitechapel Church stand here? There are superior "seminaries" and
"academies," names which linger here to show where the yearning after
the genteel survives; there is a board school, there is the great London
Hospital, there are almshouses, there are even squares in it--Sidney
Square and Bedford Square, to wit--but there are no gardens, avenues,
theatres, art galleries, libraries, or any kind of amusement whatever.

The leading thoroughfare of this quarter is named Oxford Street, which
runs nearly all the way from the New Road to Stepney Church. It begins
well with some breadth, a church and a few trees on one side, and
almshouses with a few trees on the other. This promise is not kept; it
immediately narrows and becomes like the streets which branch out of it,
a double row of little two-storied houses, all alike. Apparently, they
are all furnished alike; in each ground-floor front there are the red
curtains and the white blind of respectability, with the little table
bearing something, either a basket of artificial flowers, or a big Bible
or a vase, or a case of stuffed birds from foreign parts, to mark the
gentility of the family. A little farther on, the houses begin to have
small balconies on the first floor, and are even more genteel. The
streets which run off north and south are like unto it but meaner. Now,
the really sad thing about this district is that the residents are not
the starving class, or the vicious class, or the drinking class; they
are well-to-do and thriving people, yet they desire no happiness, they
do not feel the lack of joy, they live in meanness and are content
therewith. So that it is emphatically a representative quarter and a
type of the East End generally, which is for the most part respectable
and wholly dull, and perfectly contented never to know what pleasant
strolling and resting-places, what delightful interests, what varied
occupation, what sweet diversions there are in life.

As for the people, they follow a great variety of trades. There are
"travelling drapers" in abundance; it is, in fact, the chosen _quartier_
of that romantic following; there are a good many stevedores, which
betrays the neighborhood of docks; there are some who follow the
mysterious calling of herbalist, and I believe you could here still buy
the materials for those now forgotten delicacies, saloop and tansy
pudding. You can at least purchase medicines for any disease under the
sun if you know the right herbalist to go to. One of them is a medium as
well; and if you call on him, you may be entertained by the artless
prattle of the "sperruts," of whom he knows one or two. They call
themselves all sorts of names--such as Peter, Paul, Shakespeare,
Napoleon, and Byron--but in reality there are only two of them, and they
are bad actors. Then there are cork-cutters, "wine merchants'
engineers"--it seems rather a grand thing for a wine merchant, above all
other men, to want an engineer; novelists do not want
engineers--sealing-wax manufacturers, workers in shellac and zinc,
sign-painters, heraldic painters, coopers, makers of combs, iron hoops,
and sun-blinds, pewterers, feather-makers--they only pretend to make
feathers; what they really do is to buy them, or pluck the birds, and
then arrange the feathers and trim them; but they do not really make
them--ship-modelers, a small but haughty race; mat-dealers, who never
pass a prison without using bad language, for reasons which many who
have enjoyed the comforts of a prison will doubtless understand. There
are also a large quantity of people who call themselves teachers of
music. This may be taken as mere pride and ostentatious pretence,
because no one wants to learn music in this country, no one ever plays
any music, no one has a desire to hear any. If any one called and asked
for terms of tuition, he would be courteously invited to go away, or the
professor would be engaged, or he would be out of town. In the same way,
a late learned professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge was
reported always to have important business in the country if an Arab
came to visit the colleges. But what a lift above the stevedores,
pewterers, and feather pretenders to be a professor of music!

Angela would plant her Palace in this region, the most fitting place,
because the most dreary; because here there exists nothing, absolutely
nothing, for the imagination to feed upon. It is, in fact, though this
is not generally known, the purgatory prepared for those who have given
themselves up too much to the enjoyment of roses and rapture while
living at the West End. How beautiful are all the designs of Nature!
Could there be, anywhere in the world, a more fitting place for such a
purgatory than such a city? Besides, once one understands the thing, one
is further enabled to explain why these grim and sombre streets remain
without improvement. To beautify them would seem, in the eyes of pious
and religious people, almost flying in the face of Providence. And yet,
not really so; for it may be argued that there are other places also
fitted for the punishment of these purgatorial souls--for instance,
Hoxton, Bethnal Green, Battersea, and the Isle of Dogs.

Angela resolved, therefore, that on this spot the Palace of Joy should
stand. There should be, for all who chose to accept it, a general and
standing invitation to accept happiness and create new forms of delight.
She would awaken in dull and lethargic brains a new sense, the new sense
of pleasure; she would give them a craving for things of which as yet
they knew nothing. She would place within their reach, at no cost
whatever, absolutely free for all, the same enjoyments as are purchased
by the rich. A beautiful dream! They should cultivate a noble
discontent; they should gradually learn to be critical; they should
import into their own homes the spirit of discontent; they should cease
to look upon life as a daily uprising and a down-sitting, a daily
mechanical toil, a daily rest. To cultivate the sense of pleasure is to
civilize. With the majority of mankind the sense is undeveloped, and is
chiefly confined to eating and drinking. To teach the people how the
capacity of delight may be widened, how it may be taught to throw out
branches in all manner of unsuspected directions, was Angela's ambition.
A very beautiful dream!

She owned so many houses in this district that it was quite easy to find
a place suitable for her purpose. She discovered upon the map of her
property a whole foursquare block of small houses, all her own, bounded
north, south, east, and west by streets of other small houses, similar
and similarly situated. This site was about five minutes west of Stepney
Green, and in the district already described. The houses were occupied
by weekly tenants, who would find no difficulty in getting quarters as
eligible elsewhere. Some of them were in bad repair; and what with
maintenance of roofs and chimneys, bad debts, midnight flittings, and
other causes, there was little or no income derived from these houses.
Mr. Messenger, indeed, who was a hard man, but not unjust, only kept
them to save them from the small owner like Mr. Bunker, whose
necessities and greed made him a rack-rent landlord.

Having fixed upon her site, Angela next proceeded to have
interviews--but not on the spot, where she might be recognized--with
lawyers and architects, and to unfold partially her design. The area on
which the houses stood formed a pretty large plot of ground, ample for
her purpose, provided that the most was made of the space and nothing
wasted. But a great deal was required; therefore she would have no
lordly staircases covering half the ground, nor great ante-rooms, nor
handsome lobbies. Everything, she carefully explained, was to be
constructed for use and not for show. She wanted, to begin with, three
large halls: one of them was to be a dancing-room, but it might also be
a children's play-room for wet weather; one was to be used for a
permanent exhibition of native talent, in painting, drawing, wood and
ivory-carving, sculpture, leather-work, and the like, everything being
for sale at low prices; the last was to be a library, reading and
writing room. There was also to be a theatre, which would serve as a
concert and music room, and was to have an organ in it. In addition to
these there were to be a great number of class-rooms for the various
arts, accomplishments, and graces that were to be taught by competent
professors and lecturers. There were to be other rooms where tired
people might find rest, quiet, and talk--the women with tea and work,
the men with tobacco. And there were to be billiard-rooms, a
tennis-court, a racket-court, a fives-court, and a card-room. In fact,
there was to be space found for almost every kind of recreation.

She did not explain to her architect how she proposed to use this
magnificent place of entertainment; it was enough that he should design
it and carry out her ideas; and she stipulated that no curious inquirers
on the spot should be told for what purpose the building was destined,
nor who was the builder.

One cannot get designs for a palace in a week: it was already late in
the autumn, after Harry had taken up his appointment, and was busy among
the legs of stools, that the houses began to be pulled down and the
remnants carted away. Angela pressed on the work; but it seemed a long
and tedious delay before the foundations were laid and the walls began
slowly to rise.

There should have been a great function when the foundation-stone was
laid, with a procession of the clergy in white surplices and college
caps, perhaps a bishop, Miss Messenger herself, with her friends, a lord
or two, the officers of the nearest Masonic Lodge, a few Foresters, Odd
Fellows, Buffaloes, Druids, and Shepherds, a flag, the charity children,
a dozen policemen, and Venetian masts, with a prayer, a hymn, a speech
and a breakfast--nothing short of this should have satisfied the
founder. Yet she let the opportunity slip, and nothing was done at all;
the great building, destined to change the character of the gloomy city
into a City of Sunshine, was begun with no pomp or outward
demonstration. Gangs of workmen cleared away the ignoble bricks; the
little tenements vanished; a broad space bristling with little
garden-walls gaped where they had stood; then the walls vanished; and
nothing at all was left but holes where cellars had been; then they
raised a hoarding round the whole, and began to dig out the foundation.
After the hoarding was put up, nothing more for a long time was visible.
Angela used to prowl round it in the morning, when her girls were all at
work, but fearful lest the architect might come and recognize her.

As she saw her palace begin to grow into existence, she became anxious
about its success. The first beatific vision, the rapture of
imagination, was over, and would come no more; she had now to face the
hard fact of an unsympathetic people who perhaps would not desire any
pleasure--or if any, then the pleasure of a "spree," with plenty of
beer. How could the thing be worked if the people themselves would not
work it? How many could she reckon upon as her friends? Perhaps two or
three at most. Oh, the Herculean task, for one woman, with two or three
disciples, to revolutionize the City of East London!

With this upon her mind, her conversations with the intelligent young
cabinet-maker became more than usually grave and earnest. He was himself
more serious than of old, because he now occupied so responsible a
position in the brewery. Their relations remained unchanged. They walked
together, they talked and they devised things in the drawing-room, and
especially for Saturday evenings.

"I think," he said, one evening when they were alone except for Nelly in
the drawing-room, "I think that we should never think or talk of
working-men in the lump, any more than we think of rich men in a lump.
All sorts and conditions of men are pretty much alike, and what moves
one moves all. We are all tempted in the same way; we can all be led in
the same way."

"Yes, but I do not see how that fact helps."

They were talking, as Angela loved to do, of the scheme of the palace.

"If the palace were built, we should offer the people of Stepney,
without prejudice to Whitechapel, Mile End Bow, or even Cable Street, a
great many things which at present they cannot get and do not desire.
Yet they have always proved extremely attractive. We offer the society
of the young for the young, with dancing, singing, music, acting,
entertainments--everything except, which is an enormous exception,
feasting; we offer them all for nothing; we tell them, in fact, to do
everything for themselves; to be the actors, singers, dancers, and
musicians."

"And they cannot do anything."

"A few can; the rest will come in. You forget, Miss Kennedy, the honor
and glory of acting, singing, and performing in public. Can there be a
greater reward than the applause of one's friends?"

"It could never be so nice," said Nelly, "to dance in a great hall among
a lot of people as to dance up here, all by ourselves."

The palace was not, in these days, very greatly in the young man's mind.
He was occupied with other things: his own work and position; the wisdom
of his choice; the prospects of the future. For surely, if he had
exchanged the old life and got nothing in return but work at a lathe all
day at tenpence an hour, the change was a bad one. Nothing more had
been said to him by Miss Kennedy about the great things he was to do,
with her, for her, among his people. Was he, then, supposed to find out
for himself these great things? And he made no more way with his wooing.
That was stopped, apparently, altogether.

Always kind to him; always well pleased to see him; always receiving him
with the same sweet and gracious smile; always frank and open with him;
but nothing more.

Of late he had observed that her mind was greatly occupied; she was
brooding over something; he feared that it might be something to do with
the Associated Dressmakers' financial position. She did not communicate
her anxieties to him, but always, when they were alone, wanted to go
back to their vision of the palace. Harry possessed a ready sympathy; he
fell easily and at once into the direction suggested by another's words.
Therefore, when Angela talked about the palace, he too took up the
thread of invention, and made believe with her as if it were a thing
possible, a thing of brick and mortar.

"I see," he went on this evening, warming to the work, "I see the
opening day, long announced, of the palace. The halls are furnished and
lit up; the dancing-room is ready; the theatre is completed, and the
electric lights are lit; the concert-rooms are ready with their
music-stands and their seats. The doors are open. Then a wonderful thing
happens."

"What is that?" asked Angela.

"Nobody comes."

"Oh!"

"The vast chambers echo with the footsteps of yourself, Miss Kennedy,
and of Nelly, who makes no more noise than a demure kitten. Captain
Sorensen and I make as much trampling as we can, to produce the effect
of a crowd. But it hardly seems to succeed. Then come the girls, and we
try to get up a dance; but, as Nelly says, it is not quite the same as
your drawing-room. Presently two men, with pipes in their mouths, come
in and look about them. I explain that the stage is ready for them, if
they like to act; or the concert-room, if they will sing; or the
dancing-room, should they wish to shake a leg. They stare and they go
away. Then we shut up the doors and go away and cry."

"O Mr. Goslett, have you no other comfort for me?"

"Plenty of comfort. While we are all crying, somebody has a happy
thought. I think it is Nelly."

She blushed a pretty rosy red. "I am sure I could never suggest
anything."

"Nelly suggests that we shall offer prizes, a quantity of prizes, for
competition in everything, the audience or the spectators to be judges;
and then the palace will be filled and the universal reign of joy will
begin."

"Can we afford prizes?" asked Angela the practical.

"Miss Kennedy," said Harry severely, "permit me to remind you that, in
carrying out this project, money, for the first time in the world's
history, is to be of no value."

If Newnham does not teach women to originate--which a thousand Newnhams
will never do--it teaches them to catch at an idea and develop it. The
young workman suggested her palace; but his first rough idea was a poor
thing compared with Angela's finished structure--a wigwam beside a
castle, a tabernacle beside a cathedral. Angela was devising an
experiment, the like of which has never yet been tried upon restless and
dissatisfied mankind. She was going, in short, to say to them: "Life is
full, crammed full, overflowing with all kinds of delights. It is a
mistake to suppose that only rich people can enjoy these things. They
may buy them, but everybody may create them; they cost nothing. You
shall learn music, and forthwith all the world will be transformed for
you; you shall learn to paint, to carve, to model, to design, and the
day shall be too short to contain the happiness you will get out of it.
You shall learn to dance, and know the rapture of the waltz. You shall
learn the great art of acting, and give each other the pleasure which
rich men buy. You shall even learn the great art of writing, and learn
the magic of a charmed phrase. All these things which make the life of
rich people happy shall be yours; and they _shall cost you nothing_.
What the heart of man can desire shall be yours, _and for nothing_. I
will give you a house to shelter you, and rooms in which to play; you
have only to find the rest. Enter in, my friends; forget the squalid
past; here are great halls and lovely corridors--they are yours. Fill
them with sweet echoes of dropping music; let the walls be covered with
your works of art; let the girls laugh and the boys be happy within
these walls. I give you the shell, the empty carcass; fill it with the
spirit of content and happiness."

Would they, to begin with, "behave according"? It was easy to bring
together half a dozen dressmakers: girls always like behaving nicely;
would the young men be equally amenable? And would the policeman be
inevitable, as in the corridors of a theatre? The police, however, would
have to be voluntary, like every other part of the institution, and the
guardians of the peace must, like the performers in the entertainments,
give their services for nothing. For which end, Harry suggested, it
would be highly proper to have a professor of the noble art of
self-defence, with others of fencing, single-stick, quarter-staff, and
other kindred objects.




CHAPTER XIX.

DICK THE RADICAL.


In the early days of winter, the walls of the palace being now already
well above the hoarding, Angela made another important convert. This was
no other than Dick Coppin, the cousin of whom mention has been already
made.

"I will bring him to your drawing-room," said Harry. "That is, if he
will come. He does not know much about drawing-rooms, but he is a great
man at the Stepney Advanced Club. He is a reddest of red-hot Rads, and
the most advanced of Republicans. I do not think he would himself go
a-murdering of kings and priests, but I fancy he regards these things as
accidents naturally rising out of a pardonable enthusiasm. His manners
are better than you will generally find, because he belongs to my own
gentle craft. You shall tame him, Miss Kennedy."

Angela said she would try.

"He shall learn to waltz," Harry went on. "This will convert him from a
fierce Republican to a merely enthusiastic Radical. Then he shall learn
to sing in parts; this will drop him down into advanced Liberalism. And
if you can persuade him to attend your evenings, talk with the girls, or
engage in some art, say painting, he will become, quite naturally, a
mere Conservative."

With some difficulty Harry persuaded his cousin to come with him. Dick
Coppin was not, he said of himself, a dangler after girls'
apron-strings, having something else to think of; nor was he attracted
by the promise, held out by his cousin, of music and singing. But he
came under protest, because music seemed to him an idle thing while the
House of Lords remained undestroyed, and because this cousin of his
could somehow make him do pretty nearly what he pleased.

He was a man of Harry's own age; a short man, with somewhat rough and
rugged features--strong, and not without the beauty of strength. His
forehead was broad; he had thick eyebrows, the thick lips of one who
speaks much in public, and a straight chin--the chin of obstinacy. His
eyes were bright and full; his hair was black; his face was oval; his
expression was masterful; it was altogether the face of a man who
interested one. Angela thought of his brother, the captain in the
Salvation Army; this man, she felt, had all the courage of the other,
with more common-sense; yet one who, too, might become a fanatic--who
might be dangerous if he took the wrong side. She shook hands with him
and welcomed him. Then she said that she wanted dancing men for her
evenings, and hoped that he could dance. It was the first time in his
life that Mr. Coppin had been asked that question, and also the first
time that he had thought it possible that any man in his senses, except
a sailor, should be expected to dance. Of course he could not, and said
so bluntly, sticking his thumbs in his waistcoat pockets, which is a
gesture peculiar to the trade, if you care to notice so small a fact.

"Your cousin," said Angela, "will teach you. Mr. Goslett, please give
Mr. Coppin a lesson in a quadrille. Nelly, you will be his partner. Now,
if you will make up the set, I will play."

An elderly bishop of Calvinistic principles could not have been more
astonished than was this young workman. He had not the presence of mind
to refuse. Before he realized his position, he was standing beside his
partner: in front of him stood his cousin, also with a partner; four
girls made up the set. Then the music began, and he was dragged, pushed,
hustled, and pulled this way and that. He would have resented this
treatment but that the girls took such pains to set him right, and
evidently regarded the lesson as one of the greatest importance. Nor did
they cease until he had discerned what the mathematician called the Law
of the Quadrille, and could tread the measure with some approach to
accuracy.

"We shall not be satisfied, Mr. Coppin," said Angela, when the quadrille
was finished, "until we have taught everybody to dance."

"What is the good of dancing?" he asked good-humoredly, but a good deal
humiliated by the struggle.

"Dancing is graceful; dancing is a good exercise; dancing should be
natural to young people; dancing is delightful. See--I will play a
waltz; now watch the girls."

She played. Instantly the girls caught each other by the waist and
whirled round the room with brightened eyes and parted lips. Harry took
Nelly in the close embrace which accompanies the German dance, and
swiftly, easily, gracefully, danced round and round the room.

"Is it not happiness that you are witnessing, Mr. Coppin?" asked Angela.
"Tell me, did you ever see dressmakers happy before? You, too, shall
learn to waltz. I will teach you, but not to-night."

Then they left off dancing and sat down, talking and laughing. Harry
took his violin and discoursed sweet music, to which they listened or
not as they listed. Only the girl who was lame looked on with rapt and
eager face.

"See her!" said Angela, pointing her out. "She has found what her soul
was ignorantly desiring. She has found music. Tell me, Mr. Coppin, if it
were not for the music and this room, what would that poor child be?"

He made no reply. Never before had he witnessed, never had he
suspected, such an evening. There were the girls whom he despised, who
laughed and jested with the lads in the street, who talked loud and were
foolish. Why, they were changed! What did it mean? And who was this
young woman, who looked and spoke as no other woman he had ever met, yet
was only a dressmaker?

"I have heard of you, Mr. Coppin," this young person said, in her
queen-like manner, "and I am glad that you have come. We shall expect
you, now, every Saturday evening. I hear that you are a political
student."

"I am a Republican," he replied. "That's about what I am." Again he
stuck his thumbs into his waistcoat pockets.

"Yes. You do not perhaps quite understand what it is that we are doing
here, do you? In a small way--it is quite a little thing--it may
interest even a political student like yourself. The interests of
milliners and dressmakers are very small compared with the House of
Lords. Still--your sisters and cousins----"

"It seems pleasant," he replied, "if you don't all get set up with high
notions. As for me, I am for root-and-branch Reform."

"Yes: but all improvement in government means improvement of the people,
does it not? Else, I see no reason for trying to improve a government."

He made no reply. He was so much accustomed to the vague denunciations
and cheap rhetoric of his class that a small practical point was strange
to him.

"Now," said Angela, "I asked your cousin to bring you here, because I
learn that you are a man of great mental activity, and likely, if you
are properly directed, to be of great use to us."

He stared again. Who was this dressmaker who spoke about directing him?
The same uncomfortable feeling came over him--a cold doubt about
himself, which he often felt when in the society of his cousin. No man
likes to feel that he is not perfectly and entirely right, and that he
must be right.

"We are a society," she went on, "of girls who want to work for
ourselves; we all of us belong to your class: we therefore look to you
for sympathy and assistance. Yet you hold aloof from us. We have had
some support here already, but none from the people who ought most to
sympathize with us. That is, I suppose, because you know nothing about
us. Very well, then. While your cousin is amusing those girls, I will
tell you about our association."

       *       *       *       *       *       *       *

"Now you understand, Mr. Coppin. You men have long since organized
yourselves--it is our turn now; and we look to you for help. We are not
going to work any longer for a master: we are not going to work long
hours any longer; and we are going to get time every day for fresh air,
exercise, and amusement. You are continually occupied, I believe, at
your club, denouncing the pleasures of the rich. But we are actually
going to enjoy all those pleasures ourselves, and they will cost us
nothing. Look round this room--we have a piano lent to us: there is your
cousin with his fiddle, and Captain Sorensen with his; we are learning
part-songs, which cost us three-halfpence each; we dance; we play; we
read--a subscription to Smith's is only three guineas a year; we have
games which are cheap: the whole expense of our evenings is the fire in
winter and the gas. On Saturday evenings we have some cake and lemonade,
which one of the girls makes for us. What can rich people have more than
society, lights, music, singing, and dancing?"

He was silent, wondering at this thing.

"Don't you see, Mr. Coppin, that if we are successful we shall be the
cause of many more such associations? Don't you see, that if we could
get our principle established, we should accomplish a greater revolution
than the overthrow of the Lords and the Church, and one far more
beneficial?"

"You can't succeed," he said. "It's been tried before."

"Yes--by men: I know it. And it has always broken down because the
leaders were false to their principles and betrayed the cause."

"Where are the girls to get the money to start with?"

"We are fortunate," Angela replied. "We have this house and furniture
given to us by a lady interested in us. That, I own, is a great thing.
But other rich people will be found to do as much. Why, how much better
it is than leaving money to hospitals!"

"Rich people!" he echoed with contempt.

"Yes: rich people, of whom you know so little, Mr. Coppin, that I think
you ought to be very careful how you speak of them. But think of
us--look at the girls. Do they not look happier than they used to look?"

He replied untruthfully, because he was not going to give in to a woman,
all of a sudden, that he did not remember how they used to look, but
that undoubtedly they now looked very well. He did not say--which he
felt--that they were behaving more quietly and modestly than he had ever
known them to behave.

"You," Angela went on, with a little emphasis on the pronoun, which made
her speech a delicate flattery--"you, Mr. Coppin, cannot fail to observe
how the evening's relaxation helps to raise the whole tone of the girls.
The music which they hear sinks into their hearts and lifts them above
the little cares of their lives; the dancing makes them merry; the
social life, the talk among ourselves, the books they read, all help to
maintain a pure and elevated tone of thought. I declare, Mr. Coppin, I
no longer know these girls. And then they bring their friends, and so
their influence spreads. They will not, I hope, remain in the workrooms
all their lives. A woman should be married; do not you think so, Mr.
Coppin?"

He was too much astonished at the whole conversation to make any
coherent reply.

"I think you have perhaps turned your attention too much to politics,
have you not? Yet practical questions ought to interest you."

"They say, at the club," he answered, "that this place is a sham and a
humbug."

"Will you bring your friends here to show them that it is not?"

"Harry stood up for you the other night. He's plucky, and they like him
for all he looks a swell."

"Does he speak at your club?"

"Sometimes--not to say speak. He gets up after the speech, and says so
and so is wrong. Yet they like him--because he isn't afraid to say what
he thinks. They call him Gentleman Jack."

"I thought he was a brave man," said Angela, looking at Harry, who was
rehearsing some story to the delight of Nelly and the girls.

"Yes--the other night they were talking about you, and one said one
thing and one said another, and a chap said he thought he'd seen you in
a West End music-hall, and he didn't believe you were any better than
you should be."

"Oh!" She shrank as if she had been struck some blow.

"He didn't say it twice. After he'd knocked him down, Harry invited that
chap to stand up and have it out. But he wouldn't."

It was a great misfortune for Harry that he lost the soft and glowing
look of gratitude and admiration which was quite wasted upon him. For he
was at the very point, the critical point, of the story.

Angela had made another convert. When Dick Coppin went home that night,
he was humbled but pensive. Here was a thing of which he had never
thought; and here was a woman the like of whom he had never imagined.
The House of Lords, the Church, the Land Laws, presented no attraction
that night for his thoughts. For the first time in his life he felt the
influence of a woman.




CHAPTER XX.

DOWN ON THEIR LUCK.


Engaged in these pursuits, neither Angela nor Harry paid much heed to
the circle at the boarding-house, where they were still nominally
boarders. For Angela was all day long at her association, and her
general assistant, or prime-minister, after a hasty breakfast, hastened
to his daily labor. He found that he was left entirely to his own
devices: work came in which he did or left undone, Miss Messenger's
instructions were faithfully carried out, and his independence was
respected. During work-time he planned amusements and surprises for Miss
Kennedy and her girls, or he meditated upon the Monotony of Man, a
subject which I may possibly explain later on; or when he knocked off,
he would go and see the drayman roll about the heavy casks as if they
were footballs; or he would watch the machinery and look at the great
brown mass of boiling hops, or he would drop suddenly upon his cousin
Josephus, and observe him faithfully entering names, ticking off and
comparing, just as he had done for forty years, still a junior clerk.
But he gave no thought to the boarders.

One evening, however, in late September, he happened to look in toward
nine o'clock, the hour when the frugal supper was generally spread. The
usual occupants of the room were there, but there was no supper on the
table, and the landlady was absent.

Harry stood in the doorway, with his hands in his pockets, carelessly
looking at the group. Suddenly he became aware, with a curious sinking
of heart, that something was gone wrong with all of them. They were all
silent, all sitting bolt upright, no one taking the least notice of his
neighbor, and all apparently in some physical pain.

The illustrious pair were in their usual places, but his lordship,
instead of looking sleepy and sleepily content, as was his custom at the
evening hour, sat bolt upright and thrummed the arm of his chair with
his fingers, restless and ill at ease; opposite to him sat his consort,
her hands tightly clasped, her bright beady eyes gleaming with
impatience, which might at any moment break out into wrath. Yet the case
was completely drawn up, as Harry knew, because he had finished it
himself, and it only remained to make a clean copy before it was "sent
in" to the Lord Chancellor.

As for the professor, he was seated at the window, his legs curled under
the chair, looking moodily across Stepney Green--into space, and
neglecting his experiments. His generally cheerful face wore an anxious
expression as if he was thinking of something unpleasant, which would
force itself upon his attention.

Josephus was in his corner, without his pipe, and more than usually
melancholy. His sadness always, however, increased in the evening, so
that he hardly counted.

Daniel, frowning like a Rhine baron of the good old time, had his books
before him, but they were closed. It was a bad sign that even the
Version in the Hebrew had no attraction for him.

Mr. Maliphant alone was smiling. His smiles, in such an assemblage of
melancholy faces, produced an incongruous effect. The atmosphere was
charged with gloom--it was funereal: in the midst of it the gay and
cheerful countenance, albeit wrinkled, of the old man, beamed like the
sun impertinently shining amid fog and rain, sleet and snow. The thing
was absurd. Harry felt the force of Miss Kennedy's remark that the
occupants of the room reminded her of a fortuitous concourse of flies,
or ants, or rooks, or people in an omnibus, each of whom was profoundly
occupied with its own affairs and careless of its neighbors. Out of six
in the room, five were unhappy: they did not ask for, or expect, the
sympathies of their neighbors; they did not reveal their anxieties; they
sat and suffered in silence; the sixth alone was quite cheerful: it was
nothing to him what experiences the rest were having, whether they were
enjoying the upper airs, or enduring hardness. He sat in his own place
near the professor: he laughed aloud; he even talked and told stories,
to which no one listened. When Harry appeared, he was just ending a
story which he had never begun:

"So it was given to the other fellow. And he came from Baxter Street,
close to the City Hall, which is generally allowed to be the wickedest
street in New York City."

He paused a little, laughed cheerfully, rubbed his dry old hands
together, smoked his pipe in silence, and then concluded his story,
having filled up the middle in his own mind, without speech.

"And so he took to the coasting trade off the Andes."

Harry caught the eye of the professor, and beckoned him to come outside.

"Now," he said, taking his arm, "what the devil is the matter with all
of you?"

The professor smiled feebly under the gas-lamp in the street, and
instantly relapsed into his anxious expression.

"I suppose," he said, "that is, I guess, because they haven't told me,
that it's the same with them as with me."

"And that is----?"

The professor slapped his empty pockets:

"Want of cash," he said. "I'm used to it in the autumn, just before the
engagements begin. Bless you! It's nothing to me; though, when you've
had no dinner for a week, you do begin to feel as if you could murder
and roast a cat, if no one was looking. I've even begun to wish that the
Eighth Commandment was suspended during the autumn."

"Do you mean, man, that you are all hungry?"

"All except old Maliphant, and he doesn't count. Josephus had some
dinner, but he says he can't afford supper and dinner too at the rate
his heels wear out. Yes, I don't suppose there's been a dinner apiece
among us for the last week."

"Good heavens!" Harry hurried off to find the landlady.

She was in the kitchen sitting before the fire, though it was a warm
night. She looked up when her lodger entered, and Harry observed that
she, too, wore an air of dejection.

"Well, Mrs. Bormalack."

She groaned and wiped away a tear.

"My heart bleeds for them, Mr. Goslett," she said. "I can't bear to set
eyes on them; I can't face them. Because to do what I should like to do
for them, would be nothing short of ruin. And how to send them away I
cannot tell."

He nodded his head encouragingly.

"You are a young man, Mr. Goslett, and you don't consider--and you are
thinking day and night of that sweet young thing, Miss Kennedy. And she
of you. Oh! you needn't blush; a handsome fellow like you is a prize for
any woman, however good-looking. Besides, I've got eyes."

"Still, that doesn't help us much to the point, Mrs. Bormalack, which
is, what can we do for them?"

"Oh, dear me! the poor things don't board and lodge any more, Mr.
Goslett. They've had no board to-day. If I did what I should like to
do--but I can't. There's the rent and rates and all. And how I can keep
them in the house, unless they pay their rent, I can't tell. I've never
been so miserable since Captain Saffrey went away, owing for three
months."

"Not enough to eat?"

"Lady Davenant came to me this morning, and paid the rent for this week,
but _not the board_; said that her nephew Nathaniel hadn't sent the six
dollars, and they could only have breakfast, and must find some cheap
place for dinner somewhere else. In the middle of the day they went out.
Her ladyship put quite a chirpy face upon it; said they were going into
the city to get dinner, but his lordship groaned. Dinner! They came home
at two, and his groans have been heart-rending all the afternoon. I
never heard such groaning."

"Poor old man!"

"And there's the professor, too. It's low water with him. No one wants
conjuring till winter comes. But he's quite used to go without his
dinner. You needn't mind him!"

"Eels," said Harry, "are used to being skinned. Yet they wriggle a bit."

He produced a few coins and proffered a certain request to the landlady.
Then he returned to his fellow-lodgers.

Presently there was heard in the direction of the kitchen a cheerful
hissing, followed by a perfectly divine fragrance. Daniel closed his
eyes, and leaned back in his chair. The professor smiled. His lordship
rolled in his chair and groaned. Presently Mrs. Bormalack appeared, and
the cloth was laid. His lordship showed signs of an increasing
agitation. The fragrance increased. He leaned forward clutching the arm
of his chair, looking to his wife as if for help and guidance at this
most difficult crisis. He was frightfully hungry; all his dinner had
been a biscuit and a half, his wife having taken the other half. What is
a biscuit and a half to one accustomed to the flesh-pots of Canaan City?

"Clara Martha," he groaned, trying to whisper, but failing in his
agitation, "I must have some of that beefsteak or I shall----"

Here he relapsed into silence again.

It was not from a desire to watch the sufferings of the unlucky peer,
or in order to laugh at them, that Harry hesitated to invite him. Now,
however, he hesitated no longer.

"I am giving a little supper to-night, Lady Davenant, to--to--celebrate
my birthday. May I hope that you and his lordship will join us?"

Her ladyship most affably accepted.

Well, they were fed; they made up for the meagreness of the midday meal
by such a supper as should be chronicled, so large, so generous was it.
Such a supper, said the professor, as should carry a man along for a
week, were it not for the foolish habit of getting hungry twice at least
in the four-and-twenty hours. After supper they all became cheerful, and
presently went to bed as happy as if there were no to-morrow, and the
next day's dinner was assured.

When they were gone, Harry began to smoke his evening pipe. Then he
became aware of the presence of the two who were left--his cousin
Josephus and old Mr. Maliphant.

The former was sitting in gloomy silence, and the latter was making as
if he would say something, but thought better of it, and smiled instead.

"Josephus," said Harry, "what the devil makes you so gloomy? You can't
be hungry still?"

"No," he replied. "It isn't that; a junior clerk fifty-five years old
has no right to get hungry."

"What is it, then?"

"They talk of changes in the office, that is all. Some of the juniors
will be promoted; not me, of course, and some will have to go. After
forty years in the brewery, I shall have to go. That's all."

"Seems rough, doesn't it? Can't you borrow a handful of malt, and set up
a little brewery for yourself?"

"It is only starvation. After all, it doesn't matter--nobody cares what
happens to a junior clerk. There are plenty more. And the workhouse is
said to be well managed. Perhaps they will let me keep their accounts."

"When do you think--the--the reduction will be made?"

"Next month, they say."

"Come, cheer up, old man," said his cousin. "Why, if they do turn you
out--which would be a burning shame--you can find something better."

"No," replied Josephus sadly, "I know my place. I am a junior clerk.
They can be got to do my work at seven bob a week. Ah! in thousands."

"Well, but can't you do anything else?"

"Nothing else."

"In all these years, man, have you learned nothing at all?"

"Nothing at all."

Is there, thought Harry, gazing upon his luckless cousin, a condition
more miserable than that of the cheap clerk? In early life he learns to
spell, to read, to write, and perhaps keep books, but this only if he is
ambitious. Here his education ends; he has no desire to learn anything
more; he falls into whatever place he can get, and then he begins a life
in which there is no hope of preferment and no endeavor after better
things. There are, in every civilized country, thousands and thousands
of these helpless and hopeless creatures: they mostly suffer in silence,
being at the best ill-fed and ill-paid, but they sometimes utter a
feeble moan, when one of them can be found with vitality enough about
their pay and prospects. No one has yet told them the honest truth--that
they are already paid as much as they deserve; that their miserable
accomplishments cannot for a moment be compared with the skill of an
artisan; that they are self-condemned because they make no effort. They
have not even the energy to make a Union; they have not the sense of
self-protection; they are content if they are not hungry, if they have
tobacco to smoke and beer to drink.

"How long is it since you--did--whatever it was you did, that kept you
down?" asked the younger man, at length.

"I did nothing. It was an accident. Unless," added Josephus with a
smile--"unless it was the devil. But devils don't care to meddle with
junior clerks."

"What was the accident, then?"

"It was one day in June; I remember the day quite well. I was alone in
my office, the same office as I am in still. The others, younger than
myself, and I was then twenty-one, were gone off on business. The safe
stood close to my desk. There was a bundle of papers in it sealed up,
and marked 'Mr. Messenger, Private,' which had been there a goodish
while, so that I supposed they were not important: some of the books
were there as well, and Mr. Messenger himself had sent down, only an
hour before ... before.... It happened, a packet of notes to be paid
into the bank. The money had been brought in by our country
collectors--fourteen thousand pounds, in country bank-notes. Now
remember, I was sitting at the desk and the safe was locked, and the
keys were in the desk, and no one was in the office except me. And I
will swear that the notes were in the safe. I told Mr. Messenger that I
would take my oath to it, and I would still." Josephus grew almost
animated as he approached the important point in his history.

"Well?"

"Things being so--remember, no one but me in the office, and the
keys----"

"I remember. Get along."

"I was sent for."

"By Mr. Messenger?"

"Mr. Messenger didn't send for junior clerks. He used to send for the
heads of departments, who sent for the chief clerks, who ordered the
juniors. That was the way in those days. No, I was sent for to the chief
clerk's office and given a packet of letters for copying. That took
three minutes. When I came back the office was still empty, the safe was
locked, and the keys in my desk."

"Well?"

"Well--but the safe was empty!"

"What! all the money gone?"

"All gone, every farthing--with Mr. Messenger's private papers."

"What a strange thing!"

"No one saw anybody going into the office or coming out. Nothing else
was taken."

"Come--with fourteen thousand pounds in his hand, no reasonable thief
would ask for more."

"And what is more extraordinary still, not one of those notes has ever
since been presented for payment."

"And then, I suppose, there was a row."

Josephus assented.

"First, I was to be sacked at once; then I was to be watched and
searched; next, I was to be kept on until the notes were presented and
the thief caught. I have been kept on, the notes have not been
presented; and I've had the same pay, neither more nor less, all the
time. That's all the story. Now, there's to be an end of that. I'm to be
sent away."

Mr. Maliphant had not been listening to the story at all, being
pleasantly occupied with his own reminiscences. At this point one of
them made him laugh and rub his hands.

"When Mr. Messenger's father married Susannah Coppin, I have heard----"

Here he stopped.

"Halloo!" cried Harry. "Go on, Venerable. Why, we are cousins or
nephews, or something, of Miss Messenger. Josephus, my boy, cheer up!"

Mr. Maliphant's memory now jumped over two generations, and he went on:

"Caroline Coppin married a sergeant in the army, and a handsome lad--I
forget his name. But Mary Coppin married Bunker. The Coppins were a good
old Whitechapel stock, as good as the Messengers. As for Bunker, he was
an upstart, he was; and came from Barking, as I always understood."

Then he was once more silent.




CHAPTER XXI.

LADY DAVENANT.


It was a frequent custom with Lady Davenant to sit with the girls in the
workroom in the morning. She liked to have a place where she could talk;
she took an ex-professional interest in their occupation; she had the
eye of an artist for their interpretation of the fashion. Moreover, it
pleased her to be in the company of Miss Kennedy, who was essentially a
woman's woman. Men who are so unhappy as to have married a man's woman
will understand perfectly what I mean. On the morning after Harry's
most providential birthday, therefore, when she appeared no one was in
the least disturbed. But to-day she did not greet the girls with her
accustomed stately inclination of the head which implied that, although
now a peeress, she had been brought up to their profession and in a
republican school of thought, and did not set herself up above her
neighbors. Yet respect to rank should be conceded, and was expected. In
general, too, she was talkative, and enlivened the tedium of work with
many an anecdote illustrating Canaan City and its ways, or showing the
lethargic manners of the Davenants, both her husband and his, to say
nothing of the grandfather, contented with the lowly occupation of a
wheelwright while he might have soared to the British House of Lords.
This morning, however, she sat down and was silent, and her head
drooped. Angela, who sat next her and watched, presently observed that a
tear formed in her eye, and dropped upon her work, and that her lips
moved as if she was holding a conversation with herself. Thereupon she
arose, put her hand upon the poor lady's arm, and drew her away without
a word to the solitude of the dining-room, where her ladyship gave way
and burst into an agony of sobbing.

Angela stood before her, saying nothing. It was best to let the fit have
its way. When the crying was nearly over, she laid her hand upon her
hair and gently smoothed it.

"Poor dear lady," she said, "will you tell me what has happened?"

"Everything," she gasped. "Oh, everything! The six months are all gone,
all but one. Nephew Nathaniel writes to say that, as we haven't even
made a start all this time, he reckons we don't count to make any; and
he's got children, and as for business, it's got down to the hard pan,
and dollars are skurce, and we may come back again right away, and
there's the money for the voyage home whenever we like, but no more."

"Oh!" said Angela, beginning to understand. "And ... and your husband?"

"There's where the real trouble begins. I wouldn't mind for myself,
money or no money. I would write to the Queen for money. I would go to
the workhouse. I would beg my bread in the street, but the case I would
never give up--never--never--never."

She clasped her hands, dried her eyes, and sat bolt upright, the picture
of unyielding determination.

"And your husband is not, perhaps, so resolute as yourself?"

"He says, 'Clara Martha, let us go hum. As for the title, I would sell
it to nephew Nathaniel, who's the next heir, for a week of square meals;
he should have the coronet, if I'd got it, for a month's certainty of
steaks and chops and huckleberry pie; and as for my seat in the House of
Lords, he should have it for our old cottage in Canaan City, which is
sold, and the school which I have given up and lost.' He says: 'Pack the
box, Clara Martha--there isn't much to pack--and we will go at once. If
the American Minister won't take up the case for us, I guess that the
case may slide till Nathaniel takes it up for himself.' That is what he
says, Miss Kennedy. Those were his words. Oh! Oh! Oh! Mr. Feeblemind!
Oh! Mr. Facing-Both-Ways!"

She wrung her hands in despair, for it seemed as if her husband would be
proof against even the scorn and contempt of these epithets.

"But what do you mean to do?"

"I shall stay," she replied. "And so shall he, if my name is Lady
Davenant. Do you think I am going back to Canaan City to be scorned at
by Aurelia Tucker? Do you think I shall let that poor old man, who has
his good side, Miss Kennedy--and as for virtue he is an angel, and he
knows not the taste of tobacco or whiskey--face his nephew, and have to
say what good he has done with all those dollars? No, here we stay." She
snapped her lips, and made as if she would take root upon that very
chair. "Shall he part with his birthright like Esau, because he is
hungry? Never! The curse of Esau would rest upon us.

"He's at home now," she went on, "preparing for another day without
dinner; groans won't help him now; and this time there will be no
supper--unless Mr. Goslett has another birthday."

"Why! good gracious, you will be starved."

"Better starve than to go home as we came. Besides, I shall write to
the Queen when there's nothing left. When Nathaniel's money comes, which
may be to-morrow, and may be next month, I shall give a month's rent to
Mrs. Bormalack, and save the rest for one meal a day. Yes, as long as
the money lasts, he shall eat meat--once a day--at noon. He's been
pampered, like all the Canaan City folk; set up with turkey roast and
turkey boiled, and ducks and beef every day, and buckwheat cakes and
such. Oh! a change of diet would bring down his luxury and increase his
pride."

Angela thought that starvation was a new way of developing pride of
birth, but she did not say so. "Is there no way," she asked, "in which
he can earn money?"

She shook her head.

"As a teacher he was generally allowed to be learned, but sleepy. In our
city, however, the boys and girls didn't expect too much, and it's a
sleepy place. In winter they sit round the stove and they go to sleep;
in summer they sit in the shade and they go to sleep. It's the sleepiest
place in the States. No, there's no kind o' way in which he can earn any
money. And if there were, did you ever hear of a British peer working
for his daily bread?"

"But you, Lady Davenant? Surely your ladyship would not mind--if the
chance offered--if it were a thing kept secret--if not even your husband
knew--would not object to earning something every week to find that
square meal which your husband so naturally desires?"

Her ladyship held out her hands without a word.

Angela, in shameful contempt of political economy, placed in them the
work which she had in her own, and whispered:

"You had better," she said, "take a week in advance. Then you can
arrange with Mrs. Bormalack for the usual meals on the old terms; and if
you would rather come here to work, you can have this room to yourself
all the morning. Thank you, Lady Davenant. The obligation is entirely
mine, you know. For, really, more delicate work, more beautiful work, I
never saw. Do all American ladies work so beautifully?"

Her ladyship, quite overcome with these honeyed words, took the work
and made no reply.

"Only one thing, dear Lady Davenant," Angela went on, smiling: "you must
promise me not to work too hard. You know that such work as yours is
worth at least twice as much as mine. And then you can push on the case,
you know."

The little lady rose, and threw her arms round Angela's neck.

"My dear!" she cried with more tears, "you are everybody's friend. Oh!
yes, I know. And how you do it and all--I can't think, nor Mrs.
Bormalack neither. But the day may come--it shall come--when we can show
our gratitude."

She retired, taking the work with her.

Her husband was asleep as usual, for he had had breakfast, and as yet
the regular pangs of noon were not active. The case was not spread out
before him, as was usual ever since Mr. Goslett had taken it in hand. It
was ostentatiously rolled up, and laid on the table, as if packed ready
for departure by the next mail.

His wife regarded him with a mixture of affection and contempt.

"He would sell the crown of England," she murmured, "for roast turkey
and apple fixin's. The Davenants couldn't have been always like that. It
must be his mother's blood. Yet she was a church-member, and walked
consistent."

She did not wake him up, but sought out Mrs. Bormalack, and presently
there was a transfer of coins and the Resurrection of Smiles and _Doux
Parler_, that Fairy of Sweet Speech, who covers and hides beneath the
cold wind of poverty.

"Tell me, Mr. Goslett," said Angela, that evening, still thinking over
the sad lot of the claimants, "tell me: you have examined the claim of
these people--what chance have they?"

"I should say none whatever."

"Then what makes them so confident of success?"

"Hush! listen. They are really confident. His noble lordship perfectly
understands the weakness of his claim, which depends upon a pure
assumption, as you shall hear. As for the little lady, his wife, she
has long since jumped to the conclusion that the assumption requires no
proof. Therefore, save in moments of dejection, she is pretty confident.
Then they are hopelessly ignorant of how they should proceed and of the
necessary delays, even if their case was unanswerable. They thought they
had only to cross the ocean and send in a statement in order to get
admitted to the rank and privilege of the peerage. And I believe they
think that the Queen will, in some mysterious way, restore the property
to them."

"Poor things!"

"Yes, it's rather sad to think of such magnificent expectations.
Besides, it really is a most beautiful case. The last Lord Davenant had
one son. That only son grew up, had some quarrel with his father, and
sailed from the port of Bristol, bound for some American port, I forget
which. Neither he nor his ship was ever heard of again. Therefore the
title became extinct."

"Well?"

"Very good. Now the story begins. His name was Timothy Clitheroe
Davenant, the name always given to the eldest son of the family. Now,
our friend's name is Timothy Clitheroe Davenant, and so was his
father's, and so was his grandfather's."

"That is very strange."

"It is very strange--what is stranger still is, that his grandfather was
born, according to the date on his tomb, the same year as the lost heir,
and at the same place--Davenant, where was the family-seat."

"Can there have been two of the same name born in the same place and in
the same year?"

"It seems improbable, almost impossible. Moreover, the last lord had no
brother, nor had his father, the second lord. I found that out at the
Heralds' College. Consequently, even if there was another branch, and
the birth of two Timothys in the same year was certain, they would not
get the title. So that their one hope is to be able to prove what they
call the 'connection.' That is to say, the identity of the lost heir
with this wheelwright."

"That seems a very doubtful thing to do, after all these years."

"It is absolutely impossible, unless some documents are discovered
which prove it. But nothing remains of the wheelwright."

"No book? No papers?"

"Nothing, except a small book of songs, supposed to be convivial, with
his name on the inside cover, written in a sprawling hand, and misspelt,
with two v's--'Davvenant,' and above the name, in the same hand, the day
of the week in which it was written, 'Satturday,' with two t's. No
Christian name."

"Does it not seem as if the absence of the Christian name would point to
the assumption of the title?"

"Yes: they do not know this, and I have not yet told them. It is,
however, a very small point, and quite insufficient in itself to
establish anything."

"Yes," Angela mused. She was thinking whether something could not be
done to help these poor people and settle the case decisively for them
one way or the other. "What is to be the end of it?"

Harry shrugged his shoulders.

"Who knows how long they can go on? When there are no more dollars, they
must go home again. I hear they have got another supply of money: Mrs.
Bormalack has been paid for a fortnight in advance. After that is
gone--perhaps they had better go too."

"It seems a pity," said Angela, slightly reddening at mention of the
money, "that some researches could not be made, so as to throw a little
light upon this strange coincidence of names."

"We should want to know first what to look for. After that, we should
have to find a man to conduct the search. And then we should have to pay
him."

"As for the man, there is the professor; as for the place, first, there
is the Heralds' College, and secondly, there are the parish registers of
the village of Davenant; and as for the money, why, it would not cost
much, and I believe something might be advanced for them. If you and I,
Mr. Goslett, between us, were to pay the professor's expenses, would he
go about for us?"

She seemed to assume that he was quite ready to join her in giving his
money for this object. Yet Harry was now living, having refused his
guardian's proffered allowance, on his pay by the piece, which gave
him, as already stated, tenpence for every working hour.

"What would the professor cost?" she asked.

"The professor is down upon his luck," said Harry. "He is so hard up at
present that I believe we would get it for nothing but his expenses.
Eighteen shillings a week would buy him outright until his engagements
begin again. If there were any travelling expenses, of course that would
be extra. But the village of Davenant is not a great way off. It is
situated in Essex, and Essex is now a suburb of London, its original
name having been East-End-seaxas, which is not generally known."

"Very well," she replied gravely. "That would be only nine shillings
apiece, say eleven hours of extra work for you; and probably it would
not last long, more than a week or two. Will you give two hours a day to
his lordship?"

Harry made a wry face, and laughed. This young person had begun by
turning him into a journeyman cabinet-maker, and was now making him work
extra time. What next?

"Am I not your slave, Miss Kennedy?"

"O Mr. Goslett, I thought there was to be no more nonsense of that kind!
You know it can lead to nothing--even if you desired that it should."

"Even? Miss Kennedy, can't you see----"

"No--I can see nothing--I will hear nothing. Do not--O Mr. Goslett--we
have been--we are--such excellent friends. You have been so great a help
to me: I look to you for so much more. Do not spoil all; do not seek for
what you could never be: pray, pray, do not!"

She spoke with so much earnestness; her eyes were filled with such a
frankness; she laid her hand upon his arm with so charming
_camaraderie_, that he could not choose but obey.

"It is truly wonderful," he said, thinking, for the thousandth time, how
this pearl among women came to Stepney Green.

"What is wonderful?" she blushed as she asked.

"You know what I mean. Let us both be frank. You command me not to say
the thing I most desire to say. Very good, I will be content to wait,
but under one promise----"

"What is that?"

"If the reason or reasons which command my silence should ever be
removed--mind, I do not seek to know what they are--you will
yourself----"

"What?" she asked, blushing sweetly.

"You will yourself--tell me so."

She recovered her composure and gave him her hand.

"If at any time I can listen to you, I will tell you so. Does that
content you?"

Certainly not, but there was no more to be got; therefore Harry was fain
to be contented whether he would or not. And this was only one of a
hundred little skirmishes in which he endeavored to capture an advanced
fort or prepared to lay the siege in form. And always he was routed with
heavy loss.

"And now," she went on, "we will get back to our professor."

"Yes. I am to work two extra hours a day that he may go about in the
luxury of eighteen shillings a week. This it is to be one of the
horny-handed. What is the professor to do first?"

"Let us," she said, "find him and secure his services."

It has been seen that the professor was already come to the period of
waist-tightening, which naturally follows a too continued succession of
banyan-days.

He listened with avidity to any proposition which held forth a prospect
of food. The work, he said, only partly understanding it, would be
difficult, but, therefore, the more to be desired. Common conjurers, he
said, would spoil such a case. As for himself, he would undertake to do
just whatever they wanted with the register, whether it was the
substitution of a page or the tearing out of a page, under the very eyes
of the parish clerk. "There must be," he said, "a patter suitable to the
occasion. I will manage that for you. I'm afraid I can't make up as I
ought for the part, because it would cost too much, but we must do
without that. And now, Miss Kennedy, what is it exactly that you want me
to do?"

He was disappointed on learning that there would be no "palming" of
leaves, old or new, among the registers; nothing, in fact, but a simple
journey, and a simple examination of the books. And though, as he
confessed, he had as yet no experience in the art of falsifying parish
registers, where science was concerned its interests were above those of
mere morality.




CHAPTER XXII.

DANIEL FAGG.


What would have happened if certain things had not happened? This is a
question which is seldom set on examination papers, on account of the
great scope it offers to the imaginative faculty, and we all know how
dangerous a thing it is to develop this side of the human mind. Many a
severe historian has been spoiled by developing his imagination. But for
this, Scott might have been another Alison and Thackeray a Mill. In this
Stepney business the appearance of Angela certainly worked changes at
once remarkable and impossible to be dissociated from her name. Thus,
but for her, the unfortunate claimants must have been driven back to
their own country like baffled invaders "rolling sullenly over the
frontier." Nelly would have spent her whole life in the sadness of short
rations and long hours, with hopeless prayers for days of fatness.
Rebekah and the improvers and the dressmakers and the apprentices would
have endured the like hardness. Harry would have left the joyless city
to its joylessness, and returned to the regions whose skies are all
sunshine--to the young and fortunate--and its pavements all of gold. And
there would have been no Palace of Delight. And what would have become
of Daniel Fagg, one hardly likes to think. The unlucky Daniel had,
indeed, fallen upon very evil days. There seemed to be no longer a
single man left whom he could ask for a subscription to his book. He had
used them all up. He had sent begging letters to every Fellow of every
scientific society; he had levied contributions upon every secretary; he
had attacked in person every official at the museums of Great Russell
Street and South Kensington; he had tried all the publishers; he had
written to every bishop, nobleman, clergyman, and philanthropist of whom
he could hear, pressing upon them the claims of his great Discovery. Now
he could do no more. The subscriptions he had received for publishing
his book were spent in necessary food and lodgings: nobody at the Museum
would even see him; he got no more answers to his letters: starvation
stared him in the face.

For three days he had lived upon ninepence. Threepence a day for food.
Think of that, ye who are fed regularly, and fed well. Threepence, to
satisfy all the cravings of an excellent appetite! There was now no more
money left. And in two days more the week's rent would be due.

On the morning when he came forth, hungry and miserable, without even
the penny for a loaf, it happened that Angela was standing at her upper
window, on the other side of the Green, and, fortunately for the unlucky
scholar that she saw him. His strange behavior made her watch him. First
he looked up and down the street in uncertainty; then, as if he had
business which could not be delayed a moment, he turned to the right and
marched straight away toward the Mile End Road. This was because he
thought he would go to the Head of the Egyptian Department at the
British Museum and borrow five shillings. Then he stopped suddenly: this
was because he remembered that he would have to send in his name, and
that the chief would certainly refuse to see him. Then he turned slowly
and walked, dragging his limbs and hanging his head in the opposite
direction--because he was resolved to make for the London Docks, and
drop accidentally into the sluggish green water, the first drop of which
kills almost as certainly as a glass of Bourbon whiskey. Then he thought
that there would be some luxury in sitting down for a few moments to
think comfortably over his approaching demise, and of the noise it would
make in the learned world, and how remorseful and ashamed the
scholars--especially he of the Egyptian Department--would feel for the
short balance of their sin-laden days, and he took a seat on a bench in
the green-garden with this view. As he thought he leaned forward,
staring into vacancy, and in his face there grew so dark an expression
of despair and terror that Angela shuddered and ran for her hat,
recollecting that she had heard of his poverty and disappointments.

"I am afraid you are not well, Mr. Fagg."

He started and looked up. In imagination he was already lying dead at
the bottom of the green-water, and before his troubled mind there were
floating confused images of his former life, now past and dead and gone.
He saw himself in his Australian cottage arriving at his grand
discovery; he was lecturing about it on a platform; he was standing on
the deck of a ship, drinking farewell nobblers with an enthusiastic
crowd; and he was wandering hungry, neglected, despised, about the stony
streets of London.

"Well? No: I am not well," he replied presently, understanding things a
little.

"Is it distress of mind or of body, Mr. Fagg?"

"Yesterday it was both; to-night it will be both; just now it is only
one."

"Which one?"

"Mind," he replied fiercely, refusing to acknowledge that he was
starving. He threw his hat back, dashed his subscription book to the
ground, and banged the unoffending bench with his fists.

"As for mind," he went on, "it's a pity I was born with any. I wish I'd
had no more mind than my neighbors. It's mind, and nothing else, that
has brought me to this."

"What is this, Mr. Fagg?"

"Nothing to you. Go your ways; you are young; you have yet your hopes,
which may come to nothing, same as mine; even though they are not, like
mine, hopes of glory and learning. There's Mr. Goslett in love with you;
what is mind to you? Nothing. And you in love with him. Very likely
he'll go off with another woman, and then you'll find out what it is to
be disappointed. What is mind to anybody? Nothing. Do they care for it
in the Museum? No. Does the head of the Egyptian Department care for it?
Not he; not a bit. It's a cruel and a selfish country."

"O Mr. Fagg!" She disregarded his allusion to herself, though it was
sufficiently downright.

"Yes: but I will be revenged. I will do something--yes--something that
shall tell all Australia how I have been wronged; the colony of Victoria
shall ring with my story. It shall sap their loyalty; they shall grow
discontented; they will import more Irishmen; there shall be separation.
Yes: my friends shall demand reparation in revenge for my treatment."

"It is Christian to forgive, Mr. Fagg."

"I will forgive when I have had my revenge. No one shall say I am
vindictive. Ah!"--he heaved a profound sigh. "They gave me a dinner
before I came away; they drank my health; they all told me of the
reception I should get, and the glory that awaited me. Look at me now.
Not one penny in my pocket. Not one man who believes in the Discovery.
Therefore I may truly say that it is better to be born without a brain."

"This is your subscription-book, I believe." She took and turned over
its pages.

"Come, Mr. Fagg, you have come to the fifty-first copy of the book.
Fifty-one copies ordered beforehand does not look like disbelief. May I
add my name? That will make fifty-two. Twelve shillings and sixpence, I
see. Oh, I shall look forward with the greatest interest to the
appearance of the book, I assure you. Yet you must not expect of a
dressmaker much knowledge of Hebrew, Mr. Fagg. You great scholars must
be contented with the simple admiration of ignorant work-girls." He was
too far gone in misery to be easily soothed, but he began to wish he had
not said that cruel thing about possible desertion by her lover.

"Admiration!" he echoed with a hollow groan. "And yesterday nothing to
eat further than threepence, and the day before the same, and the day
before that. In Australia, when I was in the shoemaking line, there was
always plenty to eat. Starvation, I suppose, goes to the brain. And is
the cause of suicide, too. I know a beautiful place in the London Docks,
where the water's green with minerals. I shall go there." He pushed his
hands deeper into his pockets, while his bushy eyebrows frowned so
horribly that two children who were playing in the walk screamed with
terror and fled without stopping. "That water poisons a man directly."

"Come, Mr. Fagg," said Angela, "we allow something for the superior
activity of great minds. But we must not talk of despair, when there
should be nothing beyond a little despondency."

He shook his head.

"Too much reading has probably disordered your digestion, Mr. Fagg. You
want rest and society, with sympathy--a woman's sympathy. Scholars,
perhaps, are sometimes jealous."

"Reading has emptied my purse," he said. "Sympathy won't fill it."

"I do not know--sympathy is a wonderful medicine sometimes; it works
miracles. I think, Mr. Fagg, you had better let me pay my subscription
in advance--you can give me the change when you please."

She placed a sovereign in his hand. His fingers clutched it greedily.
Then his conscience smote him--her kind words, her flattery, touched his
heart.

"I cannot take it," he said. "Mr. Goslett warned me not to take your
money. Besides (he gasped, and pointed to the subscription
list)--fifty-one names! They've all paid their money for printing the
book. I've eaten up all the money, and I shall eat up yours as well.
Take the sovereign back--I can starve. When I am dead I would rather be
remembered for my discovery than for a shameful devourer of subscription
money."

She took him by the arm, and led him unresisting to the establishment.

"We must look after you, Mr. Fagg," she said. "Now I have got a
beautiful room, where no one sits all day long except sometimes a
crippled girl, and sometimes myself. In the evening the girls have it.
You may bring your books there, if you like, and sit there to work when
you please. And by the way"--she added this as if it were a matter of
the very least consequence, hardly worth mentioning--"if you would like
to join us any day at dinner (we take our simple meals at one), the
girls, no doubt, will all think it a great honor to have so
distinguished a scholar at table with them."

Mr. Fagg blushed with pleasure. Why--if the British Museum treated him
with contumely; if nobody would subscribe to his book; if he was weary
of asking and being refused--here was a haven of refuge, where he would
receive some of the honor due to a scholar.

"And now that you are here, Mr. Fagg"--said Angela, when she had broken
bread and given thanks--"you shall tell me all about your discovery.
Because, you see, we are so ignorant, we girls of the working classes,
that I do not exactly know what is your discovery."

He sat down and asked for a piece of paper. With this assistance he
began his exposition.

"I was drawn to my investigation," he said solemnly, "by a little old
book about the wisdom of the ancients; that is now five years ago, and I
was then fifty-five years of age. No time to be lost (says I to myself)
if anything is to be done. The more I read and the more I thought--I was
in the shoemaking trade and I'm not ashamed to own it; for it's a fine
business for such as are born with a head for thinking--the more I
thought, I say, the more I was puzzled. For there seemed to me no way
possible of reconciling what the scholars said."

"You have not told me the subject of your research yet."

"Antiquity," he replied grandly. "All antiquity was the subject of my
research. First, I read about the Egyptians and the hieroglyphics; then
I got hold of a new book, all about the Assyrians and the cuniform
character."

"I see," said Angela. "You were attracted by the ancient inscriptions?"

"Naturally. Without inscriptions where are you? The scholars said this,
and the scholars said that--they talked of reading the Egyptian language
and the Assyrian and the Median and what not. That wouldn't do for me."

The audacity of the little man excited Angela's curiosity, which had
been languid.

"Pray go on," she said.

"The scholars have the same books to go to as me, yet they don't
go--they've eyes as good, but they won't use them. Now follow me, miss,
and you'll be surprised. When Abraham went down into Egypt, did he
understand their language, or didn't he?"

"Why, I suppose--at least, it is not said that he did not."

"Of course he did. When Joseph went there, did he understand them? Of
course he did. When Jacob and his sons came into the country, did they
talk a strange speech? Not they. When Solomon married an Egyptian
princess, did he understand her talk? Why, of course he did. Now, do you
guess what's coming next?"

"No--not at all."

"None of the scholars could. Listen, then: if they all understood each
other, they must all have talked the same language--mustn't they?"

"Why, it would seem so."

"It's a sound argument, which can't be denied. Nobody can deny it--I
defy them. If they understood each other there must have been a common
language. Where did this common language spread? Over all the countries
thereabout. What was the common language? Hebrew."

"Oh," said Angela, "then they all talked Hebrew?"

"Every man Jack--nothing else known. What next? They wanted to write it.
Now we find what seems to be one character in Egypt, and another in
Syria, and another in Arabia, and another in Phoenicia, and another in
Judæa. Bless you! I know all about these alphabets. What I say is--if a
common language, then a common alphabet to write it with."

"I see. A common alphabet, which you discovered, perhaps?"

"That, young lady, is my discovery--that is the greatest discovery of
the age. I found it myself, once a small shoemaker in a little Victorian
township--I alone found out that common alphabet, and have come over
here to make it known. Not bad, says you, for a shoemaker, who had to
teach himself his own Hebrew."

"And the scholars here----"

"They're jealous--that's what it is; they're jealous. Most of them have
written books to prove other things, and they won't give in and own that
they've been wrong. My word! the scholars----" He paused and shook his
hand before her face. "Some of them have got the Hebrew alphabet, and
try to make out how one letter is a house and another a bull's head. And
so on. And some have got the cuneiforms, and they make out that one
bundle of arrows is an A and another a B. And so on. And some have got
the hieroglyphic, and it's the same game with all. While I--if you
please--with my little plain discovery just show that all the different
alphabets--different to outward seeming--are really one and the same."

"This is very interesting," said Angela. The little man was glowing with
enthusiasm and pride. He was transformed; he walked up and down throwing
about his arms; he stood before her looking almost tall; his eyes
flashed with fire, and his voice was strong. "And can you read
inscriptions by your simple alphabet?"

"There is not," he replied, "a single inscription in the British Museum
that I can't read. I just sit down before it, with my Hebrew dictionary
in my hand--I didn't tell you I learned Hebrew on purpose, did I?--and I
read that inscription, however long it is. Ah!"

"This seems extraordinary. Can you show me your alphabet?"

He sat down and began to make figures.

"What is the simplest figure? A circle; a square; a naught? No. A
triangle. Very good, then. Do you think they were such fools as to copy
a great ugly bull's head when they'd got a triangle ready to their
hands, and easy to draw? Not they: they just made a triangle--so--" [he
drew an equilateral triangle on its base], "and called it the first
letter; and two triangles, one atop the other--so--and called that the
second letter. Then they struck their triangle in another position, and
it was the third letter; and in another, and its fourth----" Angela felt
as if her head was swimming as he manipulated his triangles, and rapidly
produced his primitive alphabet, which really did present some
resemblance to the modern symbols. "There--and there--and there--and
what is that; and this? And so you've got the whole. Now, young lady,
with this in your hand, which is the key to all learning--and the
Hebrew dictionary, there's nothing you can't manage."

"And an account of this is to be given in your book, is it?"

"That is the secret of my book. Now you know what it was I found out;
now you see why my friends paid my passage home, and are now looking for
the glory which they prophesied."

"Don't get gloomy again, Mr. Fagg. It is a long lane, you know, that has
no turning. Let us hope for better luck."

"No one will ever know," he went on, "the inscriptions that I have
found--and read--in the Museum. They don't know what they've got. I've
told nobody yet, but they are all in the book, and I'll tell you
beforehand, Miss Kennedy, because you've been kind to me. Yes, a woman
is best; I ought to have gone to the woman first. I would marry you,
Miss Kennedy--I would indeed; but--I am too old, and besides, I don't
think I could afford a family."

"I thank you, Mr. Fagg, all the same. You do me a great honor. But about
these inscriptions?"

"Mind, it's a secret." He lowered his voice to a whisper. "There's
cuniform inscriptions in the Museum with David and Jonathan on
them--ah!--and Balaam and Balak--Aho!"--he positively chuckled over the
thought of these great finds--"and the whole life of Jezebel--Jezebel!
What do you think of that? And what else do you think they have got,
only they don't know it? The two tables of stone! Nothing short of the
two tables, with the Ten Commandments written out at length!"

Angela gazed with amazement at this admirable man: his faith in himself;
his audacity; the grandeur of his conceptions; the wonderful power of
his imagination overwhelmed her. But, to be sure, she had never before
met a genuine enthusiast.

"I know where they are kept; nobody else knows. It is in a dark corner;
they are each about two feet high, and there's a hole in the corner of
each for Moses' thumb to hold them by. Think of that! I've read them all
through--only," he added with a look of bewilderment, "I think there
must be something wrong with my Hebrew dictionary, because none of the
commandments read quite right. One or two come out quite surprising. Yet
the stones must be right, mustn't they? There can be no question about
that, and the discovery must be right. No question about that. And as
for the dictionaries--who put them together? Tell me that! Yah! the
scholars!"




CHAPTER XXIII.

THE MISSING LINK.


The professor then started on his quest with a cheerful heart, caused by
the certainty of dinner for some days to come. But he was an honest
Professor, and he did not prolong his absence for the sake of those
dinners. On the other hand, he made the most rapid dispatch consistent
with thorough work, and returned after an absence of four days, bearing
with him the fruits of his research.

"I think," said Harry, after reading his report, "I think, Miss Kennedy,
that we have found the Missing Link."

"Then they really will make their claim good?"

"I did not say that--quite. I said that we have found a Missing Link.
There might be, if you will think of it--two. One of them would have
connected the condescending wheelwright with his supposed parent, the
last Lord Davenant. The other would connect him with--quite another
father."

The truth, which was for some time carefully concealed from the
illustrious pair, was, in fact, this.

There is a village of Davenant, surrounding or adjoining a castle of
Davenant, just as Alnwick, Arundel, Durham, Lancaster, Chepstow,
Ragland, and a great many more English towns have a castle near them.
And whether Davenant town was built to be protected by the castle, or
the castle for the protection of the town, is a point on which I must
refer you to the county historian, who knows all about it, and is not
likely to deceive you on so important a point. The castle is now a
picturesque ruin, with a country-house built beside it. In this
country-house the last Lord Davenant died and the last heir to the title
was born. There is an excellent old church, with a tower and ivy, and
high-pitched roof, as an ancient church should have, and in the family
vault under the chancel all the Davenants, except the last heir, lie
buried.

There is also in the village a small country inn called the Davenant
Arms, where the professor put up and where he made himself
extraordinarily popular, because, finding himself among an assemblage of
folk slow to see and slower still to think, he astonished them for four
nights consecutively. The rustics still tell, and will continue to tell,
so long as memory lasts, of the wonderful man who took their money out
of their waistcoats, exchanged handkerchiefs, conveyed potatoes into
strange coat-pockets, read their thoughts, picked out the cards they had
chosen, made them take a card he had chosen whether they wanted it or
not, caused balls of glass to vanish, changed halfpence into
half-crowns, had a loaded pistol fired at himself and caught the ball,
with other great marvels, all for nothing, to oblige and astonish the
villagers, and for the good of the house. These are the recreations of
his evening hours. The mornings he spent in the vestry of the old church
searching the registers.

There was nothing professional about it, only the drudgery of clerk's
work; to do it at all was almost beneath his dignity; yet he went
through with it conscientiously, and restrained himself from inviting
the sexton, who stayed with him, to lend him his handkerchief or to
choose a card. Nor did he even hide a card in the sexton's pocket, and
then convey it into the parish register. Nothing of the sort. He was
sternly practical, and searched diligently. Nevertheless, he noted how
excellent a place for the simple feasts would be the reading-desk. The
fact is, that gentlemen of his profession never go to church, and,
therefore, are ignorant of the uses of its various parts. On Sunday
morning they lie in bed; on Sunday afternoon they have dinner, and
perhaps the day's paper, and on Sunday evening they gather at a certain
house of call for conjurers in Drury Lane, and practise on each other.
There is, therefore, no room in the conjurer's life for church. Some
remedy should be found for this by the bishops.

"What have I got to look for?" said the professor, as the sexton
produced the old books. "Well, I've got to find what families there were
living here a hundred years ago, or thereabouts, named Davenant, and
what Christian names they had, and whether there were two children born
and baptized here in one year, both bearing the name of Davenant."

The sexton shook his head. He was only a middle-aged man, and therefore
not yet arrived at sextonial ripeness; for a sexton only begins to be
mellow when he is ninety or thereabouts. He knew nothing of the
Davenants except that there were once Lords Davenant, now lying in the
family vault below the chancel, and none of them left in the parish at
all, nor any in his memory, nor in that of his father's before him, so
far as he could tell.

After a careful examination of the books, the professor was enabled to
state with confidence that at the time in question the Davenant name was
borne by none but the family at the castle; that there were no cousins
of the name in the place; and that the heir born in that year was
christened on such a day, and received the name of Timothy Clitheroe.

If this had been the only evidence, the case would have made in favor of
the Canaan City claimant; but, unfortunately, there was another
discovery made by the professor, at sight of which he whistled, and then
shook his head, and then considered whether it would not be best to cut
out the page, while the sexton thought he was forcing a card, or palming
a ball, or boiling an egg, or some other ingenious feat of legerdemain.
For he instantly perceived that the fact recorded before his eyes had an
all-important bearing upon the case of his illustrious friends.

The little story which he saw was, in short, this:

In the same year of the birth of the infant Timothy Clitheroe, there was
born of a poor vagrant woman, who wandered no one knew where from, into
the parish and died in giving him to the world, a man-child. There was
no one to rejoice over him, or to welcome him, or to claim him:
therefore he became parish property, and had to be christened, fed,
flogged, admonished, and educated, so far as education in those days was
considered necessary, at the charge of the parish. The first step was to
give him a name. For it was formerly, and may be still, a custom in
country parishes to name a waif of this kind after the village itself,
which accounts for many odd surnames, such as Stepney, Marylebone, or
Hoxton. It was not a good custom, because it might lead to
complications, as perhaps it did in this case, when there was already
another family legitimately entitled to bear the name. The authorities,
following this custom, conferred upon the baby the lordly name of
Davenant. Then, as it was necessary that he should have a Christian
name, and it would be a pity to waste good Richard or Robin upon a
beggar brat, they gave him the day of the week on which he was born.
This was intended to keep him humble, and to remind him that he had no
right to any of the distinguished Christian names bestowed upon
respectably born children.

He was called Saturday Davenant.

The name, the date, and the circumstances were briefly recorded in the
parish register.

In most cases this book contains three entries for each name--those of
the three important events in his life; the beginning, the marrying,
which is the making or the marring, and the ending. One does not of
course count the minor occasions in which he may be mentioned, as on the
birth or death of a child. The professor turned over the pages of the
register in vain for any farther entry of this Saturday Davenant.

He appeared no more. His one public appearance, as far as history
records it, was on that joyful occasion when, held in hireling arms, he
was received into the Christian Church. The one thing to which he was
born was his brotherhood in the Christian faith--no doubt the grandest
of all possessions, yet in itself not professing to provide the material
comforts of life. The baby was presented at the font, received a
contemptuous name, squealed a little, no doubt, when he felt the cold
water, and then--then--nothing more. What he did, whither he went, where
he died, might be left to conjecture. A parish brat, a cottage home,
bread and bacon to eat, with more bread and bacon, plenty of stick, the
Church Catechism, and particular attention called to the clauses about
picking and stealing; practical work as a scarecrow at seven; the plough
later on; for pleasures, quarter-staff, wrestling, fighting,
bull-baiting and perhaps poaching, with strong beer and small beer for
drink; presently a wife, then children, then old age, then death. One
was free to conjecture, because there was no more mention of this baby;
he did not marry in the parish, nor did he die in it. He, therefore,
went away. In those days, if a man went away it was for two reasons:
either he fell into trouble and went away, to escape the wrath of the
squire; or he enlisted, marched off with beer in his head and ribbons in
his hat, swore terribly with the army in Flanders, and presently earned
the immortal glory which England rejoices to confer upon the private
soldier who falls upon the ensanguined field. The enjoyment of this
glory is such a solid, substantial, and satisfying thing that fighting
and war and the field of honor are, and always will be, greatly beloved
and desired by private soldiers.

There was no other entry of this boy's name. When the professor had
quite satisfied himself upon this point he turned back to the first
entry, and then became aware of a note, in faded ink, now barely
legible, written in the margin. It was as follows, and he copied it
exactly:


     "Ye above sd Saturday Dnt was a Roag in Grane; he was bro't up in
     the fear of God yet Feared Him not; taught his Duty, yet did it
     not; admonished without stint of Rodd in Virtue, yet still inclined
     to Vice: he was appd to the wheelwright--was skillful, yet
     indolent; notorious as a Poacher who could not be caught; a
     Deceiver of Maidens; a Tosspot and a Striker. Compelled to leave
     the Parish to avoid Prison and the Lash he went to London,
     _Latronum officina_. Was reported to have been sent to His
     Majesty's Plantations in Virginia, whereof nothing certain is
     known."


This was the note which the professor read and copied out, with
misgivings that it would not prove acceptable. Of course, he knew the
story and quite understood what this might mean.

The next day, nothing more remaining to be found in the register, the
professor examined the brasses and tablets in the church, and paid a
visit to the castle. And when he had faithfully executed his commission,
he went away, amid the regrets of the villagers, who had never before
been entertained by so delightful and surprising a stranger, and brought
back his spoils.

"What are we to think," said Harry, after reading this report. "'The
Roag in Grane,' this wheelwright by trade, who can he be but the
grandfather of our poor old friend?"

"I fear it must be so," said Angela. "Saturday Davenant. Remember the
little book."

"Yes," said Harry, "the little book came into my mind at once."

"Not a doubt," added the professor. "Why, it stands to reason. The
fellow found himself a long way from England, among strangers, with no
money and only his trade. What was to prevent him from pretending to be
one of the family whose name he bore?"

"And at the same time," said Harry, "with reserve. He never seems to
have asserted that he was the son of Lord Davenant: he only threw out
ambiguous words; he fired the imagination of his son; he christened him
by the name of the lost heir; he pretended that it was his own Christian
name, and it was not until they found out that this was the hereditary
name that the claim was thought of. This poacher and striker seems to
have possessed considerable native talent."

"But what," asked Angela, "are we to do?"

"Let us do nothing, Miss Kennedy. We have our secret, and we may keep it
for the present. Meantime, the case is hopeless on account of the
absolute impossibility of connecting the wheelwright with the man
supposed to have been drowned. Let them go on 'enjoying' the title,
ignorant of the existence of this unlucky Saturday Davenant."

So, for the present, the thing was hidden away, and nothing was said
about it. And though about this time the Professor gave one or two
entertainments in the drawing-room, we cannot suppose that his silence
was bought, and it would be unjust to the noble profession of which he
was a member to think that he would let out the secret had not Miss
Kennedy paid him for their performance. Indeed, the Professor was an
extremely honorable man, and would have scorned to betray confidence,
and it was good to Miss Kennedy to find out that an evening of magic and
miracle would do the girls good.

But a profound pity seized the heart of Angela. These poor people who
believed themselves to be entitled to an English peerage, who were so
mistaken, who would be so disappointed, who were so ignorant, who knew
so little what it was they claimed--could not something be done to
lessen their disappointment, to break their fall?

She pondered long over this difficulty. That they would in the end have
to return to their own country was a thing about which there could be no
doubt whatever; that they should return with no knowledge whatever of
the reality of the thing they had claimed; what it meant, what it
involved, its splendors and its obligations, seemed to her a very great
pity. A little experience, she thought even a glimpse of the life led by
the best bred and most highly cultivated and richest people in England
would be of so much advantage to them that it would show them their own
unfitness for the rank which they assumed and claimed. And presently she
arrived at a project which she put into execution without delay. What
this was you will presently see.




CHAPTER XXIV.

LORD JOCELYN'S TROUBLES.


As the season advanced and the autumn deepened into winter, Angela found
that there were certain social duties which it was impossible altogether
to escape. The fiction of the country-house was good enough for the
general world, but for her more intimate friends and cousins this would
not do for long. Therefore, while she kept the facts of her present
occupation and place of residence a secret from all except Constance
Woodcote, now the unsympathizing, she could not wholly shut herself off
from the old circle. Among others there was one lady whose invitations
she was in a sense bound to accept. What her obligations were, and who
this lady was, belong in no way to this history--that is to say, the
explanation belongs to Angela's simple chronicle of the old days, when
she was only Miss Messenger, the heiress presumptive of the great
brewery. Therefore, it need not concern us. Suffice it to say that she
was a lady in society, and that she gave great dinners, and held other
gatherings, and was at all times properly awake to the attractions which
the young and beautiful and wealthy Angela Messenger lent to her
receptions.

On this occasion Constance Woodcote, among others, was invited to meet
her old friend; she came, but she was ungracious, and Angela felt, more
than she had expected, how great already was the gulf between the old
days of Newnham and her life of active, practical work. Six months
before such coldness would have hurt and pained her; now she hardly felt
it. Yet Constance meant to demonstrate by a becoming frost of manner how
grievous was her disappointment about those scholarships. Then there
were half a dozen men--unmarried men, men in society, men of clubs, men
who felt strongly that the possession of Miss Messenger's millions might
reconcile them to matrimony, and were much interested by the possibility
of an introduction to her, and came away disappointed because they got
nothing out of her, not even an encouragement to talk; and everybody
said that she was singularly cold, _distraite_, and even embarrassed
that evening; and those who had heard that Miss Messenger was a young
lady of great conversational powers went away cynically supposing that
any young lady with less than half her money could achieve the same
reputation at the same cost of energy. The reason of this coldness, this
preoccupation, was as follows.

The dinner-party was large, and the conversation by no means general. So
far as Angela was concerned, it was held entirely with the man who took
her down, and his name was Lord Jocelyn le Breton--a rugged-faced man,
with a pleasing manner and an agreeable voice; no longer young. He
talked to her a good deal in a light, irresponsible vein, as if it
mattered very little what he said so that it amused the young lady. He
discoursed about many things, principally about dinners, asking Angela
what were her own views as to dinners, and expostulating with her
feminine contempt for the subject. "Each dinner," he said, "should be
like a separate and distinct work of art, and should be contrived for
different kinds of wine. There should be a champagne dinner, for
instance, light, and composed of many dishes, but some of these
substantial; there should be a claret dinner, grave and conscientious; a
Burgundy dinner of few courses, and those solid; a German wine dinner,
in which only the simplest _plates_ should appear. But unto harmony and
consistency in dining we have not yet arrived. Perhaps, Miss Messenger,
you may be induced to bring your intellect to bear upon the subject. I
hear you took high honors at Newnham lately."

She laughed.

"You do too much honor to my intellect, Lord Jocelyn. At Newnham they
teach us political economy, but they have not trusted us with the art of
dining. Do you know, we positively did not care much what we had for
dinner!"

"My ward, Harry, used to say--but I forget if you ever met him."

"I think not. What is his name?"

"Well, he used to bear my name, and everybody knew him as Harry le
Breton; but he had no right to it, because he was no relation of mine,
and so he gave it up and took his own."

"Oh!" Angela felt profoundly uninterested in Mr. Harry le Breton.

"Yes. And now you never will meet him. For he is gone." Lord Jocelyn
uttered these words in so sepulchral a tone that Angela gave them
greater significance than they deserved.

"I am very sorry," she said.

"No, Miss Messenger, he is not dead. He is only dead to society. He has
gone out of the world; he has returned to--in fact, his native rank in
life."

Angela reddened. What could he mean?

"You interest me, Lord Jocelyn? Do you say that your ward has
voluntarily given up society, and--and--everything?" She thought of
herself for the moment, and also, but vaguely, of Harry Goslett. For
although she knew that this young man had refused some kind of offer
which included idleness, she had never connected him in her mind quite
with her own rank and station. How could she? He was only a
cabinet-maker, whose resemblance to a gentleman she had learned to
accept without any further wonder.

"He gave up everything; he laughed over it--he took a header into the
mob, just as if he was going to enjoy the plunge. But did you not hear
of it? Everybody talked about it--the story got into the society
journals, and people blamed me for telling him the truth."

"I have not been in London much this year, therefore I heard nothing,"
said Angela. Just then the dinner came to an end.

"Will you tell me more about your ward, Lord Jocelyn?" she asked as she
left him. His words had raised in her mind a vague and uncertain
anxiety.

Half an hour later he came to her side. The room by this time was all
full, and Angela was surrounded. But she made room for Lord Jocelyn, and
presently the others dropped away and they could talk. A young lady
began, too, a long and very brilliant piece of music, under cover of
which everybody could talk.

"Do you really want to hear my trouble about Harry?" he asked. "You look
a very sympathetic young lady, and perhaps you will feel for me. You see
I brought him up in ignorance of his father, whom he always imagined to
be a gentleman, whereas he was only a sergeant in a Line regiment. What
is it, Miss Messenger?"

For she became suddenly white in the cheek. Could there be two Harrys,
sons of sergeants, who had taken this downward plunge? Mere wonderful
than a pair of Timothy Clitheroes.

"It is nothing, Lord Jocelyn. Pray go on. Your adopted son, then----"

"I had always resolved to tell him all about his people when he was
twenty-three. Who would have thought, however, that he would take it as
he did?"

"You forget that you have not told me what he did do. If I am to
sympathize you must tell me all."

"As far as the world knows, he went away on leave, so to speak. Perhaps
it is only on leave, after all. But it is a long leave, and it looks
more like desertion."

"You are mysterious, Lord Jocelyn."

"Are you curious, Miss Messenger?"

"Say I am sympathetic. Tell me as much as you can about your ward."

Lord Jocelyn looked in his listener's face. Yes; there was sympathy in
it and interest, both, as phrenologists say, largely developed.

"Then I will explain to you, Miss Messenger, how the boy did this most
remarkable and unexpected thing." He paused a moment, considering.
"Imagine a boy whom I had taken away from his own people at three, or
thereabouts, so that he should never know anything of them at all, or
dream about them, or yearn, you know, or anything of that kind--an
orphan, too, with nothing but an uncle Bunker--it is inconceivable!"

"But we do not get on," said Angela, in great impatience; yet relieved
to find from the reference to her worthy friend, Bunker, that there was
only one Harry. "What is inconceivable?"

"I am coming to that. I gave the boy the best education I could get for
him; he was so eager and apt that he taught himself more than he could
be taught; if he saw anybody doing a thing well, he was never satisfied
till he could do it as well himself--not better, mark you! a cad might
have wanted to do it better; a gentleman is content to do it as well as
any--any other gentleman. There is hardly anything he could not do;
there was nobody who did not love him; he was a favorite in society; he
had hosts of friends; nobody cared who was his father: what did that
matter? As I put it to him, I said, 'Look at So-and-So and So-and-So,
who are their fathers? Who cares? Who asks?' Yet when he learned the
truth, he broke away, gave up all, and went back to his own
relations--to Whitechapel!"

Angela blushed again, and her lip trembled a little. Than she said
softly:

"To Whitechapel! That is very interesting to me. Because, Lord Jocelyn,
I belong to Whitechapel myself."

"Do you?" She might as well have said that she belonged to Seven Dials.
In fact, much better, because in his young days, his Corinthian days,
Lord Jocelyn had often repaired to Seven Dials to see noble sportsmen
_chez_ Ben Caunt, and rat-killing, and cock-fighting, and many other
beautiful forms of sport. "Do you really? Do you belong to that
remarkable part of London?"

"Certainly. My grandfather--did you know him?"

Lord Jocelyn shook his head.

"He had the brewery, you know, Messenger, Marsden & Company, in
Whitechapel. He was born there, and always called himself a Whitechapel
man. He seemed to be proud of it, so that in common filial respect I,
too, should be proud of it. I am, in fact, a Whitechapel granddaughter."

"But that does not seem to help my unlucky Harry."

"It gives one a little more sympathy, perhaps," she said. "And that is,
you know, so very useful a possession."

"Yes," but he did not seem to recognize its usefulness as regards his
ward. "Well, he went to Whitechapel with a light heart. He would look
round him, make the acquaintance of his own people, then he would come
back again, and we would go on just as usual. At least he did not
exactly say this, but I understood him so. Because it seemed impossible
that a man who had once lived in society, among ourselves, and formed
one of us, could ever dream of living down there." Angela laughed. From
her superior knowledge of "down there," she laughed.

"He went away and I was left without him, for the first time for twenty
years. It was pretty dull. He said he would give the thing a trial; he
wrote to me that he was trying it; that it was not so bad as it seemed,
and yet he talked as if the experiment would be a short one. I left him
there. I went away for a cruise in the Mediterranean; when I came home
he returned to me."

"He did return, then?"

"Yes, he came back one evening, a good deal changed. I should not have
thought it possible for a boy to change so much in so short a time. He
wasn't ill-fed; he hadn't suffered any privation, apparently; but he was
changed: he was more thoughtful; his smile and his laugh were not so
ready. Poor boy!"

Lord Jocelyn sighed heavily. Angela's sympathy grew deeper, for he
evidently loved the "boy."

"What had he done, then?"

"He came to say farewell to me; he thanked me, for you know what a good
honest lad would say; and he told me that he had an offer made to him of
an unexpected nature which he had determined to accept. You see, he is a
clever fellow with his fingers; he can play and paint and carve, and do
all sorts of things. And among his various arts and accomplishments he
knows how to turn a lathe, and so he has become a joiner or a
cabinet-maker, and he told me that he has got an appointment in some
great factory or works or something, as a cabinet-maker in ordinary."

"What is his name?"

"Harry Goslett."

"Goslett, Goslett!" Here she blushed again, and once more made play with
the fan. "Has he got a relation, a certain Mr. Bunker?"

"Why--yes--I told you, an uncle Bunker."

"Then I remember the name. And, Lord Jocelyn, I hope you will be
grateful to me, because I have been the humble means of procuring him
this distinguished post. Mr. Bunker, in fact, was, or conceived that he
had been, useful to my grandfather, and was said to be disappointed at
getting nothing by the will. Therefore I endeavored to make some return
by taking his nephew into the House. That is all."

"And a great deal more than enough, because, Miss Messenger, you have
all out of your kindness done a great mischief, for if you had not
employed him I am quite certain no one else would. Then he would have to
come back to me. Send him away. Do send him away. Do send him away, Miss
Messenger. There are lots of cabinet-makers to be had. Then he will
come back to society, and I will present him to you, and he shall thank
you."

She smiled and shook her head.

"People are never sent away from the brewery so long as they behave
properly. But it is strange indeed, that your ward should voluntarily
surrender all the advantages of life and social position for the hard
work and poor pay of an artisan. Was it--was it affection for his
cousins?" She blushed deeply as she put this question.

"Strange, indeed. When he came to me the other night, he told me a long
story about men being all alike in every rank of life. I have noticed
much the same thing in the army; of course he did not have the impudence
to say that women are all alike; and he talked a quantity of prodigious
nonsense about living among his own people. Presently, however, I got
out of him the real truth."

"What was that?"

"He confessed that he was in love."

"With a young lady of Whitechapel? This does great credit to the
excellent education you gave him, Lord Jocelyn." She blushed for the
fourth or fifth time, and he wondered why, and she held her fan before
her face. "But, perhaps," she added, "you are wrong, and women of all
ranks, like men, are the same."

"Perhaps I ought not to have told you this, Miss Messenger. Now you will
despise him. Yet he had the impudence to say that she was a
lady--positively a lady--this Whitechapel dressmaker."

"A dressmaker!--oh!" She threw into her voice a little of that icy
coldness with which ladies are expected to receive this kind of
announcement.

"Ah! now you care no more about him. I might have known that your
sympathy would cease directly you heard all. He went into raptures over
this young milliner. She is beautiful as the day; she is graceful,
accomplished, well-bred, well-mannered, a queen----"

"No doubt," said Angela, still frozen. "But really, Lord Jocelyn, as it
is Mr. Goslett, the cabinet-maker, and not you, who is in love with
this paragon, we may be spared her praises."

"And, which is more remarkable still, she won't have anything to say to
him."

"That is indeed remarkable. But perhaps as she is the Queen of
Dressmakers, she is looking for the King of Cabinet-Makers."

"No doubt," said Lord Jocelyn; "I think the music is coming to an end.
However, Miss Messenger, one favor."

"A dozen, Lord Jocelyn, if I can grant them."

"He refuses to take any help from me; he lives on work paid for at the
rate of tenpence an hour. If you will not send away--then--oh, then----"

"Quick, Lord Jocelyn, what is it?"

"Tax the resources of the brewery. Put on the odd twopence. It is the
gift of the Samaritan--make it a shilling an hour."

"I will, Lord Jocelyn--hush! The music is just over, and I hope that the
dressmaker will relent, and there will be a wedding in Stepney Church,
and that they will be happy ever after. O brave and loyal lover! He
gives up all, all"--she looked round the room, the room filled with
guests, and her great eyes became limpid, and her voice fell to a
murmur--"for love, for love. Do you think, Lord Jocelyn, that the
dressmaker will continue to be obdurate? But perhaps she does not know,
or cannot suspect, what he has thrown away--for her sake--happy
dressmaker!"

"I think," said Lord Jocelyn afterward, "that if Harry had seen Miss
Messenger before he saw his dressmaker we shouldn't have heard so much
about the beautiful life of a working-man. Why the devil couldn't I
wait? This girl is a Helen of Troy, and Harry should have written his
name Paris and carried her off, by gad! before Menelaus or any other
fellow got hold of her. What a woman! What a match it would have been!"




CHAPTER XXV.

AN INVITATION.


Very shortly after the fatal discovery made by the professor, Lord
Davenant received the outside recognition, so to speak, of his rank. It
is true that no one within a mile of Stepney Green--that is, anywhere
between Aldgate Pump and Bow Church--would have had the hardihood to
express a doubt on the validity of a claim which conferred a lustre upon
the neighborhood; yet even Lord Davenant, not remarkable for quickness
of perception, was sharp enough to know that recognition at Stepney is
not altogether the same thing as recognition at Westminster. He was now
once more tolerably comfortable in his mind. The agonies of composition
were over, thanks to his young friend's assistance; the labor of
transcription was finished; he felt, in looking at the bundle of papers,
all the dignity of successful authorship; the case, in fact, was now
complete and ready for presentation to the Queen, or to any one, Lord
Chancellor, Prime Minister, Lord Chamberlain, or American Minister, who
would undertake and faithfully promise to lay it before Her Majesty. For
his own part, brought up in the belief that the British Lion habitually
puts his heroic tail between his legs when the name of America is
mentioned, he thought that the Minister of the States was the proper
person to present his case. Further, the days of fatness were come
again. Clara Martha, in some secret way only known to herself, was again
in command of money; once more bacon and tea, and bread and butter, if
not coffee, cream, and buckwheat cakes, with maple syrup and hot
compone--delicacies of his native land--were spread upon the board at
eight in the morning; and again the succulent steak of Stepney, yielding
to none, not even to him of Fleet Street, appeared at stroke of one; and
the noble lord could put up his feet and rest the long and peaceful
morning through, unreproached by his consort. Therefore he felt no
desire for any change, but would have been quite content to go on for
ever enjoying his title among this simple folk, and careless about the
splendors of his rank. How Clara Martha got the money he did not
inquire. We, who know, may express our fears that here was another
glaring violation of political economy, and that the weekly honorarium
received every Saturday by Lady Davenant was by no means adequately
accounted for by her weekly work. Still her style was very fine, and
there were no more delicate workers in the association than the little
peeress with the narrow shoulders and the bright eyes.

Not one word, mark you, spoken of Saturday Davenant--that "Roag in
Grane" and the professor as respectful as if his lordship had sat
through thirty years of deliberation in the Upper House, and Mr. Goslett
humbly deferential to her ladyship, and in secret confidential and
familiar, even rollicking, with my lord, and Miss Kennedy respectfully
thoughtful for their welfare.

This serenity was troubled and dissipated by the arrival of a letter
addressed to Lady Davenant.

She received it--a simple letter on ordinary notepaper--with surprise,
and opened it with some suspicion. Her experience of letters was not of
late happy, inasmuch as her recent correspondence had been chiefly with
American friends, who reminded her how they had all along told her that
it was no good expecting that the Davenant claim would be listened to,
and now she saw for herself, and had better come home again and live
among the plain folk of Canaan, and praise the Lord for making her
husband an American citizen; with much more to the same effect, and
cruel words from nephew Nathaniel, who had no ambition, and would have
sold his heirship to the coronet for a few dollars.

She looked first at the signature, and turned pale, for it was from the
mysterious young lady, almost divine in the eyes of Stepney, because she
was so rich, Miss Messenger.

"Lord!" cried Mrs. Bormalack. "Do read it quick."

Her ladyship read it through very slowly, much too slowly for her
landlady's impatience.

Her pale cheeks flushed with pride and joy when she comprehended what
the letter meant; she drew herself up straight, and her shoulders became
so sloping that the uneasy feeling about her clothes, already alluded
to, once more passed through Mrs. Bormalack's sympathetic mind.

"It will be a change, indeed, for us," she murmured, looking at her
husband.

"Change?" cried the landlady.

"What change?" asked his lordship. "Clara Martha, I do not want any
change; I am comfortable here. I am treated with respect, the place is
quiet; I do not want to change."

He was a heavy man and lethargic--change meant some kind of physical
activity--he disliked movement.

His wife tossed her head with impatience.

"Oh," she cried, "he would rather sit in his armchair than walk even
across the green to get his coronet. Shame upon him! Oh! Carpenter!
Shh!"

His lordship quailed and said no more. That allusion to his father's
trade was not intended as a sneer; the slothfulness of his parent it was
which the lady hurled at his lordship's head. No one could tell, no
living writer is able to depict faithfully, the difficulties encountered
and overcome by this resolute woman in urging her husband to action; how
she had first to persuade him to declare that he was the heir to the
extinct title; how she had next to drag him away from Canaan City; how
she had to bear with his moanings, lamentations, and terrors, when he
found himself actually on board the steamer, and saw the land slowly
disappearing, while the great ship rolled beneath his unaccustomed feet,
and consequences which he had not foreseen began to follow. These were
things of the past, but it had been hard to get him away even from
Wellclose Square, which he found comfortable, making allowance for the
disrespectful Dane; and now--but it must and should be done.

"His lordship," said the little woman, thinking she had perhaps said too
much, "is one of them who take root wherever you set them down. He takes
after his grandfather, the Honorable Timothy Clitheroe. Set himself down
in Canaan City, and took root at once, never wanted to go away. And the
Davenants, I am told, never left the village from the day they built
their castle there till the last lord died there. In other people, Mrs.
Bormalack, it might be called sloth, but in his lordship's case we can
only say that he is quick to take root. That is all, ma'am. And when we
move him, it is like tearing him up by the roots."

"It is," said his lordship, clinging to the arms of the chair; "it is."

The letter was as follows, and Lady Davenant read it aloud:


     "DEAR LADY DAVENANT: I have quite recently learned that you and
     Lord Davenant are staying at a house on Stepney Green which happens
     to be my property. Otherwise, perhaps, I might have remained in
     ignorance of this most interesting circumstance. I have also
     learned that you have crossed the Atlantic for the purpose of
     presenting a claim to the Davenant title, which was long supposed
     to be extinct, and I hasten to convey to you my most sincere wishes
     for your success.

     "I am at this moment precluded from doing myself the pleasure of
     calling upon you, for reasons with which I will not trouble you. I
     hope, however, to be allowed to do so before very long. Meantime, I
     take the liberty of offering you the hospitality of my own house in
     Portman Square, if you will honor me by accepting it, as your place
     of residence during your stay in London. You will perhaps find
     Portman Square a central place, and more convenient for you than
     Stepney Green, which, though it possesses undoubted advantages in
     healthful air and freedom from London fog, is yet not altogether a
     desirable place of residence for a lady of your rank.

     "I am aware that in addressing you without the ceremony of an
     introduction, I am taking what may seem to you a liberty. I may be
     pardoned on the ground that I feel so deep an interest in your
     romantic story, and so much sympathy with your courage in crossing
     the ocean to prosecute your claim. Such claims as these are, you
     know, jealously regarded and sifted with the greatest care, so that
     there may be difficulty in establishing a perfectly made-out case,
     and one which shall satisfy the House of Lords as impregnable to
     any attack. There is, however, such a thing as a moral certainty,
     and I am well assured that Lord Davenant would not have left his
     native country had he not been convinced in his own mind that his
     cause is a just one, and that his claim is a duty owed to his
     illustrious ancestors. So that, whether he wins or loses, whether
     he succeeds or fails, he must in either case command our respect
     and our sympathy. Under these circumstances I trust that I may be
     forgiven, and that your ladyship will honor my poor house with your
     presence. I will send, always provided that you accept, my carriage
     for you on any day that you may appoint. Your reply may be directed
     here, because all letters are forwarded to me, though I am not, at
     the present moment, residing at my own town-house.

     "Believe me to remain, dear Lady Davenant, yours very faithfully,

     "ANGELA MARSDEN MESSENGER."


"It is a beautiful letter!" cried Mrs. Bormalack, "and to think of Miss
Messenger knowing that this house is one of hers! Why, she's got
hundreds. Now, I wonder who could have told her that you were here?"

"No doubt," said her ladyship, "she saw it in the papers."

"What a providence that you came here! If you had stayed at Wellclose
Square, which is a low place and only fit for foreigners, she never
would have heard about you. Well, it will be a sad blow losing your
ladyship, but of course you must go. You can't refuse such a noble
offer; and though I've done my best, I'm sure, to make his lordship
comfortable, yet I know that the dinner hasn't always been such as I
could wish, though as good as the money would run to. And we can't hope
to rival Miss Messenger, of course, in housekeeping, though I should
like to hear what she gives for dinner."

"You shall, Mrs. Bormalack," said her ladyship; "I will send you word
myself, and I am sure we are very grateful to you for all your kindness,
and especially at times when my husband's nephew, Nathaniel, who is not
the whole-souled and high-toned man that the heir to a peerage ought to
be----"

"Don't speak of it," interrupted the good landlady, "don't speak of it,
your ladyship. It will always be my pride to remember that your ladyship
thought I did my little best. But, then, with mutton at eleven-pence
ha'penny!"

The name of Portman Square suggested nothing at all to the illustrious
pair. It might just as well have been Wellclose Square. But here was an
outside recognition of them; and from a very rich young lady, who
perhaps was herself acquainted with some of the members of the Upper
House.

"It is a proper letter," said Lady Davenant critically; "a letter
written in a becoming spirit. There's many things to admire in England,
but the best thing is the respect to rank. Now, in our own city did they
respect his lordship for his family? Not a mite. The boys drew pictures
of him on the walls with a crown on his head and a sword in his hand."

"Must we go, Clara Martha?" his lordship asked in a tremulous voice.

"Yes, we must go; we must show people that we are ready to assume the
dignity of the position. As for my husband, Mrs. Bormalack"--she looked
at him sideways while she addressed the landlady--"there are times when
I feel that nothing but noble blood confers real dignity"--his lordship
coughed--"real dignity and a determination to have your rights, and
behavior according."

Lord Davenant straightened his back and held up his head. But when his
wife left him he drooped it again and looked sad.

Lady Davenant took the letter with her to show Miss Kennedy.

"I shall never forget old friends, my dear," she said kindly, when
Angela had read it through, "never; and your kindness in my distress I
could not forget if I tried." The tears stood in her eyes as she spoke.
"We are standing now on the very threshold of Greatness; this is the
first step to Recognition; a short time more and my husband will be in
his right place among the British peers. As for myself, I don't seem to
mind any, Miss Kennedy. It's for him that I mind. Once in his own place,
he will show the world what he is capable of. You only think of him as
a sleepy old man, who likes to put up his feet and shut his eyes. So he
is--so he is. But wait till he gets his own. Then you will see. As for
eloquence, now, I remember one Fourth of July--but of course we were
Americans then."

"Indeed, Lady Davenant, we shall all be rejoiced if you succeed. But do
not forget Miss Messenger's warning. There is a moral success, and there
is a legal success. You may have to be contented with the former. But
that should be enough for you, and you would then return to your own
people with triumph."

"Aurelia Tucker," said her ladyship, smiling gently, "will wish she
hadn't taken up the prophesyin' line. I shall forgive her, though envy
is indeed a hateful passion. However, we cannot all have illustrious
ancestors, though, since our own elevation, there's not a man, woman, or
child in Canaan City, except the Dutchman, who hasn't connected himself
with an English family, and the demand for Red Books and books of the
county families is more than you could believe, and they do say that
many a British peer will have to tremble for his title."

"Come," said Angela, interrupting these interesting facts, "come, Lady
Davenant. I knew beforehand of this letter, and Miss Messenger has given
me work in anticipation of your visit."

She led the little lady to the showroom, and here, laid on chairs, were
marvels. For there were dresses in silk and in velvet: dresses of best
silk, moire antique, brocaded silk, silk that would stand upright of
itself, without the aid of a chair-back, and velvet of the richest, the
blackest, and the most costly. There could be no doubt whatever as to
the person for whom these dresses had been designed, because nobody else
had such narrow and such sloping shoulders. Never in her dreams had her
ladyship thought it possible that she should wear such dresses.

"They are a present from Miss Messenger," said Miss Kennedy. "Now, if
you please, we will go into the trying-on room."

Then Lady Davenant discovered that these dresses were trimmed with lace,
also of the most beautiful and delicate kind. She had sometimes seen
lace during her professional career, but she never possessed any, and
the sight of it created a kind of yearning in her heart to have it on,
actually on her sleeves and round her neck.

When she dressed in her velvet with the lace trimming, she looked a very
stately little lady. When Angela had hung about her neck a heavy gold
chain with a watch and seals; when she had deftly added a touch to her
still luxuriant hair, and set in it a small aigrette of brilliants; when
she had put on her a pair of gloves and given her a large and
beautifully painted fan, there was no nobler-looking lady in the land,
for all she was so little.

Then Angela courtesied low and begged her ladyship to examine the dress
in the glass. Her ladyship surveyed herself with an astonishment and
delight impossible to be repressed, although they detracted somewhat
from the dignity due to the dress.

"O Aurelia!" she exclaimed, as if in the joy of her heart she could have
wished her friend to share her happiness.

Then Miss Kennedy explained to her that the velvet and magnificent silk
dresses were for the evening only, while for the morning there were
other black silk dresses, with beautiful fur cloaks and things for
carriage exercise, and all kinds of things provided, so that she might
make a becoming appearance in Portman Square.

"As for his lordship," Miss Kennedy went on, "steps have been taken to
provide him also with garments due to his position. And I think, Lady
Davenant, if I may venture to advise----"

"My dear," said her ladyship, simply, "just tell me, right away, what am
I to do."

"Then you are to write to Miss Messenger and tell her that you will be
ready to-morrow morning, and say any kind of thing that occurs to your
kind heart. And then you will have undisturbed possession of the big
house in Portman Square, with all its servants, butler, coachman,
footmen, and the rest of them at your orders. And I beg--that is, I
hope--that you will make use of them. Remember that a nobleman's servant
expects to be ordered, not asked. Drive every day; go to the theatres
to amuse yourself--I am sure, after all this time, you want amusement."

"We had lectures at Canaan City," said her ladyship. "Shall we go to
lectures?"

"N--no. I think there are none. But you should go to concerts, if you
like them, and to picture galleries. Be seen about a good deal; make
people talk about you, and do not press your case before you have been
talked about."

"Do you think I can persuade Timothy--I mean, his lordship--to go about
with me?"

"You will have the carriage, you know; and if he likes he can sleep at
the theatre; you have only to take a private box--but be seen and talked
about."

This seemed very good advice. Lady Davenant laid it to her heart. Then
she took off her magnificent velvet and put on the humble stuff again,
with a sigh. Happily, it was the last day she would wear it.

On returning to the boarding-house, she found her husband in great
agitation, for he too had been "trying on," and he had been told
peremptorily that the whole of the existing wardrobe must be abolished,
and changed for a new one which had been provided for him. The good old
coat, whose sleeves were so shiny, whose skirts so curly, whose cuffs so
worn, must be abandoned; the other things, which long custom had adapted
to every projection of his figure, must go too; and, in place of them,
the new things which he had just been trying on.

"There's a swallow-tail, Clara Martha, for evening wear. I shall have to
change my clothes, they tell me, every evening; and frock-coats to
button down the front like a congressman in a statue; and--O Clara
Martha, we are going to have a terrible time!"

"Courage, my lord," she said. "The end will reward us. Only hold up your
head, and remember that you are enjoying the title."

The evening was rather sad, though the grief of the noble pair at
leaving their friends was shared by none but their landlady, who really
was attached to the little bird-like woman, so resolute and full of
courage. As for the rest, they behaved as members of a happy family are
expected to behave--that is to say, they paid no heed whatever to the
approaching departure of two out of their number, and Josephus leaned
his head against the wall, and Daniel Fagg plunged his hands into his
hair, and old Mr. Maliphant sat in the corner with his pipe in his mouth
and narrated bits of stories to himself, and laughed.




CHAPTER XXVI.

LORD DAVENANT'S GREATNESS.


Probably no greater event had ever happened within the memory of Stepney
Green than the arrival of Miss Messenger's carriage to take away the
illustrious pair from the boarding-house. Mrs. Bormalack felt, with a
pang, when she saw the pair of grays, with the coachman and footman on
the box, actually standing before her own door, for all to see, as if
she had not thoroughly appreciated the honor of having a peer and his
consort residing under her roof, and paying every week for board and
lodging the moderate sum of--but she could not bear to put it into
words. Now, however, they were going.

His lordship, in his new frock-coat tightly buttoned, stood, looking
constrained and stiff, with one hand on the table and the other thrust
into his breast, like a certain well-known statue of Washington. His
wife had instructed him to assume this attitude. With him were Daniel
Fagg, the professor, and Harry, the rest of the boarders being engaged
in their several occupations. Mrs. Bormalack was putting the final
touches to Lady Davenant's morning toilet.

"If I was a lord," said Daniel, "I should become a great patron to
discoverers. I would publish their works for them."

"I will, Mr. Fagg, I will," said his lordship; "give me time to look
around and see how the dollars come in. Because, gentlemen, as Clara
Martha--I mean her ladyship--is not ready yet, there is time for me to
explain that I don't quite know what is to happen next, nor where those
dollars are to come from, unless it is from the Davenant estates. But I
don't think, Mr. Fagg, that we shall forget old friends. A man born to a
peerage, that is an accident, or the gift of Providence; but to be a
Hebrew scholar comes from genius. When a man has been a school-teacher
for near upon forty years he knows what genius means--and it's skurse,
even in Amer'ca."

"Then, my lord," said Daniel, producing his note-book, "I may put your
lordship's name down for----how many copies?"

"Wal, Mr. Fagg, I don't care how many copies you put my name down for,
provided you don't ask for payment until the way is clear. I don't
suppose they will play it so low on a man as to give him his peerage
without a mite of income, even if it has to be raised by a tax on
something."

"American beef will have to be taxed," said Harry. "Never fear, my lord,
we will pull you through somehow. As Miss Messenger said, 'moral
certainty' is a fine card to play, even if the committee of the House of
Lords don't recognize the connection."

The professor looked guilty, thinking of that "Roag in Grane," Saturday
Davenant, wheelwright, who went to the American colonies.

Then her ladyship appeared complete and ready, dressed in her black silk
with a fur cloak and a magnificent muff of sable--stately, gracious, and
happy. After her, Mrs. Bormalack, awed.

"I am ready, my lord," she said, standing in the doorway. "My friends,
we shall not forget those who were hospitable to us, and kind in the
days of our adversity. Mr. Fagg, you may depend upon us. You have his
lordship's permission to dedicate your book to his lordship. We shall
sometimes speak of your discovery. The world of fashionable London shall
hear of your circles."

"Triangles, my lady," said Daniel, bowing.

"I beg your pardon, Mr. Fagg; I ought to have known, and the triangle
goes with the fife and the drum in all the militia regiments. Professor,
if there is any place in Portman Square where an entertainment can be
held, we will remember you. Mr. Goslett--ah, Mr. Goslett, we shall miss
you very much. Often and often has my husband said that, but for your
own timely aid, he must have broken down. What can we now do for you,
Mr. Goslett?"

Nothing could have been more generous than this dispensing of patronage.

"Nothing," said Harry. "But I thank you all the same."

"Perhaps Miss Messenger wants a cabinet made?"

"No, no," he cried hastily. "I don't want to make cabinets for Miss
Messenger. I mend the office stools for the brewery, and I
work--for--for Miss Kennedy," he added, with a blush.

Lady Davenant nodded her head and laughed. So happy was she that she
could even show an interest in something outside the case.

"A handsome couple," she said simply. "Yes, my dear, go on working for
Miss Kennedy, because she is worth it--and now, my lord. Gentlemen, I
wish you farewell."

She made the most stately, the most dignified obeisance, and turned to
leave them; but Harry sprang to the front and offered his arm.

"Permit me, Lady Davenant."

It was extraordinary enough for the coachman to be ordered to Stepney
Green to take up a lord--it was more extraordinary to see that lord's
noble lady falling on the neck of an ordinary female in a black stuff
gown and an apron--namely, Mrs. Bormalack; and still more wonderful to
see that noble lady led to the carriage by a young gentleman who seemed
to belong to the place.

"I know him," said James, the footman, presently.

"Who is he?"

"He's Mr. Le Breton, nephew or something of Lord Jocelyn. I've seen him
about; and what he's doing on Stepney Green the Lord only knows."

"James," said the coachman.

"John," said the footman.

"When you don't understand what a young gentleman is a-doin', what does
a man of your experience conclude?"

"John," said the footman, "you are right as usual; but I didn't see
her."

There was a little crowd outside, and it was a proud moment for Lady
Davenant when she walked through the lane (which she could have wished a
mile long) formed by the spectators, and took her place in the open
carriage, beneath the great fur rug. His lordship followed with a look
of sadness, or apprehension, rather than triumph. The door was slammed,
the footman mounted the box, and the carriage drove off--one boy called
"Hooray!" and jumped on the curbstone. To him Lord Davenant took off his
hat. Another turned catherine-wheels along the road, and Lord Davenant
took off his hat to him, too, with aristocratic impartiality; till the
coachman flicked at him with his whip, and then he ran behind the
carriage and used language for a quarter of a mile.

"Timothy," said her ladyship--"would that Aurelia Tucker were here to
see!"

He only groaned: how could he tell what sufferings in the shape of
physical activity might be before him? When would he be able to put up
his feet again? One little disappointment marred the complete joy of the
departure: it was strange that Miss Kennedy, who had taken so much
interest in the business--who had herself tried on the dresses--should
not have been there to see. It was not kind of her, who was usually so
very kind, to be absent on this important occasion. They arrived at
Portman Square a little before one. Miss Messenger sent them her
compliments by her own maid, and hoped they would be perfectly
comfortable in her house, which was placed entirely at their disposal;
she was only sorry that absence from town would prevent her from
personally receiving Lady Davenant.

The spaciousness of the rooms, the splendor of the furniture, the
presence of many servants, awed the simple little American woman. She
followed her guide, who offered to show them the house and led them into
all the rooms, the great and splendidly furnished drawing-room, the
dining-room, the morning-room, and the library, without saying a word.
Her husband walked after her in the deepest dejection, hanging his head
and dangling his hands, in forgetfulness of the statuesque attitude. He
saw no chance whatever for a place of quiet meditation.

Presently they came back to the morning-room--it was a pleasant, sunny
room; not so large as the great dining-room, nor so gaunt in its
furniture, nor was it hung with immense pictures of game and fruit, but
with light and bright water-colors.

"I should like," said her ladyship, hesitating, because she was a little
afraid that her dignity demanded that they should use the biggest room
of all--"I should like, if we could, to sit in this room when we are
alone."

"Certainly, my lady."

"We are simple people," she went on, trying to make it clear why they
liked simplicity; "and accustomed to a plain way of life--so that his
lordship does not look for the splendor that belongs to his position."

"No, my lady."

"Therefore, if we may use this room mostly, and--and--keep the
drawing-room for when we have company----" She looked timidly at the
grave young woman who was to be her maid.

"Certainly, my lady."

"As for his lordship," she went on, "I beg he may be undisturbed in the
morning when he sits in the library--he is much occupied in the
morning."

"Yes, my lady."

"I think I noticed," said Lord Davenant, a little more cheerfully, "as
we walked through the library, a most beautiful chair." He cleared his
throat, but said no more.

Then they were shown to their own rooms, and told that luncheon would be
served immediately.

"And I hope, Clara Martha," said his lordship, when they were alone,
"that luncheon in this house means something solid and
substantial--fried oysters now, with a beefsteak and tomatoes, and a
little green corn in the ear, I should like."

"It will be something, my dear, worthy of our rank. I almost regret now
that you are a teetotaler--wine, somehow, seems to belong to a title. Do
you think that you could break your vow and take one glass, or even two,
of wine--just to show that you are equal to the position."

"No, Clara Martha," her husband replied with decision. "No--I will not
break the pledge--not even for a glass of old Bourbon."

There were no fried oysters at that day's luncheon, nor any green corn
in the ear; but it was the best square meal that his lordship had ever
sat down to in his life. Yet it was marred by the presence of an
imposing footman, who seemed to be watching to see how much an American
could eat. This caused his lordship to drop knives and upset glasses,
and went very near to mar the enjoyment of the meal.

After the luncheon he bethought him of the chair in the library, and
retired there. It was indeed a most beautiful chair--low in the seat,
broad and deep, not too soft--and there was a footstool.

His lordship sat down in this chair, beside a large and cheerful fire,
put up his feet, and surveyed the room. Books were ranged round all the
walls--books from floor to ceiling. There was a large table with many
drawers, covered with papers, magazines, and reviews, and provided with
ink and pens. The door was shut, and there was no sound save of a
passing carriage in the square.

"This," said his lordship "seems better than Stepney Green; I wish
Nathaniel were here to see me."

With these words upon his lips, he fell into a deep slumber.

At half-past three his wife came to wake him up. She had ordered the
carriage and was ready and eager for another drive along those wonderful
streets which she had seen for the first time. She roused him with great
difficulty, and persuaded him, not without words of refusal, to come
with her. Of course she was perfectly wide awake.

"This," she cried, once more in the carriage, "this is London, indeed.
Oh! to think we have wasted months at Stepney, thinking that was town.
Timothy, we must wake up; we have a great deal to see and to learn. Look
at the shops, look at the carriages. Do tell! It's better than Boston
city. Now that we have got the carriage we will go out every day and see
something; I've told them to drive past the Queen's Palace, and to show
us where the Prince of Wales lives. Before long we shall go there
ourselves, of course, with the rest of the nobility. There's only one
thing that troubles me."

"What is that, Clara Martha? You air thinkin', perhaps, that it isn't
in nature for them to keep the dinners every day up to the same pitch of
elevation?"

She repressed her indignation at this unworthy suggestion.

"No, Timothy; and I hope your lordship will remember that in our
position we can afford to despise mere considerations of meat and drink,
and wherewithal we shall be clothed." She spoke as if pure Christianity
was impossible beneath their rank, and, indeed, she had never felt so
truly virtuous before. "No, Timothy, my trouble is that we want to see
everything there is to be seen."

"That is so, Clara Martha. Let us sit in this luxurious chaise and see
it all. I never get tired o' sittin', and I like to see things."

"But we can only see the things that cost nothing or the outside things,
because we've got no money."

"No money at all?"

"None; only seven shillings and three-pence in coppers."

This was the dreadful truth. Mrs. Bormalack had been paid, and the seven
shillings was all that remained.

"And, oh, there is so much to see! We'd always intended to run round
some day, only we were too busy with the case to find the time, and see
all the shows we'd heard tell of--the Tower of London and Westminster
Abbey, and the monument and Mr. Spurgeon's Tabernacle--but we never
thought things were so grand as this. When we get home we will ask for a
guidebook of London, and pick out all the things that are open free."

That day they drove up and down the streets, gazing at the crowds and
the shops. When they got home tea was brought them in the morning-room,
and his lordship, who took it for another square meal, requested the
loaf to be brought, and did great things with the bread and butter--and
having no footman to fear.

At half-past seven a bell rang, and presently Miss Messenger's maid came
and whispered that it was the first bell, and would her ladyship go to
her own room, and could she be of any help?

Lady Davenant rose at once, looking, however, much surprised. She went
to her own room, followed by her husband, too much astonished to ask
what the thing meant.

There was a beautiful fire in the room, which was very large and
luxuriously furnished, and lit with gas burning in soft-colored glass.

"Nothing could be more delightful," said her ladyship, "and this room is
a picture. But I don't understand it."

"Perhaps it's the custom," said her husband, "for the aristocracy to
meditate in their bedrooms."

"I don't understand it," she repeated. "The girl said the _first_ bell.
What's the second? They can't _mean_ us to go to bed."

"They must," said his lordship. "Yes, we must go to bed. And there will
be no supper to-night. To-morrow, Clara Martha, you must speak about it,
and say we're accustomed to later hours. At nine o'clock or ten we can
go with a cheerful heart--after supper. But--well--it looks a soft bed,
and I dare say I can sleep in it. You've nothing to say, Clara Martha,
before I shut my eyes. Because if you have, get it off your mind, so's
not to disturb me afterward."

He proceeded to undress in his most leisurely manner, and in ten minutes
or so was getting into bed. Just as his head fell upon the pillows there
was a knock at the door.

It was the maid who, came to say that she had forgotten to tell her
ladyship that dinner was at eight.

"What?" cried the poor lady, startled out of her dignity. "Do you mean
to say that we've got to have dinner?"

"Certainly, my lady;" this young person was extremely well behaved, and
in presence of her masters and mistresses and superiors knew not the
nature of a smile.

"My!"

Her ladyship standing at the door, looked first at the maid without and
then at her husband, whose eyes were closed, and who was experiencing
the first and balmy influences of sweet sleep. She felt so helpless that
she threw away her dignity and cast herself upon the lady's maid. "See
now!" she said, "what is your name, my dear?"

"Campion, my lady."

"I suppose you've got a Christian name?"

"I mean that Miss Messenger always calls me Campion."

"Well, then, I suppose I must, too. We are simple people, Miss Campion,
and not long from America, where they do things different, and have
dinner at half-past twelve and supper at six. And my husband has gone to
bed. What is to be done?"

That a gentleman should suppose bed possible at eight o'clock in the
evening, was a thing so utterly inconceivable that Campion could for the
moment suggest nothing. She only stared. Presently she ventured to
suggest that his lordship might get up again.

"Get up, Timothy; get up this minute!" Her ladyship shook and pushed him
till he opened his eyes and lifted his head. "Don't stop to ask
questions, but get up right away." Then she ran back to the door. "Miss
Campion!"

"Yes, my lady."

"I don't mind much about myself, but it might not look well for his
lordship not to seem to know things just exactly how they're done in
England. So please don't tell the servants, Miss Campion."

She laid her hand on the maid's arm, and looked so earnest, that the
girl felt sorry for her.

"No, my lady," she replied. And she kept her word, so that though the
servants all knew how the noble lord and his lady had been brought from
Stepney Green, and how his lordship floundered among the plates at
lunch, and ate up half a loaf with afternoon tea, they did not know that
he went to bed instead of dressing for dinner.

"And, Miss Campion," she was now outside the door, holding it ajar, and
the movements of a heavy body hastily putting on clothes could be
distinctly heard, "you will please tell me, presently, what time they do
have things."

"Yes, my lady."

"Family prayers now? His lordship will lead, of course--a thing he is
quite used to, and can do better than most, having always----" Here she
stopped, remembering that there was no absolute necessity to explain the
duties of a village schoolmaster.

"There are no family prayers, my lady, and your ladyship can have dinner
or any other meal at any time you please."

"His lordship's time for meals will be those of his brother peers."

"Yes, my lady. Breakfast at ten?"

"Ten will do perfectly." It was two hours later than their usual time
and her husband's sufferings would be very great. Still, everything must
give way to the responsibilities of the rank.

"Will your ladyship take luncheon at half-past one, and tea at half-past
five, and dinner at eight?"

"Yes, now that we know them, these hours will suit me perfectly. We do
not in our own country take tea before dinner, but after it. That is
nothing, however. And supper?"

"Your ladyship can have supper whenever you want it," replied the maid.
She hesitated for a moment and then went on. "It is not usual for supper
to be served at all."

"Oh! then we must go without."

By this time her husband was dressed, and, obedient to instruction, he
had put on his new dress-coat, without, however, making any alteration
in the rest of his morning garments. The effect, therefore, when they
descended to the drawing-room would have been very startling, but for
the fact that there was nobody to see it.

If luncheon was a great meal, dinner was far more magnificent and
stately; only there were two footmen instead of one, and his lordship
felt that he could not do that justice to the dinner which the dinner
deserved, because those two great hulking fellows in livery watched him
all the time. After dinner they sat in the great drawing-room, feeling
very magnificent, and yet uncomfortable.

"The second dinner," said his lordship, in a half-whisper, "made me
feel, Clara Martha, that we did right to leave Canaan City. I never
before knew what they really meant by enjoying a title, and I don't
think I ever thoroughly enjoyed it before. The red mullet was
beautiful, and the little larks in paper baskets made me feel a lord all
over."




CHAPTER XXVII.

THE SAME SIGNS.


"This he has done for love."

When Angela returned to her dressmakery, it was with these words ringing
in her ears, like some refrain which continually returns and will not be
silenced.

"This he has done--for love."

It was a great deal to do--a great deal to give up; she fully realized,
after her talk with Lord Jocelyn, how much it was that he had given
up--at her request. What had she herself done, she asked, in comparison?
She had given money--anybody could give money. She had lived in
disguise, under false pretences, for a few months; but she never
intended to go on living in the East End, after she had set her
association on a firm basis. To be sure, she had been drawn on into
wider schemes, and could not retire until these, including the Palace of
Delight, were well started. But this young man had given up all,
cheerfully, for her sake. Because she was a dressmaker, and lived at
Stepney, he would be a workman and live there as well. For her sake he
had given up for ever the life of ease and culture which might have been
his, among the gentlefolk to whom he belonged; for her sake he left the
man who stood to him _in loco parentis_; for her sake he gave up all
things that are dear to young men, and became a servant. And without a
murmur. She watched him going to his work in the morning, cheerful, with
the sunshine ever in his face--in fact, sunshine lived there--his head
erect, his eyes fearless, not repenting at all of his choice, perhaps
hopeful that in the long run those impediments spoken of might be
removed; in that hope he lived. Should that hope be disappointed--what
then? Only to have loved, to have sacrificed so much for the sake of
love, Angela said to herself, thinking of something she had read, was
enough. Then she laughed, because this was so silly, and the young man
deserved to have some reward.

Then, as a first result of this newly acquired knowledge, the point of
view seemed changed. Quite naturally, after the first surprise at
finding so much cultivation in a working-man, she regarded him, like all
the rest, from her own elevated platform. In the same way he, from his
own elevation, had been, in a sense, looking down upon herself, though
she did not suspect the fact. One might pause here, in order to discuss
how many kinds of people do consider themselves on a higher level than
their neighbors. My own opinion is that every man thinks himself on so
very high a platform as to entitle him to consider the greater part of
mankind quite below him; the fact that no one else thinks so has nothing
to do with it. Any one, however, can understand how Angela would at
first regard Harry, and Harry the fair dressmaker. Further, that,
whatever acquaintance or intimacy grew up between them, the first
impression would always remain, with the mental attitude of a slight
superiority in both minds, so long as the first impression, the first
belief as to the real facts, was not removed. Now that it was removed on
one side, Angela, for her part, could no longer look down; there was no
superiority left, except in so far as the daughter of a Whitechapel
brewer might consider herself of finer clay than the son of a sergeant
in the army, also of Whitechapel origin.

All for love of her.

The words filled her heart: they made her cheeks burn and her eyes glow.
It seemed so great and noble a thing to do; so grand a sacrifice to
make.

She remembered her words of contempt when, in a shamefaced, hesitating
way, as if it was something wrong, he had confessed that he might go
back to a life of idleness. Why, she might have known--she ought to have
known--that it was not to an ignoble life among ignoble people that he
would go. Yet she was so stupid.

What a sacrifice to make! And all for love of her!

Then the flower of love sprang up and immediately blossomed, and was a
beauteous rose, ready for her lover to gather and place upon his heart.
But as yet she hardly knew it.

Yet she had known all along that Harry loved her. He never tried to
conceal his passion. "Why," she said to herself, trying to understand
the meaning of the sudden change in herself--"why, it only seemed to
amuse me; the thing was absurd; and I felt pity for him, and a little
anger because he was so presumptuous; and I was a little embarrassed for
fear I had compromised myself with him. But it wasn't absurd at all; and
he loves me, though I have no fortune. Oh, heaven! I am a she-Dives, and
he doesn't know it, and he loves me all the same."

She was to tell him when the "impediments" were removed. Why, they were
removed already. But should she tell him? How could she dare to tell
him? No girl likes to do her own wooing; she must be courted; she must
be won. Besides--perhaps--but here she smiled--he was not so very much
in love, after all. Perhaps he would change; perhaps he would grow tired
and go home and desert her; perhaps he would fall in love with some one
else. And perhaps Angela, the strong-minded student of Newnham, who
would have no love or marriage, or anything of the kind, in her life,
was no stronger than any of her sisters at the approach of Love the
Unconquered.

She came back the evening after that dinner. Her cheek had a new color
upon it; there was a new smile upon her lips; there was a new softness
in her eyes.

"You look so beautiful this evening," said Nelly. "Have you been happy
while you were away?"

"I have heard something that has made me happier," said Angela. "But
you, dear Nelly, have not. Why are your cheeks so pale, and what is the
meaning of the dark lines under your eyes?"

"It is nothing," the girl replied quickly. "I am quite well." But she
was not. She was nervous and preoccupied. There was something on her
mind.

Then Harry came, and they began to pass the evening in the usual way,
practising their songs, with music, and the little dance, without which
the girls could not have gone away happy. And Angela, for the first
time, observed a thing which struck a chill to her heart, and robbed her
of half her joy.

Why had she never before discovered this thing? Ah! ignorant maiden,
despite the wisdom of the schools. Hypatia herself was not more ignorant
than Angela, who knew not that the chief quality of the rose of love in
her heart was to make her read the hearts of others. Armed with this
magic power, she saw what she might have seen long before.

In the hasty glance, the quick flush, the nervous trembling of her
hands, poor Nelly betrayed her secret. And by those signs the other
girl, who loved the same man, read that secret.

"O selfish woman!" said Angela's heart. "Is your happiness to be bought
at such a cost?"

A girl of lower nature might have been jealous. Angela was not. It
seemed to her no sin in Nelly that she thought too much of such a man.
But she pitied her. Nor did she, as some women might have done, suspect
that Harry had trifled with her feelings. She knew that he had not. She
had seen them together, day after day; she knew what his bearing had
always been toward her, frank, courteous, and brotherly. He called her
by her Christian name; he liked her, her presence was pleasant; she was
pretty, sweet, and winning. No: she did not suspect him. And yet, what
should she say to the poor girl? How comfort her? How reconcile her to
the inevitable sorrow?

"Nelly," she whispered at parting, "if you are unhappy, my child, you
must tell me what it is."

"I cannot," Nelly replied. "But oh! do not think about me, Miss Kennedy;
I am not worth it."

Perhaps she, too, had read those same signs and knew what they meant.




CHAPTER XXVIII.

HARRY FINDS LIBERTY.


Mention has been made of the Stepney Advanced Club, where Dick Coppin
thundered, and burning questions were discussed, and debates held on
high political points, and where more ideas were submitted and more
projects set forth in a single year than in all the rest of London in
two years. The members of the Advanced Club were mostly young men, but
there was a sprinkling among them of grizzled beards who remembered '48
and the dreams of Chartism. They had got by this time pretty well all
they clamored for in their by-gone days, and when they thought of this,
and remembered how everything was to go well as soon as the five points
of the Charter were carried, and how every thing still remained in the
same upside-down, topsy-turvy, one-sided, muddle-headed perverseness
just as if those points had not been carried, they became sad.
Nevertheless, the habit of demanding remained, because the reformer is
like the daughter of the horse-leech, and still cries for more. Yet they
had less confidence than of old in the reformer's great nostrum of
destruction. The younger men, of course, were quite sure, absolutely
sure, that with a little more upsetting and down-pulling the balance
would be set right, and a beautiful straight level of universal
happiness would be reached.

Angela heard, from time to time, of the meetings of this club. Harry
told her how his cousin Dick had surpassed himself; how they were going
to abolish Crown, Church, and House of Lords, with landlordism, lawyers,
established armies, pauperdom, Divesdom, taxes, and all kinds of things
which the hateful Tory or that pitiful creature the moderate Liberal
considers necessary for the welfare of the state. And she knew that
Harry went there and spoke occasionally, and that he had made in a quiet
way some sort of mark among the members. One evening, about this time,
she met Dick Coppin returning from his work, in which, unlike his
cousin, he did not disdain the apron nor the box of tools.

"There's going to be a debate on Sunday," he said, half shyly and half
boastfully, "at the club. It's on the abolition of the House of Lords. I
am going to speak, and if you like to come, you and one or two of the
girls, I'll pass you in, and you will hear a thing or two that will open
your eyes."

"That is very good of you, Mr. Coppin. I always like to have my eyes
opened. Will there be many speakers?"

"There will be ME," he replied with simple grandeur. "I don't think,
when I've said my say, that there will remain much more to be said by
anybody. Cousin Harry may get up, perhaps"--his face assumed a little
uneasiness--"but no, I don't think he will find any holes in me. I've
got the facts; I've gone to the right quarter to get 'em. No: he can't
deny my facts."

"Very well, Mr. Coppin. Perhaps we will go to hear you. But be very sure
about your facts."

Angela said nothing about the proposed debate or her intention of being
present, but she learned from Harry that there really was going to be a
field-night, and that Dick Coppin was expected to come out in more than
his usual strength. The informant said nothing about his own intentions.
Indeed, he had none, but he was falling into the habit of spending an
hour or two at the club on Sunday evening before finishing off with the
girls; sometimes he spoke, but oftener he listened and came away silent
and reflected. The Advanced Club offered ample material for one who
knows how to reflect. Humanity is a grand subject, and, in fact, is the
only subject left for an epic poem. But perhaps the action would drag.
Here, Harry saw, was a body of men, old and young, all firmly persuaded
that things were wrong; that things might be made better, yet casting
about blindly for a remedy, and crying aloud for a leader. And those who
desired to lead them had nothing to offer but a stone instead of bread.
The fact that this young man did listen and reflect shows how greatly he
was changed from him whom we first met in the prologue. Regular hours,
simple living, reasonably hard work strengthened his nerves for
anything; he was harder; the men with whom he talked were rougher, and
the old carelessness was gone. He kept his gayety of heart, yet it was
sobered; he felt responsible. He knew so much more than the men around
him that he felt a consuming desire to set them right, but could not,
for he was tongue-tied; he had not yet found liberty, as the old
preachers used to say; when he felt most strongly that the speakers were
on a false track he spoke most feebly; he wanted to be a prophet, and
there were only confused ideas, blurred perceptions to work upon. Now
the first steps toward being a prophet--which is a most laudable
ambition--is to see quite clearly one's self and to understand what one
means. He could set a man right as to facts, he could shut up a speaker
and make the club laugh, but he could not move them. As yet Harry was
only in the position occupied during a long life by the late prophet of
Chelsea, inasmuch as he distinctly perceived the folly of his neighbors,
but could teach no way of wisdom. This is a form of prophetical
utterance which has never possessed much weight with the people; they
want direct teaching and a leader who knows what he means and whither he
would conduct them, if it be only in the direction of one of those poor,
old worn-out panaceas once warranted to guarantee universal happiness,
like the ballot-box. Not that Harry grew miserable over his failure to
prophesy--not at all; he only wished for words of wisdom and power, and
sat meanwhile with his hands in his pockets and his hat pulled over his
eyes like a minister in the House of Commons, while the members of the
club poured forth their frothy declamation, each louder than his
predecessor, trying to catch the applause of an assembly which generally
shouted for the loudest. The times might be out of joint, but Harry felt
no inspiration as to the way of setting them right; if a thing came to
him he would say it--if not, he would wait. The great secret about
waiting is that while a man waits he thinks, and if he thinks in
solitude and waits long enough, letting words lie in his brain and
listening to ideas which come upon him, sometimes singly and slowly,
sometimes in crowds like the fancies of a wakeful night, there presents
itself an idea at last which seizes upon him and holds him captive, and
works itself out in his brain while he mechanically goes on with the
work, the rest, the toil, and the pleasure of his daily life. Solitary
work is favorable to meditation; therefore, while Harry was shaping
things at his lathe undisturbed by no one, his brain was at work. And a
thought came to him which lay there dimly perceived at first, but
growing larger daily till it filled his head and drew unto itself all
his other thoughts, so that everything he saw, or read, or heard, or
meditated upon, became like a rill or rivulet which goes to swell a
great river. And it was this thought, growing into shape at last, which
he proclaimed to the members of the Advanced Club on the night of their
great debate.

It was not a large hall, but it was perfectly filled with people;
chiefly they were men and young men, but among them were a good many
women and girls. Does it ever occur to the "better class" that the work
of woman's emancipation is advancing in certain circles with rapid
strides? That is so, nevertheless; and large, if not pleasant, results
may be expected in a few years therefrom. It must be remembered that for
the most part they start perfectly free from any trammels of religion.
It has been stated that the basis of all their philosophy is, and always
will be, the axiom that every one must get as much as possible for
herself out of the rather limited ration of pleasure supplied to
humanity. Whether that is true I know not. Angela watched these women
with curiosity; they were mostly young, and some of them were pretty,
and there was absolutely nothing to show that they thought differently
from any other women. Some of them had brought their work; some were
talking; they were not excited by the prospect of the coming
debate--they expected, in fact, nothing more than they had already heard
over and over again. There was too much gas, the atmosphere was already
heavy and the walls already shiny, before the meeting began. On the
platform was a chair for the chairman, with a table and a hammer and a
decanter of water and a glass. Angela sat far back against the door,
with Captain Sorensen and Nelly. She was silent, wondering at these
people and why they should trouble themselves about the House of Lords,
and whether they never felt any desire at all for the religion which
brings joy and happiness to so many suffering lives. Presently she saw
Harry walk slowly up the middle aisle and take a place, for there was no
chair, on the steps which led to the platform. She was so far back that
he could not see her, for which afterward she was glad.

The chairman, a man stricken in years, with gray hair and a grizzled
beard, and one of those ex-Chartists of whom we have spoken, took the
chair, hammered the table, and opened the debate. He was a man of great
reputation, having been all his life an Irreconcilable, and he was
suspected of being a Socialist, and was certainly a Red Republican. He
began in the usual way by stating as an axiom that the people can do no
wrong; that to intrust the destinies of a nation to the People is to
insure its greatness; that Manhood is the only rank--and so forth, all
in capital letters with notes of admiration. The words were strong, but
they produced no effect, because the speech had been made before a great
many times, and the people knew it by heart. Therefore, though it was
the right thing to say, and the thing expected of a chairman, nobody
paid any attention.

The discussion, which was all one-sided, then began. Two or three young
men rose one after the other; they were listened to with the indulgence
which is always accorded to beginners. None of them made a point, or
said a good thing, or went outside the theories of untaught, if generous
youth, and their ignorance was such as to make Angela almost weep.

Then Dick Coppin mounted the platform, and advanced, amid the plaudits
of the expectant audience. He ran his fingers through his coarse, black
hair, straightened himself up to his full height of five feet six, drank
a little water, and then, standing beside the chairman's table with his
right hand resting upon it when he was not waving it about, he began,
slowly at first, but afterward with fluent speech and strong words, and
a ringing voice, the harangue which he had so carefully prepared. Of
course, he condemned the House of Lords tooth and nail; it must be
destroyed root and branch; it was a standing insult to the common sense
of the nation; it was an effete and worn-out institution, against which
the enlightenment of the age cried out aloud; it was an obstruction to
Progress; it was a menace to the people; it was a thing of the past; it
was an enemy of the working-man; it was a tyrant, who had the will but
not the power to tyrannize any longer; it was a toothless old wolf, who
could bark but could not bite. Those free and enlightened men sitting
before him, members of the Advanced Club, had pronounced its
doom--therefore, it must go. The time had come when the nation would
endure no longer to have a privileged class, and would be mocked no
more by the ridiculous spectacle of hereditary legislators.

He pursued this topic with great freedom of language and a great
eloquence of a rough and uncultivated kind; his hearers, getting
gradually warmed, interrupted him by those plaudits which go straight to
the heart of the born orator, and stir him to his strongest and his
best.

Then he changed his line and attempted to show that the families which
compose the Upper House are themselves, as well as their institution,
worn-out, used up, and lost to the vigor which first pushed them to the
front. Where were now their fighting men? he asked. Where were their
orators? Which among them all was of any real importance to his party?
Which of them had in modern times done anything, proposed anything, or
thought of anything for the advancement of knowledge or the good of the
people? Not one able man, he said, among them; luxury had ruined and
corrupted all; their blood was poisoned; they could drink and eat; they
could practise other luxurious habits, which he enumerated with
fidelity, lest there should be any mistake about the matter; and then
they could go to the House reeling into it drunk with wine, and oppose
the Will of the People.

Then he turned from generalities to particulars, and entertained his
audience with anecdotes gleaned, Heaven knows how, from the private
histories of many noble families, tending to show the corruption into
which the British aristocracy had fallen. These anecdotes were received
with that keenness which always awaits stories which show how wicked
other people are, and what are the newest fashions and hitherto unknown
forms of vice. Angela marvelled, on her part, to hear "scandal about
Queen Elizabeth" at Stepney.

Then, after an impeachment which lasted for half an hour, he thundered
forth an appeal--not at all novel to his hearers, yet still effective,
because his voice was like a trumpet--to the men before him to rise in
their millions, their majesty, and their might, and to bear the accursed
thing down.

He sat down, at last, wiping his forehead, and exhausted but triumphant.
Never before had he so completely carried his audience with him; never
before had he obtained such flow of language, and such mastery over his
voice; never before had he realized so fully that he was, he himself, an
orator inferior to none. As he sat down, while the men clapped their
hands and cheered, a vision of greatness passed before his mind. He
would be the Leader of the People; they should look to him as they had
never yet looked to any man for guidance. And he would lead them.
Whither? But, this, in the dream of the moment, mattered nothing.

A cold chill came over him as he saw his cousin Harry leap lightly to
the platform and take his place at the table. For he foresaw trouble;
and all the more because those of the audience who knew Gentleman Jack
laughed in expectation of that trouble. Fickle and fleeting is the
breath of popular favor; only a moment before and they were cheering him
to the skies; now they laughed because they hoped he was to be made to
look a fool. But the orator took heart, considering that his facts were
undeniable.

When the tumult had subsided, Harry, to everybody astonishment, laid his
hand upon his cousin's shoulder--a gesture of approbation--and looked
round the room, and said quietly, but loud enough to be heard by all:

"My cousin, Dick Coppin, can talk. That was a very good speech of his,
wasn't it?"

Voices were heard asking if he could better it.

"No," Harry replied, "I can't, I wish I could." He took his place beside
the table, and gazed for a few moments at the faces below him. Angela
observed that his face was pale, though the carriage of his head was
brave. "I wish," he repeated, "that I could. Because, after all these
fireworks, it is such a tame thing just to tell you that there wasn't a
word of sense in the whole speech."

Here there were signs of wrath, but the general feeling was to let the
speaker have his say.

"Do you suppose--any of you--that Dick believes that the Lords go
rolling drunk to the House? Of course he doesn't. Do you suppose that he
thinks you such fools as to believe it? Of course he doesn't. But then,
you see, Dick must have his fireworks. And it was a first-rate speech.
Do you suppose he believes the Lords are a worn-out lot? Not he. He
knows better. And if any of you feel inclined to think so, go and look
at them. You will find them as well set up as most, and better. You can
hear some of them in the House of Commons, where you send them, you
electors. Wherever there are Englishmen working, fighting, or sporting,
there are some of those families among them. As for their corruption,
that's fireworks, too. Dick has told you some beautiful stories which he
challenged anybody to dispute. I dare say they are all true. What he
forgot to tell you is that he has picked out these stories from the last
hundred and fifty years, and expects you to believe that they all
happened yesterday. Shall we charge you, members of the club, with all
the crimes of the Whitechapel Road for a hundred years? If you want to
upset the House of Lords, go and do it. But don't do it with lies on
your lips, and on false pretences. You know how virtuous and moral you
are yourselves. Then just remember that the members of the House of
Lords are about as moral as you are, or rather better. Abolish the House
of Lords if you like. How much better will you be when it is gone? You
can go on abolishing. There is the Church. Get it disestablished. Think
how much better you will all be when the churches are pulled down. Yet
you couldn't stay away any more then than you do. You want the Land Laws
reformed. Get them reformed, and think how much land you will get for
yourselves out of that reform.

"Dick Coppin says you have got the power. So you have. He says the last
Reform Bill gave it to you. There he makes a mistake. You have always
had the power. You have always had all the power there is. It is yours,
because you are the people, and what the people want they will have.
Your power is your birthright. You are an irresistible giant, who has
only to roar in order to get what he wants.

"Well, why don't you roar? Because you don't know what you do want.
Because your leaders don't know any more than yourselves; because they
go bawling for things which will do you no good, and don't know what it
is you do want.

"You think that by making yourselves into clubs and calling yourselves
Radicals, you are getting forward. You think that by listening to a
chap like my cousin Dick, who's a clever fellow and a devil for
fireworks, you somehow improve your own condition. Did you ever ask
yourselves what difference the form of government makes? I have been in
America where, if anywhere, the people have it their own way. Do you
think work is more plentiful, wages better, hours shorter, things
cheaper in a republic? Do you think the heels of your boots last any
longer? If you do, think so no longer. Whether the House of Lords, or
the Church, or the Land Laws stand or fall, that, my friends, makes not
the difference of a penny-piece to any single man among us. You who
agitate for their destruction are generously giving your time and
trouble for things which help no man. And yet there are so many things
that can help us.

"It comes of your cursed ignorance" (Harry was warming up)--"I say, your
cursed ignorance. You know nothing; you understand nothing of your own
country. You do not know how its institutions have grown up; why it is
so prosperous; why changes, when they have to be made, should be made
slowly and not before they are necessary; nor how you yourselves may
climb up, if you will, into a life above you, much happier, much more
pleasant. You do not respect the old institutions, because you don't
know them; you desire new things because you don't understand the old.
Go--learn--make your orators learn, and make them teach you. And then
send them to the House of Commons to represent you.

"You think that governments can do everything for you. You fools! has
any government ever done anything for you? Has it raised your wages--has
it shortened your hours? Can it protect you against rogues and
adulterers? Will it ever try to better your position? Never, never,
never!--because it cannot. Does any government ask what you want--what
you ought to want? No. Can it give you what you want? No.

"Listen. You want clean streets and houses in which decent folks can
live. The government has appointed sanitary officers. Yet, look about
you! Put your heads in the courts of Whitechapel. What has the sanitary
officer done? You want strong and well-built houses. There are
government inspectors; yet, look at the lath and plaster houses that a
child could kick over. You want honest food--all that you eat and drink
is adulterated. How does the government help you there?

"You have the power--all the power there is. You cannot use it, because
you don't know how. You expect the government to use your power--to do
your work. My friends, I will tell you the secret. Whatever you want
done you must do for yourselves! No one else will do it for you. You
must agree that such and such shall be done; and then, be very sure, you
will get it done.

"In politics you are used as the counters of a game--each side plays
with you. Not for you, mind. You get nothing, whichever side is in--you
are the pawns.

"It is something, perhaps, to take even so much part in the game; but,
as you get nothing but the honor, I am rather surprised at your going on
with it. And, if I might advise, it would be that we give that game
over, and play one by ourselves, in which there really is something to
be got.

"What we must play for is what we want. What we have got to do is, to
remember that when we say we will have a thing--nobody can resist us.
Have it we must, because we are the masters.

"Now then, what do we want?"

Harry was quite serious by this time, and so were the faces of those who
listened--though there was a little angry doubt on some of them. No one
replied to the question. Some of the younger men looked as if they
might, perhaps, have answered in the words of the sailor--"More rum."
But they refrained, and preserved silence.

"What do we want? Has any one of you considered what we do want? Let me
tell you a few things. I can't think of many; but I know a few that you
ought to put first.

"You want your own local government--what every little country town has,
you have not. You want to elect your own aldermen, mayors, guardians,
and school-boards--be yourselves--be yourselves. Get that first, and
abolish the House of Lords afterward.

"There is your food? You ought to get your beef from America, at
threepence a pound, and you are contented to give a shilling. You ought
to have your fish at twopence a pound, and you pay whatever they choose
to charge you. You drink bad beer, bad spirits, bad tea, bad cocoa, bad
coffee, because you don't know that the things are bad and dear; and
because you don't understand that you have only got to resolve in order
to get all this changed. It is, you see, your cursed ignorance.

"There are your houses! The rich people--having more knowledge than you,
and more determination--have found out how to build houses so as to
prevent fevers. You live in houses built to catch fever--fever-traps!
When you find out what you want, you will refuse to live in such houses.
You will refuse to let anybody live in such houses. You will come out of
them--you will have them pulled down.

"When it comes to building up better houses, you will remember that paid
inspectors are squared by the builders--so that the cement is mud and
sand; and the bricks are crumbling clay; and the walls crack, and the
floors are shaky. Therefore you will be your own inspectors.

"The Government makes us send our children to boarding schools to be
educated. That would be very noble of the Government if they had first
considered--which nobody has--what sort of education a working-man
wants. As yet they have only got as far as spelling. When a boy can
spell they think he is educated. Once it was all kings of Israel--now it
is all spelling. Is that what you want? Do you think it matters how you
spell, so that you know? Are you contented that your children shall know
nothing about this great country--nothing of its wealth and people;
nothing of their duties as citizens; nothing of their own trade? Shall
they not be taught that theirs is the power--that they can do what they
like, and have what they like, if they like?

"Do you resolve that the education of your children shall be real, and
it will become real; but don't look to Government to do it or it will
continue to be spelling. Find out the thing that you want, and send your
own men to the school-boards to get that thing done.

"Another thing that you want is pleasure--men can't do without it. Can
Government give you that? They can shut the public-houses at
twelve--what more can they do? But you--you do not know how to enjoy
yourselves. You don't know what to do. You can't play music, nor sing,
nor paint, nor dance--you can do nothing. You get no pleasure out of
life, and you won't get it--even by abolishing everything.

"Take that simple question of a holiday. We take ours, like the fools we
are, all in droves, by thousands and millions, on bank holidays. Why do
we do that? Why do we not insist on having our holidays at different
times in the year, without these monstrous crowds which render enjoyment
impossible? And why do we not demand--what is granted to every little
quill-driving clerk in the city--our fortnight every year with nothing
to do, and drawing full pay? That is one of your wants, and you don't
know it. The reform of the land laws, my brothers, will not bring you
one inch nearer getting this want."

At this point the chairman nodded his head approvingly. Perhaps he had
never before realized how all his life he had neglected the substance
and swallowed the shadow. The old man sat listening patiently with his
head in his hands. Never before had any workman--any one of his own
class--spoken like this young fellow, who talked and looked like a
swell--though they knew him for what he was. Pleasure! Yes--he had never
consisted that life might have its delights. Yet, what delights?

"There is another thing, and the blackest of all." Harry paused a
moment: but the men were listening, and now in earnest.

"I mean the treatment of your girls--your sisters and your daughters!
Men, you have combined together and made your unions for yourselves--you
have forced upon your employers terms which nothing but combination
would have compelled them to accept. You are paid twice what you
received twenty years ago. You go in broadcloth--you are well fed. You
have money in your pocket. But you have clean forgotten the girls.

"Think of the girls.

"They have no protection but a Government act forbidding more than ten
hours' work. Who cares for a Government act? It is defied daily. Those
who frame these acts know very well that they are powerless to maintain
them; because, my friends, the power is with the people--you. If you
resolve that an act shall become a law, you make it so. Everything, in
the end, is by the people and through the people.

"You have done nothing for your girls--you leave them to the mercies of
employers, who have got to cut down expenses to the last farthing. They
are paid starvation wages. They are kept in unwholesome rooms. They are
bound to the longest hours. They are oppressed with fines. The girls
grow up narrow-chested, stooping, consumptive--they are used up
wholesale. And what do you do for them. Nothing. There are girls and
women in this hall: can any one of them here get up and say that the
working-men have raised a finger for them?

"The worst charge any man can bring against you is that you care nothing
for your girls.

"Why, it is only the other day that a Dressmakers' Association has been
opened among you--you all know where it is. You all know what it tries
to do for the girls. Yet, what single man among you has ever had the
pluck to stand up for his sisters who are working in it?"

Then Harry stepped right to the edge of the platform and spread out his
hands, changing his voice.

"You are good fellows," he said, "and you've given me fair play. There
isn't a country in the world, except Ireland, where I could have had
this fair play. Don't misunderstand me--I tell you, and I don't think
you knew it before, that the time has come when the people should leave
off caring much about the Government, or expecting any good thing for
themselves from any government; because it can't be done in that way.
You must find out for yourselves what you want, and then you must have
that done. You must combine for these things as you did for wages, and
you will get them. And if you spend half the energy in working for
yourselves that you have spent in working for things that do you no good
you will be happy indeed.

"Your politics, I say again, will do nothing for you--do you
hear--nothing at all; but yours is the power. Let us repeat it again and
again--all the power is yours. Try what Government can do. Send Dick
Coppin into Parliament--he's a clever chap--and tell him to do what he
can for you. He will do nothing. Therefore, work for yourselves, and by
yourselves. Make out what you want, and resolve to have it--nobody can
prevent you. The world is yours to do what you like with. Here in
England, as in America, the working-man is master--provided the
working-man knows what he wants. The first thing you want, I reckon, is
good lodging. The second, is good food. The third is good drink--good,
unadulterated beer, and plenty of it. The fourth is good and sensible
education. The fifth is holiday and pleasure; and the last, which is
also the first, is justice for our girls. But don't be fools. I have
been among you in this club a good many times. It goes to my heart every
time I come to see so many clever men and able men wasting their time in
grievances which don't hurt them, when they are surrounded by a hundred
grievances which they have only to perceive in order to sweep them away.

"I am a Radical, like yourselves; but I am a Social Radical. As for your
political jaw, it plays the game of those who use you. Politics is a
game of lying accusations and impossible promises. The accusations make
you angry--the promises make you hopeful. But you get nothing in the
long run; and you never will. Because--promise what they may--it is not
laws or measures that will improve our lot; it is by our own resolution
that it shall be improved. Hold out your hands and take the things that
are offered you--everything is yours if you like to have it. You are in
a beautiful garden filled with fruits, if you care to pick them; but you
do not. You lie grubbing in the mud, and crying out for what will do you
no good. Voices are calling to you--they offer you such a life as was
never yet conceived by the lordliest House of Lords--a life full of
work, and full of pleasure. But you don't hear--you are deaf. You are
blind--you are ignorant."

He stopped; a hoarse shout greeted his peroration. Harry wondered for a
moment if this was applause or disapproval. It was the former. Then one
man rose and spoke.

"Damn him!" he cried. Yet the phrase was used in no condemnatory spirit;
as when a mother addresses her boy as a naughty little rogue-pogue.
"Damn him! He shall be our next member."

"No," said Harry, clapping his cousin on the shoulder, "here is your
next member; Dick Coppin is your boy. He is clever--he is ambitious.
Tell him what you want, and he'll get it for you if any one can. But, O
men! find out what you want, and have it. Yours--yours--yours is the
power. You are the masters of the world. Leave the humbug of Radicalism,
and Liberalism, and Toryism. Let dead politics bury their dead--learn to
look after your own interests. You are the kings and lords of humanity.
The old kings and lords are no more--they are swept away! They are only
shadows of the past. With you are the sceptre and the crown. You sit
upon the throne, and when you know how to reign, you shall reign as
never yet king was known to reign; but _first find out what you want_."

He lightly leaped from the platform and stepped down the hall--he had
said his say, and was going. The men laughed and shouted--half angry,
half pleased, but wholly astonished; and Dick Coppin, with a burning
cheek, sat humiliated yet proud of his cousin.

At the door Harry met Miss Kennedy, with Captain Sorensen and Nelly.

"We have heard your speech," said Angela, with brightened eyes and
glowing cheeks. "Oh, what did I tell you? You can speak, you can
persuade; you can lead. What a career--what a career lies before the man
who can persuade and lead!"




CHAPTER XXIX.

THE FIGUREHEADS.


It was Sunday morning, after breakfast, and Harry was sitting in the
boarding-house common room, silently contemplating his two
fellow-boarders, Josephus and Mr. Maliphant. The circle at Bormalack's
was greatly broken up. Not to speak of the loss of the illustrious pair,
Daniel Fagg had now taken to live entirely among the dressmakers, except
in the evenings, when their music and dancing drove him away; in fact,
he regarded the place as his own, and had so far forgotten that he took
his meals there by invitation as to criticise the dinners, which were
always good, although plain, and to find fault with the beer, which came
from Messenger's. Miss Kennedy, too, only slept at the boarding-house,
though by singular forgetfulness she always paid the landlady every
Saturday morning in advance for a week's board and lodging. Therefore
Josephus and the old man for the most part sat in the room alone, and
were excellent company, because the ill-used junior clerk never wanted
to talk with anybody, and the aged carver of figureheads never wanted a
listener.

Almost for the first time Harry considered this old man, the rememberer
of fag-ends and middle-bits of anecdote, with something more than a
passing curiosity and a sense of irritation caused by the incongruity of
the creature. You know that whenever you seriously address yourself to
the study of a person, however insignificant in appearance, that person
assumes an importance equal to any lord. A person, you see, is an
individual, or an indivisible thing. Wherefore, let us not despise our
neighbor. The ancient Mr. Maliphant was a little, thin old man, with a
few gray hairs left, but not many; his face was inwrapped, so to speak,
in a pair of very high collars, and he wore a black silk stock, not very
rusty, for he had been in the reign of the fourth George a dapper young
fellow, and possessed a taste in dress beyond the lights of Limehouse.
But this was in his nautical days, and before he developed his natural
genius for carving ship's figureheads. He had no teeth left, and their
absence greatly shortened the space between nose and chin, which
produced an odd effect; he was closely shaven; his face was all covered
over like an ocean with innumerable wrinkles, crows-feet, dimples,
furrows, valleys, and winding watercourses, which showed like the
universal smile of an accurate map. His forehead, when the original
thatch was thick, must have been rather low and weak; his eyes were
still bright and blue, though they wandered while he talked; when he was
silent they had a far-off look; his eyebrows, as often happens with old
men, had grown bushy and were joined across the bridge; when his memory
failed him, which was frequently the case, they frowned almost as
terribly as those of Daniel Fagg; his figure was spare and his legs
thin, and he sat on one side of the chair with his feet twisted beneath
it; he never did anything, except to smoke one pipe at night; he never
took the least notice of anybody; when he talked, he addressed the whole
company, not any individual; and he was affected by no man's happiness
or suffering. He had lived so long that he had no more sympathy left;
the world was nothing more to him; he had no further interest in it; he
had gone beyond it and out of it; he was so old that he had not a friend
left who knew him when he was young; he lived apart; he was, perforce, a
hermit.

Harry remembered, looking upon this survival, that the old man had once
betrayed a knowledge of his father and of the early history of the
Coppin and Messenger families. He wondered now why he had not tried to
get more out of him. It would be a family chronicle of small beer, but
there could be nothing, probably, very disagreeable to learn about the
career of the late sergeant, his father, nor anything painful about the
course of the Coppins. On this Sunday morning, when the old man looked
as if the cares of the week were off his mind, his memory should be
fresh--clearer than on a week-day.

In the happy family of boarders, none of whom pretended to take the
least interest in each other, nobody ever spoke to Mr. Maliphant, and
nobody listened when he spoke, except Mrs. Bormalack, who was bound by
rules of politeness, or took the least notice of his coming or his
going; nobody knew how he lived or what he paid for his board and
lodging, or anything else about him. Once, it was certain, he had been
in the mercantile marine. Now he had a "yard;" he went to his yard every
day; it was rumored that in this yard he carved figureheads all day for
large sums of money; he came home in the evening in time for supper; a
fragrance, as of rum and water, generally accompanied him at that time;
and after a pipe and a little more grog, and a few reminiscences chopped
up in bits and addressed to the room at large, the old fellow would
retire for the night. A perfectly cheerful and harmless old man, yet not
companionable.

"Did you know my father, Mr. Maliphant?" asked Harry, by way of opening
up the conversation. "He was a sergeant, you know, in the army."

Mr. Maliphant started and looked bewildered; he had been, in
imagination, somewhere off Cape Horn, and he could not get back at a
moment's notice. It irritated him to have to leave his old friends.

"Your father, young gentleman?" he asked in a vexed and trembling
quaver. "Did I know your father? Pray, sir, how am I to know that you
ever had a father?"

"You said, the other day, that you did. Think again. My father, you
know, married Caroline Coppin."

"Ay, ay--Caroline Coppin--I remember Caroline Coppin. Oh, yes, sister,
she was, to Bob--when Bob was third mate of an East Indiaman; a devil of
a fellow was Bob, though but a boy, and if living now, which I must
misdoubt, would be but sixty or thereabouts. Everybody, young man, knew
Bob Coppin," ... here he relapsed into silence. When he spoke again, he
carried on aloud the subject of his thoughts--"below he did his duty.
Such a man, sir, was Bob Coppin."

"Thank you, Mr. Maliphant. I seem to know Bob quite well from your
description. And now he's gone aloft, hasn't he? And when the word comes
to pass all hands, there will be Bob with a hitch of his trousers and a
kick of the left leg. But about my mother."

"Young gentleman, how am I to know that you were born with a mother?
Law, law! One might as well"---- Here his voice dropped again, and he
finished the sentence with the silent motion of his lips.

"Caroline Coppin, you know; your old friend."

He shook his head.

"No--oh, no! I knew her when she was as high as that table. My young
friend, not my old friend, she was. How could she be my old friend? She
married Sergeant Goslett, and he went out to India and--and--something
happened there. Perhaps he was cast away. As many get cast away in those
seas."

"Is that all you can remember about her?"

"I can remember," said the old man, "a wonderful lot of things at times.
You mustn't ask any man to remember all at once. Not at his best, you
mustn't, and I doubt I am hardly at what you may call my tip-top
ripest--yet. Wait a bit, young man; wait a bit. I've been to a many
ports and carved figureheads for a many ships, and they got cast away,
one after the other, but dear to memory still, and paid for. Like
Sergeant Goslett. A handsome man he was, with curly brown hair, like
yours, young gentleman. I remember how he sang a song in this very house
when Caroline--or was it her sister?--had it, and I forget whether it
was Bunker married her sister or after Caroline's baby was born, which
was when the child's father was dead. A beautiful evening we had."

Caroline's baby, Harry surmised, was himself.

"Where was Caroline's baby born?" Harry asked.

"Where should he be? Why, o' course, in his mother's own house."

"Why should he be born in his mother's own house? I did not know that
his mother had a house."

The old man looked at him with pity.

"Young man," he said, "you know nothing. Your ignorance is shameful."

"But why?"

"Enough said, young gentleman," replied Mr. Maliphant with dignity.
"Enough said: youth should not sport with age; it doth not become gray
hairs to--to----"

He did not finish the sentence, except to himself, but what he did say
was something emphatic and improving, because he shook his head a good
deal over it.

Presently he got up and left the room. Harry watched him getting his
hat and tying his muffler about his neck. When things were quite
adjusted the old man feebly tottered down the steps. Harry took his hat
and followed him.

"May I walk with you, sir?" he asked.

"Surely, surely!" Mr. Maliphant was surprised. "It is an unusual thing
for me to have a companion. Formerly they came--ah--all the way from
Rotherhithe to--to--sing and drink with me."

"Will you take my arm?" Harry asked.

The little old man, who wore black trousers and a dress-coat out of
respect of the day, but, although the month was December, no
great-coat--in fact he had never worn a great-coat in all his life--was
trotting along with steps which showed weakness, but manifest intention.
Harry wondered where he meant to go. He took the proffered arm, however,
and seemed to get on better for the support.

"Are you going to church, sir," asked Harry, when they came opposite the
good old church of Stepney, with its vast acres of dead men, and heard
the bells ringing.

"No, young gentleman; no, certainly not. I have more important business
to look after."

He quickened his steps, and they left the church behind them.

"Church?" repeated Mr. Maliphant with severity. "When there's property
to look after the bells may ring as loud as they please. Church is good
for paupers and church-wardens. Where would the property be, do you
think, if I were not on the spot everyday to protect it?"

He turned off the High Street into a short street of small houses
neither better nor worse than the thousands of houses around: it was a
cul-de-sac, and ended in a high brick wall, with a large gateway in the
middle, and square stone pillars, and a ponderous pair of wooden gates,
iron-bound as if they guarded things of the greatest value. There was
also a small wicket beside it, which the old man carefully unlocked and
opened, looking round to see that no burglars followed.

Harry saw within a tolerably large yard, in the middle of which was a
little house of one room. The house was a most wonderful structure; it
was built apparently of packing-cases nailed on four or eight square
posts; it was furnished with a door, a window, and a chimney, all
complete; it was exactly like a doll's house, only that it was rather
larger, being at least six feet high and eight feet square. The house
was painted green; the roof was painted red; the door blue; there was
also a brass knocker; so that in other respects it was like a doll's
house.

"Aha!" cried the old man, rubbing his hands and pointing to the house.
"I built it, young man. That is my house, that is; I laid the
foundations; I put up the walls; I painted it. And I very well remember
when it was. Let me see. Mr. Messenger, who was a younger man than me by
four years, married in that year, or lost his son--I forget which"--(his
voice lowered, and he went on talking to himself). "Caroline's
grandfather went bankrupt in the building trade; or her father perhaps,
who afterward made money and left houses. And here I am still. This is
my property, young gentleman, and I come here every day to execute
orders. Oh! yes"--he looked about him in mild kind of doubt--"I execute
orders. Perhaps the orders don't come in so thick as they did. But here
I am--ready for work--always ready, and I see my old friends, too, aha!
They come as thick as ever, bless you, if the orders don't. Quite a
gathering in here some days." Harry shuddered, thinking who these old
friends might be. "Sundays and all I come here, and they come too. A
merry company!"

The garrulous old man opened the door of the little house. Harry saw
that it contained a cupboard with some simple cooking utensils, and a
fireplace, where the proprietor began to make a fire, and one chair, and
a little table, and a rack with tools; there were also one or two pipes
and a tobacco jar.

He looked about the yard. A strange place, indeed! It was adorned, or
rather furnished, with great ships' figureheads, carved in wood,
standing in rows and circles, some complete, some half-finished, some
just begun; so that here was a Lively Peggy with rudimentary features
just emerging from her native wood, and here a Saucy Sal of Wapping
still clothed in oak up to her waist; and here a Neptune, his crowned
head only as yet indicated, though the weather-beaten appearance of his
wood showed that the time was long since he was begun; or a Father
Thames, his god-like face as yet showing like a blurred dream. Or there
were finished and perfect heads, painted and gilded, waiting for the
purchaser who never came. They stood, or sat--whichever a head and
shoulder can be said to do--with so much pride, each so rejoicing in
himself, and so disdainful of his neighbor, in so haughty a silence that
they seemed human and belonging to the first circles of Stepney; Harry
thought, too, that they eyed him curiously, as if he might be the
long-expected ship-owner come to buy a figurehead.

"Here is property, young man!" cried the old man; he had lit his fire
now and came to the door, craning forward and spreading his hands, "Look
at the beauties. There's truth! There's expression! Mine, young man, all
mine. Hundreds--thousands of pounds here, to be protected."

"Do you come here every day?" Harry asked.

"Every day. The property must be looked after."

"And do you sit here all day by yourself?"

"Why, who else should I sit with? And a man like me never sits alone.
Bless your heart, young gentleman, of a morning when I sit before the
fire and smoke a pipe, this room gets full of people. They crowd in,
they do. Dead people, I mean, of course. I know more dead men than
living. They're the best company, after all. Bob Coppin comes, for one."

Harry began to look about, wondering whether the ghost of Bob might
suddenly appear at the door. On the whole he envied the old man his
company of departed friends.

"So you talk," he said; "you and the dead people?" By this time the old
man had got into his chair and Harry stood in the doorway, for there
really was not room for more than one in the house at the same time, to
say nothing of inconveniencing and crowding the merry company of ghosts.

"You wouldn't believe," said the old man, "the talks we have nor the
yarns we spin, when we're here together."

"It must be a jovial time," said Harry. "Do they drink?"

Mr. Maliphant screwed up his lips and shook his head mysteriously.

"Not of a morning," he replied, as if in the evening the old rollicking
customs were still kept up.

"And you talk about old times--eh?"

"There's nothing else to talk about, as I know."

"Certainly not. Sometimes you talk about my--about Caroline Coppin's
father, I suppose. I mean the one who made money, not the one who went
bankrupt."

"Houses," said Mr. Maliphant; "houses it was."

"Oh!"

"Twelve houses there were, all his own. Two sons and two daughters to
divide among. Bob Coppin sold his at once--Bunker bought 'em--and we
drank up the money down Poplar-way, him and me and a few friends
together, in a friendly and comfortable spirit. A fine time we had, I
remember. Jack Coppin was in his father's trade and he lost his money;
speculated, he did. Builders are a believin' people. Bunker got his
houses too."

"Jack was my cousin Dick's father, I suppose," said Harry. "Go ahead,
old boy. The family history is reeling on beautifully. Where did the
other houses go?"

But the old man had gone off on another tack. "There were more Coppins,"
he said. "When I was a boy, to be a Coppin of Stepney was a thing of
pride. Josephus' father was church-warden, and held up his head."

"Did he, really?"

"If I hadn't the property to look after, I would show you his tombstone
in Stepney church-yard."

"That," said Harry, "would be a great happiness for me. As for Caroline
Coppin, now----"

"She was a pretty maid, she was," the old man went on. "I saw her born
and brought up. And she married a sojer."

"I know, and her three houses were lost, too, I suppose?"

"Why should her houses be lost, young man?" Mr. Maliphant asked with
severity. "Houses don't run away. This property doesn't run away. When
she died she left a baby, she did, and when the baby was took--or was
stolen--or something--Bunker said those houses were his. But not lost.
You can't lose a house. You may lose a figurehead." He got up and looked
outside to see if his were safe. "Or a big drum. But not a house."

"Oh!" Harry started. "Bunker said the houses were his, did he?"

"Of course he did."

"And if the baby had not died, those houses would still be the property
of that baby, I suppose."

But Mr. Maliphant made no reply. He was now in the full enjoyment of the
intoxication produced by his morning-pipe, and was sitting in his
arm-chair with his feet on the fender, disposed, apparently, for
silence. Presently he began to talk, as usual, to himself. Nor could he
be induced, by any leading questions, to remember anything more of the
things which Harry wanted him to remember. But he let his imagination
wander. Gradually the room became filled with dead people, and he was
talking with them. Nor did he seem to know that Harry was with him at
all.

Harry slipped quietly away, shutting the door after him, so that the old
man might be left quite alone with the ghosts.

The yard, littered with wood, crowded with the figureheads, all of which
seemed turning inquiring and jealous eyes upon the stranger, was silent
and ghostly. Thither came the old man every day, to sit before the fire
in his little red-and-green doll's house, to cook his own beefsteak for
himself, to drink his glass of grog after dinner, to potter about among
his carved heads, to talk to his friends the ghosts, to guard his
property, and to execute the orders which never came. For the
shipbuilders who had employed old Mr. Maliphant were all dead and gone,
and nobody knew of his yard any more, and he had it all to himself. The
tide of time had carried away all his friends and left him alone; the
memory of him among active men was gone; no one took any more interest
in him, and he had ceased to care for anything: to look back was his
only pleasure. No one likes to die at any time, but who would wish to
grow so old?

And those houses. Why, if the old man's memory was right, then Bunker
had simply appropriated his property. Was that, Harry asked, the price
for which he traded the child away?

He went straight away to his cousin Dick, who, mindful of the recent
speech at the club, was a little disposed to be resentful. It
fortunately takes two to make a quarrel, however, and one of those two
had no intention of a family row.

"Never mind, Dick," he said in answer to an allusion to the speech.
"Hang the club. I want to ask you about something else. Now, then. Tell
me about your grandfather."

"I cannot. He died before I can remember. He was a builder."

"Did he leave property?"

"There were some houses, I believe. My father lost his share, I know.
Speculated it away."

"Your uncle Bob. What became of his share?"

"Bob was a worthless chap. He drank everything, so of course he drank up
his houses."

"Then we come to the two daughters. Bunker married one, and of course he
got his wife's share. What became of my mother's share?"

"Indeed, Harry, I do not know."

"Who would know?"

"Bunker ought to be able to tell you all about it. Of course he knows."

"Dick," said Harry, "should you be astonished to learn that the
respectable uncle Bunker is a mighty great rogue? But say nothing, Dick.
Say nothing. Let me consider how to bring the thing home to him."




CHAPTER XXX.

THE PROFESSOR'S PROPOSAL.


When the professor called upon Angela that same Sunday morning and
requested an interview, she perceived that something serious was
intended. He had on, as if for an occasion, a new coat with a flower in
the buttonhole, a chrysanthemum. His face was extremely solemn, and his
fingers, which always seemed restless and dissatisfied unless they were
making things disappear and come again, were quite still.

Certainly, he had something on his mind.

The drawing-room had one or two girls in it, who were reading and
talking, though they ought to have been in church--Angela left their
religious duties to their own consciences. But the dining-room was empty
and the interview was held there.

The professor had certainly made up in his own mind exactly what was
going to be said: he had dramatized the situation--a very good plan if
you are quite sure of the replies; otherwise, you are apt to be put out.

"Miss Kennedy," he began, with a low voice, "allow me, first of all, to
thank you for your great kindness during a late season of depression."

"I am very glad it is a _late_ season," said Angela; "that means, I
presume, that the depression has passed away."

"Quite, I am glad to say; in fact," the professor laughed cheerfully, "I
have got engagements from now to nearly the end of April in the country,
and am in treaty for a West-End engagement in May. Industry and
application, not to speak of talent, will make their way in the long
run. But I hope I am none the less grateful to you for your loan--let me
call it a loan--when things were tight. I assure you, Miss Kennedy, that
the run into the country, after those parish registers, was as good as a
week's engagement, simple as it looked, and as for that Saturday night
for your girls----"

"O Professor, we were agreed that it should appear to be given by you
for nothing."

"Never mind what it was agreed. You know very well what was paid for it.
Now, if it hadn't been for that night's performance and that little trip
into the country, I verily believe they would have had to send for a
nice long box for me--a box that can't be palmed, and I should have gone
off in it to a country where perhaps they don't care for conjuring."

"In that case, professor, I am very glad to have been of help."

"And so," he went on--following the programme he had laid down in his
own mind--"And so I came here to-day to ask if your interest in
conjuring could be stimulated to a professional height."

"Really, I do not know. Professional? You mean----"

"Anybody can see that you've showed an interest in the subject beyond
what is expected or found in women. What I came here to-day for is to
ask whether you like the conjurer well enough to take to conjuring?"

Angela laughed and was astonished, after being told by Daniel Fagg that
he would honor her by making her his wife, but for certain reasons of
age. Now, having became hardened, it seemed but a small thing to receive
the offer of a conjurer, and the proposal to join the profession.

"I think it must be the science, professor," she said; "yes, it must be
the science that I like so much. Not the man who exhibits his skill in
the science. Yes, I think of your admirable science."

"Ah," he heaved a deep sigh, "you are quite right, miss; science is
better than love. Love! What sort of a thing is that, when you get tired
of it in a month? But science fills up all your life: people are always
learning--always."

"I am so glad, professor, that I can agree with you entirely."

"Which makes me bolder," he said, "because we could be useful to each
other, without pretending to be in love, or any nonsense of that sort."

"Indeed. Now, I shall be very pleased to be useful to you without, as
you say, any foolish pretence or nonsense."

"The way is this: you can play, can't you?"

"Yes."

"And sing?"

"Yes."

"Did you ever dance in tights?"

"No, I never did that."

"Ah, well--it's a pity; but one can't expect everything. And no doubt
you'd take to it easy. They all do. Did you ever sing on the stage--at a
music-hall, I mean?"

"No. I never did."

"There was a chap--but I suppose he was a liar--said you used to sing
under an electric light at the Canterbury, with a character dance, and a
topical song, and a kick up at the finish."

"Yes, professor. I think that 'chap' must certainly be written down a
liar. But go on."

"I told him he was, and he offered to fight me for half a crown. When I
said I'd do it, and willingly, for a bob, he went away. I think he's the
fellow Harry Goslett knocked down one night. Bunker put him up to it.
Bunker doesn't like you. Never mind him. Look here, now."

"I am looking as hard as I can."

"There's some things that bring the money in, and some that don't.
Dressmaking don't; conjurin' does."

"Yet you yourself, professor--"

"Why," he asked, "because I am only four-and-twenty, and not much known
as yet. Give me time; wait. Lord! to see the clumsy things done by the
men who've got a name. And how they go down; and a child would spot the
dodge! Now, mark my words--if you go in with me, there's a fortune in
it."

"For your sake, I am glad to hear it; but it must be without me."

"It is for your sake that I tell you of it."

He was not in love at all. Love and science have never yet really
composed their differences; and there was not the least dropping of his
voice, or any sign of passion in his speech.

"For your sake," he repeated. "Because, if you can be got to see your
way as I see it, there's a fortune for both of us."

"Oh!"

"Yes: now, miss, listen. Conjuring, like most things, is makin' believe
and deceivin'. What we do is, to show you one thing and to do another.
The only thing is, to do it so quick that it shan't be seen even by the
few men who know how it is done. No woman yet was ever able to be a
conjurer, which is a rum thing, because their fingers do pretty for
music, and lace-work, and such. But for conjurin', they haven't the
mind. You want a man's brain for such work."

"I have always," said Angela, "felt what poor, weak things we are,
compared with men."

"Yes, you are," continued the professor gallantly. "But you do have your
uses in the world--most things have. Now, as a confederate or assistant,
there's nobody like a woman. They do what they are told to do. They are
faithful over the secrets. They learn their place on the platform and
they stay there. Some professors carry about a boy with them. But you
can't place any real trust in a boy; he's always up to tricks, and if
you wallop him--likely as not, next night he'll take and spoil your best
trick out of revenge. Some have a man to help, but then he learns the
secrets and tries to cut you out; but with a woman you're always pretty
safe. A daughter's best; because then you pocket all the money yourself.
But a wife is next best so long as she keeps steady and acts on the
square."

"I never thought of it before," said Angela, "but I suppose it is as you
say, and the real object for which women were created must have been the
assistance of conjurers."

"Of course," said the professor, failing to see the delicate sarcasm of
this remark--"of course. What better thing could they do? Why, here you
sit slaving all day long, and all the year round; and what are you the
better for it? A bare living--that's all you get out of it. Whether you
go into shops, behind a bar, or into the workroom, it's the same
story--a bare living. Look at the conjurin' line now: you live in
splendor; you go on the stage in a most beautiful costume--silks and
satins, gold and spangles; tights, if you like. You travel about the
country free. You hear the people clapping their hands whenever you go
in; and believin' that you do it all yourself. You've got nothing to do
but just what you are told, and that's your life--with pockets full of
money, and the proud consciousness that you are making your fortune."

"It certainly seems very beautiful to look at; are there no drawbacks?"

"None," answered the enthusiast. "It's the best profession in the
world--there's no danger in it. There's no capital required. All it
wants is cleverness. That's why I come to you; because you are a real
clever girl, and what's more, you're good-looking--it is not always
that looks and brains go together."

"Very well, professor. Let us come to the point--what is it you want me
to do?"

"I want you, Miss Kennedy, to go about the country with me. You shall be
my assistant; you shall play the piano, and come on dressed in a pink
costume--which generally fetches at an entertainment. Nothing to say;
and I will teach you by degrees all the dodges, and the way it's done
you will learn. You'll be surprised when you find how easy it is, and
yet how you can't do it. And when you hear the people telling what they
saw, and you know just exactly what they could have seen if they'd had
their eyes in their heads, you'll laugh--you will."

"But I'm afraid I can't think----"

"Don't raise difficulties, now," he spoke persuasively. "I am coming to
them directly. I've got ideas in my head which I can't carry through
without a real, clever confederate. And you must be that confederate.
Electricity: now"--he lowered his voice, and whispered--"none of the
conjurers have got a battery at work. Think of new feats of marvel and
magic never before considered possible; and done secret by electricity.
What a shame--what a cruel shame, to have let the world get hold of
electricity! Why, it ought to have been kept for conjurers. And
telephones--again, what a scope there is in a good telephone! You and me
together, Miss Kennedy, could knock up an entertainment as nobody ever
yet dreamed of. If you could dance a bit it would be an advantage. But,
if you won't, of course, we must give it up. And, as to the dressmaking
rubbish, why in a week you will be wondering how in the world you ever
came to waste your time upon it at all, while such a chance was going
about in the world. Not that I blame you for it; not at all. It was your
ignorance kept you out of it, and your good luck threw you in the way of
it."

"That may be so. But still, I am not sure----"

"I haven't done yet. Look here! I've been turning the thing over in my
own mind a good bit. The only way I can think of for such a girl as you
to go about the country with a show is for you to be married to the
showman--so I'll marry you before we start, and then we shall be
comfortable and happy, and ready for the fortune to come in. And you'll
be quite sure of your share in it."

"Thank you, professor."

"Very good, then; no need for thanks. I've got engagements in the
country for over three months. We'll marry at once, and you can spend
that time in learning."

Angela laughed. Were women of "her class," she thought, so easily won,
and so unceremoniously wooed? Were there no preliminary advances, soft
speeches, words of compliment and flattery?

"I've been laying out a plan," the professor went on, "for the most
complete thing you ever saw! Never before attempted on any stage!
Marvelous optical illusion. Hush--electricity!" [He said this in a stage
whisper.] "You are to be a fairy. Stale old business, isn't it? But it
always pays. Silk stockin's and gauze, with a wand. I'm Sinbad the
Sailor, or Robinson Crusoe. It doesn't matter what; and then you----"

"Stay a moment, professor"--she laid her hand upon his arm--"you have
not waited for my answer. I cannot, unfortunately, marry you; nor can I
go about the country with you; nor can I possibly become your
confederate and assistant."

"You can't marry me? Why not, when I offer you a fortune?"

"Not even for fortune."

"Why not?"

"Well, for many reasons. One of them is that I cannot leave my
dressmaking--rubbish, as it seems to you. That is, indeed, a sufficient
reason."

"Oh!"--his face becoming sad--"and I set my heart upon it! The very
first time I saw you I said to myself, 'There's a girl for the
business--never was such a girl!' And to think you're thrown away on a
dressmaking business. Oh! it's too bad! and that you're contented with
your lot, humble as it is, when I offer to make you an artist, and to
give you a fortune. That's what cuts me to the quick--that you should be
contented."

"I am very much ashamed of myself," said Angela, with contrition; "but,
you see, what you ask is impossible."

"And I only made up my mind last night that I would marry you, if
nothing else would do."

"Did you--poor professor! I am quite sorry for you; but you should never
marry a woman unless you are in love with her. Now it's quite clear that
you are not in love with me."

"Love! I've got my work to think of."

"Then good-morning, professor. Let us part friends, if I cannot accept
your offer."

He took her offered hand with reluctance, and in sorrow more than in
anger.

"Do you really understand," he asked, "what you are throwing away? Fame
and fortune--nothing less."

She laughed, and drew back her hand, shaking her head.

"Oh, the woman's a fool!" cried the professor, losing his temper, and
slamming the door after him.




CHAPTER XXXI.

CAPTAIN COPPIN.


It was at this time that Tom Coppin, Captain Coppin of the Salvation
Army, paid his only visit to Angela, that visit that caused so much
sensation among the girls.

He chose a quiet evening early in the week. Why he came has never been
quite clear. It was not curiosity, for he had none; nor was it a desire
to study the kind of culture which Angela had introduced among her
friends, for he had no knowledge of, or desire for, culture at all. Nor
does the dressmakers' workshop afford a congenial place for the exercise
of that soldier's gifts. He came, perhaps, because he was passing on his
way from a red-hot prayer meeting to a red-hot preaching, and he thought
he would see the place which among others, the Advanced Club for
instance, was keeping his brother from following in his own steps, and
helping him to regard the world, its pleasures and pursuits, with eyes
of affection. One knows not what he expected to find or what he
proposed by going there, because the things he did find completely upset
all his expectations, if he had any. Visions, perhaps, of the
soul-destroying dance, and the red cup, and the loud laughter of fools,
and the talk that is as the crackling of thorns, were in his mind.

The room was occupied, as usual, with the girls, Angela among them.
Captain Sorensen was there too; the girls were quietly busy, for the
most part, over "their own" work, because, if they would go fine, they
must make their own fineries; it was a frosty night, and the fire was
burning clear; in the most comfortable chair beside it sat the crippled
girl of whom we know; the place was hers by a sort of right; she was
gazing into the flames, listening lazily to the music--Angela had been
playing--and doing nothing, with contentment. Life was so sweet to the
child when she was not suffering pain, and was warm, and was not hungry,
and was not hearing complaints, that she wanted nothing more. Nelly, for
her part, sat with hands folded pensively, and Angela wondered what, of
late days, it was that seemed to trouble her.

Suddenly the door opened, and a man, dressed in a tight uniform of dark
cloth and a cap of the same, with "S. S." upon it, like the Lord Mayor's
gold chain, stood before them.

He did not remove his cap, but he looked round the room, and presently
called in a loud, harsh voice:

"Which of you here answers to the name of Kennedy?"

"I do," replied Angela; "my name is Kennedy. What is yours, and why do
you come here?"

"My name is Coppin. My work is to save souls. I tear them out of the
very clutches and claws of the devil; I will have them; I leave them no
peace until I have won them; I cry aloud to them; I shout to them; I
pray for them; I sing to them; I seek them out in their hiding-places,
even in their dens and courts of sin; there are none too far gone for my
work; none that I will let go once I get a grip of them; once my hand is
on them out they must come if the devil and all his angels were pulling
them the other way. For my strength is not of myself; it is----"

"But why do you come here?" asked Angela.

The man had the same black hair and bright eyes as his brother; the same
strong voice, although a long course of street-shouting had made it
coarse and rough; but his eyes were brighter, his lips more sensitive,
his forehead higher; he was like his brother in all respects, yet so
unlike that, while the Radical had the face of a strong man, the
preacher had in his the indefinable touch of weakness which fanaticism
always brings with it. Whatever else it was, however, the face was that
of a man terribly in earnest.

"I have heard about you," he said. "You are of those who cry peace when
there is no peace; you entice the young men and maidens who ought to be
seeking pardon and preaching repentance, and you destroy their souls
with dancing and music. I come here to tell you that you are one of the
instruments of the devil in this wicked town."

"Have you really come here, Mr. Coppin, on purpose to tell me that?"

"That," he said, "is part of my message."

"Do you think," asked Angela, because this was almost intolerable, "that
it is becoming a preacher like yourself to invade a quiet and private
house in order to insult a woman?"

"Truth is not insult," he said. "I come here as I would go to a theatre
or a singing-hall or any soul-destroying place. You shall hear the plain
truth. With your music and your dancing and your pleasant ways, you are
corrupting the souls of many. My brother is hardened in his unrepentance
since he knew you. My cousin goes on laughing, and dances over the very
pit of destruction, through you. These girls----"

"Oh!" cried Rebekah, who had no sympathy with the Salvation Army, and
felt herself an authority when the religious question was touched, "they
are all mad. Let him go away."

"I would," replied the captain, "that you were half as mad. Oh! I know
you now; I know you snug professors of a Saturday religion----"

"Your mission," Angela interrupted, "is not, I am sure, to argue about
another sect. Come, Mr. Coppin, now that you have told us who you are
and what is your profession and why you come here, you might like to
preach to us. Do so, if you will. We were sitting here quietly when you
came, and you interrupt nothing. So that, if it would really make you
feel any happier, you may preach to us for a few minutes."

He looked about him in hesitation. This kind of preaching was not in his
line: he loved a vast hall with a thousand faces looking at him; or a
crowd of turbulent roughs ready to answer the Message with a volley of
brickbats; or a chance gathering of unrepentant sinners in a wide
thoroughfare. He could lift up his voice to them; but to preach in a
quiet room to a dozen girls was a new experience.

And it was not the place which he had expected. His brother, in their
last interview, had thrown in his teeth this house and its doings as
offering a more reasonable solution of life's problems than his own.
"You want everybody," he said, "to join you in singing and preaching
every day; what should we do when there was nobody left to preach at?
Now, there, what they say is, 'Let us make ourselves comfortable.'
There's a deal in that, come to think of.

"Look at those girls now: while you and your Happy Elizas are trampin'
in the mud with your flag and your procession, and gettin' black eyes
and brickbats, they are singin' and laughin' and dancin', and makin'
what fun they can for themselves. It seems to me, Tom, that if this kind
of thing gets fashionable you and your army will be played out."

Well, he had come to see this place, which had offered pleasure instead
of repentance, as a method of improving life. They were not laughing and
singing at all; there were no men present except one old gentleman in a
blue coat with brass buttons. To be sure, he had a fiddle lying on a
chair beside him. There was no indication whatever of the red cup, and
no smell of tobacco. Now, pleasure without drink, tobacco, and singing
had been in Tom's unregenerate days incomprehensible. "I would rather,"
said Dick, "see an army of Miss Kennedy's girls than an army of
Hallelujah Polls." Yet they seemed perfectly quiet. "Make 'em happy,
Tom, first," said Dick, who was still thinking over Harry's speech as a
possible point of departure. Happiness is not a word in the dictionary
of men like Tom Coppin; they know what it means; they know a spree; they
understand drink; they know misery, because it is all round them--the
misery of hunger, of disease, of intemperance, of dirt, of evil temper,
of violence; the misery which the sins of one bring all, and sins of all
upon each. Indeed, we need not go to Whitechapel to find out misery. But
they know not happiness. For such as Captain Coppin there is, as an
alternative for misery, the choice of glory. What they mean by glory is
ecstasy, the rapture, the mysteries of emotional religion; he, they
believe, is the most advanced who is most often hysterical; Dick, like
many of his followers, yearned honestly and unselfishly to extend this
rapture which he himself so often enjoyed: but that there should be any
other way out of the misery save by way of the humble stool of
conviction, was a thing which he could not understand. Happiness, calm,
peace, content, the sweet enjoyment of innocent recreation--these things
he knew nothing of; they had not come his way.

He had come; he had seen; no doubt the moment his back was turned the
orgy would begin. But he had delivered his message: he had warned the
young woman who had led the girls--that calm, cold woman who looked at
him with curiosity and was so unmoved by what he said: he might go. With
his whole heart he had spoken and had so far moved no one except the
daughter of the Seventh-Day Independent--and her only a little. This
kind of thing is very irritating. Suppose you were to put a red-hot
poker into a jug of water without producing any steam or hissing at all,
how, as a natural philosopher, would you feel?

"You may preach to us, if you like," said Miss Kennedy.

She sat before him, resting her chin upon her hand. He knew that she was
beautiful, although women and their faces, graces, and sweet looks
played no part at all in his thoughts. He felt, without putting the
thing into words, that she was beautiful. Also, that she regarded him
with a kind of contempt, as well as curiosity; also, that she had
determined not to be moved by anything he might say; also, that she
relied on her own influence over the girls. And he felt for a moment as
if his trusty arms were dropping from his hands and his whole armor was
slipping from his shoulders. Not her beauty; no, fifty Helens of Troy
would not have moved this young apostle; but her position as an
impregnable outsider. For against the curious outsider, who regard
captains in the Salvation Army only as so many interesting results of
growing civilization, their officers are powerless indeed.

If there is any real difference between the working-man of England and
the man who does other work, it is that the former is generally
emotional and the latter is not. To the man of emotion things cannot be
stated too strongly; his leader is he who has the greatest command of
adjectives; he is singularly open to the charm of eloquence; he likes
audacity of statement; he likes to be moved by wrath, pity, and terror;
he has no eye for shades of color; and when he is most moved he thinks
he is most right. It is this which makes him so angry with the people
who cannot be moved.

Angela was one of those persons who cannot be moved by the ordinary
methods. She looked at Tom as if he was some strange creature, watching
what he did, listening to what he said, as if she was not like unto him.
It is not quite a fair way of describing Angela's attitude of mind; but
it is near enough; and it represents what passed through the brain of
the Salvation captain.

"Will you preach to us?" she repeated the third time.

He mechanically opened his hymn-book.

"Number three hundred and sixty-two," he said quietly.

He sang the hymn all by himself, at the top of his voice, so that the
windows rattled, to one of those rousing and popular melodies which have
been pressed into the service of the army; it was, in fact, "Molly
Darling," and the people at Stepney Green asked each other in wonder if
a meeting of the Salvation Army was actually being held at Miss
Kennedy's.

When he had finished his hymn he began to preach.

He stammered at first, because the surroundings were strange; besides,
the cold, curious eyes of Miss Kennedy chilled him. Presently, however,
he recovered self-possession, and began his address.

There is one merit, at least, possessed by these preachers; it is that
of simplicity. Whatever else they may be, they are always the same; even
the words do not vary while there is but one idea.

If you want to influence the dull of comprehension, such as the common
donkey, there is but one way possible. He cannot be led, or coaxed, or
persuaded; he must be thwacked. Father Stick explains and makes
apparent, instantly, what the logic of all the schools has failed to
prove. In the same way, if you wish to awaken the spiritual emotions
among people who have hitherto been strange to them, your chance is not
by argument, but by appeals, statements, prophecies, threats, terrors,
and pictures, which, in fact, do exactly correspond, and produce the
same effect as Father Stick; they are so many knock-down blows; they
belabor and they terrify.

The preacher began: the girls composed themselves to listen, with the
exception of Rebekah, who went on with her work ostentatiously, partly
to show her disapproval of such irregular proceedings and partly as one
who, having got the truth from an independent source, and being already
advanced in the narrow way, had no occasion for the captain's
persuasion.

It is one thing to hear the voice of a street preacher in his own
church, so to speak, that is, on the curbstone, and quite another thing
to hear the same man and the same person in a quiet room. Tom Coppin had
only one sermon, though he dressed it up sometimes, but not often, in
new words. Yet he was relieved of monotony by the earnestness which he
poured into it. He believed in it, himself; that goes a long way. Angela
began by thinking of the doctrine, but presently turned her attention to
the preacher, and began to think what manner of man he was. Personally
he was pale and thin, with strong black hair, like his brother, and his
eyes were singularly bright.

Here was a man of the people: self-taught; profoundly ignorant as to the
many problems of life and its solutions; filled, however, with that
noble sympathy which makes prophets, poets, martyrs; wholly possessed
of faith in his narrow creed, owning no authority of church or priest;
believing himself under direct Divine guidance, chosen and called, the
instrument of merciful Heaven to drag guilty souls from the pit;
consciously standing as a servant, day and night, before a Throne which
other men regard afar off or cannot see at all; actually living the life
of hardship, privation, and ill-treatment, which he preached; for the
sake of others, enduring hardness, poverty, contumely; taking all these
things as part and parcel of the day's work; and, in the name of duty,
searching into corners and holes of this great town for the vilest, the
most hardened, the most depraved, the most blinded to a higher life.

This, if you please, is not a thing to be laughed at. What did Wesley
more? What did Whitfield? Nay, what did Paul?

They paid him for his services, it is true; they gave him
five-and-twenty shillings a week; some of this great sum he gave away;
the rest provided him with poor and simple food. He had no pleasures or
joys of life; he had no recreations; he had no hope of any pleasures;
some of the officers of his army--being men and women as well as
preachers--loved each other and were married; but this man had no
thought of any such thing, he, as much as any monk, was vowed to the
service of the Master, without rest or holiday, or any other joy than
that of doing the work that lay before him.

A great pity and sympathy filled Angela's heart as she thought of these
things.

The man before her was for the moment a prophet; it mattered nothing
that his creed was narrow, his truths only half truths, his doctrine
commonplace, his language in bad taste, his manner vulgar; the faith of
the man covered up and hid these defects; he had a message to mankind;
he was delivering that message; to him it was a fresh, new message,
never before intrusted to any man; he had to deliver it perpetually,
even though he went in starvation.

Angela's heart softened as she realized the loyalty of the man. He saw
the softening in her eyes and thought it was the first sign of
conviction.

But it was not.

Meantime, if Angela was thinking of the preacher, the girls, of course
with the exception of Rebekah, were trembling at his words.

Suddenly--the unexpected change was a kind of rhetorical trick which
often proved effective--the preacher ceased to denounce and threaten,
and spoke of pardon and peace; he called upon them in softer voice, in
accents full of tears and love, to break down their pride, to hear the
voice that called them.... We know well enough what he said, only we do
not know how he said it. Angela looked about the room. The Captain sat
with his hands on his knees, and his face dutifully lifted to the angle
which denotes attention; his expression was unmoved; evidently, the
captain was not open to conviction. As for the girls, they might be
divided into classes. They had all listened to the threats and the
warnings, though they had heard them often enough before; now, however,
some of them seemed as if they were impatient, and as if with a little
encouragement they could break into scoffing. But others were crying,
and one or two were steadfastly regarding the speaker, as if he had
mesmerized them. Among these was Nelly. Her eyes were fixed, her lips
were parted, her breathing was quick, her cheek was pale.

Great and wonderful is the power of eloquence; there are few orators;
this ex-printer, this uneducated man of the ranks was, like his brother,
born with the gift that is so rare. He should have been taken away and
taught, and kept from danger, and properly fed and cared for. And now it
is too late. They said of him in his connection that he was blessed in
the saving of souls: the most stubborn, the most hardened, when they
fell under the magic of his presence and his voice, were broken and
subdued; what wonder that a weak girl should give way?

When he paused he looked round; he noted the faces of those whom he had
mesmerized; he raised his arm; he pointed to Nelly and beckoned her,
without a word, to rise.

Then the girl stood up as if she could not choose but obey. She moved a
step toward him; in a moment she would have been at his feet, with sobs
and tears, in the passion of self-abasement which is so dear to the
revivalist. But Angela broke the spell. She sprang toward her, caught
her in her own arms, and passed her hand before her eyes.

"Nelly!" she said gently. "Nelly, dear."

The girl sank back in her chair, and buried her face in her hands. But
the moment was gone, and Captain Coppin had lost his recruit.

They all breathed a deep sigh. Those who had not been moved looked at
each other and laughed; those who were, dried their eyes and seemed
ashamed.

"Thank you," said Angela to the preacher. "You have preached very well,
and I hope your words will help us on our way, even though it is not
quite your way."

"Then be of our way. Cease from scoffing."

She shook her head.

"No, I do not scoff, but I cannot join your way. Leave us now, Mr.
Coppin. You are a brave man. Let us reverence courage and loyalty. But
we will have no more sermons in this room. Good-night."

She offered him her hand, but he would not take it, and with a final
warning, addressed to Angela in particular and the room in general, he
went as he had come, without greeting or word of thanks.

"These Salvation people," said Rebekah, "are all mad. If people want the
way of truth there's the chapel in Redman's Row, and father's always in
it every Saturday."

"What do you say, Captain Sorensen?" asked Angela.

"The Church of England," said the captain, who had not been moved a
whit, "says that two sacraments are necessary. I find nothing about
stools of repentance. Come, Nelly, my girl, remember that you are a
Church-woman."

"Yet," said Angela, "what are we to say when a man is so brave and true,
and when he lives the life? Nelly dear--girls all--I think that religion
should not be a terror but a great calm and a trust. Let us love each
other and do our work and take the simple happiness that God gives, and
have faith. What more can we do? To-night, I think, we cannot dance or
sing, but I will play to you."

She played to them--grand and solemn music--so that the terror went out
of their brains, and the hardening out of their hearts, and next day all
was forgotten.

In this manner and this once did Tom Coppin cross Angela's path. Now he
will cross it no more, because his work is over. If a man lives on less
than the bare necessaries in order to give to others; if he does the
work of ten men; if he gives himself no rest any day in the week, what
happens to that man when typhus seizes him?

He died, as he had lived, in glory, surrounded by Joyful Jane,
Hallelujah Jem, Happy Polly, Thankful Sarah, and the rest of them. His
life has been narrated in the "_War Cry_;" it is specially recorded of
him that he was always "on the mountains," which means, in their
language, that he was a man of strong faith, free from doubt, and of
emotional nature.

The extremely wicked and hardened family, consisting of an old woman and
half a dozen daughters, for whose soul's sake he starved himself and
thereby fell an easy prey to the disease, have nearly all found a refuge
in the workhouse, and are as hardened as ever, though not so wicked,
because some kinds of wickedness are not allowed in that place of
virtue. Therefore it seems almost as if poor Tom's life has been fooled
away. According to a philosophy which makes a great deal of noise just
now, every life is but a shadow, a dream, a mockery, a catching at
things impossible, and a waste of good material, ending with the last
breath. Then all our lives are fooled away, and why not Tom's as well as
the rest? But if the older way of thinking is, after all, right, then
that life can hardly have been wasted which was freely given--even if
the gift was not accepted--for the advantage of others. Because the
memory and the example remain, and every example--if boys and girls
could only be taught this copy-book truth--is like an inexhaustible
horn, always filled with precious seed.




CHAPTER XXXII.

BUNKER AT BAY.


Harry was thinking a good deal about the old man's strange story of the
houses. There was, to be sure, little dependence to be placed in the
rambling, disjointed statements made by so old a man. But, then, this
statement was so clear and precise. There were so many children--there
were so many houses (three for each child), and he knew exactly what
became of all those houses. If the story had been told by a man in the
prime of life, it could not have been more exact and detailed. But what
were the houses--where were they? And how could he prove that they were
his own?

What did Bunker get when he traded the child away?

Harry had always been of opinion that he got a sum of money down, and
that he was now ashamed of the transaction, and would fain have it
remain unknown. This solution accounted, or seemed to account, for his
great wrath and agitation when the subject was mentioned. Out of a
mischievous delight in making his uncle angry, Harry frequently alluded
to this point; but the story of the houses was a better solution still.
It accounted for Mr. Bunker's agitation as well as his wrath. But his
wrath and his terror appeared to Harry to corroborate very strongly the
old man's story. And the longer he thought about it the more strongly he
believed it.

Harry asked his landlady whether, in her opinion, if Mr. Maliphant made
a statement, that statement was to be accepted as true?

Mrs. Bormalack replied that as he never made any statement, except in
reference to events long since things of the past, it was impossible for
her to say whether they were true or not; that his memory was clean gone
for things of the present--so that of to-day and yesterday he knew
nothing; that his thoughts were always running on the old days; and that
when he could be heard right through, without dropping his voice at
all, he sometimes told very interesting and curious things. His board
and lodging were paid for him by his grandson, a most respectable
gentleman, and a dockmaster; and that as to the old man's business he
had none, and had had none for many years, being clean
forgotten--although he did go every day to his yard, and stayed there
all day long.

Harry thought he would pay him another visit. Perhaps something more
would be remembered.

He went there again in the morning.

The street, at the end of which was the yard, was as quiet as on the
Sunday, the children being at school and the men at work. The great
gates were closed and locked, but the small side-door was unlocked. When
he opened it all the figureheads turned quickly and anxiously to look at
him. At least Harry declares they did, and Spiritualists will readily
believe him. Was he, they asked, going to take one of them away and
stick it on the bow of a great ship, and send it up and down upon the
face of the ocean to the four corners of the world. Ha! They were made
for an active life. They pined away in this inactivity. A fig for the
dangers of the deep! From Saucy Sal to Neptune they all asked the same
question in the same hope. Harry shook his head, and they sighed sadly
and resumed sadly their former positions, as they were, eyes front,
waiting till night should fall and the old man should go, and they could
talk with each other.

"This," thought Harry, "is a strange and ghostly place."

You know the old and creepy feeling caused by the presence, albeit
unseen, of ghosts. One may feel it anywhere and at all times--in church,
at a theatre, in bed at night--by broad daylight--in darkness or in
twilight. This was in the sunshine of a bright December day--the last
days of the year 1881 were singularly bright and gracious. The place was
no dark chamber or gloomy vault, but a broad and open yard, cheerfully
decorated with carved figureheads. Yet, even here, Harry experienced the
touch of ghostliness. The place was so strange that it did not astonish
him at all to see the old man suddenly appear in the door of his doll's
house, waving his hand and smiling cheerily, as one who speeds the
parting guest. The salutations were not intended for Harry, because Mr.
Maliphant was not looking at him.

Presently he ceased gesticulating, became suddenly serious (as happens
to one when his friend's back is turned, or he has vanished), and
returned to his seat by the fire.

Harry softly followed, and stood before him waiting to be recognized.

The old man looked up at last, and nodded his head.

"Been entertaining your friends, Mr. Maliphant?"

"Bob was here, only Bob. You have just missed Bob," he replied.

"That's a pity--never mind. Can you, my ancient, carry your memory back
some twenty years? You did it, you know, last Sunday for me."

"Twenty years? Ay, ay--twenty years. I was only sixty-five or so then.
It seems a long time until it is gone--twenty years! Well, young man,
twenty years--why, it is only yesterday!"

"I mean to the time when Caroline Coppin, you know your old friend
Caroline, was married."

"That was twenty years before, and more; when William the Fourth died
and Queen Victoria (then a young thing) came long to reign over us----"
His voice sank, and he continued the rest of his reminiscence to
himself.

"But Caroline Coppin?"

"I'm telling you about Caroline Coppin, only you won't listen."

There was nothing more to be got out of him. His recent conversation
with Bob's spirit had muddled him for the day, and he mixed up Caroline
with her mother or grandmother. He relapsed into silence, and sat with
his long pipe unfilled in his hand, looking into the fireplace; gone
back in imagination to the past. As the old man made no sign of
conversation, but rather of a disposition to "drop off" for a few
minutes, Harry began to look about the room. On the table lay a bundle
of old letters. It was as if the living and the dead had been reading
them together.

Harry took them up and turned them over, wondering what secrets of long
ago were contained in those yellow papers, with their faded ink. The
old man's eyes were closed--he took no heed of his visitor; and Harry
standing at the table began shamelessly to read the letters. They were
mostly the letters of a young sailor addressed to one apparently a good
deal older than himself--for they abounded in such appellations as "my
ancient," "venerable," "old salt," and so forth. But the young man did
not regard his correspondent with the awe which age should inspire, but
rather as a gay and rollicking spirit who would sympathize with the
high-jinks of younger men, even if he no longer shared in them, and who
was an old and still delighted treader of those flowery paths which are
said by moralists to be planted with the frequent pitfall and the crafty
trap. "The old man," thought Harry, "must have been an admirable guide
to youth, and the disciple was apt to learn."

Sometimes the letters were signed "Bob," sometimes "R. Coppin,"
sometimes "R. C." Harry, therefore, surmised that the writer was no
other than his own uncle Bob, whose ghost he had just missed.

Bob was an officer on board of an East Indiaman, but he spoke not of
such commonplace matters as the face of the ocean or the voice of the
tempest. He only wrote from port, and told what things he had seen and
done, what he had consumed in ardent drink. The letters were brief,
which seemed as well, because if literary skill had been present to
dress up effectively the subjects treated, a literary monument might
have been erected, the like of which the world has never seen.

It is, indeed, a most curious and remarkable circumstance that even in
realistic France the true course of the prodigal has never been
faithfully described. Now the great advantage formerly possessed by the
sailor--an advantage cruelly curtailed by the establishment of "homes,"
and the introduction of temperance--was, that he could be and was a
prodigal at the end of every cruise; while the voyage itself was an
agreeable interval provided for recovery, recollection, and
anticipation.

"Bob, Uncle Bob, was a flyer," said Harry. "One should be proud of such
an uncle. With Bob and Bunker and the bankrupt builder, I am indeed
provided."

There seemed nothing in the letters which bore upon the question of his
mother's property, and he was going to put them down again, when he
lighted upon a torn fragment on which he saw in Bob's big handwriting
the name of his cousin Josephus.

"Josephus, my cousin, that he will ... (here a break in the continuity)
... 'nd the safe the bundle ... (another break) ... for a lark. Josephus
is a square-toes. I hate a man who wont' drink. He will ... (another
break) if he looks there. Your health and song, shipmate.--R. C."

He read this fragment two or three times over. What did it mean? Clearly
nothing to himself.

"Josephus is a square-toes." Very likely. The prodigal Bob was not.
Quite the contrary--he was a young man of extremely mercurial
temperament. "Josephus, my cousin, that he will ... 'nd the safe the
bundle." He put down the paper, and without waking the old man he softly
left the room and the place, shutting the door behind him; and then he
forgot immediately the torn letter and its allusion to Josephus. He
thought next that he would go to Bunker and put the question directly to
him. The man might be terrified--might show confusion--might tell lies.
That would matter little; but if he showed his hand too soon Bunker
might be put upon his guard. Well, that mattered little--what Harry
hoped was, rather to get at the truth than to recover his houses.

"I want," he said, finding his uncle at home, and engaged in his office
drawing up bills--"I want a few words of serious talk with you, my
uncle."

"I am busy; go away--I never want to talk to you. I hate the very sight
of your face."

He looked indeed as if he did--if a flushing cheek and an angry glare of
the eyes are any sign.

"I am not going away until you have answered my questions. As to your
hatred or your affection, that does not concern me at all. Now will you
listen, or shall I wait?"

"To get rid of you the sooner," growled Bunker, "I will listen now. If I
was twenty years younger I'd kick you out."

"If you were twenty years younger, there might, it is true, be a fight.
Now then?"

"Well, get along--my time is valuable."

"I have several times asked you what you got for me when you sold me.
You have on those occasions allowed yourself to fall into a rage, which
is really dangerous in so stout a man. I am not going to ask you that
question any more."

Mr. Bunker looked relieved.

"Because, you see, I know now what you got."

Mr. Bunker turned very pale.

"What do you know?"

"I know exactly what you got when I was taken away."

Mr. Bunker said nothing; yet there was in his eyes a look as if a
critical moment long expected had at last arrived, and he waited.

"When my mother died and you became my guardian, I was not left
penniless."

"It's a lie--you were."

"If I had been, you would have handed me over to your brother-in-law,
Coppin, the builder; but I had property."

"You had nothing."

"I had three houses--one of those houses is, I believe, that which has
been rented from you, by Miss Kennedy. I do not know yet where the other
two are; but I shall find out."

"You are on a wrong tack," said his uncle; "now I know why you wouldn't
go away. You came here to ferret and fish, did you? You thought you were
entitled to property, did you? Ho!--you're a nice sort o' chap to have
house property, ain't you? Ha! ho!" But his laughter was not mirthful.

"Let me point out," Harry went gravely on, "what it is you have done.
The child whom you kept for a year or two was heir to a small estate,
bringing in, I suppose, about eighty or a hundred pounds a year. We will
say that you were entitled to keep that money in return for his support;
but when that child was carried away and adopted you said nothing about
the property. You kept it for yourself, and you have received the rents
year after year, as if the house belonged to you. Shall I go on, and
tell you what judges and lawyers and police people call this sort of
conduct?"

"Where's your proofs?" asked the other--his face betraying his emotion.
"Where's your proofs?"

"I have none yet--I am going to search for those proofs."

"You can't find them--there are none. Now, young man, you have had your
say, and you can go. Do you hear? You can go."

"You deny, then, that the houses were mine?"

"If you'd come to me meek and lowly--as is your humble station in
life--I would ha' told you the history of those houses. Yes, your mother
had them, same as her brothers and her sister. Where are they now? I've
got 'em all--I've got 'em all. How did I get 'em? By lawful and
honorable purchase--I bought 'em. Do you want proofs? You shan't have
any proofs. If you'd behaved humble you should ha' seen those proofs.
Now you may go away and do your worst. Do you hear? You may do your
worst."

He shook his fist in Harry's face. His words were brave, but his voice
was shaky and his lips were trembling.

"I don't believe you," said Harry. "I am certain that you did not buy my
houses. There was no one left to care for my interests, and you took
those houses."

"This is the reward," said Bunker, "for nussin' of this child for nigh
upon three years. Who would take an orphan into his bosom? But it was
right, and I'd do it again. Yes. I'd do it again."

"I don't doubt you," the ungrateful nephew replied, "especially if that
other orphan had three substantial houses, and there was nobody but
yourself to look after him."

"As for your proofs, go and look for them. When you've found 'em, bring
'em to me--you and your proofs."

Harry laughed.

"I shall find them," he said; "but I don't know where or when. Meantime
you will go on as you do now--thinking continually that they may be
found. You won't be able to sleep at night--you will dream of police
courts. You will let your thoughts run on handcuffs--you will take to
drink. You will have no pleasure in your life. You will hasten your end;
you will----" Here he desisted; for his uncle (dropping into his chair)
looked as if he was about to swoon.

"Remember, I shall find these proofs some day. A hundred a year, for
twenty years, is two thousand pounds. That's a large sum to hand over;
and then, there is the interest. Upon my word, my uncle, you will have
to begin the world again."




CHAPTER XXXIII.

MR. BUNKER'S LETTER.


Two days after this Angela received a wonderful letter. It was addressed
to Miss Messenger, and was signed Benjamin Bunker. It ran as follows:


     "HONORED MISS: As an old and humble friend of your late lamented
     grandfather, whose loss I can never recover from, nor has it yet
     been made up to me in any way"--Angela laughed--"I venture to
     address the following lines in secrecy and confidence, knowing that
     what ought not to be concealed should be told in the proper
     quarter, which is you, miss, and none other.

     "Everybody in these parts knows me; everybody knows Bunker, your
     grandfather's right-hand man; wherefore what I write is with no
     other design than to warn you and to put you on your guard against
     the deceitful, and such as would abuse your confidingness, being
     but young--ay, yes, and therefore ignorant of dodges, and easy to
     come round.

     "You have been come round, and that in such a shameful way that I
     cannot bear myself any longer, and must take the liberty of telling
     you so, being an old and confidential adviser. Your grandfather
     used to say that even the brewery wouldn't be where it is now if it
     hadn't been for me, not to speak of the house property, which is
     now a profitable investment, with rents regular and respectable
     tenants, whereas before I took it in hand the houses were out of
     repair, the rents backward, and the tenants too often such as would
     bring discredit on any estate. I therefore beg to warn you against
     two persons--young, I am sorry to say, which makes it worse,
     because it is only the old who should be thus depraved--whom you
     have benefited and they are unworthy of it.

     "One of them is a certain Miss Kennedy, a dressmaker, at least she
     says so. The other is--I write this with a blush of indignant
     shame--my own nephew, whose name is Harry Goslett."


"Bunker!" murmured Angela. "Is this fair to your own tenant and your own
nephew?"


     "As regards my nephew, you have never inquired about him, and it
     was out of your kindness and a desire to mark your sense of me,
     that you gave him a berth in the brewery. That young man, miss, who
     calls himself a cabinet-maker and doesn't seem to know that a
     joiner is one thing and a cabinet-maker another, now does the
     joinery for the brewery, and makes, I am told, as much as two
     pounds a week, being a handy chap. If you asked me first, I should
     have told you that he is a lazy, indolent, free and easy,
     disrespectful, dangerous young man. He has been no one knows where;
     no one knows where he has worked, except that he talks about
     America; he looks like a betting man; I believe he drinks of a
     night; he has been living like a gentleman, doing no work, and I
     believe, though up to the present I haven't found out for certain,
     that he has been in trouble and knows what is a convict's feelings
     when the key is turned. Because he is such a disgrace to the
     family, for his mother was a Coppin and came of a respectable
     Whitechapel stock, though not equal to the Bunkers or the
     Messengers, I went to him and offered him five-and-twenty pounds
     out of my slender stock to go away and never come back any more to
     disgrace us. Five-and-twenty pounds I would have given to save
     Messenger's brewery from such a villain."


"Bunker, Bunker!" murmured Angela again.


     "But he wouldn't take the money. You thought to do me a good turn
     and you done yourself a bad one. I don't know what mischief he has
     already done in the brewery, and perhaps he is watched; if so it
     may not yet be too late. Send him about his business. Make him go.
     You can then consider some other way of making it up to me for all
     that work for your grandfather whereof you now sweetly reap the
     benefit.

     "The other case, miss, is that of the young woman, Kennedy by name,
     the dressmaker."


"What of her, Bunker?" asked Angela.


     "I hear that you are givin' her your custom, not knowing, maybe,
     the kind of woman she is nor the mischief she's about. She's got a
     house of mine on false pretences."


"Really, Bunker," said Angela, "you are too bad."


     "Otherwise I wouldn't let her have it, and at the end of the year
     out she goes. She has persuaded a lot of foolish girls, once
     contented with their lowly lot and thankful for their wages and
     their work, nor inclined to grumble when hours were long and work
     had to be done. She has promised them the profits, and meantime she
     feeds them up so that their eyes swell out with fatness. She gives
     them short hours, and sends them out into the garden to play games.
     Games, if you please, and short hours for such as them. In the
     evening it's worse, for then they play and sing and dance, having
     young men to caper about with them, and you can hear them half a
     mile up the Mile End Road, so that it is a scandal to Stepney
     Green, once respectable, and the police will probably interfere.
     Where she came from, who she was, how she got her money, we don't
     know. Some say one thing, some say another; whatever they say it's
     a bad way. The worst is that when she smashes, as she must, because
     no ladies who respect virtue and humble-mindedness with contentment
     will employ her, that the other dressmakers and shops will have
     nothing to do with her girls, so that what will happen to them no
     one can tell.

     "I thought it right, miss, to give you this information, because it
     is certain that if you withdraw your support from these two
     undeserving people, they must go away, which as a respectable
     Stepney man, I unite in wishing may happen before long, when the
     girls shall go on again as before and leave off dancing and
     singing to the rich, and be humble and contented with the trust to
     which they were born.

     "And as regards the kindness you were meditating toward me, miss, I
     think that I may say that none of my nephews--one of whom is a
     Radical, and another a captain in the Salvation Army--deserves to
     receive any benefits at your hands, the least of all that villain
     who works in the brewery. Wherefore, it may take the form of
     something for myself. And it is not for me to tell you, miss, how
     much that something ought to be for a man in years, of respectable
     station, and once the confidential friend of your grandfather, and
     prevented thereby from saving as much as he had otherwise a right
     to expect.

     "I remain, miss, your humble servant,

     "BENJAMIN BUNKER."


"This," said Angela, "is a very impudent letter. How shall we bring him
to book for it?"

When she learned, as she speedily did, the great mystery about the
houses and the Coppin property, she began to understand the letter, the
contents of which she kept to herself for the present. This was perhaps
wise, for the theory implied rather than stated in the letter, that both
should be ordered to go, for if one only was turned out of work both
would stay. This theory made her smile and blush, and pleased her,
insomuch that she was not so angry as she might otherwise have been, and
should have been, with the crafty double-dealer who wrote the letter.

It happened that Mr. Bunker had business on Stepney Green that morning,
while Angela was reading the letter. She saw him from the window, and
could not resist the temptation of inviting him to step in. He came, not
in the least abashed, and with no tell-tale signal of confusion in his
rosy cheeks.

"Come in, Mr. Bunker," said Angela. "Come in; I want five minutes' talk
with you. This way, please, where we can be alone."

She led him into the refectory, because Daniel Fagg was in the drawing
room.

"I have been thinking, Mr. Bunker," she said, "how very, very fortunate
I was to fall into such hands as yours, when I came to Stepney."

"You were, miss, you were. That was a fall, as one may say, which meant
a rise."

"I am sure it did, Mr. Bunker. You do not often come to see us, but I
hope you approve of our plans."

"As for that," he replied, "it isn't my business. People come to me and
I put them in the way. How they run in the way is not my business to
inquire. As for you and your girls, now, if you make the concern go, you
may thank me for it. If you don't, why, it isn't my fault."

"Very well put, indeed, Mr. Bunker. In six months the first year, for
which I paid the rent, will come to an end."

"It will."

"We shall then have to consider a fresh agreement. I was thinking, Mr.
Bunker, that, seeing how good a man you are, and how generous, you would
like to make your rent, like the wages of the girls, depend upon the
profits of the business."

"What?" he asked.

Angela repeated her proposition.

He rose, buttoned his coat, and put on his hat.

"Rent depend on profits? Is the girl mad? Rent comes first and before
anything else. Rent is even before taxes; and as for rates--but you're
mad. My rent depend on profits! Rent, miss, is sacred. Remember that."

"Oh!" said Angela.

"And what is more," he added, "people who don't pay up get sold up. It's
a Christian duty to sell 'em up. I couldn't let off my own nephews."

"As for one of them, you would like to sell him up, would you not, Mr.
Bunker?"

"I would," he replied truthfully. "I should like to see him out of the
place. You know what I told you when you came. Have nothing to do, I
said, with that chap. Keep him at arm's length, for he is a bad lot. Now
you see what he has brought you to. Singin', dancin', playin', laughin',
every night; respectable ladies driven away from your shop; many
actually kept out of the place; expenses doubled; all through him.
What's more--bankruptcy ahead! Don't I know that not a lady in Stepney
or Mile End comes here? Don't I know that you depend upon your West End
connection? When that goes, where are you? And all for the sake of that
pink and white chap! Well, when one goes, the other'll go too, I
suppose. Rent out of profits, indeed! No, no, Miss; it'll do you good to
learn a little business, even if you do get sold up."

"Thank you, Mr. Bunker. Do you know, I do not think you will ever have
the pleasure of selling me up?"

She laughed so merrily that he felt he hated her quite as much as he
hated his nephew. Why, six months before, no one laughed in Stepney at
all; and to think that any one should laugh at him, would have been an
impossible dream.

"You laugh," he said gravely, "and yet you are on the brink of ruin.
Where's your character? Wrapped up with the character of that young man.
Where's your business! Drove away--by him. You laugh. Ah! I'm sorry for
you, miss, because I thought at one time you were a plain-spoken, honest
sort of young woman; if I'd ha' known that you meant to use my
house--mine, the friend of all the respectable tradesmen--for such
wicked fads as now disgrace it, I'd never ha' taken you for a tenant."

"Oh yes, you would, Mr. Bunker." She laughed again, but not merrily this
time. "Oh yes--you would. You forget the fittings and the furniture, the
rent paid in advance, and the half-crown an hour for advice. Is there
anything, I should like to know, that you would not do for half a crown
an hour?"

He made no reply.

"Why, again, do you hate your nephew? What injury have you done him that
you should bear him such ill will?"

This, which was not altogether a shot in the dark, went straight to Mr.
Bunker's heart. He said nothing, but put on his hat and rushed out.
Clearly these two, between them, would drive him mad.




CHAPTER XXXIV.

PROOFS IN PRINT.


"It is quite finished now," said Daniel Fagg, blotting the last page.

When he began to live with the dressmakers, Angela, desiring to find him
some employment, had suggested that he should rewrite the whole of his
book, and redraw the illustrations. It was not a large book, even though
it was stuffed and padded with readings of inscriptions and tablets. An
ordinary writer would have made a fair copy in a fortnight. But so
careful an author as Daniel, so anxious to present his work perfect and
unassailable, and so slow in the mere mechanical art of writing, wanted
much more than a fortnight. His handwriting, like his Hebrew, had been
acquired comparatively late in life; it was therefore rather ponderous,
and he had never learned the art of writing half a word and leaving the
other half to be guessed. Then there were the Hebrew words, which took a
great deal of time to get right; and the equilateral triangles, which
also caused a considerable amount of trouble. So that it was a good six
weeks before Daniel was ready with a fair copy of his manuscript. He was
almost as happy in making this transcript as he had been with the
original document; perhaps more so, because he was now able to consider
his great discovery as a whole, to regard it as an architect may regard
his finished work, and to touch up, ornament, and improve his
translations.

"It is quite complete," he repeated, laying the last page in its place
and tapping the roll affectionately. "Here you will find the full
account of the two tables of stone and a translation of their contents,
with notes. What will they say to that, I wonder?"

"But how," asked Angela--"how did the tables of stone get to the British
Museum?"

Mr. Fagg considered his reply for a while.

"There are two ways," he said, "and I don't know which is the right one.
For either they were brought here when we, the descendants of Ephraim,
as everybody knows, landed in England, or else they were brought here by
Phoenician traders after the Captivity. However, there they are, as
anybody may see with the help of my discovery. As for the scholars, how
can they see anything? Wilful ignorance, miss, is their sin: pride and
wilful ignorance. You're ignorant because you are a woman, and it is
your nature too. But not to love darkness!"

"No, Mr. Fagg. I lament my ignorance."

"Then there's the story of David and Jonathan, and the history of
Jezebel and her great wickedness, and the life and death of King
Jehoshaphat, and a great deal more. Now read for the first time from the
arrow-headed character--so called--by Daniel Fagg, self-taught scholar,
once shoemaker in the colony of Victoria, discoverer of the Primitive
Alphabet and the Universal Language."

"That is, indeed, a glorious thing to be able to say, Mr. Fagg."

"But now it is written, what next?"

"You mean how can you get it printed?"

"Of course--that's what I mean," he replied almost angrily. "There's the
book and no one will look at it. Haven't I tried all the publishers?
What else should I mean?"

The old disappointment, kept under and forgotten during the excitement
of re-writing the book, was making itself felt again. How much further
forward was he--the work had been finished long before. All he had done
the last six weeks was to write it afresh.

"I've only been wasting my time here," he said querulously. "I ought to
have been up and about. I might have gone to Oxford, where, I am told,
there are young men who would, perhaps, give me a hearing. Or, there's
Cambridge--where they have never heard of my discovery. You've made me
waste six weeks and more."

Angela forbore to ask him how he would have lived during those six
weeks. She replied softly: "Nay, Mr. Fagg; not wasted the time. You were
overworked; you wanted rest. Besides, I think, we may find a plan to get
this book published."

"What plan--how?"

"If you would trust the manuscript to my hands. Yes, I know well how
precious it is, and what a dreadful thing it would be to lose it. But
you have a copy, and you can keep that while I take the other."

"Where are you going to take it?"

"I don't know yet--to one of the publishers, I suppose."

He groaned.

"I have been to every one of them--not a publisher in London but has had
the offer of my book. They won't have it, any of them. Oh, it's their
loss--I know that. But what is it to me?"

"Will you let me try--will you trust me with the manuscript?"

He reluctantly and jealously allowed her to take away the precious
document. When it was out of his hands he tried to amuse himself with
the first copy, but found no pleasure in it at all; because he thought
continually of the scorn which had been hurled upon him and his
discovery. He saw the heads of departments, one after the other,
receiving him politely and listening to what he had to say. He saw them
turning impatient--interrupting him, declining to hear any
more--referring him to certain books in which he would find a refutation
of his theories; and finally refusing even to see him.

Never was discoverer treated with such contempt--even the attendants at
the Museum took their cue from the chiefs, and received his advances
with scorn. Should they waste their time--the illiterate--in listening
unprofitably to one whom the learned Dr. Birch and the profound Mr.
Newton had sent away in contempt? Better sit in the spacious halls,
bearing the wand of office and allowing the eyelids to fall gently, and
the mind to wander away among pleasant pastures, where there was drink
with tobacco. Then there were the people who had subscribed. Some of
them were gentlemen connected with Australia. They had tossed him the
twelve-and-sixpence in the middle of his talk, as if to get rid of him.
Some of them had subscribed in pity for his poverty--some persuaded by
his importunity. There was not one among them all (he reflected with
humiliation) who subscribed because he believed. Stay--there was this
ignorant dressmaker. One convert out of all to whom he had explained his
discovery; one, only one.

There have been many religious enthusiasts--prophets, preachers, holders
of strange doctrines--who have converted women so that they believed
them inspired of heaven. Yet these men made other converts; whereas he
(Fagg) had but this one, and she was not in love with him, because he
was old now and no longer comely. This was a grand outcome of that
Australian enthusiasm!

That day Mr. Fagg was disagreeable, considered as a companion. He found
fault with the dinner, which was excellent, as usual. He complained that
the beer was thick and flat; whereas it sparkled like champagne, and was
as clear as a bell. He was cross in the afternoon, and wanted to prevent
the child who sat in the drawing-room from practising her music; and he
went out for his walk in a dark and gloomy mood.

Angela let him have his querulous way unrebuked, because she knew the
cause of it. He was suffering from that dreadful, hopeless anger which
falls upon the unappreciated. He was like some poet, who brings out
volume after volume, yet meets with no admirers, and remains obscure. He
was like some novelist who has produced a masterpiece--which nobody will
read--or like some actor (the foremost of his age) who depletes the
house; or like a dramatist, from whose acted works the public fly; or
like a man who invents something which is to revolutionize things. Only
people prefer their old way!

Good heavens! Is it impossible to move this vast inert mass called the
world? Why, there are men who can move it at their will--even by a touch
of their little finger--and the unappreciated with all their efforts
cannot make the slightest impression. This, from time to time, makes
them go mad! and at such periods they are unpleasant persons to meet.
They growl at their clubs, they quarrel with their blood relations--they
snarl at their wives, they grumble at their servants!

Daniel was having such a fit.

It lasted two whole days, and on the second Rebekah took upon herself
to lead him aside and reprove him for the sin of ingratitude--because it
was very well known to all that the man would have gone to the workhouse
but for Miss Kennedy's timely help.

She asked him sternly what he had done to merit that daily bread which
was given him without a murmur? And what excuse he could make for his
bad temper and his rudeness toward the woman who had done so much for
him?

He had no excuse to make--because Rebekah would not have understood the
true one--wherefore she bade him repent and reform, or he would hear
more from her. This threat frightened him, though it could not remove
his irritation and depression; but, on the third day, sunshine and good
cheer and hope, new hope and enthusiasm, returned to him. For Miss
Kennedy announced to him with many smiles that a publisher had accepted
his manuscript; and that it had already been sent to the printers.

"He will publish it for you," she said, "at no cost to yourself. He will
give you as many copies as you wish to have for presentation among your
friends and among your subscribers. You will like to send copies to your
subscribers, will you not?"

He rubbed his hands and laughed aloud.

"That," he said, "will prove that I did not eat up the subscriptions."

"Of course,"--Angela smiled, but did not contradict the proposition--"of
course, Mr. Fagg. And if ever there was any doubt in your own mind about
that money it is now removed, because the book will be in their hands;
and all they wanted was the book."

"Yes, yes; and no one will be able to say--you know what. Will they?"

"No, no; you will have proofs sent you."

"Proofs," he murmured, "proofs in print!--will they send me proofs
soon?"

"I believe you will have the whole book set up in a few weeks."

"Oh, the whole book! My book set up in print?"

"Yes. And if I were you, I would send an announcement of the work by the
next mail to your Australian friends. Say that your discovery has at
length assumed its final shape, and is now ripe for publication, after
being laid before all the learned societies of London; and that it has
been accepted by Messrs. ----, the well-known publishers, and will be
issued almost as soon as this announcement reaches Melbourne. Here is a
slip that I have prepared for you."

He took it with glittering, eyes and stammering voice. The news seemed
too good to be true.

"Now, Mr. Fagg, that this has been settled, there is another thing which
I should like to propose for your consideration. Did you ever hear of
that great Roman who saved his country in a time of peril, and then went
back to the plough?"

Daniel shook his head.

"Is there any Hebrew inscription about him?" he asked.

"Not that I know of. What I mean is this: When your volume is sent, Mr.
Fagg--when you have sent it triumphantly to all the learned societies
and all your subscribers, and all the papers and everywhere (including
your Australian friends), because the publisher will let you have as
many copies as you please--would it not be a graceful thing, and a thing
for future historians to remember, that you left England at the moment
of your greatest fame, and went back to Australia to take up--your old
occupation?"

Daniel never had considered the thing in this light, and showed no
enthusiasm at the proposal.

"When your friends in Victoria prophesied fortune and fame, Mr. Fagg,
they spoke out of their hopes and their pride in you. Of course, I do
not know much about these things. How should I? Yet I am quite certain
that it takes a long time for a learned discovery to make its way. There
are jealousies--you have experienced them--and unwillingness to admit
new things. You have met with that, too; and reluctance to unlearn old
things. Why, you have met with that as well."

"I have," he said, "I have."

"As for granting a pension to a scholar--or a title, or anything of that
sort--it is really never done. So that you would have to make your own
living if you remained here."

"I thought that when the book was published people would buy it."

Angela shook her head.

"Oh, no! That is not the kind of book which is bought--very few people
know anything about inscriptions. Those who do will go to the British
Museum and read it there--one copy will do for all."

Daniel looked perplexed.

"You do not go back empty-handed," she said. "You will have a fine story
to tell of how the great scholars laughed at your discovery, and how you
got about and told people, and they subscribed, and your book was
published, and how you sent it to all of them--to show the mistake they
had made--and how the English people have got the book now, to confound
the scholars; and how your mission is accomplished, and you are at home
again--to live and die among your own people. It will be a glorious
return, Mr. Fagg. I envy you the landing at Melbourne--your book under
your arm. You will go back to your old township--you will give a lecture
in the schoolroom on your stay in England, and your reception. And then
you will take your old place again and follow your old calling, exactly
the same as if you had never left it, but for the honor and reverence
which people will pay you!"

Daniel cooed like a dove.

"It may be," the siren went on, "that people will pay pilgrimages to see
you in your old age. They will come to see the man who discovered the
Primitive Alphabet and the Universal Language. They will say: 'This in
Daniel Fagg--the great Daniel Fagg, whose unaided intellect overset and
brought to confusion all the scholars, and showed their learning was but
vain pretence; who proved the truth of the Scriptures by his reading of
tablets and inscriptions; and who returned when he had finished his
task, with the modesty of a great mind, to his simple calling.'"

"I will go," said Daniel, banging the table with his fist; "I will go as
soon as the book is ready."




CHAPTER XXXV.

THEN WE'LL KEEP COMPANY.


After the celebrated debate on the abolition of the Lords, Dick Coppin
found that he took for the moment a greatly diminished interest in
burning political questions. He lost, in fact, confidence in himself,
and went about with hanging head. The Sunday evening meetings were held
as usual, but the fiery voice of Dick the Radical was silent, and people
wondered. This was the effect of his cousin's address upon him. As for
the people, it had made them laugh, just as Dick's had made them angry.
They came to the Hall to get these little emotions, and not for any
personal or critical interest in the matter discussed; and this was
about all the effect produced by them.

One evening the old Chartist who had taken the chair met Dick at the
club.

"Come out," he said, "come out and have a crack while the boys wrangle."

They walked from Redman's Lane, where the club stands, to the quiet side
pavement of Stepney Green, deserted now because the respectable people
were all in church, and it was too cold for the lounging of the more
numerous class of those who cannot call themselves respectable. The
ex-Chartist belonged, like Daniel Fagg, to the shoemaking trade in its
humbler lines. The connection between leather and Socialism, Chartism,
Radicalism, Atheism, and other things detrimental to old institutions,
has frequently been pointed out, and need not be repeated. It is a
reflecting trade, and the results of meditation are mainly influenced by
the amount of knowledge the meditation brings with it. In this respect
the Chartist of thirty years ago had a great advantage over his
successors of the present day, for he had read. He knew the works of
Owen, of Holyoke, and of Cobbett. He understood something of what he
wanted, and why he wanted it. The proof of which is that they have got
all they wanted, and we still survive.

When next the people make up their minds that they want another set of
things they will probably get them, too.

"Let us talk," he said. "I've been thinking a bit about that chap's
speech the other night--I wanted an answer to it."

"Have you got one?"

"It's all true what he said--first of all, it's true. The pinch is just
the same. Whether the Liberals are in or the Tories, Government don't
help us. Why should we help them?"

"Is that all your answer?"

"Wait a bit, lad--don't hurry a man. The chap was right. We ought to
co-operate and get all he said, and a deal more; and once we do begin,
mind you, there'll be astonishment--because you see, Dick, my lad,
there's work before us. But we must be educated; we must all be got to
see what we can do if we like. That chap's clever now, though he looks
like a swell."

"He's got plenty in him. But he'll never be one of us."

"If we can use him, what matter whether he is one of us or not? Come to
that--who is 'us'? You don't pretend before me that you call yourself
one of the common workmen, do you? That does for the club; but, between
ourselves, why, man! you and me, we're leaders. We've got to think for
'em. What I think is--make that chap draw up a plan, if he can, for
getting the people to work together--for we've got all the power at
last, Dick. We've got all the power. Don't forget when we old 'uns are
dead and gone, who done it for you."

He was silent for a moment. Then he went on:

"We've got what we wanted--that's true; and we seem to be no better
off--that's true, too. But we are better off, because we feel that every
man has his share in the rule of the nation. That's a grand thing. We
are not kept out of our vote--we don't see, as we used to see, our money
spent for us without having a say. That's a very grand thing, which he
doesn't understand, nor you neither, because you are too young.
Everything we get, which makes us feel our power more, is good for us.
The chap was right; but he was wrong as well. Don't give up politics,
lad."

"What's the good if nothing comes?"

"There's a chance now for the working-man, such as he has never had
before in history. You are the lad to take that chance. I've watched
you, Dick, since you first began to come to the club--there's life in
you. Lord! I watch the young fellows one after the other. They stamp and
froth, but it comes to nothing. You're different--you want to be
something better than a bellows; though your speech the other night came
pretty nigh to the bellows kind."

"Well, what is the chance?"

"The House, Dick. The working-men will send you there, if you can show
them that you've got something in you. It isn't froth they want--it's a
practical man, with knowledge. You go on reading, go on speaking, go on
debating. Keep it up. Get your name known; don't demean yourself. Get
reported; and learn all that there is to learn. Once in the House, Dick,
if you are not afraid----"

"I shall not be afraid."

"Humph! Well, we shall see. Well, there's your chance. A working-man's
candidate--one of ourselves. That's a card for you to play; but not so
ignorant as your mates. Eh? Able (if you want) to use the swell's
sneerin' talk--so's to call a man a liar, without sayin' the words. To
make him feel like a fool and a whipped cur, with just showing your
white teeth! Learn them ways, Dick--they'll be useful."

"But if," said the young man doubtfully, "if I am to keep on debating,
what subjects shall we take up at the club?"

"I should go in for practical subjects. Say that the club is ready to
vote for the abolition of the Lords and the Church, and reform of the
land laws when the time comes. You haven't got the choice of subjects
that we had. Lord! what with rotten boroughs and the black Book of
Pensions, and younger sons, and favoritism in the service, why, our
hands were full."

"What practical subjects?"

"Why, them as your cousin talked about. There's the wages of the
girls--there's food and fish and drink. There's high rent--there's a
world of subjects. You go, and find out all about them. Give up the rest
for a spell, and make yourself master of all these questions. If you do,
Dick, I believe your fortune is made."

Dick looked doubtful--it seemed disheartening to be sent back to the
paltry matter of wages, prices, and so on, when he was burning to lead
in something great. Yet the advice was sound.

"Sometimes I think, Dick," the old man went on, "that the working-man's
best friend would be the swells, if they could be got hold of. They've
got nothing to make out of the artisan. They don't run factories, nor
keep shops. They don't care, bless you, how high his wages are. Why
should they? They've got their farmers to pay the rent; and their
houses, and their money in the funds. What does it matter to them?
They're well brought up, most of them--civil in their manner, and
disposed to be friendly if you're neither standoffish nor familiar; but
know yourself, and talk accordin'."

"If the swells were to come to us, we ought to go to them--remember
that, Dick. Very soon there will be no more questions of Tory and
Liberal; but only what is the best thing for us. You play your game by
the newest rules. As for the old ones, they've seen their day."

Dick left him; but he did not return to the club. He communed beneath
the stars, turning over these and other matters in his mind.

"Yes, the old man was right. The old indignation times were over. The
long list of crimes which the political agitator could bring against
King, Church, Lords, and Commons thirty, forty, fifty years ago, are
useless now. They only serve to amuse an audience not too critical."

He was ashamed of what he had himself said about the Lords. Such charges
are like the oratory of an ex-minister on the stump--finding no
accusation too reckless to be hurled against his enemies.

He was profoundly ambitious. To some men, situated like himself, it
might have been a legitimate and sufficient ambition to recover by slow
degrees and thrift, and in some trading way, the place in the middle
class from which the Coppins had fallen. Not so to Dick Coppin--he
cared very little about the former greatness of the Coppins, and the
position once occupied by Coppin the builder (his father), before he
went bankrupt. He meant secretly something very much greater for
himself. He would be a member of Parliament--he would be a working-man's
member. There have already been half a dozen working-men's members in
the House. Their success has not hitherto been marked, probably because
none of them have shown that they know what they want--if, indeed, they
want anything. Up to the last few days Dick simply desired in the
abstract to be one of them; only, of course, a red-hot Radical--an
Irreconcilable.

Now, however, he desired more. His cousin's words and the Chartist's
words fell on fruitful soil. He perceived that to become a power in the
House one must be able to inform the House on the wants--the programme
of his constituents--what they desire, and mean to have. Dick always
mentally added that clause, because it belongs to the class of speech in
which he had been brought up--"and we mean to have it." You accompany
the words with a flourish of the left hand, which is found to be more
effective than the right for such purposes. They don't really mean to
have it, whatever it may be. But with their audiences it is necessary to
put on the appearance of strength before there arises any confidence in
strength. Disestablishers of all kinds invariably mean to have it, and
the phrase is, perhaps, getting played out.

Dick went home to his lodgings and sat among his books, thinking. He was
a man who read. For the sake of being independent, he became a
teetotaler--so that, getting good wages, he was rich. He would not
marry, because he did not want to be encumbered. He bought such books as
he thought would be useful to him, and read them, but no others. He was
a man of energy and tenacity, whose chief fault was the entire absence
as yet of sympathy and imagination--if these could be supplied in any
way, Dick Coppin's course would be assured. For with them would come
play of fancy, repartee, wit, illustration, and the graces as well as
the strength of oratory.

He went on Monday evening to see Miss Kennedy. He would find out from
her, as a beginning, all that she could tell him about the wages of
women.

"But I have told you," she said, "I told you all the first night you
came here--have you forgotten? Then, I suppose, I must tell you again."

The first time he was only bored with the story, because he did not see
how he could use it for his own purposes--therefore he had forgotten the
details.

She told him the sad story of woman's wrongs, which go unredressed while
their sisters clamor for female suffrage and make school boards
intolerable by their squabbles. The women do but copy the men;
therefore, while the men neglect the things that lie ready to their hand
and hope for things impossible, under new forms of government, what
wonder if the women do the like?

This time Dick listened, because he now understood that a practical use
might be made out of the information. He was not a man of highly
sensitive organization, nor did he feel any indignation at the things
Angela told him, seeing that he had grown up among these things all his
life, and regarded the inequalities of wages and work as part of the bad
luck of being born a woman. But he took note of all, and asked shrewd
questions and made suggestions.

"If," he said, "there's a hundred women asking for ten places, of course
the governor'll give them to the cheapest."

"That," replied Angela, "is a matter of course as things now are. But
there is another way of considering the question. If we had a Woman's
Trade Union, as we shall have before long, where there are ten places
only ten women should be allowed to apply, and just wages be demanded."

"How is that to be done?"

"My friend, you have yet a great deal to learn."

Dick reddened and replied rudely, that if he had, he did not expect to
learn it from a woman.

"A great deal to learn," she repeated gently. "Above all, you have got
to learn the lesson which your cousin began to teach you the other
night, the great lesson of finding out what you want and then getting it
for yourselves. Governments are nothing; you must help yourselves; you
must combine."

He was silent. The girl made him angry, yet he was afraid of her because
no other woman he had ever met spoke as she did or knew so much.

"Combine," she repeated. "Preach the doctrine of combination; and teach
us the purposes for which we ought to combine."

The advice was just what the cobbler had given.

"Oh, Mr. Coppin"--her voice was as winning as her eyes were kind and
full of interest--"you are clever; you are persevering; you are brave;
you have so splendid a voice; you have such a natural gift of oratory,
that you ought to become--you must become--one of the leaders of the
people."

Pride fell prone, like Dagon--before these words. Dick succumbed to the
gracious influence of a charming woman.

"Tell me," he said, reddening, because it is humiliating to seek help of
a girl, "tell me what I am to do."

"You are ambitious, are you not?"

"Yes," he replied coldly, "I am ambitious. I don't tell them outside,"
he jerked his thumb over his shoulder to indicate the Advanced Club,
"but I mean to get into the 'Ouse--I mean the House." One of his little
troubles was the correction of certain peculiarities of speech common
among his class. It was his cousin who first directed his attention to
this point.

"Yes: there is no reason why you should not get into the House," said
Angela. "But it would be a thousand pities if you should get in yet."

"Why should I wait, if they will elect me?"

"Because, Mr. Coppin, you must not try to lead the people till you know
whither you would lead them: because you must not pretend to represent
the people till you have learned their condition and their wants;
because you must not presume to offer yourself till you are prepared
with a programme."

"Yet plenty of others do."

"They do; but what else have they done?"

"Only tell me--then--tell me what to do. Am I to read?"

"No; you have read enough for the present. Rest your eyes from books;
open them to the world; see things as they are. Look out of this window.
What do you see?"

"Nothing; a row of houses; a street; a road."

"I see, besides, that the houses are mean, dirty, and void of beauty:
but I see more. I see an organ player; on the curbstone the little girls
are dancing; in the road the ragged boys are playing. Look at the
freedom of the girls' limbs; look at the careless grace of the children.
Do you know how clever they are? Some of them, who sleep where they can
and live as they can, can pick pockets at three, go shop-lifting at
four, plot and make conspiracies at five; see how they run and jump and
climb."

"I see them. They are everywhere. How can we help that?"

"You would leave these poor children to the Government and the police.
Yet I think a better way to redeem these little ones is for the
working-men to resolve together that they shall be taken care of,
taught, and apprenticed. Spelling, which your cousin says constitutes
most of the School Board education, does not so much matter. Take them
off the streets and train them to a trade. Do you ever walk about the
streets at night? Be your own police and make your streets clean. Do you
ever go into the courts and places where the dock laborers sleep? Have a
committee for every one such street or court, and make them decent. When
a gang of roughs make the pavement intolerable, you decent men step off
and leave them to the policeman, if he dares interfere. Put down the
roughs yourselves with a strong hand. Clear out the thieves' dens, and
the drinking shops; make roughs and vagabonds go elsewhere. I am always
about among the people; they are full of sufferings which need not be;
there are a great many workers--ladies, priests, clergymen--among them
trying to remove some of the suffering. But why do you not do this for
yourselves? Be your own almoners. I find everywhere, too, courage and
honesty, and a desire for better things. Show them how their lot may be
alleviated."

"But I don't know how," he replied, humbly.

"You must find out, if you would be their leader. And you must have
sympathy. Never was there yet a leader of the people who did not feel
with them as they feel."

This saying was too hard for the young man, who had, he knew, felt
hitherto only for himself.

"You say what Harry says. I sometimes think----" he stopped short, as if
an idea had suddenly occurred to him. "Look here, is it true that you
and Harry are keeping company?"

"No, we are not," Angela replied with a blush.

"Oh! I thought you were. Is it off, then?"

"It never was--more--on--than it is at present, Mr. Coppin."

"Oh!" he looked doubtful. "Well," he said, "I suppose there is no reason
why a girl should tell a lie about such a simple thing." He certainly
was a remarkably rude young man. "Either you are, or you ain't. That's
it, isn't it? And you ain't?"

"We are not," said Angela, with a little blush, for the facts of the
case were, from one point of view, against her.

"Then if you are not--I don't care--though it's against my rules, and I
did say I would never be bothered with a woman.... Look here--you and me
will."

"Will what?"

"Will keep company," he replied firmly. "Oh! I know it's a great chance
for you--but then, you see, you ain't like the rest of 'em, and you know
things, somehow, that may be useful--though how you learned 'em, nor
where you came from, nor what's your character--there--I don't care,
we'll keep company!"

"Oh!"

"Yes; we'll begin next Sunday. You'll be useful to me, so that the
bargain is not all one side." It was not till afterward that Angela felt
the full force of this remark. "As for getting married, there's no
hurry; we'll talk about that when I'm member. Of course it would be
silly to get married now."

"Of course," said Angela.

"Let's get well up the tree first. Lord help you! how could I climb, to
say nothing o' you, with a round half-dozen o' babies at my heels?"

"But, Mr. Coppin," she said, putting aside these possibilities, "I am
sorry to say that I cannot possibly keep company with you. There is a
reason--I cannot tell you what it is--but you must put that out of your
thoughts."

"Oh!" his face fell, "if you won't, you won't. Most girls jump at a man
who's in good wages and a temperance man, and sought after, like me.
But--there--if you won't, there's an end. I'm not going to waste my time
cryin' after any girl."

"We will remain friends, Mr. Coppin?" She held out her hand.

"Friends? what's that? We might ha' been pals--I mean partners."

"But I can tell you all I think; I can advise you in my poor way still,
whenever you please to ask my advice, even if I do not share your
greatness. And believe me, Mr. Coppin, that I most earnestly desire to
see you not only in the House, but a real leader of the people, such a
leader as the world has never yet beheld. To begin with, you will be a
man of the very people."

"Ay!" he said, "one of themselves!"

"A man not to be led out of his way by flatterers."

"No," he said with a superior smile, "no one, man or woman, can flatter
me."

"A man who knows the restless unsatisfied yearnings of the people, and
what they mean, and has found out how they may be satisfied."

"Ye--yes!" he replied, doubtfully, "certainly."

"A man who will lead the people to get what is good for themselves and
by themselves, without the help of Government."

And no thunders in the Commons? No ringing denunciation of the
Hereditary House? Nothing at all that he had looked to do and to say?
Call this a leadership? But he thought of the Chartist and his new
methods. By different roads, said Montaigne, we arrive at the same end.




CHAPTER XXXVI.

WHAT WILL BE THE END?


The end of the year drew near--the end of that last year of '81, which,
whatever its shortcomings, its burning heat of July and its wretched
rain of August, went out in sweet and gracious sunshine, and a December
like unto the April of a poet.

For six months Angela had been living among her girls. The place was
become homelike to her. The workwomen were now her friends--her trusted
friends. The voice of calumny about her antecedents was silent, unless
it was the voice of Bunker. The Palace of Delight (whose meaning was as
yet unknown and unsuspected,) was rising rapidly, and indeed was nearly
complete--a shell which had to be filled with things beautiful and
delightful, of which Angela did not trust herself to speak. She had a
great deal to think of in those last days of the year '81. The
dressmaking was nothing--that went on. There was some local custom, and
more was promised. It seemed as if (on the soundest principles of
economy) it would actually pay. There was a very large acquaintance made
at odd times among the small streets and mean houses of Stepney. It was
necessary to visit these people and to talk with them.

Angela had nothing to do with the ordinary channels of charity. She
would help neither curate nor Sister of Mercy, nor Bible-woman. Why, she
said, do not the people stand shoulder to shoulder and help themselves?
To be sure, she had the great advantage over professional visitors that
she was herself only a work-woman, and was not paid for any services;
and, as if there was not already enough to make her anxious, there was
that lover of hers.

Were she and Harry keeping company? Dick Coppin asked this question; and
Angela (not altogether truthfully) said that they were not. What else
were they doing, indeed? No word of love now. Had he not promised to
abstain? Yet she knew his past--she knew what he had given up for her
sake, believing her only a poor dressmaker; all for love of her, and
she could not choose but let her heart go forth to so loyal and true a
lover. Many ladies, in many tales of chivalry, have demanded strange
services from their lovers: none so strange as that asked by Angela when
she ordered her lover not only to pretend to be a cabinet-maker, and a
joiner, but to work at his trade and to live by it. Partly in
self-reproach--partly in admiration--she watched him going and coming to
and from the Brewery, where he now earned (thanks to Lord Jocelyn's
intervention) the sum of a whole shilling an hour. For there was nothing
in his bearing or his talk to show that he repented his decision. He was
always cheerful, always of good courage--more, he was always in
attendance on her. It was he who thought for her; invented plans to make
her evenings attractive; brought raw lads (recruits in the army of
culture) from the Advanced Club and elsewhere, and set them an example
of good manners; and was her prime minister, her aide-de-camp, her chief
vizier.

And the end of it all--nay, the thing itself being so pleasant, why
hasten the end? And, if there was to be an end, could it not be
connected with the opening of the Palace? Yes. When the Palace was ready
to open its gates then would Angela open her arms.

For the moment it was the sweet twilight of love--the half-hour before
the dawn. The sweet uncertainty, when all was certainty. And, as yet,
the palace was only just receiving its roof. The fittings and
decorations, the organ and the statues, and all, had still to be put in.
When everything was ready, then--then--Angela would somehow, perhaps,
find words to bid her lover be happy, if she could make him happy.

There could be but one end.

Angela came to Whitechapel incognito--a princess disguised as a
milkmaid; partly out of curiosity, partly to try her little experiment
for the good of work-girls, with the gayety and light heart of
youth--thinking that before long she would return to her old place, just
as she had left it. But she could not. Her old views of life were
changed, and a man had changed them. More than that--a man whose
society, whose strength, whose counsel had become necessary to her.

"Who," she asked herself, "would have thought of the Palace except him?
Could I, could any woman? I could have given away money--that is all. I
could have been robbed and cheated; but such an idea--so grand, so
simple; it is a man's, not a woman's. When the Palace is completed; when
all is ready for the opening, then----" And the air became musical with
the clang and clash of wedding bells--up the scale, down the scale; in
thirds, in fifths; with triple bob-majors and the shouts of the people,
and the triumphant strains of a wedding march.

How could there be any end but one?--seeing that not only did this young
man present himself nearly every evening at the drawing-room, when he
was recognized as the director of ceremonies or the leader of the
cotillon or deviser of sports, from an acting proverb to a madrigal; but
that later the custom was firmly established that he and Angela should
spend their Sundays together. When it rained, they went to church
together, and had readings in the drawing-room in the afternoon, with,
perhaps, a little concert in the evening, of sacred music, to which some
of the girls would come. If the day was sunny and bright, there were
many places where they might go--for the East is richer than the West in
pretty and accessible country places. They would take the tram along the
Mile End Road, past the delightful old church of Bow, to Staring
Stratford, with its fine town-hall and its round dozen of churches and
chapels; a town of 50,000 people, and quite a genteel place, whose
residents preserve the primitive custom of fetching the dinner-beer
themselves from its native public-houses on Sunday, after church. At
Stratford there are a good many ways open if you are a good walker, as
Angela was.

You may take the Romford road, and presently turn to the left and find
yourself in a grand old forest (only there is not much of it left)
called Hainault Forest. When you have crossed the Forest you get to
Chigwell; and then, if you are wise, you will take another six miles (as
Angela and Harry generally did) and get to Epping, where the toothsome
steak may be found, or haply the simple cold beef--not to be despised
after a fifteen miles' walk--and so home by tram. Or you may take the
Northern road at Stratford, and walk through Leytonstone and Woodford;
and, leaving Epping Forest on the right, walk along the bank of the
River Lea till you come to Waltham Abbey, where there is a church to be
seen, and a cross and other marvels. Or you may go still further afield
and take train all the way to Ware, and walk through country roads and
pleasant lanes, if you have a map, to stately Hatfield, and on to St.
Albans; but do not try to dine there, even if you are only
one-and-twenty, and a girl.

All these walks and many more were taken by Angela with her companion on
that blessed day, which should be spent for good of body as well as
soul. They are walks which are beautiful in the winter as well as in the
summer--though the trees are leafless, there is an underwood faintly
colored with its winter tint of purple; and there are stretches of
springy turf and bushes hung with catkins; and, above all, there was
nobody in the Forest or on the roads except Angela and Harry. Sometimes
night fell on them when they were three or four miles from Epping. Then,
as they walked in the twilight, the trees on either hand silently glided
past them like ghosts, and the mist rose and made things look shadowy
and large; and the sense of an endless pilgrimage fell upon them--as if
they would always go on like this, side by side. Then their hearts would
glow within them, and they would talk; and the girl would think it no
shame to reveal the secret thoughts of her heart, although the man with
her was not her accepted lover.

As for her reputation, where was it? Not gone, indeed, because no one
among her old friends knew of these walks and this companionship, but in
grievous peril.

Or, when the day was cloudy, there was the city. I declare there is no
place which contains more delightful walks for a cloudy Sunday forenoon,
when the clang of the bells has finished, and the scanty worshippers are
in their places, and the sleepy sextons have shut the doors, than the
streets and lanes of the old city.

You must go as Harry did, provided with something of ancient lore,
otherwise the most beautiful places will quite certainly be thrown away
and lost for you. Take that riverside walk from Billingsgate to
Blackfriars. Why, here were the quays, the ports, the whole commerce of
the city in the good old days. Here was Cold Herbergh, that great
many-gabled house, where Harry, Prince of Wales, "carried on" with
Falstaff and his merry crew. Here was Queen Hithe--here Dowgate with
Walbrook. Here Baynard's Castle, and close by the Tower of Montfichet;
also, a little to the north, a thousand places dear to the
antiquarian--even though they have pulled down so much. There is Tower
Royal, where Richard the Second lodged his mother. There is the Church
of Whittington, close by the place where his college stood. There are
the precincts of Paul's, and the famous street of Chepe. Do people ever
think what things have been done in Chepe? There is Austin Friars, with
its grand old church now given to the Dutch, and its quiet city square,
where only a few years ago lived Lettice Langton (of whom some of us
have heard). There is Tower Hill, on which was the residence of Alderman
Medlycott, guardian of Nelly Carellis; and west of Paul's there is the
place where once stood the house of Dr. Gregory Shovel, who received the
orphan Kitty Pleydell. But, indeed, there is no end to the histories and
associations of the city; and a man may give his life profitably to the
mastery and mystery of its winding streets.

Here they would wander in the quiet Sunday forenoon, while their
footsteps echoed in the deserted street, and they would walk fearless in
the middle of the road, while they talked of the great town, and its
million dwellers, who come like the birds in the morning, and vanish
like the birds in the evening.

Or they would cross the river and wander up and down the quaint old town
of Rotherhithe, or visit Southwark, the town of hops and malt, and all
kinds of strange things; or Deptford, the deserted, or even Greenwich;
and if it was rainy they would go to church. There are a great many
places of worship about Whitechapel, and many forms of creed, from the
Baptist to the man with the biretta; and it would be difficult to select
one which is more confident than another of possessing the real
Philosopher's Stone--the thing for which we are always searching, the
whole truth. And everywhere church and chapel filled with the
well-to-do and the respectable, and a sprinkling of the very poor; but
of the working-men--none.

"Why have they all given up religion?" asked Angela. "Why should the
work-men all over the world feel no need of religion--if it were only
the religious emotion?"

Harry, who had answers ready for many questions, could find none for
this. He asked his cousin Dick, but he could not tell. Personally, he
said, he had something else to do; but if the women wanted to go to
church they might. And so long as the parsons and priests did not meddle
with him, he should not meddle with them.

But these statements hardly seemed an answer to the question. Perhaps in
Berlin or in Paris they could explain more clearly how this strange
thing has come to pass.




CHAPTER XXXVII.

TRUTH WITH FAITHFULNESS.


To possess pure truth--_and to know it_--is a thing which affects people
in two ways, both of them uncomfortable to their fellow-creatures. It
impels some to go pointing out the purity of truth to the world at
large, insisting upon it, dragging unwilling people along the road which
leads to it, and dwelling upon the dangers which attend the neglect of
so great a chance. Others it affects with a calm and comfortable sense
of superiority. The latter was Rebekah's state of mind. To be a Seventh
Day Independent was only one degree removed from belonging to the Chosen
People, to begin with: and that there is but one chapel in all England
where the truth reposes for a space as the Ark of the Covenant reposed
in Shiloh, "in curtains," is, if you please, a thing to be proud of! It
brings with it elevation of soul.

There is at present, whatever there may once have been, no proselytizing
zeal about the Seventh Day Independents; they are, in fact, a torpid
body; they are contented with the conviction--a very comforting one,
and possessed by other creeds besides their own--that, sooner or later,
the whole world will embrace their faith. Perhaps the Jews look forward
to a day when, in addition to the Restoration, which they profess to
desire, all mankind will become proselytes in the court of the Gentiles:
it is something little short of this that the congregation of Seventh
Day Independents expect in the dim future. What a splendid, what a
magnificent field for glory--call it not vain-glory!--does this
conviction present to the humble believer! There are, again, so very few
of them, that each one may feel himself a visible pillar of the Catholic
Church, bearing on his shoulders a perceptible and measurable quantity
of weight. Each is an Atlas. It is, moreover, pleasing to read the Holy
Scriptures, especially the books of the Prophets, as written especially
for a Connection which numbers just one chapel in Great Britain and
seven in the United States. How grand is the name of Catholic applied to
just one church! Catholicity is as yet all to come, and exists only as a
germ or seedling! The early Christians may have experienced the same
delight.

Rebekah, best and most careful of shopwomen and accountants, showed her
religious superiority more by the silence of contempt than by zeal for
conversion. When Captain Tom Coppin, for instance, was preaching to the
girls, she went on with her figures, casting up, ruling in red ink,
carrying forward in methodical fashion, as if his words could not
possibly have any concern with her; and when a church bell rang, or any
words were spoken about other forms of worship, she became suddenly deaf
and blind and cold. But she entreated Angela to attend their services.
"We want everybody to come," she said; "we only ask for a single
hearing; come and hear my father preach."

She believed in the faith of the Seventh Day. As for her father--when a
man is paid to advocate the cause of an eccentric or a ridiculous form
of belief; when he has to plead that cause week by week to the same
slender following, to prop up the limp, and to keep together his small
body of believers: when he has to maintain a show of hopefulness, to
strengthen the wavering, to confirm the strong, to encourage his sheep
in confidence; when he gets too old for anything else, and his daily
bread depends upon this creed and no other--who shall say what, after a
while, that man believes or does not believe? Red-hot words fall from
his lips, but they fall equally red-hot each week; his arguments are
conclusive, but they were equally conclusive last week; his logic is
irresistible; his encouragement is warm and glowing; but logic and
encouragement alike are those of last week and many weeks ago. Surely,
surely there is no worse fate possible for any man than to preach, week
by week, any form whatever of dogmatic belief, and to live by it;
surely, nothing can be more deadly than to simulate zeal, to suppress
doubt, to pretend certainty. But this is dangerous ground, because
others besides Seventh Day Independents may feel that they are upon it,
and that beneath them are quagmires.

"Come," said Rebekah. "We want nothing but a fair hearing."

Their chapel was endowed, which doubtless helped the flock to keep
together. It had a hundred and ten pounds a year belonging to it, and a
little house for the minister, and there were scanty pew rents, which
almost paid for the maintenance of the fabric and the old woman who
cleaned the windows and dusted the pews. If the Reverend Percival
Hermitage gave up that chapel he would have no means of subsistence at
all. Let us not impute motives. No doubt he firmly believed what he
taught: but his words, like his creed, were stereotyped; they had long
ceased to be persuasive; they now served only to preserve.

If Angela had accepted that invitation for any given day there would
have been, she knew very well, a sermon for the occasion, conceived,
written, and argued out expressly for herself. And this she did not
want. Therefore, she said nothing at all of her intentions, but chose
one Saturday when there was little doing and she could spare a forenoon
for her visit.

The chapel of the Seventh Day Independents stands at Redman's Lane,
close to the Advanced Club House. It is a structure extremely plain and
modest in design. It was built by an architect who entertained humble
views--perhaps he was a Churchman--concerning the possible extension of
the Connection, because the whole chapel if quite filled would not hold
more than two hundred people. The front, or façade, is flat, consisting
of a surface of gray brick wall, with a door in the middle and two
circular windows, one on each side. Over the door there are two
dates--one of erection, the other of restoration. The chapel within is a
well-proportioned room, with a neat gallery running round three sides,
resting on low pillars, and painted a warm and cheerful drab; the pews
are painted of the same color. At the back are two windows with
semi-circular arches, and between the windows stands a small railed
platform with a reading-desk upon it for the minister. Beside it are
high seats with cushions for elders, or other ministers if there should
be any. But these seats have never been occupied in the memory of man.
The pews are ranged in front of the platform, and they are of the old
and high-backed kind. It is a wonderful--a truly wonderful--thing that
clergymen, priests, ministers, padres, rabbis, and church architects,
with church-wardens, sidesmen, vergers, bishops, and chapel-keepers of
all persuasions, are agreed, whatever their other differences, in the
unalterable conviction that it is impossible to be religious, that is,
to attend services in a proper frame of mind, unless one is
uncomfortable. Therefore we are offered a choice. We may sit in
high-backed, narrow-seated pews, or we may sit on low-backed,
narrow-seated benches: but sit in comfort we may not. The Seventh Day
people have got the high-backed pew (which catches you on the
shoulder-blade and tries the backbone, and affects the brain, causing
softening in the long run) and the narrow seat (which drags the muscles
and brings on premature paralysis of the lower limbs). The equally
narrow, low-backed bench produces injurious effects of a different kind,
but similarly pernicious. How would it be to furnish one aisle, at
least, of a church with broad, low, and comfortable chairs having arms?
They should be reserved for the poor who have so few easy-chairs of
their own. Rightly managed and properly advertised, they might help
toward a revival of religion among the working classes.

Above the reading platform in the little chapel they have caused to be
painted on the wall the Ten Commandments--the fourth emphasized in
red--with a text or two, bearing on their distinctive doctrine; and in
the corner is a little door leading to a little vestry; but, as there
are no vestments, its use is not apparent.

As for the position taken by these people it is perfectly logical, and,
in fact, impregnable. There is no answer to it. They say, "Here is the
Fourth Commandment. All the rest you continue to observe. Why not this?
When was it repealed? And by whom?" If you put these questions to Bishop
or Presbyter, he has no reply. Because that law has never been repealed.
Yet as the people of the Connection complain, though they have reason
and logic on their side, the outside world will not listen, and go on
breaking the commandment with a light and unthinking heart. It is a
dreadful responsibility--albeit a grand thing--to be in possession of so
simple a truth of such vast importance; and yet to get nobody ever to
listen. The case is worse even than that of Daniel Fagg.

Angela noted all these things as she entered the little chapel a short
time after the service had commenced. It was bewildering to step out of
the noisy streets, where the current of Saturday morning was at flood,
into this quiet room with its strange service and its strange flock of
Nonconformists. The thing, at first, felt like a dream: the people
seemed like the ghosts of an unquiet mind.

There were very few worshippers; she counted them all: four elderly men,
two elderly women, three young men, two girls, one of whom was Rebekah,
and five boys. Sixteen in all. And standing on the platform was their
leader.

Rebekah's father, the Rev. Percival Hermitage, was a shepherd who from
choice led his flock gently, along peaceful meadows and in shady, quiet
places; he had no prophetic fire; he had evidently long since acquiesced
in a certain fact that under him, at least, whatever it might do under
others, the Connection would not greatly increase. Perhaps he did not
himself desire an increase, which would give him more work. Perhaps he
never had much enthusiasm. By the simple accident of birth he was a
Seventh Day Christian; being of a bookish and unambitious turn, and of
an indolent habit of body, mentally and physically unfitted for the life
of a shop, he entered the ministry; in course of time he got this
chapel, where he remained, tolerably satisfied with his lot in life, a
simple, self-educated, mildly pious person, equipped with the phrases of
his craft, and comforted with the consciousness of superiority and
separation. He looked up from his book in gentle surprise when Angela
entered the chapel. It was seldom that a stranger was seen there--once,
not long ago, there was a boy who had put his head in at the door and
shouted "Hoo!" and ran away again; once there was a drunken sailor who
thought it was a public-house, and sat down and began to sing and
wouldn't go, and had to be shoved out by the united efforts of the whole
small congregation. When he was gone they sang an extra hymn to restore
a religious calm--but never a young lady before. Angela took her seat
amid the wondering looks of the people, and the minister went on in a
perfunctory way with his prayers and his hymns and his exposition. There
certainly did seem to an outsider a want of heart about the service, but
that might have been due to the emptiness of the pews. When it came to
the sermon, Angela thought the preacher spoke and looked as if the limit
of endurance had at last almost arrived, and he would not much longer
endure the inexpressible dreariness of the conventicle. It was not so;
he was always mildly sad; he seemed always a little bored; it was no use
pretending to be eloquent any more; fireworks were thrown away; and as
for what he had to say, the congregation always had the same thing,
looked for the same thing, and would have risen in revolt at the
suggestion of a new thing. His sermon was neither better nor worse than
may be heard any day in church or chapel; nor was there anything in it
to distinguish it from the sermons of any other body of Christians. The
outsider left off listening and began to think of the congregation. In
the pew with her was a man of sixty or so, with long black hair streaked
with gray, brushed back behind his ears. He was devout and followed the
prayers audibly, and sang the hymns out of a manuscript music-book, and
read the text critically. His face was the face of a bulldog for
resolution. The man, she thought, would enjoy going to the stake for his
opinions, and if the Seventh Day Independents were to be made the
National Established Church he would secede the week after and make a
new sect, if only by himself. Such men are not happy under authority;
their freedom of thought is as the breath of their nostrils, and they
cannot think like other people. He was not well dressed, and was
probably a shoemaker or some such craftsman. In front of her sat a
family of three. The wife was attired in a sealskin rich and valuable,
and the son, a young man of one or two and twenty, had the dress and
appearance of a gentleman--that is to say, of what passes for such in
common city parlance. What did these people do in such a place? Yet they
were evidently of the religion. Then she noticed a widow and her boy.
The widow was not young; probably, Angela thought, she had married late
in life. Her lips were thin and her face was stern. "The boy," thought
Angela, "will have the doctrine administered with faithfulness." Only
sixteen altogether; yet all, except the pastor, seemed to be grimly in
earnest and inordinately proud of their sect. It was as if the emptiness
of their benches and their forsaken condition called upon them to put on
a greater show of zeal and to persuade themselves that the cause was
worth fighting for. The preacher alone seemed to have lost heart. But
his people, who were accustomed to him, did not notice this despondency.

Then Angela, while the sermon went slowly on, began to speculate on the
conditions belonging to such a sect. First of all, with the apparent
exception of the lady in sealskin and her husband and son, the whole
sixteen--perhaps another two or three were prevented from
attending--were of quite the lower middle class; they belonged to the
great stratum of society whose ignorance is as profound as their
arguments are loud. But the uncomfortableness of it! They can do no work
on the Saturday--"neither their man-servant nor their
maid-servant"--their shops are closed and their tools put aside. They
lose a sixth part of the working time. The followers of this creed are
as much separated from their fellows as the Jews. On the Sunday they may
work if they please, but on that day all the world is at church or at
play. Angela looked round again. Yes; the whole sixteen had upon their
faces the look of pride; they were proud of being separated; it was a
distinction, just as it is to be a Samaritan. Who would not be one of
the recipients, however few they be in number, of Truth? And what a
grand thing, what an inspiriting thing, it is to feel that some day or
other, perhaps not to-day nor to-morrow, nor in one's lifetime at all,
the whole world will rally round the poor little obscure banner, and
shout all together, with voice of thunder, the battle-cry which now
sounds no louder than a puny whistle-pipe! Yet, on the whole, Angela
felt it must be an uncomfortable creed; better be one of the
undistinguished crowd which flocks to the parish church and yearns not
for any distinction at all. Then the sermon ended and they sang another
hymn--the collection in use was a volume printed in New York, and
compiled by the committee of the Connection, so that there were
manifestly congregations on the other side of the Atlantic living in the
same discomfort of separation.

At the departure of the people Rebekah hurried out first, and waited in
the doorway to greet Angela.

"I knew you would come some day," she said, "but oh! I wish you had told
me when you were coming, so that father might have given one of his
doctrine sermons. What we had to-day was one of the comfortable
discourses to the professed members of the church which we all love so
much. I am so sorry. Oh, he would convince you in ten minutes!"

"But, Rebekah," said Angela, "I should be sorry to have seen your
service otherwise than usual. Tell me, does the congregation to-day
represent all your strength?"

Rebekah colored. She could not deny that they were, numerically, a
feeble folk.

"We rely," she said, "on the strength of our cause--and some day--oh!
some day--the world will rally round us. See, Miss Kennedy, here is
father; when he has said good-by to the people"--he was talking to a
lady in sealskin--"he will come and speak to us."

"I suppose," said Angela, "that this lady is a member of your chapel?"

"Yes," Rebekah whispered. "Oh, they are quite rich people--the only
rich people we have. They live at Leytonstone; they made their money in
the book-binding, and are consistent Christians. Father,"--for at this
moment Mr. Hermitage left his rich followers in the porch--"this is Miss
Kennedy, of whom you have heard so much."

Mr. Hermitage took her hand with a weary smile, and asked Rebekah if
Miss Kennedy would come home with her.

They lived in a small house next door to the chapel. It was so small
that there was but one sitting-room, and this was filled with books.

"Father likes to sit here," said Rebekah, "by himself all day. He is
quite happy if he is let alone. Sometimes, however, he has to go to
Leytonstone."

"To the rich people?"

"Yes," Rebekah looked troubled. "A minister must visit his flock, you
know: and if they were to leave us it would be bad for us, because the
endowment is only a hundred and ten pounds a year, and out of that the
church and the house have got to be kept in repair. However, a clergyman
must not be dictated to, and I tell father he should go his own way and
preach his own sermons. Whatever people say, truth must not be hidden
away as if we were ashamed of it! Hush! Here he is."

The good man welcomed Angela, and said some simple words of gratitude
about her reception of his daughter. He had a good face, but he wore an
anxious expression as if something was always on his mind; and he sighed
when he sat down at his table.

Angela stayed for half an hour, but the minister said nothing more to
her; only when she rose to go he murmured with another heavy sigh,
"There's an afternoon service at three."

It is quite impossible to say whether he intended this announcement as
an invitation to Angela, or whether it was a complaint, wrung from a
heavy heart, of a trouble almost intolerable.




CHAPTER XXXVIII.

I AM THE DRESSMAKER.


It happened on this very same Saturday that Lord Jocelyn, feeling a
little low, and craving for speech with his ward, resolved that he would
pay a personal visit to him in his own den, where, no doubt, he would
find him girt with a fair white apron and crowned with brown paper,
proudly standing among a lot of his brother workmen--glorious
fellows!--and up to his knees in shavings.

It is easy to take a cab and tell the driver to go to the Mile End Road.
Had Lord Jocelyn taken more prudent counsel with himself he would have
bidden him drive straight to Messenger's Brewery; but he got down where
the Whitechapel road ends and the Mile End road begins, thinking that he
would find his way to the Brewery with the greatest ease. First,
however, he asked the way of a lady with a basket on her arm; it was, in
fact, Mrs. Bormalack going a-marketing, and anxious about the price of
greens; and he received a reply so minute, exact, and bewildering, that
he felt, as he plunged into the labyrinthine streets of Stepney, like
one who dives into the dark and devious ways of the catacombs.

First of all, of course, he lost himself; but as the place was strange
to him, and a strange place is always curious, he walked along in great
contentment. Nothing remarkable in the streets and houses unless,
perhaps, the entire absence of anything to denote inequality of wealth
and position, so that, he thought with satisfaction, the happy residents
in Stepney all receive the same salaries and make the same income,
contribute the same amount to the tax collectors, and pay the same rent.
A beautiful continuity of sameness; a divine monotony realizing
partially the dreams of the socialist. Presently he came upon a great
building which seemed rapidly approaching completion; not a beautiful
building, but solid, big, well proportioned and constructed of real red
brick, and without the "Queen Anne" conceits which mostly go with that
material. It was so large and so well built that it was evidently
intended for some special purpose; a purpose of magnitude and
responsibility, requiring capital; not a factory, because the windows
were large and evidently belonged to great halls, and there were none of
the little windows in rows which factories must have in the nature of
things; not a prison, because prisons are parsimonious to a fault in the
matter of external windows; nor a school--yet it might be a school;
then--how should so great a school be built in Stepney? It might be a
superior almshouse, or union--yet this could hardly be. While Lord
Jocelyn looked at the building, a working-man lounged along, presumably
an out-of-working man, with his hands in his pockets and kicking stray
stones in the road, which is a sign of the penniless pocket, because he
who yet can boast the splendid shilling does not slouch as he goes, or
kick stones in the road, but holds his head erect and anticipates with
pleasure six half-pints in the immediate future. Lord Jocelyn asked that
industrious idle, or idle industrious, if he knew the object of the
building. The man replied that he did not know the object of the
building; and to make it quite manifest that he really did not know he
put an adjective before the word object, and another--that is, the
same--before the word building. With that he passed upon his way, and
Lord Jocelyn was left marvelling at the slender resources of our
language which makes one adjective do duty for so many qualifications.
Presently, he came suddenly upon Stepney Church, which is a landmark or
initial point, like the man on the chair in the maze of Hampton Court.
Here he again asked his way, and then, after finding it and losing it
again six times more, and being generally treated with contumely for not
knowing so simple a thing, he found himself actually at the gates of the
Brewery, which he might have reached in five minutes had he gone the
shortest way.

"So," he said, "this is the property of that remarkably beautiful girl,
Miss Messenger; who could wish to start better? She is young; she is
charming, she is queenly, she is fabulously rich; she is clever; she
is--ah! if only Harry had met her before he became an ass!"

He passed the gate and entered the courtyard, at one side of which he
saw a door on which was painted the word "Office." The Brewery was
conservative; what was now a hive of clerks and writers was known by the
same name and stood upon the same spot as the little room built by
itself in the open court in which King Messenger I., the inventor of the
Entire, had transacted by himself, having no clerks at all, the whole
business of the infant Brewery for his great invention. Lord Jocelyn
pushed open the door and stood irresolute, looking about him; a clerk
advanced and asked his business. Lord Jocelyn was the most polite and
considerate of men: he took off his hat, humbly bowed, and presented his
card.

"I am most sorry to give trouble," he said. "I came to see----"

"Certainly, my lord." The clerk, having been introduced to Lord
Davenant, was no longer afraid of tackling a title, however grand, and
would have been pleased to show his familiarity with the great even to a
Royal Highness. "Certainty, my lord. If your lordship will be so good as
to write your lordship's name in the visitors' book, a guide shall take
your lordship round the Brewery immediately."

"Thank you, I do not wish to see the Brewery," said the visitor. "I came
to see a--a--a young man who, I believe, works in this establishment:
his name is Goslett."

"Oh!" replied the clerk, taken aback, "Goslett? Can any one," he asked
generally of the room he had just left, "tell me whether there's a man
working here named Goslett?"

Josephus--for it was the juniors' room--knew and indicated the place and
man.

"If, my lord," said the clerk, loath to separate himself from nobility,
"your lordship will be good enough to follow me, I can take your
lordship to the man your lordship wants. Quite a common man, my
lord--quite. A joiner and carpenter. But if your lordship wants to see
him----"

He led Lord Jocelyn across the court, and left him at the door of
Harry's workshop.

It was not a great room with benches, and piles of shavings, and a
number of men. Not at all; there were racks with tools, a bench, and a
lathe; there were pieces of furniture about waiting repair; there was an
unfinished cabinet with delicate carved work, which Lord Jocelyn
recognized at once as the handiwork of his boy; and the boy himself
stood in the room, his coat off and his cuffs turned up, contemplating
the cabinet. It is one of the privileges of the trade that it
allows--nay, requires--a good deal of contemplation. Presently Harry
turned his head and saw his guardian standing in the doorway. He greeted
him cheerfully and led him into the room, where he found a chair with
four legs and begged him to sit down and talk.

"You like it, Harry?"

Harry laughed. "Why not?" he said. "You see I am independent,
practically. They pay me pretty well according to the work that comes
in. Plain work, you see--joiners' work."

"Yes, yes, I see. But how long, my boy--how long?"

"Well, sir, I cannot say. Why not all my life?"

Lord Jocelyn groaned.

"I admit," said Harry, "that if things were different I should have gone
back to you long ago. But now I cannot, unless----"

"Unless what?"

"Unless the girl who keeps me here goes away herself or bids me go."

"Then you are really engaged to the dress--I mean--the young lady?"

"No, I am not. Nor has she shown the least sign of accepting me. Yet I
am her devoted and humble servant."

"Is she a witch--this woman? Good heavens, Harry! Can you, who have
associated with the most beautiful and best-bred women in the world, be
so infatuated about a dressmaker?"

"It is strange, is it not? But it is true. The thought of her fills my
mind day and night. I see her constantly. There is never one word of
love, but she knows already, without that word."

"Strange, indeed," repeated Lord Jocelyn. "But it will pass. You will
awake, and find yourself again in your right mind, Harry."

He shook his head.

"From this madness," he said, "I shall never recover--for it is my life.
Whatever happens, I am her servant."

"It is incomprehensible," replied his guardian; "you were always
chivalrous in your ideas of women. They are unusual in young men of the
present day; but they used to sit well upon you. Then, however, your
ideal was a lady."

"It is a lady still," said the lover, "and yet a dressmaker. How this
can be, I do not know; but it is. In the old days men became the
servants of ladies. I know now what a good custom it was, and how
salutary to the men. Petit Jehan de Saintre, in his early days, had the
best of all possible training."

"But if Petit Jehan had lived at Stepney----?"

"Then there is another thing--the life here is useful."

"You now tinker chairs, and get paid a shilling an hour. Formerly, you
made dainty, carved workboxes and fans, and pretty things for ladies,
and got paid by their thanks. Which is the more useful life?"

"It is not the work I am thinking of--it is the---- Do you remember what
I said the last time I saw you?"

"Perfectly--about your fellow-creatures, was it not? My dear Harry, it
seems to me as if our fellow-men get on very well in their own way
without our interference."

"Yes--that is to say, no. They are all getting on as badly as possible;
and somehow I want, before I go away, to find out what it is they want.
They don't know; and how they should set about getting it--if it is to
be got--as I think it is. You will not think me a prig, sir?"

"You will never be a prig, Harry, under any circumstances. Does, then,
the lady of your worship approve of this?--this study of humanity?"

"Perfectly--if this lady did not approve of it, I should not be engaged
upon it."

"Harry, will you take me to see this goddess of Stepney Green--it is
there, I believe, that she resides?"

"Yes; I would rather not. Yet (the young man hesitated for a
moment)--Miss Kennedy thinks that I have always been a working-man. I
would not undeceive her yet. I would rather she did not know that I have
given up, for her sake, such a man as you, and such companionship as
yours."

He held out both his hands to his guardian, and his eyes for a moment
were dim.

Lord Jocelyn made no reply for a moment--then he cleared his throat and
said he must go; asked Harry rather piteously could he do nothing for
him at all? and made slowly for the door. The clerk who received the
distinguished visitor was standing at the door of the office, waiting
for another glimpse of the noble and illustrious personage. Presently he
came back and reported that his lordship had crossed the yard on the arm
of the young man called Goslett, and that on parting with him he had
shaken him by the hand, and called him "my boy." Whereat many marvelled,
and the thing was a stumbling-block; but Josephus said it was not at all
unusual for members of his family to be singled out by the great for
high positions of trust; that his own father had been churchwarden of
Stepney, and he was a far-off cousin of Miss Messenger's; and that he
could himself have been by this time superintendent of his Sunday-school
if it had not been for his misfortunes. Presently the thing was told to
the chief accountant, who told it to the chief brewer; and if there had
been a chief baker one knows not what would have happened.

Lord Jocelyn walked slowly away in the direction of Stepney Green. She
lived there, did she? Oh, and her name was Miss Kennedy; ah, and a man,
by calling upon her, might see her. Very good--he would call. He would
say that he was the guardian of Harry, and that he took a warm interest
in him; and that the boy was pining away--which was not true; and that
he called to know if Miss Kennedy as a friend would divine the
cause--which was crafty. Quite a little domestic drama he made up in his
own mind, which would have done beautifully had it not been completely
shattered by the surprising things which happened, as will immediately
be seen.

Presently he arrived at Stepney Green and stopped to look about him. A
quiet, George-the-Third looking place, with many good and solid houses,
and a narrow strip of garden running down the middle--in which of these
houses did Miss Kennedy dwell?

There came along the asphalt walk an old, old man; he was feeble, and
tottered as he went. He wore a black silk stock and a buttoned-up
frock-coat. His face was wrinkled and creased. It was, in fact, Mr.
Maliphant going rather late (because he had fallen asleep by the fire)
to protect the property.

Lord Jocelyn asked him politely if he would tell him where Miss Kennedy
lived.

The patriarch looked up, laughed joyously, and shook his head--then he
said something inaudibly, but his lips moved; and then pointing to a
large house on the right, he said aloud:

"Caroline Coppin's house it was--she that married Sergeant Goslett. Mr.
Messenger, whose grandmother was a Coppin, and a good old Whitechapel
family, had the deeds. My memory is not so good as usual this morning,
young man, or I could tell you who had the house before Caroline's
father; but I think it was old Mr. Messenger, because the young man who
died the other day, and was only a year or two older than me, was born
there himself." Then he went on his way, laughing and wagging his head.

"That is a wonderful old man," said Lord Jocelyn. "Caroline Coppin's
house--that is, Harry's mother's house. Pity she couldn't keep it for
her son--the sergeant was a thrifty man, too. Here is another native;
let us try him."

This time it was Daniel Fagg, and in one of his despondent moods,
because none of the promised proofs had arrived.

"Can you tell me, sir," asked Lord Jocelyn, "where Miss Kennedy lives?"

The "native," who had sandy hair and a gray beard, and immense sandy
eyebrows, turned upon him fiercely, shaking a long finger in his face,
as if it was a sword.

"Mind you," he growled, "Miss Kennedy's the only man among you! You talk
of your scholars! Gar!--jealousy and envy. But I've remembered
her--posterity shall know her when the head of the Egyptian department
is dead and forgotten."

"Thank you," said Lord Jocelyn, as the man left him. "I am likely to be
forwarded at this rate."

He tried again.

This time it happened to be none other than Mr. Bunker. The events of
the last few weeks were preying upon his mind--he thought continually of
handcuffs and prisons. He was nervous and agitated.

But he replied courteously, and pointed out the house.

"Ah!" said Lord Jocelyn, "that is the house which an old man, whom I
have just asked, said was Caroline Coppin's."

"Old man--what old man?" (Mr. Bunker turned pale--it seemed as if the
atmosphere itself was full of dangers.) "'Ouse was whose? That 'ouse,
sir, is mine--mine, do you hear?"

Lord Jocelyn described the old man--in fact, he was yet within sight.

"I know him," said Mr. Bunker. "He's mad, that old man--silly with age;
nobody minds him. That 'ouse, sir, is mine."

"Oh! And you" (for Lord Jocelyn now recollected him)--"are Mr. Bunker,
are you? Do you remember me? Think, man."

Mr. Bunker thought his hardest; but if you do not remember a man, you
might as well stand on your head as begin to think.

"Twenty years ago," said Lord Jocelyn, "I took away your nephew, who has
now come back here."

"You did, you did," cried Bunker eagerly. "Ah, sir, why did you let him
come back here? A bad business--a bad business."

"I came to see him to-day, perhaps to ask him why he stays here."

"Take him away again, sir--don't let him stay. Rocks ahead, sir!" Mr.
Bunker put up hands in warning. "When I see youth going to capsize on
virtue it makes my blood, as a Christian man, to curdle--take him away."

"Certainly it does you great credit, Mr. Bunker, as a Christian man;
because curdled blood must be unpleasant. But what rocks?"

"A rock--one rock, a woman. In that 'ouse, sir, she lives; her name is
Miss Kennedy--that is what she calls herself. She's a dressmaker by
trade, she says; and a captivator of foolish young men by nature--don't
go anigh her. She may captivate you. Daniel Fagg made her an offer of
marriage, and he's sixty. He confessed it to me. She tried it on with
me; but a man of principles is proof. The conjurer wanted to marry her.
My nephew, Dick Coppin, is a fool about her."

"She must be a very remarkable woman," said Lord Jocelyn.

"As for that boy, Harry Goslett" (Bunker uttered the name with an
obvious effort)--"he's further gone than all the rest put together. If
it wasn't for her, he would go back to where he came from."

"Ah! and where is that?"

"Don't you know, then? You, the man who took him away? Don't you know
where he came from? Was it something very bad?"

There was a look of eager malignity about the man's face--he wanted to
hear something bad about his nephew.

Lord Jocelyn encouraged him.

"Perhaps I know--perhaps I do not."

"A disgraceful story, no doubt," said Bunker, with a pleased smile. "I
dreaded the worst when I saw him with his white hands, and his sneerin',
fleerin' ways. I thought of Newgate and jailbirds--I did, indeed, at
once. O prophetic soul! Well, now we know the worst, and you had better
take him away before all the world knows it. I shan't talk, of course."

"Thank you, Mr. Bunker; and about this Miss Kennedy, is there anything
against her except that the men fall in love with her?"

"There is plenty against her; but I'm not the man to take away a woman's
character. Reports are about her that would astonish you. If all secrets
were known, we should find what a viper we've been cherishing. At the
end of her year, out she goes of my 'ouse--bag and baggage, she goes;
and wherever she goes, that boy'll go after her unless you prevent it."

"Thank you again, Mr. Bunker. Good-morning."

Angela (just returned from her chapel) was sitting at the window of the
workroom, in her usual place; she looked out upon the green now and
again.

Presently she saw Mr. Maliphant creep slowly along the pavement, and
observed that he stopped and spoke to a gentleman. Then she saw Daniel
Fagg swinging his arms and gesticulating, as he rehearsed to himself the
story of his wrongs, and he stopped and spoke to the same man. Then she
saw Mr. Bunker walking moodily on his way, and he stopped, too, and
conversed with the stranger. Then he turned, and she saw his face.

It was Lord Jocelyn le Breton, and he was walking with intention toward
her own door!

She divined the truth in a moment--he was coming to see the "dressmaker"
who had bewitched his boy.

She whispered to Nelly that a gentleman was coming to see her who must
be shown upstairs. She took refuge in the drawing-room, which was
happily empty; and she awaited him with a beating heart.

She heard his footsteps on the stairs--the door opened. She rose to meet
him.

"You here, Miss Messenger! This is, indeed, a surprise."

"No, Lord Jocelyn," she replied, confused, yet trying to speak
confidently; "in this house, if you please, I am not Miss Messenger. I
am Miss Kennedy, the--the----"

Now she remembered exactly what her next words would mean to him, and
she blushed violently. "I am the--the dressmaker."




CHAPTER XXXIX.

THRICE HAPPY BOY.


A man of the world at forty-five seldom feels surprised at anything,
unless, indeed, like Molière, he encounters virtue in unexpected
quarters. This, however, was a thing so extraordinary that Lord Jocelyn
gasped.

"Pardon me, Miss Messenger," he said, recovering himself. "I was so
totally unprepared for this--this discovery."

"Now that you have made it, Lord Jocelyn, may I ask you most earnestly
to reveal it to no one? I mean no one at all."

"I understand perfectly. Yes, Miss Messenger, I will keep your secret.
Since it is a secret, I will tell it to none. But I would ask a favor in
return, if I may."

"What is that?"

"Take me further into your confidence. Let me know why you have done
this most wonderful thing. I hope I am not impertinent in asking this of
you."

"Not impertinent, certainly. And the thing must seem strange to you. And
after what you told me some time ago, about----" She hesitated a moment,
and then turned her clear brown eyes straight upon his face, "about your
ward, perhaps some explanation is due to you."

"Thank you, beforehand."

"First, however, call me Miss Kennedy here; pray--pray, do not forget
that there is no Miss Messenger nearer than Portman Square."

"I will try to remember."

"I came here," she went on, "last July, having a certain problem in my
mind. I have remained here ever since, working at that problem. It is
not nearly worked out yet, nor do I think that in the longest life it
could be worked out. It is a most wonderful problem, for one thing leads
to another, and great schemes rise out of small, and there are hundreds
of plans springing out of one--if I could only carry them out."

"To assist you in carrying them out, you have secured the services of my
ward, I learn."

"Yes; he has been very good to me."

"I have never," said Lord Jocelyn, "been greatly tempted in the
direction of philanthropy. But pray go on."

"The first thing I came to establish was an association of dressmakers,
myself being one. That is very simple. I have started them with a house
free of rent and the necessary furniture--which I know is wrong, because
it introduces an unfair advantage--and we divide all the money in
certain proportions. That is one thing."

"But, my dear young lady, could you not have done this from Portman
Square?"

"I could, but not so well. To live here as a workwoman among other
workwomen is, at least, to avoid the danger of being flattered,
deceived, and paid court to. I was a most insignificant person when I
came. I am now so far advanced that a great many employers of women's
labor cordially detest me, and would like to see my association ruined.

"O Lord Jocelyn," she went on, after a pause, "you do not know, you
cannot know the dreadful dangers which a rich woman has to encounter. If
I had come here in my own name I should have been besieged by every
plausible rogue who could catch my ear for half an hour. I should have
all the clergy round me imploring help for their schools and their
churches; I should have had every unmarried curate making love to me; I
should have paid ten times as much as anybody else; and, worse than all,
I should not have made a single friend. My sympathies, whenever I read
the parable, are always with Dives, because he must have been so
flattered and worshipped before his pride became intolerable."

"I see. All this you escaped by your assumption of the false name."

"Yes. I am one of themselves; one of the people; I have got my girls
together; I have made them understand my project; they have become my
fast and faithful friends. The better to inspire confidence, I even
sheltered myself behind myself. I said Miss Messenger was interested in
our success. She sends us orders. I went to the West End with things
made up for her. Thanks mainly to her, we are flourishing. We work for
shorter hours and for greater pay than other girls: I could already
double my staff if I could only, which I shall soon, double the work. We
have recreation, too, and we dine together, and in the evening we have
singing and dancing. My girls have never before known any happiness: now
they have learned the happiness of quiet, at least, with a little of the
culture, and some of the things which make rich people happy. Oh! would
you have me go away and leave them, when I have taught these things of
which they never dreamed before? Should I send them back to the squalid
house and the bare pittance again? Stay and take your luncheon with us
when we dine, and ask yourself whether it would not be better for me to
live here altogether--never to go back to the West End at all--than to
go away and desert my girls?"

She was agitated because she spoke from her heart. She went on without
waiting for any reply:

"If you knew the joyless lives, the hopeless days of these girls, if you
could see their workrooms, if you knew what is meant by their long hours
and their insufficient food, you would not wonder at my staying here,
you would cry shame upon the rich woman so selfish as to spend her
substance in idle follies, when she might have spent it upon her
unfortunate sisters."

"I think," said Lord Jocelyn, "that you are a very noble girl."

"Then there is another scheme of mine: a project so great and
generous--nay, I am not singing my own praises, believe me--that I can
never get it out of my mind. This project, Lord Jocelyn, is due to your
ward."

"Harry was always an ingenious youth. But pray tell me what it is."

"I cannot," she replied; "when I put the project into words they seem
cold and feeble. They do not express the greatness of it. They would not
rouse your enthusiasm. I could not make you understand in any degree the
great hopes I have of this enterprise."

"And it is Harry's invention?"

"Yes--his. All I have done is to find the money to carry it out."

"That is a good part of any enterprise, however."

At this point the bell rang.

"That is the first bell," said Angela; "now they lay down their work and
scamper about--at least the younger ones do--for ten minutes before
dinner. Come with me to the dining-room."

Presently the girls came trooping in, fifteen or so, with bright eyes
and healthy cheeks. Some of them were pretty: one, Lord Jocelyn thought,
of a peculiarly graceful and delicate type, though too fragile in
appearance. This was Nelly Sorensen. She looked more fragile than usual
to-day, and there were black lines under her lustrous eyes. Another,
whom Miss Kennedy called Rebekah, was good-looking in a different way,
being sturdy, rosy-cheeked, and downright in her manner. Another, who
would otherwise have been quite common in appearance, was made
beautiful--almost--by the patient look which had followed years of
suffering; she was a cripple; all their faces during the last few months
had changed for the better; not one among them all bore the expression
which is described by the significant words "bold" and "common." Six
months of daily drill and practice in good manners had abolished that
look at any rate.

The dinner was perfectly plain and simple, consisting of a piece of meat
with plenty of vegetables and bread, and nothing else at all. But the
meat was good and well cooked, and the service was on fair white linen.
Moreover, Lord Jocelyn, sitting down in this strange company, observed
that the girls behaved with great propriety. Soon after they began, the
door opened and a man came in. It was one of those to whom Lord Jocelyn
had spoken on the green, the man with the bushy sandy eyebrows. He took
his seat at the table and began to eat his food ravenously. Once he
pushed his plate away as if in a temper, and looked up as if he was
going to complain. Then the girl they called Rebekah--she came to dinner
on Saturdays, so as to have the same advantages as the rest, though she
did no work on that day--held up her forefinger and shook it at him, and
he relapsed into silence. He was the only one who behaved badly, and
Miss Kennedy made as if she had not seen.

During the dinner the girls talked freely among themselves without any
of the giggling and whispering which, in some circles, is considered
good manners; they all treated Miss Kennedy with great respect, though
she was only one workwoman among the rest. Yet there was a great
difference, and the girls knew it; next to her on her left sat the
pretty girl whom she called Nelly.

When dinner was over, because it was Saturday there was no more work.
Some of the girls went into the drawing-room to rest for an hour and
read; Rebekah went home again to attend the afternoon service; some
went into the garden, although it was December, and began to play
lawn-tennis on the asphalt; the man with the eyebrows got up and glared
moodily around from under those shaggy eyebrows and then vanished.
Angela and Lord Jocelyn remained alone.

"You have seen us," she said; "what do you think of us?"

"I have nothing to say, and I do not know what to think."

"Your ward is our right hand. We women want a man to work for us always.
It is his business, and his pleasure, too, to help us to amuse
ourselves. He finds diversions; he invents all kinds of things for us.
Just now he is arranging tableaux and plays for Christmas."

"Is it--is it--oh, Miss Kennedy--is it for the girls only?"

"That is dangerous ground," she replied, but not severely. "Do you think
we had better discuss the subject from that point of view?"

"Poor boy!" said Lord Jocelyn. "It is the point of view from which I
must regard it."

She blushed again--and her beautiful eyes grew limpid.

"Do you think," she said, speaking low, "do you think I do not feel for
him? Yet there is a cause--a sentiment, perhaps. The time is not quite
come. Lord Jocelyn, be patient with me!"

"You will take pity on him?"

"Oh!" she took the hand he offered her. "If I can make him happy----"

"If not," replied Lord Jocelyn, kissing her hand, "he would be the most
ungrateful dog in all the world. If not, he deserves to get nothing but
a shilling an hour for the miserable balance of his days. A shilling?
No; let him go back to his tenpence. My dear young lady, you have made
me at all events, the happiest of men! No, do not fear: neither by word
nor look shall Harry--shall any one--know what you have been so very,
very good, so generous, and so thoughtful as to tell me."

"He loves me for myself," she murmured. "He does not know that I am
rich. Think of that, and think of the terrible suspicions which grow up
in every rich woman's heart when a man makes love to her. Now I can
never, never doubt his honesty. For my sake he has given up so much; for
my sake--mine! oh! Why are men so good to women?"

"No," said Lord Jocelyn. "Ask what men can ever do that they should be
rewarded with the love and trust of such a woman as you?"

That is, indeed, a difficult question, seeing in what words the virtuous
woman has been described by one who writes as if he ought to have known.
As a pendant to the picture 'tis pity, 'tis great pity we have not the
eulogy of the virtuous man. But there never were any, perhaps.

Lord Jocelyn stayed with Angela all the afternoon. They talked of many
things; of Harry's boyhood, of his gentle and ready ways, of his many
good qualities, and of Angela herself, her hopes and ambitions, and of
their life at Bormalack's. And Angela told Lord Jocelyn about her
_protégés_, the claimants to the Davenant peerage, with the history of
the "Roag in Grane," Saturday Davenant; and Lord Jocelyn promised to
call upon them.

It was five o'clock when she sent him away, with permission to come
again. Now this, Lord Jocelyn felt, as he came away, was the most
satisfactory, nay the most delightful, day that he had ever spent.

That lucky rascal Harry! To think of this tremendous stroke of fortune!
To fall in love with the richest heiress in England; to have that
passion returned, to be about to marry the most charming, the most
beautiful, the sweetest woman that had ever been made. Happy, thrice
happy boy! What wonder, now, that he found tinkering chairs, in company,
so to speak, with that incomparable woman, better than the soft divans
of his club or the dinners and dances of society? What had he, Lord
Jocelyn, to offer the lad, in comparison with the delights of this
strange and charming courtship?




CHAPTER XL.

SWEET NELLY.


In every love-story there is always, though it is not always told, a
secondary plot, the history of the man or woman who might have been left
happy but for the wedding bells which peal for somebody else and end the
tale. When these ring out, the hopes and dreams of some one else, for
whom they do not ring, turn at last to dust and ashes. We are drawing
near the church; we shall soon hear those bells. Let us spare a moment
to speak of this tale untold, this dream of the morning, doomed to
disappointment.

It is only the dream of a foolish girl; she was young and ignorant; she
was brought up in a school of hardship until the time when a gracious
lady came to rescue her. She had experienced, outside the haven of rest,
where her father was safely sheltered, only the buffets of a hard and
cruel world, filled with greedy taskmasters who exacted the uttermost
farthing in work and paid the humblest farthing for reward. More than
this, she knew, and her father knew, that when his time came for
exchanging that haven for the cemetery, she would have to fight the hard
battle alone, being almost a friendless girl, too shrinking and timid to
stand up for herself. Therefore, after her rescue, at first she was in
the seventh heaven; nor did her gratitude and love toward her rescuer
ever know any abatement. But there came a time when gratitude was called
upon to contend with another feeling.

From the very first Harry's carriage toward Nelly was marked by
sympathetic and brotherly affection. He really regarded this pretty
creature, with her soft and winning ways, as a girl whom he could call
by her Christian name and treat as one treats a sweet and charming
child. She was clever at learning--nobody, not even Miss Kennedy, danced
better; she was docile; she was sweet-tempered and slow to say or think
evil. She possessed naturally, Harry thought--but then he forgot that
her father had commanded an East Indiaman--a refinement of thought and
manner far above the other girls; she caught readily the tone of her
patron; she became in a few weeks, this young dressmaker, the faithful
effigies of a lady under the instruction of Miss Kennedy, whom she
watched and studied day by day. It was unfortunate that Harry continued
to treat her as a child, because she was already a woman.

Presently she began to think of him, to watch for him, to note his
manner toward herself.

Then she began to compare and to watch his manner toward Miss Kennedy.

Then she began to wonder if he was paying attention to Miss Kennedy, if
they were engaged, if they had an understanding.

She could find none. Miss Kennedy was always friendly toward him, but
never more. He was always at her call, her faithful servant, like the
rest of them, but no more.

Remember that the respect and worship with which she regarded Miss
Kennedy were unbounded. But Harry she did not regard as on the same
level. No one was good enough for Miss Kennedy. And Harry, clever and
bright and good as he seemed, was not too good for herself.

They were a great deal together. All Nelly's evenings were spent in the
drawing-room; Harry was there every night; they read together; they
talked and danced and sang together. And though the young man said no
single word of love, he was always thoughtful for her in ways that she
had never experienced before. Below a certain level, men are not
thoughtful for women. The cheapeners of women's labor at the East End
are not by any means thoughtful toward them. No one had ever considered
Nelly at all, except her father.

Need one say more? Need one explain how tender flowers of hope sprang up
in this girl's heart, and became her secret joy?

This made her watchful, even jealous. And when a change came in Miss
Kennedy's manner--it was after her first talk with Lord Jocelyn--when
Nelly saw her color heighten and her eyes grow brighter when Harry
appeared, a dreadful pain seized upon her, and she knew, without a word
being spoken, that all was over for her. For what was she compared with
this glorious woman, beautiful as the day, sweet as a rose in June, full
of accomplishments? How could any man regard her beside Miss Kennedy?
How could any man think of any other woman when such a goddess had
smiled upon him?

In some stories, a girl who has had to beat down and crush the young
blossoms of love goes through a great variety of performances, always in
the same order. The despair of love demands that this order shall be
obeyed. She turns white; she throws herself on her bed, and weeps by
herself, and miserably owns that she loves him; she tells the
transparent fib to her sister or mother; she has received a blow from
which she never will recover; if she is religious, it brings her nearer
to heaven--all this we have heard over and over again. Poor little Nelly
knew nothing about her grander sisters in misfortune; she knew nothing
of what is due to self-respect under similar circumstances; she only
perceived that she had been foolish, and tried to show as if that was
not so. It was a make-believe of rather a sorry kind. When she was alone
she reproached herself; when she was with Miss Kennedy she reproached
herself; when she was with Harry she reproached herself. Always herself
to blame, no one else, and the immediate result was that her great
limpid eyes were surrounded by dark rings and her cheeks grew thin.

Perhaps there is no misfortune more common among women--especially among
women of the better class--than that of disappointed hope. Girls who are
hard worked in shops have no time, as a rule, to think of love at all.
Love, like other gracious influences, does not come in their way. It is
when leisure is arrived at, with sufficiency of food and comfort, of
shelter and good clothing, that love begins.

To most of Angela's girls, Harry Goslett was a creature far above their
hopes or thoughts. It was pleasant to dance with him; to hear him play,
to hear him talk; but he did not belong to them. It was not for nothing
that their brothers called him "Gentleman Jack." They were, in fact,
"common girls," although Angela, by the quiet and steady force of
example, was introducing such innovations in the dressing of the hair,
the carriage of the person, and the style of garments, that they were
rapidly becoming uncommon girls. But they occupied a position lower than
that of Nelly, who was the daughter of a ship's captain now in the
asylum; or of Rebekah, who was the daughter of a minister, and had the
key to all truth.

To Nelly, therefore, there came for a brief space this dream of love. It
lasted, indeed, so brief a space--it had such slender foundations of
reality--that when it vanished she ought to have let it go without a
sigh, and have soon felt as if it never had come to her at all. This is
difficult of accomplishment, even for women of strong nerves and good
physique; but Nelly tried it and partially succeeded. That is, no one
knew her secret except Angela, who divined it--having special reason for
this insight; and Rebekah, who perhaps had also her own reasons; but she
was a self-contained woman, who kept her own secret.

"She cannot," said Rebekah, watching Angela and Harry, who were walking
together on the green--"she cannot marry anybody else. It is
impossible."

"But why," said Nelly--"why do they not tell us, if they are to be
married?"

"There are many things," said Rebekah, "which Miss Kennedy does not tell
us. She has never told us who she is or where she came from, or how she
gets command of money; or how she knows Miss Messenger; or what she was
before she came to us. Because, Nelly, you may be sure of one
thing--that Miss Kennedy is a lady, born and bred. Not that I want to
know more than she chooses to tell, and I am as certain of her goodness
as I am certain of anything. And what this place will do for the girls
if it succeeds, no one can tell. Miss Kennedy will tell us, perhaps,
some day why she has come among us, pretending to be a dressmaker."

"Oh!" said Nelly, "what a thing for us that she did pretend! And oh,
Rebekah, what a thing it would be if she were to leave off pretending!
But she would never desert us--never."

"No, she never would."

Rebekah continued to watch them.

"You see, Nelly, if she is a lady, he is a gentleman." Nelly blushed;
and then blushed again for very shame at having blushed at all. "Some
gentleman, I am told, take delight in turning girls' heads. He doesn't
do that. Has he ever said a word to you that he shouldn't?"

"No," said Nelly, "never."

"Well, and he hasn't to me; though, as for you, he goes about saying
everywhere that you are the prettiest girl in Stepney, next to Miss
Kennedy. And as for me and the rest, he has always been like a brother;
and a good deal better than most brothers are to their sisters. Being a
gentleman, I mean he is no match for you and me, who are real
work-girls. And there is nobody in the parish except Miss Kennedy for
him."

"Yet he works for money."

"So does she. My dear, I don't understand it--I never could understand
it. Perhaps some day we shall know what it all means. There they are,
making believe. They go on making believe and pretending, and they seem
to enjoy it. Then they walk about together, and play in words with each
other--one pretending not to understand and so on. Miss Kennedy says,
'But then I speak from hearsay, for I am only a dressmaker.' And he
says, 'So I read, because, of course, a cabinet-maker can know nothing
of these things.' Mr. Bunker, who ought to be made to learn the Epistle
of St. James by heart, says dreadful things of both of them, and one his
own nephew; but what does he know?--nothing."

"But, Rebekah, Mr. Goslett cannot be a very great gentleman, if he is
Mr. Bunker's nephew; his father was a sergeant in the army."

"He is a gentleman by education and training. Well, some day we shall
learn more. Meantime, I for one am contented that they should marry. Are
you, Nelly?"

"I, too," she replied, "am contented, if it will make Miss Kennedy
happy."

"He is not convinced of the truth," said Rebekah, making her little
sectarian reservation, "but any woman who would want a better husband
must be a fool. As for you and me, now, after knowing these two, it will
be best for us never to marry, rather than to marry one of the drinking,
tobacco-smoking workmen, who would have us."

"Yes," said Nelly, "much best. I shall never marry anybody."

Certainly it was not likely that more young gentlemen would come their
way. One Sunday evening, the girl, being alone with Miss Kennedy, took
courage and dared to speak to her.

In fact, it was Angela herself who began the talk.

"Let us talk, Nelly," she began; "we are quite alone. Tell me, my dear,
what is on your mind?"

"Nothing," said Nelly.

"Yes there is something--tell me what it is."

"Oh, Miss Kennedy, I cannot tell you. It would be rudeness to speak of
it."

"There can be no rudeness, Nelly, between you and me. Tell me what you
are thinking."

Angela knew already what was in her mind, but after the fashion of her
sex she dissembled. The brutality of truth among the male sex is
sometimes very painful; and yet we are so proud, some of us, of our
earnest attachment to truth.

"Oh, Miss Kennedy, can you not see that he is suffering?"

"Nelly!" but she was not displeased.

"He is getting thinner. He does not laugh as he used to; and he does not
dance as much as he did. Oh, Miss Kennedy, can you not take pity on
him?"

"Nelly, you have not told me whom you mean. Nay," as with a sudden
change of tone she threw her arms about Nelly's neck and kissed her,
"nay. I know very well whom you mean, my dear."

"I have not offended you?"

"No, you have not offended me. But, Nelly, answer me one
question--answer it truthfully. Do you, from your own heart, wish me to
take pity on him?"

Nelly answered frankly and truthfully:

"Yes; because how can I wish anything but what will make you happy? Oh,
how can any of us help wishing that; and he is the only man who can make
you happy. And he loves you."

"You want him to love me for my sake; for my own sake. Nelly, dear
child, you humble me."

But Nelly did not understand. She had secretly offered up her humble
sacrifice--her pair of turtledoves; and she knew not that her secret was
known.

"She loves him herself," Angela was thinking, "and she gives him up for
my sake."

"He is not," Nelly went on--as if she could by any words of hers
persuade Angela--"he is not like any of the common workmen. See how he
walks, and how independent he is, and he talks like a gentleman. And he
can do all the things that gentlemen learn to do. Who is there among us
all that he could look at, except you?"

"Nelly--do not make me vain."

"As for you, Miss Kennedy, there is no man fit for you in all the world.
You call yourself a dressmaker, but we know better; oh, you are a lady!
My father says so. He used to have great ladies sometimes on board his
ship. He says that never was any one like you for talk and manner. Oh,
we don't ask your secret, if you have one--only some of us (not I, for
one) are afraid that some day you will go away, and never come back to
us again. What should we do then?"

"My dear, I shall not desert you."

"And, if you marry him, you will remain with us? A lady should marry a
gentleman, I know; she could not marry any common man. But you are, so
you tell us, only a dressmaker. And he, he says, only a cabinet-maker;
and Dick Coppin says that, though he can use the lathe, he knows nothing
at all about the trade--not even how they talk, nor anything about them.
If you two have secrets, Miss Kennedy, tell them to each other."

"My secrets, if I have any, are very simple, Nelly, and very soon you
shall know them; and, as for his, I know them already."

Angela was silent awhile, thinking over this thing; then she kissed the
girl, and whispered: "Patience yet a little while, dear Nelly. Patience,
and I will do, perhaps, what you desire."


"Father," said Nelly, later on that night, sitting together by the fire,
"father, I spoke to Miss Kennedy to-night."

"What did you speak to her about, my dear?"

"I told her that we knew (you and I) that she is a lady, whatever she
may pretend."

"That is quite true, Nelly."

"And I said that Mr. Goslett is a gentleman, whatever he may pretend."

"That may be true--even though he is not a gentleman born--but that's a
very different thing, my dear."

"Why is it different?"

"Because there are many ladies who go about among poor people; but no
gentleman, unless it's the clergymen. Ladies seem to like it--they do
it, however hard the work, for nothing--and all because it is their
duty, and an imitation of the Lord. Some of them go out nursing. I have
told you how I took them out to Scutari. Some of them go, not a bit
afraid, into the foul courts, and find out the worst creatures in the
world, and help them. Many of them give up their whole lives for the
poor and miserable. My dear, there is nothing that a good woman will
shrink from--no misery, no den of wickedness--nothing. Sometimes I think
Miss Kennedy must be one of those women. Yes, she's got a little money,
and she has come here to work in her own way among the people here."

"And Mr. Goslett, father?"

"Men don't do what women do. There may be something in what Mr. Bunker
says--that he has reasons of his own for coming here and hiding
himself."

"Oh, father, you don't mean it; and his own uncle, too, to say such a
thing."

"Yes, his own uncle. Mr. Goslett, certainly, does belong to the place;
though why Bunker should bear him so much malice is more than I can
tell."

"And, father, there is another reason why he should stay here." Nelly
blushed, and laughed merrily.

"What is that, my dear?"

Nelly kissed him and laughed again.

"It is your time for a pipe--let me fill it for you. And the Sunday
ration, here it is; and here is a light. Oh, father, to be a sailor so
long and have no eyes in your head!"

"What"--he understood now--"you mean Miss Kennedy! Nell, my dear,
forgive me--I was thinking that perhaps you----"

"No, father," she replied hurriedly, "that could never be. I want
nothing but to stay on here with you and Miss Kennedy, who has been so
good to us that we can never, never thank her enough; nor can we wish
her too much joy. But, please, never--never say that again."

Her eyes filled with tears.

Captain Sorensen took a book from the table--it was that book which so
many people have constantly in their mouths, and yet it never seems to
get into their hearts; the book which is so seldom read and so much
commented upon. He turned it over till he found a certain passage
beginning, "Who can find a virtuous woman?" He read this right through
to the end. One passage, "She stretcheth out her hand to the poor. Yea,
she reacheth forth her hands unto the needy," he read twice; and the
last line, "Let her own works praise her in the gates," he read three
times.

"My dear" he concluded, "to pleasure Miss Kennedy you would do more than
give up a lover; ay, and with a cheerful heart."




CHAPTER XLI.

BOXING-NIGHT.


"Let us keep Christmas," said Angela, "with something like original
treatment. We will not dance, because we do that nearly every night."

"Let us," said Harry, "dress up and act."

What were they to act? That he would find for them. How were they to
dress? That they would have to find for themselves. The feature of the
Christmas festival was that they were to be mummers, and that there was
to be mummicking, and of course there would be a little feasting, and
perhaps a little singing.

"We must have just such a programme," said Angela to their master of
ceremonies, "as if you were preparing it for the Palace of Delight."

"This is the only Palace of Delight," said Harry, "that we shall ever
see. For my own part I desire no other."

"But, you know, we are going to have another one, much larger than this
little place. Have you forgotten all your projects?"

Harry laughed; it was strange how persistently Miss Kennedy returned to
the subject again and again; how seriously she talked about it; how she
dwelt upon it.

"We must have," she continued, "sports which will cost nothing, with
dresses which we can make for ourselves. Of course we must have guests
to witness them."

"Guests cost money," said Harry. "But, of course, in a Palace of Delight
money must not be considered. That would be treason to your principles."

"We shall not give our guests anything except the cold remains of the
Christmas dinner. As for champagne, we can make our own with a few
lemons and a little sugar. Do not forbid us to invite an audience."

Fortunately, a present which arrived from their patron, Miss Messenger,
the day before Christmas Day, enabled them to give their guests a
substantial supper, at no cost whatever. The present took the form of
several hampers, addressed to Miss Kennedy, with a note from the donor
conveying her love to the girls and best wishes for the next year, when
she hoped to make their acquaintance. The hampers contained turkeys,
sausages, ducks, geese, hams, tongues, and the like.

Meantime, Harry, as stage manager and dramatist, had devised the
tableaux, and the girls between them had devised the dresses from a book
of costumes. Christmas Day, as everybody remembers, fell last year on a
Sunday. This gave the girls the whole of Saturday afternoon and evening,
with Monday morning for the conversion of the trying-on room into the
stage, and the show-room for the audience. But the rehearsals took a
fortnight, for some of the girls were stupid and some were shy, though
all were willing to learn, and Harry was patient. Besides, there was the
chance of wearing the most beautiful dresses, and no one was left out;
in the allegory, a pastoral, invented by their manager, there was a part
for every one.

The gift of Miss Messenger made it possible to have two sets of guests;
one set consisting of the girls' female relations, and a few private
friends of Miss Kennedy's who lived and suffered in the neighborhood,
for the Christmas dinner, held on Monday; and the other set was
carefully chosen from a long list of the select audience in the evening.
Among them were Dick and his friend, the ex-Chartist cobbler, and a few
leading spirits of the Advanced Club. They wanted an audience who would
read between the lines.

The twenty-sixth day of last December was, in the neighborhood of
Stepney, dull and overcast; it promised to be a day of rebuke for all
quiet folk, because it was a general holiday, one of those four terrible
days when the people flock in droves to favorite haunts if it is in the
summer, or hang about public-houses if it is winter; when, in the
evening, the air is hideous with the shouts of those who roll about the
pavements; a day when even Comus and his rabble rout are fain to go home
for fear of being hustled and evilly treated by the holiday-makers of
famous London town; a day when the peaceful and the pious, the temperate
and the timid, stay at home. But to Angela it was a great day, sweet and
precious--to use the language of an ancient Puritan and modern
prig--because it was the first attempt toward the realization of her
great dream; because her girls on this night for the first time showed
the fruits of her training in the way they played their parts, their
quiet bearing and their new refinement. After the performances of this
evening she looked forward with confidence to her palace.

The day began, then, at half-past with the big dinner. All the girls
could bring their mothers, sisters, and female relations generally, who
were informed that Miss Messenger, the mysterious person who interfered
perpetually, like a goddess out of a machine, with some new gift, or
some device for their advantage, was the giver of the feast.

It was a good and ample Christmas dinner served in the long work-room by
Angela and the girls themselves. There were the turkeys of the hamper,
roasted with sausages, and roast beef and roast fowls, and roast geese
and roast pork, with an immense supply of the vegetables dear to London
people; and after this first course, there were plum-pudding and
mince-pies. Messenger's ale, with the stout so much recommended by
Bunker, flowed freely, and after dinner there was handed to each a glass
of port. None but women and children--no boy over eight being
allowed--were present at the feast, and when it was over most of the
women got up and went away, not without some little talk with Angela and
some present in kind from the benevolent Miss Messenger. Then they
cleared all away and set out the tables again, with the same provisions,
for the supper in the evening, at which there would be hungry men.

All the afternoon they spent in completing their arrangements. The
guests began to arrive at five. The music was supplied by Angela
herself, who did not act, with Captain Sorensen and Harry. The piano was
brought downstairs and stood in the hall outside the trying-on room.

The performance was to commence at six, but everybody had come long
before half-past five. At a quarter to six the little orchestra began to
play the old English tunes dear to pantomimes.

At the ringing of a bell, the music changed to a low monotonous plaint
and the curtain slowly rose on the tableau.

There was a large, bare, empty room; its sole furniture was a table and
three chairs; in one corner was a pile of shavings; upon them sat,
crouching with her knees drawn up, the pale and worn figure of a girl;
beside her were the crutches which showed that she was a cripple; her
white cheek was wasted and hollow; her chin was thrust forward as if she
was in suffering almost intolerable. During the tableau she moved not,
save to swing slowly backward and forward upon the shavings which formed
her bed.

On the table, for it was night, was a candle in a ginger-beer bottle,
and two girls sat at the table working hard; their needles were running
a race with starvation; their clothes were in rags; their hair was
gathered up in careless knots; their cheeks were pale; they were pinched
and cold and feeble with hunger and privation.

Said one of the women present, "Twopence an hour, they can make. Poor
things! poor things!"

"Dick," whispered the cobbler, "you make a note of it; I guess what's
coming."

The spectators shivered with sympathy. They knew so well what it meant;
some of them had themselves dwelt amid these garrets of misery and
suffering.

Then voices were heard outside in the street singing.

They were the waits, and they sang the joyful hymns of Christmas. When
the working-girls heard the singing, they paid no heed whatever, plying
the needle fast and furiously; and the girl in the shavings paid no
heed, slowly swinging to and fro in her pain and hunger. At the sight of
this callous contempt, this disregard of the invitation to rejoice, as
if there were neither hope nor joy for such as themselves, with only a
mad desire to work for something to stay the dreadful pains of hunger,
some of the women among the spectators wept aloud.

Then the waits went away; and there was silence again.

Then one of the girls--it was Nelly--stopped, and leaned back in her
chair, with her hand to her heart; the work fell from her lap upon the
floor; she sprang to her feet, threw up her hands, and fell in a
lifeless heap upon the floor. The other girl went on with her sewing;
and the cripple went on swinging backward and forward. For they were all
three so miserable that the misery of one could no more touch the other
two.

The curtain dropped. The tableau represented, of course, the girls who
work for an employer.

After five minutes it rose again. There were the same girls and others;
they were sitting at work in a cheerful and well-furnished room; they
were talking and laughing. The clock struck six, and they laid aside
their work, pushed back the table and advanced to the front singing all
together. Their faces were bright and happy; they were well dressed,
they looked well fed; there was no trouble among them at all; they
chatted like singing-birds; they ran and played.

Then Captain Sorensen came in with his fiddle, and first he played a
merry tune, at the sound of which the girls caught each other by the
waist, and fell to dancing the old Greek ring. Then he played a
quadrille, and they danced that simple figure, and as if they liked it;
and then he played a waltz, and they whirled round and round.

This was the labor of girls for themselves. Everybody understood
perfectly what was meant without the waste of words. Some of the mothers
present wiped their eyes and told their neighbors that this was no play
acting, but the sweet and blessed truth; and that the joy was real,
because the girls were working for themselves and there were no
naggings, no fines, no temper, no bullying, no long hours.

After this there was a concert, which seemed a falling off in point of
excitement. But it was pretty. Captain Sorensen played some rattling sea
ditties; then Miss Kennedy and Mr. Goslett played a duet; then the girls
sang a madrigal in parts, so that it was wonderful to hear them,
thinking how ignorant they were six months before. Then Miss Kennedy
played a solo, and then the girls sang another song. By what magic, by
what mystery, were girls so transformed? Then the audience talked
together, and whispered that it was all the doing of that one girl--Miss
Kennedy--who was believed by everybody to be a lady born and bred, but
pretended to be a dressmaker. She it was who got the girls together,
gave them the house, found work for them, arranged the time and duties,
and paid them week by week for shorter hours better wages. It was she
who persuaded them to spend their evenings with her instead of trapesing
about the streets, getting into mischief; it was she who taught them the
singing, and all manner of pretty things; and they were not spoiled by
it, except that they would have nothing more to say to the rough lads
and shopboys who had formerly paid them rude court and jested with them
on Stepney Green. Uppish they certainly were; what mother would find
fault with a girl for holding up her head and respecting herself? And as
for manners, why, no one could tell what a difference there was.

The Chartist looked on with a little suspicion at first, which gradually
changed to the liveliest satisfaction.

"Dick," he whispered to his friend and disciple, "I am sure that, if the
working-men like, they may find the swells their real friends. See, now
we've got all the power; they can't take it from us; very good then, who
are the men we should suspect? Why, those who've got to pay the
wages--the manufacturers and such. Not the swells. Make a note of that,
Dick. It may be the best card you've got to play. A thousand places such
as this--planted all about England--started at first by a swell--why,
man, the working classes would have not only all the power but all the
money. Oh, if I were ten years younger! What are they going to do next?"

The next thing they did pleased the women, but the men did not seem to
care much about it, and the Chartist went on developing the new idea to
Dick, who drank it all in, seeing that here, indeed, was a practical and
attractive idea even though it meant a new departure. But the preacher
of a new doctrine has generally a better chance than one who only
hammers away at an old one.

The stage showed one figure. A beautiful girl, her hair bound in a
fillet, clad in Greek dress, simple, flowing, graceful, stood upon a low
pedestal. She was intended--it was none other than Nelly--to represent
woman dressed as she should be. One after the other there advanced upon
the stage and stood beside this statue, women dressed as women ought not
to be; there they were, the hideous fashions of generations; the pinched
waists, monstrous hats, high peaks, hoops and crinolines, hair piled up,
hair stuffed out, gigot sleeves, high waists, tight skirts, bending
walk, boots with high heels--an endless array.

When Nelly got down from her pedestal and the show was over, Harry
advanced to the front and made a little speech. He reminded his hearers
that the Association was only six months old; he begged them to consider
what was its position now. To be sure, the girls had been started, and,
that he said, was the great difficulty; but, the start once made and
prejudice removed, they found themselves with work to do, and they were
now paying their own way and doing well; before long they would be able
to take in more hands; it was not all work with them, but there was
plenty of play, as they knew. Meantime the girls invited everybody to
have supper with them, and after supper there would be a little dance.

They stayed to supper, and they appreciated the gift of Miss Messenger;
then they had the little dance--Dick Coppin now taking his part without
shame. While the dancing went on the Chartist sat in the corner of the
room, talking with Angela. When he went away his heart--which was large
and generous--burned within him, and he had visions of a time when the
voices of the poor shall not be raised against the rich nor the minds of
the rich hardened against the poor. Perhaps he came unconsciously nearer
to Christianity, this man who was a scoffer and an unbeliever, that
night than he had ever before. To have faith in the future forms,
indeed, a larger part of the Christian religion than some of us ever
realize. And to believe in a single woman is one step, however small,
toward believing in the Divine Man.




CHAPTER XLII.

NOT JOSEPHUS, BUT ANOTHER.


The attractions of a yard peopled with ghosts, discontented
figure-heads, and an old man, are great at first, but not likely to be
lasting if one does not personally see or converse with the ghosts and
if the old man becomes monotonous. We expect too much of old men.
Considering their years, we think their recollections must be wonderful.
One says, "Good heavens! Methuselah must recollect William the Conqueror
and King John, and Sir John Falstaff, to say nothing of the battle of
Waterloo!" As a matter of fact, Methuselah generally remembers nothing
except that where Cheapside now stands was once a green field. As for
Shakespeare, and Coleridge, and Charles Lamb, he knows nothing whatever
about them. You see if he had taken so much interest in life as to care
about things going on, he would very soon, like his contemporaries, have
worn out the machine, and would be lying, like them, in the grassy
inclosure.

Harry continued to go to the carver's yard for some time, but nothing
more was to be learned from him. He knew the family history, however, by
this time, pretty well. The Coppins of Stepney, like all middle-class
families, had experienced many ups and downs. They had been
churchwardens; they had been bankrupts; they had practised many trades;
and once there was a Coppin who died, leaving houses--twelve
houses--three apiece to his children--a meritorious Coppin. Where were
those houses now? Absorbed by the omnivorous Uncle Bunker. And how Uncle
Bunker got those belonging to Caroline Coppin could not now be
ascertained, except from Uncle Bunker himself. Everywhere there are
scrapers and scatterers; the scrapers are few, and the scatterers many.
By what scatterer or what process of scattering did Caroline lose her
houses?

Meantime, Harry did not feel himself obliged to hold his tongue upon the
subject; and everybody knew, before long, that something was going on
likely to be prejudicial to Mr. Bunker. People whispered that Bunker was
going to be caught out; this rumor lent to the unwilling agent some of
the interest which attaches to a criminal. Some went so far as to say
that they had always suspected him because he was so ostentatious in his
honesty; and this is a safe thing to say, because any person may be
reasonably suspected; and if we did not suspect all the world, why the
machinery of bolts and bars, keys and patent safes? But it is the wise
man who suspects the right person, and it is the justly proud man who
strikes an attitude and says: "What did I tell you?" As yet, however,
the suspicions were vague. Bunker, for his part, though not generally a
thin-skinned man, easily perceived that there was a change in the way he
was received and regarded; people looked at him with marked interest in
the streets; they turned their heads and looked after him; they talked
about him as he approached; they smiled with meaning; Josephus Coppin
met him one day, and asked him why he would not tell his nephew how he
obtained those three houses and what consideration he gave for them. He
began, especially of an evening, over brandy and water, to make up
mentally, over and over again, his own case, so that it might be
presented at the right moment absolutely perfect and without a flaw; a
paragon among cases. His nephew, whom he now regarded with a loathing
almost lethal, was impudent enough to go about saying that he had got
those houses unlawfully. Was he? Very good; he would have such law as
is to be had in England, for the humiliation, punishment, stamping out,
and ruining of that nephew; aye, if it cost him five hundred pounds he
would. He should like to make his case public; he was not afraid; not a
bit; let all the world know; the more the story was known, the more
would his contemporaries admire his beautiful and exemplary virtue,
patience, and moderation. There were, he said, with the smile of
benevolence and blush of modesty which so well become the good man,
transactions, money transactions, between himself and his sister-in-law,
especially after her marriage with a man who was a secret scatterer.
These money matters had been partly squared by the transfer of the
houses, which he took in part payment; the rest he forgave when Caroline
died, and when, which showed his goodness in an electric light, he took
over the boy to bring him up to some honest trade, though he was a
beggar. Where were the proofs of those transactions? Unfortunately they
were all destroyed by fire some years since, after having been carefully
preserved, and docketed, and indorsed, as is the duty of every careful
man of business.

Now by dint of repeating this precious story over and over again, the
worthy man came to believe it entirely, and to believe that other people
would believe it as well. It seemed, in fact, so like the truth, that it
would deceive even experts, and pass for that priceless article. At the
time when Caroline died, and the boy went to stay with him, no one asked
any questions, because it seemed nobody's business to inquire into the
interest of the child. After the boy was taken away it gradually became
known among the surviving members of the family that the houses had long
before, owing to the profligate extravagance of the sergeant--as careful
a man as ever marched--passed into the hands of Bunker, who now had all
the Coppin houses. Everything was clean forgotten by this time. And the
boy must needs turn up again, asking questions. A young villain! A
serpent! But he should be paid out.

A very singular accident prevented the "paying out" quite in the sense
intended by Mr. Bunker. It happened in this way:

One day when Miss Messenger's cabinet-maker and joiner-in-ordinary,
having little or nothing to do, was wandering about the Brewery, looking
about him, lazily watching the process of beer-making on a large
extensive scale, and exchanging the compliments of the season, which was
near the new year, with the workmen, it happened that he passed the room
in which Josephus had sat for forty years among the juniors. The door
stood open, and he looked in, as he had often done before, to nod a
friendly salutation to his cousin. There Josephus sat, with gray hair,
an elderly man among boys, mechanically ticking off entries among the
lads. His place was in the warm corner near the fire; beside him stood a
large and massive safe; the same safe out of which, during an absence of
three minutes, the country notes had been so mysteriously stolen.

The story, of course, was well known. Josephus' version of the thing was
also well known. Everybody further knew that, until the mystery of that
robbery was cleared up, Josephus would remain a junior on 30s. a week.
Lastly, everybody (with the kindliness of heart common to our glorious
humanity) firmly believed that Josephus had really cribbed those notes,
but had been afraid to present them, and so dropped them into a fire, or
down a drain. It is truly remarkable to observe how deeply we respect,
adore, and venerate virtue--insomuch that we all go about pretending to
be virtuous; yet how little we believe in the virtue of each other! It
is also remarkable to reflect upon the extensive fields still open to
the moralist, after all these years of preaching and exhorting.

Now, as Harry looked into the room, his eye fell upon the safe, and a
curious thing occurred. The fragment of a certain letter from Bob Coppin
(in which he sent a message by his friend to his cousin, Squaretoes
Josephus) quite suddenly and unexpectedly returned to his
memory--further, the words assumed a meaning.

"Josephus," he said, stepping into the office, "lend me a piece of paper
and a pencil. Thank you."

He wrote down the words exactly as he recollected them--half destroyed
by the tearing of the letter.

" ... Josephus, my cousin, that he will ... 'nd the safe the bundle ...
or a lark. Josephus is a squaretoes. I hate a man who won't drink. He
will ... if he looks there."

When he had written these words down he read them over again, while the
lads looked on with curiosity and some resentment. Cabinet-makers and
joiners have no business to swagger about the office of young gentlemen
who are clerks in breweries, as if it were their own place. It is an
innovation--a levelling of rank.

"Josephus," Harry whispered, "you remember your cousin, Bob Coppin?"

"Yes; but these are office hours. Conversation is not allowed in the
juniors' room."

He spoke as if he was still a boy--as indeed, he was, having been
confined to the society of boys, and having drawn the pay of a boy for
so many years.

"Never mind rules--tell me all about Bob."

"He was a drinker and a spendthrift--that's enough about him."

Josephus spoke in a whisper, being anxious not to discuss the family
disgrace among his fellow-clerks.

"Good! Were you a friend as well as a cousin of his?"

"No, I never was--I was respectable in those days, and desirous of
getting my character high for steadiness. I went to evening lectures and
taught in the Wesleyan Sunday-schools. Of course, when the notes were
stolen, it was no use trying any more for character--that was gone. A
young man suspected of stealing £14,000 can't get any character at all.
So I gave up attending the evening lectures, and left off teaching in
the school, and going to church, and everything."

"You were a great fool, Josephus--you ought to have gone on and fought
it out. Now then, on the day that you lost the money, had you seen
Bob--do you remember?"

"That day?" the unlucky junior replied; "I remember every hour as plain
as if it was to-day. Yes, I saw Bob. He came to the office half an hour
before I lost the notes. He wanted me to go out with him in the evening,
I forget where--some gardens, and dancing, and prodigalities. I refused
to go. In the evening I saw him again, and he did nothing but laugh
while I was in misery. It seemed cruel; and the more I suffered the
louder he laughed."

"Did you never see Bob again?"

"No; he went away to sea, and he came home and went away again; but
somehow I never saw him. It is twenty years now since he went away last,
and was never heard of, nor his ship--so, of course, he's dead long ago.
But what does it matter about Bob? And these are office hours; and there
will, really, be things said if we go on talking--do go away."

Harry obeyed, and left him; but he went straight to the office of the
chief accountant and requested an interview.

The chief accountant sent word that he could communicate his business
through one of the clerks. Harry replied that his business was of a
nature which could not be communicated by a clerk--that it was very
serious and important business, which must be imparted to the chief
alone; and that he would wait his convenience in the outer office.
Presently he was ushered into the presence of the great man.

"This is very extraordinary," said the official. "What can your business
be, which is so important that it must not be intrusted to the clerks?
Now come to the point, young man--my time is valuable."

"I want you to authorize me to make a little examination in the junior
clerks' room."

"What examination, and why?"

Harry gave him the fragment of the letter, and explained where he found
it.

"I understand nothing. What do you learn from this fragment?"

"There is no date," said Harry, "but that matters very little. You will
observe that it clearly refers to my cousin Josephus Coppin."

"That seems evident--Josephus is not a common name."

"You know my cousin's version of the loss of those notes?"

"Certainly--he said they must have been stolen during the two or three
minutes that he was out of the room."

"Yes--now" (Harry wrote a few words to fill up the broken sentences of
the letter) "read that, sir."

"Good heavens!"

"My cousin tells me, too," he went on, "that this fellow, Bob Coppin,
was in the office half an hour before the notes were missed--why, very
likely he was at the time hanging about the place--and that in the
evening, when his cousin was in an agony of distress, Bob was laughing
as if the whole thing was a joke."

"Upon my word," said the chief, "it seems plausible."

"We can try the thing at once," said Harry. "But I should like you to be
present when we do."

"Undoubtedly I will be present--come, let us go at once. By the way, you
were the young man recommended by Miss Messenger; are you not?"

"Yes. Not that I have the honor of knowing Miss Messenger personally."

The chief accountant laughed. Cabinet-makers do not generally know young
ladies of position; and this was such a remarkably cheeky young workman.

They took with them four stout fellows from those who toss about the
casks of beer. The safe was one of the larger kind, standing three feet
six inches high, on a strong wooden box, with an open front--it was in
the corner next to Josephus' seat. Between the back of the safe and the
wall was a space of an inch or so.

"I must trouble you to change your seat," said the chief accountant to
Josephus, "we are about to move this safe."

Josephus rose, and the men presently, with mighty efforts, lugged the
great heavy thing a foot or two from its place.

"Will you look, sir?" asked Harry. "If there is anything there, I should
like you, who know the whole story, to find it."

The chief stooped over the safe and looked behind it. Everybody was now
aware that something was going to happen; and though pens continued to
be dipped into inkstands with zeal, and heads to be bent over desks with
the devotion which always seizes a junior clerk in presence of his
chief, all eyes were furtively turned to Josephus' corner.

"There is a bundle of papers," he said. "Thank you."

Harry picked them up and placed them in his hands.

The only person who paid no heed to the proceedings was the most
concerned.

The chief accountant received them (a rolled bundle, not a tied-up
parcel, and covered inch deep with black dust). He opened it and glanced
at the contents--then a strange and unaccountable look came into his
eyes as he handed them to Josephus.

"Will you oblige me, Mr. Coppin," he said, "by examining those papers?"

It was the first time that the title of "Mr." had been bestowed upon
Josephus during all the years of his long servitude. He was troubled by
it, and he could not understand the expression in his chief's eyes; and
when he turned to Harry for an explanation he met eyes in which the same
sympathy and pity were expressed. When he turned to the boys, his
fellow-clerks, he was struck by their faces of wondering expectation.

What was going to happen?

Recovering his presence of mind, he held out the dusty papers and shook
the dust off them.

Then he began slowly to obey orders, and to examine them.

Suddenly he began to turn them over with fierce eagerness. His eyes
flashed--he gasped.

"Come, Josephus," said his cousin, taking his arm, "gently--gently. What
are they, these papers?"

The man laughed, a hysterical laugh.

"They are. Ha! ha! they are--ha! ha! ha!"

He did not finish because his voice failed him; but he dropped into a
chair, with his head in his hands.

"They are country bank-notes and other papers," said Harry, taking them
from his cousin's hands--he had interpreted the missing words rightly.

The chief looked round the room. "Young men," he said solemnly, "a
wonderful thing has happened. After many years of undeserved suspicion
and unmerited punishment, Mr. Coppin's character is cleared at last. We
cannot restore to him the years he has lost, but we can rejoice that his
innocence is established."

"Come, Josephus," said Harry, "bear your good fortune as you have borne
the bad--rouse yourself."

The senior junior clerk lifted his head and looked around. His cheeks
were white. His eyes were filled with tears; his lips were trembling.

"Take your cousin home," said the chief to Harry, "and then come back
to my office."

Harry led Josephus unresisting home to the boarding-house.

"We have had a shock, Mrs. Bormalack. Nothing to be alarmed about--quite
the contrary. The bank-notes have been found after all these years, and
my cousin has earned his promotion and recovered his character. Give him
some brandy and water, and make him lie down for a bit."

For the man was dazed--he could not understand as yet what had happened.

Harry placed him in the armchair, and left him to the care of the
landlady. Then he went back to the brewery.

The chief brewer was with the chief accountant, and they were talking
over what was best to be done; said very kind things about intelligence,
without which good fortune and lucky finds are wasted. And they promised
to represent Harry's conduct in a proper light to Miss Messenger, who
would be immediately communicated with; and Josephus would at once
receive a very substantial addition to his pay, a better position, and
more responsible work.

"May I suggest, gentlemen," said Harry, "that a man who is fifty-five,
and has all his life been doing the simple work of a junior, may not be
found equal to more responsible work."

"That may be the case."

"My cousin, when the misfortune happened, left off taking any interest
in things--I believe he has never opened a book or learned anything in
all these years."

"Well, we shall see." A workman was not to be taken into counsel. "There
is, however, something here which seems to concern yourself. Your mother
was one Caroline Coppin, was she not?"

"Yes."

"Then these papers which were deposited by some persons unknown with Mr.
Messenger--most likely for greater care--and placed in the safe by him,
belong to you; and I hope will prove of value to you."

Harry took them without much interest, and came away.

In the evening Josephus held a reception. All his contemporaries in the
brewery--the men who entered with himself--all those who had passed over
his head, all those with whom he had been a junior in the brewery,
called to congratulate him. At the moment he felt as if this universal
sympathy fully made up for all his sufferings of the past. Nor was it
until the morning that he partly perceived the truth--that no amount of
sympathy would restore his vanished youth, and give him what he had
lost.

But he will never quite understand this; and he looked upon himself as
having begun again from the point where he stopped. When the reception
was over and the last man gone, he began to talk about his future.

"I shall go on again with the evening course," he said, "just where I
left off. I remember we were having Monday for book-keeping by single
and double entry; Tuesday for French; Thursday for arithmetic--we were
in mixed fractions; and Friday for Euclid. Then I shall take up my class
at the Sunday-school again, and shall become a full church-member of the
Wesleyan connection--for though my father was once churchwarden at
Stepney church, I always favored the Wesleyans myself."

He talked as if he was a boy again, with all his life before him, and,
indeed, at the moment he thought he was.




CHAPTER XLIII.

O MY PROPHETIC SOUL!


Harry thought nothing about the papers which were found among the notes
that evening, because he was wholly engaged in the contemplation of a
man who had suddenly gone back thirty-five years in his life. The gray
hairs, thin at the top and gone at the temples, were not, it is true,
replaced by the curly brown locks of youth, though one thinks that
Josephus must always have been a straight-haired young man. But it was
remarkable to hear that man of fifty-five talking as if the years had
rolled backward, and he could take up the thread of life where he had
dropped it so long ago. He spoke of his evening lectures and his
Sunday-school with the enthusiasm of a boy. He would study--work of that
sort always paid: he would prepare his lessons for the school
beforehand, and stand well with the superintendent: it was good for men
in business offices, he said, to have a good character with the
superintendent. Above all, he would learn French and bookkeeping, with
mensuration, gauging, and astronomy, at the Beaumont Institute. All
these things would come in useful, some time or the other, at the
brewery; besides, it helps a man to be considered studious in his
habits. He became, in fact, in imagination a young man once more. And
because in the old days, when he had a character to earn, he did not
smoke tobacco, so now he forgot that former solace of the day, his
evening pipe.

"The brewery," he said, "is a splendid thing to get into. You can rise:
you may become--ah! even chief accountant: you may look forward to draw
over a thousand a year at the brewery, if you are steady and well
conducted, and get a good name. It is not every one, mind you, gets the
chance of such a service. And once in, always in. That's the pride of
the brewery. No turning out: there you stay, with your salary always
rising, till you die."

In the morning, the exultation of spirits was exchanged for a
corresponding depression. Josephus went to the brewery, knowing that he
should sit on that old seat of his no longer.

He went to look at it: the wooden stool was worn black; the desk was
worn black; he knew every cut and scratch in the lid at which he had
written so many years. There were all the books at which he had worked
so long: not hard work, nor work requiring thought, but simple entering
and ticking off of names, which a man can do mechanically--on summer
afternoons, with the window open and an occasional bee buzzing in from
Hainault Forest, and the sweet smell of the vats and the drowsy rolling
of the machinery--one can do the work half asleep and never make a
mistake. Now he would have to undertake some different kind of work,
more responsible work: he would have to order and direct; he would have
a chair instead of a stool, and a table instead of a desk. So that he
began to wish that he had in the old days gone further in his
studies--but he was always slow at learning--before the accident
happened; and to wonder if anything at all remained of the knowledge he
had then painfully acquired after all these years.

As a matter of fact, nothing remained. Josephus had become perfectly,
delightfully, inconceivably stupid. He had forgotten everything, and
could now learn no new thing. Pending the decision of Miss Messenger, to
whom the case was referred, they tried him with all sorts of simple
work--correspondence, answering letters, any of the things which require
a little intelligence. Josephus could do nothing. He sat like a helpless
boy and looked at the documents. Then they let him alone, and for a
while he came every day, sat all day long, half asleep, and did nothing,
and was much less happy than when he had been kept at work from nine
o'clock in the morning till six o'clock at night.

When Harry remembered the packet of papers placed in his hand, which was
on the following morning, he read them. And the effect of his reading
was that he did not go to work that morning at all.

He was not a lawyer, and the principal paper was a legal instrument, the
meaning of which it took him some little time to make out.

"Hum--hum--um--why can't they write plain English. 'I give to my said
trustees, John Skelton and Benjamin Bunker, the three freehold houses as
follows: that called number twenty-nine on Stepney Green, forty-five in
Beaumont Square, and twenty-three in Redman's Row, upon trust to apply
the rents and income of the same as in their absolute discretion they
may think fit for the maintenance, education, and benefit of the said
Caroline, until she be twenty-one years old or until she marry, and to
invest from time to time the accumulations of such rents and income as
is hereintofore provided, and to apply the same when invested in all
respects as I direct concerning the last above-mentioned premises. And
when the said Caroline shall attain the age of twenty-one, or marry, I
direct my said trustees to pay to her the said rents and income and the
income of the accumulation of the same, if any during her life, by four
equal quarterly payments for her sole and separate use, free from the
debts and engagements of any husband or husbands she may marry; and I
direct that on the death of the said Caroline my said trustees shall
hold and stand possessed of all the said premises for such person or
persons and in such manner in all respects as the said Caroline shall by
deed or will appoint. And in default of such appointment and so far as
the same shall not extend upon trust'--and so on--and so on."

Harry read this document with a sense, at first, of mystification. Then
he read it a second time, and began to understand it.

"The houses," he said, "my mother's houses, are hers, free from any
debts contracted by her husband: they are vested in trustees for her
behalf; she could not sell or part with them. And the trustees were John
Skelton and Benjamin Bunker. John Skelton--gone to Abraham's bosom, I
suppose. Benjamin Bunker--where will he go to? The houses were tied
up--settled--entailed."

He read the document right through for the third time.

"So," he said. "The house at number twenty-nine Stepney Green. That is
the house which Bunker calls his own; the house of the Associated
Dressmakers; and it's mine--mine." He clinched his fist and looked
dangerous. "Then the house at twenty-three Redman's Row, and at
forty-five Beaumont Square. Two more houses. Also mine. And Bunker, the
perfidious Bunker, calls them all his own! What shall be done to
Bunker?"

"Next," he went on, after reading the document again, "Bunker is a
fraudulent trustee, and his brother trustee too, unless he has gone
dead. Of that there can be no doubt whatever. That virtuous and
benevolent Bunker was my mother's trustee--and mine. And he calmly
appropriates the trust to his own uses--Uncle Bunker! Uncle Bunker!"

"I knew from the beginning that there was something wrong. First, I
thought he had taken a sum of money from Lord Jocelyn. Then I found out
that he had got possession of houses in a mysterious manner. And now I
find that he was simply the trustee. Wicked Uncle Bunker!"

Armed with his precious document, he put on his hat and walked straight
off, resolution on his front, toward his uncle's office. He arrived just
when Mr. Bunker was about to start on a daily round among his houses. By
this frequent visitation he kept up the hearts of his tenants, and
taught them the meaning of necessity; so that they put by their money
and religiously paid the rent. Else----

"Pray," said Harry, "be so good as to take off your hat, and sit down
and have five minutes' talk with me."

"No, sir," said Bunker, "I will not. You can go away, do you hear? Be
off; let me lock my office and go about my own business."

"Do take off your hat, my uncle."

"Go, sir, do you hear?"

"Sit down and let us talk--my honest--trustee!"

Mr. Bunker dropped into a chair.

In all the conversations and dramatic scenes made up in his own mind to
account for the possession of the houses, it had never occurred to him
that the fact of his having been a trustee would come to light. All were
dead, except himself, who were concerned in that trust: he had forgotten
by this time that there was any deed: by ignoring the trust he
simplified, to his own mind, the transfer of the houses; and during all
these years he had almost forgotten the obligations of the trust.

"What do you mean?" he stammered.

"Virtuous uncle! I mean that I know all. Do you quite understand me? I
mean really and truly all. Yes: all that there is to know--all that you
hide away in your own mind and think that no one knows."

"What--what--what do you know?"

"First, I know which the houses are--I mean my houses--my mother's
houses. The house in Stepney Green that you have let to Miss Kennedy is
one; a house in Beaumont Square--do you wish to know the number?--is
another; and a house in Redman's Row--and do you want to know the number
of that?--is the third. You have collected the rents of those houses
and paid those rents to your own account for twenty years and more."

"Go on. Let us hear what you pretend to know. Suppose they were
Caroline's houses, what then?" He spoke with an attempt at bounce; but
he was pale, and his eyes were unsteady.

"This next. These houses, man of probity, were not my mother's property
to dispose of as she pleased."

"Oh! whose were they, then?"

"They were settled upon her and her heirs after her; and the property
was placed in the hands of two trustees: yourself, my praiseworthy; and
a certain John Skelton, of whom I know nothing. Presumably, he is dead."

Mr. Bunker made no reply at all. But his cheek grew paler.

"Shall I repeat this statement, or is that enough for you?" asked Harry.
"The situation is pretty, perhaps not novel: the heir has gone away,
probably never to come back again; the trustee, sole surviving, no doubt
receives the rents. Heir comes back. Trustee swears the houses are his
own. When the trustee is brought before a court of law and convicted,
the judge says that the case is one of peculiar enormity, and must be
met by transportation for five-and-twenty years;
five--and--twenty--years, my patriarch! think of that, in uniform and
with short hair."

Mr. Bunker said nothing. But by the agitation of his fingers it was
plain that he was thinking a great deal.

"I told you," cried Harry. "I warned you, some time ago, that you must
now begin to think seriously about handcuffs and prison, and men in
blue. The time has come now, when, unless you make restitution of all
that you have taken, action will be taken, and you will realize what it
is that people think of the fraudulent trustee. Uncle Bunker, my heart
bleeds for you."

"Why did you come here?" asked his uncle, piteously. "Why did you come
here at all? We got on very well without you--very well and comfortably,
indeed."

This seemed a feeble sort of bleat. But, in fact, the Bunker's mind was
for the moment prostrated. He had no sound resistance left.

"I offered you," he went on, "twenty-five pounds--to go. I'll double
it--there. I'll give you fifty pounds to go, if you'll go at once. So
that there will be an end to all this trouble."

"Consider," said Harry, "there's the rent of Miss Kennedy's
house--sixty-five pounds a year for that; there's the house in Beaumont
Square--fifty for that; and the house in Redman's Row at five-and-twenty
at least: comes to a hundred and forty pounds a year, which you have
drawn, my precious uncle, for twenty-one years at least. That makes,
without counting interest, two thousand nine hundred and forty pounds.
And you want to buy me off for fifty pounds!"

"Not half the money--not half the money!" his uncle groaned. "There's
repairs and painting--and bad tenants; not half the money."

"We will say, then," lightly replied his nephew, as if nine hundred were
a trifle, "we will say two thousand pounds. The heir to that property
has come back; he says, 'Give me my houses, and give me an account of
the discharge of your trust.' Now"--Harry rose from the table on which
he had been sitting--"let us have no more bounce: the game is up. I have
in my pocket--here," he tapped his coat-pocket, "the original deed
itself. Do you want to know where it was found? Behind a safe at the
Brewery, where it was hidden by your brother-in-law, Bob Coppin, with
all the country notes which got Josephus into a mess. As for the date I
will remind you that it was executed about thirty-five years ago, when
my mother was still a girl and unmarried, and you had recently married
her sister. I have the deed here. What is more, it has been seen by the
chief accountant at the Brewery, who gave it me. Bunker, the game is
up."

He moved toward the door.

"Have you anything to say before I go? I am now going straight to a
lawyer."

"What is the--the--lowest--O good Lord!--the very lowest figure that you
will take to square it? Oh! be merciful; I am a poor man, indeed a very
poor man, though they think me warm. Yet I must scrape and save to get
along at all."

"Two thousand," said Harry.

"Make it fifteen hundred. Oh! fifteen hundred to clear off all scores,
and then you can go away out of the place; I could borrow fifteen
hundred."

"Two thousand," Harry repeated. "Of course, besides the houses, which
are mine."

"_Besides_ the houses? Never. You may do your worst. You may drag your
poor old uncle, now sixty years of age, before the courts, but two
thousand besides the houses? Never!"

He banged the floor with his stick, but his agitation was betrayed by
the nervous tapping of the end upon the oil-cloth which followed the
first hasty bang.

"No bounce, if you please." Harry took out his watch. "I will give you
five minutes to decide; or, if your mind is already made up, I will go
and ask advice of a lawyer at once."

"I cannot give you that sum of money," Bunker declared; "it is not that
I would not; I would if I could. Business has been bad; sometimes I've
spent more than I've made; and what little I've saved I meant always for
you--I did, indeed. I said, 'I will make it up to him. He shall have it
back with----'"

"One minute gone," said Harry, relentlessly.

"Oh! this is dreadful. Why, to get even fifteen hundred I should have to
sell all my little property at a loss; and what a dreadful thing it is
to sell property at a loss! Give me more time to consider, only a week
or so, just to look round."

"Three minutes left," said Harry the hardened.

"Oh! oh! oh!" He burst into tears and weeping of genuine grief, and
shame, and rage. "Oh, that a nephew should be found to persecute his
uncle in such a way! Where is your Christian charity? Where is forgiving
and remitting?"

"Only two minutes left," said Harry, unmoved.

Then Bunker fell upon his knees: he grovelled and implored pardon; he
offered one house, two houses, and twelve hundred pounds, fifteen
hundred pounds, eighteen hundred pounds.

"One minute left," said Harry.

Then he sat down and wiped the tears from his eyes, and in good round
terms--in Poplar, Limehouse, Shadwell, Wapping, and Ratcliff Highway
terms--he cursed his nephew, and the houses, and the trust, and all that
therein lay, because, before the temptation came, he was an honest man,
whereas now he should never be able to look Stepney in the face again.

"Time's up," said Harry, putting on his hat.

In face of the inevitable, Mr. Bunker showed an immediate change of
front. He neither prayed, nor wept, nor swore. He became once more the
complete man of business. He left the stool of humiliation, and seated
himself on his own Windsor chair before his own table. Here, pen in
hand, he seemed as if he were dictating rather than accepting terms.

"Don't go," he said. "I accept."

"Very good," Harry replied. "You know what is best for yourself. As for
me, I don't want to make more fuss than is necessary. You know the
terms?"

"Two thousand down; the three houses; and a complete discharge in full
of all claims. Those are the conditions."

"Yes, those are the conditions."

"I will draw up the discharge," said Mr. Bunker, "and then no one need
be any the wiser."

Harry laughed. This cool and business-like compromise of felony pleased
him.

"You may draw it up if you like. But my opinion of your ability is so
great, that I shall have to show the document to a solicitor for his
approval and admiration."

Mr. Bunker was disconcerted. He had hoped--that is, thought--he saw his
way; but never mind. He quickly recovered and said, with decision:

"Go to Lawyer Pike, in the Mile End Road."

"Why? Is the Honorable Pike a friend of yours?"

"No, he isn't; that is why I want you to go to him. Tell him that you
and I have long been wishing to clear up these accounts, and that you've
agreed to take the two thousand with the houses." Mr. Bunker seemed now
chiefly anxious that the late deplorable scene should be at once
forgotten and forgiven. "He said the other day that I was nothing better
than a common grinder and oppressor. Now, when he sees what an
honorable trustee I am, he will be sorry he said that. You can tell
everybody if you like. Why, what is it? Here's my nephew comes home to
me and says, 'Give me my houses.' I say, 'Prove your title.' Didn't I
say so? How was I to know that he was my nephew? Then the gentleman
comes who took him away, and says, 'He is your long-lost nephew;' and I
say, 'Take your houses, young man, with the accumulations of the rent
hoarded up for you.' Why, you can tell everybody that story."

"I will leave you to tell it, Bunker, your own way. Everybody will
believe that way of telling the story. What is more, I will not go out
of my way to contradict it."

"Very good, then. And on that understanding I withdraw all the harsh
things I may have said to you, nephew. And we can be good friends
again."

"Certainly, if you like," said Harry, and fairly ran away for fear of
being called upon to make more concessions.

"It's a terrible blow!" The old man sat down and wiped his forehead. "To
think of two thousand down! But it might have been much worse. Ah! it
might have been very, very much worse. I've done better than I expected,
when he said he had the papers. The young man's a fool--a mere fool. The
houses let for £150 a year, and they have never been empty for six
months together; and the outside repairs are a trifle, and I've saved it
all every year. Ha! now a hundred and fifty pounds a year for twenty
years and more, at compound interest only five per cent., is close on
£5,000. I've calculated it out often enough to know. Yes, and I've made
five per cent. on it, and sometimes six and seven, and more, with no
losses. It might have been far, far worse. It's come to £7,000 if it's a
penny. And to get rid of that awful fear and that devil of a boy with
his grins and his sneers at £2,000, why, it's cheap, I call it cheap. As
for the houses, I'll get them back, see if I don't."




CHAPTER XLIV.

A FOOL AND HIS MONEY.


Mr. Pike, the solicitor of the Mile End Road, does not belong to the
story--which is a pity, because he has many enviable qualities--further
than is connected with Harry's interview with him.

He read the documents and heard the story from beginning to end. When he
had quite mastered all the details he began mildly to express
astonishment and pity that any young man could be such a fool. This was
hard, because Harry really thought he had done a mighty clever thing.
"You have been taken in, sir," said Mr. Pike, "in a most barefaced and
impudent manner. Two thousand pounds! Why, the mere rent alone, without
counting interest, is three thousand. Go away, sir; find out this
fraudulent impostor, and tell him that you will have nothing to do with
him short of a full account and complete restitution."

"I cannot do that," said Harry.

"Why not?"

"Because I have passed my word."

"I think, young man, you said you were a cabinet-maker--though you look
something better."

"Yes, I belong to that trade."

"Since when, may I ask, have cabinet-makers been so punctilious as to
their promises?"

"The fact is," said Harry gravely, "we have turned over a new leaf, and
are now all on the side of truth and honor."

"Humph! Then there is nothing to do but to give the man a receipt in
full and a discharge. You are of age; you can do this if you like. Shall
I draw it up for you, and receive the money, and take over the houses?"

This was settled, therefore, and in this way Harry became a rich man,
with houses and money in the funds.

As for Bunker, he made the greatest mistake in his life when he sent
his nephew to Mr. Pike. He should have known, but he was like the
ostrich when he runs his head into the sand, and believes from the
secure retreat that he is invisible to his hunters. For his own version
of the incident was palpably absurd; and, besides, Mr. Pike heard
Harry's account of the matter. Therefore, though Bunker thought to heap
coals of fire upon his enemy's head, he only succeeded in throwing them
under his feet, which made him kick--"for who can go upon hot coals and
his feet not be burned?" The good man is now, therefore, laboring under
a cloud of prejudice which does not seem to lift, though perhaps he will
live it down. Other events have happened since, which have operated to
his prejudice. Everybody knows how he received his nephew; what wicked
things he said everywhere about him; and what rumors he spread about
Miss Kennedy: everybody knows that he had to disgorge houses--actually,
houses--which he had appropriated. This knowledge is common property;
and it is extremely unpleasant for Mr. Bunker when he takes his walks
abroad to be cruelly assailed by questions which hit harder than any
brickbat: they are hurled at him by working-men and by street boys. "Who
stole the 'ouse?" for instance, is a very nasty thing to be said to a
gentleman who is professionally connected with house property. I know
not how this knowledge came to be so generally known. Certainly Harry
did not spread it abroad. People, however, are not fools, and can put
things together; where the evil-doings and backslidings of their friends
are concerned they are surprisingly sharp.

Now when the ownership of the house in Stepney Green became generally
known, there immediately sprang up, as always happens on occasions of
discovery, rooting-out of facts, or exposure of wickedness, quite a
large crop of old inhabitants ready to declare that they knew all along
that the house on Stepney Green was one of those belonging to old Mr.
Coppin. He bought it, they said, of Mr. Messenger, who was born there;
and it was one of three left to Caroline, who died young. Who would
believe that Mr. Bunker could have been so wicked? Where is faith in
brother man since so eminent a professor of honesty has fallen?

Mr. Bunker suffers, but he suffers in silence; he may be seen any day
in the neighborhood of Stepney Green, still engaged in his usual
business; people may talk behind his back, but talk breaks no bones;
they don't dare talk before his face; though he has lost two thousand
pounds, there is still money left--he feels that he is a warm man, and
has money to leave behind him; it will be said of him that he cut up
well. Warmth of all kinds comforts a man; but he confesses with a pang
that he did wrong to send his nephew to that lawyer, who took the
opportunity, when he drew up the discharge and receipt, of giving him an
opinion--unasked and unpaid for--as to his conduct in connection with
the trust. There could be no mistake at all about the meaning and force
of that opinion. And, oddly enough, whenever Mr. Bunker sees the queen's
omnibus--that dark painted vehicle, driven by a policeman--pass along
the road, he thinks of Mr. Pike, and that opinion returns to his memory,
and he feels just exactly as if a bucket of cold water was trickling
down his back by the nape of the neck. Even in warm weather this is
disagreeable. And it shows that the lawyer must have spoken very strong
words indeed, and that although Mr. Bunker, like the simple ones and the
scorners, wished for none of the lawyer's counsel, unlike them he did
not despise their reproof. Yet he is happier, now that the blow has
fallen, than he was while he was awaiting it and dreaming of handcuffs.

We anticipate; but we have, indeed, seen almost the last of Mr. Bunker.
It is sad to part with him. But we have no choice.

In the evening Harry went as usual to the drawing-room. He stayed,
however, after the girls went away. There was nothing unusual in his
doing so. "Girls in my position," said the dressmaker, "are not tied by
the ordinary rules." To-night, however, he had something to say.

"Congratulate me," he cried, as soon as they were alone. "I have turned
out, as the story-books say, to be the heir to vast sums of money."

Angela turned pale. She was reassured, however, on learning the extent
of the heritage.

"Consider my romantic story," said Harry. "Instead of finding myself
the long-lost heir, strawberry-mark and all, to an earldom, I am the son
of a sergeant in the Line. And then, just as I am getting over the blow,
I find myself the owner of three houses and two thousand pounds. What
workman ever had two thousand pounds before? There was an under-gardener
I knew," he went on meditatively, "who once got a hundred; he called it
a round hundred, I remember. He and his wife went on the hospitable
drink for a fortnight; then they went to hospital for a month with
trimmings; and then went back to work--the money all gone--and joined
the Primitive Methodists. Can't we do something superior in the shape of
a burst or a boom, for the girls, with two thousand pounds?"

"Tell me," said Angela, "how you got it."

He narrated the whole story, for her instruction and amusement, with
some dramatic force, impersonating Bunker's wrath, terror, and
entreaties, and final business-like collapse.

"So that," said Angela, "you are now a man of property, and will, I
suppose, give up the work at the brewery."

"Do you think I should?"

"I do not like to see any man idle, and"--she hesitated--"especially
you."

"Thank you," said Harry. "Then I remain. The question of the two
thousand pounds--my cool two thousand--I am the winner of the two
thousand--in reserve. As for this house, however, decided steps must be
taken. Listen, Queen of the Mystery of Dress! You pay Bunker sixty-five
pounds a year or so for the rent of this house; that is a good large
deduction from the profits of the Association. I have been thinking, if
you approve, that I will have this house conveyed to you in trust for
the Association. Then you will be rent-free."

"But that is a very, very generous offer. You really wish to give us
this house altogether for ourselves!"

"If you will accept it."

"You have only these houses, and you give us the best of them. Is it
right and just to strip yourself?"

"How many houses should I have? Now there are two left, and their rent
brings in seventy pounds a year, and I have two thousand pounds which
will bring in another eighty pounds a year. I am rich--much too rich
for a common cabinet-maker."

"Oh!" she said, "what can we do but accept? And how shall we show our
gratitude? But, indeed, we can do nothing."

"I want nothing," said Harry. "I have had so much happiness in this
place that I can want for nothing. It is for me to show my gratitude."

"Thank you," she replied, giving him her hand. He stooped and kissed it,
but humbly, as one who accepts a small favor gratefully and asks for no
more.

They were alone in the drawing-room; the fire was low; only one lamp was
burning; Angela was sitting beside the fire; her face was turned from
him. A mighty wave of love was mounting in the young man's brain; but a
little more, a very little more, and he would have been kneeling at her
feet. She felt the danger; she felt it the more readily because she was
so deeply moved herself. What had she given the girls, out of her
abundance, compared with what he had given out of his slender portion?
Her eyes filled with tears. Then she sprang to her feet and touched his
hand again.

"Do not forget your promise," she said.

"My promise? Oh! how long----"

"Patience," she replied. "Give me a little while--a little
while--only--and----"

"Forgive me," he said, kissing her hand again. "Forgive me."

"Let me go," she went on. "It is eleven o'clock." They put out the lamp
and went out. The night was clear and bright.

"Do not go in just yet," said Harry. "It is pleasant out here, and I
think the stars are brighter than they are at the West End."

"Everything is better here," said Angela, "than at the West End. Here we
have hearts, and can feel for each other. Here we are all alike--workmen
and workwomen together."

"You are a prejudiced person. Let us talk of the Palace of Delight--your
dream."

"Your invention," said Angela.

"Won't my two thousand go some way in starting it? Perhaps, if we could
just start it, the thing would go on of its own accord. Why, see what
you have done with your girls already."

"But I must have a big Palace--a noble building, furnished with
everything that we want. No, my friend, we will take your house because
it is a great and noble gift, but you shall not sacrifice your money.
Yet we will have that Palace, and before long. And when it is ready----"

"Yes, when it is ready."

"Perhaps the opening of the Palace will be, for all of us, the beginning
of a new happiness."

"You speak in a parable."

"No," she said, "I speak in sober earnestness. Now let me go. Remember
what I say; the opening of the Palace may be, if you will--for all of
us----"

"For you and me?"

"For--yes--for you--and for me. Good-night."




CHAPTER XLV.

LADY DAVENANT'S DINNER-PARTY.


Lady Davenant had now been in full enjoyment of her title in Portman
Square, where one enjoys such things more thoroughly than on Stepney
Green, for four or five weeks. She at first enjoyed it so much that she
thought of nothing but the mere pleasure of the greatness. She felt an
uplifting of heart every time she walked up and down the stately stairs;
another every time she sat at the well-furnished dinner table; and
another whenever she looked about her in the drawing-room. She wrote
copious letters to her friend Aurelia Tucker during these days. She
explained with fulness of detail, and in terms calculated to make that
lady expire of envy, the splendor of her position; and for at least five
weeks she felt as if the hospitality of Miss Messenger actually brought
with it a complete recognition of her claim. Her husband, not so
sanguine as herself, knew very well that the time would come when the
Case would have to be taken up again and sent in to the proper quarter
for examination. Meantime he was resigned, and even happy. Three square
meals a day, each of them abundant, each a masterpiece of art, were
enough to satisfy that remarkable twist which, as her ladyship was
persuaded, one knows not on what grounds, had always been a
distinguishing mark of the Davenants. Familiarity speedily reconciled
him to the presence of the footmen; he found in the library a most
delightful chair in which he could sleep all the morning; and it pleased
him to be driven through the streets in a luxurious carriage under soft,
warm furs, in which one can take the air and get a splendid appetite
without fatigue.

They were seen about a great deal. It was a part of Angela's design that
they should, when the time came for going back again, seem to themselves
to have formed a part of the best society in London. Therefore she gave
instructions to her maid that her visitors were to go to all the public
places, the theatres, concerts, exhibitions, and places of amusement.
The little American lady knew so little what she ought to see and
whither she ought to go, that she fell back on Campion for advice and
help. It was Campion who suggested a theatre in the evening, the
Exhibition of Old Masters or the Grosvenor Gallery in the morning, and
Regent Street in the afternoon; it was Campion who pointed out the
recognized superiority of Westminster Abbey, considered as a place of
worship for a lady of exalted rank, over a chapel up a back street, of
the Baptist persuasion, to which at her own home Lady Davenant had
belonged. It was Campion who went with her and showed her the shops, and
taught her the delightful art of spending her money--the money "lent"
her by Miss Messenger--in the manner becoming to a peeress. She was so
clever and sharp, that she caught at every hint dropped by the
lady's-maid; she reformed her husband's ideas of evening-dress; she
humored his weaknesses; she let him keep his eyes wide open at a farce
or a ballet on the understanding that at a concert or a sermon he might
blamelessly sleep through it; she even began to acquire rudimentary
ideas on the principles of art.

"I confess, my dear Aurelia," she wrote, "that habit soon renders even
these marble halls familiar. I have become perfectly reconciled to the
splendor of English patrician life, and now feel as if I had been born
to it. Tall footmen no longer frighten me, nor the shouting of one's
name after the theatre. Of course the outward marks of respect one
receives as one's due, when one belongs, by the gift of Providence, to a
great and noble house."

This was all very pleasant; yet Lady Davenant began to yearn for
somebody, if it were only Mrs. Bormalack, with whom she could converse.
She wanted a long chat. Perhaps Miss Kennedy or Mrs. Bormalack, or the
sprightly Mr. Goslett, might be induced to come and spend a morning with
her, or a whole day, if only they would not feel shy and frightened in
so splendid a place.

Meantime some one "connected with the Press" got to hear of a
_soi-disant_ Lord Davenant who was often to be seen with his wife in
boxes at theatres and other places of resort. He heard, this
intellectual connection of the Press, people asking each other who Lord
Davenant was; he inquired of the Red Book, and received no response; he
thereupon perceived that here was an opportunity for a sensation and a
mystery. He found out where Lord Davenant was living, by great good
luck--it was through taking a single four of whiskey in a bar frequented
by gentlemen in plush; and he proceeded to call upon his lordship and to
interview him.

The result appeared in a long _communique_ which attracted general and
immediate interest. The journalist set forth at length and in the most
graphic manner the strange and romantic career of the condescending
wheelwright; he showed how the discovery was made, and how, after many
years, the illustrious pair had crossed the Atlantic to put forward
their claim; and how they were offered the noble hospitality of a young
lady of princely fortune. It was a most delightful godsend to the paper
in which it appeared, and it came at a time when the House was not
sitting, and there was no wringle-wrangle of debates to furnish material
for the columns of big type which are supposed to sway the masses. The
other papers therefore seized upon the topic and had leading articles
upon it, in which the false Demetrius, the pretending Palæologus, Perkin
Warbeck, Lambert Simnel, George Psalmanazar, the Languishing Nobleman,
the Earl of Mar, the Count of Albany, with other claims and claimants,
furnished illustrations to the claims of the Davenants. The publicity
given to the Case by these articles delighted her ladyship beyond
everything, while it abashed and confounded her lord. He saw in it the
beginning of more exertion, and strenuous efforts after the final
recognition. And she carefully cut out all the articles and sent them to
her nephew Nicholas, to her friend Aurelia Tucker, and to the editor of
the _Canaan City Express_ with her compliments. And she felt all the
more, in the midst of this excitement, that if she did not have some one
to talk to she must go back to Stepney Green and spend a day. Or she
would die.

It was at this juncture that Campion, perhaps inspired by secret
instructions, suggested that her ladyship must be feeling a little
lonely, and must want to see her friends. Why not, she said, ask them to
dinner?

A dinner-party, Lady Davenant reflected, would serve not only to show
her old friends the reality of her position, but would also please them
as a mark of kindly remembrance. Only, she reflected, dinner at Stepney
Green had not the same meaning that it possesses at the West End. The
best dinner in that locality is that which is most plentiful, and there
are no attempts made to decorate a table. Another thing, dinner is taken
universally between one o'clock and two. "I think, Clara Martha," said
his lordship, whom she consulted in this affair of state, "that at any
time of day such a Feast of Belshazzar as you will give them will be
grateful; and they may call it dinner or supper, which ever they
please."

Thereupon Lady Davenant wrote a letter to Mrs. Bormalack inviting the
whole party. She explained that they had met with the most splendid
hospitality from Miss Messenger, in whose house they were still staying;
that they had become public characters, and had been the subject of
discussion in the papers, which caused them to be much stared at and
followed in the streets, and in theatres and concert-rooms; that they
were both convinced that their case would soon be triumphant; that they
frequently talked over old friends of Stepney, and regretted that the
distance between them was so great--though distance, she added kindly,
cannot divide hearts; and that, if Mrs. Bormalack's party would come
over together and dine with them, it would be taken as a great kindness,
both by herself and by his lordship. She added that she hoped they would
all come, including Mr. Fagg and old Mr. Maliphant and Mr. Josephus,
"though," she added with a little natural touch, "I doubt whether Mr.
Maliphant ever gave me a thought; and Mr. Josephus was always too much
occupied with his own misfortunes to mind any business of mine. And,
dear Mrs. Bormalack, please remember that when we speak of dinner we
mean what you call supper. It is exactly the same thing, only served a
little earlier. We take ours at eight o'clock instead of nine. His
lordship desires me to add that he shall be extremely disappointed if
Mr. Goslett does not come; and you will tell Miss Kennedy, whose
kindness I can never forget, the same from me, and that she must bring
Nelly and Rebekah and Captain Sorensen."

The letter was received with great admiration. Josephus, who had
blossomed into a complete new suit of clothes of juvenile cut, declared
that the invitation did her ladyship great credit, and that now his
misfortunes were finished he should be rejoiced to take his place in
society. Harry laughed, and said that of course he would go. "And you,
Miss Kennedy?"

Angela colored. Then she said that she would try to go.

"And if Mr. Maliphant and Daniel only go too," said Harry, "we shall be
as delightful a party as were ever gathered together at one
dinner-table."

It happened that about this time Lord Jocelyn remembered the American
claimants, and his promise to call upon them. He therefore called, and
was received with the greatest cordiality by her little ladyship, and
with wondrous affability, as becomes one man of rank toward another, by
Lord Davenant.

It was her ladyship who volubly explained their claim to him, and the
certainty of the assumption that their Timothy Clitheroe was the lost
heir to the same two Christian names; her husband only folded his fat
hands over each other, and from time to time wagged his head.

"You are the first of my husband's brother peers," she said, "who has
called upon us. We shall not forget this kindness from your lordship."

"But I am not a peer at all," he explained; "I am only a younger son
with a courtesy title. I am quite a small personage."

"Which makes it all the kinder," said her ladyship; "and I must say
that, grand as it is, in this big house, one does get tired of hearin'
no voice but your own--and my husband spends a good deal of his time in
the study. Oh! a man of great literary attainments, and a splendid
mathematician. I assure your lordship not a man or a boy in Canaan City
can come near him in algebra."

"Up to a certain point, Clara Martha," said her husband, meaning that
there might be lofty heights in science to which even he himself could
not soar. "Quadratic equations, my lord."

Lord Jocelyn made an original remark about the importance of scientific
pursuits.

"And since you are so friendly," continued her ladyship, "I will venture
to invite your lordship to dine with us."

"Certainly. I shall be greatly pleased."

"We have got a few friends coming to-morrow evening," said her ladyship,
rather grandly. "Friends from Whitechapel."

Lord Jocelyn looked curious.

"Yes, Mr. Josephus Coppin and his cousin Mr. Goslett, a sprightly young
man who respects rank."

"He is coming, is he?" asked Lord Jocelyn, laughing.

"And then there is Miss Kennedy----"

"She is coming too?" He rose with alacrity. "Lady Davenant, I shall be
most happy to come, I assure you."

It was most unfortunate that next day Miss Kennedy had such a dreadful
headache, that she found herself prevented from going with the rest.
This was a great disappointment, and at the last moment old Mr.
Maliphant could not be found, and they had to start without him.

How they performed the journey, how Harry managed to let most of the
party go on before, because of his foolish pride, which would not let
him form one of a flock all going out together, and how he with Captain
Sorensen and Nelly came on after the rest, may be passed over.

When he got to Portman Square, he found the first detachment already
arrived, and, to his boundless astonishment, his guardian. Lady
Davenant, arrayed in her black velvet and the jewels which Angela gave
her, looked truly magnificent. Was it possible, Mrs. Bormalack thought,
that such a transformation could be effected in a woman by a velvet
gown? She even looked tall. She received her friends with unaffected
kindness, and introduced them all to Lord Jocelyn.

"Mrs. Bormalack, your lordship, my former landlady, and always my very
good friend. Professor Climo, your lordship, the famous conjurer. And
I'm sure the way he makes things disappear makes you believe in magic.
Mr. Fagg, the great scholar; of whom, perhaps, your lordship has heard.
Mr. Josephus Coppin, who has been unfortunate." Lord Jocelyn wondered
what that meant. "Miss Rebekah Hermitage, whose father is minister of
the Seventh Day Independents, and a most respectable connection, though
small in number. Captain Sorensen, your lordship, who comes from the
Trinity Almshouse, and Nellie his daughter; and Mr. Goslett. And I think
that is all; and the sooner they let us have dinner the better."

Lord Jocelyn shook hands with everybody. When it came to Harry, he
laughed, and they both laughed, but they did not say why.

"And where is Miss Kennedy?" asked her ladyship. And there were great
lamentations. "I wanted your lordship to see Miss Kennedy. Oh, there's
nobody like Miss Kennedy--is there, Nelly?"

"Nobody," said Nelly. "There can be nobody like Miss Kennedy." Lord
Jocelyn was struck with the beauty of this girl, whom he remembered
seeing at the dressmakery. He began to hope that she would sit next to
him at dinner.

"Nobody half so beautiful in all Stepney, is there?"

"Nobody half so good," said Rebekah.

Then the dinner was announced, and there was confusion in going down,
because nobody would go before Lord Jocelyn, who, therefore, had to lead
the way. Lord Davenant offered his arm to Mrs. Bormalack, Harry to
Nelly, and Captain Sorensen to Rebekah. The professor, Mr. Fagg, and
Josephus came last.

"To be sure," said Mrs. Bormalack, looking about her, thankful that she
had put on her best cap, "magnificence was expected, as was your
lordship's due, but such as this--no, young man, I never take soup
unless I've made it myself, and am quite sure--such as this, my lord, we
did not expect."

She was splendid in her beautiful best cap, all ribbons and bows, with
an artificial dahlia in it of a far-off fashion--say, the forties; the
sight of the table, with its plate and flowers and fruit, filled her
with admiration, but, as she now says in recalling that stupendous feed,
there was too much ornament, which kept her mind off the cooking, so
that she really carried away no new ideas for Stepney use. Nelly did sit
next to Lord Jocelyn, who talked with her, and found that she was shy
until he touched upon Miss Kennedy. Then she waxed eloquent, and told
him marvels, forgetting that he was a stranger who probably knew and
cared nothing about Miss Kennedy. But Nelly belonged to that very
numerous class which believes its own affairs of the highest interest to
the world at large, and in this instance Miss Kennedy was a subject of
the deepest interest to her neighbors. Wherefore he listened while she
told what had been done for the workgirls by one woman, one of
themselves.

Opposite, on Lady Davenant's left, sat Captain Sorensen. In the old days
the captains of East Indiamen were not unacquainted with great men's
tables, but it was long since he had sat at such a feast. Presently Lord
Jocelyn began to look at him curiously.

"Who is the old gentleman opposite?" he whispered to Nelly.

"That is my father; he was a captain once, and commanded a great ship."

"I thought so," said Lord Jocelyn. "I remember him, but he has forgotten
me."

Next to the captain sat Rebekah, looking prepared for any fate, and not
unduly uplifted by the splendor of the scene. But for her, as well as
for nearly all who were present, the word dinner will henceforth have a
new and exalted meaning. The length of the feast, the number of things
offered, the appointments of the table, struck her imagination; she
thought of Belshazzar and of Herod; such as the feast before her were
those feasts of old; she tasted the champagne, and it took away her
breath; yet it seemed good. Mr. Goslett seemed to think so too, because
he drank so many glasses.

So did the others, and, being inexperienced in wine, they drank with
more valor than discretion, so that they began to talk loud, but that
was not till later.

"Do people--rich people--always dine like this?" asked Nelly of her
neighbor.

"Something like this; yes, that is, some such dinner, though simpler, is
always prepared for them."

"I was thinking," she said, "how differently people live. I would rather
live in our way--with Miss Kennedy--than in so much grandeur."

"Grandeur soon becomes a matter of habit. But as for Miss Kennedy, you
cannot live always with her, can you?"

"Why not?"

"Well, she may marry, you know."

Nelly looked across the table at Harry.

"I suppose she will; we all of us hope she will, if it is to stay with
us; but that need not take her away from us."

"Do you know Miss Messenger?"

"No," said Nelly; "she has been very kind to us; she is our best
customer, she sends us all sorts of kind messages, and presents even;
and she sends us her love and best wishes; I think she must be very fond
of Miss Kennedy. She promises to come some day and visit us. Whenever I
think of Miss Messenger, I think, somehow, that she must be like Miss
Kennedy; only I cannot understand Miss Kennedy being rich and the owner
of this great house."

When the ladies retired, at length, it became manifest that Josephus had
taken more wine than was good for him. He laughed loudly; he told
everybody that he was going to begin all over again, classes and
lectures and everything, including the Sunday-school and the church
membership. The professor, who, for his part, seemed indisposed for
conversation, retained the mastery over his fingers, and began to
prepare little tricks, and presently conveyed oranges into Lord
Davenant's coat-tails without moving from his chair. And Daniel Fagg,
whose cheek was flushed, and whose eyes were sparkling, rose from his
chair, and attacked Lord Jocelyn, note-book in hand.

"Is your lo'ship," he began, with a perceptible thickness of
speech--Lord Jocelyn recognized him as the man whom he had accosted at
Stepney Green, and who subsequently took dinner with the girls--"is your
lo'ship int'rested in Hebrew schriptions?"

"Very much indeed," said Lord Jocelyn, politely.

"'Low me to put your lo'ship's name down for schription, twelve-and-six?
Book will come out next month, Miss Ken'dy says so."

"Put up your book, Daniel," said Harry sternly, "and sit down."

"I want--show--his lo'ship--a Hebrew schription."

He sat down, however, obediently, and immediately fell fast asleep.

Said Lord Jocelyn to Captain Sorensen:

"I remember you, captain, very well indeed, but you have forgotten me.
Were you not in command of the _Sussex_ in the year of the Mutiny? Did
you not take me out with the 120th?"

"To be sure--to be sure I did; and I remember your lordship very well,
and am very glad to find you remember me. You were younger then."

"I was; and how goes it with you now, captain? Cheerfully as of old?"

"Ay, ay, my lord. I'm in the Trinity Almshouse, and my daughter is with
Miss Kennedy, bless her! Therefore I've nothing to complain of."

"May I call upon you, some day, to talk over old times? You used to sing
a good song in those days, and play a good tune, and dance a good
dance."

"Come, my lord, as often as you like," he replied in great good-humor.
"The cabin is small, but it's cozy, and the place is hard to get at."

"It is the queerest dinner I ever had, Harry," Lord Jocelyn whispered.
"I like our old captain and his daughter. Is the hard-hearted dressmaker
prettier than Nellie?"

"Prettier! why, there is no comparison possible."

"Yet Nelly hath a pleasing manner."

"Miss Kennedy turns all her girls into ladies. Come and see her."

"Perhaps, Harry, perhaps; when she is no longer hard-hearted; when she
has named the happy day."

"This evening," said Lady Davenant, when they joined her, "will be one
that I never can forget. For I've had my old friends round me, who were
kind in our poverty and neglect; and now I've your lordship, too, who
belongs to the new time. So that it is a joining together, as it were,
and one don't feel like stepping out of our place into another quite
different, as I shall tell Aurelia, who says she is afraid that splendor
may make me forget old friends; whereas there is nobody I should like to
have with us this moment better than Aurelia. But perhaps she judges
others by herself."

"Lor!" cried Mrs. Bormalack, "to hear your ladyship go on! It's like an
angel of goodness."

"And the only thing that vexes me--it's enough to spoil it all--is that
Miss Kennedy couldn't come. Ah! my lord, if you had only seen Miss
Kennedy! Rebekah and Nelly are two good girls and pretty, but you are
not to compare with Miss Kennedy--are you, dears?"

They both shook their heads, and were not offended.

It was past eleven when they left to go home in cabs; one contained the
sleeping forms of Josephus and Mr. Fagg; the next contained Captain
Sorensen and Nelly, with Harry. The Professor, who had partly revived,
came with Mrs. Bormalack and Rebekah in the last.

"You seemed to know Lord Jocelyn, Mr. Goslett," said the captain.

"I ought to," replied Harry simply; "he gave me my education."

"He was always a brave and generous officer, I remember," the captain
went on. "Yes, I remember him well; all the men would have followed him
everywhere. Well, he says he will come and see me."

"Then he will come," said Harry, "if he said so."

"Very good; if he comes, he shall see Miss Kennedy too."




CHAPTER XLVI.

THE END OF THE CASE.


This dinner, to which her ladyship will always look back with the
liveliest satisfaction, was the climax, the highest point, so to speak,
of her greatness, which was destined to have a speedy fall. Angela asked
Lord Jocelyn to read through the papers and advise. She told him of the
professor's discovery, and of the book which had belonged to the
wheelwright, and everything. Of course the opinion which he formed was
exactly that formed by Angela herself, and he told her so.

"I have asked them to my house," Angela wrote, "because I want them to
go home to their own people with pleasant recollections of their stay in
London. I should like them to feel, not that their claim had broken
down, and that they were defeated, but that it had been examined, and
was held to be not proven. I should be very sorry if I thought that the
little lady would cease to believe in her husband's illustrious descent.
Will you help me to make her keep her faith as far as possible and go
home with as little disappointment as possible?"

"I will try," said Lord Jocelyn.

He wrote to Lady Davenant that he had given careful consideration to the
Case, and had taken opinions, which was also true, because he made a
lawyer, a herald, and a peer all read the documents, and write him a
letter on the subject. He dictated all three letters, it is true; but
there is generally something to conceal in this world of compromises.

He went solemnly to Portman Square bearing these precious documents with
him. To Lady Davenant his opinion was the most important step which had
yet occurred in the history of the claim; she placed her husband in the
hardest arm-chair that she could find, with strict injunctions to keep
broad awake; and she had a great array of pens and paper laid out on the
table in order to look business-like. It must be owned that the good
feeling of the last two months, with carriage exercise, had greatly
increased his lordship's tendency to sleep and inaction. As for the
Case, he had almost ceased to think of it. The Case meant worry, copying
out, writing and re-writing, hunting up facts, and remembering; when the
Case was put away he could give up his mind to breakfast, lunch, and
dinner. Never had the present moment seemed so delightful to him.

Lord Jocelyn wore an expression of great gravity, as befitted the
occasion. In fact, he was intrusted with an exceedingly delicate
mission; he had to tell these worthy people that there was not the
slightest hope for them; to recommend them to go home again; and, though
the counsel would be clothed in sugared words, to renounce forever the
hope of proving their imaginary claim. But it is better to be told these
things kindly and sympathetically, by a man with a title, than by any
coarse or common lawyer.

"Before I begin"--Lord Jocelyn addressed himself to the lady instead of
her husband--"I would ask if you have any relic at all of that first
Timothy Clitheroe who is buried in your cemetery at Canaan City?"

"There is a book," said her ladyship. "Here it is."

She handed him a little book of songs, roughly bound in leather; on the
title-page was written at the top "Satturday," and at the bottom
"Davvenant."

Lord Jocelyn laid the book down and opened his case.

First, he reminded them that Miss Messenger in her first letter had
spoken of a possible moral, rather than legal, triumph; of a possible
failure to establish the claim before a committee of the House of Peers
to whom it would be referred. This, in his opinion, was the actual
difficulty; he had read the Case, as it had been carefully drawn up and
presented by his lordship--and he complimented the writer upon his lucid
and excellent style of drawing up of facts--and he had submitted the
Case for the opinion of friends of his own, all of them gentlemen
eminently proper to form and to express an opinion on such a subject. He
held the opinions of these gentlemen in his hands. One of them was from
Lord de Lusignan, a nobleman of very ancient descent. His lordship wrote
that there were very strong grounds for supposing it right to
investigate a case which presented, certainly, very remarkable
coincidences, if nothing more; that further investigations ought to be
made on the spot; and that, if this Timothy Clitheroe Davenant turned
out to be the lost heir, it would be another romance in the history of
the Peerage. And his lordship concluded by a kind expression of hope
that more facts would be discovered in support of the claim.

"You will like to keep this letter," said the reader, giving it to Lady
Davenant. She was horribly pale and trembled, because it seemed as if
everything was slipping from her.

"The other letters," Lord Jocelyn went on, "are to the same effect. One
is from a lawyer of great eminence, and the other is from a herald. You
will probably like to keep them, too, when I have read them."

Lady Davenant took the letters, which were cruel in their kindness, and
the tears came into her eyes.

Lord Jocelyn went on to say that researches made in their interest in
the parish registers had resulted in a discovery which might even be
made into an argument against the claim. There was a foundling child
baptized in the church in the same year as the young heir; he received
the name of the village, with the day of the week on which he was found
for Christian name; that is to say, he was called Saturday Davenant.

Then, indeed, his lordship became very red, and her ladyship turned
still paler, and both looked guilty. Saturday Davenant! the words in the
book. Suppose they were not a date and a name, but a man's whole name
instead!

"He left the parish," said Lord Jocelyn, "and was reported to have gone
to America."

Neither of them spoke. His lordship looked slowly around the room, as if
expecting that everything, even the solid mahogany of the library
shelves, would vanish suddenly away. And he groaned, thinking of the
dinners which would soon be things of the golden past.

"But, my friends," Lord Jocelyn went on, "do not be downcast. There is
always a possibility of new facts turning up. Your grandfather's name
may have been really Timothy Clitheroe, in which case I have very little
doubt that he was the missing heir; but he may, on the other hand, have
been the Saturday Davenant, in which case he lived and died with a lie
on his lips, which one would be sorry to think possible."

"Well, sir--if that is so--what do you advise that we should do now?"
asked the grandson of this mystery. He seemed to have become an American
citizen again, and to have shaken off the aristocratic manner.

"What I should advise is this. You will never, most certainly never get
recognition of your claim without stronger evidence than you at present
offer. On the other hand, no one will refuse to admit that you have a
strong case. Therefore I would advise you to go home to your own people,
to tell them what has happened--how your case was taken up and carefully
considered by competent authorities"--here he named again the lawyer,
the herald, and the peer--"to show them their opinions, and to say that
you have come back for further evidence, if you can find any, which will
connect you beyond a doubt with the lost heir."

"That is good advice, sir," said the claimant. "No, Clara Martha, for
once I will have my own way. The connection is the weak point; we must
go home and make it a strong point, else we had better stay there. I
said, all along, that we ought not to have come. Nevertheless, I'm glad
we came, Clara Martha. I shan't throw it in your teeth that we did come.
I'm grateful to you for making us come. We've made good friends here,
and seen many things which we shouldn't otherwise have seen. And the
thought of this house and the meals we've had in it--such breakfasts,
such luncheons, such dinners--will never leave us, I am sure."

Lady Davenant could say nothing. She saw everything torn from her at a
rough blow--her title, her consideration, the envy of her
fellow-citizens, especially of Aurelia Tucker. She put her handkerchief
to her eyes and sobbed aloud.

"You should not go back as if you were defeated," Lord Jocelyn went on,
in sympathy with the poor little woman. "You are as much entitled to the
rank you claim as ever. More: your case has been talked about; it is
known; should any of the antiquaries who are always grubbing about
parish records find any scrap of information which may help, he will
make a note of it for you. When you came you were friendless and
unknown. Now the press of England has taken you up; your story is
romantic; we are all interested in you, and desirous of seeing you
succeed. Before you go you will write to the papers stating why you go,
and what you hope to find. All these letters and papers and proofs of
the importance of your claim should be kept and shown to your friends."

"We feel mean about going back, and that's a fact," said his lordship.
"Still, if we must go back, why, we'd better go back with drums and
trumpets than sneak back----"

"Ah!" said his wife, "if you'd only shown that spirit from the
beginning, Timothy!"

He collapsed.

"If we go back," she continued, thoughtfully, "I suppose there's some
sort of work we can find, between us. Old folks hadn't ought to work
like the young, and I'm sixty-five, and so is my husband. But----"

She stopped, with a sigh.

"I am empowered by Miss Messenger," Lord Jocelyn went on, with great
softness of manner, "to make you a little proposition. She thinks that
it would be most desirable for you to have your hands free while you
make those researches which may lead to the discoveries we hope for.
Now, if you have to waste the day in work you will never be able to make
any research. Therefore Miss Messenger proposes--if you do not mind--if
you will accept--an annuity on your joint lives of six hundred dollars.
You may be thus relieved of all anxiety about your personal wants. And
Miss Messenger begs only that you may let this annuity appear the
offering of sympathizing English friends."

"But we don't know Miss Messenger," said her ladyship.

"Has she not extended her hospitality to you for two months and more? Is
not that a proof of the interest she takes in you?"

"Certainly it is. Why--see now--we've been living here so long, that
we've forgotten it is all Miss Messenger's gift."

"Then you will accept?"

"Oh, Lord Jocelyn, what can we do but accept?"

"And with grateful hearts," added his lordship. "Tell her that. With
grateful hearts. They've a way of serving quail in her house, that----"
He stopped and sighed.


They have returned to Canaan City; they live in simple sufficiency. His
lordship, when he is awake, has many tales to tell of London. His
friends believe Stepney Green to be a part of May-fair, and Mrs.
Bormalack to be a distinguished though untitled ornament of London
society; while as for Aurelia Tucker, who fain would scoff, there are
her ladyship's beautiful and costly dresses, and her jewels, and the
letters from Lord Jocelyn le Breton and the rich Miss Messenger, and the
six hundred dollars a year drawn monthly, which proclaim aloud that
there is something in the claim.

There are things which cannot be gainsaid.

Nevertheless, no new discoveries have yet rewarded his lordship's
researches.




CHAPTER XLVII.

A PALACE OF DELIGHT.


During this time the Palace of Delight was steadily rising. Before
Christmas its walls were completed and the roof on. Then began the
painting, the decorating, and the fittings. And Angela was told that the
building would be handed over to her, complete according to the
contract, by the first of March.

The building was hidden away, so to speak, in a corner of vast Stepney,
but already rumors were abroad concerning it, and the purpose for which
it was erected. They were conflicting rumors. No one knew at all what
was intended by it; no one had been within the walls; no one knew who
built it. The place was situated so decidedly in the very heart and core
of Stepney, that the outside public knew nothing at all about it, and
the rumors were confined to the small folk round it. So it rose in their
midst without being greatly regarded. No report or mention of it came to
Harry's ears, so that he knew nothing of it, and suspected nothing any
more than he suspected Miss Kennedy of being some other person.

The first of March in this present year of grace 1882 fell upon a
Wednesday. Angela resolved that the opening-day should be on Thursday,
the second, and that she would open it herself; and then another thought
came into her mind; and the longer she meditated upon it, the stronger
hold did the idea take upon her.

The Palace of Delight was not, she said, her own conception; it was that
of the man--the man she loved. Would it not be generous, in giving this
place over to the people for whom it was built, to give its real founder
the one reward which he asked?

Never any knight of old had been more loyal. He obeyed in the spirit as
well as the letter her injunction not to speak of love; not only did he
refrain from those good words which he would fain have uttered, but he
showed no impatience, grumbled not, had no fits of sulking; he waited,
patient. And in all other things he did her behest, working with a
cheerful heart for her girls, always ready to amuse them, always at her
service for things great and small, and meeting her mood with a ready
sympathy.

One evening, exactly a fortnight before the proposed opening-day, Angela
invited all the girls, and with them her faithful old captain and her
servant Harry, to follow her because she had a thing to show them. She
spoke with great seriousness, and looked overcome with the gravity of
this thing. What was she going to show them?

They followed, wondering, while she led the way to the church, and then
turned to the right among the narrow lanes of a part where, by some
accident, none of the girls belonged.

Presently she stopped before a great building. It was not lit up, and
seemed quite dark and empty. Outside, the planks were not yet removed,
and they wore covered with gaudy advertisements, but it was too dark to
see them. There was a broad porch above the entrance, with a generously
ample ascent of steps like unto those of St. Paul's Cathedral. Angela
rang a bell and the door was opened. They found themselves in an
entrance-hall of some kind, imperfectly lighted by a single gas-jet.
There were three or four men standing about, apparently waiting for
them, because one stepped forward, and said:

"Miss Messenger's party?"

"We are Miss Messenger's party," Angela replied.

"Whoever we are," said Harry, "we are a great mystery to ourselves."

"Patience," Angela whispered; "part of the mystery is going to be
cleared up."

"Light up, Bill," said one of the men.

Then the whole place passed suddenly into daylight, for it was lit by
the electric globes. It was a lofty vestibule. On either side were
cloak-rooms; opposite were entrance-doors. But what was on the other
side of these entrance-rooms none of them could guess.

"My friend," said Angela to Harry, "this place should be yours. It is of
your creation."

"What is it, then?"

"It is your Palace of Delight. Yes; nothing short of that. Will you lead
me into your palace?"

She took his arm while he marvelled greatly and asked himself what this
might mean. One of the men then opened the doors, and they entered,
followed by the wondering girls.

They found themselves in a lofty and very spacious hall. At the end was
a kind of throne--a red velvet divan, semicircular under a canopy of red
velvet. Statues stood on either side; behind them was a great organ;
upon the walls were pictures. Above the pictures were trophies in arms;
tapestry carpets--all kinds of beautiful things. Above the entrance was
a gallery for musicians; and on either side were doors leading to places
of which they knew nothing.

Miss Kennedy led the way to the semicircular divan at the end. She took
the central place, and motioned the girls to arrange themselves about
her. The effect of this little group sitting by themselves and in
silence, at the end of the great hall, was very strange and wonderful.

"My dears," she said, after a moment--and the girls saw that her eyes
were full of tears--"my dears, I have got a wonderful story to tell you.
Listen.

"There was a girl, once, who had the great misfortune to be born rich.
It is a thing which many people desire. She, however, who had it knew
what a misfortune it might become to her. For the possessor of great
wealth, more especially if it be a woman, attracts all the designing and
wicked people in the world, all the rogues and all the pretended
philanthropists to her, as wasps are attracted by honey; and presently,
by sad experience, she gets to look on all mankind as desirous only of
robbing and deceiving her. This is a dreadful condition of mind to fall
into, because it stands in the way of love and friendship and trust, and
all the sweet confidences which make us happy.

"This girl's name was Messenger. Now, when she was quite young she knew
what was going to happen, unless she managed somehow differently from
other women in her unhappy position. And she determined as a first step
to get rid of a large quantity of her wealth, so that the cupidity of
the robbers might be diverted.

"Now, she had a humble friend--only a dressmaker,--who, for reasons of
her own, loved her and would have served her if she could. And this
dressmaker came to live at the East End of London.

"And she saw that the girls who have to work for their bread are treated
in such a way that slavery would be a better lot for most of them. For
they have to work twelve hours in the day, and sometimes more; they sit
in close, hot rooms, poisoned by gas; they get no change of position as
the day goes on; they have no holiday, no respite, save on Sunday; they
draw miserable wages, and they are indifferently fed. So that she
thought one good thing Miss Messenger could do was to help those girls,
and this was how our Association was founded."

"But we shall thank you, all the same," said Nelly.

"Then another thing happened. There was a young--gentleman," Angela went
on, "staying at the East End too. He called himself a working-man, said
he was the son of a sergeant in the army, but everybody knew he was a
gentleman. This dressmaker made his acquaintance, and talked with him a
great deal. He was full of ideas, and one day he proposed that we should
have a Palace of Delight. It would cost a great deal of money; but they
talked as if they had that sum, and more, at their disposal. They
arranged it all; they provided for everything. When the scheme was fully
drawn up, the dressmaker took it to Miss Messenger. O my dear girls!
this _is_ the Palace of Delight. It is built as they proposed; it is
finished; it is our own; and here is its inventor."

She took Harry's hand. He stood beside her, gazing upon her impassioned
face; but he was silent. "It looks cold and empty now, but when you see
it on the opening day; when you come here night after night; when you
get to feel the place to be a part, and the best part, of your life,
then remember that what Miss Messenger did was nothing compared with
what this--this young gentleman did. For he invented it."

"Now," she said, rising--they were all too much astonished to make any
demonstration--"now let us examine the building. This hall is your great
reception-room. You will use it for the ball nights, when you give your
great dances; a thousand couples may dance here without crowding. On wet
days it is to be the playground of the children. It will hold a couple
of thousand, without jostling against each other. There is the gallery
for the music, as soon as you have got any."

She led the way to a door on the right.

"This," she said, "is your theatre."

It was like a Roman theatre, being built in the form of a semicircle,
tier above tier, having no distinction in places, save that some were
nearer the stage and some further off.

"Here," she said, "you will act. Do not think that players will be found
for you. If you want a theatre you must find your own actors. If you
want an orchestra you must find your own for your theatre, because in
this place everything will be done by yourselves."

They came out of the theatre. There was one other door on that side of
the hall.

"This," said Angela, opening it, "is the concert-room. It has an organ
and a piano and a platform. When you have got people who can play and
sing, you will give concerts."

They crossed the hall. On the other side were two more great rooms, each
as big as the theatre and the concert-room. One was a gymnasium, fitted
up with bars and ropes, and parallel rods and trapezes.

"This is for the young men," said Angela. "They will be stimulated by
prizes to become good gymnasts. The other room is the library. Here they
may come, when they please, to read and study."

It was a noble room, fitted with shelves and the beginning of a great
library.

"Let us go upstairs," said Angela.

Upstairs the rooms were all small, but there were a great many of them.

Thus there were billiard-rooms, card-rooms, rooms with chess, dominos,
and backgammon-tables laid out, smoking-rooms for men alone, tea and
coffee rooms, rooms where women could sit by themselves if they pleased,
and a room where all kinds of refreshments were to be procured. Above
these was a second floor, which was called the School. This consisted of
a great number of quite small rooms, fitted with desks, tables, and
whatever else might be necessary. Some of these rooms were called
music-rooms, and were intended for instruction and practice on different
instruments. Others were for painting, drawing, sculpture, modelling,
wood-carving, leather-work, brass-work, embroidery, lace-work, and all
manner of small arts.

"In the Palace of Delight," said Angela, "we shall not be like a troop
of revellers, thinking of nothing but dance and song and feasting. We
shall learn something every day; we shall all belong to some class.
Those of us who know already will teach the rest. And oh! the best part
of all has to be told. Everything in the palace will be done for nothing
except the mere cleaning and keeping in order. And if anybody is paid
anything, it will be at the rate of a working-man's wage--no more. For
this is our own palace, the club of the working-people; we will not let
anybody make money out of it. We shall use it for ourselves, and we
shall make our enjoyment by ourselves.

"All this is provided in the deed of trust by which Miss Messenger hands
over the building to the people. There are three trustees. One of these,
of course, is you--Mr. Goslett."

"I have been so lost in amazement," said Harry, "that I have been unable
to speak. Is this, in very truth, the Palace of Delight that we have
battled over so long and so often?"

"It is none other. And you are a trustee to carry out the intentions of
the founder--yourself."

They went downstairs again to the great hall.

"Captain Sorensen," Angela whispered, "will you go home with the girls?
I will follow in a few minutes."

Harry and Angela were left behind in the hall.

She called the man in charge of the electric light, and said something
to him. Then he went away and turned down the light, and they were
standing in darkness, save for the bright moon which shone through the
windows and fell upon the white statues and made them look like two
ghosts themselves standing among rows of other ghosts.

"Harry," said Angela.

"Do not mock me," he replied: "I am in a dream. This is not real. The
place----"

"It is your own Palace of Delight. It will be given to the people in a
fortnight. Are you pleased with your creation?"

"Pleased? And you?"

"I am greatly pleased. Harry"--it was the first time she had called him
by his Christian name--"I promised you--I promised I would tell you--I
would tell you--if the time should come----"

"Has the time come? O my dear love, has the time come?"

"There is nothing in the way. But oh!--Harry--are you in the same mind?
No--wait a moment." She held him by the wrists. "Remember what you are
doing. Will you choose a lifetime of work among working-people? You can
go back, now, to your old life; but--perhaps--you will not be able to go
back, then."

"I have chosen, long ago. You know my choice--O love--my love."

"Then, Harry, if it will make you happy--are you quite sure it
will?--you shall marry me on the day when the Palace is opened."


"You are sure," she said, presently, "that you can love me, though I am
only a dressmaker?"

"Could I love you," he replied, passionately, "if you were anything
else?"


"You have never told me," he said, presently, "your Christian name."

"It is Angela."

"Angela! I should have known it could have been no other. Angela, kind
heaven surely sent you down to stay awhile with me. If, in time to come,
you should be ever unhappy with me, dear, if you should not be able to
bear any longer with my faults, you would leave me and go back to the
heaven whence you came."


They parted, that night, on the steps of Mrs. Bormalack's dingy old
boarding-house, to both so dear. But Harry, for half the night, paced
the pavement, trying to calm the tumult of his thoughts. "A life of
work--with Angela--with Angela? Why, how small, how pitiful seemed all
other kinds of life in which Angela was not concerned!"




CHAPTER XLVIII.

MY LADY SWEET.


My story, alas! has come to an end, according to the nature of all
earthly things. The love vows are exchanged, the girl has given herself
to the man--rich or poor. My friends, if you come to think of it, no
girl is so rich that she can give more, or so poor that she can give
less, than herself; and in love one asks not for more or less. Even the
day is appointed, and nothing is going to happen which will prevent the
blessed wedding-bells from ringing, or the clergyman from the sacred
joining together of man and of maid, till death do part them. What more
to tell? We ought to drop the curtain while the moonlight pours through
the windows of the silent palace upon the lovers, while the gods and
goddesses, nymphs, naiads, and oreads in marble look on in sympathetic
joy. They, too, in the far-off ages, among the woods and springs of
Hellas, lived and loved, though their forests know them no more. Yet,
because this was no ordinary marriage, and because we are sorry to part
with Angela before the day when she begins her wedded life, we must fain
tell of what passed in that brief fortnight before the Palace was
opened, and Angela's great and noble dream became a reality.

There was, first of all, a great deal of business to be set in order.
Angela had interviews with her lawyers, and settlements had to be drawn
up about which Harry knew nothing, though he would have to sign them;
then there were the trust-deeds for the Palace. Angela named Harry, Dick
Coppin, the old Chartist, now her firm and fast friend, and Lord
Jocelyn, as joint trustees. They were to see, first of all, that no one
got anything out of the Palace unless it might be workmen's wages for
work done. They were to carry out the spirit of the house in making the
place support and feed itself, so that whatever amusements, plays,
dances, interludes, or mummeries were set afoot, all might be by the
people themselves for themselves; and they were to do their utmost to
keep out of the discordant elements of politics, religion, and party
controversy.

All the girls knew by this time that Miss Kennedy was to be married on
the second of March--the day when the Palace was to be opened. They also
learned, because the details were arranged and talked over every
evening, that the opening would be on a very grand scale indeed. Miss
Messenger herself was coming to hand it over in person to the trustees
on behalf of the people of Stepney and Whitechapel. There was to be the
acting of a play in the new theatre, a recital on the new organ, the
performance of a concert in the new concert-room, playing all the
evening long by a military band, some sort of general entertainment; and
the whole was to be terminated by a gigantic supper given by Miss
Messenger herself, to which fifteen hundred guests were bidden--namely,
first, all the employees of the brewery with their wives, if they had
any, from the chief brewer and the chief accountant down to the humblest
boy in the establishment; and, secondly, all the girls in the
Association, with two or three guests for each; and, thirdly, a couple
of hundred or so chosen from a list drawn up by Dick Coppin, and the
cobbler, and Harry.

As for Harry, he had now, by Angela's recommendation, resigned his
duties at the Brewery, in order to throw his whole time into the
arrangement for the opening day; and this so greatly occupied him that
he sometimes even forgot what the day would mean to him. The invitations
were sent in Miss Messenger's own name. They were all accepted, although
there was naturally some little feeling of irritation at the brewery
when it became known that there was to be a general sitting down of all
together. Miss Messenger also expressed her wish that the only beverage
at the supper should be Messenger's beer, and that of the best quality.
The banquet, in imitation of the Lord Mayor's dinner on the ninth of
November, was to be a cold one, and solid, with plenty of ices, jellies,
puddings, and fruit. But there was something said about glasses of wine
for every guest after supper.

"I suppose," said Angela, talking over this pleasant disposition of
things with Harry, "that she means one or two toasts to be proposed. The
first should be to the success of the Palace. The second, I think"--and
she blushed--"will be the health of you, Harry, and of me."

"I think so much of you," said Harry, "all day long, that I never think
of Miss Messenger at all. Tell me what she is like, this giver and
dispenser of princely gifts. I suppose she really is the owner of
boundless wealth?"

"She has several millions, if you call that boundless. She has been a
very good friend to me, and will continue so."

"You know her well?"

"I know her very well. O Harry, do not ask me any more about her or
myself. When we are married I will tell you all about the friendship of
Miss Messenger to me. You trust me, do you not?"

"Trust you! O Angela!"

"My secret, such as it is, is not a shameful one, Harry; and it has to
do with the very girl, this Miss Messenger. Leave me with it till the
day of our wedding. I wonder how far your patience will endure my
secrets? for here is another. You know that I have a little money?"

"I am afraid, my Angela," said Harry, laughing, "that you must have made
a terrible hole in it since you came here. Little or much, what does it
matter to us? Haven't we got the two thousand? Think of that tremendous
lump."

"What can it matter?" she cried. "O Harry, I thank Heaven for letting
me, too, have this great gift of sweet and disinterested love. I thought
it would never come to me."

"To whom, then, should it come?"

"Don't, Harry, or--yes--go on thinking me all that you say, because it
may help to make me all that you think. But that is not what I wanted to
say. Would you mind very much, Harry, if I asked you to take my name?"

"I will take any name you wish, Angela. If I am your husband, what does
it matter about any other name?"

"And then one other thing, Harry. Will your guardian give his consent?"

"Yes, I can answer for him that he will. And he will come to the wedding
if I ask him."

"Then ask him, Harry."


"So," said Lord Jocelyn, "the dressmaker has relented, has she? Why,
that is well. And I am to give my consent? My dear boy, I only want you
to be happy. Besides, I am quite sure and certain that you will be
happy."

"Everybody is, if he marries the woman he loves," said the young man
sententiously.

"Yes--yes, if he goes on loving the woman he has married. However,
Harry, you have my best wishes and consent, since you are good enough to
ask for it. Wait a bit." He got up and began to search about in drawers
and desks. "I must give your fiancée a present, Harry. See--here is
something good. Will you give her, with my best love and good wishes,
this? It was once my mother's."

Harry looked at the gaud, set with pearls and rubies in old-fashioned
style.

"Is it not," he asked, "rather too splendid for a--poor people in our
position?"

Lord Jocelyn laughed aloud.

"Nothing," he said, "can be too splendid for a beautiful woman. Give it
her, Harry, and tell her I am glad she has consented to make you happy.
Tell her I am more than glad, Harry. Say that I most heartily thank her.
Yes, thank her. Tell her that. Say that I thank her from my heart."

As the day drew near the girls became possessed of a great fear. It
seemed to all as if things were going to undergo some great and sudden
change. They knew that the house was secured to them free of rent; but
they were going to lose their queen, that presiding spirit who not only
kept them together, but also kept them happy. In her presence there were
no little tempers, and jealousies were forgotten. When she was with them
they were all on their best behavior. Now it is an odd thing in girls,
and I really think myself privileged, considering my own very small
experience of the sex, in being the first to have discovered this
important truth--that, whereas to boys good behavior is too often a
_gêne_ and a bore, girls prefer behaving well. They are happiest when
they are good, nicely dressed, and sitting all in a row with company
manners. But who, when Miss Kennedy went away, would lead them in the
drawing-room? The change, however, was going to be greater than they
knew or guessed; the drawing-room itself would become before many days a
thing of the past, but the Palace would take its place.

They all brought gifts; they were simple things, but they were offered
with willing and grateful hearts. Rebekah brought the one volume of her
father's library which was well bound. It was a work written in
imitation of Hervey's "Meditations," and dwelt principally with tombs,
and was therefore peculiarly appropriate as a wedding present. Nelly
brought a ring which had been her mother's, and was so sacred to her
that she felt it _must_ be given to Miss Kennedy; the other girls gave
worked handkerchiefs, and collars, and such little things.

Angela looked at the table on which she had spread all her wedding
presents: the plated teapot from Mrs. Bormalack; the girls' work;
Nelly's ring; Rebekah's book; Lord Jocelyn's bracelet. She was happier
with these trifles than if she had received in Portman Square the
hundreds of gifts and jewelled things which would have poured in for the
young heiress.

And in the short fortnight she thought for everybody. Josephus received
a message that he might immediately retire on the pension which he would
have received had he been fortunate in promotion, and been compelled to
go by ill-health: in other words, he was set free with three hundred
pounds a year for life. He may now be seen any day in the Mile End Road
or on Stepney Green, dressed in the fashion of a young man of twenty-one
or so, walking with elastic step, because he is so young, yet
manifesting a certain gravity, as becomes one who attends the evening
lectures of the Beaumont Institute in French and arithmetic, and takes a
class on the Sabbath in connection with the Wesleyan body. After all, a
man is only as old as he feels; and why should not Josephus, whose youth
was cruelly destroyed, feel young again, now that his honor has been
restored to him?

On the morning before the wedding, Angela paid two visits of
considerable importance.

The first was to Daniel Fagg, to whom she carried a small parcel. "My
friend," she said, "I have observed your impatience about your book.
Your publisher thought that, as you are inexperienced in correcting
proofs, it would be best to have the work done for you. And here, I am
truly happy to say, is the book itself."

He tore the covering from the book, and seized it as a mother would
seize her child.

"My book!" he gasped, "my book!"

Yes, his book; bound in sober cloth, with an equilateral triangle on the
cover for simple ornament. "The Primitive Alphabet, by Daniel Fagg!" "My
book!"

Angela explained to him that his passage to Melbourne was taken, and
that he would sail in a week; and that a small sum of money would be put
into his hands on landing: and that a hundred copies of the book would
be sent to Australia for him, with more if he wanted them. But she
talked to idle ears, for Daniel was turning over the leaves and
devouring the contents of his book.

"At all events," said Angela, "I have made one man happy."

Then she walked to the Trinity Almshouse, and sought her old friend,
Captain Sorensen.

To him she told her whole story from the very beginning, begging only
that he would keep her secret till the next evening.

"But, of course," said the sailor, "I knew, all along, that you were a
lady born and bred. You might deceive the folk here, who've no chance,
poor things, of knowing a lady when they see one--how should they? But
you could not deceive a man who's had his quarter-deck full of ladies.
The only question in my mind was, why you did it."

"You did not think that what Bunker said was true--did you, Captain
Sorensen?"

"Nay," he replied. "Bunker never liked you; and how I am to thank you
enough for all you've done for my poor girl----"

"Thank me by continuing to be my dear friend and adviser," said Angela.
"If I thought it would pleasure you to live out of this place----"

"No, no," said the captain, "I could not take your money; any one may
accept the provision of the asylum and be grateful."

"I knew you would say so. Stay on, then, Captain Sorensen. And as
regards Nelly, my dear and fond Nelly----"

It needs not to tell what she said and promised on behalf of Nelly.

And at the house the girls were trying on the new white frocks and white
bonnets in which they were to go to the wedding. They were all
bridemaids, but Nelly had the post of honor.




CHAPTER XLIX.

"UPROUSE YE THEN, MY MERRY, MERRY MEN."


At nine in the morning Harry presented himself at the house, no longer
his own, for the signing of certain papers. The place was closed for a
holiday, but the girls were already assembling in the show-room, getting
their dresses laid out, trying on their gloves, and chattering like
birds up in the branches on a fine, spring morning. He found Angela
sitting with an elderly gentleman--none other than the senior partner of
the firm of her solicitors. He had a quantity of documents on the table
before him, and as Harry opened the door he heard these remarkable
words:

"So the young man does not know--even at the eleventh hour?"

What it was he would learn, Harry cared not to inquire. He had been told
that there was a secret of some sort which he would learn in the course
of the day.

"These papers, Harry," said his bride, "are certain documents which you
have to sign, connected with that little fortune of which I told you."

"I hope," said Harry, "that the fortune, whatever it is, has all been
settled upon yourself absolutely."

"You will find, young gentleman," said the solicitor, gravely, "that
ample justice--generous justice--has been done you. Very well, I will
say no more."

"Do you want me to sign without reading, Angela?"

"If you will so far trust me."

He took the pen and signed where he was told to sign, without reading
one word. If he had been ordered to sign away his life and liberty, he
would have done so blindly and cheerfully at Angela's bidding. The deed
was signed, and the act of signature was witnessed.

So that was done. There now remained only the ceremony. While the
solicitor, who evidently disliked the whole proceeding, as irregular and
dangerous, was putting up the papers, Angela took her lover's hands in
hers, and looked into his face with her frank and searching look.

"You do not repent, my poor Harry?"

"Repent?"

"You might have done so much better: you might have married a lady----"

The solicitor, overhearing these words, sat down and rubbed his nose
with an unprofessional smile.

"Shall I not marry a lady?"

"You might have found a rich bride: you might have led a lazy life, with
nothing to do, instead of which--O Harry, there is still time! We are
not due at the church for half an hour yet. Think. Do you deliberately
choose a life of work and ambition--with--perhaps--poverty?"

At this point the solicitor rose from his chair and walked softly to the
window, where he remained for five minutes looking out upon Stepney
Green with his back to the lovers. If Harry had been watching him, he
would have remarked a curious tremulous movement of the shoulders.

"There is one thing more, Harry, that I have to ask you."

"Of course, you have only to ask me, whatever it is. Could I refuse you
anything, who will give me so much?"

Their fingers were interlaced, their eyes were looking into each other.
No; he could refuse her nothing.

"I give you much? O Harry! what is a woman's gift of herself?"

Harry restrained himself. The solicitor might be sympathetic; but, on
the whole, it was best to act as if he were not. Law has little to do
with love; Cupid has never yet been represented with the long gown.

"It is a strange request, Harry. It is connected with my--my little
foolish secret. You will let me go away directly the service is over,
and you will consent not to see me again until the evening, when I shall
return. You, with all the girls, will meet me in the porch of the Palace
at seven o'clock exactly. And, as Miss Messenger will come too, you will
make your--perhaps your last appearance--my poor boy--in the character
of a modern English gentleman in evening-dress. Tell your best man that
he is to give his arm to Nelly; the other girls will follow two and two.
Oh, Harry, the first sound of the organ in your Palace will be your own
wedding march: the first festival in your Palace will be in your own
honor. Is not that what it should be?"

"In your honor, dear, not mine. And Miss Messenger? Are we to give no
honor to her who built the Palace?"

"Oh, yes--yes--yes!" She put the question by with a careless gesture.
"But any one who happened to have the money could do such a simple
thing. The honor is yours because you invented it."

"From your hands, Angela, I will take all the honor that you please to
give. So am I doubly honored."


There were no wedding bells at all: the organ was mute; the parish
church of Stepney was empty; the spectators of the marriage were Mrs.
Bormalack and Captain Sorensen, besides the girls and the bridegroom,
and Dick, his best man. The captain in the Salvation Army might have
been present as well; he had been asked, but he was lying on the
sick-bed from which he was never to rise again. Lord and Lady Davenant
were there: the former sleek, well contented, well dressed in broadcloth
of the best; the latter agitated, restless, humiliated, because she had
lost the thing she came across the Atlantic to claim, and was going
home, after the splendor of the last three months, to the monotonous
level of Canaan City. Who could love Canaan City after the West End of
London! What woman would look forward with pleasure to the dull and
uneventful days, the local politics, the chapel squabbles, the little
gatherings for tea and supper, after the enjoyment of a carriage and
pair and unlimited theatres, operas, and concerts, and footmen, and such
dinners as the average American, or the average Englishman either,
seldom arrives at seeing, even in visions? Sweet content was gone; and
though Angela meant well, and it was kind of her to afford the ambitious
lady a glimpse of that great world into which she desired to enter, the
sight--even this Pisgah glimpse--of a social paradise to which she could
never belong destroyed her peace of mind, and she will for the rest of
her life lie on a rock deploring. Not so her husband: his future is
assured; he can eat and drink plentifully; he can sleep all the morning
undisturbed; he is relieved of the anxieties connected with his Case;
and, though the respect due to rank is not recognized in the States, he
has to bear none of its responsibilities, and has altogether abandoned
the grand manner. At the same time, as one who very nearly became a
British peer, his position in Canaan City is enormously raised.

They, then, were in the church. They drove thither, not in Miss
Messenger's carriage, but with Lord Jocelyn.

They arrived a quarter of an hour before the ceremony. When the curate
who was to perform the ceremony arrived, Lord Jocelyn sought him in the
vestry and showed him a special license by which it was pronounced
lawful, and even laudable, for Harry Goslett, bachelor, to take unto
wife Angela Marsden Messenger, spinster.

And at sight of that name did the curate's knees begin to tremble, and
his hands to shake.

"Angela Marsden Messenger? is it then," he asked, "the great heiress?"

"It is none other," said Lord Jocelyn. "And she marries my ward--here is
my card--by special license."

"But--but--is it a clandestine marriage?"

"Not at all. There are reasons why Miss Messenger desires to be married
in Stepney. With them we have nothing to do. She has, of late,
associated herself with many works of benevolence, but anonymously. In
fact, my dear sir"--here Lord Jocelyn looked profoundly knowing--"my
ward, the bridegroom, has always known her under another name, and even
now does not know whom he is marrying. When we sign the books we must,
just to keep the secret a little longer, manage that he shall write his
own name without seeing the names of the bride."

This seemed very irregular in the eyes of the curate, and at first he
was for referring the matter to the rector, but finally gave in, on the
understanding that he was to be no party to any concealment.

And presently the wedding party walked slowly up the aisle, and Harry,
to his great astonishment, saw his bride on Lord Jocelyn's arm. There
were cousins of the Messengers in plenty who should have done this duty,
but Angela would invite none of them. She came alone to Stepney; she
lived and worked in the place alone; she wanted no consultation or
discussion with the cousins; she would tell them when all was done; and
she knew very well that so great an heiress as herself could do nothing
but what is right, when one has time to recover from the shock, and to
settle down and think things over.

No doubt, though we have nothing to do with the outside world in this
story, there was a tremendous rustling of skirts, shaking of heads,
tossing of curls, wagging of tongues, and uplifting of hands, the next
morning when Angela's cards were received, and the news was in all the
papers. And there was such a run upon interjections that the vocabulary
broke down, and people were fain to cry to one another in foreign
tongues.

For thus the announcement ran:


     "On Thursday, March 20, at the parish church, Stepney, Harry, son
     of the late Samuel Goslett, Sergeant in the 120th Regiment of the
     Line, to Angela Marsden, daughter of the late John Marsden
     Messenger, and granddaughter of the late John Messenger, of Portman
     Square and Whitechapel."


This was a pretty blow among the cousins. The greatest heiress in
England, who they had hoped would marry a duke, or a marquis, or an earl
at least, had positively and actually married the son of a common
soldier--well, a non-commissioned officer--the same thing. What did it
mean? What _could_ it mean?

Others, who knew Harry and his story, who had sympathy with him on
account of his many qualities--who owned that the obscurity of his birth
was but an accident, shared with him by many of the most worthy,
excellent, brilliant, useful, well-bred, delightful men of the
world--rejoiced over the strange irony of fate which had first lifted
this soldier's son out of the gutter, and then, with apparent
malignity, dropped him back again, only, however, to raise him once more
far higher than before. For, indeed, the young man was now rich--with
his vats and his mashtubs, his millions of casks, his Old and his Mild
and his Bitter, and his Family at nine shillings the nine-gallon cask,
and his accumulated millions, "beyond the potential dream of avarice."
If he chooses to live more than half his time in Whitechapel, that is no
concern of anybody's; and if his wife chooses to hold a sort of court at
the abandoned East, to surround herself with people unheard of in
society, not to say out of it, why should she not? Any of the royal
princes might have done the same thing if they had chosen and had been
well-advised. Further, if, between them, Angela and her husband have
established a superior Aquarium, a glorified Crystal Palace, in which
all the shows are open, all the performers are drilled and trained
amateurs, and all the work actually is done for nothing; in which the
management is by the people themselves, who will have no interference
from priest or parson, rector or curate, philanthropist or agitator; and
no patronage from societies, well-intentioned young ladies, meddling
benevolent persons and officious promoters, starters, and shovers-along,
with half an eye fixed on heaven and the remaining eye and a half on
their own advancement--if, in fact, they choose to do these things, why
not? It is an excellent way of spending their time, and a change from
the monotony of society.

Again, it is said that Harry, now Harry Messenger by the provision of
old John Messenger's will, is the President, or the Chairman, or the
Honorary Secretary--in fact, the spring and stay and prop of a new and
most formidable Union or Association, which threatens, unless it be
nipped in the bud, very considerable things of the greatest importance
to the country. It is, in fact, a League of Working-men for the
promotion and advancement of their own interests. Its prospectus sets
forth that, having looked in vain among the candidates for the House of
Commons for any representative who had been in the past, or was likely
to be in the future, of the slightest use to them in the House; having
found that neither Conservatives, nor Liberals, nor Radicals have ever
been, or are ever likely to be, prepared with any real measure which
should in the least concern themselves and their own wants; and fully
recognizing the fact that in the debates of the House the interests of
labor and the duties of Government toward the laboring classes are never
recognized or understood--the working-men of the country hereby form
themselves into a General League or Union, which shall have no other
object whatever than the study of their own rights and interests. The
question of wages will be left to the different unions, except in such
cases where there is no union, or where the men are inarticulate (as in
the leading case, now some ten years old, of the gas-stokers) through
ignorance and drink. And the immediate questions before the union will
be, first, the dwelling-houses of the working-men, which are to be made
clean, safe, and healthy; next, their food and drink, which are to be
unadulterated, pure, and genuine, and are to pass through no more hands
than is necessary, and to be distributed at the actual cost price
without the intervention of small shops; next, instruction, for which
purpose the working-men will _elect their own school boards_, and burn
all the foolish reading-books at present in use, and abolish spelling as
a part of education, and teach the things necessary for all trades;
next, clothing, which will be made for them by their own men working for
themselves, without troubling the employers of labor at all; next, a
newspaper of their own, which will refuse any place to political
agitators, leaders, partisans, and professional talkers, and be devoted
to the questions which really concern working-men, and especially the
question of how best to employ the power which is in their hands, and
report continually what is doing, what must be done, and how it must be
done. And lastly, emigration, so that in every family it shall be
considered necessary for some to go, and the whole country shall be
mapped out into districts, and only a certain number be allowed to
remain.

Now, the world being so small as it is, and Englishmen and Scotchmen
being so masterful that they must needs go straight to the front and
stay there, it cannot but happen that the world will presently--that is,
in two generations, or three at the most--be overrun with the good old
English blood: whereupon till the round earth gets too small, which will
not happen for another ten thousand years or so, there will be the
purest, most delightful, and most heavenly Millennium. Rich people may
come into it if they please, but they will not be wanted: in fact, rich
people will die out, and it will soon come to be considered an unhappy
thing, as it undoubtedly is, to be born rich.


--"Whose daughters ye are," concluded the curate, closing his book, "as
long as ye do well, and are not afraid with any amazement."

He led the way into the vestry, where the book lay open, and sitting at
the table he made the proper entries.

Then Harry took his place and signed. Now, behold! as he took the pen in
his hand, Lord Jocelyn artfully held blotting-paper in readiness, and in
such a manner as to hide the name of the bride; then Angela signed; then
the witnesses, Lord Jocelyn and Captain Sorensen. And then there were
shaking of hands and kissing. And before they came away the curate
ventured timidly to whisper congratulations and that he had no idea of
the honor. And then Angela stopped him, and bade him to her
wedding-feast that evening at the new Palace of Delight.

Then Lord Jocelyn distributed largess, the largest kind of largess,
among the people of the church.

But it surely was the strangest of weddings. For when they reached the
church door the bride and bridegroom kissed each other, and then he
placed her in the carriage, in which the Davenants and Lord Jocelyn also
seated themselves, and so they drove off.

"We shall see her again to-night," said Harry. "Come, Dick, we have got
a long day to got through--seven hours. Let us go for a walk. I can't
sit down; I can't rest; I can't do anything. Let us go for a walk and
wrangle."

They left the girls and strode away, and did not return until it was
past six o'clock, and already growing dark.

The girls, in dreadful lowness of spirits, and feeling as flat as so
many pancakes, returned to their house and sat down with their hands in
their laps, to do nothing for seven hours. Did one ever hear that the
maidens at a marriage--do the customs of any country present an example
of such a thing--returned to the bride's house without either bride or
bridegroom? Did one ever hear of a marriage where the groom left the
bride at the church door, and went away for a six hours' walk?

As for Captain Sorensen, he went to the Palace and pottered about,
getting snubbed by the persons in authority. There was still much to be
done before the evening, but there was time: all would be done.
Presently he went away; but he, too, was restless and agitated; he could
not rest at home; the possession of the secret, the thought of his
daughter's future, the strange and unlooked-for happiness that had come
to him in his old age--these things agitated him; nor could even his
fiddle bring him any consolation; and the peacefulness of the Almshouse,
which generally soothed him, this day irritated him. Therefore he
wandered about, and presently appeared at the House, were he took dinner
with the girls, and they talked about what would happen.

The first thing that happened was the arrival of a cart--a
spring-cart--with the name of a Regent Street firm upon it. The men took
out a great quantity of parcels and brought them into the show-room. All
the girls ran down to see what it meant, because on so great a day
everything, said Nelly, must mean something.

"Name of Hermitage?" asked the man. "This is for you, miss. Name of
Sorensen? This is for you." And so on, a parcel for every one of the
girls.

Then he went away, and they all looked at each other.

"Hadn't you better," asked Captain Sorensen, "open the parcels, girls?"

They opened them.

"Oh--h!"

Behold! for every girl such a present as none of them had ever imagined!
The masculine pen cannot describe the sweet things which they found
there; not silks and satins, but pretty things; with boots, because
dressmakers are apt to be shabby in the matter of boots; and with
handkerchiefs and pretty scarfs and gloves and serviceable things of all
sorts.

More than this: there was a separate parcel tied up in white paper for
every girl, and on it, in pencil, "For the wedding supper at the Palace
of Delight." And in it gauze, or lace, for bridemaid's head-dress, and
white kid gloves, and a necklace with a locket, and inside the locket a
portrait of Miss Kennedy, and outside her Christian name, Angela. Also,
for each girl a little note, "For ----, with Miss Messenger's love;" but
for Nelly, whose parcel was like Benjamin's mess, the note was, "For
Nelly, with Miss Messenger's kindest love."

"That," said Rebekah, but without jealousy, "is because you were Miss
Kennedy's favorite. Well! Miss Messenger _must_ be fond of her, and no
wonder!"

"No wonder at all," said Captain Sorensen.

And nobody guessed. Nobody had the least suspicion.

While they were all admiring and wondering, Mrs. Bormalack ran over
breathless.

"My dears!" she cried, "look what's come!"

Nothing less than a beautiful black silk dress.

"Now go away, Captain Sorensen," she said; "you men are only hindering.
And we've got to try on things. Oh, good gracious! To think that Miss
Messenger would remember me, of all people in the world! To be sure, Mr.
Bormalack was one of her collectors, and she may have heard about
me----"

"No," said Rebekah, "it is through Miss Kennedy; no one has been
forgotten who knew her."


At seven o'clock that evening the great hall of the Palace was pretty
well filled with guests. Some of them, armed with white wands, acted as
stewards, and it was understood that on the arrival of Miss Messenger a
lane was to be formed, and the procession to the dais at the end of the
hall was to pass through that lane.

Outside, in the vestibule, stood the wedding-party, waiting: the
bridegroom, with his best man, and the bridemaids in their white
dresses, flowing gauze and necklaces, and gloves, and flowers--a very
sweet and beautiful bevy of girls; Harry for the last time in his life,
he thought with a sigh, in evening-dress. Within the hall there were
strange rumors flying about. It was said that Miss Messenger herself had
been married that morning, and that the procession would be for her
wedding; but others knew better: it was Miss Kennedy's wedding; she had
married Harry Goslett, the man they called Gentleman Jack; and Miss
Kennedy, everybody knew, was patronized by Miss Messenger.

At ten minutes past seven, two carriages drew up. From the first of
these descended Harry's bride, led by Lord Jocelyn; and from the second
the Davenants.

Yes, Harry's bride. But whereas in the morning she had been dressed in a
plain white frock and white bonnet like her bridemaids--she was now
arrayed in white satin, mystic, wonderful, with white veil and white
flowers, and round her white throat a necklace of sparkling diamonds,
and diamonds in her hair.

Harry stepped forward with beating heart.

"Take her, boy," said Lord Jocelyn, proudly. "But you have married--not
Miss Kennedy at all--but Angela Messenger."

Harry took his bride's hand in a kind of stupor. What did Lord Jocelyn
mean?

"Forgive me, Harry," she said, "say you forgive me."

Then he raised her veil and kissed her forehead before them all. But he
could not speak, because all in a moment the sense of what this would
mean poured upon his brain in a great wave, and he would fain have been
alone.

It was Miss Kennedy, indeed, but glorified into a great lady;
oh!--oh--MISS MESSENGER!

The girls, frightened, were shrinking together; even Rebekah was afraid
at the great and mighty name of Messenger.

Angela went among them, and kissed them all with words of encouragement.
"Can you not love me, Nelly," she said, "as well when I am rich as when
I was poor?"

Then the chief officers of the brewery advanced, offering
congratulations in timid accents, because they knew now that Miss
Kennedy, the dressmaker, of whom such hard things had been sometimes
said in their own presence and by their own wives, was no other than the
sole partner in the brewery, and that her husband had worked among them
for a daily wage. What did these things mean? They made respectable men
afraid. One person there was, however, who at sight of Miss Messenger,
for whom he was waiting with anxious heart, having a great desire to
present his own case of unrewarded zeal, turned pale, and broke through
the crowd with violence and fled. It was Uncle Bunker.

And then the stewards appeared at the open doors, and the procession was
formed.

First the stewards themselves--being all clerks of the brewery--walked
proudly at the head, carrying their white wands like rifles. Next came
Harry and the bride, at sight of whom the guests shouted and roared;
next came Dick Coppin with Nelly, and Lord Jocelyn with Rebekah, and the
chief brewer with Lady Davenant, of course in her black velvet and
war-paint, and Lord Davenant with Mrs. Bormalack, and the chief
accountant with another bridesmaid, and Captain Sorensen with another,
and then the rest.

Then the organ burst into a wedding march, rolling and pealing about the
walls and roof of the mighty hall, and amid its melodious thunder, and
the shouts of the wedding-guests, Harry led his bride slowly through the
lane of curious and rejoicing faces, till they reached the dais.

When all were arranged with the bride seated in the middle, her husband
standing at her right and the bridemaids grouped behind them, Lord
Jocelyn stepped to the front and read in a loud voice part of the deed
of gift, which he then gave with a profound bow to Angela, who placed it
in her husband's hands.

Then she stepped forward and raised her veil, and stood before them all,
beautiful as the day, and with tears in her eyes. Yet she spoke in firm
and clear accents which all could hear. It was her first and last public
speech; for Angela belongs to that rapidly diminishing body of women who
prefer to let the men do all the public speaking.

"My dear friends," she said, "my kind friends: I wish first that you
should clearly understand that this Palace has been invented and
designed for you by my husband. All I have done is to build it. Now it
is yours, with all it contains. I pray God that it may be used worthily,
and for the joy and happiness of all. I declare this Palace of Delight
open, the property of the people, to be administered and governed by
them, and them alone, in trust for each other."

This was all she said; and the people cheered again, and the organ
played "God Save the Queen."

With this simple ceremony was the Palace of Delight thrown open to the
world. What better beginning could it have than a wedding party? What
better omen could there be than that the Palace, like the Garden of
Eden, should begin with the happiness of a wedded pair?


At this point there presented itself, to those who drew up the
programme, a grave practical difficulty. It was this. The Palace could
only be declared open in the great hall itself. Also, it could be only
in the great hall that the banquet could take place. Now, how were the
fifteen hundred guests to be got out of the way and amused while the
tables were laid and the cloth spread? There could not be, it is true,
the splendor and costly plate and épergnes and flowers of my Lord
Mayor's great dinner, but ornament of some kind there must be upon the
tables; and even with an army of drilled waiters it takes time to lay
covers for fifteen hundred people.

But there was no confusion. Once more the procession was formed and
marched round the hall, headed by the band of the Guards, visiting first
the gymnasium, then the library, then the concert-room, and lastly the
theatre. Here they paused, and the bridal party took their seats. The
people poured in; when every seat was taken, the stewards invited the
rest into the concert-room. In the theatre a little sparkling comedy was
played; in the concert-room a troupe of singers discoursed sweet
madrigals and glees. Outside the waiters ran backward and forward as
busy as Diogenes with his tub, but more to the purpose.

When, in something over an hour, the performances were finished, the
stewards found that the tables were laid, one running down the whole
length of the hall, and shorter ones across the hall. Everybody had a
card with his place upon it; there was no confusion, and, while
trumpeters blared a welcome, they all took their places in due order.

Angela and her husband sat in the middle of the long table; at Angela's
left hand was Lord Jocelyn, at Harry's right Lady Davenant. Opposite the
bride and bridegroom sat the chief brewer and the chief accountant. The
bridemaids spread out right and left. All Angela's friends and
acquaintances of Stepney Green were there, except three. For old Mr.
Maliphant was sitting as usual in the boarding-house, conversing with
unseen persons, and laughing and brandishing a pipe; and with him Daniel
Fagg sat hugging his book. And in his own office sat Bunker, sick at
heart. For he remembered his officious private letter to Miss Messenger,
and he felt that he had indeed gone and done it.

The rest of the long table was filled up by the clerks and superior
officers of the brewery; at the shorter tables sat the rest of the
guests, including even the draymen and errand-boys. And so the feast
began, while the band of the Guards played for them.

It was a royal feast, with the most magnificent cold sirloins of roast
beef and rounds of salt beef, legs of mutton, saddles of mutton, loins
of veal, ribs of pork, legs of pork, great hams, huge turkeys, capons,
fowls, ducks, and geese, all done to a turn; so that the honest guests
fell to with a mighty will, and wished that such a wedding might come
once a month at least, with such a supper. And Messenger's beer, as much
as you pleased, for everybody. At a moment like this, would one, even at
the high table, venture to ask, to say nothing of wishing for, aught but
Messenger's beer?

After the hacked and mangled remains of the first course were removed,
there came puddings, pies, cakes, jellies, ices, blanc-mange, all kinds
of delicious things.

And after this was done and eating was stayed and only the memory left
of the enormous feed, the chief brewer rose and proposed in a few words
the health of the bride and bridegroom. He said that it would be a
lasting sorrow to all of them that they had not been present at the
auspicious event of the morning; but that it was in some measure made up
to them by the happiness they had enjoyed together that evening. If
anything, he added, could make them pray more heartily for the happiness
of the bride, it would be the thought that she refused to be married
from her house in the West End, but came to Stepney among the workmen
and managers of her own brewery, and preferred to celebrate her
wedding-feast in the magnificent hall which she had given to the people
of the place. And he had one more good thing to tell them. Miss
Messenger, when she gave that precious thing, her hand, retained her
name. There would still be a Messenger at the head of the good old
house.

Harry replied in a few words, and the wedding-cake went round. Then Dick
Coppin proposed success to the Palace of Delight.

"Harry," whispered Angela, "if you love me, speak now, from your very
heart."

He sprang to his feet, and spoke to the people as they had never heard
any yet speak.

After telling them what the Palace was, what it was meant to be, a place
for the happiness and recreation of all; how they were to make their own
amusements for themselves; how there were class-rooms where all kinds of
arts and accomplishments would be taught; how, to insure order and good
behavior, it was necessary that they should form their own volunteer
police; how there were to be no politics and no controversies within
those walls, and how the management of all was left to committees of
their own choosing, he said:

"Friends all, this is indeed such a thing as the world has never yet
seen. You have been frequently invited to join together and combine for
the raising of wages; you are continually invited to follow leaders who
promise to reform land laws, when you have had no land and never will
have any; to abolish the House of Lords, in which you have no part,
share, or lot; to sweep away a church which does not interfere with you;
but who have nothing--no nothing to offer you, out of which any help or
advantage will come to you. And you are always being told to consider
life as a long period of resignation under inevitable suffering; and you
are told to submit your reason, your will, yourselves, to authority,
and all will be well with you. No one yet has given you the chance of
making yourselves happy. In this place you will find, or you will make
for yourselves, all the things which make the lives of the rich happy.
Here you will have music, dancing, singing, acting, painting, reading,
games of skill, games of chance, companionship, cheerfulness, light,
warmth, comfort--everything. When these things have been enjoyed for a
time they will become a necessity for you, and a part of the education
for your young people. They will go on to desire other things which
cannot be found by any others for you, but which must be found by
yourselves and for yourselves. My wife has placed in your hands the
materials for earthly joy; it lies with you to learn how to use them; it
lies with you to find what other things are necessary; how the people,
who have all the power there is, must find out what they want, and help
themselves to it, standing shoulder to shoulder by means of that power;
how those enemies are not the rich, whom your brawlers in Whitechapel
Road ignorantly accuse, but quite another kind--and you must find out
for yourselves who these are. It is not by setting poor against rich, or
by hardening the heart of rich against poor, that you will succeed; it
is by independence and by knowledge. All sorts and conditions of men are
alike. As are the vices of the rich, so are your own; as are your
virtues, so are theirs. But, hitherto, the rich have had things which
you could not get. Now all that is altered: in the Palace of Delight we
are equal to the richest; there is nothing which we, too, cannot have;
what they desire we desire; what they have we shall have; we can all
love; we can all laugh; we can all feel the power of music; we can dance
and sing; or we can sit in peace and meditate. In this Palace, as in the
outer world, remember that you have the power. The time for envy,
hatred, and accusations has gone by; because we working-men have, at
last, all the power there is to have. Let us use it well. But the Palace
will be for joy and happiness, not for political wrangles. Brothers and
sisters, we will no longer sit down in resignation; we will take the
same joy in this world that the rich have taken. Life is short for us
all; let us make the most of it for ourselves and for each other. There
are so many joys within our reach; there are so many miseries we can
abolish. In this house, which is a Temple of Praise, we shall all
together continually be thinking how to bring more sunshine into our
lives, more change, more variety, more happiness."

A serious ending; because Harry spoke from his heart. As he took his
seat in deep silence, the organ broke forth again and played, while the
people stood, the grand Old Hundredth Psalm.

A serious ending to the feast; but life is serious.


Ten minutes later the bride rose, and the band played a joyful march,
while the wedding-procession once more formed and marched down the hall,
and the people poured out into the streets to cheer, and Angela and her
husband drove away for their honeymoon.

The Palace of Delight is in working order now, and Stepney is already
transformed. A new period began on the opening night for all who were
present. For the first time they understood that life may be happy; for
the first time they resolved that they would find out for themselves the
secret of happiness. The angel with the flaming sword has at last
stepped from the gates of the earthly Paradise, and we may now enter
therein and taste, unreproved, of all the fruits except the apples of
the Tree of Life--which has been removed, long since, to another place.


THE END.