<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXV</h2>
<p>Let it be some apology for the damage caused by the careering hero, and a
consolation to the quiet wretches, dragged along with him at his
chariot-wheels, that he is generally the last to know when he has made an
actual start; such a mere creature is he, like the rest of us, albeit the head
of our fates. By this you perceive the true hero, whether he be a prince or a
pot-boy, that he does not plot; Fortune does all for him. He may be compared to
one to whom, in an electric circle, it is given to carry the battery.</p>
<p>We caper and grimace at his will; yet not his the will, not his the power.
’Tis all Fortune’s, whose puppet he is. She deals her dispensations
through him. Yea, though our capers be never so comical, he laughs not. Intent
upon his own business, the true hero asks little services of us here and there;
thinks it quite natural that they should be acceded to, and sees nothing
ridiculous in the lamentable contortions we must go through to fulfil them.
Probably he is the elect of Fortune, because of that notable faculty of being
intent upon his own business: “Which is,” says The Pilgrim’s
Scrip, “with men to be valued equal to that force which in water makes a
stream.” This prelude was necessary to the present chapter of
Richard’s history.</p>
<p class="p2">
It happened that in the turn of the year, and while old earth was busy with her
flowers, the fresh wind blew, the little bird sang, and Hippias Feverel, the
Dyspepsy, amazed, felt the Spring move within him. He communicated his
delightful new sensations to the baronet, his brother, whose constant
exclamation with regard to him, was: “Poor Hippias! All his machinery is
bare!” and had no hope that he would ever be in a condition to defend it
from view. Nevertheless Hippias had that hope, and so he told his brother,
making great exposure of his machinery to effect the explanation. He spoke of
all his physical experiences exultingly, and with wonder. The achievement of
common efforts, not usually blazoned, he celebrated as triumphs, and, of
course, had Adrian on his back very quickly. But he could bear him, or
anything, now. It was such ineffable relief to find himself looking out upon
the world of mortals instead of into the black phantasmal abysses of his own
complicated frightful structure. “My mind doesn’t so much seem to
haunt itself, now,” said Hippias, nodding shortly and peering out of
intense puckers to convey a glimpse of what hellish sufferings his had been:
“I feel as if I had come aboveground.”</p>
<p>A poor Dyspepsy may talk as he will, but he is the one who never gets sympathy,
or experiences compassion: and it is he whose groaning petitions for charity do
at last rout that Christian virtue. Lady Blandish, a charitable soul, could not
listen to Hippias, though she had a heart for little mice and flies, and Sir
Austin had also small patience with his brother’s gleam of health, which
was just enough to make his disease visible. He remembered his early follies
and excesses, and bent his ear to him as one man does to another who complains
of having to pay a debt legally incurred.</p>
<p>“I think,” said Adrian, seeing how the communications of Hippias
were received, “that when our Nemesis takes lodgings in the stomach,
it’s best to act the Spartan, smile hard, and be silent.”</p>
<p>Richard alone was decently kind to Hippias; whether from opposition, or real
affection, could not be said, as the young man was mysterious. He advised his
uncle to take exercise, walked with him, cultivated cheerful impressions in
him, and pointed out innocent pursuits. He made Hippias visit with him some of
the poor old folk of the village, who bewailed the loss of his cousin Austin
Wentworth, and did his best to waken him up, and give the outer world a
stronger hold on him. He succeeded in nothing but in winning his uncle’s
gratitude. The season bloomed scarce longer than a week for Hippias, and then
began to languish. The poor Dyspepsy’s eager grasp at beatification
relaxed: he went underground again. He announced that he felt “spongy
things”—one of the more constant throes of his malady. His bitter
face recurred: he chewed the cud of horrid hallucinations. He told Richard he
must give up going about with him: people telling of their ailments made him so
uncomfortable—the birds were so noisy, pairing—the rude bare soil
sickened him.</p>
<p>Richard treated him with a gravity equal to his father’s. He asked what
the doctors said.</p>
<p>“Oh! the doctors!” cried Hippias with vehement scepticism.
“No man of sense believes in medicine for chronic disorder. Do you happen
to have heard of any new remedy then, Richard? No? They advertise a great many
cures for indigestion, I assure you, my dear boy. I wonder whether one can rely
upon the authenticity of those signatures? I see no reason why there should be
no cure for such a disease?—Eh? And it’s just one of the things a
quack, as they call them, would hit upon sooner than one who is in the beaten
track. Do you know, Richard, my dear boy, I’ve often thought that if we
could by any means appropriate to our use some of the extraordinary digestive
power that a boa constrictor has in his gastric juices, there is really no
manner of reason why we should not comfortably dispose of as much of an ox as
our stomachs will hold, and one might eat French dishes without the
wretchedness of thinking what’s to follow. And this makes me think that
those fellows may, after all, have got some truth in them: some secret that, of
course, they require to be paid for. We distrust each other in this world too
much, Richard. I’ve felt inclined once or twice—but it’s
absurd!—If it only alleviated a few of my sufferings I should be
satisfied. I’ve no hesitation in saying that I should be quite satisfied
if it only did away with one or two, and left me free to eat and drink as other
people do. Not that I mean to try them. It’s only a fancy—Eh? What
a thing health is, my dear boy! Ah! if I were like you! I was in love
once!”</p>
<p>“Were you!” said Richard, coolly regarding him.</p>
<p>“I’ve forgotten what I felt!” Hippias sighed.
“You’ve very much improved, my dear boy.”</p>
<p>“So people say,” quoth Richard.</p>
<p>Hippias looked at him anxiously: “If I go to town and get the
doctor’s opinion about trying a new course—Eh, Richard? will you
come with me? I should like your company. We could see London together, you
know. Enjoy ourselves,” and Hippias rubbed his hands.</p>
<p>Richard smiled at the feeble glimmer of enjoyment promised by his uncle’s
eyes, and said he thought it better they should stay where they were—an
answer that might mean anything. Hippias immediately became possessed by the
beguiling project. He went to the baronet, and put the matter before him,
instancing doctors as the object of his journey, not quacks, of course; and
requesting leave to take Richard. Sir Austin was getting uneasy about his
son’s manner. It was not natural. His heart seemed to be frozen: he had
no confidences: he appeared to have no ambition—to have lost the virtues
of youth with the poison that had passed out of him. He was disposed to try
what effect a little travelling might have on him, and had himself once or
twice hinted to Richard that it would be good for him to move about, the young
man quietly replying that he did not wish to quit Raynham at all, which was too
strict a fulfilment of his father’s original views in educating him there
entirely. On the day that Hippias made his proposal, Adrian, seconded by Lady
Blandish, also made one. The sweet Spring season stirred in Adrian as well as
in others: not to pastoral measures: to the joys of the operatic world and
bravura glories. He also suggested that it would be advisable to carry Richard
to town for a term, and let him know his position, and some freedom. Sir Austin
weighed the two proposals. He was pretty certain that Richard’s passion
was consumed, and that the youth was now only under the burden of its ashes. He
had found against his heart, at the Bellingham inn: a great lock of golden
hair. He had taken it, and the lover, after feeling about for it with faint
hands, never asked for it. This precious lock (Miss Davenport had thrust it
into his hand at Belthorpe as Lucy’s last gift), what sighs and tears it
had weathered! The baronet laid it in Richard’s sight one day, and beheld
him take it up, turn it over, and drop it down again calmly, as if he were
handling any common curiosity. It pacified him on that score. The young
man’s love was dead. Dr. Clifford said rightly: he wanted distractions.
The baronet determined that Richard should go. Hippias and Adrian then pressed
their several suits as to which should have him. Hippias, when he could forget
himself, did not lack sense. He observed that Adrian was not at present a
proper companion for Richard, and would teach him to look on life from the
false point.</p>
<p>“You don’t understand a young philosopher,” said the baronet.</p>
<p>“A young philosopher’s an old fool!” returned Hippias, not
thinking that his growl had begotten a phrase.</p>
<p>His brother smiled with gratification, and applauded him loudly:
“Excellent! worthy of your best days! You’re wrong, though, in
applying it to Adrian. He has never been precocious. All he has done has been
to bring sound common sense to bear upon what he hears and sees. I think,
however,” the baronet added, “he may want faith in the better
qualities of men.” And this reflection inclined him not to let his son be
alone with Adrian. He gave Richard his choice, who saw which way his
father’s wishes tended, and decided so to please him. Naturally it
annoyed Adrian extremely. He said to his chief:</p>
<p>“I suppose you know what you are doing, sir. I don’t see that we
derive any advantage from the family name being made notorious for twenty years
of obscene suffering, and becoming a byword for our constitutional tendency to
stomachic distension before we fortunately encountered Quackem’s Pill. My
uncle’s tortures have been huge, but I would rather society were not
intimate with them under their several headings.” Adrian enumerated some
of the most abhorrent. “You know him, sir. If he conceives a duty, he
will do it in the face of every decency—all the more obstinate because
the conception is rare. If he feels a little brisk the morning after the pill,
he sends the letter that makes us famous! We go down to posterity with
heightened characteristics, to say nothing of a contemporary celebrity nothing
less than our being turned inside-out to the rabble. I confess I don’t
desire to have my machinery made bare to them.”</p>
<p>Sir Austin assured the wise youth that Hippias had arranged to go to Dr.
Bairam. He softened Adrian’s chagrin by telling him that in about two
weeks they would follow to London: hinting also at a prospective Summer
campaign. The day was fixed for Richard to depart, and the day came. Madame the
Eighteenth Century called him to her chamber and put into his hand a
fifty-pound note, as her contribution toward his pocket-expenses. He did not
want it, he said, but she told him he was a young man, and would soon make that
fly when he stood on his own feet. The old lady did not at all approve of the
System in her heart, and she gave her grandnephew to understand that, should he
require more, he knew where to apply, and secrets would be kept. His father
presented him with a hundred pounds—which also Richard said he did not
want—he did not care for money. “Spend it or not,” said the
baronet, perfectly secure in him.</p>
<p>Hippias had few injunctions to observe. They were to take up quarters at the
hotel, Algernon’s general run of company at the house not being
altogether wholesome. The baronet particularly forewarned Hippias of the
imprudence of attempting to restrict the young man’s movements, and
letting him imagine he was under surveillance. Richard having been, as it were,
pollarded by despotism, was now to grow up straight, and bloom again, in
complete independence, as far as he could feel. So did the sage decree; and we
may pause a moment to reflect how wise were his previsions, and how successful
they must have been, had not Fortune, the great foe to human cleverness, turned
against him, or he against himself.</p>
<p>The departure took place on a fine March morning. The bird of Winter sang from
the budding tree; in the blue sky sang the bird of Summer. Adrian rode between
Richard and Hippias to the Bellingham station, and vented his disgust on them
after his own humorous fashion, because it did not rain and damp their ardour.
In the rear came Lady Blandish and the baronet, conversing on the calm summit
of success.</p>
<p>“You have shaped him exactly to resemble yourself,” she said,
pointing with her riding-whip to the grave stately figure of the young man.</p>
<p>“Outwardly, perhaps,” he answered, and led to a discussion on
Purity and Strength, the lady saying that she preferred Purity.</p>
<p>“But you do not,” said the baronet. “And there I admire the
always true instinct of women, that they all worship Strength in whatever form,
and seem to know it to be the child of heaven; whereas Purity is but a
characteristic, a garment, and can be spotted—how soon! For there are
questions in this life with which we must grapple or be lost, and when, hunted
by that cold eye of intense inner-consciousness, the clearest soul becomes a
cunning fox, if it have not courage to stand and do battle. Strength indicates
a boundless nature—like the Maker. Strength is a God to you—Purity
a toy. A pretty one, and you seem to be fond of playing with it,” he
added, with unaccustomed slyness.</p>
<p>The lady listened, pleased at the sportive malice which showed that the
constraint on his mind had left him. It was for women to fight their fight now;
she only took part in it for amusement. This is how the ranks of our enemies
are thinned; no sooner do poor women put up a champion in their midst than she
betrays them.</p>
<p>“I see,” she said archly, “we are the lovelier vessels; you
claim the more direct descent. Men are seedlings: Women—slips! Nay, you
have said so,” she cried out at his gestured protestation, laughing.</p>
<p>“But I never printed it.”</p>
<p>“Oh! what you speak answers for print with me.”</p>
<p>Exquisite Blandish! He could not choose but love her.</p>
<p>“Tell me what are your plans?” she asked. “May a woman
know?”</p>
<p>He replied, “I have none or you would share them. I shall study him in
the world. This indifference must wear off. I shall mark his inclinations now,
and he shall be what he inclines to. Occupation will be his prime safety. His
cousin Austin’s plan of life appears most to his taste, and he can serve
the people that way as well as in Parliament, should he have no stronger
ambition. The clear duty of a man of any wealth is to serve the people as he
best can. He shall go among Austin’s set, if he wishes it, though
personally I find no pleasure in rash imaginations, and undigested schemes
built upon the mere instinct of principles.”</p>
<p>“Look at him now,” said the lady. “He seems to care for
nothing; not even for the beauty of the day.”</p>
<p>“Or Adrian’s jokes,” added the baronet.</p>
<p>Adrian could be seen to be trying zealously to torment a laugh, or a confession
of irritation, out of his hearers, stretching out his chin to one, and to the
other, with audible asides. Richard he treated as a new instrument of
destruction about to be let loose on the slumbering metropolis; Hippias as one
in an interesting condition; and he got so much fun out of the notion of these
two journeying together, and the mishaps that might occur to them, that he
esteemed it almost a personal insult for his hearers not to laugh. The wise
youth’s dull life at Raynham had afflicted him with many peculiarities of
the professional joker.</p>
<p>“Oh! the Spring! the Spring!” he cried, as in scorn of his sallies
they exchanged their unmeaning remarks on the sweet weather across him.
“You seem both to be uncommonly excited by the operations of turtles,
rooks, and daws. Why can’t you let them alone?”</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Wind bloweth,<br/>
Cock croweth,<br/>
Doodle-doo;<br/>
Hippy verteth,<br/>
Ricky sterteth,<br/>
Sing Cuckoo!’</p>
<p>There’s an old native pastoral!—Why don’t you write a Spring
sonnet, Ricky? The asparagus-beds are full of promise, I hear, and eke the
strawberry. Berries I fancy your Pegasus has a taste for. What kind of berry
was that I saw some verses of yours about once?—amatory verses to some
kind of berry—yewberry, blueberry, glueberry! Pretty verses, decidedly
warm. Lips, eyes, bosom, legs—legs? I don’t think you gave her any
legs. No legs and no nose. That appears to be the poetic taste of the day. It
shall be admitted that you create the very beauties for a chaste people.</p>
<p class="poem">
‘O might I lie where leans her lute!’</p>
<p>and offend no moral community. That’s not a bad image of yours, my dear
boy:</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Her shape is like an antelope<br/>
Upon the Eastern hills.’</p>
<p>But as a candid critic, I would ask you if the likeness can be considered
correct when you give her no legs? You will see at the ballet that you are in
error about women at present, Richard. That admirable institution which our
venerable elders have imported from Gallia for the instruction of our gaping
youth, will edify and astonish you. I assure you I used, from reading The
Pilgrim’s Scrip, to imagine all sorts of things about them, till I was
taken there, and learnt that they are very like us after all, and then they
ceased to trouble me. Mystery is the great danger to youth, my son! Mystery is
woman’s redoubtable weapon, O Richard of the Ordeal! I’m aware that
you’ve had your lessons in anatomy, but nothing will persuade you that an
anatomical figure means flesh and blood. You can’t realize the fact. Do
you intend to publish when you’re in town? It’ll be better not to
put your name. Having one’s name to a volume of poems is as bad as to an
advertising pill.”</p>
<p>“I will send you an early copy, Adrian, when I publish,” quoth
Richard. “Hark at that old blackbird, uncle.”</p>
<p>“Yes!” Hippias quavered; looking up from the usual subject of his
contemplation, and trying to take an interest in him, “fine old
fellow!”</p>
<p>“What a chuckle he gives out before he flies! Not unlike July
nightingales. You know that bird I told you of—the blackbird that had its
mate shot, and used to come to sing to old Dame Bakewell’s bird from the
tree opposite. A rascal knocked it over the day before yesterday, and the dame
says her bird hasn’t sung a note since.”</p>
<p>“Extraordinary!” Hippias muttered abstractedly. “I remember
the verses.”</p>
<p>“But where’s your moral?” interposed the wrathful Adrian.
“Where’s constancy rewarded?</p>
<p class="poem">
‘The ouzel-cock so black of hue,<br/>
With orange-tawny bill;<br/>
The rascal with his aim so true;<br/>
The Poet’s little quill!’</p>
<p>Where’s the moral of that? except that all’s game to the poet!
Certainly we have a noble example of the devotedness of the female, who for
three entire days refuses to make herself heard, on account of a defunct male.
I suppose that’s what Ricky dwells on.”</p>
<p>“As you please, my dear Adrian,” says Richard, and points out
larch-buds to his uncle, as they ride by the young green wood.</p>
<p>The wise youth was driven to extremity. Such a lapse from his pupil’s
heroics to this last verge of Arcadian coolness, Adrian could not believe in.
“Hark at this old blackbird!” he cried, in his turn, and pretending
to interpret his fits of song:</p>
<p>“Oh, what a pretty comedy!—Don’t we wear the mask well, my
Fiesco?—Genoa will be our own to-morrow!—Only wait until the train
has started—jolly! jolly! jolly! We’ll be winners yet!</p>
<p>“Not a bad verse—eh, Ricky? my Lucius Junius!”</p>
<p>“You do the blackbird well,” said Richard, and looked at him in a
manner mildly affable.</p>
<p>Adrian shrugged. “You’re a young man of wonderful powers,” he
emphatically observed; meaning to say that Richard quite beat him; for which
opinion Richard gravely thanked him, and with this they rode into Bellingham.</p>
<p>There was young Tom Blaize at the station, in his Sunday beaver and gala
waistcoat and neckcloth, coming the lord over Tom Bakewell, who had preceded
his master in charge of the baggage. He likewise was bound for London. Richard,
as he was dismounting, heard Adrian say to the baronet: “The Beast, sir,
appears to be going to fetch Beauty;” but he paid no heed to the words.
Whether young Tom heard them or not, Adrian’s look took the lord out of
him, and he shrunk away into obscurity, where the nearest approach to the
fashions which the tailors of Bellingham could supply to him, sat upon him more
easily, and he was not stiffened by the eyes of the superiors whom he sought to
rival. The baronet, Lady Blandish, and Adrian remained on horseback, and
received Richard’s adieux across the palings. He shook hands with each of
them in the same kindly cold way, elicitating from Adrian a marked encomium on
his style of doing it. The train came up, and Richard stepped after his uncle
into one of the carriages.</p>
<p>Now surely there will come an age when the presentation of science at war with
Fortune and the Fates, will be deemed the true epic of modern life; and the
aspect of a scientific humanist who, by dint of incessant watchfulness, has
maintained a System against those active forties, cannot be reckoned less than
sublime, even though at the moment he but sit upon his horse, on a fine March
morning such as this, and smile wistfully to behold the son of his heart, his
System incarnate, wave a serene adieu to tutelage, neither too eager nor
morbidly unwilling to try his luck alone for a term of two weeks. At present, I
am aware, an audience impatient for blood and glory scorns the stress I am
putting on incidents so minute, a picture so little imposing. An audience will
come to whom it will be given to see the elementary machinery at work: who, as
it were, from some slight hint of the straws, will feel the winds of March when
they do not blow. To them will nothing be trivial, seeing that they will have
in their eyes the invisible conflict going on around us, whose features a nod,
a smile, a laugh of ours perpetually changes. And they will perceive, moreover,
that in real life all hangs together: the train is laid in the lifting of an
eyebrow, that bursts upon the field of thousands. They will see the links of
things as they pass, and wonder not, as foolish people now do, that this great
matter came out of that small one.</p>
<p>Such an audience, then, will participate in the baronet’s gratification
at his son’s demeanour, wherein he noted the calm bearing of experience
not gained in the usual wanton way: and will not be without some excited
apprehension at his twinge of astonishment, when, just as the train went
sliding into swiftness, he beheld the grave, cold, self-possessed young man
throw himself back in the carriage violently laughing. Science was at a loss to
account for that. Sir Austin checked his mind from inquiring, that he might
keep suspicion at a distance, but he thought it odd, and the jarring sensation
that ran along his nerves at the sight, remained with him as he rode home.</p>
<p>Lady Blandish’s tender womanly intuition bade her say: “You see it
was the very thing he wanted. He has got his natural spirits already.”</p>
<p>“It was,” Adrian put in his word, “the exact thing he wanted.
His spirits have returned miraculously.”</p>
<p>“Something amused him,” said the baronet, with an eye on the
puffing train.</p>
<p>“Probably something his uncle said or did,” Lady Blandish
suggested, and led off at a gallop.</p>
<p>Her conjecture chanced to be quite correct. The cause for Richard’s
laughter was simple enough. Hippias, on finding the carriage-door closed on
him, became all at once aware of the bright-haired hope which dwells in Change;
for one who does not woo her too frequently; and to express his sudden relief
from mental despondency at the amorous prospect, the Dyspepsy bent and gave his
hands a sharp rub between his legs: which unlucky action brought Adrian’s
pastoral,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Hippy verteth,<br/>
Sing cuckoo!”</p>
<p>in such comic colours before Richard, that a demon of laughter seized him.</p>
<p class="poem">
“Hippy verteth!”</p>
<p>Every time he glanced at his uncle the song sprang up, and he laughed so
immoderately that it looked like madness come upon him.</p>
<p>“Why, why, why, what are you laughing at, my dear boy,” said
Hippias, and was provoked by the contagious exercise to a modest “ha!
ha!”</p>
<p>“Why, what are you laughing at, uncle?” cried Richard.</p>
<p>“I really don’t know,” Hippias chuckled.</p>
<p>“Nor I, uncle! Sing, cuckoo!”</p>
<p>They laughed themselves into the pleasantest mood imaginable. Hippias not only
came aboveground, he flew about in the very skies, verting like any blithe
creature of the season. He remembered old legal jokes, and anecdotes of
Circuit; and Richard laughed at them all, but more at him—he was so
genial, and childishly fresh, and innocently joyful at his own transformation,
while a lurking doubt in the bottom of his eyes, now and then, that it might
not last, and that he must go underground again, lent him a look of pathos and
humour which tickled his youthful companion irresistibly, and made his heart
warm to him.</p>
<p>“I tell you what, uncle,” said Richard, “I think
travelling’s a capital thing.”</p>
<p>“The best thing in the world, my dear boy,” Hippias returned.
“It makes me wish I had given up that Work of mine, and tried it before,
instead of chaining myself to a task. We’re quite different beings in a
minute. I am. Hem! what shall we have for dinner?”</p>
<p>“Leave that to me, uncle. I shall order for you. You know, I intend to
make you well. How gloriously we go along! I should like to ride on a railway
every day.”</p>
<p>Hippias remarked: “They say it rather injures the digestion.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense! see how you’ll digest to-night and to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I shall do something yet,” sighed Hippias, alluding to the
vast literary fame he had aforetime dreamed of. “I hope I shall have a
good night to-night.”</p>
<p>“Of course you will! What! after laughing like that?”</p>
<p>“Ugh!” Hippias grunted, “I daresay, Richard, you sleep the
moment you get into bed!”</p>
<p>“The instant my head’s on my pillow, and up the moment I wake.
Health’s everything!”</p>
<p>“Health’s everything!” echoed Hippias, from his immense
distance.</p>
<p>“And if you’ll put yourself in my hands,” Richard continued,
“you shall do just as I do. You shall be well and strong, and sing
‘Jolly!’ like Adrian’s blackbird. You shall, upon my honour,
uncle!”</p>
<p>He specified the hours of devotion to his uncle’s recovery—no less
than twelve a day—that he intended to expend, and his cheery robustness
almost won his uncle to leap up recklessly and clutch health as his own.</p>
<p>“Mind,” quoth Hippias, with a half-seduced smile, “mind your
dishes are not too savoury!”</p>
<p>“Light food and claret! Regular meals and amusement! Lend your heart to
all, but give it to none!” exclaims young Wisdom, and Hippias mutters,
“Yes! yes!” and intimates that the origin of his malady lay in his
not following that maxim earlier.</p>
<p>“Love ruins us, my dear boy,” he said, thinking to preach Richard a
lesson, and Richard boisterously broke out:</p>
<p class="poem">
“The love of Monsieur Francatelli,<br/>
It was the ruin of—et coetera.”</p>
<p>Hippias blinked, exclaiming, “Really, my dear boy! I never saw you so
excited.”</p>
<p>“It’s the railway! It’s the fun, uncle!”</p>
<p>“Ah!” Hippias wagged a melancholy head, “you’ve got the
Golden Bride! Keep her if you can. That’s a pretty fable of your
father’s. I gave him the idea, though. Austin filches a great many of my
ideas!”</p>
<p>“Here’s the idea in verse, uncle:</p>
<p class="poem">
‘O sunless walkers by the tide!<br/>
O have you seen the Golden Bride!<br/>
They say that she is fair beyond<br/>
All women; faithful, and more fond!</p>
<p>You know, the young inquirer comes to a group of penitent sinners by the brink
of a stream. They howl, and answer:</p>
<p class="poem">
Faithful she is, but she forsakes:<br/>
And fond, yet endless woe she makes:<br/>
And fair! but with this curse she’s cross’d;<br/>
To know her not till she is lost!’</p>
<p>“Then the doleful party march off in single file solemnly, and the
fabulist pursues:</p>
<p class="poem">
‘She hath a palace in the West:<br/>
Bright Hesper lights her to her rest:<br/>
And him the Morning Star awakes<br/>
Whom to her charmed arms she takes.<br/>
<br/>
So lives he till he sees, alas!<br/>
The maids of baser metal pass.’</p>
<p>And prodigal of the happiness she lends him, he asks to share it with one of
them. There is the Silver Maid, and the Copper, and the Brassy Maid, and others
of them. First, you know, he tries Argentine, and finds her only twenty to the
pound, and has a worse experience with Copperina, till he descends to the
scullery; and the lower he goes, the less obscure become the features of his
Bride of Gold, and all her radiance shines forth, my uncle.”</p>
<p>“Verse rather blunts the point. Well, keep to her, now you’ve got
her,” says Hippias.</p>
<p>“We will, uncle!—Look how the farms fly past! Look at the cattle in
the fields! And how the lines duck, and swim up!</p>
<p class="poem">
‘She claims the whole, and not the part—<br/>
The coin of an unused heart!<br/>
To gain his Golden Bride again,<br/>
He hunts with melancholy men,’</p>
<p>—and is waked no longer by the Morning Star!”</p>
<p>“Not if he doesn’t sleep till an hour before it rises!”
Hippias interjected. “You don’t rhyme badly. But stick to prose.
Poetry’s a Base-metal maid. I’m not sure that any writing’s
good for the digestion. I’m afraid it has spoilt mine.”</p>
<p>“Fear nothing, uncle!” laughed Richard. “You shall ride in
the park with me every day to get an appetite. You and I and the Golden Bride.
You know that little poem of Sandoe’s?</p>
<p class="poem">
‘She rides in the park on a prancing bay,<br/>
She and her squires together;<br/>
Her dark locks gleam from a bonnet of grey,<br/>
And toss with the tossing feather.<br/>
<br/>
‘Too calmly proud for a glance of pride<br/>
Is the beautiful face as it passes;<br/>
The cockneys nod to each other aside,<br/>
The coxcombs lift their glasses.<br/>
<br/>
‘And throng to her, sigh to her, you that can breach<br/>
The ice-wall that guards her securely;<br/>
You have not such bliss, though she smile on you each,<br/>
As the heart that can image her purely.’</p>
<p>Wasn’t Sandoe once a friend of my father’s? I suppose they
quarrelled. He understands the heart. What does he make his ‘Humble
Lover’ say?</p>
<p class="poem">
‘True, Madam, you may think to part<br/>
Conditions by a glacier-ridge,<br/>
But Beauty’s for the largest heart,<br/>
And all abysses Love can bridge!’”</p>
<p>Hippias now laughed; grimly, as men laugh at the emptiness of words.</p>
<p>“Largest heart!” he sneered. “What’s a
‘glacier-ridge’? I’ve never seen one. I can’t deny it
rhymes with ‘bridge.’ But don’t go parading your admiration
of that person, Richard. Your father will speak to you on the subject when he
thinks fit.”</p>
<p>“I thought they had quarrelled,” said Richard. “What a
pity!” and he murmured to a pleased ear:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Beauty’s for the largest heart!”</p>
<p>The flow of their conversation was interrupted by the entrance of passengers at
a station. Richard examined their faces with pleasure. All faces pleased him.
Human nature sat tributary at the feet of him and his Golden Bride. As he could
not well talk his thoughts before them, he looked out at the windows, and
enjoyed the changing landscape, projecting all sorts of delights for his old
friend Ripton, and musing hazily on the wondrous things he was to do in the
world; of the great service he was to be to his fellow-creatures. In the midst
of his reveries he was landed in London. Tom Bakewell stood at the carriage
door. A glance told Richard that his squire had something curious on his mind;
and he gave Tom the word to speak out. Tom edged his master out of hearing, and
began sputtering a laugh.</p>
<p>“Dash’d if I can help it, sir!” he said. “That young
Tom! He’ve come to town dressed that spicy! and he don’t know his
way about no more than a stag. He’s come to fetch somebody from another
rail, and he don’t know how to get there, and he ain’t sure about
which rail ’tis. Look at him, Mr. Richard! There he goes.”</p>
<p>Young Tom appeared to have the weight of all London on his beaver.</p>
<p>“Who has he come for?” Richard asked.</p>
<p>“Don’t you know, sir? You don’t like me to mention the
name,” mumbled Tom, bursting to be perfectly intelligible.</p>
<p>“Is it for her, Tom?”</p>
<p>“Miss Lucy, sir.”</p>
<p>Richard turned away, and was seized by Hippias, who begged him to get out of
the noise and pother, and caught hold of his slack arm to bear him into a
conveyance; but Richard, by wheeling half to the right, or left, always got his
face round to the point where young Tom was manoeuvring to appear at his ease.
Even when they were seated in the conveyance, Hippias could not persuade him to
drive off. He made the excuse that he did not wish to start till there was a
clear road. At last young Tom cast anchor by a policeman, and, doubtless at the
official’s suggestion, bashfully took seat in a cab, and was shot into
the whirlpool of London. Richard then angrily asked his driver what he was
waiting for.</p>
<p>“Are you ill, my boy?” said Hippias. “Where’s your
colour?”</p>
<p>He laughed oddly, and made a random answer that he hoped the fellow would drive
fast.</p>
<p>“I hate slow motion after being in the railway,” he said.</p>
<p>Hippias assured him there was something the matter with him.</p>
<p>“Nothing, uncle! nothing!” said Richard, looking fiercely candid.</p>
<p>They say, that when the skill and care of men rescue a drowned wretch from
extinction, and warm the flickering spirit into steady flame, such pain it is,
the blood forcing its way along the dry channels, and the heavily-ticking
nerves, and the sullen heart—the struggle of life and death in
him—grim death relaxing his gripe; such pain it is, he cries out no
thanks to them that pull him by inches from the depths of the dead river. And
he who has thought a love extinct, and is surprised by the old fires, and the
old tyranny, he rebels, and strives to fight clear of the cloud of forgotten
sensations that settle on him; such pain it is, the old sweet music reviving
through his frame, and the charm of his passion filing him afresh. Still was
fair Lucy the one woman to Richard. He had forbidden her name but from an
instinct of self-defence. Must the maids of baser metal dominate him anew, it
is in Lucy’s shape. Thinking of her now so near him—his darling!
all her graces, her sweetness, her truth; for, despite his bitter blame of her,
he knew her true—swam in a thousand visions before his eyes; visions
pathetic, and full of glory, that now wrung his heart, and now elated it. As
well might a ship attempt to calm the sea, as this young man the violent
emotion that began to rage in his breast. “I shall not see her!” he
said to himself exultingly, and at the same instant thought, how black was
every corner of the earth but that one spot where Lucy stood! how utterly
cheerless the place he was going to! Then he determined to bear it; to live in
darkness; there was a refuge in the idea of a voluntary martyrdom. “For
if I chose I could see her—this day within an hour!—I could see
her, and touch her hand, and, oh, heaven!—But I do not choose.” And
a great wave swelled through him, and was crushed down only to swell again more
stormily.</p>
<p>Then Tom Bakewell’s words recurred to him that young Tom Blaize was
uncertain where to go for her, and that she might be thrown on this Babylon
alone. And flying from point to point, it struck him that they had known at
Raynham of her return, and had sent him to town to be out of the way—they
had been miserably plotting against him once more. “They shall see what
right they have to fear me. I’ll shame them!” was the first turn
taken by his wrathful feelings, as he resolved to go, and see her safe, and
calmly return to his uncle, whom he sincerely believed not to be one of the
conspirators. Nevertheless, after forming that resolve, he sat still, as if
there were something fatal in the wheels that bore him away from
it—perhaps because he knew, as some do when passion is lord, that his
intelligence juggled with him; though none the less keenly did he feel his
wrongs and suspicions. His Golden Bride was waning fast. But when Hippias
ejaculated to cheer him: “We shall soon be there!” the spell broke.
Richard stopped the cab, saying he wanted to speak to Tom, and would ride with
him the rest of the journey. He knew well enough which line of railway his Lucy
must come by. He had studied every town and station on the line. Before his
uncle could express more than a mute remonstrance, he jumped out and hailed Tom
Bakewell, who came behind with the boxes and baggage in a companion cab, his
head a yard beyond the window to make sure of his ark of safety, the vehicle
preceding.</p>
<p>“What an extraordinary, impetuous boy it is,” said Hippias.
“We’re in the very street!”</p>
<p>Within a minute the stalwart Berry, despatched by the baronet to arrange
everything for their comfort, had opened the door, and made his bow.</p>
<p>“Mr. Richard, sir?—evaporated?” was Berry’s modulated
inquiry.</p>
<p>“Behind—among the boxes, fool!” Hippias growled, as he
received Berry’s muscular assistance to alight. “Lunch
ready—eh!”</p>
<p>“Luncheon was ordered precise at two o’clock, sir—been in
attendance one quarter of an hour. Heah!” Berry sang out to the second
cab, which, with its pyramid of luggage, remained stationary some thirty paces
distant. At his voice the majestic pile deliberately turned its back on them,
and went off in a contrary direction.</p>
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