<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XV </h2>
<p>Humphrey Greddon, in the Duke's place, would have taken a pinch of snuff.
But he could not have made that gesture with a finer air than the Duke
gave to its modern equivalent. In the art of taking and lighting a
cigarette, there was one man who had no rival in Europe. This time he
outdid even himself.</p>
<p>"Ah," you say, "but 'pluck' is one thing, endurance another. A man who
doesn't reel on receipt of his death-warrant may yet break down when he
has had time to think it over. How did the Duke acquit himself when he
came to the end of his cigarette? And by the way, how was it that after he
had read the telegram you didn't give him again an hour's grace?"</p>
<p>In a way, you have a perfect right to ask both those questions. But their
very pertinence shows that you think I might omit things that matter.
Please don't interrupt me again. Am <i>I</i> writing this history, or are
you?</p>
<p>Though the news that he must die was a yet sharper douche, as you have
suggested, than the douche inflicted by Zuleika, it did at least leave
unscathed the Duke's pride. The gods can make a man ridiculous through a
woman, but they cannot make him ridiculous when they deal him a blow
direct. The very greatness of their power makes them, in that respect,
impotent. They had decreed that the Duke should die, and they had told him
so. There was nothing to demean him in that. True, he had just measured
himself against them. But there was no shame in being gravelled. The
peripety was according to the best rules of tragic art. The whole thing
was in the grand manner.</p>
<p>Thus I felt that there were no indelicacy, this time, in watching him.
Just as "pluck" comes of breeding, so is endurance especially an attribute
of the artist. Because he can stand outside himself, and (if there be
nothing ignoble in them) take a pleasure in his own sufferings, the artist
has a huge advantage over you and me. The Duke, so soon as Zuleika's spell
was broken, had become himself again—a highly self-conscious artist
in life. And now, standing pensive on the doorstep, he was almost enviable
in his great affliction.</p>
<p>Through the wreaths of smoke which, as they came from his lips, hung in
the sultry air as they would have hung in a closed room, he gazed up at
the steadfast thunder-clouds. How nobly they had been massed for him! One
of them, a particularly large and dark one, might with advantage, he
thought, have been placed a little further to the left. He made a gesture
to that effect. Instantly the cloud rolled into position. The gods were
painfully anxious, now, to humour him in trifles. His behaviour in the
great emergency had so impressed them at a distance that they rather
dreaded meeting him anon at close quarters. They rather wished they had
not uncaged, last night, the two black owls. Too late. What they had done
they had done.</p>
<p>That faint monotonous sound in the stillness of the night—the Duke
remembered it now. What he had thought to be only his fancy had been his
death-knell, wafted to him along uncharted waves of ether, from the
battlements of Tankerton. It had ceased at daybreak. He wondered now that
he had not guessed its meaning. And he was glad that he had not. He was
thankful for the peace that had been granted to him, the joyous arrogance
in which he had gone to bed and got up for breakfast. He valued these
mercies the more for the great tragic irony that came of them. Aye, and he
was inclined to blame the gods for not having kept him still longer in the
dark and so made the irony still more awful. Why had they not caused the
telegram to be delayed in transmission? They ought to have let him go and
riddle Zuleika with his scorn and his indifference. They ought to have let
him hurl through her his defiance of them. Art aside, they need not have
grudged him that excursion.</p>
<p>He could not, he told himself, face Zuleika now. As artist, he saw that
there was irony enough left over to make the meeting a fine one. As
theologian, he did not hold her responsible for his destiny. But as a man,
after what she had done to him last night, and before what he had to do
for her to-day, he would not go out of his way to meet her. Of course, he
would not actually avoid her. To seem to run away from her were beneath
his dignity. But, if he did meet her, what in heaven's name should he say
to her? He remembered his promise to lunch with The MacQuern, and
shuddered. She would be there. Death, as he had said, cancelled all
engagements. A very simple way out of the difficulty would be to go
straight to the river. No, that would be like running away. It couldn't be
done.</p>
<p>Hardly had he rejected the notion when he had a glimpse of a female figure
coming quickly round the corner—a glimpse that sent him walking
quickly away, across the road, towards Turl Street, blushing violently.
Had she seen him? he asked himself. And had she seen that he saw her? He
heard her running after him. He did not look round, he quickened his pace.
She was gaining on him. Involuntarily, he ran—ran like a hare, and,
at the corner of Turl Street, rose like a trout, saw the pavement rise at
him, and fell, with a bang, prone.</p>
<p>Let it be said at once that in this matter the gods were absolutely
blameless. It is true they had decreed that a piece of orange-peel should
be thrown down this morning at the corner of Turl Street. But the Master
of Balliol, not the Duke, was the person they had destined to slip on it.
You must not imagine that they think out and appoint everything that is to
befall us, down to the smallest detail. Generally, they just draw a sort
of broad outline, and leave us to fill it in according to our taste. Thus,
in the matters of which this book is record, it was they who made the
Warden invite his grand-daughter to Oxford, and invite the Duke to meet
her on the evening of her arrival. And it was they who prompted the Duke
to die for her on the following (Tuesday) afternoon. They had intended
that he should execute his resolve after, or before, the boat-race of that
evening. But an oversight upset this plan. They had forgotten on Monday
night to uncage the two black owls; and so it was necessary that the
Duke's death should be postponed. They accordingly prompted Zuleika to
save him. For the rest, they let the tragedy run its own course—merely
putting in a felicitous touch here and there, or vetoing a superfluity,
such as that Katie should open Zuleika's letter. It was no part of their
scheme that the Duke should mistake Melisande for her mistress, or that he
should run away from her, and they were genuinely sorry when he, instead
of the Master of Balliol, came to grief over the orange-peel.</p>
<p>Them, however, the Duke cursed as he fell; them again as he raised himself
on one elbow, giddy and sore; and when he found that the woman bending
over him was not she whom he dreaded, but her innocent maid, it was
against them that he almost foamed at the mouth.</p>
<p>"Monsieur le Duc has done himself harm—no?" panted Melisande. "Here
is a letter from Miss Dobson's part. She say to me 'Give it him with your
own hand.'"</p>
<p>The Duke received the letter and, sitting upright, tore it to shreds, thus
confirming a suspicion which Melisande had conceived at the moment when he
took to his heels, that all English noblemen are mad, but mad, and of a
madness.</p>
<p>"Nom de Dieu," she cried, wringing her hands, "what shall I tell to
Mademoiselle?"</p>
<p>"Tell her—" the Duke choked back a phrase of which the memory would
have shamed his last hours. "Tell her," he substituted, "that you have
seen Marius sitting among the ruins of Carthage," and limped quickly away
down the Turl.</p>
<p>Both his hands had been abraded by the fall. He tended them angrily with
his handkerchief. Mr. Druce, the chemist, had anon the privilege of
bathing and plastering them, also of balming and binding the right knee
and the left shin. "Might have been a very nasty accident, your Grace," he
said. "It was," said the Duke. Mr. Druce concurred.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Mr. Druce's remark sank deep. The Duke thought it quite
likely that the gods had intended the accident to be fatal, and that only
by his own skill and lightness in falling had he escaped the ignominy of
dying in full flight from a lady's-maid. He had not, you see, lost all
sense of free-will. While Mr. Druce put the finishing touches to his shin,
"I am utterly purposed," he said to himself, "that for this death of mine
I will choose my own manner and my own—well, not 'time' exactly, but
whatever moment within my brief span of life shall seem aptest to me.
Unberufen," he added, lightly tapping Mr. Druce's counter.</p>
<p>The sight of some bottles of Cold Mixture on that hospitable board
reminded him of a painful fact. In the clash of the morning's excitements,
he had hardly felt the gross ailment that was on him. He became fully
conscious of it now, and there leapt in him a hideous doubt: had he
escaped a violent death only to succumb to "natural causes"? He had never
hitherto had anything the matter with him, and thus he belonged to the
worst, the most apprehensive, class of patients. He knew that a cold, were
it neglected, might turn malignant; and he had a vision of himself gripped
suddenly in the street by internal agonies—a sympathetic crowd, an
ambulance, his darkened bedroom; local doctor making hopelessly wrong
diagnosis; eminent specialists served up hot by special train, commending
local doctor's treatment, but shaking their heads and refusing to say more
than "He has youth on his side"; a slight rally at sunset; the end. All
this flashed through his mind. He quailed. There was not a moment to lose.
He frankly confessed to Mr. Druce that he had a cold.</p>
<p>Mr. Druce, trying to insinuate by his manner that this fact had not been
obvious, suggested the Mixture—a teaspoonful every two hours. "Give
me some now, please, at once," said the Duke.</p>
<p>He felt magically better for the draught. He handled the little glass
lovingly, and eyed the bottle. "Why not two teaspoonfuls every hour?" he
suggested, with an eagerness almost dipsomaniacal. But Mr. Druce was
respectfully firm against that. The Duke yielded. He fancied, indeed, that
the gods had meant him to die of an overdose.</p>
<p>Still, he had a craving for more. Few though his hours were, he hoped the
next two would pass quickly. And, though he knew Mr. Druce could be
trusted to send the bottle round to his rooms immediately, he preferred to
carry it away with him. He slipped it into the breast-pocket of his coat,
almost heedless of the slight extrusion it made there.</p>
<p>Just as he was about to cross the High again, on his way home, a butcher's
cart dashed down the slope, recklessly driven. He stepped well back on the
pavement, and smiled a sardonic smile. He looked to right and to left,
carefully gauging the traffic. Some time elapsed before he deemed the road
clear enough for transit.</p>
<p>Safely across, he encountered a figure that seemed to loom up out of the
dim past. Oover! Was it but yesternight that Oover dined with him? With
the sensation of a man groping among archives, he began to apologise to
the Rhodes Scholar for having left him so abruptly at the Junta. Then,
presto!—as though those musty archives were changed to a crisp
morning paper agog with terrific head-lines—he remembered the awful
resolve of Oover, and of all young Oxford.</p>
<p>"Of course," he asked, with a lightness that hardly hid his dread of the
answer, "you have dismissed the notion you were toying with when I left
you?"</p>
<p>Oover's face, like his nature, was as sensitive as it was massive, and it
instantly expressed his pain at the doubt cast on his high seriousness.
"Duke," he asked, "d'you take me for a skunk?"</p>
<p>"Without pretending to be quite sure what a skunk is," said the Duke, "I
take you to be all that it isn't. And the high esteem in which I hold you
is the measure for me of the loss that your death would be to America and
to Oxford."</p>
<p>Oover blushed. "Duke" he said "that's a bully testimonial. But don't
worry. America can turn out millions just like me, and Oxford can have as
many of them as she can hold. On the other hand, how many of YOU can be
turned out, as per sample, in England? Yet you choose to destroy yourself.
You avail yourself of the Unwritten Law. And you're right, Sir. Love
transcends all."</p>
<p>"But does it? What if I told you I had changed my mind?"</p>
<p>"Then, Duke," said Oover, slowly, "I should believe that all those yarns I
used to hear about the British aristocracy were true, after all. I should
aver that you were not a white man. Leading us on like that, and then—Say,
Duke! Are you going to die to-day, or not?"</p>
<p>"As a matter of fact, I am, but—"</p>
<p>"Shake!"</p>
<p>"But—"</p>
<p>Oover wrung the Duke's hand, and was passing on. "Stay!" he was adjured.</p>
<p>"Sorry, unable. It's just turning eleven o'clock, and I've a lecture.
While life lasts, I'm bound to respect Rhodes' intentions." The
conscientious Scholar hurried away.</p>
<p>The Duke wandered down the High, taking counsel with himself. He was
ashamed of having so utterly forgotten the mischief he had wrought at
large. At dawn he had vowed to undo it. Undo it he must. But the task was
not a simple one now. If he could say "Behold, I take back my word. I
spurn Miss Dobson, and embrace life," it was possible that his example
would suffice. But now that he could only say "Behold, I spurn Miss
Dobson, and will not die for her, but I am going to commit suicide, all
the same," it was clear that his words would carry very little force.
Also, he saw with pain that they placed him in a somewhat ludicrous
position. His end, as designed yesterday, had a large and simple grandeur.
So had his recantation of it. But this new compromise between the two
things had a fumbled, a feeble, an ignoble look. It seemed to combine all
the disadvantages of both courses. It stained his honour without
prolonging his life. Surely, this was a high price to pay for snubbing
Zuleika... Yes, he must revert without more ado to his first scheme. He
must die in the manner that he had blazoned forth. And he must do it with
a good grace, none knowing he was not glad; else the action lost all
dignity. True, this was no way to be a saviour. But only by not dying at
all could he have set a really potent example.... He remembered the look
that had come into Oover's eyes just now at the notion of his unfaith.
Perhaps he would have been the mock, not the saviour, of Oxford. Better
dishonour than death, maybe. But, since die he must, he must die not
belittling or tarnishing the name of Tanville-Tankerton.</p>
<p>Within these bounds, however, he must put forth his full might to avert
the general catastrophe—and to punish Zuleika nearly well enough,
after all, by intercepting that vast nosegay from her outstretched hands
and her distended nostrils. There was no time to be lost, then. But he
wondered, as he paced the grand curve between St. Mary's and Magdalen
Bridge, just how was he to begin?</p>
<p>Down the flight of steps from Queen's came lounging an average
undergraduate.</p>
<p>"Mr. Smith," said the Duke, "a word with you."</p>
<p>"But my name is not Smith," said the young man.</p>
<p>"Generically it is," replied the Duke. "You are Smith to all intents and
purposes. That, indeed, is why I address you. In making your acquaintance,
I make a thousand acquaintances. You are a short cut to knowledge. Tell
me, do you seriously think of drowning yourself this afternoon?"</p>
<p>"Rather," said the undergraduate.</p>
<p>"A meiosis in common use, equivalent to 'Yes, assuredly,'" murmured the
Duke. "And why," he then asked, "do you mean to do this?"</p>
<p>"Why? How can you ask? Why are YOU going to do it?"</p>
<p>"The Socratic manner is not a game at which two can play. Please answer my
question, to the best of your ability."</p>
<p>"Well, because I can't live without her. Because I want to prove my love
for her. Because—"</p>
<p>"One reason at a time please," said the Duke, holding up his hand. "You
can't live without her? Then I am to assume that you look forward to
dying?"</p>
<p>"Rather."</p>
<p>"You are truly happy in that prospect?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Rather."</p>
<p>"Now, suppose I showed you two pieces of equally fine amber—a big
one and a little one. Which of these would you rather possess?"</p>
<p>"The big one, I suppose."</p>
<p>"And this because it is better to have more than to have less of a good
thing?"</p>
<p>"Just so."</p>
<p>"Do you consider happiness a good thing or a bad one?"</p>
<p>"A good one."</p>
<p>"So that a man would rather have more than less of happiness?"</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly."</p>
<p>"Then does it not seem to you that you would do well to postpone your
suicide indefinitely?"</p>
<p>"But I have just said I can't live without her."</p>
<p>"You have still more recently declared yourself truly happy."</p>
<p>"Yes, but—"</p>
<p>"Now, be careful, Mr. Smith. Remember, this is a matter of life and death.
Try to do yourself justice. I have asked you—"</p>
<p>But the undergraduate was walking away, not without a certain dignity.</p>
<p>The Duke felt that he had not handled his man skilfully. He remembered
that even Socrates, for all the popular charm of his mock-modesty and his
true geniality, had ceased after a while to be tolerable. Without such a
manner to grace his method, Socrates would have had a very brief time
indeed. The Duke recoiled from what he took to be another pitfall. He
almost smelt hemlock.</p>
<p>A party of four undergraduates abreast was approaching. How should he
address them? His choice wavered between the evangelic wistfulness of "Are
you saved?" and the breeziness of the recruiting sergeant's "Come, you're
fine upstanding young fellows. Isn't it a pity," etc. Meanwhile, the
quartet had passed by.</p>
<p>Two other undergraduates approached. The Duke asked them simply as a
personal favour to himself not to throw away their lives. They said they
were very sorry, but in this particular matter they must please
themselves. In vain he pled. They admitted that but for his example they
would never have thought of dying. They wished they could show him their
gratitude in any way but the one which would rob them of it.</p>
<p>The Duke drifted further down the High, bespeaking every undergraduate he
met, leaving untried no argument, no inducement. For one man, whose name
he happened to know, he invented an urgent personal message from Miss
Dobson imploring him not to die on her account. On another man he offered
to settle by hasty codicil a sum of money sufficient to yield an annual
income of two thousand pounds—three thousand—any sum within
reason. With another he offered to walk, arm in arm, to Carfax and back
again. All to no avail.</p>
<p>He found himself in the precincts of Magdalen, preaching from the little
open-air pulpit there an impassioned sermon on the sacredness of human
life, and referring to Zuleika in terms which John Knox would have
hesitated to utter. As he piled up the invective, he noticed an ominous
restiveness in the congregation—murmurs, clenching of hands, dark
looks. He saw the pulpit as yet another trap laid for him by the gods. He
had walked straight into it: another moment, and he might be dragged down,
overwhelmed by numbers, torn limb from limb. All that was in him of
quelling power he put hastily into his eyes, and manoeuvred his tongue to
gentler discourse, deprecating his right to judge "this lady," and merely
pointing the marvel, the awful though noble folly, of his resolve. He
ended on a note of quiet pathos. "To-night I shall be among the shades.
There be not you, my brothers."</p>
<p>Good though the sermon was in style and sentiment, the flaw in its
reasoning was too patent for any converts to be made. As he walked out of
the quadrangle, the Duke felt the hopelessness of his cause. Still he
battled bravely for it up the High, waylaying, cajoling, commanding,
offering vast bribes. He carried his crusade into the Loder, and thence
into Vincent's, and out into the street again, eager, untiring,
unavailing: everywhere he found his precept checkmated by his example.</p>
<p>The sight of The MacQuern coming out top-speed from the Market, with a
large but inexpensive bunch of flowers, reminded him of the luncheon that
was to be. Never to throw over an engagement was for him, as we have seen,
a point of honour. But this particular engagement—hateful, when he
accepted it, by reason of his love—was now impossible for the reason
which had made him take so ignominiously to his heels this morning. He
curtly told the Scot not to expect him.</p>
<p>"Is SHE not coming?" gasped the Scot, with quick suspicion.</p>
<p>"Oh," said the Duke, turning on his heel, "she doesn't know that I shan't
be there. You may count on her." This he took to be the very truth, and he
was glad to have made of it a thrust at the man who had so uncouthly
asserted himself last night. He could not help smiling, though, at this
little resentment erect after the cataclysm that had swept away all else.
Then he smiled to think how uneasy Zuleika would be at his absence. What
agonies of suspense she must have had all this morning! He imagined her
silent at the luncheon, with a vacant gaze at the door, eating nothing at
all. And he became aware that he was rather hungry. He had done all he
could to save young Oxford. Now for some sandwiches! He went into the
Junta.</p>
<p>As he rang the dining-room bell, his eyes rested on the miniature of
Nellie O'Mora. And the eyes of Nellie O'Mora seemed to meet his in
reproach. Just as she may have gazed at Greddon when he cast her off, so
now did she gaze at him who a few hours ago had refused to honour her
memory.</p>
<p>Yes, and many other eyes than hers rebuked him. It was around the walls of
this room that hung those presentments of the Junta as focussed, year
after year, in a certain corner of Tom Quad, by Messrs. Hills and
Saunders. All around, the members of the little hierarchy, a hierarchy
ever changing in all but youth and a certain sternness of aspect that
comes at the moment of being immortalised, were gazing forth now with a
sternness beyond their wont. Not one of them but had in his day handed on
loyally the praise of Nellie O'Mora, in the form their Founder had
ordained. And the Duke's revolt last night had so incensed them that they
would, if they could, have come down from their frames and walked straight
out of the club, in chronological order—first, the men of the
'sixties, almost as near in time to Greddon as to the Duke, all so
gloriously be-whiskered and cravated, but how faded now, alas, by
exposure; and last of all in the procession and angrier perhaps than any
of them, the Duke himself—the Duke of a year ago, President and sole
Member.</p>
<p>But, as he gazed into the eyes of Nellie O'Mora now, Dorset needed not for
penitence the reproaches of his past self or of his forerunners. "Sweet
girl," he murmured, "forgive me. I was mad. I was under the sway of a
deplorable infatuation. It is past. See," he murmured with a delicacy of
feeling that justified the untruth, "I am come here for the express
purpose of undoing my impiety." And, turning to the club-waiter who at
this moment answered the bell, he said "Bring me a glass of port, please,
Barrett." Of sandwiches he said nothing.</p>
<p>At the word "See" he had stretched one hand towards Nellie; the other he
had laid on his heart, where it seemed to encounter some sort of hard
obstruction. This he vaguely fingered, wondering what it might be, while
he gave his order to Barrett. With a sudden cry he dipped his hand into
his breast-pocket and drew forth the bottle he had borne away from Mr.
Druce's. He snatched out his watch: one o'clock!—fifteen minutes
overdue. Wildly he called the waiter back. "A tea-spoon, quick! No port. A
wine-glass and a tea-spoon. And—for I don't mind telling you,
Barrett, that your mission is of an urgency beyond conjecture—take
lightning for your model. Go!"</p>
<p>Agitation mastered him. He tried vainly to feel his pulse, well knowing
that if he found it he could deduce nothing from its action. He saw
himself haggard in the looking-glass. Would Barrett never come? "Every two
hours"—the directions were explicit. Had he delivered himself into
the gods' hands? The eyes of Nellie O'Mora were on him compassionately;
and all the eyes of his forerunners were on him in austere scorn: "See,"
they seemed to be saying, "the chastisement of last night's blasphemy."
Violently, insistently, he rang the bell.</p>
<p>In rushed Barrett at last. From the tea-spoon into the wine-glass the Duke
poured the draught of salvation, and then, raising it aloft, he looked
around at his fore-runners and in a firm voice cried "Gentlemen, I give
you Nellie O'Mora, the fairest witch that ever was or will be." He drained
his glass, heaved the deep sigh of a double satisfaction, dismissed with a
glance the wondering Barrett, and sat down.</p>
<p>He was glad to be able to face Nellie with a clear conscience. Her eyes
were not less sad now, but it seemed to him that their sadness came of a
knowledge that she would never see him again. She seemed to be saying to
him "Had you lived in my day, it is you that I would have loved, not
Greddon." And he made silent answer, "Had you lived in my day, I should
have been Dobson-proof." He realised, however, that to Zuleika he owed the
tenderness he now felt for Miss O'Mora. It was Zuleika that had cured him
of his aseity. She it was that had made his heart a warm and negotiable
thing. Yes, and that was the final cruelty. To love and be loved—this,
he had come to know, was all that mattered. Yesterday, to love and die had
seemed felicity enough. Now he knew that the secret, the open secret, of
happiness was in mutual love—a state that needed not the fillip of
death. And he had to die without having ever lived. Admiration, homage,
fear, he had sown broadcast. The one woman who had loved him had turned to
stone because he loved her. Death would lose much of its sting for him if
there were somewhere in the world just one woman, however lowly, whose
heart would be broken by his dying. What a pity Nellie O'Mora was not
really extant!</p>
<p>Suddenly he recalled certain words lightly spoken yesterday by Zuleika.
She had told him he was loved by the girl who waited on him—the
daughter of his landlady. Was this so? He had seen no sign of it, had
received no token of it. But, after all, how should he have seen a sign of
anything in one whom he had never consciously visualised? That she had
never thrust herself on his notice might mean merely that she had been
well brought-up. What likelier than that the daughter of Mrs. Batch, that
worthy soul, had been well brought up?</p>
<p>Here, at any rate, was the chance of a new element in his life, or rather
in his death. Here, possibly, was a maiden to mourn him. He would lunch in
his rooms.</p>
<p>With a farewell look at Nellie's miniature, he took the medicine-bottle
from the table, and went quickly out. The heavens had grown steadily
darker and darker, the air more sulphurous and baleful. And the High had a
strangely woebegone look, being all forsaken by youth, in this hour of
luncheon. Even so would its look be all to-morrow, thought the Duke, and
for many morrows. Well he had done what he could. He was free now to
brighten a little his own last hours. He hastened on, eager to see the
landlady's daughter. He wondered what she was like, and whether she really
loved him.</p>
<p>As he threw open the door of his sitting-room, he was aware of a rustle, a
rush, a cry. In another instant, he was aware of Zuleika Dobson at his
feet, at his knees, clasping him to her, sobbing, laughing, sobbing.</p>
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