<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Dinner at Franching’s to meet Mr.
Hardfur Huttle.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">May</span> 10.—Received a letter
from Mr. Franching, of Peckham, asking us to dine with him
to-night, at seven o’clock, to meet Mr. Hardfur Huttle, a
very clever writer for the American papers. Franching
apologised for the short notice; but said he had at the last
moment been disappointed of two of his guests and regarded us as
old friends who would not mind filling up the gap. Carrie
rather demurred at the invitation; but I explained to her that
Franching was very well off and influential, and we could not
afford to offend him. “And we are sure to get a good
dinner and a good glass of champagne.” “Which
never agrees with you!” Carrie replied, sharply. I
regarded Carrie’s observation as unsaid. Mr.
Franching asked us to wire a reply. As he had said nothing
about dress in the letter, I wired back: “With
pleasure. Is it full dress?” and by leaving out our
name, just got the message within the sixpence.</p>
<p>Got back early to give time to dress, which we received a
telegram instructing us to do. I wanted Carrie to meet me
at Franching’s house; but she would not do so, so I had to
go home to fetch her. What a long journey it is from
Holloway to Peckham! Why do people live such a long way
off? Having to change ’buses, I allowed plenty of
time—in fact, too much; for we arrived at twenty minutes to
seven, and Franching, so the servant said, had only just gone up
to dress. However, he was down as the clock struck seven;
he must have dressed very quickly.</p>
<p>I must say it was quite a distinguished party, and although we
did not know anybody personally, they all seemed to be quite
swells. Franching had got a professional waiter, and
evidently spared no expense. There were flowers on the
table round some fairy-lamps and the effect, I must say, was
exquisite. The wine was good and there was plenty of
champagne, concerning which Franching said he himself, never
wished to taste better. We were ten in number, and a
<i>menû</i> card to each. One lady said she always
preserved the <i>menû</i> and got the guests to write their
names on the back.</p>
<p>We all of us followed her example, except Mr. Huttle, who was
of course the important guest.</p>
<p>The dinner-party consisted of Mr. Franching, Mr. Hardfur
Huttle, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hillbutter, Mrs. Field, Mr. and Mrs.
Purdick, Mr. Pratt, Mr. R. Kent, and, last but not least, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Pooter. Franching said he was sorry he had no
lady for me to take in to dinner. I replied that I
preferred it, which I afterwards thought was a very
uncomplimentary observation to make.</p>
<p>I sat next to Mrs. Field at dinner. She seemed a
well-informed lady, but was very deaf. It did not much
matter, for Mr. Hardfur Huttle did all the talking. He is a
marvellously intellectual man and says things which from other
people would seem quite alarming. How I wish I could
remember even a quarter of his brilliant conversation. I
made a few little reminding notes on the <i>menû</i>
card.</p>
<p>One observation struck me as being absolutely
powerful—though not to my way of thinking of course.
Mrs. Purdick happened to say “You are certainly unorthodox,
Mr. Huttle.” Mr. Huttle, with a peculiar expression
(I can see it now) said in a slow rich voice: “Mrs.
Purdick, ‘orthodox’ is a grandiloquent word implying
sticking-in-the-mud. If Columbus and Stephenson had been
orthodox, there would neither have been the discovery of America
nor the steam-engine.” There was quite a
silence. It appeared to me that such teaching was
absolutely dangerous, and yet I felt—in fact we must all
have felt—there was no answer to the argument. A
little later on, Mrs. Purdick, who is Franching’s sister
and also acted as hostess, rose from the table, and Mr. Huttle
said: “Why, ladies, do you deprive us of your company so
soon? Why not wait while we have our cigars?”</p>
<p>The effect was electrical. The ladies (including Carrie)
were in no way inclined to be deprived of Mr. Huttle’s
fascinating society, and immediately resumed their seats, amid
much laughter and a little chaff. Mr. Huttle said:
“Well, that’s a real good sign; you shall not be
insulted by being called orthodox any longer.” Mrs.
Purdick, who seemed to be a bright and rather sharp woman, said:
“Mr. Huttle, we will meet you half-way—that is, till
you get half-way through your cigar. That, at all events,
will be the happy medium.”</p>
<p>I shall never forget the effect the words, “happy
medium,” had upon him. He was brilliant and most
daring in his interpretation of the words. He positively
alarmed me. He said something like the following:
“Happy medium, indeed. Do you know ‘happy
medium’ are two words which mean ‘miserable
mediocrity’? I say, go first class or third; marry a
duchess or her kitchenmaid. The happy medium means
respectability, and respectability means insipidness. Does
it not, Mr. Pooter?”</p>
<p>I was so taken aback by being personally appealed to, that I
could only bow apologetically, and say I feared I was not
competent to offer an opinion. Carrie was about to say
something; but she was interrupted, for which I was rather
pleased, for she is not clever at argument, and one has to be
extra clever to discuss a subject with a man like Mr. Huttle.</p>
<p>He continued, with an amazing eloquence that made his
unwelcome opinions positively convincing: “The happy medium
is nothing more or less than a vulgar half-measure. A man
who loves champagne and, finding a pint too little, fears to face
a whole bottle and has recourse to an imperial pint, will never
build a Brooklyn Bridge or an Eiffel Tower. No, he is
half-hearted, he is a half-measure—respectable—in
fact, a happy medium, and will spend the rest of his days in a
suburban villa with a stucco-column portico, resembling a
four-post bedstead.”</p>
<p>We all laughed.</p>
<p>“That sort of thing,” continued Mr. Huttle,
“belongs to a soft man, with a soft beard with a soft head,
with a made tie that hooks on.”</p>
<p>This seemed rather personal and twice I caught myself looking
in the glass of the cheffonière; for <i>I</i> had on a tie
that hooked on—and why not? If these remarks were not
personal they were rather careless, and so were some of his
subsequent observations, which must have made both Mr. Franching
and his guests rather uncomfortable. I don’t think
Mr. Huttle meant to be personal, for he added; “We
don’t know that class here in this country: but we do in
America, and I’ve no use for them.”</p>
<p>Franching several times suggested that the wine should be
passed round the table, which Mr. Huttle did not heed; but
continued as if he were giving a lecture:</p>
<p>“What we want in America is your homes. We live on
wheels. Your simple, quiet life and home, Mr. Franching,
are charming. No display, no pretension! You make no
difference in your dinner, I dare say, when you sit down by
yourself and when you invite us. You have your own personal
attendant—no hired waiter to breathe on the back of your
head.”</p>
<p>I saw Franching palpably wince at this.</p>
<p>Mr. Huttle continued: “Just a small dinner with a few
good things, such as you have this evening. You
don’t insult your guests by sending to the grocer for
champagne at six shillings a bottle.”</p>
<p>I could not help thinking of “Jackson
Frères” at three-and-six!</p>
<p>“In fact,” said Mr. Huttle, “a man is little
less than a murderer who does. That is the province of the
milksop, who wastes his evening at home playing dominoes with his
wife. I’ve heard of these people. We
don’t want them at this table. Our party is well
selected. We’ve no use for deaf old women, who cannot
follow intellectual conversation.”</p>
<p>All our eyes were turned to Mrs. Field, who fortunately, being
deaf, did not hear his remarks; but continued smiling
approval.</p>
<p>“We have no representative at Mr. Franching’s
table,” said Mr. Huttle, “of the unenlightened
frivolous matron, who goes to a second class dance at Bayswater
and fancies she is in Society. Society does not know her;
it has no use for her.”</p>
<p>Mr. Huttle paused for a moment and the opportunity was
afforded for the ladies to rise. I asked Mr. Franching
quietly to excuse me, as I did not wish to miss the last train,
which we very nearly did, by-the-by, through Carrie having
mislaid the little cloth cricket-cap which she wears when we go
out.</p>
<p>It was very late when Carrie and I got home; but on entering
the sitting-room I said: “Carrie, what do you think of Mr.
Hardfur Huttle?” She simply answered: “How like
Lupin!” The same idea occurred to me in the
train. The comparison kept me awake half the night.
Mr. Huttle was, of course, an older and more influential man; but
he <i>was</i> like Lupin, and it made me think how dangerous
Lupin would be if he were older and more influential. I
feel proud to think Lupin <i>does</i> resemble Mr. Huttle in some
ways. Lupin, like Mr. Huttle, has original and sometimes
wonderful ideas; but it is those ideas that are so
dangerous. They make men extremely rich or extremely
poor. They make or break men. I always feel people
are happier who live a simple unsophisticated life. I
believe <i>I</i> am happy because I am not ambitious.
Somehow I feel that Lupin, since he has been with Mr. Perkupp,
has become content to settle down and follow the footsteps of his
father. This is a comfort.</p>
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