<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Oxford.—Montmorency’s idea of
Heaven.—The hired up-river boat, its beauties and
advantages.—The “Pride of the
Thames.”—The weather changes.—The river under
different aspects.—Not a cheerful evening.—Yearnings
for the unattainable.—The cheery chat goes
round.—George performs upon the banjo.—A mournful
melody.—Another wet day.—Flight.—A little
supper and a toast.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p299ab.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatright' alt= "Dog running" title= "Dog running" src="images/p299as.jpg" /></SPAN>We spent two very pleasant days at Oxford. There are
plenty of dogs in the town of Oxford. Montmorency had
eleven fights on the first day, and fourteen on the second, and
evidently thought he had got to heaven.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p299bb.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatleft' alt= "Dogs fighting" title= "Dogs fighting" src="images/p299bs.jpg" /></SPAN>Among folk too constitutionally weak, or too constitutionally
lazy, whichever it may be, to relish up-stream work, it is a
common practice to get a boat at Oxford, and row down. For
the energetic, however, the up-stream journey is certainly to be
preferred. It does not seem good to be always going with
the current. There is more satisfaction in squaring
one’s back, and fighting against it, and winning
one’s way forward in spite of it—at least, so I feel,
when Harris and George are sculling and I am steering.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p300ab.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatleft' alt= "Dog running" title= "Dog running" src="images/p300as.jpg" /></SPAN>To those who do contemplate making Oxford their
starting-place, I would say, take your own boat—unless, of
course, you can take someone else’s without any possible
danger of being found out. The boats that, as a rule, are
let for hire on the Thames above Marlow, are very good
boats. They are fairly water-tight; and so long as they are
handled with care, they rarely come to pieces, or sink.
There are places in them to sit down on, and they are complete
with all the necessary arrangements—or nearly all—to
enable you to row them and steer them.</p>
<p>But they are not ornamental. The boat you hire up the
river above Marlow is not the sort of boat in which you can flash
about and give yourself airs. The hired up-river boat very
soon puts a stop to any nonsense of that sort on the part of its
occupants. That is its chief—one may say, its only
recommendation.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p300bb.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatright' alt= "Dog" title= "Dog" src="images/p300bs.jpg" /></SPAN>The man in the hired up-river boat is modest and
retiring. He likes to keep on the shady side, underneath
the trees, and to do most of his travelling early in the morning
or late at night, when there are not many people about on the
river to look at him.</p>
<p>When the man in the hired up-river boat sees anyone he knows,
he gets out on to the bank, and hides behind a tree.</p>
<p>I was one of a party who hired an up-river boat one summer,
for a few days’ trip. We had none of us ever seen the
hired up-river boat before; and we did not know what it was when
we did see it.</p>
<p>We had written for a boat—a double sculling skiff; and
when we went down with our bags to the yard, and gave our names,
the man said:</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p301b.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatright' alt= "The Pride of the Thames" title= "The Pride of the Thames" src="images/p301s.jpg" /></SPAN>“Oh, yes; you’re the party that wrote for a
double sculling skiff. It’s all right. Jim,
fetch round <i>The Pride of the Thames</i>.”</p>
<p>The boy went, and re-appeared five minutes afterwards,
struggling with an antediluvian chunk of wood, that looked as
though it had been recently dug out of somewhere, and dug out
carelessly, so as to have been unnecessarily damaged in the
process.</p>
<p>My own idea, on first catching sight of the object, was that
it was a Roman relic of some sort,—relic of <i>what</i> I
do not know, possibly of a coffin.</p>
<p>The neighbourhood of the upper Thames is rich in Roman relics,
and my surmise seemed to me a very probable one; but our serious
young man, who is a bit of a geologist, pooh-poohed my Roman
relic theory, and said it was clear to the meanest intellect (in
which category he seemed to be grieved that he could not
conscientiously include mine) that the thing the boy had found
was the fossil of a whale; and he pointed out to us various
evidences proving that it must have belonged to the preglacial
period.</p>
<p>To settle the dispute, we appealed to the boy. We told
him not to be afraid, but to speak the plain truth: Was it the
fossil of a pre-Adamite whale, or was it an early Roman
coffin?</p>
<p>The boy said it was <i>The Pride of the Thames</i>.</p>
<p>We thought this a very humorous answer on the part of the boy
at first, and somebody gave him twopence as a reward for his
ready wit; but when he persisted in keeping up the joke, as we
thought, too long, we got vexed with him.</p>
<p>“Come, come, my lad!” said our captain sharply,
“don’t let us have any nonsense. You take your
mother’s washing-tub home again, and bring us a
boat.”</p>
<p>The boat-builder himself came up then, and assured us, on his
word, as a practical man, that the thing really was a
boat—was, in fact, <i>the</i> boat, the “double
sculling skiff” selected to take us on our trip down the
river.</p>
<p>We grumbled a good deal. We thought he might, at least,
have had it whitewashed or tarred—had <i>something</i> done
to it to distinguish it from a bit of a wreck; but he could not
see any fault in it.</p>
<p>He even seemed offended at our remarks. He said he had
picked us out the best boat in all his stock, and he thought we
might have been more grateful.</p>
<p>He said it, <i>The Pride of the Thames</i>, had been in use,
just as it now stood (or rather as it now hung together), for the
last forty years, to <i>his</i> knowledge, and nobody had
complained of it before, and he did not see why we should be the
first to begin.</p>
<p>We argued no more.</p>
<p>We fastened the so-called boat together with some pieces of
string, got a bit of wall-paper and pasted over the shabbier
places, said our prayers, and stepped on board.</p>
<p>They charged us thirty-five shillings for the loan of the
remnant for six days; and we could have bought the thing
out-and-out for four-and-sixpence at any sale of drift-wood round
the coast.</p>
<p>The weather changed on the third day,—Oh! I am talking
about our present trip now,—and we started from Oxford upon
our homeward journey in the midst of a steady drizzle.</p>
<p>The river—with the sunlight flashing from its dancing
wavelets, gilding gold the grey-green beech-trunks, glinting
through the dark, cool wood paths, chasing shadows o’er the
shallows, flinging diamonds from the mill-wheels, throwing kisses
to the lilies, wantoning with the weirs’ white waters,
silvering moss-grown walls and bridges, brightening every tiny
townlet, making sweet each lane and meadow, lying tangled in the
rushes, peeping, laughing, from each inlet, gleaming gay on many
a far sail, making soft the air with glory—is a golden
fairy stream.</p>
<p>But the river—chill and weary, with the ceaseless
rain-drops falling on its brown and sluggish waters, with a sound
as of a woman, weeping low in some dark chamber; while the woods,
all dark and silent, shrouded in their mists of vapour, stand
like ghosts upon the margin; silent ghosts with eyes reproachful,
like the ghosts of evil actions, like the ghosts of friends
neglected—is a spirit-haunted water through the land of
vain regrets.</p>
<p>Sunlight is the life-blood of Nature. Mother Earth looks
at us with such dull, soulless eyes, when the sunlight has died
away from out of her. It makes us sad to be with her then;
she does not seem to know us or to care for us. She is as a
widow who has lost the husband she loved, and her children touch
her hand, and look up into her eyes, but gain no smile from
her.</p>
<p>We rowed on all that day through the rain, and very melancholy
work it was. We pretended, at first, that we enjoyed
it. We said it was a change, and that we liked to see the
river under all its different aspects. We said we could not
expect to have it all sunshine, nor should we wish it. We
told each other that Nature was beautiful, even in her tears.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p305b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt= "The boat in the rain" title= "The boat in the rain" src="images/p305s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>Indeed, Harris and I were quite enthusiastic about the
business, for the first few hours. And we sang a song about
a gipsy’s life, and how delightful a gipsy’s
existence was!—free to storm and sunshine, and to every
wind that blew!—and how he enjoyed the rain, and what a lot
of good it did him; and how he laughed at people who didn’t
like it.</p>
<p>George took the fun more soberly, and stuck to the
umbrella.</p>
<p>We hoisted the cover before we had lunch, and kept it up all
the afternoon, just leaving a little space in the bow, from which
one of us could paddle and keep a look-out. In this way we
made nine miles, and pulled up for the night a little below
Day’s Lock.</p>
<p>I cannot honestly say that we had a merry evening. The
rain poured down with quiet persistency. Everything in the
boat was damp and clammy. Supper was not a success.
Cold veal pie, when you don’t feel hungry, is apt to
cloy. I felt I wanted whitebait and a cutlet; Harris
babbled of soles and white-sauce, and passed the remains of his
pie to Montmorency, who declined it, and, apparently insulted by
the offer, went and sat over at the other end of the boat by
himself.</p>
<p>George requested that we would not talk about these things, at
all events until he had finished his cold boiled beef without
mustard.</p>
<p>We played penny nap after supper. We played for about an
hour and a half, by the end of which time George had won
fourpence—George always is lucky at cards—and Harris
and I had lost exactly twopence each.</p>
<p>We thought we would give up gambling then. As Harris
said, it breeds an unhealthy excitement when carried too
far. George offered to go on and give us our revenge; but
Harris and I decided not to battle any further against Fate.</p>
<p>After that, we mixed ourselves some toddy, and sat round and
talked. George told us about a man he had known, who had
come up the river two years ago and who had slept out in a damp
boat on just such another night as that was, and it had given him
rheumatic fever, and nothing was able to save him, and he had
died in great agony ten days afterwards. George said he was
quite a young man, and was engaged to be married. He said
it was one of the saddest things he had ever known.</p>
<p>And that put Harris in mind of a friend of his, who had been
in the Volunteers, and who had slept out under canvas one wet
night down at Aldershot, “on just such another night as
this,” said Harris; and he had woke up in the morning a
cripple for life. Harris said he would introduce us both to
the man when we got back to town; it would make our hearts bleed
to see him.</p>
<p>This naturally led to some pleasant chat about sciatica,
fevers, chills, lung diseases, and bronchitis; and Harris said
how very awkward it would be if one of us were taken seriously
ill in the night, seeing how far away we were from a doctor.</p>
<p>There seemed to be a desire for something frolicksome to
follow upon this conversation, and in a weak moment I suggested
that George should get out his banjo, and see if he could not
give us a comic song.</p>
<p>I will say for George that he did not want any pressing.
There was no nonsense about having left his music at home, or
anything of that sort. He at once fished out his
instrument, and commenced to play “Two Lovely Black
Eyes.”</p>
<p>I had always regarded “Two Lovely Black Eyes” as
rather a commonplace tune until that evening. The rich vein
of sadness that George extracted from it quite surprised me.</p>
<p>The desire that grew upon Harris and myself, as the mournful
strains progressed, was to fall upon each other’s necks and
weep; but by great effort we kept back the rising tears, and
listened to the wild yearnful melody in silence.</p>
<p>When the chorus came we even made a desperate effort to be
merry. We re-filled our glasses and joined in; Harris, in a
voice trembling with emotion, leading, and George and I following
a few words behind:</p>
<blockquote><p> “Two
lovely black eyes;<br/>
Oh! what a surprise!<br/>
Only for telling a man he was wrong,<br/>
Two—”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>There we broke down. The unutterable pathos of
George’s accompaniment to that “two” we were,
in our then state of depression, unable to bear. Harris
sobbed like a little child, and the dog howled till I thought his
heart or his jaw must surely break.</p>
<p>George wanted to go on with another verse. He thought
that when he had got a little more into the tune, and could throw
more “abandon,” as it were, into the rendering, it
might not seem so sad. The feeling of the majority,
however, was opposed to the experiment.</p>
<p>There being nothing else to do, we went to bed—that is,
we undressed ourselves, and tossed about at the bottom of the
boat for some three or four hours. After which, we managed
to get some fitful slumber until five a.m., when we all got up
and had breakfast.</p>
<p>The second day was exactly like the first. The rain
continued to pour down, and we sat, wrapped up in our
mackintoshes, underneath the canvas, and drifted slowly down.</p>
<p>One of us—I forget which one now, but I rather think it
was myself—made a few feeble attempts during the course of
the morning to work up the old gipsy foolishness about being
children of Nature and enjoying the wet; but it did not go down
well at all. That—</p>
<blockquote><p>“I care not for the rain, not I!”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>was so painfully evident, as expressing the sentiments of each
of us, that to sing it seemed unnecessary.</p>
<p>On one point we were all agreed, and that was that, come what
might, we would go through with this job to the bitter end.
We had come out for a fortnight’s enjoyment on the river,
and a fortnight’s enjoyment on the river we meant to
have. If it killed us! well, that would be a sad thing for
our friends and relations, but it could not be helped. We
felt that to give in to the weather in a climate such as ours
would be a most disastrous precedent.</p>
<p>“It’s only two days more,” said Harris,
“and we are young and strong. We may get over it all
right, after all.”</p>
<p>At about four o’clock we began to discuss our
arrangements for the evening. We were a little past Goring
then, and we decided to paddle on to Pangbourne, and put up there
for the night.</p>
<p>“Another jolly evening!” murmured George.</p>
<p>We sat and mused on the prospect. We should be in at
Pangbourne by five. We should finish dinner at, say,
half-past six. After that we could walk about the village
in the pouring rain until bed-time; or we could sit in a
dimly-lit bar-parlour and read the almanac.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p311b.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatright' alt= "Lady in skirt" title= "Lady in skirt" src="images/p311s.jpg" /></SPAN>“Why, the Alhambra would be almost more lively,”
said Harris, venturing his head outside the cover for a moment
and taking a survey of the sky.</p>
<p>“With a little supper at the --- <SPAN name="citation311"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote311" class="citation">[311]</SPAN> to follow,” I added, half
unconsciously.</p>
<p>“Yes it’s almost a pity we’ve made up our
minds to stick to this boat,” answered Harris; and then
there was silence for a while.</p>
<p>“If we <i>hadn’t</i> made up our minds to contract
our certain deaths in this bally old coffin,” observed
George, casting a glance of intense malevolence over the boat,
“it might be worth while to mention that there’s a
train leaves Pangbourne, I know, soon after five, which would
just land us in town in comfortable time to get a chop, and then
go on to the place you mentioned afterwards.”</p>
<p>Nobody spoke. We looked at one another, and each one
seemed to see his own mean and guilty thoughts reflected in the
faces of the others. In silence, we dragged out and
overhauled the Gladstone. We looked up the river and down
the river; not a soul was in sight!</p>
<p>Twenty minutes later, three figures, followed by a
shamed-looking dog, might have been seen creeping stealthily from
the boat-house at the “Swan” towards the railway
station, dressed in the following neither neat nor gaudy
costume:</p>
<p>Black leather shoes, dirty; suit of boating flannels, very
dirty; brown felt hat, much battered; mackintosh, very wet;
umbrella.</p>
<p>We had deceived the boatman at Pangbourne. We had not
had the face to tell him that we were running away from the
rain. We had left the boat, and all it contained, in his
charge, with instructions that it was to be ready for us at nine
the next morning. If, we said—<i>if</i> anything
unforeseen should happen, preventing our return, we would write
to him.</p>
<p>We reached Paddington at seven, and drove direct to the
restaurant I have before described, where we partook of a light
meal, left Montmorency, together with suggestions for a supper to
be ready at half-past ten, and then continued our way to
Leicester Square.</p>
<p>We attracted a good deal of attention at the Alhambra.
On our presenting ourselves at the paybox we were gruffly
directed to go round to Castle Street, and were informed that we
were half-an-hour behind our time.</p>
<p>We convinced the man, with some difficulty, that we were
<i>not</i> “the world-renowned contortionists from the
Himalaya Mountains,” and he took our money and let us
pass.</p>
<p>Inside we were a still greater success. Our fine bronzed
countenances and picturesque clothes were followed round the
place with admiring gaze. We were the cynosure of every
eye.</p>
<p>It was a proud moment for us all.</p>
<p>We adjourned soon after the first ballet, and wended our way
back to the restaurant, where supper was already awaiting us.</p>
<p>I must confess to enjoying that supper. For about ten
days we seemed to have been living, more or less, on nothing but
cold meat, cake, and bread and jam. It had been a simple, a
nutritious diet; but there had been nothing exciting about it,
and the odour of Burgundy, and the smell of French sauces, and
the sight of clean napkins and long loaves, knocked as a very
welcome visitor at the door of our inner man.</p>
<p>We pegged and quaffed away in silence for a while, until the
time came when, instead of sitting bolt upright, and grasping the
knife and fork firmly, we leant back in our chairs and worked
slowly and carelessly—when we stretched out our legs
beneath the table, let our napkins fall, unheeded, to the floor,
and found time to more critically examine the smoky ceiling than
we had hitherto been able to do—when we rested our glasses
at arm’s-length upon the table, and felt good, and
thoughtful, and forgiving.</p>
<p>Then Harris, who was sitting next the window, drew aside the
curtain and looked out upon the street.</p>
<p>It glistened darkly in the wet, the dim lamps flickered with
each gust, the rain splashed steadily into the puddles and
trickled down the water-spouts into the running gutters. A
few soaked wayfarers hurried past, crouching beneath their
dripping umbrellas, the women holding up their skirts.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Harris, reaching his hand out for his
glass, “we have had a pleasant trip, and my hearty thanks
for it to old Father Thames—but I think we did well to
chuck it when we did. Here’s to Three Men well out of
a Boat!”</p>
<p>And Montmorency, standing on his hind legs, before the window,
peering out into the night, gave a short bark of decided
concurrence with the toast.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p315b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt= "Neptune drinking a toast" title= "Neptune drinking a toast" src="images/p315s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />