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<h1>THE UNBEARABLE<br/> BASSINGTON</h1>
<p style="text-align: center">:: BY H. H. MUNRO
(“SAKI”) ::</p>
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<p style="text-align: center">LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY
HEAD</p>
<p style="text-align: center">NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY</p>
<p style="text-align: center">TORONTO: BELL & COCKBURN.
MCMXIII</p>
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<p style="text-align: center"><i>SIXTH EDITION</i></p>
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<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PRINTED BY
JAS. TRUSCOTT & SON, LTD. LONDON</span></p>
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<h2><span class="smcap">Author’s Note</span></h2>
<p>This story has no moral.</p>
<p>If it points out an evil at any rate it suggests no
remedy.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Francesca Bassington</span> sat in the
drawing-room of her house in Blue Street, W., regaling herself
and her estimable brother Henry with China tea and small cress
sandwiches. The meal was of that elegant proportion which,
while ministering sympathetically to the desires of the moment,
is happily reminiscent of a satisfactory luncheon and blessedly
expectant of an elaborate dinner to come.</p>
<p>In her younger days Francesca had been known as the beautiful
Miss Greech; at forty, although much of the original beauty
remained, she was just dear Francesca Bassington. No one
would have dreamed of calling her sweet, but a good many people
who scarcely knew her were punctilious about putting in the
“dear.”</p>
<p>Her enemies, in their honester moments, would have admitted
that she was svelte and knew how to dress, but they would have
agreed with her friends in asserting that she had no soul.
When one’s friends and enemies agree on any particular
point they are usually wrong. Francesca herself, if pressed
in an unguarded moment to describe her soul, would probably have
described her drawing-room. Not that she would have
considered that the one had stamped the impress of its character
on the other, so that close scrutiny might reveal its outstanding
features, and even suggest its hidden places, but because she
might have dimly recognised that her drawing-room was her
soul.</p>
<p>Francesca was one of those women towards whom Fate appears to
have the best intentions and never to carry them into
practice. With the advantages put at her disposal she might
have been expected to command a more than average share of
feminine happiness. So many of the things that make for
fretfulness, disappointment and discouragement in a woman’s
life were removed from her path that she might well have been
considered the fortunate Miss Greech, or later, lucky Francesca
Bassington. And she was not of the perverse band of those
who make a rock-garden of their souls by dragging into them all
the stoney griefs and unclaimed troubles they can find lying
around them. Francesca loved the smooth ways and pleasant
places of life; she liked not merely to look on the bright side
of things but to live there and stay there. And the fact
that things had, at one time and another, gone badly with her and
cheated her of some of her early illusions made her cling the
closer to such good fortune as remained to her now that she
seemed to have reached a calmer period of her life. To
undiscriminating friends she appeared in the guise of a rather
selfish woman, but it was merely the selfishness of one who had
seen the happy and unhappy sides of life and wished to enjoy to
the utmost what was left to her of the former. The
vicissitudes of fortune had not soured her, but they had perhaps
narrowed her in the sense of making her concentrate much of her
sympathies on things that immediately pleased and amused her, or
that recalled and perpetuated the pleasing and successful
incidents of other days. And it was her drawing-room in
particular that enshrined the memorials or tokens of past and
present happiness.</p>
<p>Into that comfortable quaint-shaped room of angles and bays
and alcoves had sailed, as into a harbour, those precious
personal possessions and trophies that had survived the
buffetings and storms of a not very tranquil married life.
Wherever her eyes might turn she saw the embodied results of her
successes, economies, good luck, good management or good
taste. The battle had more than once gone against her, but
she had somehow always contrived to save her baggage train, and
her complacent gaze could roam over object after object that
represented the spoils of victory or the salvage of honourable
defeat. The delicious bronze Fremiet on the mantelpiece had
been the outcome of a Grand Prix sweepstake of many years ago; a
group of Dresden figures of some considerable value had been
bequeathed to her by a discreet admirer, who had added death to
his other kindnesses; another group had been a self-bestowed
present, purchased in blessed and unfading memory of a wonderful
nine-days’ bridge winnings at a country-house party.
There were old Persian and Bokharan rugs and Worcester
tea-services of glowing colour, and little treasures of antique
silver that each enshrined a history or a memory in addition to
its own intrinsic value. It amused her at times to think of
the bygone craftsmen and artificers who had hammered and wrought
and woven in far distant countries and ages, to produce the
wonderful and beautiful things that had come, one way and
another, into her possession. Workers in the studios of
medieval Italian towns and of later Paris, in the bazaars of
Baghdad and of Central Asia, in old-time English workshops and
German factories, in all manner of queer hidden corners where
craft secrets were jealously guarded, nameless unremembered men
and men whose names were world-renowned and deathless.</p>
<p>And above all her other treasures, dominating in her
estimation every other object that the room contained, was the
great Van der Meulen that had come from her father’s home
as part of her wedding dowry. It fitted exactly into the
central wall panel above the narrow buhl cabinet, and filled
exactly its right space in the composition and balance of the
room. From wherever you sat it seemed to confront you as
the dominating feature of its surroundings. There was a
pleasing serenity about the great pompous battle scene with its
solemn courtly warriors bestriding their heavily prancing steeds,
grey or skewbald or dun, all gravely in earnest, and yet somehow
conveying the impression that their campaigns were but vast
serious picnics arranged in the grand manner. Francesca
could not imagine the drawing-room without the crowning
complement of the stately well-hung picture, just as she could
not imagine herself in any other setting than this house in Blue
Street with its crowded Pantheon of cherished household gods.</p>
<p>And herein sprouted one of the thorns that obtruded through
the rose-leaf damask of what might otherwise have been
Francesca’s peace of mind. One’s happiness
always lies in the future rather than in the past. With due
deference to an esteemed lyrical authority one may safely say
that a sorrow’s crown of sorrow is anticipating unhappier
things. The house in Blue Street had been left to her by
her old friend Sophie Chetrof, but only until such time as her
niece Emmeline Chetrof should marry, when it was to pass to her
as a wedding present. Emmeline was now seventeen and
passably good-looking, and four or five years were all that could
be safely allotted to the span of her continued
spinsterhood. Beyond that period lay chaos, the wrenching
asunder of Francesca from the sheltering habitation that had
grown to be her soul. It is true that in imagination she
had built herself a bridge across the chasm, a bridge of a single
span. The bridge in question was her schoolboy son Comus,
now being educated somewhere in the southern counties, or rather
one should say the bridge consisted of the possibility of his
eventual marriage with Emmeline, in which case Francesca saw
herself still reigning, a trifle squeezed and incommoded perhaps,
but still reigning in the house in Blue Street. The Van der
Meulen would still catch its requisite afternoon light in its
place of honour, the Fremiet and the Dresden and Old Worcester
would continue undisturbed in their accustomed niches.
Emmeline could have the Japanese snuggery, where Francesca
sometimes drank her after-dinner coffee, as a separate
drawing-room, where she could put her own things. The
details of the bridge structure had all been carefully thought
out. Only—it was an unfortunate circumstance that
Comus should have been the span on which everything balanced.</p>
<p>Francesca’s husband had insisted on giving the boy that
strange Pagan name, and had not lived long enough to judge as to
the appropriateness, or otherwise, of its significance. In
seventeen years and some odd months Francesca had had ample
opportunity for forming an opinion concerning her son’s
characteristics. The spirit of mirthfulness which one
associates with the name certainly ran riot in the boy, but it
was a twisted wayward sort of mirth of which Francesca herself
could seldom see the humorous side. In her brother Henry,
who sat eating small cress sandwiches as solemnly as though they
had been ordained in some immemorial Book of Observances, fate
had been undisguisedly kind to her. He might so easily have
married some pretty helpless little woman, and lived at Notting
Hill Gate, and been the father of a long string of pale, clever
useless children, who would have had birthdays and the sort of
illnesses that one is expected to send grapes to, and who would
have painted fatuous objects in a South Kensington manner as
Christmas offerings to an aunt whose cubic space for lumber was
limited. Instead of committing these unbrotherly actions,
which are so frequent in family life that they might almost be
called brotherly, Henry had married a woman who had both money
and a sense of repose, and their one child had the brilliant
virtue of never saying anything which even its parents could
consider worth repeating. Then he had gone into Parliament,
possibly with the idea of making his home life seem less dull; at
any rate it redeemed his career from insignificance, for no man
whose death can produce the item “another
by-election” on the news posters can be wholly a
nonentity. Henry, in short, who might have been an
embarrassment and a handicap, had chosen rather to be a friend
and counsellor, at times even an emergency bank balance;
Francesca on her part, with the partiality which a clever and
lazily-inclined woman often feels for a reliable fool, not only
sought his counsel but frequently followed it. When
convenient, moreover, she repaid his loans.</p>
<p>Against this good service on the part of Fate in providing her
with Henry for a brother, Francesca could well set the plaguy
malice of the destiny that had given her Comus for a son.
The boy was one of those untameable young lords of misrule that
frolic and chafe themselves through nursery and preparatory and
public-school days with the utmost allowance of storm and dust
and dislocation and the least possible amount of collar-work, and
come somehow with a laugh through a series of catastrophes that
has reduced everyone else concerned to tears or Cassandra-like
forebodings. Sometimes they sober down in after-life and
become uninteresting, forgetting that they were ever lords of
anything; sometimes Fate plays royally into their hands, and they
do great things in a spacious manner, and are thanked by
Parliaments and the Press and acclaimed by gala-day crowds.
But in most cases their tragedy begins when they leave school and
turn themselves loose in a world that has grown too civilised and
too crowded and too empty to have any place for them. And
they are very many.</p>
<p>Henry Greech had made an end of biting small sandwiches, and
settled down like a dust-storm refreshed, to discuss one of the
fashionably prevalent topics of the moment, the prevention of
destitution.</p>
<p>“It is a question that is only being nibbled at, smelt
at, one might say, at the present moment,” he observed,
“but it is one that will have to engage our serious
attention and consideration before long. The first thing
that we shall have to do is to get out of the dilettante and
academic way of approaching it. We must collect and
assimilate hard facts. It is a subject that ought to appeal
to all thinking minds, and yet, you know, I find it surprisingly
difficult to interest people in it.”</p>
<p>Francesca made some monosyllabic response, a sort of
sympathetic grunt which was meant to indicate that she was, to a
certain extent, listening and appreciating. In reality she
was reflecting that Henry possibly found it difficult to interest
people in any topic that he enlarged on. His talents lay so
thoroughly in the direction of being uninteresting, that even as
an eye-witness of the massacre of St. Bartholomew he would
probably have infused a flavour of boredom into his descriptions
of the event.</p>
<p>“I was speaking down in Leicestershire the other day on
this subject,” continued Henry, “and I pointed out at
some length a thing that few people ever stop to
consider—”</p>
<p>Francesca went over immediately but decorously to the majority
that will not stop to consider.</p>
<p>“Did you come across any of the Barnets when you were
down there?” she interrupted; “Eliza Barnet is rather
taken up with all those subjects.”</p>
<p>In the propagandist movements of Sociology, as in other arenas
of life and struggle, the fiercest competition and rivalry is
frequently to be found between closely allied types and
species. Eliza Barnet shared many of Henry Greech’s
political and social views, but she also shared his fondness for
pointing things out at some length; there had been occasions when
she had extensively occupied the strictly limited span allotted
to the platform oratory of a group of speakers of whom Henry
Greech had been an impatient unit. He might see eye to eye
with her on the leading questions of the day, but he persistently
wore mental blinkers as far as her estimable qualities were
concerned, and the mention of her name was a skilful lure drawn
across the trail of his discourse; if Francesca had to listen to
his eloquence on any subject she much preferred that it should be
a disparagement of Eliza Barnet rather than the prevention of
destitution.</p>
<p>“I’ve no doubt she means well,” said Henry,
“but it would be a good thing if she could be induced to
keep her own personality a little more in the background, and not
to imagine that she is the necessary mouthpiece of all the
progressive thought in the countryside. I fancy Canon
Besomley must have had her in his mind when he said that some
people came into the world to shake empires and others to move
amendments.”</p>
<p>Francesca laughed with genuine amusement.</p>
<p>“I suppose she is really wonderfully well up in all the
subjects she talks about,” was her provocative comment.</p>
<p>Henry grew possibly conscious of the fact that he was being
drawn out on the subject of Eliza Barnet, and he presently turned
on to a more personal topic.</p>
<p>“From the general air of tranquillity about the house I
presume Comus has gone back to Thaleby,” he observed.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Francesca, “he went back
yesterday. Of course, I’m very fond of him, but I
bear the separation well. When he’s here it’s
rather like having a live volcano in the house, a volcano that in
its quietest moments asks incessant questions and uses strong
scent.”</p>
<p>“It is only a temporary respite,” said Henry;
“in a year or two he will be leaving school, and then
what?”</p>
<p>Francesca closed her eyes with the air of one who seeks to
shut out a distressing vision. She was not fond of looking
intimately at the future in the presence of another person,
especially when the future was draped in doubtfully auspicious
colours.</p>
<p>“And then what?” persisted Henry.</p>
<p>“Then I suppose he will be upon my hands.”</p>
<p>“Exactly.”</p>
<p>“Don’t sit there looking judicial. I’m
quite ready to listen to suggestions if you’ve any to
make.”</p>
<p>“In the case of any ordinary boy,” said Henry,
“I might make lots of suggestions as to the finding of
suitable employment. From what we know of Comus it would be
rather a waste of time for either of us to look for jobs which he
wouldn’t look at when we’d got them for
him.”</p>
<p>“He must do something,” said Francesca.</p>
<p>“I know he must; but he never will. At least,
he’ll never stick to anything. The most hopeful thing
to do with him will be to marry him to an heiress. That
would solve the financial side of his problem. If he had
unlimited money at his disposal, he might go into the wilds
somewhere and shoot big game. I never know what the big
game have done to deserve it, but they do help to deflect the
destructive energies of some of our social misfits.”</p>
<p>Henry, who never killed anything larger or fiercer than a
trout, was scornfully superior on the subject of big game
shooting.</p>
<p>Francesca brightened at the matrimonial suggestion.
“I don’t know about an heiress,” she said
reflectively. “There’s Emmeline Chetrof of
course. One could hardly call her an heiress, but
she’s got a comfortable little income of her own and I
suppose something more will come to her from her
grandmother. Then, of course, you know this house goes to
her when she marries.”</p>
<p>“That would be very convenient,” said Henry,
probably following a line of thought that his sister had trodden
many hundreds of times before him. “Do she and Comus
hit it off at all well together?”</p>
<p>“Oh, well enough in boy and girl fashion,” said
Francesca. “I must arrange for them to see more of
each other in future. By the way, that little brother of
hers that she dotes on, Lancelot, goes to Thaleby this
term. I’ll write and tell Comus to be specially kind
to him; that will be a sure way to Emmeline’s heart.
Comus has been made a prefect, you know. Heaven knows
why.”</p>
<p>“It can only be for prominence in games,” sniffed
Henry; “I think we may safely leave work and conduct out of
the question.”</p>
<p>Comus was not a favourite with his uncle.</p>
<p>Francesca had turned to her writing cabinet and was hastily
scribbling a letter to her son in which the delicate health,
timid disposition and other inevitable attributes of the new boy
were brought to his notice, and commanded to his care. When
she had sealed and stamped the envelope Henry uttered a belated
caution.</p>
<p>“Perhaps on the whole it would be wiser to say nothing
about the boy to Comus. He doesn’t always respond to
directions you know.”</p>
<p>Francesca did know, and already was more than half of her
brother’s opinion; but the woman who can sacrifice a clean
unspoiled penny stamp is probably yet unborn.</p>
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