Tell it not in OATH.
As they sat silent in that little
sitting-room after supper, a double knock at the door
suddenly announced the arrival of a telegram for Ernest.
He opened it with trembling lingers. It was from
Lancaster:—’Come down to the office
at once. Schurz has been sentenced to a year’s
imprisonment, and we want a leader about him for to-morrow.’
The telegram roused Ernest at once from his stupefied
lethargy. Here was a chance at last of doing something
for Max Schurz and for the cause of freedom! Here
was a chance of waking up all England to a sense of
the horrible crime it had just committed through
the voice of its duly accredited judicial mouthpiece!
The country was trembling on the brink of an abyss,
and he, Ernest Le Breton, might just be in time to
save it. The Home Secretary must be compelled
by the unanimous clamour of thirty millions of free
working people to redress the gross injustice of the
law in sending Max Sohurz, the greatest, noblest, and
purest-minded of mankind, to a common felon’s
prison! Nothing else on earth could have moved
Ernest, jaded and dispirited as he was at that moment,
to the painful exertion of writing a newspaper leader
after the day’s fatigues and excitements, except
the thought that by doing so he might not only blot
out this national disgrace, as he considered it, but
might also help to release the martyr of the people’s
rights from his incredible, unspeakable punishment.
Flushed and feverish though he was, he rose straight
up from the table, handed the telegram to Edie without
a word, and started off alone to hail a hansom cab
and drive down immediately to the office. Arthur
Berkeley, fearful of what might happen to him in his
present excited state, stole out after him quietly,
and followed him unperceived in another hansom at
a little distance.
When Ernest got to the ‘Morning
Intelligence’ buildings, he was shown up at
once into the editorial room. He expected to find
Mr. Lancaster at the same white heat of indignation
as himself; but to his immense surprise he actually
found him in the usual sleepy languid condition of
apathetic impartiality. ’I wired for you,
Le Breton,’ the impassive editor said calmly,
’because I understand you know all about this
man Schurz, who has just got his twelve months’
imprisonment this evening. I suppose, of course,
you’ve heard already all about it.’
‘I’ve been at the trial
all day,’ Ernest answered, ’and myself
heard the verdict and sentence.’
‘Good,’ Mr. Lancaster
said, with a dreamy touch of approval in his tone.
’That’s good journalism, certainly, and
very smart of you. Helps you to give local colour
and realistic touches to the matter. But you
ought to have called in here to see me immediately.
We shall have a regular reporter’s report of
the trial, of course; but reporters’ reports
are fearfully and wonderfully lifeless. If you
like, besides the leader, you might work up a striking
headed article on the Scene in Court. This is
an important case, and we want something more about
it than mere writing, you know; a little about the
man himself and his personal history, which Berkeley
tells me you’re well acquainted with. He’s
written something called “Gold and the Proletariate,”
or whatever it is; just tell our readers all about
it. As to the leader, say what you like in it—of
course I shall look over the proof, and tone it down
a bit to suit the taste of our public—we
appeal mainly to the mercantile middle class, I need
hardly say; but you know the general policy of the
paper, and you can just write what you think best,
subject to subsequent editorial revision. Get
to work at once, please, as the articles are wanted
immediately, and send down slips as fast as they’re
written to the printers.’
Ernest could hardly contain his surprise
at Mr. Lancaster’s calmness under such unheard-of
circumstances, when the whole laborious fabric of
British liberties was tottering visibly to its base—but
he wisely concluded to himself that the editor had
to see articles written about every possible subject
every evening—from a European convulsion
to a fire at a theatre,—and that use must
have made it in him a property of easiness. When
a man’s obliged to work himself up perpetually
into a state of artificial excitement about every
railway accident, explosion, shipwreck, earthquake,
or volcanic eruption, in Europe, Asia, Africa, America,
and the islands of the Pacific Ocean, why then, Ernest
charitably said to himself, his sympathies must naturally
end by getting a trifle callous, especially when he’s
such a very apathetic person to start with as this
laconic editorial Lancaster. So he turned into
the little bare box devoted to his temporary use,
and began writing with perfectly unexampled and extraordinary
rapidity at his leader and his article about the injured
and martyred apostle of the slighted communistic religion.
It was only a few months since Ernest
had, with vast toil and forethought, spun slowly out
his maiden newspaper article on the Italian organ-boy,
and now he found himself, to his own immense surprise,
covering sheet after sheet of paper in feverish haste
with a long account of Max Schurz’s splendid
life and labours, and with a really fervid and eloquent
appeal to the English people not to suffer such a
man as he to go helplessly and hopelessly to an English
prison, at the bare bidding of a foreign despot.
He never stopped for one moment to take thought, or
to correct what he had written; in the excitement
of the moment his pen travelled along over the paper
as if inspired, and he found the words and thoughts
thronging his brain almost faster than his lagging
hand could suffice to give them visible embodiment.
As each page was thrown off hurriedly, he sent it
down, still pale and wet, to the printers in the office;
and before two o’clock in the morning, he had
full proofs of all he had written sent up to him for
final correction. It was a stirring and vigorous
leader, he felt quite certain himself as he read it
over; and he thought with a swelling breast that it
would appear next day, with all the impersonal authority
of the ‘Morning Intelligence’ stamped
upon its face, at ten thousand English breakfast tables,
where it might rouse the people in their millions
to protest sternly before it was too late against this
horrid violation of our cherished and boasted national
hospitality.
Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stopped
at the office, and run in hastily for five minutes’
talk with the terrible editor. ’Don’t
say anything to shock Le Breton, I beg of you, Lancaster,’
he said, ’about this poor man Schurz who has
just been sent for a year to prison. It’s
a very hard case, and I’m awfully sorry for the
man myself, though that’s neither here nor there.
I can see from your face that you, for your part,
don’t sympathise with him; but at any rate,
don’t say anything about it to hurt Le Breton’s
feelings. He’s in a dreadfully feverish
and excited condition this evening; Max Schurz has
always been to him almost like a father, and he naturally
takes his sentence very bitterly to heart. To
tell you the truth, I regret it a great deal myself,
I know a little of Schurz, through Le Breton, and
I know what a well-meaning, ardent, enthusiastic person
he really is, and how much good actually underlies
all his chaotic socialistic notions. But at any
rate, I do beg of you, don’t say anything to
further excite and hurt poor Le Breton.’
‘Certainly not,’ the editor
answered, smoothing his large hands softly one over
the other. ’Certainly not; though I confess,
as a practical man, I don’t sympathise in the
least with this preposterous German refugee fellow.
So far as I can learn, he’s been at the bottom
of half the revolutionary and insurrectionary movements
of the last twenty years—a regular out-and-out
professional socialistic incendiary.’
‘You wouldn’t say so,’
Berkeley replied quietly, ’if you’d seen
more of him, Lancaster.’ But being a man
of the world, and having come mainly on Ernest’s
account, he didn’t care to press the abstract
question of Herr Max’s political sincerity any
further.
‘Well,’ the editor went
on, a little testily, ’be that as it may, I
won’t discuss the subject with your friend Le
Breton, who’s really a nice, enthusiastic young
fellow, I think, as far as I’ve seen him.
I’ll simply let him write to-night whatever he
pleases, and make the necessary alterations in proof
afterwards, without talking it over with him personally
at all. That’ll avoid any needless discussion
and ruffling of his supersensitive communistic feelings.
Poor fellow, he looks very ill indeed to-night.
I’m really extremely sorry for him.’
‘When will he be finished?’ asked Arthur.
‘At two,’ the editor answered.
‘I’ll send a cab for him,’
Arthur said; ’there’ll be none about at
that hour, probably. Will you kindly tell him
it’s waiting for him?’
At two o’clock or a little after,
Ernest drove home with his heart on fire, full of
eagerness and swelling hope for to-morrow morning.
He found Edie waiting for him, late as it was, with
a little bottle of wine—an unknown luxury
at Mrs. Halliss’s lodgings—and such
light supper as she thought he could manage to swallow
in his excitement. Ernest drank a glass of the
wine, but left the supper untasted. Then he went
to bed, and tossed about uneasily till morning.
He couldn’t sleep through his anxiety to see
his great leader appear in all the added dignity of
printer’s ink and rouse the slumbering world
of England up to a due sense of Max Schurz’s
wrongs and the law’s incomprehensible iniquity.
Before seven, he rose very quietly,
dressed himself without saying a word, and stole out
to buy an early copy of the ’Morning Intelligence.’
He got one at the small tobacconist’s shop round
the corner, where he had taken his first hint for
the Italian organ-boy leader. It was with difficulty
that he could contain himself till he was back in
Mrs. Halliss’s little front parlour; and there
he tore open the paper eagerly, and turned to the well-remembered
words at the beginning of his desperate appealing article.
He could recollect the very run of every clause and
word he had written: ’No Englishman can
read without a thrill of righteous indignation,’
it began,’the sentence passed last night upon
Max Schurz, the author of that remarkable economical
work, “Gold and the Proletariate.”
Herr Schurz is one of those numerous refugees from
German despotism who have taken advantage of the hospitable
welcome usually afforded by England to the oppressed
of all creeds or nations’—and so forth,
and so forth. Where was it now? Yes, that
was it, in the place of honour, of course—the
first leader under the clock in the ’Morning
Intelligence.’ His eye caught at once the
opening key-words, ’No Englishman.’
Sinking down into the easy-chair by the flowers in
the window he prepared to run it through at his leisure
with breathless anxiety.
’No Englishman can read without
a feeling of the highest approval the sentence passed
last night upon Max Schurz, the author of that misguided
economical work, “Gold and the Proletariate.”
Herr Schurz is one of those numerous refugees from
German authority, who have taken advantage of the
hospitable welcome usually afforded by England to
the oppressed of all creeds or nations, in order to
hatch plots in security against the peace of sovereigns
or governments with which we desire always to maintain
the most amicable and cordial relations.’
Ernest’s eyes seemed to fail him. The type
on the paper swam wildly before his bewildered vision.
What on earth could this mean? It was his own
leader, indeed, with the very rhythm and cadence of
the sentences accurately preserved, but with all the
adjectives and epithets so ingeniously altered that
it was turned into a crushing condemnation of Max
Schurz, his principles, his conduct, and his ethical
theories. From beginning to end, the article
appealed to the common-sense of intelligent Englishmen
to admire the dignity of the law in thus vindicating
itself against the atrocious schemes of a dangerous
and ungrateful political exile who had abused the
hospitality of a great fres country to concoct vile
plots against the persons of friendly sovereigns and
innocent ministers on the European continent.
Ernest laid down the paper dreamily,
and leant back for a moment in his chair, to let his
brain recover a little from the reeling dizziness
of that crushing disappointment. Then he turned
in a giddy mechanical fashion to the headed article
on the fourth page. There the self-same style
of treatment met once more his astonished gaze.
All the minute facts as to Max Schurz’s history
and personality were carefully preserved; the description
of his simple artisan life, his modest household,
his Sunday evening receptions, his great following
of earnest and enthusiastic refugees—every
word of all this, which hardly anyone else could have
equally well supplied, was retained intact in the
published copy; yet the whole spirit of the thing
had utterly evaporated, or rather had been perverted
into the exact opposite unsympathetic channel.
Where Ernest had written ‘enthusiasm,’
Lancaster had simply altered the word to ‘fanaticism;’
where Ernest had spoken of Herr Max’s ’single-hearted
devotion,’ Lancaster had merely changed the phrase
into ’undisguised revolutionary ardour.’
The whole paper was one long sermon against Max Schurz’s
Utopian schemes, imputing to him not only folly but
even positive criminality as well. We all know
how we all in England look upon the foreign political
refugee—a man to be hit again with impunity,
because he has no friends; but to Ernest, who had lived
so long in his own little socialistic set, the discovery
that people could openly say such things against his
chosen apostle at the very moment of his martyrdom,
was a hideous and blinding disillusionment. He
put the paper down upon the table once more, and buried
his face helplessly between his burning hands.
The worst of it all was this:
if Herr Max ever saw those articles he would naturally
conclude that Ernest had been guilty of the basest
treachery, and that too on the very day when he most
needed the aid and sympathy of all his followers.
With a thrill of horror he thought in his own soul
that the great leader might suspect him for an hour
of being the venal Judas of the little sect.
How Ernest ever got through that weary
day he did not know himself; nothing kept him up through
it except his burning indignation against Lancaster’s
abominable conduct. About eleven o’clock,
Arthur Berkeley called in to see him. ’I’m
afraid you’ve been a little disappointed,’
he said, ’about the turn Lancaster has given
to your two articles. He told me he meant to
alter the tone so as to suit the policy of the paper,
and I see he’s done so very thoroughly.
You can’t look for much sympathy from commonplace,
cold, calculating Englishmen for enthusiastic natures
like Herr Max’s.’
Ernest turned to him in blank amazement.
He had expected Berkeley to be as angry as himself
at Lancaster’s shameful mutilation of his appealing
leader; and he found now that even Berkeley accepted
it as an ordinary incident in the course of journalistic
business. His heart sank within him as he thought
how little hope there could be of Herr Max’s
liberation, when even his own familiar friend Berkeley
looked upon the matter in such a casual careless fashion.
‘I shall never write another
word for the “Morning Intelligence,”’
he cried vehemently, after a moment’s pause.
’If we starve for it, I shall never write another
word in that wicked, abominable, dishonourable paper.
I can die easily enough, heaven knows, without a murmur:
but I can’t be disloyal to dear Herr Max, and
to all my innate ingrained principles.’
‘Don’t say that, Ernest,’
Berkeley answered gently. ’Think of Mrs.
Le Breton and the baby. The luxury of starvation
for the sake of a cause is one you might venture to
allow yourself if you were alone in the world as I
am, but not one which you ought to force unwillingly
upon your wife and children. You’ve been
getting a trifle more practical of late under the
spur of necessity; don’t go and turn impossible
again at the supreme moment. Whatever happens,
it’s your plain duty to go on writing for the
“Morning Intelligence.” You say with
your own hand only what you think and believe yourself:
the editor alone is responsible for the final policy
of the paper.’
Ernest only muttered slowly to himself,—’Never,
never, never!’
Still, though the first attempt had
failed, Ernest did not wholly give up his hopes of
doing something towards the release of Herr Max from
that unutterable imprisonment. He drew up a form
of petition to the Home Secretary, in which he pointed
out the reasons for setting aside the course of the
law in the case of this particular political prisoner.
With feverish anxiety he ran about London for the
next two days, trying to get influential signatures
to his petition, and to rouse the people in their
millions to demand the release of the popular martyr.
Alas for the stolid indifference of the British public!
The people in their millions sat down to eat and drink,
and rose up to play, exactly as if nothing unusual
in any way had happened. Most of them had never
heard at all of Herr Max, or of ‘Gold and the
Proletariate,’ and those who had heard understood
for the most part that he was a bad lot who was imprisoned
for trying nefariously to blow up the Emperor of Rooshia.
Crowds of people nightly besieged the doors of the
Ambiguities and the Marlborough, to hear the fate
of ‘The Primate of Fiji’ and ’The
Duke of Bermondsey;’ but very few among the
millions took the trouble to sign their names to Ernest
Le Breton’s despairing petition. Even the
advanced radicals of the market-place, the men who
figured largely at Trafalgar Square meetings and Agricultural
Labourers’ Unions, feared to damage their reputation
for moderation and sobriety by getting themselves
mixed up with a continental agitator like this man
Schurz that people were talking about. The Irish
members expressed a pious horror of the very word
dynamite: the working-man leaders hemmed and
hawed, and regretted their inability, in their very
delicate position, to do anything which might seem
like countenancing Russian nihilism. In the end,
Ernest sent, in his petition with only half a dozen
unknown signatures; and the Home Secretary’s
private prompter threw it into the waste-paper basket
entire, without even taking the trouble to mention
its existence to his harassed and overburdened chief.
Just a Marylebone communist refugee in prison!
How could a statesman with half the bores and faddists
of England on his troubled hands, find time to look
at uninfluential petitions about an insignificant
worthless nobody like that?
So gentle, noble-natured, learned
Herr Max went to prison and served his year there
uncomplainingly, like any other social malefactor;
and Society talked about his case with languid interest
for nearly a fortnight, and then straightway found
a new sensation, and forgot all about him. But
there are three hundred and sixty-five days of twenty-four
hours each in every year; and for every one of those
days Herr Max and Herr Max’s friends never forgot
for an hour together that he was in prison.
And at the end of the week Ernest
got a letter from Lancaster, enclosing a cheque for
eight guineas. That is a vast sum of money, eight
guineas: just think of all the bread, and meat,
and tea, and clothing one can buy with it for a small
family! ’My dear Le Breton,’ the
editor wrote—in his own hand, too; a rare
honour; for he was a kindly man, and he had learned,
much to his surprise, from Arthur Berkeley, that Ernest
was angry at his treatment of the Schurzian leader:
’My dear Le Breton, I enclose cheque for eight
guineas, for your two articles. I hope you didn’t
mind the way I was obliged to cut them up in some
unessential details, so as to suit the policy of
the paper. I kept whatever was really most distinctive
as embodying special information in them. You
know we are above all things strictly moderate.
Please send us another social shortly.’
It was a kind letter, undoubtedly
a kind and kindly-meant letter: but Ernest flung
it from him as though he had been stung by a serpent
or a scorpion. Then he handed the cheque to Edie
in solemn silence, to see what she would do with it.
He merely wanted to try her constancy. For himself,
he would have felt like a Judas indeed if he had
taken and used their thirty pieces of silver.
Edie looked at the cheque intently
and sighed a deep sigh of regret. How could she
do otherwise? They were so very poor, and it was
such an immense sum of money! Then she rose quietly
without saying a word, and lighted a match from the
box on the mantelpiece. She held the cheque firmly
between her finger and thumb till it was nearly burnt,
end let it drop slowly at last into the empty fireplace.
Ernest rose up and kissed her tenderly. The leaden
weight of the thirty pieces of silver was fairly off
their united conscience. They had made what
reparation they could for the evil of that unhappy,
undesigned leader. After all Ernest had wasted
the last remnant of his energy on one eventful evening,
all for nothing.
As Edie sat looking wistfully at the
smouldering fragments of the burnt cheque, Ernest
roused her again by saying quietly, ’To-day’s
Saturday. Have we got anything for to-morrow’s
dinner, Edie?’
‘Nothing,’ Edie answered,
simply. ’How much money have you left,
Ernest?’
‘Sixpence,’ Ernest said,
without needing to consult his empty purse for confirmation—he
had counted the pence, as they went, too carefully
for that already. ’Edie, I’m afraid
we must go at last to the poor man’s banker
till I can get some more money.’
‘Oh, Ernest—not—not—not
the pawnbroker!’
‘Yes, Edie, the pawnbroker.’
The tears came quickly into Edie’s
eyes, but she answered nothing. They must have
food, and there was no other way open before them.
They rose together and went quietly into the bedroom.
There they gathered together the few little trinkets
and other things that might be of use to them, and
Ernest took down his hat from the stand to go out
with them to the pawnbroker’s.
As he turned out he was met energetically
on the landing by a stout barricade from good Mrs.
Halliss. ‘No, sir, not you, sir,’
the landlady said firmly, trying to take the parcel
from him as he went towards the door. ’I
beg your pardon, sir, for ‘avin’ over’eard
what wasn’t meant for me to ’ear, no doubt,
but I couldn’t ’elp it, sir, and John
an’ me can’t allow nothink of this sort,
we can’t. We’re used to this sort
o’ things, sir, John and me is; but you and
the dear lady isn’t used to ’em, sir, and
didn’t nought to be neither, and John an’
me can’t allow it, not anyhow.’
Ernest turned scarlet with shame,
but could say nothing. Edie only whispered softly,
’Dear, dear Mrs. Halliss, we’re so sorry,
but we can’t help it.’
‘’Elp it, ma’am,’
said Mrs. Halliss, herself almost crying, ’nor
there ain’t no reason why you should try to ’elp
it neither. As I says to John, “John,”
says I, “there ain’t no ’arm in it,
noways,” says I, “but I can’t stand
by,” says I, “and see them two poor dear
young creechurs,” meanin’ no offence, ma’am,
“a-pawning of their own jewelry and things to
go and pay for their Sunday’s dinner.”
And John, ’e says, says ’e, “Quite
right, Martha,” says ’e; “don’t
let ’em, my dear,” says ’e.
“The Lord has prospered us a bit in our ’umble
way, Martha,” says ’e, “and we ain’t
got no cause to want, we ain’t; and if the dear
lady and the good gentleman wouldn’t take it
as a liberty,” says ’e, “it ’ud
be better they should just borrer a pound or two for
a week from us,” says ‘e, beggin’
your pardon, ma’am, for ‘intin’
of it, “than that there Mr. Le Breting, as ain’t
accustomed to such places nohow, should go a-makin’
acquaintance, for the fust time of his life, as you
may say, with the inside of a pawnbroker’s shop,”
says ’e. “John,” says I, “it’s
my belief the lady and gentleman ’ud be insulted,”
says I, “though they are the sweetest unassoomin’est
young gentlefolk I ever did see,” says I, “if
we were to go as tin’ them to accept the loan
of money from the likes of you and me, John, as is
no better, by the side of them, nor old servants,
in the manner o’ speakin’.”
“Insulted,” says ’e; “not a
bit of it, they needn’t, Martha,” says
’e, “for I knows the ways of the aristocracy,”
says ’e, “and I knows as there’s
many a gentleman as owns ’is own ’osses
and ’is own ’ounds as isn’t afraid
to borrer a pound or so from ’is own coachman,
or even from ’is own groom—not but
what to borrer from a groom is lowerin’,”
says ’e, “in a tempory emergency.
Mind you, Martha,” says ’e, “a tempory
emergency is a thing as may ’appen to landed
gentlefolks any day,” says ’e. “It’s
like a ’ole in your coat made by a tear,”
says ’e; “a haccident as may ’appen
to-morrer to the Prince of Wales ’isself upon
the ‘untin’ field,” ’e says.
“Well, then, John,” says I, “I’ll
just go an’ speak to ’em about it, this
very minnit,” says I, and if I might make so
bold, ma’am, without seemin’ too presumptious,
I should be very glad if you’d kindly allow
me, ma’am, to lend Mr. Le Breting a few suvverins
till ’e gets ‘is next remittances, ma’am.’
Edie looked at Ernest, and Ernest
looked at Edie and the landlady; and then they all
three burst out crying together without further apology.
Perhaps it was the old Adam left in Ernest a little;
but though he could stand kindness from Dr. Greatrex
or from Mr. Lancaster stoically enough, he couldn’t
watch the humble devotion of those two honest-hearted
simple old servants without a mingled thrill of shame
and tenderness. ‘Mrs. Halliss,’ he
said, catching up the landlady’s hard red hand
gratefully in his own, ’you are too good and
too kind, and too considerate for us altogether.
I feel we have done nothing to deserve such great
kindness from you. But I really don’t think
it would be right of us to borrow from you when we
don’t even know how long it may be before we’re
able to return your money or whether we shall ever
be able to return it at all. We’re so much
obliged to you, so very very much obliged to you,
dear Mrs. Halliss, but I think we ought as a matter
of duty to pawn these few little things rather than
run into debt which we’ve no fair prospect at
present of ever redeeming.’
‘Has you please, sir,’
Mrs. Halliss said gently, wiping her eyes with her
snow-white apron, for she saw at once that Ernest really
meant what he said. ‘Not that John an’
me would think of it for a minnit, sir, so long as
you wouldn’t mind our takin’ the liberty;
but any’ow, sir, we can’t allow you to
go out yourself and go to the pawnbroker’s.
It ain’t no fit place for the likes of you, sir,
a pawnbroker’s ain’t, in all that low company;
and I don’t suppose you’d rightly know
’ow much to hask on the articles, neither.
John, ‘e ain’t afeard of goin’; an’
’e says, ’e insists upon it as ’e’s
to go, for ’e don’t think, sir, for the
honour of the ’ouse, ‘e says, sir, as
a lodger of ours ought to be seen a-goin’ to
the pawnbroker’s. Just you give them things
right over to John, sir, and ’e’ll get
you a better price on ’em by a long way nor they’d
ever think of giving a gentleman like you, sir.’
Ernest fought off the question in
a half-hearted fashion for a little while, but Mrs.
Halliss insisted upon it, and after a short time Ernest
gave way, for to say the truth he had very vague ideas
himself as to how he ought to proceed in a pawnbroking
expedition. Mrs. Halliss ran down the kitchen
stairs quickly, for fear he should change his mind
as soon as her back was turned, and called out gaily
to her husband in the first delight of her unexpected
triumph.
‘John,’ she cried, ’—drat
that man, where is ’e? John, dear, you
just putt your ’at on, and purtend to run round
the corner a bit to Aston’s the pawnbroker’s.
The Lord have mercy upon me for the stories I’ve
been a-tellin’ of ’em, but I couldn’t
bear to see them two pore things a-pawnin’ their
little bits of jewelry and sich, and Mr. Le Breting,
too, ‘im as ain’t fit to go knockin’
together with underbred folks like pawnbrokers.
So I told ’im as you’d take ’em
round and pawn ’em for ’im yourself; not
as I don’t suppose you’ve never pawned
nothink in your ’ole life, John, leastways not
since ever you an’ me kep’ company, for
afore that I suppose you was purty much like other
young men is, John, for all you shakes your ’ead
at it now so innocent like. But you just run
round, there’s a dear, and make as if you was
goin’ to the pawnbroker’s, and then you
come straight ’ome again unbeknown to ’em.
I ain’t a goin’ to let them two pore dears
go pawnin’ their things for a dinner nohow.
You take them two suvverins out of your box, John,
and putt away these ’ere little things for the
present time till the pore souls is able to pay us,
and if they never don’t, small matter neither.
Now you go fast, John, there’s a dear, and come
back, and mind you give them two suvverins to Mr. Le
Breting as natural like as ever you’re able.’
’Pawn ’em,’ John
said in a pitying voice, ’no indeed, it ain’t
come to that yet, I should ‘ope, that they need
go a-pawnin’ their effects while we’ve
got a suvverin or two laid by in our box, Martha.
Not as anybody need be ashamed of pawnin’ on
occasions, for that matter,—I don’t
say as a reg’lar thing, but now an’ then
on occasions, as you may call it; for even in the
best dookal families, I’ve ’eard tell
they do sometimes ’ave to pawn the dimonds,
so that pawnin’ ain’t in the runnin’
noways, bless you, as respects gentility. Not
as I’d like to go into a pawnshop myself, Martha,
as I’ve always been brought up respectable; but
when you send for Mr. Hattenborough to your own ressydence
and say quite commandin’ like, “’Er
Grace ’ud be obleeged if you’d wait upon
’er in Belgrave Square to hinspeck ’er
dimonds as I want to raise the wind on ’em,”
why, that’s quite another matter nat’rally.’
When honest John came back in a few
minutes and handed the two sovereigns over to Ernest,
he did it with such an unblushing face as might have
won him applause on any stage for its perfect naturalness.
‘Lor’ bless your ‘eart, sir,’
he said in answer to Ernest’s shamefaced thanks,
touching the place where his hat ought to be mechanically,
’it ain’t nothing, sir, that ain’t.
If it weren’t for the dookal families of England,
sir, it’s my belief the pawnbrokin’ business
wouldn’t be worth mentioning in the manner o’
speakin’.’
That evening, Ernest paced up and
down the little parlour rather moodily for half an
hour with three words ringing perpetually in his dizzy
ears-the ‘Never, never, never,’ he had
used so short a tune since about the ‘Morning
Intelligence.’ He must get money somehow
for Dot and Edie! he must get money somehow to pay
good Mrs. Halliss for their board and lodging!
There was only one way possible. Fight against
it as he would, in the end he must come back to that
inevitable conclusion. At last he sat down with
a gloomy face at the centre table, and pulled out
a sheet of blank foolscap.
‘What are you going to do, Ernest?’ Edie
asked him.
Ernest groaned. ’I’m
writing a social for the “Morning Intelligence,”
Edie,’ he answered bitterly.
‘Oh, Ernest!’ Edie said
with a face of horror and surprise. ’Not
after the shameful way they’ve treated poor Max
Schurz!’
Ernest groaned again. ‘There’s
nothing else to be done, Edie,’ he said, looking
up at her despondently. ’I must earn money
somehow to keep the house going.’
It is the business of the truthful
historian to narrate facts, not to palliate or extenuate
the conduct of the various actors. Whether Ernest
did right or wrong, at least he did it; he wrote a
playful social for Monday’s ‘Morning Intelligence,’
and carried it into the office on Sunday afternoon
himself, beause there was no postal delivery in the
London district.
That night, he lay awake once more
for hours together, tossing and turning, and reflecting
bitterly on his own baseness and his final moral
downfall. Herbert was right, after all. The
environment was beginning to conquer. He could
hold out no longer. Herr Max was in prison; the
world was profoundly indifferent; he himself had fallen
away like Peter; and there was nothing left for him
now but to look about and find himself a dishonourable
grave.
And Dot? And Edie? What
was to become of them after? Ah me, for the pity
of it when a man cannot even crawl quietly into a corner
and die in peace like a dog, without being tortured
by fears and terrors beforehand as to what will come
to those he loves far better than life when he himself
is quietly dead and buried out of the turmoil!