Out of the hand OP the PHILISTINES.
Ernest’s unexpected success
with ‘London’s Shame’ was not, as
Arthur Berkeley at first feared it might be, the mere
last dying flicker of a weak and failing life.
Arthur was quite right, indeed, when he said one day
to Lady Hilda that its very brilliancy and fervour
had the hectic glow about it, as of a man who was burning
himself out too fiercely and rapidly; you could read
the feverish eagerness of the writer in every line;
but still, Lady Hilda answered with her ordinary
calm assurance that it was all going well, and that
Ernest only needed the sense of security to pull him
round again; and as usual, Lady Hilda’s practical
sagacity was not at fault. The big pamphlet—for
it was hardly more than that—soon proved
an opening for further work, in procuring which Hilda
and Arthur were again partially instrumental.
An advanced Radical member of Parliament, famous
for his declamations against the capitalist faction,
and his enormous holding of English railway stock,
was induced to come forward as the founder of a new
weekly paper, ‘in the interest of social reform.’
Of course the thing was got up solely with an idea
to utilising Ernest as editor, for, said the great
anti-capitalist with his usual charming frankness,
’the young fellow has a positive money-value,
now, if he’s taken in hand at once before the
sensation’s over, and there can be no harm in
turning an honest penny by exploiting him, you know,
and starting a popular paper.’ When Ernest
was offered the post of editor to the new periodical,
at a salary which almost alarmed him by its plutocratic
magnificence (for it was positively no less than six
hundred a year), he felt for a moment some conscientious
scruples about accepting so splendid a post.
And when Lady Hilda in her emphatic fashion promptly
over-ruled these nascent scruples by the application
of the very simple solvent formula, ‘Bosh!’
he felt bound at least to stipulate that he should
be at perfect liberty to say whatever he liked in
the new paper, without interference or supervision
from the capitalist proprietor. To which the
Radical member, in his business capacity, immediately
responded, ’Why, certainly. What we want
to pay you for is just your power of startling people,
which, in its proper place, is a very useful marketable
commodity. Every pig has its value—if
only you sell it in the best market.’
‘The Social Reformer, a Weekly
Advocate of the New Economy,’ achieved at once
an immense success among the working classes, and grew
before long to be one of the most popular journals
of the second rank in all London. The interest
that Ernest had aroused by his big pamphlet was carried
on to his new venture, which soon managed to gain
many readers by its own intrinsic merits. ’Seen
your brother’s revolutionary broadsheet, Le
Breton?’ asked a friend at the club of Herbert
not many weeks later—he was the same person
who had found it ‘so very embarrassing’
to recognise Ernest—in his shabby days
when walking with a Q.C.—’It’s
a dreadful tissue of the reddest French communism,
I believe, but still, it’s scored the biggest
success of its sort in journalism, I’m told,
since the days of Kenealy’s “Englishman.”
Bradbury, who’s found the money to start it—deuced
clever fellow in his way, Bradbury!—is making
an awful lot out of the speculation, they say.
What do you think of the paper, eh?’
Herbert drew himself up grimly.
‘To tell you the truth,’ he said in his
stiffest style, ’I haven’t yet had time
to look at a copy. Ernest Le Breton’s not
a man in whose affairs I feel called upon to take
any special interest; and I haven’t put myself
to the trouble of reading his second-hand political
lucubrations. Faint echoes of Max Schurz, all
of it, no doubt; and having read and disposed of Schurz
himself long ago, I don’t feel inclined now to
go in for a second supplementary course of Schurz
and water.’
‘Well, well, that may be so,’
the friend answered, turning over the pages of the
peccant periodical carelessly; ’but all the same
I’m afraid your brother’s really going
to do an awful lot of mischief in the way of setting
class against class, and stirring up the dangerous
orders to recognise their own power. You see,
Le Breton, the real danger of this sort of thing lies
in the fact that your brother Ernest’s a more
or less educated and cultivated person. I don’t
say he’s really got any genuine depth of culture—would
you believe it, he told me once he’d never read
Rabelais, and didn’t want to?—and
of course a man of true culture in the grain, like
you and me now, my dear fellow, would never dream of
going and mistaking these will-o’-the-wisps
of socialism for the real guiding light of regenerated
humanity—of course not. But the dangerous
symptom at the present day lies just in the fact that
while the papers written for the mob used to be written
by vulgar, noisy, self-made, half-educated demagogues,
they’re sent out now with all the authority
and specious respectability of decently instructed
and comparatively literary English gentlemen.
Now, nobody can deny that that’s a thing very
seriously to be regretted; and for my part I’m
extremely sorry your brother has been ill-advised enough
to join the mob that’s trying to pull down our
comfortably built and after all eminently respectable,
even if somewhat patched up, old British constitution.’
‘The subject’s one,’
Herbert answered curtly, ’in which I for my
part cannot pretend to feel the remotest personal interest.’
Ernest and Edie, howerer, in the little
lodgings up at Holloway, which they couldn’t
bear to desert even now in this sudden burst of incredible
prosperity, went their own way as self-containedly
as usual, wholly unconcerned by the non-arrival of
Mrs. Herbert on a visit of ceremony, or the failure
of the ‘Social Reformer’ to pierce the
lofty ethereal regions of abstract contemplation where
Herbert himself sat throned like an Epicurean god in
the pure halo of cultivated pococurantism. Every
day, as that eminent medical authority, Hilda Tregellis,
had truly prophesied, Ernest’s cheeks grew less
and less sunken, and a little colour returned slowly
to their midst; while Edie’s face was less pale
than of old, and her smile began to recover something
of its old-fashioned girlish joyousness. She
danced about once more as of old, and Arthur Berkeley,
when he dropped in of a Sunday afternoon for a chat
with Ernest, noticed with pleasure that little Miss
Butterfly was beginning to flit round again almost
as naturally as in the old days when he first saw
her light little form among the grey old pillars of
Magdalen Cloisters. Yet he couldn’t help
observing, too, that his feeling towards her was more
one of mere benevolence now, and less of tender regret,
than it used to be even a few short months before,
in the darkest days of Edie’s troubles.
Could it be, he asked himself more than once, that
the tall stately picture of Hilda Tregellis was overshadowing
in his heart the natural photograph of that unwedded
Edie Oswald that he once imagined was so firmly imprinted
there? Ah well, ah well, it may be true that a
man can love really but once in his whole lifetime;
and yet, the second spurious imitation is positively
sometimes a very good facsimile of the genuine first
impression, for all that.
As the months went slowly round, too,
the time came in the end for good Herr Max to be released
at last from his long imprisonment. On the day
that he came out, there was a public banquet at the
Marylebone dancing saloon; and all the socialists and
communards were there, and all the Russian nihilists,
and all the other wicked revolutionary plotters in
all London: and in the chair sat Ernest Le Breton,
now the editor of an important social paper, while
at his left hand, to balance the guest of the evening,
sat Arthur Berkeley, the well-known dramatic author,
who was himself more than suspected of being the timid
Nicodemus of the new faith. And when Ernest
announced that Herr Schurz had consented to aid him
on the ‘Social Reformer,’ and to add the
wisdom of age to the impetuosity of youth in conducting
its future, the simple enthusiasm of the wicked revolutionists
knew no bounds. And they cried ‘Hoch!’
and ‘Viva!’ and ‘Hooray!’
and many other like inarticulate shouts in many varieties
of interjectional dialect all the evening; and everybody
agreed that after all Herr Max was very little
grayer than before the trial, in spite of his long
and terrible term of imprisonment.
He was a little embittered by
his troubles, no doubt;—what can you expect
if you clap men in prison for the expression of their
honest political convictions?—but Ernest
tried to keep his eye steadily rather on the future
than on the past; and with greater ease and unwonted
comforts the old man’s cheerfulness as well as
his enthusiasm gradually returned. ’I’m
too old now to do anything more worth doing myself
before I die,’ he used to say, holding Ernest’s
arm tightly in his vice-like grip: ’but
I have great hopes in spite of everything for friend
Ernest; I have very great hopes indeed for friend
Ernest here. There’s no knowing yet what
he may accomplish.’
Ernest only smiled a trifle sadly,
and murmured half to himself that this was a hard
world, and he began himself to fear there was no fitting
feeling for a social reformer except one of a brave
despair. ‘We can do little or nothing,
after all,’ he said slowly; ’and our only
consolation must be that even that little is perhaps
just worth doing.’