The next day was Wednesday and a slack
day for the Potwell Inn. It was a hot, close
day, full of the murmuring of bees. One or two
people crossed by the ferry, an elaborately equipped
fisherman stopped for cold meat and dry ginger ale
in the bar parlour, some haymakers came and drank
beer for an hour, and afterwards sent jars and jugs
by a boy to be replenished; that was all. Mr.
Polly had risen early and was busy about the place
meditating upon the probable tactics of Uncle Jim.
He was no longer strung up to the desperate pitch of
the first encounter. But he was grave and anxious.
Uncle Jim had shrunken, as all antagonists that are
boldly faced shrink, after the first battle, to the
negotiable, the vulnerable. Formidable he was
no doubt, but not invincible. He had, under Providence,
been defeated once, and he might be defeated altogether.
Mr. Polly went about the place considering
the militant possibilities of pacific things, pokers,
copper sticks, garden implements, kitchen knives,
garden nets, barbed wire, oars, clothes lines, blankets,
pewter pots, stockings and broken bottles. He
prepared a club with a stocking and a bottle inside
upon the best East End model. He swung it round
his head once, broke an outhouse window with a flying
fragment of glass, and ruined the stocking beyond
all darning. He developed a subtle scheme with
the cellar flap as a sort of pitfall, but he rejected
it finally because (A) it might entrap the plump woman,
and (B) he had no use whatever for Uncle Jim in the
cellar. He determined to wire the garden that
evening, burglar fashion, against the possibilities
of a night attack.
Towards two o’clock in the afternoon
three young men arrived in a capacious boat from the
direction of Lammam, and asked permission to camp
in the paddock. It was given all the more readily
by Mr. Polly because he perceived in their proximity
a possible check upon the self-expression of Uncle
Jim. But he did not foresee and no one could
have foreseen that Uncle Jim, stealing unawares upon
the Potwell Inn in the late afternoon, armed with
a large rough-hewn stake, should have mistaken the
bending form of one of those campers—who
was pulling a few onions by permission in the garden—for
Mr. Polly’s, and crept upon it swiftly and silently
and smitten its wide invitation unforgettably and
unforgiveably. It was an error impossible to
explain; the resounding whack went up to heaven, the
cry of amazement, and Mr. Polly emerged from the inn
armed with the frying-pan he was cleaning, to take
this reckless assailant in the rear. Uncle Jim,
realising his error, fled blaspheming into the arms
of the other two campers, who were returning from
the village with butcher’s meat and groceries.
They caught him, they smacked his face with steak and
punched him with a bursting parcel of lump sugar, they
held him though he bit them, and their idea of punishment
was to duck him. They were hilarious, strong
young stockbrokers’ clerks, Territorials
and seasoned boating men; they ducked him as though
it was romping, and all that Mr. Polly had to do was
to pick up lumps of sugar for them and wipe them on
his sleeve and put them on a plate, and explain that
Uncle Jim was a notorious bad character and not quite
right in his head.
“Got a regular obsession that
the Missis is his Aunt,” said Mr. Polly, expanding
it. “Perfect noosance he is.”
But he caught a glance of Uncle Jim’s
eye as he receded before the campers’ urgency
that boded ill for him, and in the night he had a
disagreeable idea that perhaps his luck might not hold
for the third occasion.
That came soon enough. So soon,
indeed, as the campers had gone.
Thursday was the early closing day
at Lammam, and next to Sunday the busiest part of
the week at the Potwell Inn. Sometimes as many
as six boats all at once would be moored against the
ferry punt and hiring rowboats. People could
either have a complete tea, a complete tea with jam,
cake and eggs, a kettle of boiling water and find the
rest, or refreshments á la carte, as they chose.
They sat about, but usually the boiling water-ers
had a delicacy about using the tables and grouped
themselves humbly on the ground. The complete
tea-ers with jam and eggs got the best tablecloth
on the table nearest the steps that led up to the
glass-panelled door. The groups about the lawn
were very satisfying to Mr. Polly’s sense of
amenity. To the right were the complete
tea-ers with everything heart could desire,
then a small group of three young men in remarkable
green and violet and pale-blue shirts, and two girls
in mauve and yellow blouses with common teas and gooseberry
jam at the green clothless table, then on the grass
down by the pollard willow a small family of hot water-ers
with a hamper, a little troubled by wasps in their
jam from the nest in the tree and all in mourning,
but happy otherwise, and on the lawn to the right a
ginger beer lot of ’prentices without their collars
and very jocular and happy. The young people
in the rainbow shirts and blouses formed the centre
of interest; they were under the leadership of a gold-spectacled
senior with a fluting voice and an air of mystery;
he ordered everything, and showed a peculiar knowledge
of the qualities of the Potwell jams, preferring gooseberry
with much insistence. Mr. Polly watched him,
christened him the “benifluous influence,”
glanced at the ’prentices and went inside and
down into the cellar in order to replenish the stock
of stone ginger beer which the plump woman had allowed
to run low during the preoccupations of the campaign.
It was in the cellar that he first became aware of
the return of Uncle Jim. He became aware of him
as a voice, a voice not only hoarse, but thick, as
voices thicken under the influence of alcohol.
“Where’s that muddy-faced
mongrel?” cried Uncle Jim. “Let ’im
come out to me! Where’s that blighted whisp
with the punt pole—I got a word to say
to ’im. Come out of it, you pot-bellied
chunk of dirtiness, you! Come out and ’ave
your ugly face wiped. I got a Thing for you….
’Ear me?
“’E’s ’iding,
that’s what ’e’s doing,” said
the voice of Uncle Jim, dropping for a moment to sorrow,
and then with a great increment of wrathfulness:
“Come out of my nest, you blinking cuckoo, you,
or I’ll cut your silly insides out! Come
out of it—you pock-marked rat! Stealing
another man’s ’ome away from ’im!
Come out and look me in the face, you squinting son
of a Skunk!...”
Mr. Polly took the ginger beer and
went thoughtfully upstairs to the bar.
“’E’s back,”
said the plump woman as he appeared. “I
knew ’e’d come back.”
“I heard him,” said Mr.
Polly, and looked about. “Just gimme the
old poker handle that’s under the beer engine.”
The door opened softly and Mr. Polly
turned quickly. But it was only the pointed nose
and intelligent face of the young man with the gilt
spectacles and discreet manner. He coughed and
the spectacles fixed Mr. Polly.
“I say,” he said with
quiet earnestness. “There’s a chap
out here seems to want someone.”
“Why don’t he come in?” said Mr.
Polly.
“He seems to want you out there.”
“What’s he want?”
“I think,” said
the spectacled young man after a thoughtful moment,
“he appears to have brought you a present of
fish.”
“Isn’t he shouting?”
“He is a little boisterous.”
“He’d better come in.”
The manner of the spectacled young
man intensified. “I wish you’d come
out and persuade him to go away,” he said.
“His language—isn’t quite the
thing—ladies.”
“It never was,” said the plump woman,
her voice charged with sorrow.
Mr. Polly moved towards the door and
stood with his hand on the handle. The gold-spectacled
face disappeared.
“Now, my man,” came his
voice from outside, “be careful what you’re
saying—”
“Oo in all the World and Hereafter
are you to call me, me man?” cried Uncle Jim
in the voice of one astonished and pained beyond endurance,
and added scornfully: “You gold-eyed Geezer,
you!”
“Tut, tut!” said the gentleman
in gilt glasses. “Restrain yourself!”
Mr. Polly emerged, poker in hand,
just in time to see what followed. Uncle Jim
in his shirtsleeves and a state of ferocious decolletage,
was holding something—yes!—a
dead eel by means of a piece of newspaper about its
tail, holding it down and back and a little sideways
in such a way as to smite with it upward and hard.
It struck the spectacled gentleman under the jaw with
a peculiar dead thud, and a cry of horror came from
the two seated parties at the sight. One of the
girls shrieked piercingly, “Horace!” and
everyone sprang up. The sense of helping numbers
came to Mr. Polly’s aid.
“Drop it!” he cried, and
came down the steps waving his poker and thrusting
the spectacled gentleman before him as once heroes
were wont to wield the ox-hide shield.
Uncle Jim gave ground suddenly, and
trod upon the foot of a young man in a blue shirt,
who immediately thrust at him violently with both
hands.
“Lea go!” howled Uncle
Jim. “That’s the chap I’m looking
for!” and pressing the head of the spectacled
gentleman aside, smote hard at Mr. Polly.
But at the sight of this indignity
inflicted upon the spectacled gentleman a woman’s
heart was stirred, and a pink parasol drove hard and
true at Uncle Jim’s wiry neck, and at the same
moment the young man in the blue shirt sought to collar
him and lost his grip again.
“Suffragettes,” gasped
Uncle Jim with the ferule at his throat. “Everywhere!”
and aimed a second more successful blow at Mr. Polly.
“Wup!” said Mr. Polly.
But now the jam and egg party was
joining in the fray. A stout yet still fairly
able-bodied gentleman in white and black checks enquired:
“What’s the fellow up to? Ain’t
there no police here?” and it was evident that
once more public opinion was rallying to the support
of Mr. Polly.
“Oh, come on then all the LOT
of you!” cried Uncle Jim, and backing dexterously
whirled the eel round in a destructive circle.
The pink sunshade was torn from the hand that gripped
it and whirled athwart the complete, but unadorned,
tea things on the green table.
“Collar him! Someone get
hold of his collar!” cried the gold-spectacled
gentleman, coming out of the scrimmage, retreating
up the steps to the inn door as if to rally his forces.
“Stand clear, you blessed mantel
ornaments!” cried Uncle Jim, “stand clear!”
and retired backing, staving off attack by means of
the whirling eel.
Mr. Polly, undeterred by a sense of
grave damage done to his nose, pressed the attack
in front, the two young men in violet and blue skirmished
on Uncle Jim’s flanks, the man in white and black
checks sought still further outflanking possibilities,
and two of the apprentice boys ran for oars.
The gold-spectacled gentleman, as if inspired, came
down the wooden steps again, seized the tablecloth
of the jam and egg party, lugged it from under the
crockery with inadequate precautions against breakage,
and advanced with compressed lips, curious lateral
crouching movements, swift flashings of his glasses,
and a general suggestion of bull-fighting in his pose
and gestures. Uncle Jim was kept busy, and unable
to plan his retreat with any strategic soundness.
He was moreover manifestly a little nervous about
the river in his rear. He gave ground in a curve,
and so came right across the rapidly abandoned camp
of the family in mourning, crunching a teacup under
his heel, oversetting the teapot, and finally tripping
backwards over the hamper. The eel flew out at
a tangent from his hand and became a mere looping
relic on the sward.
“Hold him!” cried the
gentleman in spectacles. “Collar him!”
and moving forward with extraordinary promptitude
wrapped the best tablecloth about Uncle Jim’s
arms and head. Mr. Polly grasped his purpose
instantly, the man in checks was scarcely slower, and
in another moment Uncle Jim was no more than a bundle
of smothered blasphemy and a pair of wildly active
legs.
“Duck him!” panted Mr.
Polly, holding on to the earthquake. “Bes’
thing—duck him.”
The bundle was convulsed by paroxysms
of anger and protest. One boot got the hamper
and sent it ten yards.
“Go in the house for a clothes
line someone!” said the gentleman in gold spectacles.
“He’ll get out of this in a moment.”
One of the apprentices ran.
“Bird nets in the garden,” shouted Mr.
Polly. “In the garden!”
The apprentice was divided in his
purpose. And then suddenly Uncle Jim collapsed
and became a limp, dead seeming thing under their hands.
His arms were drawn inward, his legs bent up under
his person, and so he lay.
“Fainted!” said the man in checks, relaxing
his grip.
“A fit, perhaps,” said the man in spectacles.
“Keep hold!” said Mr. Polly, too late.
For suddenly Uncle Jim’s arms
and legs flew out like springs released. Mr.
Polly was tumbled backwards and fell over the broken
teapot and into the arms of the father in mourning.
Something struck his head—dazzingly.
In another second Uncle Jim was on his feet and the
tablecloth enshrouded the head of the man in checks.
Uncle Jim manifestly considered he had done all that
honour required of him, and against overwhelming numbers
and the possibility of reiterated duckings, flight
is no disgrace.
Uncle Jim fled.
Mr. Polly sat up after an interval
of an indeterminate length among the ruins of an idyllic
afternoon. Quite a lot of things seemed scattered
and broken, but it was difficult to grasp it all at
once. He stared between the legs of people.
He became aware of a voice, speaking slowly and complainingly.
“Someone ought to pay for those
tea things,” said the father in mourning.
“We didn’t bring them ’ere to be
danced on, not by no manner of means.”