THE MAN IN SPECTACLES
“Burgundy is a jolly thing,”
said the Professor sadly, as he set his glass down.
“You don’t look as if
it were,” said Syme; “you drink it as if
it were medicine.”
“You must excuse my manner,”
said the Professor dismally, “my position is
rather a curious one. Inside I am really bursting
with boyish merriment; but I acted the paralytic Professor
so well, that now I can’t leave off. So
that when I am among friends, and have no need at
all to disguise myself, I still can’t help speaking
slow and wrinkling my forehead—just as
if it were my forehead. I can be quite happy,
you understand, but only in a paralytic sort of way.
The most buoyant exclamations leap up in my heart,
but they come out of my mouth quite different.
You should hear me say, ’Buck up, old cock!’
It would bring tears to your eyes.”
“It does,” said Syme;
“but I cannot help thinking that apart from
all that you are really a bit worried.”
The Professor started a little and
looked at him steadily.
“You are a very clever fellow,”
he said, “it is a pleasure to work with you.
Yes, I have rather a heavy cloud in my head. There
is a great problem to face,” and he sank his
bald brow in his two hands.
Then he said in a low voice—
“Can you play the piano?”
“Yes,” said Syme in simple
wonder, “I’m supposed to have a good touch.”
Then, as the other did not speak, he added—
“I trust the great cloud is lifted.”
After a long silence, the Professor
said out of the cavernous shadow of his hands—
“It would have done just as well if you could
work a typewriter.”
“Thank you,” said Syme, “you flatter
me.”
“Listen to me,” said the
other, “and remember whom we have to see tomorrow.
You and I are going tomorrow to attempt something which
is very much more dangerous than trying to steal the
Crown Jewels out of the Tower. We are trying
to steal a secret from a very sharp, very strong,
and very wicked man. I believe there is no man,
except the President, of course, who is so seriously
startling and formidable as that little grinning fellow
in goggles. He has not perhaps the white-hot
enthusiasm unto death, the mad martyrdom for anarchy,
which marks the Secretary. But then that very
fanaticism in the Secretary has a human pathos, and
is almost a redeeming trait. But the little Doctor
has a brutal sanity that is more shocking than the
Secretary’s disease. Don’t you notice
his detestable virility and vitality. He bounces
like an india-rubber ball. Depend on it, Sunday
was not asleep (I wonder if he ever sleeps?) when
he locked up all the plans of this outrage in the
round, black head of Dr. Bull.”
“And you think,” said
Syme, “that this unique monster will be soothed
if I play the piano to him?”
“Don’t be an ass,”
said his mentor. “I mentioned the piano
because it gives one quick and independent fingers.
Syme, if we are to go through this interview and come
out sane or alive, we must have some code of signals
between us that this brute will not see. I have
made a rough alphabetical cypher corresponding to the
five fingers—like this, see,” and
he rippled with his fingers on the wooden table—“B
A D, bad, a word we may frequently require.”
Syme poured himself out another glass
of wine, and began to study the scheme. He was
abnormally quick with his brains at puzzles, and with
his hands at conjuring, and it did not take him long
to learn how he might convey simple messages by what
would seem to be idle taps upon a table or knee.
But wine and companionship had always the effect of
inspiring him to a farcical ingenuity, and the Professor
soon found himself struggling with the too vast energy
of the new language, as it passed through the heated
brain of Syme.
“We must have several word-signs,”
said Syme seriously—“words that we
are likely to want, fine shades of meaning. My
favourite word is ‘coeval’. What’s
yours?”
“Do stop playing the goat,”
said the Professor plaintively. “You don’t
know how serious this is.”
“‘Lush’ too,”
said Syme, shaking his head sagaciously, “we
must have ’lush’—word applied
to grass, don’t you know?”
“Do you imagine,” asked
the Professor furiously, “that we are going
to talk to Dr. Bull about grass?”
“There are several ways in which
the subject could be approached,” said Syme
reflectively, “and the word introduced without
appearing forced. We might say, ’Dr. Bull,
as a revolutionist, you remember that a tyrant once
advised us to eat grass; and indeed many of us, looking
on the fresh lush grass of summer”’
“Do you understand,” said
the other, “that this is a tragedy?”
“Perfectly,” replied Syme;
“always be comic in a tragedy. What the
deuce else can you do? I wish this language of
yours had a wider scope. I suppose we could not
extend it from the fingers to the toes? That
would involve pulling off our boots and socks during
the conversation, which however unobtrusively performed—”
“Syme,” said his friend
with a stern simplicity, “go to bed!”
Syme, however, sat up in bed for a
considerable time mastering the new code. He
was awakened next morning while the east was still
sealed with darkness, and found his grey-bearded ally
standing like a ghost beside his bed.
Syme sat up in bed blinking; then
slowly collected his thoughts, threw off the bed-clothes,
and stood up. It seemed to him in some curious
way that all the safety and sociability of the night
before fell with the bedclothes off him, and he stood
up in an air of cold danger. He still felt an
entire trust and loyalty towards his companion; but
it was the trust between two men going to the scaffold.
“Well,” said Syme with
a forced cheerfulness as he pulled on his trousers,
“I dreamt of that alphabet of yours. Did
it take you long to make it up?”
The Professor made no answer, but
gazed in front of him with eyes the colour of a wintry
sea; so Syme repeated his question.
“I say, did it take you long
to invent all this? I’m considered good
at these things, and it was a good hour’s grind.
Did you learn it all on the spot?”
The Professor was silent; his eyes
were wide open, and he wore a fixed but very small
smile.
“How long did it take you?”
The Professor did not move.
“Confound you, can’t you
answer?” called out Syme, in a sudden anger
that had something like fear underneath. Whether
or no the Professor could answer, he did not.
Syme stood staring back at the stiff
face like parchment and the blank, blue eyes.
His first thought was that the Professor had gone
mad, but his second thought was more frightful.
After all, what did he know about this queer creature
whom he had heedlessly accepted as a friend?
What did he know, except that the man had been at the
anarchist breakfast and had told him a ridiculous tale?
How improbable it was that there should be another
friend there beside Gogol! Was this man’s
silence a sensational way of declaring war? Was
this adamantine stare after all only the awful sneer
of some threefold traitor, who had turned for the
last time? He stood and strained his ears in
this heartless silence. He almost fancied he
could hear dynamiters come to capture him shifting
softly in the corridor outside.
Then his eye strayed downwards, and
he burst out laughing. Though the Professor himself
stood there as voiceless as a statue, his five dumb
fingers were dancing alive upon the dead table.
Syme watched the twinkling movements of the talking
hand, and read clearly the message—
“I will only talk like this. We must get
used to it.”
He rapped out the answer with the impatience of relief—
“All right. Let’s get out to breakfast.”
They took their hats and sticks in
silence; but as Syme took his sword-stick, he held
it hard.
They paused for a few minutes only
to stuff down coffee and coarse thick sandwiches at
a coffee stall, and then made their way across the
river, which under the grey and growing light looked
as desolate as Acheron. They reached the bottom
of the huge block of buildings which they had seen
from across the river, and began in silence to mount
the naked and numberless stone steps, only pausing
now and then to make short remarks on the rail of the
banisters. At about every other flight they passed
a window; each window showed them a pale and tragic
dawn lifting itself laboriously over London.
From each the innumerable roofs of slate looked like
the leaden surges of a grey, troubled sea after rain.
Syme was increasingly conscious that his new adventure
had somehow a quality of cold sanity worse than the
wild adventures of the past. Last night, for
instance, the tall tenements had seemed to him like
a tower in a dream. As he now went up the weary
and perpetual steps, he was daunted and bewildered
by their almost infinite series. But it was not
the hot horror of a dream or of anything that might
be exaggeration or delusion. Their infinity was
more like the empty infinity of arithmetic, something
unthinkable, yet necessary to thought. Or it
was like the stunning statements of astronomy about
the distance of the fixed stars. He was ascending
the house of reason, a thing more hideous than unreason
itself.
By the time they reached Dr. Bull’s
landing, a last window showed them a harsh, white
dawn edged with banks of a kind of coarse red, more
like red clay than red cloud. And when they entered
Dr. Bull’s bare garret it was full of light.
Syme had been haunted by a half historic
memory in connection with these empty rooms and that
austere daybreak. The moment he saw the garret
and Dr. Bull sitting writing at a table, he remembered
what the memory was—the French Revolution.
There should have been the black outline of a guillotine
against that heavy red and white of the morning.
Dr. Bull was in his white shirt and black breeches
only; his cropped, dark head might well have just come
out of its wig; he might have been Marat or a more
slipshod Robespierre.
Yet when he was seen properly, the
French fancy fell away. The Jacobins were idealists;
there was about this man a murderous materialism.
His position gave him a somewhat new appearance.
The strong, white light of morning coming from one
side creating sharp shadows, made him seem both more
pale and more angular than he had looked at the breakfast
on the balcony. Thus the two black glasses that
encased his eyes might really have been black cavities
in his skull, making him look like a death’s-head.
And, indeed, if ever Death himself sat writing at
a wooden table, it might have been he.
He looked up and smiled brightly enough
as the men came in, and rose with the resilient rapidity
of which the Professor had spoken. He set chairs
for both of them, and going to a peg behind the door,
proceeded to put on a coat and waistcoat of rough,
dark tweed; he buttoned it up neatly, and came back
to sit down at his table.
The quiet good humour of his manner
left his two opponents helpless. It was with
some momentary difficulty that the Professor broke
silence and began, “I’m sorry to disturb
you so early, comrade,” said he, with a careful
resumption of the slow de Worms manner. “You
have no doubt made all the arrangements for the Paris
affair?” Then he added with infinite slowness,
“We have information which renders intolerable
anything in the nature of a moment’s delay.”
Dr. Bull smiled again, but continued
to gaze on them without speaking. The Professor
resumed, a pause before each weary word—
“Please do not think me excessively
abrupt; but I advise you to alter those plans, or
if it is too late for that, to follow your agent with
all the support you can get for him. Comrade Syme
and I have had an experience which it would take more
time to recount than we can afford, if we are to act
on it. I will, however, relate the occurrence
in detail, even at the risk of losing time, if you
really feel that it is essential to the understanding
of the problem we have to discuss.”
He was spinning out his sentences,
making them intolerably long and lingering, in the
hope of maddening the practical little Doctor into
an explosion of impatience which might show his hand.
But the little Doctor continued only to stare and smile,
and the monologue was uphill work. Syme began
to feel a new sickness and despair. The Doctor’s
smile and silence were not at all like the cataleptic
stare and horrible silence which he had confronted
in the Professor half an hour before. About the
Professor’s makeup and all his antics there
was always something merely grotesque, like a gollywog.
Syme remembered those wild woes of yesterday as one
remembers being afraid of Bogy in childhood. But
here was daylight; here was a healthy, square-shouldered
man in tweeds, not odd save for the accident of his
ugly spectacles, not glaring or grinning at all, but
smiling steadily and not saying a word. The whole
had a sense of unbearable reality. Under the increasing
sunlight the colours of the Doctor’s complexion,
the pattern of his tweeds, grew and expanded outrageously,
as such things grow too important in a realistic novel.
But his smile was quite slight, the pose of his head
polite; the only uncanny thing was his silence.
“As I say,” resumed the
Professor, like a man toiling through heavy sand,
“the incident that has occurred to us and has
led us to ask for information about the Marquis, is
one which you may think it better to have narrated;
but as it came in the way of Comrade Syme rather than
me—”
His words he seemed to be dragging
out like words in an anthem; but Syme, who was watching,
saw his long fingers rattle quickly on the edge of
the crazy table. He read the message, “You
must go on. This devil has sucked me dry!”
Syme plunged into the breach with
that bravado of improvisation which always came to
him when he was alarmed.
“Yes, the thing really happened
to me,” he said hastily. “I had the
good fortune to fall into conversation with a detective
who took me, thanks to my hat, for a respectable person.
Wishing to clinch my reputation for respectability,
I took him and made him very drunk at the Savoy.
Under this influence he became friendly, and told
me in so many words that within a day or two they hope
to arrest the Marquis in France.
“So unless you or I can get on his track—”
The Doctor was still smiling in the
most friendly way, and his protected eyes were still
impenetrable. The Professor signalled to Syme
that he would resume his explanation, and he began
again with the same elaborate calm.
“Syme immediately brought this
information to me, and we came here together to see
what use you would be inclined to make of it.
It seems to me unquestionably urgent that—”
All this time Syme had been staring
at the Doctor almost as steadily as the Doctor stared
at the Professor, but quite without the smile.
The nerves of both comrades-in-arms were near snapping
under that strain of motionless amiability, when Syme
suddenly leant forward and idly tapped the edge of
the table. His message to his ally ran, “I
have an intuition.”
The Professor, with scarcely a pause
in his monologue, signalled back, “Then sit
on it.”
Syme telegraphed, “It is quite extraordinary.”
The other answered, “Extraordinary rot!”
Syme said, “I am a poet.”
The other retorted, “You are a dead man.”
Syme had gone quite red up to his
yellow hair, and his eyes were burning feverishly.
As he said he had an intuition, and it had risen to
a sort of lightheaded certainty. Resuming his
symbolic taps, he signalled to his friend, “You
scarcely realise how poetic my intuition is.
It has that sudden quality we sometimes feel in the
coming of spring.”
He then studied the answer on his
friend’s fingers. The answer was, “Go
to hell!”
The Professor then resumed his merely
verbal monologue addressed to the Doctor.
“Perhaps I should rather say,”
said Syme on his fingers, “that it resembles
that sudden smell of the sea which may be found in
the heart of lush woods.”
His companion disdained to reply.
“Or yet again,” tapped
Syme, “it is positive, as is the passionate
red hair of a beautiful woman.”
The Professor was continuing his speech,
but in the middle of it Syme decided to act.
He leant across the table, and said in a voice that
could not be neglected—
“Dr. Bull!”
The Doctor’s sleek and smiling
head did not move, but they could have sworn that
under his dark glasses his eyes darted towards Syme.
“Dr. Bull,” said Syme,
in a voice peculiarly precise and courteous, “would
you do me a small favour? Would you be so kind
as to take off your spectacles?”
The Professor swung round on his seat,
and stared at Syme with a sort of frozen fury of astonishment.
Syme, like a man who has thrown his life and fortune
on the table, leaned forward with a fiery face.
The Doctor did not move.
For a few seconds there was a silence
in which one could hear a pin drop, split once by
the single hoot of a distant steamer on the Thames.
Then Dr. Bull rose slowly, still smiling, and took
off his spectacles.
Syme sprang to his feet, stepping
backwards a little, like a chemical lecturer from
a successful explosion. His eyes were like stars,
and for an instant he could only point without speaking.
The Professor had also started to
his feet, forgetful of his supposed paralysis.
He leant on the back of the chair and stared doubtfully
at Dr. Bull, as if the Doctor had been turned into
a toad before his eyes. And indeed it was almost
as great a transformation scene.
The two detectives saw sitting in
the chair before them a very boyish-looking young
man, with very frank and happy hazel eyes, an open
expression, cockney clothes like those of a city clerk,
and an unquestionable breath about him of being very
good and rather commonplace. The smile was still
there, but it might have been the first smile of a
baby.
“I knew I was a poet,”
cried Syme in a sort of ecstasy. “I knew
my intuition was as infallible as the Pope. It
was the spectacles that did it! It was all the
spectacles. Given those beastly black eyes, and
all the rest of him his health and his jolly looks,
made him a live devil among dead ones.”
“It certainly does make a queer
difference,” said the Professor shakily.
“But as regards the project of Dr. Bull—”
“Project be damned!” roared
Syme, beside himself. “Look at him!
Look at his face, look at his collar, look at his blessed
boots! You don’t suppose, do you, that
that thing’s an anarchist?”
“Syme!” cried the other in an apprehensive
agony.
“Why, by God,” said Syme,
“I’ll take the risk of that myself!
Dr. Bull, I am a police officer. There’s
my card,” and he flung down the blue card upon
the table.
The Professor still feared that all
was lost; but he was loyal. He pulled out his
own official card and put it beside his friend’s.
Then the third man burst out laughing, and for the
first time that morning they heard his voice.
“I’m awfully glad you
chaps have come so early,” he said, with a sort
of schoolboy flippancy, “for we can all start
for France together. Yes, I’m in the force
right enough,” and he flicked a blue card towards
them lightly as a matter of form.
Clapping a brisk bowler on his head
and resuming his goblin glasses, the Doctor moved
so quickly towards the door, that the others instinctively
followed him. Syme seemed a little distrait,
and as he passed under the doorway he suddenly struck
his stick on the stone passage so that it rang.
“But Lord God Almighty,”
he cried out, “if this is all right, there were
more damned detectives than there were damned dynamiters
at the damned Council!”
“We might have fought easily,”
said Bull; “we were four against three.”
The Professor was descending the stairs,
but his voice came up from below.
“No,” said the voice,
“we were not four against three—we
were not so lucky. We were four against One.”
The others went down the stairs in silence.
The young man called Bull, with an
innocent courtesy characteristic of him, insisted
on going last until they reached the street; but there
his own robust rapidity asserted itself unconsciously,
and he walked quickly on ahead towards a railway inquiry
office, talking to the others over his shoulder.
“It is jolly to get some pals,”
he said. “I’ve been half dead with
the jumps, being quite alone. I nearly flung my
arms round Gogol and embraced him, which would have
been imprudent. I hope you won’t despise
me for having been in a blue funk.”
“All the blue devils in blue
hell,” said Syme, “contributed to my blue
funk! But the worst devil was you and your infernal
goggles.”
The young man laughed delightedly.
“Wasn’t it a rag?”
he said. “Such a simple idea—not
my own. I haven’t got the brains.
You see, I wanted to go into the detective service,
especially the anti-dynamite business. But for
that purpose they wanted someone to dress up as a
dynamiter; and they all swore by blazes that I could
never look like a dynamiter. They said my very
walk was respectable, and that seen from behind I
looked like the British Constitution. They said
I looked too healthy and too optimistic, and too reliable
and benevolent; they called me all sorts of names
at Scotland Yard. They said that if I had been
a criminal, I might have made my fortune by looking
so like an honest man; but as I had the misfortune
to be an honest man, there was not even the remotest
chance of my assisting them by ever looking like a
criminal. But as last I was brought before some
old josser who was high up in the force, and who seemed
to have no end of a head on his shoulders. And
there the others all talked hopelessly. One asked
whether a bushy beard would hide my nice smile; another
said that if they blacked my face I might look like
a negro anarchist; but this old chap chipped in with
a most extraordinary remark. ‘A pair of
smoked spectacles will do it,’ he said positively.
’Look at him now; he looks like an angelic office
boy. Put him on a pair of smoked spectacles, and
children will scream at the sight of him.’
And so it was, by George! When once my eyes were
covered, all the rest, smile and big shoulders and
short hair, made me look a perfect little devil.
As I say, it was simple enough when it was done, like
miracles; but that wasn’t the really miraculous
part of it. There was one really staggering thing
about the business, and my head still turns at it.”
“What was that?” asked Syme.
“I’ll tell you,”
answered the man in spectacles. “This big
pot in the police who sized me up so that he knew
how the goggles would go with my hair and socks—by
God, he never saw me at all!”
Syme’s eyes suddenly flashed on him.
“How was that?” he asked. “I
thought you talked to him.”
“So I did,” said Bull
brightly; “but we talked in a pitch-dark room
like a coalcellar. There, you would never have
guessed that.”
“I could not have conceived it,” said
Syme gravely.
“It is indeed a new idea,” said the Professor.
Their new ally was in practical matters
a whirlwind. At the inquiry office he asked with
businesslike brevity about the trains for Dover.
Having got his information, he bundled the company
into a cab, and put them and himself inside a railway
carriage before they had properly realised the breathless
process. They were already on the Calais boat
before conversation flowed freely.
“I had already arranged,”
he explained, “to go to France for my lunch;
but I am delighted to have someone to lunch with me.
You see, I had to send that beast, the Marquis, over
with his bomb, because the President had his eye on
me, though God knows how. I’ll tell you
the story some day. It was perfectly choking.
Whenever I tried to slip out of it I saw the President
somewhere, smiling out of the bow-window of a club,
or taking off his hat to me from the top of an omnibus.
I tell you, you can say what you like, that fellow
sold himself to the devil; he can be in six places
at once.”
“So you sent the Marquis off,
I understand,” asked the Professor. “Was
it long ago? Shall we be in time to catch him?”
“Yes,” answered the new
guide, “I’ve timed it all. He’ll
still be at Calais when we arrive.”
“But when we do catch him at
Calais,” said the Professor, “what are
we going to do?”
At this question the countenance of
Dr. Bull fell for the first time. He reflected
a little, and then said—
“Theoretically, I suppose, we
ought to call the police.”
“Not I,” said Syme.
“Theoretically I ought to drown myself first.
I promised a poor fellow, who was a real modern pessimist,
on my word of honour not to tell the police.
I’m no hand at casuistry, but I can’t
break my word to a modern pessimist. It’s
like breaking one’s word to a child.”
“I’m in the same boat,”
said the Professor. “I tried to tell the
police and I couldn’t, because of some silly
oath I took. You see, when I was an actor I was
a sort of all-round beast. Perjury or treason
is the only crime I haven’t committed. If
I did that I shouldn’t know the difference between
right and wrong.”
“I’ve been through all
that,” said Dr. Bull, “and I’ve made
up my mind. I gave my promise to the Secretary—you
know him, man who smiles upside down. My friends,
that man is the most utterly unhappy man that was
ever human. It may be his digestion, or his conscience,
or his nerves, or his philosophy of the universe, but
he’s damned, he’s in hell! Well, I
can’t turn on a man like that, and hunt him
down. It’s like whipping a leper. I
may be mad, but that’s how I feel; and there’s
jolly well the end of it.”
“I don’t think you’re
mad,” said Syme. “I knew you would
decide like that when first you—”
“Eh?” said Dr. Bull.
“When first you took off your spectacles.”
Dr. Bull smiled a little, and strolled
across the deck to look at the sunlit sea. Then
he strolled back again, kicking his heels carelessly,
and a companionable silence fell between the three
men.
“Well,” said Syme, “it
seems that we have all the same kind of morality or
immorality, so we had better face the fact that comes
of it.”
“Yes,” assented the Professor,
“you’re quite right; and we must hurry
up, for I can see the Grey Nose standing out from France.”
“The fact that comes of it,”
said Syme seriously, “is this, that we three
are alone on this planet. Gogol has gone, God
knows where; perhaps the President has smashed him
like a fly. On the Council we are three men against
three, like the Romans who held the bridge. But
we are worse off than that, first because they can
appeal to their organization and we cannot appeal
to ours, and second because—”
“Because one of those other
three men,” said the Professor, “is not
a man.”
Syme nodded and was silent for a second
or two, then he said—
“My idea is this. We must
do something to keep the Marquis in Calais till tomorrow
midday. I have turned over twenty schemes in
my head. We cannot denounce him as a dynamiter;
that is agreed. We cannot get him detained on
some trivial charge, for we should have to appear;
he knows us, and he would smell a rat. We cannot
pretend to keep him on anarchist business; he might
swallow much in that way, but not the notion of stopping
in Calais while the Czar went safely through Paris.
We might try to kidnap him, and lock him up ourselves;
but he is a well-known man here. He has a whole
bodyguard of friends; he is very strong and brave,
and the event is doubtful. The only thing I can
see to do is actually to take advantage of the very
things that are in the Marquis’s favour.
I am going to profit by the fact that he is a highly
respected nobleman. I am going to profit by the
fact that he has many friends and moves in the best
society.”
“What the devil are you talking
about?” asked the Professor.
“The Symes are first mentioned
in the fourteenth century,” said Syme; “but
there is a tradition that one of them rode behind Bruce
at Bannockburn. Since 1350 the tree is quite clear.”
“He’s gone off his head,”
said the little Doctor, staring.
“Our bearings,” continued
Syme calmly, “are ’argent a chevron gules
charged with three cross crosslets of the field.’
The motto varies.”
The Professor seized Syme roughly by the waistcoat.
“We are just inshore,”
he said. “Are you seasick or joking in the
wrong place?”
“My remarks are almost painfully
practical,” answered Syme, in an unhurried manner.
“The house of St. Eustache also is very ancient.
The Marquis cannot deny that he is a gentleman.
He cannot deny that I am a gentleman. And in
order to put the matter of my social position quite
beyond a doubt, I propose at the earliest opportunity
to knock his hat off. But here we are in the harbour.”
They went on shore under the strong
sun in a sort of daze. Syme, who had now taken
the lead as Bull had taken it in London, led them
along a kind of marine parade until he came to some
cafes, embowered in a bulk of greenery and overlooking
the sea. As he went before them his step was
slightly swaggering, and he swung his stick like a
sword. He was making apparently for the extreme
end of the line of cafes, but he stopped abruptly.
With a sharp gesture he motioned them to silence,
but he pointed with one gloved finger to a cafe table
under a bank of flowering foliage at which sat the
Marquis de St. Eustache, his teeth shining in his
thick, black beard, and his bold, brown face shadowed
by a light yellow straw hat and outlined against the
violet sea.