I served Edward as his second
clerk faithfully, punctually, diligently. What
was given me to do I had the power and the determination
to do well. Mr. Crimsworth watched sharply for
defects, but found none; he set Timothy Steighton,
his favourite and head man, to watch also. Tim
was baffled; I was as exact as himself, and quicker.
Mr. Crimsworth made inquiries as to how I lived,
whether I got into debt—no, my accounts
with my landlady were always straight. I had
hired small lodgings, which I contrived to pay for
out of a slender fund—the accumulated savings
of my Eton pocket-money; for as it had ever been abhorrent
to my nature to ask pecuniary assistance, I had early
acquired habits of self-denying economy; husbanding
my monthly allowance with anxious care, in order to
obviate the danger of being forced, in some moment
of future exigency, to beg additional aid. I
remember many called me miser at the time, and I used
to couple the reproach with this consolation—better
to be misunderstood now than repulsed hereafter.
At this day I had my reward; I had had it before,
when on parting with my irritated uncles one of them
threw down on the table before me a 5l. note, which
I was able to leave there, saying that my travelling
expenses were already provided for. Mr. Crimsworth
employed Tim to find out whether my landlady had any
complaint to make on the score of my morals; she answered
that she believed I was a very religious man, and
asked Tim, in her turn, if he thought I had any intention
of going into the Church some day; for, she said,
she had had young curates to lodge in her house who
were nothing equal to me for steadiness and quietness.
Tim was “a religious man” himself; indeed,
he was “a joined Methodist,” which did
not (be it understood) prevent him from being at the
same time an engrained rascal, and he came away much
posed at hearing this account of my piety. Having
imparted it to Mr. Crimsworth, that gentleman, who
himself frequented no place of worship, and owned
no God but Mammon, turned the information into a weapon
of attack against the equability of my temper.
He commenced a series of covert sneers, of which
I did not at first perceive the drift, till my landlady
happened to relate the conversation she had had with
Mr. Steighton; this enlightened me; afterwards I came
to the counting-house prepared, and managed to receive
the millowner’s blasphemous sarcasms, when next
levelled at me, on a buckler of impenetrable indifference.
Ere long he tired of wasting his ammunition on a
statue, but he did not throw away the shafts—he
only kept them quiet in his quiver.
Once during my clerkship I had an
invitation to Crimsworth Hall; it was on the occasion
of a large party given in honour of the master’s
birthday; he had always been accustomed to invite his
clerks on similar anniversaries, and could not well
pass me over; I was, however, kept strictly in the
background. Mrs. Crimsworth, elegantly dressed
in satin and lace, blooming in youth and health, vouchsafed
me no more notice than was expressed by a distant
move; Crimsworth, of course, never spoke to me; I
was introduced to none of the band of young ladies,
who, enveloped in silvery clouds of white gauze and
muslin, sat in array against me on the opposite side
of a long and large room; in fact, I was fairly isolated,
and could but contemplate the shining ones from affar,
and when weary of such a dazzling scene, turn for
a change to the consideration of the carpet pattern.
Mr. Crimsworth, standing on the rug, his elbow supported
by the marble mantelpiece, and about him a group of
very pretty girls, with whom he conversed gaily—Mr.
Crimsworth, thus placed, glanced at me; I looked weary,
solitary, kept down like some desolate tutor or governess;
he was satisfied.
Dancing began; I should have liked
well enough to be introduced to some pleasing and
intelligent girl, and to have freedom and opportunity
to show that I could both feel and communicate the
pleasure of social intercourse—that I was
not, in short, a block, or a piece of furniture, but
an acting, thinking, sentient man. Many smiling
faces and graceful figures glided past me, but the
smiles were lavished on other eyes, the figures sustained
by other hands than mine. I turned away tantalized,
left the dancers, and wandered into the oak-panelled
dining-room. No fibre of sympathy united me to
any living thing in this house; I looked for and found
my mother’s picture. I took a wax taper
from a stand, and held it up. I gazed long,
earnestly; my heart grew to the image. My mother,
I perceived, had bequeathed to me much of her features
and countenance—her forehead, her eyes,
her complexion. No regular beauty pleases egotistical
human beings so much as a softened and refined likeness
of themselves; for this reason, fathers regard with
complacency the lineaments of their daughters’
faces, where frequently their own similitude is found
flatteringly associated with softness of hue and delicacy
of outline. I was just wondering how that picture,
to me so interesting, would strike an impartial spectator,
when a voice close behind me pronounced the words—
“Humph! there’s some sense in that face.”
I turned; at my elbow stood a tall
man, young, though probably five or six years older
than I—in other respects of an appearance
the opposite to common place; though just now, as I
am not disposed to paint his portrait in detail, the
reader must be content with the silhouette I have
just thrown off; it was all I myself saw of him for
the moment: I did not investigate the colour
of his eyebrows, nor of his eyes either; I saw his
stature, and the outline of his shape; I saw, too,
his fastidious-looking retrousse nose; these
observations, few in number, and general in character
(the last excepted), sufficed, for they enabled me
to recognize him.
“Good evening, Mr. Hunsden,”
muttered I with a bow, and then, like a shy noodle
as I was, I began moving away—and why?
Simply because Mr. Hunsden was a manufacturer and a
millowner, and I was only a clerk, and my instinct
propelled me from my superior. I had frequently
seen Hunsden in Bigben Close, where he came almost
weekly to transact business with Mr. Crimsworth, but
I had never spoken to him, nor he to me, and I owed
him a sort of involuntary grudge, because he had more
than once been the tacit witness of insults offered
by Edward to me. I had the conviction that he
could only regard me as a poor-spirited slave, wherefore
I now went about to shun his presence and eschew his
conversation.
“Where are you going?”
asked he, as I edged off sideways. I had already
noticed that Mr. Hunsden indulged in abrupt forms of
speech, and I perversely said to myself—
“He thinks he may speak as he
likes to a poor clerk; but my mood is not, perhaps,
so supple as he deems it, and his rough freedom pleases
me not at all.”
I made some slight reply, rather indifferent
than courteous, and continued to move away.
He coolly planted himself in my path.
“Stay here awhile,” said
he: “it is so hot in the dancing-room;
besides, you don’t dance; you have not had a
partner to-night.”
He was right, and as he spoke neither
his look, tone, nor manner displeased me; my AMOUR-propre
was propitiated; he had not addressed me out of condescension,
but because, having repaired to the cool dining-room
for refreshment, he now wanted some one to talk to,
by way of temporary amusement. I hate to be
condescended to, but I like well enough to oblige;
I stayed.
“That is a good picture,”
he continued, recurring to the portrait.
“Do you consider the face pretty?” I
asked.
“Pretty! no—how can
it be pretty, with sunk eyes and hollow cheeks? but
it is peculiar; it seems to think. You could
have a talk with that woman, if she were alive, on
other subjects than dress, visiting, and compliments.”
I agreed with him, but did not say so. He went
on.
“Not that I admire a head of
that sort; it wants character and force; there’s
too much of the sen-si-tive (so he articulated it,
curling his lip at the same time) in that mouth; besides,
there is Aristocrat written on the brow and defined
in the figure; I hate your aristocrats.”
“You think, then, Mr. Hunsden,
that patrician descent may be read in a distinctive
cast of form and features?”
“Patrician descent be hanged!
Who doubts that your lordlings may have their ‘distinctive
cast of form and features’ as much as we ——shire
tradesmen have ours? But which is the best?
Not theirs assuredly. As to their women, it
is a little different: they cultivate beauty
from childhood upwards, and may by care and training
attain to a certain degree of excellence in that point,
just like the oriental odalisques. Yet even this
superiority is doubtful. Compare the figure in
that frame with Mrs. Edward Crimsworth—which
is the finer animal?”
I replied quietly: “Compare
yourself and Mr. Edward Crimsworth, Mr Hunsden.”
“Oh, Crimsworth is better filled
up than I am, I know besides he has a straight nose,
arched eyebrows, and all that; but these advantages—if
they are advantages—he did not inherit from
his mother, the patrician, but from his father, old
Crimsworth, who, my father says, was as veritable
a ——shire blue-dyer as ever put
indigo in a vat yet withal the handsomest man in the
three Ridings. It is you, William, who are the
aristocrat of your family, and you are not as fine
a fellow as your plebeian brother by long chalk.”
There was something in Mr. Hunsden’s
point-blank mode of speech which rather pleased me
than otherwise because it set me at my ease.
I continued the conversation with a degree of interest.
“How do you happen to know that
I am Mr. Crimsworth’s brother? I thought
you and everybody else looked upon me only in the light
of a poor clerk.”
“Well, and so we do; and what
are you but a poor clerk? You do Crimsworth’s
work, and he gives you wages—shabby wages
they are, too.”
I was silent. Hunsden’s
language now bordered on the impertinent, still his
manner did not offend me in the least—it
only piqued my curiosity; I wanted him to go on, which
he did in a little while.
“This world is an absurd one,” said he.
“Why so, Mr. Hunsden?”
I wonder you should ask: you
are yourself a strong proof of the absurdity I allude
to.”
I was determined he should explain
himself of his own accord, without my pressing him
so to do—so I resumed my silence.
“Is it your intention to become
a tradesman?” he inquired presently.
“It was my serious intention three months ago.”
“Humph! the more fool you—you
look like a tradesman! What a practical business-like
face you have!”
“My face is as the Lord made it, Mr. Hunsden.”
“The Lord never made either
year face or head for X—— What good
can your bumps of ideality, comparison, self-esteem,
conscientiousness, do you here? But if you like
Bigben Close, stay there; it’s your own affair,
not mine.”
“Perhaps I have no choice.”
“Well, I care nought about it—it
will make little difference to me what you do or where
you go; but I’m cool now—I want to
dance again; and I see such a fine girl sitting in
the corner of the sofa there by her mamma; see if
I don’t get her for a partner in a jiffy!
There’s Waddy—Sam Waddy making up
to her; won’t I cut him out?”
And Mr. Hunsden strode away.
I watched him through the open folding-doors; he
outstripped Waddy, applied for the hand of the fine
girl, and led her off triumphant. She was a tall,
well-made, full-formed, dashingly-dressed young woman,
much in the style of Mrs. E. Crimsworth; Hunsden whirled
her through the waltz with spirit; he kept at her
side during the remainder of the evening, and I read
in her animated and gratified countenance that he
succeeded in making himself perfectly agreeable.
The mamma too (a stout person in a turban—Mrs.
Lupton by name) looked well pleased; prophetic visions
probably flattered her inward eye. The Hunsdens
were of an old stem; and scornful as Yorke (such was
my late interlocutor’s name) professed to be
of the advantages of birth, in his secret heart he
well knew and fully appreciated the distinction his
ancient, if not high lineage conferred on him in a
mushroom-place like X——, concerning
whose inhabitants it was proverbially said, that not
one in a thousand knew his own grandfather. Moreover
the Hunsdens, once rich, were still independent; and
report affirmed that Yorke bade fair, by his success
in business, to restore to pristine prosperity the
partially decayed fortunes of his house. These
circumstances considered, Mrs. Lupton’s broad
face might well wear a smile of complacency as she
contemplated the heir of Hunsden Wood occupied in
paying assiduous court to her darling Sarah Martha.
I, however, whose observations being less anxious,
were likely to be more accurate, soon saw that the
grounds for maternal self-congratulation were slight
indeed; the gentleman appeared to me much more desirous
of making, than susceptible of receiving an impression.
I know not what it was in Mr. Hunsden that, as I
watched him (I had nothing better to do), suggested
to me, every now and then, the idea of a foreigner.
In form and features he might be pronounced English,
though even there one caught a dash of something Gallic;
but he had no English shyness: he had learnt
somewhere, somehow, the art of setting himself quite
at his ease, and of allowing no insular timidity to
intervene as a barrier between him and his convenience
or pleasure. Refinement he did not affect, yet
vulgar he could not be called; he was not odd—no
quiz—yet he resembled no one else I had
ever seen before; his general bearing intimated complete,
sovereign satisfaction with himself; yet, at times,
an indescribable shade passed like an eclipse over
his countenance, and seemed to me like the sign of
a sudden and strong inward doubt of himself, his words
and actions-an energetic discontent at his life or
his social position, his future prospects or his mental
attainments—I know not which; perhaps after
all it might only be a bilious caprice.