I will give no more of the details
of my hero’s earlier years. Enough that
he struggled through them, and at twelve years old
knew every page of his Latin and Greek Grammars by
heart. He had read the greater part of Virgil,
Horace and Livy, and I do not know how many Greek plays:
he was proficient in arithmetic, knew the first four
books of Euclid thoroughly, and had a fair knowledge
of French. It was now time he went to school,
and to school he was accordingly to go, under the famous
Dr Skinner of Roughborough.
Theobald had known Dr Skinner slightly
at Cambridge. He had been a burning and a shining
light in every position he had filled from his boyhood
upwards. He was a very great genius. Everyone
knew this; they said, indeed, that he was one of the
few people to whom the word genius could be applied
without exaggeration. Had he not taken I don’t
know how many University Scholarships in his freshman’s
year? Had he not been afterwards Senior Wrangler,
First Chancellor’s Medallist and I do not know
how many more things besides? And then, he was
such a wonderful speaker; at the Union Debating Club
he had been without a rival, and had, of course, been
president; his moral character,—a point
on which so many geniuses were weak—was
absolutely irreproachable; foremost of all, however,
among his many great qualities, and perhaps more remarkable
even than his genius was what biographers have called
“the simple-minded and child-like earnestness
of his character,” an earnestness which might
be perceived by the solemnity with which he spoke
even about trifles. It is hardly necessary to
say he was on the Liberal side in politics.
His personal appearance was not particularly
prepossessing. He was about the middle height,
portly, and had a couple of fierce grey eyes, that
flashed fire from beneath a pair of great bushy beetling
eyebrows and overawed all who came near him.
It was in respect of his personal appearance, however,
that, if he was vulnerable at all, his weak place
was to be found. His hair when he was a young
man was red, but after he had taken his degree he
had a brain fever which caused him to have his head
shaved; when he reappeared, he did so wearing a wig,
and one which was a good deal further off red than
his own hair had been. He not only had never
discarded his wig, but year by year it had edged itself
a little more and a little more off red, till by the
time he was forty, there was not a trace of red remaining,
and his wig was brown.
When Dr Skinner was a very young man,
hardly more than five-and-twenty, the head-mastership
of Roughborough Grammar School had fallen vacant, and
he had been unhesitatingly appointed. The result
justified the selection. Dr Skinner’s
pupils distinguished themselves at whichever University
they went to. He moulded their minds after the
model of his own, and stamped an impression upon them
which was indelible in after-life; whatever else
a Roughborough man might be, he was sure to make everyone
feel that he was a God-fearing earnest Christian and
a Liberal, if not a Radical, in politics. Some
boys, of course, were incapable of appreciating the
beauty and loftiness of Dr Skinner’s nature.
Some such boys, alas! there will be in every school;
upon them Dr Skinner’s hand was very properly
a heavy one. His hand was against them, and theirs
against him during the whole time of the connection
between them. They not only disliked him, but
they hated all that he more especially embodied, and
throughout their lives disliked all that reminded them
of him. Such boys, however, were in a minority,
the spirit of the place being decidedly Skinnerian.
I once had the honour of playing a
game of chess with this great man. It was during
the Christmas holidays, and I had come down to Roughborough
for a few days to see Alethea Pontifex (who was then
living there) on business. It was very gracious
of him to take notice of me, for if I was a light
of literature at all it was of the very lightest kind.
It is true that in the intervals of
business I had written a good deal, but my works had
been almost exclusively for the stage, and for those
theatres that devoted themselves to extravaganza and
burlesque. I had written many pieces of this
description, full of puns and comic songs, and they
had had a fair success, but my best piece had been
a treatment of English history during the Reformation
period, in the course of which I had introduced Cranmer,
Sir Thomas More, Henry the Eighth, Catherine of Arragon,
and Thomas Cromwell (in his youth better known as the
Malleus Monachorum), and had made them dance
a break-down. I had also dramatised “The
Pilgrim’s Progress” for a Christmas Pantomime,
and made an important scene of Vanity Fair, with Mr
Greatheart, Apollyon, Christiana, Mercy, and Hopeful
as the principal characters. The orchestra played
music taken from Handel’s best known works, but
the time was a good deal altered, and altogether the
tunes were not exactly as Handel left them.
Mr Greatheart was very stout and he had a red nose;
he wore a capacious waistcoat, and a shirt with a
huge frill down the middle of the front. Hopeful
was up to as much mischief as I could give him; he
wore the costume of a young swell of the period, and
had a cigar in his mouth which was continually going
out.
Christiana did not wear much of anything:
indeed it was said that the dress which the Stage
Manager had originally proposed for her had been considered
inadequate even by the Lord Chamberlain, but this is
not the case. With all these delinquencies upon
my mind it was natural that I should feel convinced
of sin while playing chess (which I hate) with the
great Dr Skinner of Roughborough—the historian
of Athens and editor of Demosthenes. Dr Skinner,
moreover, was one of those who pride themselves on
being able to set people at their ease at once, and
I had been sitting on the edge of my chair all the
evening. But I have always been very easily
overawed by a schoolmaster.
The game had been a long one, and
at half-past nine, when supper came in, we had each
of us a few pieces remaining. “What will
you take for supper, Dr Skinner?” said Mrs Skinner
in a silvery voice.
He made no answer for some time, but
at last in a tone of almost superhuman solemnity,
he said, first, “Nothing,” and then “Nothing
whatever.”
By and by, however, I had a sense
come over me as though I were nearer the consummation
of all things than I had ever yet been. The room
seemed to grow dark, as an expression came over Dr
Skinner’s face, which showed that he was about
to speak. The expression gathered force, the
room grew darker and darker. “Stay,”
he at length added, and I felt that here at any rate
was an end to a suspense which was rapidly becoming
unbearable. “Stay—I may presently
take a glass of cold water—and a small piece
of bread and butter.”
As he said the word “butter”
his voice sank to a hardly audible whisper; then there
was a sigh as though of relief when the sentence was
concluded, and the universe this time was safe.
Another ten minutes of solemn silence
finished the game. The Doctor rose briskly from
his seat and placed himself at the supper table.
“Mrs Skinner,” he exclaimed jauntily,
“what are those mysterious-looking objects surrounded
by potatoes?”
“Those are oysters, Dr Skinner.”
“Give me some, and give Overton some.”
And so on till he had eaten a good
plate of oysters, a scallop shell of minced veal nicely
browned, some apple tart, and a hunk of bread and
cheese. This was the small piece of bread and
butter.
The cloth was now removed and tumblers
with teaspoons in them, a lemon or two and a jug of
boiling water were placed upon the table. Then
the great man unbent. His face beamed.
“And what shall it be to drink?”
he exclaimed persuasively. “Shall it be
brandy and water? No. It shall be gin and
water. Gin is the more wholesome liquor.”
So gin it was, hot and stiff too.
Who can wonder at him or do anything
but pity him? Was he not head-master of Roughborough
School? To whom had he owed money at any time?
Whose ox had he taken, whose ass had he taken, or
whom had he defrauded? What whisper had ever
been breathed against his moral character? If
he had become rich it was by the most honourable of
all means—his literary attainments; over
and above his great works of scholarship, his “Meditations
upon the Epistle and Character of St Jude” had
placed him among the most popular of English theologians;
it was so exhaustive that no one who bought it need
ever meditate upon the subject again—indeed
it exhausted all who had anything to do with it.
He had made 5000 pounds by this work alone, and would
very likely make another 5000 pounds before he died.
A man who had done all this and wanted a piece of
bread and butter had a right to announce the fact with
some pomp and circumstance. Nor should his words
be taken without searching for what he used to call
a “deeper and more hidden meaning.”
Those who searched for this even in his lightest
utterances would not be without their reward.
They would find that “bread and butter”
was Skinnerese for oyster-patties and apple tart,
and “gin hot” the true translation of
water.
But independently of their money value,
his works had made him a lasting name in literature.
So probably Gallio was under the impression that his
fame would rest upon the treatises on natural history
which we gather from Seneca that he compiled, and
which for aught we know may have contained a complete
theory of evolution; but the treatises are all gone
and Gallio has become immortal for the very last reason
in the world that he expected, and for the very last
reason that would have flattered his vanity.
He has become immortal because he cared nothing about
the most important movement with which he was ever
brought into connection (I wish people who are in
search of immortality would lay the lesson to heart
and not make so much noise about important movements),
and so, if Dr Skinner becomes immortal, it will probably
be for some reason very different from the one which
he so fondly imagined.
Could it be expected to enter into
the head of such a man as this that in reality he
was making his money by corrupting youth; that it was
his paid profession to make the worse appear the better
reason in the eyes of those who were too young and
inexperienced to be able to find him out; that he
kept out of the sight of those whom he professed to
teach material points of the argument, for the production
of which they had a right to rely upon the honour
of anyone who made professions of sincerity; that
he was a passionate half-turkey-cock half-gander of
a man whose sallow, bilious face and hobble-gobble
voice could scare the timid, but who would take to
his heels readily enough if he were met firmly; that
his “Meditations on St Jude,” such as they
were, were cribbed without acknowledgment, and would
have been beneath contempt if so many people did not
believe them to have been written honestly? Mrs
Skinner might have perhaps kept him a little more
in his proper place if she had thought it worth while
to try, but she had enough to attend to in looking
after her household and seeing that the boys were well
fed and, if they were ill, properly looked after—which
she took good care they were.