Pryer had done well to warn Ernest
against promiscuous house to house visitation.
He had not gone outside Mrs Jupp’s street door,
and yet what had been the result?
Mr Holt had put him in bodily fear;
Mr and Mrs Baxter had nearly made a Methodist of him;
Mr Shaw had undermined his faith in the Resurrection;
Miss Snow’s charms had ruined—or would
have done so but for an accident—his moral
character. As for Miss Maitland, he had done
his best to ruin hers, and had damaged himself gravely
and irretrievably in consequence. The only lodger
who had done him no harm was the bellows’ mender,
whom he had not visited.
Other young clergymen, much greater
fools in many respects than he, would not have got
into these scrapes. He seemed to have developed
an aptitude for mischief almost from the day of his
having been ordained. He could hardly preach
without making some horrid faux pas. He
preached one Sunday morning when the Bishop was at
his Rector’s church, and made his sermon turn
upon the question what kind of little cake it was that
the widow of Zarephath had intended making when Elijah
found her gathering a few sticks. He demonstrated
that it was a seed cake. The sermon was really
very amusing, and more than once he saw a smile pass
over the sea of faces underneath him. The Bishop
was very angry, and gave my hero a severe reprimand
in the vestry after service was over; the only excuse
he could make was that he was preaching ex tempore,
had not thought of this particular point till he was
actually in the pulpit, and had then been carried
away by it.
Another time he preached upon the
barren fig-tree, and described the hopes of the owner
as he watched the delicate blossom unfold, and give
promise of such beautiful fruit in autumn. Next
day he received a letter from a botanical member of
his congregation who explained to him that this could
hardly have been, inasmuch as the fig produces its
fruit first and blossoms inside the fruit, or so nearly
so that no flower is perceptible to an ordinary observer.
This last, however, was an accident which might have
happened to any one but a scientist or an inspired
writer.
The only excuse I can make for him
is that he was very young—not yet four
and twenty—and that in mind as in body,
like most of those who in the end come to think for
themselves, he was a slow grower. By far the
greater part, moreover, of his education had been an
attempt, not so much to keep him in blinkers as to
gouge his eyes out altogether.
But to return to my story. It
transpired afterwards that Miss Maitland had had no
intention of giving Ernest in charge when she ran out
of Mrs Jupp’s house. She was running away
because she was frightened, but almost the first person
whom she ran against had happened to be a policeman
of a serious turn of mind, who wished to gain a reputation
for activity. He stopped her, questioned her,
frightened her still more, and it was he rather than
Miss Maitland, who insisted on giving my hero in charge
to himself and another constable.
Towneley was still in Mrs Jupp’s
house when the policeman came. He had heard
a disturbance, and going down to Ernest’s room
while Miss Maitland was out of doors, had found him
lying, as it were, stunned at the foot of the moral
precipice over which he had that moment fallen.
He saw the whole thing at a glance, but before he
could take action, the policemen came in and action
became impossible.
He asked Ernest who were his friends
in London. Ernest at first wanted not to say,
but Towneley soon gave him to understand that he must
do as he was bid, and selected myself from the few
whom he had named. “Writes for the stage,
does he?” said Towneley. “Does he
write comedy?” Ernest thought Towneley meant
that I ought to write tragedy, and said he was afraid
I wrote burlesque. “Oh, come, come,”
said Towneley, “that will do famously.
I will go and see him at once.” But on
second thoughts he determined to stay with Ernest
and go with him to the police court. So he sent
Mrs Jupp for me. Mrs Jupp hurried so fast to
fetch me, that in spite of the weather’s being
still cold she was “giving out,” as she
expressed it, in streams. The poor old wretch
would have taken a cab, but she had no money and did
not like to ask Towneley to give her some. I
saw that something very serious had happened, but was
not prepared for anything so deplorable as what Mrs
Jupp actually told me. As for Mrs Jupp, she
said her heart had been jumping out of its socket and
back again ever since.
I got her into a cab with me, and
we went off to the police station. She talked
without ceasing.
“And if the neighbours do say
cruel things about me, I’m sure it ain’t
no thanks to him if they’re true.
Mr Pontifex never took a bit o’ notice of me
no more than if I had been his sister. Oh, it’s
enough to make anyone’s back bone curdle.
Then I thought perhaps my Rose might get on better
with him, so I set her to dust him and clean him as
though I were busy, and gave her such a beautiful
clean new pinny, but he never took no notice of her
no more than he did of me, and she didn’t want
no compliment neither, she wouldn’t have taken
not a shilling from him, though he had offered it,
but he didn’t seem to know anything at all.
I can’t make out what the young men are a-coming
to; I wish the horn may blow for me and the worms
take me this very night, if it’s not enough to
make a woman stand before God and strike the one half
on ’em silly to see the way they goes on, and
many an honest girl has to go home night after night
without so much as a fourpenny bit and paying three
and sixpence a week rent, and not a shelf nor cupboard
in the place and a dead wall in front of the window.
“It’s not Mr Pontifex,”
she continued, “that’s so bad, he’s
good at heart. He never says nothing unkind.
And then there’s his dear eyes—but
when I speak about that to my Rose she calls me an
old fool and says I ought to be poleaxed. It’s
that Pryer as I can’t abide. Oh he!
He likes to wound a woman’s feelings he do,
and to chuck anything in her face, he do—he
likes to wind a woman up and to wound her down.”
(Mrs Jupp pronounced “wound” as though
it rhymed to “sound.”) “It’s
a gentleman’s place to soothe a woman, but he,
he’d like to tear her hair out by handfuls.
Why, he told me to my face that I was a-getting old;
old indeed! there’s not a woman in London knows
my age except Mrs Davis down in the Old Kent Road,
and beyond a haricot vein in one of my legs I’m
as young as ever I was. Old indeed! There’s
many a good tune played on an old fiddle. I
hate his nasty insinuendos.”
Even if I had wanted to stop her,
I could not have done so. She said a great deal
more than I have given above. I have left out
much because I could not remember it, but still more
because it was really impossible for me to print it.
When we got to the police station
I found Towneley and Ernest already there. The
charge was one of assault, but not aggravated by serious
violence. Even so, however, it was lamentable
enough, and we both saw that our young friend would
have to pay dearly for his inexperience. We
tried to bail him out for the night, but the Inspector
would not accept bail, so we were forced to leave
him.
Towneley then went back to Mrs Jupp’s
to see if he could find Miss Maitland and arrange
matters with her. She was not there, but he traced
her to the house of her father, who lived at Camberwell.
The father was furious and would not hear of any
intercession on Towneley’s part. He was
a Dissenter, and glad to make the most of any scandal
against a clergyman; Towneley, therefore, was obliged
to return unsuccessful.
Next morning, Towneley—who
regarded Ernest as a drowning man, who must be picked
out of the water somehow or other if possible, irrespective
of the way in which he got into it—called
on me, and we put the matter into the hands of one
of the best known attorneys of the day. I was
greatly pleased with Towneley, and thought it due
to him to tell him what I had told no one else.
I mean that Ernest would come into his aunt’s
money in a few years’ time, and would therefore
then be rich.
Towneley was doing all he could before
this, but I knew that the knowledge I had imparted
to him would make him feel as though Ernest was more
one of his own class, and had therefore a greater claim
upon his good offices. As for Ernest himself,
his gratitude was greater than could be expressed
in words. I have heard him say that he can call
to mind many moments, each one of which might well
pass for the happiest of his life, but that this night
stands clearly out as the most painful that he ever
passed, yet so kind and considerate was Towneley that
it was quite bearable.
But with all the best wishes in the
world neither Towneley nor I could do much to help
beyond giving our moral support. Our attorney
told us that the magistrate before whom Ernest would
appear was very severe on cases of this description,
and that the fact of his being a clergyman would tell
against him. “Ask for no remand,”
he said, “and make no defence. We will
call Mr Pontifex’s rector and you two gentlemen
as witnesses for previous good character. These
will be enough. Let us then make a profound
apology and beg the magistrate to deal with the case
summarily instead of sending it for trial. If
you can get this, believe me, your young friend will
be better out of it than he has any right to expect.”