ONE hour to closing time in the X and Y Stores.
Here, in the
new Oriental Department, the air is heavy
and enervating—pungent with odours of
Eastern woodwork,
laden with the perfumed dust from piles of rich Eastern fabrics
and
warmed with the fumes of incense in metal boxes and the vapour
from
quaint little coloured lamps. Especially oppressive and ex-
hausting in the
dimly-lit corner where the pale-haired assistant
half leans against the Indian
screen and languidly sweeps the
“new line” of Persian glass with his long peacock
feather brush.
“Wike up, Alf,” whispers a passing confrére, “yer’ ‘arf
asleep, and guvnor’s piping yer.”
The friendly warning was needed.
“Mr Nasher—attention!”
It is the voice of the superintendent—short and sharp, like
the crack of a whip.
“Oh, yes, madam,” says Mr Alf Nasher, rousing himself
from
his languorous reverie. ‘Quite a new line. The ’ole of
these trays of glorss was
purchased by aar trav’lers in the market
place of Bagdad. Nothing like it ever
reached London before.
Sim’lar to Bo’emian, but the Bo’emians can’t produce these
exqui-
site opal tints, nor blow the threads so fragile-like. Perfect spider’s
web! Make a very beautiful wedding present, that tall pair, I
should say,
madam, or the small ones, or one alone, madam.”
But, while he cries his wares in orthodox fashion, keeping
his almost colourless grey eyes fixed upon the lady’s animated
face, the pupils
dilate until nearly the whole iris is swallowed by
their net shade; then slowly
contract, become smaller and
smaller until they are as black spots in their vague
surroundings,
and the young man begins to dream.
All this afternoon, since his indigestible, salt-beef dinner, he
has been assailed by the press and throng of his trance-world,
finding
vehicles for brain-wanderings in every detail of his work,
in despite of his
struggles to keep his feet on the solid ground of
everyday life.
The lady customers—and in this department nearly all the
customers are of the softer sex—at once enervate and torment by
drawing him,
blindfold, into the realm of luminous shadows and
diffused and rose-coloured
light. Blondes and brunettes—the
young specimens fresh, innocent, adorable in
their gauche sim-
plicity; the maturer types in the flush and fire of high-toned and
dragon-fly
loveliness; the faint carmine tints of old poe era lips
like geranium petals,
curls like spun gold; the thick, white skins
and heavy, black tresses, long
lashes, full eyelids veiling the mys-
tery of amorous Sphinxes; diffident Madonnas;
flashing Cleo-
patras; all moulds, all forms of feminine grace or seductiveness—
all troubling, tormenting him, since the clogging mid-day meal, all
furnishing irresistible material for dreams.
Suppose that he were rich, pepe ey wealthy, rich
enough to
buy up the X and Y, stock, lot and barrel, if the fancy
moved him, from the roof
tree and Toys No. 1 to the cellars and
the overflow of sewing-machines from No.
20.
Ransacking departments, building them in with invoiceless
goods, could he not win them—buy them all? Why shy at the
word? Are they not all of them to be bought if you are rich
enough to pay
the price? Who among them would long with-
stand the virtue-sapping seduction of
the Jewellery Department—
all his, from the tiaras on sale or return from the
great Midland
houses, to the little “merry-thought” brooches (9 carat, one split
pearl, 18s. 9d.), bought net and stocked by the gross? He could
gauge the
power of the Jewellery Department by those merry-
thoughts. For had he not given
one to Sybil Cartwright, of the
middle counter of “Gloves, Hose and
Underwear”?
A brown-haired, moon-faced maid—Sybil—with hair swept
over
egg-shell ears, and almond eyes, darkly lustrous as a summer’s
night on the banks
of the Karun, and the haughty insouciance
which can laugh at the wooing of a
rosetted shop-walker or a
ground-floor desk clerk, not to mention an undecorated
assistant!
But to be bought, no doubt, like the countesses and duchesses
whose fur-clad menials fill the “out” benches of the hall. “What
are in all those
saddle-bag sacks which I see the warehouse men
carrying all day long into the
Deposit Account Office?” asks
Sybil disdainfully. Gold, young lidy, my gold. Same as what
I’ve bought the ole Stores with.”
“Praad” she might be, and cold too, and dignified in de-
meanour; but he could set her dancing for his pleasure in a mar-
vellous, secret
flat, obtained through the X and Y House Agency,
and furnished “remorseless” out
of this very department, within
a month—yes, dancing before him, dressed like some
Nautch girl,
In the New Oriental Department
and all jingling and jangling with diamonds, rubies and sapphires,
as she twisted
and squirmed about to the muffled music of an
X and Y “ten clay band,” hidden away
in the next room.
“Praad, may be! but mine at last!”
Yet how restricted the power, how feeble the effect, of the
vastest treasure here in England, in these prosaic, convention-
ruled days! But to
have. the wealth and the power, too: to be an
Eastern potentate, absolute,
uncontrolled lord of all the land! Ah,
Sultan and King! sensual, merciless, if you
like, but splendid even
in his depravement; capable of fine flashes of magnanimity
to
illumine the dark background of his soul’s demoralization. ‘Lord
of all
this, my humming, bustling market-place, my walled city
and my palace all in
one—all these busy clerks and assistants my
troops, bearers and servants; the
liftmen my bronzed captains;
the frock-coated commissionaires my corpulent,
white-faced body-
guard, safe and harmless guardians of the new block of women’s
sleeping accommodation, which I herewith appropriate as my sera-
glio, and
over which I set them on guard.” …
And now is seen one of those terrible occurrences, frightful
examples of a despot’s tyranny, which have made this young
monarch at once famous
and execrable in Oriental history.
“Well, let the historians talk! What must be,
must be. Kis-
met. I have spoken.”
Throwing himself down on the finest of the embroidered
divans, while ready hands bring forward the huge hookah—that
reat unsaleable thing
that has stood by the A desk of the
obacco Department for the last three years—he
summons the
now trembling secretary, his grand vizier; issues his brief but
awful commands; and, wrapping himself in wreaths of fragrant
smoke, calmly awaits
their fulfilment.
Crunch! clink, clank! The sounds of bolts and bars; then
the
rumble of the iron fireproof doors, as they fall in their sockets
throughout the
great building, leaving only the little wickets
wee from floor to floor, between
department and department.
What does it mean? Closing at half after five! Fire?
What
is it
Alas, the panic-stricken cries, the shrieks of women, the
groans of men, too well indicate a premonition of the horrible
truth. It is nothing more nor less than one of the Sultan’s gigantic
raids for
the re-stocking of his harem.
“All out! All out! All men and boys,
outside!” the unflinch-
ing guards are already roaring on the staircases,
and husbands are
being torn from wives, brothers from sisters, on every landing.
A shriek and an oath. The astrakan toque has fallen from the
head of a tall
girl—a well-known customer—her hair is half down,
and she is struggling madly to
retain the hand of a tall guards-
man, probably her betrothed. Quick as life, the
guardsman
snatches from the wall one of those huge Afghan knives, heavy
as a
hatchet, sharp as a razor, and clears a space all round him.
In a moment he is
overpowered and hurled back through the little
wicket. Killed? Who shall say? He
has resisted the Sultan’s
command. Death were a light punishment. “Besides, it
ain’t so
easy to see through the ’ooker smoke.”
“All out! All out! All females over the age of
thirty-five
outside!” roar the guards. The men are all gone. It is the
turn
of the agonized mothers and aunts and elderly sisters. Oh,
lamentable
scene! Oh, pitiful wailings! The most valuable
parcels thrown away in anguish, the
floors littered with mono-
grammed purses, muffs, fur capes, powder boxes, card
cases, hair-
pins, and what not; a screaming and raving and sobbing and gasp-
ing which might melt a granite rock to tears, as the ensnared
matrons and
maids rush to and fro, beating against their prison
bars like a flock of trapped
doves. In a voice broken with emotion
and with humble deprecating obeisance, the
Secretary-Vizier
a that some daughters of shareholders may be set at
liberty.
But he laughs cruelly.
“That new block of buildings must be filled. I have
spoken.”
In the midst of the uproar a stout, middle-aged dame, over-
looked by the Janissaries, appeals to him for mercy. With hideous
mockery he bids
her depart.
Her prayer is in truth on behalf of her nieces—two bright’
girls from Hastings, her brother’s pride and joy, on a New Year’s
visit to their
aunt at Earl’s Court—but he affects to misunderstand,
mischievously assumes that
she is pleading for her own freedom,
and she is hustled from his sight.
“Marshal them all through the Grocery and Candles,” he
In the New Oriental Department
commands. “Then march them before me to their quarters. Give
them food. If
necessary drug them all. To-morrow we will en-
large the meshes of our royal net
and let many fish pass through.
To-night I am too weary to pick and choose. “I
have spoken.”
But what is this? A slim and plainly-dressed girl forces
her
way through the agonized throng and throws herself at his
feet. It is Sybil, from
counter 5 Ladies’ Hose, etc. Crouched
down like a spaniel before the divan, her
nice brown hair trembling
on the back of her neck, upturned towards him, three
times she
touches the dusty matting with her white forehead, then raises her
tear-stained eyes to his, and speaks.
“Oh, great Master and King! Do not do this thing. Turn
your
thoughts away from this monstrous wickedness. For my
sake let them off. For the
sake of a poor girl, open the doors and
let them go. Don’t go and do anything so
mean and low as this.”
“For your sake, girl? And what is the
ransom you offer?
Body and soul were too small a price for thwarting a king’s
fancy.”
“No ransom, O King, if they might pay it, but a free gift.
I have always loved you”; and now the lovely girl’s pale face
is
suffused with blushes.
“Then rise” he cries, in clarion tones, himself springing to
his full height; “and stand here beside me, my empress and my
queen. Open all
doors. Let the mob loose. Poor frightened
slaves! your master needs ye not.”
And with a superb gesture of dismissal he flings wide his
open arms….
Down they all go—‘“the new line”—tray upon tray—
Bagdad’s
glory, the “fragile-like” novelties of the season, shivered
into thousands of
tinkling fragments—and, as he kneels amidst
the ruin he has wrought, the merciless
voice of the Superintendent
hisses in his ear.
“Secretary’s Office. Explain it as best you can. ’Ope for
nothing from me. I’m sick and tired of you.”
W. B. MAXWELL
MLA Citation:
Maxwell, W. B. “In the New Oriental Department.” The Venture: an Annual of Art and Literature, vol. 2, 1905, pp. 9-13. Venture Digital Edition, edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2019-2022. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Toronto Metropolitan University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2022, https://1890s.ca/vv2-maxwell-oriental