The Phantasies of Philarete
I
FOR quite a month or two it was noticed at the Shandy Club
that a certain
change had passed over Hartmann West.
West was rather a notability at the
club, though he was, com-
paratively speaking, a young member. To be
precise, he had
belonged to it just two years and a half, and six months
before
his election he had published his first book, Drafts upon Inexperi-
ence. It was a volume of somewhat exotic sentiment
and para-
doxical reflection, with a dash of what was just then beginning
to
be called ” the new humour ” ; and the novelty, as represented by
West, found no great favour with the critics. In most quarters
the book was
either energetically slated or altogether ignored—
which, as we all
know, is a much worse fate—but somehow,
perhaps as a consequence of
the very vigour of the slating,
perhaps in virtue of that touch of
unconventional genius which
critics are not always quick to detect, the
Drafts were honoured
by the great reading
public, and in half a year Hartmann West
was a hero of six editions, and a
member of the somewhat
exclusive Shandy Club.
On the whole, he was a fairly popular member, in spite of the
fact
fact that he had what is called an uncertain temper ; but, during
the period
to which reference has been made, his popularity had
much declined, for the
uncertainty had become a very unpleasant
certainty ; and an after-dinner
chat or game of whist with Hart-
mann West was becoming, even to the most
gentle and tactful
members of the club, a thing that was to be avoided, if
avoidance
were at all possible. Most of those who had in a tepid way
liked
him, began to regard him with a dislike which was not in
the
least tepid ; but one or two Shandians—illuminated it may
be by
personal experience—had been heard to say that it was
no use being
hard upon poor West ; for as Major Forth, the
well-known African explorer,
pithily put it : ” It’s plain enough
that the man has had a nasty
knock-down blow of some kind or
other ; but he’ll get over it all right if
fellows will only give him
a chance.” The Major’s intuition was wonderfully
accurate.
Hartmann West had received a
knock-down blow ; and though
chances were not dealt out to him in
overflowing measure, he did
get over it. At least, he seemed to get over it
; but I can’t
forget the way in which Sumner told that he could have
pulled
him through the influenza, complicated as it was, if he hadn’t
had
something on his mind. ” He was sick of life, sir, and when a
man
gets to that, it doesn’t take much to make life sick of him.”
It was after
his death that I acquired the knowledge which
corroborated the Major’s
theory. And this is the story.
II
A few months after the date of the publication of Drafts
upon
Inexperience, a great stroke of luck had come to a
certain John
Errington. The influence of the only acquaintance he had in
the
world
world who possessed any influence at all, had been exerted in his
favour,
and he had become a member of the reviewing staff of
Noon, a mid-day paper, the conductors of which made
an
emphasised appeal to the public that fancies literature and art,
without snubbing that other public which better loves the House
of Commons,
the Turf, and the Divorce Court. Errington’s
career up to this time had not
been conspicuously successful.
All his life he had been more or less of an
invalid. In his youth
he had tried one or two callings, but ill-health had
compelled him
to abandon them ; and, having a genuine love of letters and
gift of
expression, he had—paradoxical as the sequence may
seem—
drifted into journalism. The leading paper in the northern
pro-
vincial town where he lived had, in the first instance, published
his articles, and had then gone on to pay for them, the pay
becoming
finally so assured as to justify him—that, at any rate,
was the poor
fellow’s view of the case—in marrying the pretty
Alice Blundell, and
assuming the responsibilities of a British
husband and ratepayer.
They did not exactly live on the fat of the land, but they lived
somehow and
kept out of debt, and were most foolishly happy
until the fatal day when it
became known that Mr. Warlow the
proprietor of the Norton Post had loved American railroad invest-
ments not
wisely, but too well, and that his journal had passed
into new hands. The
new hands, as is sometimes the case, did
not appreciate the old hands ; and
John Errington received an
intimation that at the end of the month his
services on the great
organ of Norton opinion would no longer be required.
Seeing
that he was a nervous, timid, and singularly unresourceful man,
he
bore the blow with more of courage than might have been
expected
from him ; perhaps because it came and did the worst
for him at once, the
really demoralising troubles being those
which
The Yellow Book—Vol. V. M
which arrive in instalments, each one suggesting the harassing
question ”
What next? ” Thus it was that he came to take a
step which to an ordinary
man would have been simple and
obvious enough, but which in John Errington
indicated the
special courage of despair, that is to ordinary courage, what
the
struggle of delirium is to healthy muscular force. He broke up
his
little Norton home ; bade good-bye to his friends, and to the
grave where
his two little children lay buried ; and carrying in
his purse the few
bank-notes which were the price of his household
goods, took his wife and
their one remaining child to London, and
pitched the family tent in a
dreary but reasonably clean and cheap
Camberwell lodging-house.
It was a step to which even despair would not have impelled
him had there
not been one chance of possible success. About
twelve months before the
trouble came, he had contributed to the
Post a short set of articles which had attracted the
favourable
attention of Sir George Blunt, and a correspondence between
the
Baronet and himself which had arisen out of them, had been
maintained with something of regularity. Out of this corre-
spondence
sprung Errington’s one hope, for Sir George, who had
always written in the
friendliest manner, was known to be a large
proprietor of Noon, and if his good word could only be secured,
the
terrible premier pas in the new life would
be successfully taken.
Errington accordingly presented himself at the great
house in
Prince’s Gardens, and was received by the master of his fate
without any effusion, but with courtesy and kindliness. Sir
George was
sorry to hear of Mr. Errington’s misfortune, and
would be pleased to be of
service to him. Mr. Errington, as a
journalist, would understand that a
proprietor felt some delicacy
in taking any step, which looked like
interference in the literary
management of a paper, that was in competent
editorial hands ;
that
that the hands of Mr. Mackenzie who edited Noon were
singularly
competent ; and that they belonged to a man who was very
likely
to regard suggestion as an attempt at dictation.
John Errington listened and felt chilly ; had he been standing
his legs
would have trembled.
” But,” continued Sir George with a voice in a new key. ” I’ll
tell you what
I will do, Mr. Errington. There can be no im-
propriety in my giving you a
letter of introduction to Mr.
Mackenzie, in which I will tell him what I
know of you, and
what I think of your work. Perhaps you had better not
present
it in person, but send it by post, with a letter of your own, and
a
few specimen articles—not too many. Then if there is any
opening, he will probably make an appointment. I can’t promise
you that
anything will come of it, but there is a chance, and
at any rate it is the
best thing—indeed the only thing—that I
can do. “
The two letters and the carefully selected literary specimens
reached Mr.
Mackenzie at an auspicious moment. The most
useful of his general utility
men in the literary department of
Noon had suddenly levanted, and was supposed to be
half-way
across the Atlantic, having for a companion, the beautiful
Mrs.
Greatrex, wife of the well-known dramatist. Dick Mawson’s
morals—or his want of them—had long been notorious ; but Mr.
Mackenzie did not deal in morals save in his social articles, and
very
sparingly even there. What concerned him was that Mawson
was, as a writer,
clever, versatile, and best of all prompt ; and his
wrath burned as he
thought of Dick’s perfidious treatment—not
of poor Mr. Greatrex, but
of Noon and of himself, Andrew
Mackenzie. And
now here was this new man. His articles
were hardly so smart as Mawson’s,
but he seemed to know more,
and there was a certain finish about his work
which the erring
Dick
Dick had never attained. He should be tried. If he proved a
success, well
and good ; if a failure, he could soon be got rid of, and
there would be a
reasonable pretext—not that Mr. Mackenzie
needed any—for
saying to Sir George : ” Hands off. “
And so it happened that after a brief interview with the great
man of Noon, John Errington left the editorial office in
Bouverie
Street, for the Camberwell lodgings, bearing under his arm a
couple of volumes for review, and in his mind a proposal made by
the editor
that he should write one of a forthcoming series of
articles on ”
Fin-de-Siècle Fiction. ” Some ideas for this series,
and one quite
impossibly libellous contribution to it, were the
only keepsakes that the
amorous fugitive Dick Mawson had left
behind him for the consolation of Mr.
Andrew Mackenzie ; but
the editor made no mention of Dick to John
Errington, leaving
him indeed with a vague impression that the series was
an im-
promptu scheme, conceived and brought forth in ten minutes for
his special benefit.
Mr. Mackenzie did not find Errington a failure, so Sir George,
Blunt did not
receive the ” hands off ” ultimatum. Indeed the
editor rather liked the
work of his new contributor, mainly
because he found that other people
liked it ; and the cheques
which came monthly to the little house at
Shepherd’s Bush (for
Camberwell had been abandoned) sometimes represented
an
amount which made Errington feel that fortune had really come
to
him at last. There was, however, a harassing irregularity in
the descent of
the golden or paper shower. Sometimes publishers
abstained from publishing
the right sort of books ; sometimes,
even in Noon, politics raided the territory of letters ; and there
were
months when Errington would have made a fair profit by
exchanging his
cheque for a ten pound-note. He had tried to
get work on other newspapers,
or to find an appreciative magazine
editor
editor to accept his more thoughtful and elaborate literary essays ;
but the
newspapers had no vacancy, and the magazine editors all
wanted short
stories—the one literary commodity which he found
himself unable to
supply. In spite, therefore, of what he ad-
mitted to be his wonderful good
luck, there were seasons when
Errington felt somewhat anxious and
depressed.
He was feeling so one day, when he entered Mr. Mackenzie’s
room, seeking
what he might devour. For two months the
cheques had been of the smallest ;
and before very long there
would be a new and expensive arrival in the
house at Shepherd’s
Bush—a conjunction which roused the timid man to
unwonted
persistence of appeal.
” I’m afraid there’s nothing, ” said Mackenzie ; ” the publishers
are
keeping everything back until this dynamite excitement is
over, and upon my
word I am glad they are, for it fills the paper.
This is really the only
thing I have in hand that is in your line,
and it has been here for nearly
a month. ” As he spoke the
editor took down a daintily attired book from a
shelf behind him, and
continued : ” I didn’t intend to notice it. I think
West is a con-
ceited ass who needs snubbing ; but as you want something
you
can take it, and of course treat it on its merits. But you must
keep within a column, and if you only send half, so much the
better.
“
John Errington left Mr. Mackenzie’s room with a lighter
heart than that
which he had taken there, for though the
honorarium represented by a column of copy was not
much in
itself, it was just then a good deal to him. He was specially
grateful to his chief for stretching a point in his favour, for he
was
inclined to agree with his opinion that The Phantasies
of
Philarete was likely to prove poor stuff. During the
weeks in
which it had been lying on Mr. Mackenzie’s shelf, Errington
had
read
read reviews of it in the Hour, the Morning Gazette, the Parthenon,
and the Book World, and
these influential journals with almost
unique unanimity had pronounced it a
strained, affected, pretentious,
and entirely vapid performance. ” If a
beginner, ” said the Hour,
” were to ask us to
indicate the qualities of substance and work-
manship which he, in his own
attempts ought most studiously
to avoid, we should give him this volume and
say, ‘ My dear boy,
you will find them all here.’ “
III
When John Errington, after going upstairs to kiss his rather
worn-looking
little wife, who was taking the afternoon rest which
had become a
necessity, lighted his pipe and began to read the
Phantasies, he found the opening pages better than he
expected.
He saw nothing of strain or affectation ; and if the substance
was
slight, the style had a graceful lightsomeness which seemed to
Errington very charming. He read on and on ; his wife came
into the room
with her sewing and he never noticed her entrance ;
but when he had
finished the chapter which contains the episode
of old Antoine’s daughter,
he looked up and said, ” I must read
this book to you, dear love, it is
just wonderful. “
Errington did not go to bed until he had reached that last
chapter, which,
you will remember, Mr. Walter Hendon cited a
few weeks ago as the most
beautiful thing in contemporary prose.
The next morning he wrote and posted
his review, the 1200
words of which would, he knew, just fill a column of
Noon, and
in two days more it appeared. In
the meantime, Errington’s
enforced leisure had allowed the domestic
readings to begin, and,
as the fragile wife reclined on her little couch
and sewed and
listened,
listened, her enthusiasm was not less intense than her hus-
band’s.
Then, when the paper came, he read his review, and she
exclaimed :
” Oh, John, that is lovely: it is one of the best things you
have ever done.
I do wish you would send it to Mr. West and
thank him for the pleasure he
has given us. I would like to write
myself, only I express myself so
stupidly, but you will do it
perfectly ; and I am sure he would like to
know all that we feel
about the book. “
” I don’t know, ” said Errington, with the self-distrust always
aroused in
him by any suggestion of the mildest self-assertion, ” I
don’t suppose he
would care for the opinion of a man about whom
he knows nothing. “
” Oh, yes, he would ; people like sympathy, even if they don’t
care for
praise ; and then, too, if it is really true that he is the sub-
editor of
Caviare, he might be able to get you some work
for it. “
Now Caviare, as proved by its name and motto, ”
Caviare to the
general, ” was a monthly magazine, dealing exclusively with
litera-
ture and art in a way that appealed to the superior few ; and
some
of Errington’s best essays—or those which he thought the
best—
had been declined by several editors on the ground that their
good-
ness was not of the kind to attract their miscellaneous clientèle.
He had once or twice thought of
submitting to Caviare one of
these rejected
addresses ; but he had doubted whether they were up
to the mark, and so
they had never gone. His wife’s last sugges-
tion startled him.
” Oh, I couldn’t do that,” he said ; ” it would spoil the whole
thing. It
would take the bloom off one’s gratitude for a beautiful
thing. I couldn’t
do it. I would rather ask help from a perfect
stranger. “
” Well,
” Well, that seems to me to be morbid ; and I don’t like to hear
you talk as
if people did you a favour by accepting your work.
They accept it not for
love of you, but because they know it is
good. You remember what Professor
Miles said about your essay
on ‘ The Secret of Swift, ‘ and I am sure they
would be glad to have
it for Caviare. I don’t
often press you to do anything ; but I don’t
think you have ever repented
taking my advice, and I do want you
to write to
Mr. West. “
Errington was not a strong man. He was too timid to initiate,
and too timid
to oppose ; and his wife was right, for he had never
adopted a suggestion
of hers without finding that she was wiser
than he. And so he sat down and
wrote :
Titan Villas, Shepherd’s Bush.
DEAR SIR,
I am a stranger to you, and my only introduction is the
enclosed review of The Phantasies of Philarete which
I have had the
great privilege of contributing to Noon, and which appears in to-day’s
issue of that journal. I
have tried my best to do justice to the
truth and beauty and tenderness of
the book ; but I feel that my best
does not say what I wanted to say. Nor
is a second attempt likely to
be one whit more successful than the first,
so I do not write now to
supplement my review ; but to express what I could
not express in
public—my own personal gratitude and that of my wife,
to whom I
have been reading it, for a book which has touched us as we have
not
often been touched before. We live a very quiet life into which
enters little of what is ordinarily called pleasure, but such a volume as
your Phantasies brings with it delights upon which we
can live for
many days. Please accept our hearty gratitude for so great a
gift.
I cannot suppose that my name will be at all known to you, for I
am,
comparatively speaking, a new-comer in the world of London
journalism ; and
I have so far been unsuccessful in obtaining any
literary
literary work besides that which has been given me by the editor of
Noon. To follow an acknowledgment of one favour by a
request for
another is not usual with me, but I find something in your book
which
encourages me to unwonted freedom. Just now I have special
reasons
for wishing to enlarge my slender but ordinarily sufficient
resources,
and I have thought it possible that you might be willing to look
over an
article of mine entitled ” The Secret of Swift, ” with a view to
giving
me your opinion as to its suitability for publication in Caviare. The
theory propounded in it is, I think,
a new one, and Professor Miles
has been kind enough to say that it is at
any rate sufficiently well-
supported to deserve provisional acceptance as
a working hypothesis.
But please let this matter await a perfectly free moment. I write
not to
trouble you about my poor affairs, but to express my gratitude
—to
which my wife wishes me to add hers—for the pure and rare
delight
your book has brought to us.—I am, dear sir,
Yours very truly and gratefully,
JOHN ERRINGTON.
Errington was not a man who expected much, yet he felt a cer-
tain
disappointment when, on the second day after the despatch of
his letter,
the postman passed and left no reply from Hartmann
West. But no postman
ever passed the office of Noon, and while
Errington was wondering whether the author of Phantasies could
be at home, Mr. Mackenzie was perusing with
ireful countenance
a letter bearing his signature. It had contained an
enclosure in a
handwriting with which the editor was familiar, and it ran
thus :
Shandy Club, W.
DEAR SIR,
I have received the enclosed communication from a
person
who is, or professes to be, a member of your staff. You will see
that
he, truly or falsely, announces himself as the writer of a very
fulsome,
and
and yet in some respects gratuitously offensive, review of my latest
book
which appeared in your issue of Thursday last, and that he then
goes on to
tout for employment by the editor of a magazine with
which I am supposed to
be connected. I do not know whether you
have any views upon the dignity of
journalism ; but you have pro-
bably strong views upon the ethics of
advertising, and are not very
eager to give payment, instead of receiving
it, for allowing a small
scribe to introduce his wares through your
literary columns to possible
purchasers. I think it well for you to know to
what base use even
Noon can be put.
Yours faithfully,
HARTMANN WEST.
Seldom had Andrew Mackenzie felt such an access of speechless
rage ; and for
the moment he could not tell which object of his
emotion was the more
hateful. He was not a physically violent
man, but had either West or
Errington presented himself at that
moment, violence would certainly have
been done. He had not
willingly inserted the review of The Phantasies of Philarete ; in
fact, he had remarked to his
nephew and sub-editor that he wished
Errington had chosen any other book on
which to ” tap his
d——d private cask of gush ; ” but having
explicitly given the
owner of the cask a free hand, he had not felt it
consistent with
dignity implicitly to cancel the authorisation. And now
this
consummate cad, who ought to be off his head with exultation at
having been honoured with even the coolest notice of Noon, had
actually dared to write of its praise as ” fulsome ”
and ” gratui-
tously offensive. ” What was meant by the latter term
Mackenzie
did not trouble to guess ; but had he done so, his trouble
would
have been fruitless, for one vain man can seldom sound the
depths
of vanity in another. The fact was that Errington had made a
veiled reference to previous criticisms of the book as ” attempts
made
made by malignity or incompetence to crush a rising author ; “
and the word
” rising ” was gall and wormwood to the man who
believed himself to have
been for at least a year on the apex of
fame’s pyramid. Had he read
Errington’s letter first, the un-
mistakable accent of timorous praise, and
still more the appeal
to him as a possible patron, would have titillated
his vanity and
sent him to the review with a clean palate ; but of course
a
printed cutting, headed ” A Western Masterpiece, ” could not
wait,
and the ” rising ” vitiated his taste for what would have
been to him the
dainty dish of adulation.
But Andrew Mackenzie neither knew this nor cared to know
it, and his
thoughts turned from West to Errington. It has been
said that at the moment
he knew not which he hated the more ;
but he did know upon which he could
inflict immediate
vengeance, and that was a great point. As he brooded
upon
Errington’s offence, West’s seemed comparatively trivial, for
was
it not Errington who had provided West with his offensive
weapon ? The
member of the Shandy Club had said that he did
not know whether Mr.
Mackenzie had any views upon the
dignity of journalism. His ignorance on
this matter was very
general ; but there were many who knew that he held
exceedingly
strong views concerning the dignity of one journal, Noon, and
one journalist, Andrew Mackenzie. It was
his pride to know
that the members of his political staff were to be seen
at Govern-
ment Office receptions, hobnobbing with Cabinet Ministers,
that
his critics dined with literary peers whose logs they judiciously
rolled, and that both were frequently represented in the half-
crown
reviews. That was as it should be : and here was a
fellow who put it in the
power of a man like West to say that
one of his contributors wrote from
Titan Villas, Shepherd’s
Bush, about his slender resources, and his ardent
desire to pick
up
up any crumbs that might fall from the table of Caviare. He, at
any rate, should be made to suffer.
IV
While Mackenzie was devising his scheme of punishment,
John Errington was
engaged in pleasant thoughts of Hartmann
West. The expected letter might
now come by any post, and it
would be well to see whether ” The Secret of
Swift ” were in fit
condition to be despatched to him, or whether he must
get Alice
to make a clean copy of it in that pretty handwriting of
hers
which was always seen at its neatest in her transcript of the
MSS, of which she was so proud. The present copy was, how-
ever, in capital
order, but on examining it he found that one slip
was missing. Nervous
search through the well-filled drawer soon
convinced him that it was not
there ; but, fortunately, on
examining the two edges of the gap, he made
the discovery that
the lost leaf had been devoted to little more than a
long quotation,
which could be easily restored by a visit to the library of
the
British Museum.
He had nothing else to do, and the day was fine. He could
start at once,
copy his quotation, and have a few hours in the
metropolis of the world of
books. It was six o’clock when he
reached home again, and the dusk of an
evening in late autumn
was beginning to gather, but the lamp in the little
general
utility chamber, which served for dining and drawing room,
was
unlit. As he entered he thought no one was there, but
a second glance
revealed his wife crouching upon the floor, her
head lying upon the couch
which stood by the window.
” Dear Alice, ” he said faintly as he strode forward, ” are you
ill?
ill ? what is the matter ? ” but there was no reply. His first
vague terror
crystallised into a definite dread, which, however,
lasted only for an
instant, for the hand he took in his, cold as it
was, had not the
unmistakable coldness of death ; and when he
kissed the lips whose
whiteness even the dusk revealed, he felt
that they were the lips of a
living woman.
” Jane, Jane, ” he called loudly, ” bring some water quickly ;
your mistress
has fainted ; ” and rising from his knees he lit with
trembling hands the
lamp upon the table. The maid, carrying a
basin of water, bustled in with a
scared face.
” Oh, dear, dear, ” she exclaimed, ” she do look awful bad ; shall
I go for
the doctor ? “
” No, no—we must bring her to, first. How has it happened ?
Do you
know anything about it ? “
” No, indeed ; she was in the kitchen ten minutes ago, or it
might be a
quarter of an hour, and the postman knocked at the
door, and she says ‘
That will be the letter the master was
expectin’,’ and then she didn’t come
back, but I heard nothink,
and thought nothink of it. If I’d a heard
anythink I’d have
come in. “
They lifted her on to the couch. Errington loosened her dress
and sprinkled
the water over her face, while the girl rubbed one
of her hands, but there
was no movement. The small basin was
soon emptied.
” More water, quick, ” said the man ; ” and oughtn’t we to burn
something ?
“
” Feathers is the thing, but we haven’t got no feathers ; perhaps
brown
paper’d do; I’ll fetch some. “
It was brought, and the woman now sprinkled the water while
the man held
under his wife’s nostrils the ignited paper which
threw off a pungent
aromatic smoke. A slight shiver ran
through
through the recumbent figure ; the eyelids trembled, then opened,
though
their glance was hardly recognition, and slowly closed
again.
” Alice, dear heart, ” exclaimed the man brokenly as he gently
put his arm
round her neck, and drew her lips to his ; ” speak to
me, darling. You will
be all right now. I am with you. What
has frightened you ? “
For a few seconds she lay apparently unconscious ; then the
eyes opened
again with less of that dreadful, unseeing look, and
she murmured sleepily,
” Where am I ? What is the matter,
John ? “
” Yes, darling, I am here. You are better now. Rest a little
bit, and then
tell me all about it. “
” She’s coming to, ” said the girl, ” I’ll go and make her a cup of
tea.
It’s the best thing now. ” And she left the husband and wife
together.
While the wife lay, again silent, with now and then a slight
movement as of
a shiver, a timid voice was heard at the door. ” Is
mother ill ? Can I come
in ? “
” She’s getting better, my pet. Run away now, and be very
quiet. You shall
come in soon. “
The figure stirred again, this time with more of voluntary
motion ; she made
as if to raise herself; her eyes met her
husband’s with a look of full
recognition ; she threw her arm
round his neck and pressed herself against
him in a terrifying
outburst of hysterical weeping. It lasted for
minutes—how many
John never knew—with heavy sobs that
convulsed her, and inter-
mittent sounds of eerie laughter. At last the
words began to
struggle forth with difficulty and intermittence.
” John—John—dear John—my own dear husband—Oh my
darling—my darling—I love you, and I have ruined you—it
will
kill
kill me ; but, oh, if I could have died before. ” And then, with
less of
violence, for the paroxysm had exhausted her, she began
silently to weep
again. An hour had passed before John
Errington had heard the story, or
rather read it in the type-
written letters which had dropped from his
wife’s hands as she fell,
and had been pushed under the sofa. He read them
first rapidly ;
then again more slowly, with stunned senses :
Office of Noon,
October 5, 1893.
SIR,
Enclosed you will find a copy of a letter which I have
just
received from Mr. Hartmann West, from which you will see that he
has done me the favour to place in my hands a letter addressed to him
by
you, and written so recently that its purport must be fresh in your
memory.
That I should see it did not enter into your calculations,
and I do not
suppose that the man capable of writing it, would in the
least understand
the emotions excited by it, in the mind of a self-
respecting journalist. I
may, however, say that never in the whole
course of my professional
experience—which has been tolerably varied
—can I remember an
instance in which a trusted contributor to a high-
class journal had
deliberately puffed a book which he knows to be
worthless (for I am assured
on all hands that the worthlessness of this
particular book would be
obvious to the meanest capacity), and has
made that puff a fulcrum for the
epistolary leverage of two or three
contemptible guineas. I congratulate
you on the invention of an
ingenious system of blackmailing, one great
merit of which is that it
evades the clutch of the criminal law, though I
cannot add to my
congratulations either a lament for its present failure or
a hope for
its future success. Though I am unfortunately powerless to
control
the operations of the inventor, I am happily able to restrict their
scope
by refusing the use of Noon as a theatre
of operation. Please under-
stand
stand that your connection with this journal is at an end. A cheque
for the
amount due to you will be at once forwarded.
Yours truly,
ANDREW MACKENZIE.
Hartmann West’s letter had also been read, and John Errington
was vainly
endeavouring to check his wife’s outpourings of
remorse.
” I can’t bear it, John. To think that I who love you should
have brought
this upon you. Oh ! I hate myself. You would
never have written it if it
hadn’t been for me. You didn’t want
to write, and I made you write. But oh,
I didn’t know. I ought
to have known that I was foolish and that you were
wiser than I ;
but I thought of other times when I had done you good and
not
harm. Dear, dear John ; you won’t hate me, will you ? “
” Don’t talk like that, darling ; you will break my heart. I
should love you
more than ever, if that were possible ; but it isn’t.
How could we know
that the man who seemed to us an angel
was just a devil. When I read the
book I felt that he was a man
to love, and I tried to put something of what
I felt into what I
wrote, being sure that he would understand. I wrote from
my
heart, and he calls it gratuitously offensive. Darling, you
mustn’t
reproach yourself any more ; I can’t bear it ; how could
you know, how
could I know, how could any one know, that
there could be such a man ?
“
John Errington passed a wakeful night, but his wife slept the
heavy sleep of
exhaustion. When at eight o’clock he quietly rose,
dressed, and went down
to breakfast with his little girl, she was
sleeping still. ” It will do her
good, ” thought Errington, and
when Doris had gone to school, he set to
work upon his essay,
” The Common Factor in Shakespeare’s Fools,” to pass
the time
until
until he heard her bell. It did not ring until half-past eleven, and
he ran
rapidly up the short flight of stairs.
” Well darling,” he said, ” you have had a good sleep. “
” Oh, I have been awake for a long time—two hours I should
think—and I have been in great pain. I didn’t ring before,
because I
thought it would pass away, and I wouldn’t trouble you,
but it is much
worse than it was. “
John Errington looked down tenderly upon the thin face, which
seemed to have
grown thinner during the night. The woman
closed her eyes and seemed to be
suffering. After a moment’s
silence she spoke again.
” I’m better now,” she said faintly, ” but I think dear, Jane
had better go
for the doctor, and she might knock next door and
ask Mrs. Williams if she
can come in. “
The kindly neighbour was soon by the bedside, and the doctor,
who had been
found at home, was shortly in attendance. It was
not an obscure case, nor a
tedious one. Three hours afterwards
Alice Errington was the mother of a
dead baby-boy, and in the
early dawn of the next day Mrs. Williams with
many tears placed
the little corpse on the breast of the dead mother, and
drew the
lifeless arm around it. John Errington stood and watched her
silently ; then he came and kissed the two dead faces ; then he
threw
himself upon the bed, which shook with his tearless sobs.
John Errington, Doris, and Alice’s father, Richard Blundell,
who came from
Norton for the funeral, returned from Kensal
Green, and sat down to the
untimely meal prepared for Mr.
Blundell, who in a few minutes must start to
catch his homeward
train at Willesden. He was a man of few words, and of
the very
few he now uttered, most were addressed to his little grand-
daughter. It was only as the two men stood at the door that he
spoke to his
son-in-law in that Lancashire accent that the younger
man
The Yellow Book—Vol. V. N
man still loved to hear. ” Tha’s been hard hit lad, and so have I,
God knows
; but try to keep up heart for th’little lass’s sake.
We’re proud folk
i’Lancashire ; mayhap too proud ; but ye won’t
mind a bit of a lift in a
tight place fro’ Alice’s faither. Ah wish
it were ten times as much. God
bless thee—and thee, my lass. “
The old man kissed the child, wiped his eyes, and was driven
away. John
watched the cab till it turned a corner ; then looked
hard at the ten pound
note left in his hand as if it presented some
remarkable problem for
solution ; closed the door ; led Doris into
the little sitting-room ; and
began the task imposed upon him—of
keeping up his heart.
V
The cheque from Noon had come ; John Errington had it
in his
pocket, where also were five sovereigns and a few shillings.
The
ten-pound note was still in his hand, and a rapid calculation told
him that when the undertaker was paid, nearly a month of safety
from
absolute penury was still his. In a month surely something
could be done,
and John Errington set himself to do it. The man
to whom self-assertion and
self-advertisement had been impossible
horrors, now found himself wondering
at himself as he bearded
editors and sub-editors, and referred—in
perhaps too apologetic a
tone for persuasion—to the Noon articles on ” Fin-de-Siècle Fic-
tion, ”
which had really excited more comment than he was aware
of in journalistic
circles. His success was small. No editor had
any immediate opening, but
one or two were friendly, and said they
would bear his name in mind. A
proprietor who was his own
editor told him that literary paragraphs
containing quite fresh infor-
mation would be always acceptable ; but of
the various paragraphs
he sent in, only two—representing a sum of
fourteen shillings or
thereabouts
thereabouts—found acceptance. The going up and down other
men’s
stairs became as hateful to him as it was to Dante ; but he
lashed himself
into hope for the ” little lass’s ” sake, and hope made
it endurable. At
six o’clock every evening he arrived at Titan
Villas, and for two hours,
until Doris’s bedtime, in helping the
child with her lessons, or reading
aloud while she nestled up to him,
he felt something that was to happiness
as moonshine is to sunlight.
One evening, however, he had to forego this
delight, for he had
received a message from a certain editor, who had asked
him to call
after eight at his house at Wimbledon. He had seen the
great
man, who had given him a long chapter of autobiography, but had
said little of practical importance, and when, just before midnight,
he
reached home, he was weary and disspirited. He drew his arm
chair to the
fire, warmed his feet, smoked his pipe in the company
of an evening paper
for half an hour, and then went to bed, turning
for a moment—as was
his wont—into the room where the ten-
years-old little Doris must
have been asleep for hours. He held
the carrying-lamp over the child’s
face, which was somewhat
flushed : and the bed-clothes were tumbled as if
the sleeper had
been restless. As he made them straight and tucked them in,
the
child stirred but did not waken, and Errington was on the point of
leaving the room, when his eye caught the little frock hanging at
the foot
of the bed. The new black cashmere looked shabby and
draggled, and as he
instinctively grasped one of its falling folds,
he felt it cold and wet.
Then he turned to the little heap of under-
linen upon a chair and was
conscious of their chill damp. ” She
has been wet through, ” he thought, ”
and her clothes have never
been changed. Poor motherless darling. ” He
gathered the little
garments together on his arm, and, taking them
downstairs, found
a clothes-horse, and spread them upon it before the fire,
which he
had replenished when he came in.
He
He knew how it had happened. A kindly girl who had once
been a near
neighbour had offered to give the little Doris lessons
in music, but she
had recently removed to lodgings nearly two
miles away, and the child must
have been caught in the heavy
rain which he remembered had set in just
about the time that she
would be leaving Miss Rumbold. The thoughtless Jane
had
allowed her to sit in the saturated garments until she went to
bed.
In the morning the child’s eyes looked somewhat dull and
heavy, but
otherwise she was apparently quite well, and she
resisted her father’s
suggestion that she should stay in bed instead
of going to school. In the
evening when Errington returned
from his wanderings she seemed much better.
Her eyes were
bright again — brighter even than usual — and
for the first time
since her mother’s death she chatted to her father with
something
of her old animation. During the night Errington heard a
short,
hard cough often repeated, but when he left his bed and went to
look at her she was fast asleep. When he rose for the day and
visited her
again she seemed feverish ; the cough was more
frequent ; and her breathing
was somewhat short.
” What is the matter with her ? ” said the father to the doctor
whom he had
hastily summoned. ” I suppose it is nothing really
serious. “
” Well, ” said the slowly-speaking young Scotsman, ” I’m just
thinking it’s
a case of pneumonia, and pneumonia is never exactly
a trifle, but I see no
grounds for special anxiety. You must just
keep her warm, and I’ll send her
some medicine over, and look in
again to-night. “
He sent the medicine and looked in, but said little.
” Of course the temperature is higher, but that was to be
expected. I will
be down again in the morning, and she just
needs care—care.
“
The
The care was not lacking, for Errington was himself Doris’s
nurse, but, as
Mr. Grant observed, ” pneumonia is never a trifle, “
and even her father
did not know how heavily her mother’s death
had taxed the child’s power of
resistance. The unequal fight
lasted for five days and nights, and for the
last two of them there
could be little doubt of the issue. The end came on
Sunday
evening as the bells were ringing for church. The child had
been delirious during the latter part of the day, and had evidently
supposed herself to be talking to her mother, subsiding from the
delirium
into heavy sleep ; but about six she awakened with the
light of fever no
longer in her eyes, and stretched out a thin little
hand to Errington, and
said faintly, ” Dear, dear father. “
” Are you feeling better, darling ? ” he said.
” I don’t know,” she whispered ; ” I like you holding my hand.
I feel as if
I were sinking through the bed. I think I am sleepy. “
She closed her eyes, and for ten minutes she lay quite still.
Then she
opened them very wide and looked straight before her,
lifted her free hand,
and partly raised herself from the pillow.
The glance which had been a
question became a recognition.
” Oh mother, mother, ” she exclaimed in the
clear voice of health,
” it is you ; oh, I am so glad. ” And then the grey
veil fell over
the child’s face ; she sank back upon the pillow ; and the
eyes
closed again for the last time. In the room where there had been
two—or was it three ?—there was only one.
VI
On the morning of the funeral there came a letter for John
Errington. It was
from the editor who lived at Wimbledon, and
was very brief.
” Mr. Joliffe
” Mr. Joliffe regrets that on consideration he cannot entertain Mr.
Errington’s proposal with regard to the series of articles for The Book
World. When Mr. Joliffe informs Mr. Errington that he
has had an
interview with Mr. Mackenzie, he will doubtless understand
the
reasons for this decision. “
Mr. Williams, John Errington’s neighbour, was standing near
him in the
darkened room. He had offered to accompany him to
Kensal Green, for Richard
Blundell was confined to bed and
could not come, and the stricken man was
alone in his grief.
When Errington had read the letter he quietly returned
it to its
envelope, and placed it in his pocket, as the undertaker
summoned
them to the waiting coach. On their return from the cemetery
Williams pressed Errington to come into his house and sit down
with his
wife and himself at their midday dinner.
” It is very kind of you, ” said Errington, ” but I must not be
tempted ; I
have work to do. But I will come in for a moment
and thank Mrs. Williams
for all her goodness to me and mine. “
He went in, and the thanks were tendered.
” Well, I must go, now, ” he said abruptly, after a short silence.
” God
bless you both. Good-bye ! “
” Oh, Mr. Errington, not ‘ good-bye.’ You must come in this
evening and
smoke a pipe with Robert. ‘ Good morning ‘ is
what you ought to say, if you
really can’t stay now.”
” I don’t know. This is a world in which ‘ good-bye ‘ never
seems wrong. But
God bless you, anyhow. That must be
right—if, ” he added suddenly, ”
there is any God to bless. “
Then he walked hastily down the road in the direction of half
a dozen shops
which supplied suburban requirements, of suburban
quality, at suburban
prices ; went into one of them, and in a few
moments reappeared and turned
homeward. Entering the house,
he drew up the blind of the sitting-room and
sat down at the
table
table to write a letter. When it was finished he read it over, put
it in an
envelope, addressed it, took it to the pillar-box about
twenty yards from
his gate, and when he had dropped it in,
sauntered with a weary air back to
the house. This time he
went, not to the sitting-room, but to the
kitchen.
” Jane, ” he said, ” I’m tired out. I don’t think I have slept
properly for
a week, but I feel very sleepy now. I shall go and
lie down on the bed, and
don’t let me be disturbed, whatever
happens. If I get a chance I think I
can sleep for hours. “
He turned as if to go, and then turned back again, thrust his
hand into his
pocket, and drew from it a few coins. Two of them
were sovereigns. These he
laid upon the table.
” Your wages are due to-morrow, Jane, aren’t they ? I
may as well pay you
now lest I forget. Twenty-three and
fourpence, isn’t it ? “
” Yes, sir; but don’t trouble about it a day like this; it’ll do
any time.
“
” I would rather pay it now. I haven’t the even money, but
you can get me
the change when you go out. “
” Thank you, sir ; but won’t you have a chop before you lie
down? I can have
it ready in ten minutes. “
” No, I’m not hungry ; I want rest. ” Then after a pause—
” I’m
afraid I spoke roughly that day—about those wet clothes,
you know.
We may all forget things. I forget many things,
and I daresay I was too
hard. “
The girl burst into tears. ” Oh, sir, ” she said, ” it’s kind of
you, but I
can’t forgive myself. The sweet pet that was so fond
of her Jane, and that
I wouldn’t have harmed for “—but as she
took the apron from her eyes
she saw that she had no listener.
Her master had gone upstairs.
It was half-past twelve, for the funeral had been very early.
At
At eight in the evening Jane was standing at the door of the next
house,
speaking eagerly in a terrified tone to Mrs. Williams’s
small servant. “Oh,
will you ask Mr. Williams if he would
mind stepping in. I’m frightened
about the master. He’s been
in his room since noon, and I can’t make him
hear. I’m afraid
something’s happened.”
” What’s that ? ” said Williams, stepping out into the narrow
passage.
The girl repeated her story, and without putting on his hat
he followed her
into the house and up the stairs.
” It’s the front room, ” she said, and Williams knocked and
called loudly,
but all was silent.
” How many times did you knock ? “
” Ever so many, and very hard at last. “
” Good God ! I’m afraid you’re right, ” and as he spoke he
tried the handle
of the door.
” He has locked himself in. We must break the door open.
Have you a mallet ?
Anything would do. “
” There’s a screwdriver ; nothing else but a little tack hammer,
that would
be of no use. “
The large screwdriver was brought, and the wood-work of the
suburban builder
soon gave way before its leverage. When Mr.
Williams entered, carrying the
lamp he had taken from Jane’s
trembling hand, he saw that Errington had
undressed himself and
got into bed. He was lying with his face towards the
door, and
one arm was extended on the coverlet. He might have been
sleeping, but before Williams touched the cold hand he knew
what had
happened. There was a bedroom tumbler on the
dressing table, and beside it
an empty bottle bearing the label,
” Chloral Hydrate. Dose one tablespoon,
15 grains. ” John
Errington was dead.
When
VII
When during the forenoon of the next day Hartmann West
entered the Shandy
Club the correspondence awaiting him—
which was usually
heavy—consisted only of a single letter. He
glanced at the address,
which was in a handwriting that he could
not at the moment identify, though
he thought he had seen it
before. He mounted to the smoking-room on the
first floor,
holding it in his hand, and when he had established himself in
his
favourite arm-chair near one of the three windows, drew a small
paper knife from his waistcoat pocket and cut open the envelope.
The letter
began abruptly without any one of the usual forms of
address :
I do not want you to throw this letter aside until you have read it to
the
end, and therefore I mention a fact concerning it which will give
it a
certain interest—even to you. It is written by a man who, when
you
receive it, will be dead—dead by your hand—who has just come
from the grave of his dead wife and dead children, murdered by you
as
surely as if you had drawn the knife across their throats. I wonder
if you
remember me, or if you have added to all the other gifts with
which Heaven,
or Hell, has dowered you, the gift of forgetfulness. I
am the man who read
your book and loved it—loved it for itself, but
loved still more the
heart that I thought I felt was beating behind it, and
wrote of my love
which I was glad to tell—first for all who might read
what I had
written, and then for you alone. I must have written
clumsily, for I seem
to have angered you—how I know not, and because
I had angered you,
you took your revenge. I was a poor man—I told
you I was
poor—but I was rich in a wife and child who loved me, and
whom I
loved ; and I only thought of my poverty when I looked at
them
them, and felt the hardness of the lot to which my physical weakness,
and
perhaps other weakness as well, had led them. Then, because my
wife was
looking forward to the pains and perils of motherhood, and I
had tried in
vain to secure for her something of comfort in her time of
trial, I humbled
myself for her—you know how ; and yet, fool that I
was, I felt no
humiliation, for I thought that I was writing to, as well
as from, a human
heart. Then came the blow which your letter
rendered inevitable, the blow
which bereft me of the scanty work
which had perhaps been done clumsily,
but which I know had been
done honestly, the blow which killed a mother and
an unborn child.
I found her fainting with your letter lying beside her,
and in two days
she was dead. She left me with our little girl for a sole
remaining
possession ; but a child motherless is a child defenceless, and
to-day I
have laid her in her grave, and she is motherless no more. Only I
am
alone, and now I go to join them, if indeed the grave be not the
end
of all. I know not, for you have robbed me of faith as well as of
joy.
Within the last hour, I have with my lips and in my heart, denied
the
God whom I have loved and trusted, even as I loved and trusted the
man who has murdered my dear ones. If there be no God I will not
curse you,
for what would curses avail ? If there be a God I will not
curse you, for
my cause is His cause, and shall not the Judge of all the
earth do right ?
But remember that when you are where I am now—
the unknown now in
which you read these words—I shall summon you
with a summons you
dare not disobey, to stand as a murderer before
His judgment bar.
JOHN ERRINGTON.
Hartmann West had lighted a cigar before he cut the envelope.
It had gone
out. No connoisseur relights a cigar, and Hartmann
West was a connoisseur
not only in tobacco but in many other
things. He considered
himself—quite justly—a proficient in the
art of making life
enjoyable, and his achievements in that art had
so far been successful. He
had enjoyed the writing of his letter
to
to Andrew Mackenzie; it was, as he put it to himself, ” rather
neat. ” But
it came back to him with an unexpected rebound ;
and Major Forth was not
wrong when he talked about a knock-
down blow.
For such it undoubtedly was. West was not, like Mackenzie, a
thick-skinned
and insensitive man. He was, on the contrary, a
bundle of nerves, and the
nerves were well on the surface—an
idiosyncrasy of physique which
accounted for the delicacy and
exquisiteness of sympathetic realisation
that had charmed
Errington in The Phantasies of
Philarete. But he was a colossal
egoist, and when his egoistic
instincts were aroused, the man who
became almost sick when he heard or
read a story of cruelty,
showed himself capable of a sustained and
startling ruthlessness of
malignity. When the mood passed he became again
his ordinary
self—the fastidious, sensitive creature, susceptible to
tortures
which a chance word of any coarser-fibred acquaintance might
inflict. Errington’s letter appealed to the quick imagination
which was his
hell as well as his heaven. It made pictures for
him, and he turned from
one only to find himself face to face
with another. He saw the fainting
woman, the dead child, the
corpse of the man—bloody it might be, for
the tormenting fiend
of fancy provided all possible accessories of
horror—and as he
looked the tide of life ebbed within him.
Next morning this one ghastliness of terror was removed, but its
place was
taken by a new dread. He received a copy of a suburban
news-sheet, the
West London Comet, with a thick line of blue
pencilling surrounding a report headed ” Sad Suicide of a Journal-
ist. ”
The details he knew and those that he did not know were
all there ; and
there, too, was the evidence of a man Williams—
by whom he rightly
conjectured this latest torture was inflicted—
who had told the jury
that Errington’s misfortunes had been due
to
to some unpleasantness connected with a review of a book by Mr.
Hartmann
West, and would evidently have told more had not the
coroner decided that
the matter was irrelevant. The West London
Comet was not taken at the Shandy Club ; but would
not the report,
with this horrible mention of his name, find its way into
more
highly favoured journals ? With trembling hands, which even
brandy had not served to steady, he turned over the papers of that
morning,
and the evening journals of the day before, and, as he
failed to find the
dreaded item, relief slowly came. But the older
terror remained ; the
pictures were still with him ; and though
one had lost its streak of
sanguine colour, they were still lurid
enough. Gradually the very fact upon
which, for an hour, he had
congratulated himself—the fact that the
world knew nothing, but
that he and one unknown man shared the hateful
knowledge
between them—became in itself all but unbearable. Once,
twice,
half a dozen times, he felt that he must tell the story ; but
when
he thought he had nerved himself for the attempt, the words
refused to come.
Three months later, in the morning and evening papers, which
had taken no
notice of the affair at Shepherd’s Bush, there were
leaderettes lamenting,
with grave eloquence, the loss sustained by
English literature in the death
of Mr. Hartmann West. A com-
ment upon these utterances found a place in ”
At the Meridian,”
the column in Noon known to be
written by its accomplished
editor, Mr. Andrew Mackenzie :
” Were there no such emotion as disgust I should feel nothing but
amusement
in the perusal of the eulogies upon the late Mr. Hartmann
West which have
appeared in the Hour and the Morning Gazette. Less
than six months ago the former journal,
in reviewing Mr. West’s
Phantasies of Philarete, declared the book to be ‘
characterised by
pretentiousness, strain, and affectation, ‘ and the latter
authority, with
its
its well-known subtlety of satire, remarked that, ‘ Mr. Hartmann
West’s
extraordinary vogue among the shop-girls of Bermondsey, and
the junior
clerks of Peckham, will probably be maintained by a volume
which is even
richer than its predecessors in shoddy sentiment and
machine-made epigram.
‘ The Hour has now discovered that Mr.
West’s
work presented ‘ a remarkable combination of imaginative
veracity and
distinction of utterance, ‘ and the Gazette mourns
him as
‘ a writer whose death breaks a splendid promise, but whose life
has
left a splendid performance. ‘ The style of these belated eulogists
is
their own ; but their substance seems to have been borrowed from
this journal, which in reviewing the ‘ pretentious shoddy ‘ and
‘
machine-made ‘ work, spoke of it as ‘ one of those books which make
life
better worth living by revealing its possibilities of beauty, which
touch
us by their truth not less than by their tenderness, in which the
lovely
art is all but lost in the lovely nature which the art reveals,
which make
us free of the companionship of a spirit finely touched to
fine issues. ‘ I
am not apt at sudden post-mortem eloquence, and I
have nothing to add to
these words, written while Hartmann West
was still alive, and able to
appreciate the sympathy he was so ready to
give. “
” Well, I never could have believed, ” said a young member of
the Shandy
Club, ” that Mackenzie wrote that review of poor
West’s Phantasies. “
The current issue of Noon had just come in, and,
though it was
before luncheon, Major Forth, who had contracted bad habits
in
Africa and elsewhere, was refreshing himself with whisky and
potash. He looked at the speaker, slowly emptied his tumbler,
and replied,
” I don’t believe it now. “
MLA citation:
Noble, James Ashcroft. “The Phantasies of Philarete.” The Yellow Book, vol. 5, April 1895, pp. 195-225. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/YBV5_noble_phantasies/