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                <title>The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly, Volume 13 April 1897</title>
                <title type="YBV13_thorp_immortal"/>
                <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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                    <date>2020</date>
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                            <persName>Henry Harland</persName>
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                        <author>Sidney Benson Thorp</author>
                        <title>An Immortal</title>
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                            <publisher>John Lane</publisher>
                            <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
                            <pubPlace>New York</pubPlace>
                            <date>April 1897</date>
                            <biblScope>Thorp, Sidney Benson. "An Immortal." <emph rend="italic"
                                >The Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 13, April 1897, pp. 156-166. <emph
                                    rend="italic">Yellow Book Digital Edition</emph>, edited by Dennis
                                Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>,
                                Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2020. 
                                https://1890s.ca/YBV13_thorp_immortal/ </biblScope>
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                <pb n="173"/>
            
                <head><title level="a"> An Immortal </title></head> 

                <byline>By <docAuthor><ref target="#SBT">      
                    
                  Sidney Benson Thorp </ref></docAuthor></byline> 
                

<p>THE dusky little row comprising No. 79 quivered like a jelly <lb/>
                    as railway or post-office vans, making a short cut between  <lb/>
                    two principal thoroughfares, roared over the boulders of Wickham  <lb/>
Road, N.W. </p>

                                <p>To the left front shone a public-house, another to the right.  <lb/>
                                                    Before each an Italian musician had set up his rest (for it was ten  <lb/>
                                                    o'clock and a fine, warm night), and thence, reckless of unhappy  <lb/>
                                                    beings at the confluence, in friendly rivalry they teemed forth  <lb/>
                                                    contradictory tunes. From a neighbouring street floated tepid  <lb/>
                                                    air charged with the vibrations of inflated brass; the voices of the  <lb/>
                                                    inhabitants, seeking on their doorsteps comparative cool at the  <lb/>
                                                    close of a tropical day, fantastically varied the echoes. Linked  <lb/>
                                                    bands of frolicsome youth patrolled beneath the window of No. 79,  <lb/>
                                                    shouting a parody of Wagner wedded to words by an imitator of  <lb/>
                                                    Mr. George R. Sims&#x2014;the latest success of the halls. Splutters  <lb/>
of gurgling laughter betrayed the whereabouts of amorous pairs.</p> 

                                <p>And the man staring from the open window of the first-floor  <lb/>
front neither saw nor heard. </p>

                                <p>Within the room a pale circle of light fell, from beneath the  <lb/>
                                                    opaque shade of a single candle, directly upon a litter of manuscript  <lb/>
and a few odd volumes of standard literature. The feebler rays </p>

                                <fw type="catchword"> reflected </fw>
                                <pb n="174"/>
                                <fw type="runningHead">By Sidney Benson Thorp <fw type="pageNum">157</fw> </fw>

                                <p>reflected thence disclosed the furniture indispensable for man's  <lb/>
                                                    dual existence : a narrow bed, from beneath which the rim of a  <lb/>
                                                    bath protruded ; the table, and a couple of chairs. The walls  <lb/>
were unadorned, the boards were bare. </p>

                                <p>The appearance of Henry Longton's volume had been the  <lb/>
                                                    literary event of a season. The new man had been recognised as  <lb/>
                                                    standing in a solitude unapproachable by the twittering mob of a  <lb/>
                                                    prolific generation. A great poet, who chanced to be also himself  <lb/>
                                                    a great critic, had dared to stake his reputation upon the future of  <lb/>
                                                    the new Immortal. And so for a while he had lived in a hashish  <lb/>
                                                    dream of exultation. He knew his achievements to be high ; and  <lb/>
                                                    as he wandered by day or night through howling thoroughfares,  <lb/>
                                                    lonely amid the turgid waves of half-evolved humanity, he forgot  <lb/>
                                                    the cruel side of life, and hugged himself in the warm cloak of  <lb/>
                                                    flattering memories : the tumult of the traffic sounded drums and  <lb/>
trumpets to his song. </p>

                                <p>Importunate came the hour when he must set forth once more  <lb/>
                                                    to produce. A royalty on a limited edition may mount to a  <lb/>
                                                    handsome dole of pocket-money, but it is not a chartered company.  <lb/>
                                                    Longton's small capital had long since melted away ; and he sat  <lb/>
                                                    down, therefore, to write immortal verse for the liquidation of his  <lb/>
landlady's bill. </p>

                                <p>The time had been when a mere act of attention sufficed to  <lb/>
                                                    the erection of jewelled palaces from the piled-up treasures of his  <lb/>
                                                    brain. Now, to his dismay, the most assiduous research could  <lb/>
                                                    discover among the remnants nothing but the oft-rejected, the  <lb/>
                                                    discoloured, and the flawed. The heavy wrath of the gods had  <lb/>
                                                    fallen upon him, and he was dumb : he must betake himself to the  <lb/>
                                                    merest hack-work of anonymous journalism j and the bitterest  <lb/>
                                                    drop in the cup of this set-back was the reflection that the tide  <lb/>
was ebbing for one whom nature had framed unfit to profit by its </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> flood. </fw>
                                                <pb n="175"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">158</fw> An Immortal </fw>

                                <p>flood. A poet and no man is a crushed worm endowed with  <lb/>
understanding. </p>

                                <p>A tinkling hansom drew up at the door, and a moment after a  <lb/>
                                                    well-dressed man came lightly up the stairs. He welcomed him  <lb/>
                                                    self with a breezy confidence that suited well with his pleasant  <lb/>
                                                    voice and handsome face, lighted all the candles he could find in  <lb/>
                                                    his friend s store-cupboard and, finally, reclined upon the bed ;  <lb/>
                                                    while his host, without any remonstrance against these revolu-  <lb/>
                                                    tionary proceedings, hastened to produce a bottle, a couple or  <lb/>
tumblers, and a half-empty box of his visitor's own cigars. </p>

                                <p>The brave shine of seventeen candles (ingeniously fastened to  <lb/>
                                                    the mantelboard with a drop of their own wax) revealed a notable  <lb/>
                                                    contrast between the friends, suggesting the not uncommon cir- <lb/> 
                                                    cumstance of an intimacy cemented by contrasting traits. The  <lb/>
                                                    new comer was a man of extremely advantageous exterior ; his  <lb/>
                                                    masculine beauty of a type that is familiar among Englishmen, but  <lb/>
                                                    seldom so perfectly exampled. Longton, on the other side, was  <lb/>
                                                    contemptibly plain ; nor was his barbarous shapelessness of parts  <lb/>
                                                    redeemed even by such ensign of superior intelligence as he might  <lb/>
                                                    justly have claimed to distinguish him from the general man. His  <lb/>
                                                    mean face was dingy with a three days growth ; the opening of his  <lb/>
                                                    coarse lips disclosed sparse fragments of discoloured teeth ; his eyes  <lb/>
                                                    shone with a distressful expression of diffidential self-esteem ; the  <lb/>
                                                    greasy skin was unpleasantly diversified with patches of unwhole  <lb/>
                                                    some red. His accustomed bearing was characterised by a deference  <lb/>
                                                    that was servile without being humble ; but among the few with  <lb/>
                                                    whom he was intimate he betrayed a self-assertive petulance which  <lb/>
                                                    might not be confounded with courage. That Freddy Beaumont,  <lb/>
                                                    in spite of these defects, had never ceased to revere and to befriend  <lb/>
                                                    the solitary creature was the most amiable feature in his otherwise  <lb/>
tolerably selfish and purposeless life. </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> "And </fw>
                                                <pb n="176"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead">By Sidney Benson Thorp <fw type="pageNum">159</fw> </fw>

                                <p>" And what,* he presently demanded, " might be the sense of  <lb/>
                                                    this document ?"&#x2014;producing, as he spoke, a crumpled scrap. </p>

                                <p>" I wanted particularly to see you," replied the poet, who lisped  <lb/>
disagreeably. </p>

                                <p>" So much I gathered : the appeal is in the name of the Deity."  <lb/>
</p>
<p>" It was urgent." </p>

                                <p>" Very. I expected to find serpents coiling round the chairs  <lb/>
                                                    and a fat toad squatting on the mantel-piece. It is nothing of  <lb/>
that kind ? " </p>

                                <p>" Nothing, nothing," replied the other in a tone of distressful  <lb/>
impatience. </p>

<p>Well ? " </p>

                                <p>The poet strained his eyes helplessly up and around, with diffi- <lb/> 
                                                    culty disjoined his sticky lips, wrung his clammy hands together, and  <lb/>
at last, in an insecure voice and with a singular hesitancy, asked : </p>

<p>" Are you fond of pictures ? " </p>

                                <p>" No," rejoined Freddy, placidly ; " but the first cousin of the  <lb/>
wife of our gardener has a tame elephant." </p>

                                <p>" That is fortunate," answered Longton, suppressing with an  <lb/>
                                                    effort the irritation which his friend's witticisms rarely failed to  <lb/>
                                                    stir up. " Putting the elephant aside, however, for the moment&#x2014;<lb/>
the fact is, I am in a difficulty." </p>

                                <p>" My dear fellow, why couldn't you say so at once ? What's  <lb/>
the demned total ? </p>

                                <p>A van, the property of the Midland Railway Company, had  <lb/>
                                                    made rapid approach, and the dialogue had risen in proportion on  <lb/>
                                                    a swift crescendo. At this moment Freddy made as if he were  <lb/>
                                                    clinging for his life to a bucker. When the turmoil had partially  <lb/>
                                                    subsided&#x2014;&#x2014;</p>

                                <p>" A cheque won't serve," replied the poet, shaking his head  <lb/>
sadly. </p>

                                                <p>The Yellow Book&#x2014;Vol. XIII. K</p> 
                                
                                                <fw type="catchword"> Anything </fw>
                                                <pb n="177"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">160</fw> An Immortal </fw>

                                <p>" Anything in reason, you know, I am always ready to do for  <lb/>
you," the other reassured him. </p>

<p>"This is easy," cried the poet, "and it is not unreasonable." 
</p>
                                <p>"Just tell me what it is you want," said Beaumont, "and you  <lb/>
may depend on its being done." </p>

<p>"I am going to place my happiness in your hands." 
</p>
<p>" Snakes ! What, a woman ? " 
</p>
                                <p>Exerting himself once more to master his nerves, the other <lb/> 
continued : </p>

<p>" Do you know the Madonna degli Ansidei ? : 
</p>
                                <p>" Never heard of the lady. Where s she on? But really this  <lb/>
                                                    is very new&#x2014;very new and unexpected ! " And his face shaped  <lb/>
                                                    itself to an appropriate but displeasing expression of masculine  <lb/>
archness. </p>

                                <p>"The Madonna degli Ansidei, " the other explained with  <lb/>
                                                    laborious precision, though within the decayed slippers his toes  <lb/>
                                                    were curled into a knot, " is a picture, painted some years ago by  <lb/>
                                                    one Raphael Sanzio, an Italian gentleman, and at present housed  <lb/>
                                                    in a public building which stands (for the greater convenience of  <lb/>
                                                    exploring Londoners) within a stone's throw of the Alhambra  <lb/>
                                                    and Empire Theatres. Do you think&#x2014;&#x2014;</p>

                                <p>"Right you are," responded Freddy, cheerily. "I don't know  <lb/>
                                                    it&#x2014;the picture&#x2014;of course ; but I suppose one of the official  <lb/>
persons would condescend to point it out. What then ? </p>

                                <p>"You will find it in the third gallery ; it faces the entrance;  <lb/>
                                                    and the name is written beneath. You can read, I think you  <lb/>
say ? " </p>

<p>" Oh, shut up ! Well, what am I to do ? Annex the thing ? " 
</p>
                                <p>"Precisely; if you can bring it away conveniently, without  <lb/>
attracting attention." </p>

                                                <p>" My dear chap&#x2014;&#x2014;" 
</p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> " Otherwise </fw>
                                                <pb n="178"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead">By Sidney Benson Thorp <fw type="pageNum">161</fw> </fw>

                                <p>" Otherwise I shall be satisfied if you will devote yourself, I  <lb/>
                                                    won't say to admiring it, but to observing it closely for a quarter  <lb/>
of an hour." 
</p>
                                <p>" And therewith, as by a miracle, the Philistine shall put off his  <lb/>
                                                    skin and the barbarian wash away his spots ; is that the hope ?  <lb/>
                                                    Now, I take this real kind of you, little boy ; and it pains  <lb/>
                                                    me to have to assure you that I am incorrigible : you'll have to  <lb/>
                                                    put up with me as I am." And twisting up his lips, he joined  <lb/>
his pipe to a passing choir : </p>

                                <p><emph rend="indent">". . . mahnd 'aow ye ga-ow ! </emph> <lb/>
<emph rend="indent">Nahnteen jolly good boys, all in a ra-ow." </emph></p>
<p>
There was a pause. </p>

                                <p>" From four o clock to-morrow afternoon till a quarter past,"  <lb/>
resumed the petitioner, gazing fixedly past his guest. </p>

                                <p>Freddy's blue eyes opened childishly. " What the devil are  <lb/>
you up to ? " he demanded curiously. </p>

                                <p>" I have an engagement," stammered the poet. A flow of  <lb/>
blood flushed his face and ebbed. </p>

<p>" You had better keep it, I suggest." 
</p>
                                <p>" I can't : don't you see ? " he wailed, and threw out his hands  <lb/>
with a gesture of despair. </p>

                                <p>" Why ? Who's the party ? I haven't a dream what you are  <lb/>
driving at, I tell you." </p>

                                                <p>" To meet&#x2014;to meet&#x2014;the Madonna," he replied desperately.  <lb/>
" And you must represent me." </p>

                                <p>The excitement of the moment lent an unwonted rigidity to  <lb/>
                                                    the crazy form, which to the young man's eyes, as he looked at  <lb/>
him pitifully, seemed to render it yet more lamentable. </p>

                                                <p>" My dear fellow," he remonstrated, " don't you think&#x2014;<lb/>
                                                                    seriously, you know&#x2014;you had better knock it off for a bit&#x2014;the </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> absinthe </fw>
                                                <pb n="179"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">162</fw> An Immortal </fw>

                                <p>absinthe or chloral or whatever it is ? Now, give it up, there's a  <lb/>
                                                    dear old chap. Look here," he added, laying a kind hand upon  <lb/>
                                                    the other's shoulder, " get shaved and into some decent clothes, and  <lb/>
                                                    come along to my chambers. I'll put you up for to-night, and  <lb/>
                                                    to-morrow we'll run down to a little place I know on the coast :  <lb/>
a week of it will make a new man of you." </p>

<p>The poet started up, a prodigy of wrath. </p>

                                <p>" Ass ! " he exclaimed. " It is life and death, I tell you. You  <lb/>
                                                    call yourself a friend ; will you do this <emph rend="italic">nothing</emph> for me ? I ask  <lb/>
you for the last time." </p>
<p>
                    " No." The answer was given in a tone of quiet obstinacy  <lb/>
                    which, seldom heard by Freddy's intimates, never failed to carry  <lb/>
                    conviction. " I will go no such fool's errand," he added, " for  <lb/>
                    any man. And now I must be off. Good-bye. I'll look round  <lb/>
again in a day or two, and I hope I shall find a rational creature." </p>
<p>
                    For a moment, while he held the handle, he faltered ; the  <lb/>
                    spectacle might have moved commiseration ; but hardening his  <lb/>
                    heart&#x2014; </p>

                                <p>"It's too damned silly," he muttered, as he descended the steep  <lb/>
stairs. </p>

                                <p>The poet heard him give a direction to the driver and presently  <lb/>
                                                    the clatter of hoofs, as the hansom turned and tinkled away south  <lb/>
wards. </p>

<p>* * * * * </p>

                                <p>Quarter after quarter chimed from the church of St. Pancras,  <lb/>
                                                    and the solitary still sat crouching over the table. Involuntarily  <lb/>
                                                    from the bitterness of present despair his mind strayed back into  <lb/>
                                                    the past, and by an almost orderly survey reviewed the tissue of  <lb/>
                                                    its web ; picking out from it the gilded strands that here and  <lb/>
                                                    there diversified the dun&#x2014;the day when the long-sought publisher  <lb/>
                                                    was found, the first handling of the precious volume, the article  <lb/>
</p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> in </fw>
                                                <pb n="178"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead">By Sidney Benson Thorp <fw type="pageNum">163</fw> </fw>

<p>
                    in the <emph rend="italic">National</emph> of which it furnished the subject. For a space  <lb/>
                    he doted upon the brilliant imagination that had conceived these  <lb/>
                    choice things and brought them forth. Then he was overwhelmed  <lb/>
                    by the sense of present barrenness and of the defects that must in  <lb/>
any case for ever link his days with solitude. </p>
<p>
                    He rose and extinguished the candle-flare upon the mantelpiece,  <lb/>
                    then from a worn despatch-box withdrew a faggot of letters.  <lb/>
                    They dated over two years : the last from that very interning. He  <lb/>
                    read each one through ; raised it devoutly for a moment to his  <lb/>
                    quivering mouth ; and held it in the flame till it was consumed.  <lb/>
The last ran : </p>

                                                <p>" A strange idea of yours, my Poet&#x2014;but what you tell me I shall  <lb/>
                                                    do. To-morrow, then, I am to see the face I have searched a  <lb/>
                                                    hundred crowds to find : for I should have known it, never doubt, if  <lb/>
                                                    once chance had brought us near. Faces mirror minds : that never  <lb/>
                                                    fails : and your mind, how well I know it ! I am not to speak, you  <lb/>
                                                    say, and that is hard. Yet I am humble and submit. In this, as in  <lb/>
all else, I am your glad handmaid." </p>

                                <p>With glistening eyes he re-read the words ; then, with a groan,  <lb/>
                                                    held this letter also in the flame. The fire spread along the edge  <lb/>
                                                    and marched in a tremulous blue curve across the sheet, leaving  <lb/>
                                                    charred ruin behind. He gently placed the unbroken tinder upon  <lb/>
                                                    the table and allowed the flame to consume the corner by which  <lb/>
                                                    he had held it. While he hesitated to mix these ashes with the  <lb/>
                                                    rest, his eye lit upon the tumbler. He crushed the brittle remnant  <lb/>
                                                    into the glass, pounding it with his ringers till it was mere dust.  <lb/>
                                                    Upon this he poured the contents of a phial ; and having filled up  <lb/>
                                                    the goblet from a carafe, stirred the contents with the end of a  <lb/>
                                                    quill. He held the glass up towards the candle and watched the  <lb/>
ashes circling and sinking in the yellow liquid. </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"><emph rend="italic"> " I have</emph> </fw>
                                                <pb n="179"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">164</fw> An Immortal </fw>

                                <p><emph rend="italic">" I have eaten ashes as It were bread,</emph>" he murmured (as if to  <lb/>
fulfil the magic), "<emph rend="italic">and have mingled my drink with weeping</emph>." </p>
<p>
                    He placed the draught upon the table, and kneeling at the low  <lb/>
window-sill, looked out upon the road. </p>

                                <p>The clamour thence had grown louder as the hour drew near  <lb/>
                                                    to midnight ; the choruses more boisterous and less abject to the  <lb/>
                                                    conventions of time and tune. Above the din of perpetual harsh  <lb/>
                                                    chatter, on this side and that, rose shrill voices into the extreme  <lb/>
                                                    register of denunciation and vituperative challenge, buoyed higher  <lb/>
                                                    to each response by antiphonal remonstrance in a lower octave.  <lb/>
                                                    A mingled line of young men and women, in various stages of  <lb/>
                                                    incipient intoxication, wavered past, and beneath the window of  <lb/>
No. 79, attained the honeyed climax of their song : </p>

                                <p><emph rend="indent">" She was one of the Early Birds, </emph> <lb/>
<emph rend="indent">And I was one o the Worms."</emph> </p>

                                <p>The solitary lodger closed and bolted the window, and pulled  <lb/>
the blind well down. </p>

<p>***** 
</p>
                                <p>Upon Freddy's mind the last view of the unhappy young man  <lb/>
                                                    had left an impression which he would gladly have shaken off. It  <lb/>
                                                    would be too much, indeed, to assert that the memory chased  <lb/>
                                                    sleep from his pillow, but it was a fact&#x2014;and he noted it with  <lb/>
                                                    surprise&#x2014;that even eight hours of dreamless slumber proved  <lb/>
                                                    impotent to efface it. By noon, though still resolved that friend  <lb/>
                                                    ship should exact no irrational concession from common sense, he  <lb/>
                                                    began to be aware that his purpose was less strenuously set than  <lb/>
                                                    at breakfast-time he had supposed it to be. The attempt to  <lb/>
                                                    stiffen it ruined his lunch ; the last effort to hold out diminished  <lb/>
                                                    the value of his smoke ; and by three o clock he owned him  <lb/>
self vanquished. He presently despatched a telegram to his </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> arbitrary</fw>
                                                <pb n="180"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead">By Sidney Benson Thorp <fw type="pageNum">165</fw> </fw>

                                <p>arbitrary friend and strolled down Piccadilly towards Trafalgar  <lb/>
Square. </p>

                                <p>A little while he wandered, with a sense of reposeful well-being,  <lb/>
                                                    through the wide rooms ; sharing their spaciousness with some  <lb/>
                                                    half-score of travellers from the Continent or the States ; for it  <lb/>
                                                    was the height of the season, and to lovers of art there was the  <lb/>
                                                    Academy. Then, having found the Raphael of which he had  <lb/>
                                                    come in search, with a little grimace he settled himself, as the  <lb/>
clock of St. Martin s struck four, full facing it upon a chair. </p>

                                <p>Determined, now that he had gone so far, to fulfil to the utter  <lb/>
                                                    most his friend s eccentric request, he focussed his eyes resolutely  <lb/>
                                                    upon the masterpiece. "I will absorb culture," he thought ; "it  <lb/>
is good form." And he proceeded to concentrate his mind. </p>

                                <p>But, good as was his will, he found it impossible to stir up in  <lb/>
                                                    himself any poignant interest ; nor could he help repining against  <lb/>
                                                    the wayward taste of his friend, which had selected as the object  <lb/>
                                                    of his study the inspired incongruities of this mediaeval work,  <lb/>
                                                    rather than a cheerful canvas representing an Epsom crowd, which  <lb/>
                                                    had laid hold upon his imagination in one of the chambers devoted  <lb/>
                                                    to the British and Modern Schools. Indeed, such was the tedium  <lb/>
                                                    of this futile search after occult beauties that five minutes of the  <lb/>
                                                    fifteen had barely sped before he was pressingly aware of a head in  <lb/>
                                                    unstable equilibrium. The nod aroused him, and the next  <lb/>
moment he was wide-awake. </p>

                                <p>From the gallery on his right hand as he sat, from behind a  <lb/>
                                                    screen which masked the opening, fluttered the panting figure of  <lb/>
                                                    a girl. Her slender shape sloped forward as if the little feet were  <lb/>
                                                    clogs upon a buoyant soul ; her hands were pressed crosswise  <lb/>
                                                    beneath her throat ; cloud fleeces of evening gold pursued one  <lb/>
                                                    another across her forehead, her cheek, her neck, as she stood  <lb/>
gazing with shining eyes upon his face, her dewy lips apart. </p>

                                                <fw type="catchword"> An </fw>
                                                <pb n="181"/>
                                                <fw type="runningHead"><fw type="pageNum">166</fw> An Immortal </fw>
                                                
<p>
                    An older women, her companion, emerged and drew her away.  <lb/>
                    " How sweet ! " murmured the student. " Wonder who she  <lb/>
can be ? " And he arose. </p>

<p>***** </p>

                                <p>It was almost midnight when Freddy drove into Wickham  <lb/>
Road, swelling with great words, primed with confidences. </p>

                                <p>About the door of 79 it surprised him to find a loose semi- <lb/> 
                                                    circular crowd, radiating from the sheen of police-buttons. With  <lb/>
                                                    some difficulty he made his way to the officer, and inquired of him  <lb/>
the reason of the assemblage. </p>

                                <p>The constable eyed him deliberately, and answered with com- <lb/> 
posure : </p>

                                <p>" Oh, ther's been a bit of a tragedy : lodger's done for 'i'sulf.  <lb/>
They'll stop here all night, some of 'em." </p>
<p>
And he spat wearily upon the pavement. </p>
                
        
                
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