A Day's Ride Part 9
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"At a moderate cost, but comfortably: tea, rolls, two eggs, and a rumpsteak with fried potatoes."
"What's your name?" said he, taking out his note-book. "I mustn't forget you when I hear of you next."
"For the present, I call myself Potts,--Mr. Potts, if you please."
"Write it here yourself," said he, handing me the pencil. And I wrote in a bold, vigorous hand, "Algernon Sydney-Potts," with the date.
"Preserve that autograph, Captain," said I; "it is in no-spirit of vanity I say it, but the day will come you 'll refuse a ten-pound note for it."
"Well, I'd take a trifle less just now," said he, smiling.
He sat for some time gravely contemplating the writing, and at length, in a sort of half soliloquy, said, "Bob would like him,--he would suit Bob." Then, lifting his head, he addressed me: "I have a brother in command of one of the P. and O. steamers,--just the fellow for _you_. He has got ideas pretty much like your own about success in life, and won't be persuaded that he isn't the first seaman in the English navy; or that he hasn't a plan to send Cherbourg and its breakwater sky-high, at twenty-four hours' warning."
"An enthusiast,--a visionary, I have no doubt," said I, contemptuously.
"Well, I think you might be more merciful in your judgment of a man of your own stamp," retorted he, laughing. "At all events, it would be as good as a play to see you together. If you should chance to be at Malta, or Ma.r.s.eilles, when the _Clarence_ touches there, just ask for Captain Rogers; tell him you know me, that will be enough."
"Why not give me a line of introduction to him?" said I, with an easy indifference. "These things serve to clear away the awkwardness of a self-presentation."
"I don't care if I do," said he, taking a sheet of paper, and beginning 'Dear Bob,'--after which he paused and deliberated, muttering the words 'Dear Bob' three or four times over below his breath.
"'Dear Bob,'" said I aloud, in the tone of one dictating to an amanuensis,--"'This brief note will be handed to you by a very valued friend of mine, Algernon Sydney Potts, a man so completely after your own heart that I feel a downright satisfaction in bringing you together.'"
"Well, that ain't so bad," said he, as he uttered the last words which fell from his pen--"'in bringing you together.'"
"Go on," said I dictatorially, and continued: "'Thrown by a mere accident myself into his society, I was so struck by his attainments, the originality of his views, and the wide extent of his knowledge of life----' Have you _that_ down?"
"No," said he, in some confusion; "I am only at 'entertainments.'"
"I said 'attainments,' sir," said I rebukingly, and then repeating the pa.s.sage word for word, till he had written it--"'that I conceived for him a regard and an esteem rarely accorded to others than our oldest friends.' One word more: 'Potts, from certain circ.u.mstances, which I cannot here enter upon, may appear to you in some temporary inconvenience as regards money----'"
Here the captain stopped, and gave me a most significant look: it was at once an appreciation and an expression of drollery.
"Go on," said I dryly. "'If so,'" resumed I, "'be guardedly cautious neither to notice his embarra.s.sment nor allude to it; above all, take especial care that you make no offer to remove the inconvenience, for he is one of those whose sensibilities are so fine, and whose sentiments sa fastidious, that he could never recover, in his own esteem, the dignity compromised by such an incident.'"
"Very neatly turned," said he, as he re-read the pa.s.sage. "I think that's quite enough."
"Ample. You have nothing more to do than sign your name to it."
He did this, with a verificatory flourish at foot, folded and sealed the letter, and handed it to me, saying--
"If it weren't for the handwriting, Bob would never believe all that fine stuff came from _me_; but you 'll tell him it was after three gla.s.ses of brandy-and-water that I dashed it off--that will explain everything."
I promised faithfully to make the required explanation, and then proceeded to make some inquiries about this brother Bob, whose nature was in such a close affinity with my own. I could learn, however, but little beyond the muttered acknowledgment that Bob was a "queer 'un,"
and that there was never his equal for "falling upon good-luck, and spending it after," a description which, when applied to my own conscience, told an amount of truth that was actually painful.
"There's no saying," said I, as I pocketed the letter, "if this epistle should ever reach your brother's hand, my course in life is too wayward and uncertain for me to say in what corner of the earth fate may find me; but if we _are_ to meet, you shall hear of it. Rogers"--I said, "this you extended to me, at a time that, to all seeming, I needed such attentions--at a time, I say, when none but myself could know how independently I stood as regarded means; and of one thing be a.s.sured, Rogers, he whose caprice it now is to call himself Potts, is your friend, your fast friend, for life."
He wrung my hand cordially--perhaps it was the easiest way for an honest sailor, as he was, to acknowledge the patronising tone of my speech--but I could plainly see that he was sorely puzzled by the situation, and possibly very well pleased that there was no third party to be a spectator of it.
"Throw yourself there on that sofa," said he, "and take a sleep." And with that piece of counsel he left me, and went up on deck.
CHAPTER IX. HIS INTEREST IN A LADY FELLOW-TRAVELLER.
Next mornings are terrible things, whether one awakes to the thought of some awful run of ill-luck at play, or with the racking headache of new port or a very "fruity" Burgundy. They are dreadful, too, when they bring memories--vague and indistinct, perhaps--of some serious altercations, pa.s.sionate words exchanged, and expressions of defiance reciprocated; but, as a measure of self-reproach and humiliation, I know not any distress can compare with the sensation of awaking to the consciousness that our cups have so ministered to imagination that we have given a mythical narrative of ourself and our belongings, and have built up a card edifice of greatness that must tumble with the first touch of truth.
It was a sincere satisfaction to me that I saw nothing of the skipper on that "next morning." He was so occupied with all the details of getting into port, that I escaped his notice, and contrived to land unremarked.
Little sc.r.a.ps of my last night's biography would obtrude themselves upon me, mixed up strangely with incidents of that same skipper's life, so that I was actually puzzled at moments to remember whether "he" was not the descendant of the famous rebel friend of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, and _I_ it was who was sold in the public square at Tunis.
These dissolving views of an evening before are very difficult problems,--not to _you_, most valued reader, whose conscience is not burglariously a.s.saulted by a riotous imagination, but to the poor weak Potts-like organizations, the men who never enjoy a real sensation, or taste a real pleasure, save on the hypothesis of a mock situation.
I sat at my breakfast in the "Goat" meditating these things. The grand problem to resolve was this: Is it better to live a life of dull incidents and commonplace events in one's own actual sphere, or, creating, by force of imagination, an ideal status, to soar into a region of higher conceptions and more pictorial situations? What could existence in the first case offer me? A wearisome beaten path, with nothing to interest, nothing to stimulate me. On the other side lay glorious regions of lovely scenery, peopled with figures the most graceful and attractive. I was at once the a.s.sociate of the wise, the witty, and the agreeable, with wealth at my command, and great prizes within my reach. Illusions all! to be sure; but what are not illusions,--if by that word you take mere account of permanence? What is it in this world that we love to believe real is not illusionary,--the question of duration being the only difference? Is not beauty perishable? Is not wit soon exhausted? What becomes of the proudest physical strength after middle life is reached? What of eloquence when the voice fails or loses its facility of inflection?
All these considerations, however convincing to myself, were not equally satisfactory as regarded others; and so I sat down to write a letter to Crofton, explaining the reasons of my sudden departure, and enclosing him Father d.y.k.e's epistle, which I had carried away with me. I began this letter with the most firm resolve to be truthful and accurate. I wrote down, not only the date, but the day. "'Goat,' Milford," followed, and then, "My dear Crofton,--It would ill become one who has partaken of your generous hospitality, and who, from an unknown stranger, was admitted to the privilege of your intimacy, to quit the roof beneath which the happiest hours of his life were pa.s.sed without expressing the deep shame and sorrow such a step has cost him, while he bespeaks your indulgence to hear the reason." This was my first sentence, and it gave me uncommon trouble. I desired to be dignified, yet grateful, proud in my humility, grieved over an abrupt departure, but sustained by a manly confidence in the strength of my own motives. If I read it over once, I read it twenty times; now deeming it too diffuse, now fearing lest I had compressed my meaning too narrowly. Might it not be better to open thus: "Strike, but hear me, dear Crofton, or, before condemning the unhappy creature whose abject cry for mercy may seem but to increase the presumption of his guilt, and in whose faltering accents may appear the signs of a stricken conscience, read over, dear friend, the entire of this letter, weigh well the difficulties and dangers of him who wrote it, and say, is he not rather a subject for pity than rebuke? Is not this more a case for a tearful forgiveness than for chastis.e.m.e.nt and reproach?"
Like most men who have little habit of composition, my difficulties increased with every new attempt, and I became bewildered and puzzled what to choose. It was vitally important that the first lines of my letter should secure the favorable opinion of the reader; by one unhappy word, one ill-selected expression, a whole case might be prejudiced. I imagined Crofton angrily throwing the epistle from him with an impatient "Stuff and nonsense! a practised hum-b.u.g.g.e.r!" or, worse again, calling out, "Listen to this, Mary. Is not Master Potts a cool hand? Is not this brazening it out with a vengeance?" Such a thought was agony to me; the very essence of my theory about life was to secure the esteem and regard of others. I yearned after the good opinion of my fellow-men, and there was no amount of falsehood I would not incur to obtain it. No, come what would of it, the Croftons must not think ill of me. They must not only believe me guiltless of ingrat.i.tude, but some one whose grat.i.tude was worth having. It will elevate them in their own esteem if they suppose that the pebble they picked up in the highway turned out to be a ruby.
It will open their hearts to fresh impulses of generosity; they will not say to each other, "Let us be more careful another time; let us be guarded against showing attention to mere strangers; remember how we were taken in by that fellow Potts; what a specious rascal he was,--how plausible, how insinuating!" but rather, "We can afford to be confiding, our experiences have taught us trustfulness. Poor Potts is a lesson that may inspire a hopeful belief in others." How little benefit can any one in his own individual capacity confer upon the world, but what a large measure of good may be distributed by the way he influences others.
Thus, for instance, by one well-sustained delusion of mine, I inspire a fund of virtues which, in my merely truthful character, I could never pretend to originate. "Yes," thought I, "the Croftons shall continue to esteem me; Potts shall be a beacon to guide, not a sunken rock to wreck them."
Thus resolving, I sat down to inform them that on my return from a stroll, I was met by a man bearing a telegram, informing me of the dying condition of my father's only brother, my sole relative on earth; that, yielding only to the impulse of my affection, and not thinking of preparation, I started on board of a steamer for Waterford, and thence for Milford, on my way to Brighton. I vaguely hinted at great expectations, and so on, and then, approaching the difficult problem of Father d.y.k.e's letter, I said, "I enclose you the priest's letter, which amused me much. With all his shrewdness, the worthy churchman never suspected how completely my friend Keldrum and myself had humbugged him, nor did he discover that our little dinner and the episode that followed it were the subjects of a wager between ourselves. His marvellous cunning was thus for once at fault, as I shall explain to you more fully when we meet, and prove to you that, upon this occasion at least, he was not deceiver, but dupe!" I begged to have a line from him to the "Crown Hotel, Brighton," and concluded.
With this act, I felt I had done with the past, and now addressed myself to the future. I purchased a few cheap necessaries for the road, as few and as cheap as was well possible. I said to myself, Fortune shall lift you from the very dust of the high-road, Potts; not one advantageous adjunct shall aid your elevation!
The train by which I was to leave did not start till noon, and to while away time I took up a number of the "Times," which the "Goat" appeared to receive at third or fourth hand. My eye fell upon that memorable second column, in which I read the following:--
"Left his home in Dublin on the 8th ult, and not since been heard of, a young gentleman, aged about twenty-two years, five feet nine and a quarter in height, slightly formed, and rather stooped in the shoulders; features pale and melancholy; eyes grayish, inclining to hazel; hair light brown, and worn long behind. He had on at his departure--"
I turned impatiently to the foot of the advertis.e.m.e.nt, and found that to any one giving such information as might lead to his discovery was promised a liberal reward, on application to Messrs. Potts and Co., compounding chemists and apothecaries, Mary's Abbey. I actually grew sick with anger as I read this. To what end was it that I built up a glorious edifice of imaginative architecture, if by one miserable touch of coa.r.s.e fact it would crumble into clay? To what purpose did I intrigue with Fortune to grant me a special destiny, if I were thus to be cla.s.sed with runaway traders or strayed terriers? I believe in my heart I could better have borne all the terrors of a charge of felony than the lowering, debasing, humiliating condition of being advertised for on a reward.
I had long since determined to be free as regarded the ties of country.
I now resolved to be equally so with respect to those of family. I will be Potts no longer. I will call myself for the future--let me see--what shall it be, that will not involve a continued exercise of memory, and the troublesome task of unmarking my linen? I was forgetting in this that I had none, all my wearables being left behind at the Rosary.
Something with an initial P was requisite; and after much canva.s.sing, I fixed on Pottinger. If by an unhappy chance I should meet one who remembered me as Potts, I reserved the right of mildly correcting him by saying, "Pottinger, Pottinger! the name Potts was given me when at Eton for shortness." They tell us that amongst the days of our exultation in life, few can compare with that in which we exchange a jacket for a tailed coat. The spring from the tadpole to the full-grown frog, the emanc.i.p.ation from boyhood into adolescence, is certainly very fascinating. Let me a.s.sure my reader that the bound from a monosyllabic name to a high-sounding epithet of three syllables is almost as enchanting as this a.s.sumption of the _toga virilis_. I had often felt the terrible brevity of Potts; I had shrunk from answering the question, "What name, sir?" from the indescribable shame of saying "Potts;" but Pottinger could be uttered slowly and with dignity. One could repose on the initial syllable, as if to say, "Mark well what I am saying; this is a name to be remembered." With that, there must have been great and distinguished Pottingers, rich men, men of influence and acres; from these I could at leisure select a parentage.
"Do you go by the twelve-fifteen train, sir?" asked the waiter, breaking in upon these meditations. "You have no time to lose, sir."
With a start, I saw it was already past twelve; so I paid my bill with all speed, and, taking my knapsack in my hand, hurried away to the train. There was considerable confusion as I arrived, a crush of cabs, watermen, and porters blocked the way, and the two currents of an arriving and departing train struggled against and confronted each other. Amongst those who, like myself, were bent on entering the station-house, was a young lady in deep mourning, whose frail proportions and delicate figure gave no prospect of resisting the shock and conflict before her. Seeing her so dest.i.tute of all protection, I espoused her cause, and after a valorous effort and much buffeting, I fought her way for her to the ticket-window, but only in time to hear the odious crash of a great bell, the bang of a gla.s.s door, and the cry of a policeman on duty, "No more tickets, gentlemen; the train is starting."
"Oh! what shall I do?" cried she, in an accent of intense agony, inadvertently addressing the words to myself: "What shall I do?"
"There 's another train to start at three-forty," said I, consolingly.
"I hope that waiting will be no inconvenience to you. It is a slow one, to be sure, stops everywhere, and only arrives in town at two o'clock in the morning."
I heard her sob,--I distinctly heard her sob behind her thick black veil as I said this; and to offer what amount of comfort I could, I added, "I, too, am disappointed, and obliged to await the next departure; and if I can be of the least service in any way--"
"Oh, no, sir! I am very grateful to you, but there is nothing--I mean--there is no help for it!" And here her voice dropped to a mere whisper.
A Day's Ride Part 9
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A Day's Ride Part 9 summary
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