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'I will go,' said George, 'but not till you have heard me. I am rich--Elsie is rich--we shall not marry into poverty. The whole situation is entirely changed.'
'Changed,' Elsie repeated, taking George's arm.
'My dear George,' said Mrs. Arundel, when she had heard the whole story--and by cross examination persuaded herself that it was true--'you know on what a just basis my objections were founded. Otherwise, I should have been delighted at the outset.--Kiss me, Elsie.--You have my full consent, children. These remarkable events are Providential.--On Mr. Dering's death or retirement, you will step into an enormous practice. Follow his example. Take no partner till old age compels you.
Keep all the profits for yourself--all.--My dear George, you should be a very happy man. Not so rich, perhaps, as my son-in-law, Sir Samuel, but above the ordinary run of common happiness. As for the past---- We will now go down to lunch.--There is the bell. These emotions are fatiguing.'
CHAPTER VIII
IN HONOUR OF THE EVENT
May one dwell upon so simple a thing as a small family dinner-party? It is generally undramatic and uneventful: it is not generally marked even by a new dish or a bottle of rare wine. Yet there lingers in the mind of every man the recollection of pleasant dinners. I should like to write a Book of Dinners--not a book for the _gourmet_, but a book of memories.
It might be a most delightful volume. There would be in it the school-boys' dinner. I remember a certain dinner at eighteenpence a head, at Richmond, before we had the row in the boat, when we quarrelled and broke the oars over each other's heads, and very nearly capsized: a certain undergraduates' dinner, in which four men--three of whom are now ghosts--joined: the Ramblers' dinner, of lamb chops and bottled ale and mirth and merriment: the two-by-two dinner in the private room, a dainty dinner of sweet lamb, sweet bread, sweet peas, sweet looks, sweet Moselle, and sweet words. Is it really true that one never--never--gets young again? Some people do, I am sure, but they are under promise to say nothing about it. I shall--and then that dinner may perhaps--one cannot say--one never knows--and I suppose--if one was young again--that they would be found just as pretty as they ever were. There is the official dinner, stately and cold: the city dinner, which generally comes to a man when his digestion is no longer what it was: the family dinner, in which the intellect plays so small a part, because no one wastes his fine things on his brothers and sisters: the dinner at which one has to make a speech. Indeed, this Book of Dinners promises to be a most charming volume. I should attempt it, however, with trembling, because, to do it really well, one should be, first of all, a scholar, if only to appreciate things said and spoken, and in order to connect the ill.u.s.trious past with food and drink. Next, he ought to be still young: he certainly must have a proper feeling for wine, and must certainly understand when and why one should be grateful to good Master Cook: he should be a past or present master in the Art of Love and a squire of Dames: he should be good at conversation: he must, in the old language, be a worshipper of Bacchus, Venus, Phoebus Apollo, the Muses nine and the Graces three. He must be no poor weakling, unable to enjoy the good creatures of flesh, fowl, fish, and wine: no boor: and no log insensible to loveliness.
Dinner, which should be a science, has long been treated as one of the Fine Arts. Now every Fine Art, as we all know, has its fashions and its caprices. Those who are old enough to remember the dinners of twenty, thirty, or forty years ago can remember many of their fashions and caprices. In the Thirties, for instance, everything was carved upon the table. It required a man with a strong wrist to give a dinner-party.
Fortunately, a dinner then consisted of few dishes. They drank sherry with dinner, and port afterwards. The champagne, if there was any, was sweet. The guests were bidden for half-past six: they sat down to dinner before seven. At eight the ladies went up-stairs: at half-past ten the men joined them. Their faces were flushed, their shoulders were inclined to lurch, and their speech was the least bit thick. Wonderful to relate, brandy-and-water used to be served to these topers in the drawing-room itself.
Mr. Dering had altered little in his dinner customs. They mostly belonged to the Sixties, with a survival of some belonging to the Thirties. Things were carved upon the sideboard: this was in deference to modern custom: champagne formed an integral part of the meal: but the dinner itself was solid: the cloth after dinner was removed, leaving the dark polished mahogany after the old fashion: the furniture of the room was also in the old style: the chairs were heavy and solid: the walls were hung with a dark crimson paper of velvety texture: the curtains and the carpets were red: there were pictures of game and fruit: the sideboard was as solid as the table.
Checkley the clerk, who was invited as a faithful servant of the House, to the celebration of the new partnership, was the first to arrive.
Dressed in a hired suit, he looked like an undertaker's a.s.sistant: the gloom upon his face heightened the resemblance. Why the partnership caused this appearance of gloom, I know not. Certainly, he could never expect to be made a partner himself. It was perhaps a species of jealousy which filled his soul. He would no longer know so much of the business.
George came with the Mother-in-law Elect and the _fiancee_. Forgiveness, Peace, Amnesty, and Charity sat all together upon the brow of the elder lady. She was magnificent in a dark crimson velvet, and she had a good deal of gold about her arms and neck. Jewish ladies are said to show, by the magnificence of their attire, the prosperity of the business. Why not? It is a form of enjoying success. There are many forms: one man buys books: let him buy books. Another collects pictures. Why not? One woman wears crimson velvet. Why not? In this way she enjoys her wealth and proclaims it. Again, why not? It seems to the philosopher a fond and vain thing to deck the person at all times, and especially fond when the person is middle-aged and no longer beautiful. We are not all philosophers. There are many middle-aged men who are extremely happy to put on their uniform and their medals and their glittering helmets. Mrs.
Arundel wore her velvet as if she enjoyed the colour of it, the richness of it, the light and shade that lay in its folds, and the soft feel of it. She wore it, too, as an outward sign that this was a great occasion.
Her daughter, Lady Dering, came also arrayed in a queenly dress of amber silk with an aigrette of feathers in her hair. To be sure, she was going on somewhere after the dinner. Elsie, for her part, came in a creamy white almost like a bride: but she looked much happier than most brides.
Hilda's husband, Sir Samuel, who was some six or seven years younger than his brother, was in appearance a typical man of wealth. The rich man can no longer, as in the days of good old Sir Thomas Gresham, ill.u.s.trate his riches by costly furs, embroidered doublets, and heavy chains. He has to wear broadcloth and black. Yet there is an air, a carriage, which belongs to the rich man. In appearance, Sir Samuel was tall, like his brother, but not thin like him: he was corpulent: his face was red: he was bald, and he wore large whiskers, dyed black.
The late dissensions were completely forgotten. Hilda embraced her sister fondly. 'My dear,' she whispered, 'we have heard all.
Everything--everything is changed by these fortunate events. They do you the greatest credit.--George'--she took his hand and held it tenderly--'I cannot tell you how happy this news has made us all. You will be rich in the course of years. Sir Samuel was only saying, as we came along----'
'I was saying, young gentleman,' the Knight interrupted, 'that the most beautiful thing about money is the way it develops character. We do not ask for many virtues--only honesty and diligence--from the poor. When a man acquires wealth we look for his better qualities.'
'Yes, indeed,' Hilda murmured. 'His better qualities begin to show.--Elsie, dear, that is a very pretty frock. I don't think I have seen it before. How do you like my dress?'
George accepted this sudden turn in opinion with smiles. He laughed at it afterwards. For the moment it made him feel almost as if he was being rewarded for some virtuous action.
Dinner was announced at seven--such were the old-fashioned manners of this old gentleman. He led in Mrs. Arundel, and placed Elsie on his left. At first, the dinner promised to be a silent feast. The two lovers were not disposed to talk much--they had not yet recovered from the overwhelming and astonishing events of the day. Sir Samuel never talked at the beginning of dinner--besides, there was turtle soup and red mullet and whitebait--it is sinful to divert your attention from these good creatures. His wife never talked at dinner or at any other time more than she could help. Your statuesque beauty seldom does. Talking much involves smiling and even laughing, which distorts the face. A woman must encourage men to talk: this she can do without saying much herself.
Presently Mr. Dering roused himself and began to talk, with a visible effort, first to Mrs. Arundel of things casual: then to Elsie: and then to his brother, but always with an effort, as if he was thinking of other things. And a constraint fell upon the party.
When the cloth was removed and the wine and fruit placed upon the dark and l.u.s.trous board, he filled a gla.s.s and made a kind little speech.
'My Partner,'he said, 'I drink to you. May your connection with the House be prosperous! It is a very great good fortune for me to have found such a Partner.--Elsie, I join you with my Partner. I wish you both every happiness.'
He drained the b.u.mper and sent round the decanters.
Then he began to talk, and his discourse was most strange. 'Had it been,' said his brother afterwards, 'the idle fancies of some crackbrained writing fellow, I could have understood it; but from him--from a steady old solicitor--a man who has never countenanced any kind of nonsense--to be sure he said it was only an illusion. I hope it isn't a softening. Who ever heard of such a man as that having dreams and illusions?'
Certainly no one had ever before heard Mr. Dering talk in this new manner. As a rule, he was silent and grave even at the head of his own table. He spoke little and then gravely. To-night his talk as well as his face was changed. Who would have thought that Mr. Dering should confess to illusions, and should relate dreams, and should be visited by such dreams? Remember that the speaker was seventy-five years of age, and that he had never before been known so much as to speak of benevolence. Then you will understand something of the bewilderment which fell upon the whole company.
He began by raising his head and smiling with a strange and new benignity--but Elsie thought of her portrait. 'We are all one family here,' he said; 'and I may talk. I want to tell you of a very remarkable thing that has recently happened to me. It has been growing, I now perceive, for some years. But it now holds me strongly, and it is one reason why I am anxious to have the affairs of the House in the hands of a younger man. For it may be a sign of the end. At seventy-five anything uncommon may be a sign.'
'You look well, Mr. Dering, and as strong as most men of sixty,' said Mrs. Arundel.
'Perhaps. I feel well and strong. The fact is that I am troubled--or pleased--or possessed--by an Illusion.'
'You with an Illusion?' said his brother.
'I myself. An Illusion possesses me. It whispers me from time to time that my life is wholly spent in promoting the happiness of other people.'
'Well,' said his brother, 'since you are a first-cla.s.s solicitor, and manage the affairs of many people very much to their advantage, you certainly do promote their happiness.'
'Yes, yes--I suppose so. My Illusion further is that it is done outside my business--without any bill afterwards'--Checkley looked up with eyes wide open--'I am made to believe that I am working and living for the good of others. A curious Illusion, is it not?'
The City man shook his head. 'That any man can possibly live for the good of others is, I take it, always and under all circ.u.mstances an Illusion. In the present state of society--and a very admirable state it is'--he rolled his bald head as he spoke and his voice had a rich roll in it--'a man's first duty--his second duty--his third duty--his hundredth duty--is to himself. In the City it is his business to ama.s.s wealth--to roll it up--roll it up'--he expressed the words with feeling--'to invest it profitably--to watch it, and to nurse it as it fructifies--fructifies. Afterwards, when he is rich enough, if ever a man can be rich enough, he may exercise as much charity as he pleases--as he pleases. Charity seems to please some people as a gla.s.s of fine wine'--he ill.u.s.trated the comparison--'pleases the palate--pleases the palate.'
The lawyer listened politely and inclined his head.
'There is at least some method in my Illusion,' he went on. 'You mentioned it. The solicitor is always occupied with the conduct of other people's affairs. That must be admitted. He is always engaged in considering how best to guide his fellow-man through the labyrinthine world. He receives his fellow-man at his entrance into the world, as a ward: he receives him grown up, as a client: he advises him all his life at every step and in every emergency. If the client goes into partnership, or marries, or buys a house, or builds one, or gets into trouble, the solicitor a.s.sists and advises him. When the client grows old, the solicitor makes his will. When the client dies, the solicitor becomes his executor and his trustee, and administers his estate for him. It is thus a life, as I said, entirely spent for other people. I know not of any other, unless it be of medicine, that so much can be said. And think what terrors, what anxieties, what disappointments, the solicitor witnesses and alleviates! Think of the family scandals he hushes up and keeps secret! Good heavens! if a solicitor in large practice were to tell what he knows, think of the terrible disclosures!
He knows every thing. He knows more than a Roman Catholic priest, because his penitents not only reveal their own sins but also those of their wives and sons and friends and partners. And anxiety, I may tell you, makes a man better at confessing than penitence. Sometimes we bring actions at law and issue writs and so forth. Well now: this part of our business, which is disagreeable to us, is actually the most beneficent of any. Because, by means of the cases brought before the High Court of Justice, we remind the world that it must be law abiding as well as law worthy. The Law, in order to win respect, must first win fear. Force comes before order. The memory of force must be kept up. The presence of force must be felt. For instance, I have a libel case just begun. It is rather a bad libel. My libeller will suffer: he will bleed: but he will bleed for the public good, because thousands who are only anxious to libel and slander, to calumniate and defame their neighbours, will be deterred. Oh! it will be a most beneficent case--far reaching--striking terror into the hearts of ill-doers.--Well--this, my friends, is my Illusion. It is, I suppose, one of the many Illusions with which we cheat old age and rob it of its terrors. To everybody else I am a hard-fisted lawyer, exacting his pound of flesh from the unfortunate debtor, and making myself rich at the expense of the creditor.'
'Nonsense about how a man gets rich,' said the man of business. 'He can only get rich if he is capable. Quite right. Let the weak go under. Let the careless and the lazy starve.'
'At the same time,' said Elsie softly, 'it is not all illusion. There are others besides the careless and the lazy----'
'Sometimes,' the old lawyer went on, 'this Illusion of mine--oh! I know it is only Illusion--takes the form of a dream--so vivid that it comes back to me afterwards as a reality. In this dream, which is always the same, I seem to have been engaged in some great scheme of practical benevolence.'
'Practical---- What? You engaged in Practical Benevolence?' the City man asked in profound astonishment. The Illusion was astonishing enough; but to have his brother talk of practical benevolence was amazing indeed.
'Practical benevolence,' repeated Mr. Dering. His voice dropped. His eyes looked out into s.p.a.ce: he seemed as one who narrates a story. 'It is a curiously persistent dream. It comes at irregular intervals; it pleases me while it lasts.--Oh! in the evening after dinner, while one takes a nap in the easy chair, perhaps--it is, as I said, quite vivid.
The action of this dream always takes place in the same room--a large room, plainly furnished, and looking out upon an open s.p.a.ce--I should know it if I saw it--and it fills me with pleasure--in my dream--just to feel that I am--there is no other word for it--diffusing happiness. How I manage this diffusion, I can never remember; but there it is--good solid happiness, such as, in waking moments, one feels to be impossible.'
'Diffusing happiness--you!' said his brother.
'A very beautiful dream,' said Elsie. But no one dared to look in each other's face.
'This strange dream of mine,' continued Mr. Dering, 'does not form part of that little Illusion, though it seems connected with it. And as I said, mostly it comes in the evening. The other day, however, I had it in the afternoon--went to sleep in my office, I suppose.--Did you find me asleep, Checkley? It was on Friday.'
'No. On Friday afternoon you went out.'
'Ah! When I came back, then-- I had forgotten that I went out. Did I go out? Strange! Never mind. This continuous dream opens up a world of new ideas and things which are, I perceive, when I am awake, quite unreal and illusory. Yet they please. I see myself, as I said, diffusing happiness with open hands. The world which is thus made happier consists entirely of poor people. I move among them unseen: I listen to them: I see what they do, and I hear what they say. Mind--all this is as real and true to me as if it actually happened. And it fills me with admiration of the blessed state of poverty. In my dream I pity the rich, with all my heart. To get rich, I think--in this dream--they must have practised so many deceptions----'
'Brother! brother!' Sir Samuel held up both hands.