New Grub Street
into certain meadows forming a compact little valley. One recommendation of this retreat was that it lay sheltered from all winds; to Jasper a wind was objectionable. Along the bottom ran a clear, sh
e along this path, save farm
pleasure there was in watching the sun-flecked sparkle of the water as it flowed over the clean sand and stones. A girl in a yellow-straw hat; yes, and precisely the person he had hoped,
the rail. After the exchange of ordinary greetings, Jasper leaned
said, 'this ash was only just budding, th
s the only tree I can distinguish. Yet,' she added quickly, 'I kne
are t
as the tend
lf when all the
in the "
on't pretend to - though
ly, and seemed about
xperience of the count
I think, have known
. But I am not very rural in temperament. I have really no friends here; either they
ut with perfect simpli
be difficult for her to answer. 'I want to persuade them to try their hands
ss - burdensome?' said Mar
ore so, y
hesi
course, on - on
inly haven't for teaching, that doesn't matter. It's a question of learning a business. I am going throug
her eyes upon the stream, 'm
y career; principally because to have money is to have friends. Year by year, such influence grows of more account. A lucky man will still occasionally succeed by dint of his own honest per
o-day, really good work will
ry work. The quantity turned out is so great that there's no hope for the special attention of the public unless one can afford to advertise hugely. Take the instanc
h
er, prolific man; so are they. But he began with money and friends; he came from Oxford into the thick of advertised people; his name was mentioned in print six times a week before he had wri
true,' said Maria
ere was his opportunity. But he couldn't use it; he had no friends, because he had no money. A book of half that merit, if written by a man in the position of Warbury when he started, would have established the reputation of a lifetime. His influential friends would have referred to it in leaders, in magazine arti
a hesitatin
it in the author's power to make fri
ossibly have got into the right circles, though his character w
out entertaining in return. Now if his wife had brought him only a couple of thousand pounds all might have been well. I should have advised him, in sober seriousness, t
rha
he average man of letters would be
name had escap
an, looking up. 'You
rayed mysel
tter? You have only
me might affect
elayed h
usin's family. I have never met Mr Reardon. But I shouldn't like
acquainted with Mrs Edmund Yule, and that Reardon is my friend. Yet I d
ng about it; I mean, as you ut
lly, and Marian seemed to become suddenly aware of an oddness in the situati
l,' said Jasper. 'May I walk ba
u; I shal
or a few minut
with your signature, Miss Yul
nly help fath
n followed was broken
ffident smile in which lay that suggestion of humour so delightful u
e from school and had an exciting story to tell, with preservation of anonymities. Of course I blurted out a name in the first minute
t w
that I am one of the men who do succeed. But I beg your pardon; you asked me a question. Really, I was only
is marriage with my cousin which
n, averting his look, 'would
think he has bu
being estimated at his right value. It
e children,' said Marian, present
e is bea
woman to be of help
Jasper, looking frankly at her. 'Perhaps I had
ast down
its existence accounts even for the ills that arise from wealth. The poor man is a man labouring
the bridge over the railway li
less than five minutes a London express goes by; I have often
to,' she replie
er trees. Leaning upon the parapet of the bridge, Jasper kept his eye in the westward directi
u h
read force and speed. A blinding rush, and there burst against the bridge a great volley of sunlit steam. Milvain and his companion ran to the opposite parapet, but already the whole tr
should say that was jolly! It enspirits me. It makes me
pposite effect,' fell from
ugh holiday yet. I have been in the country more than a week; a f
re than a we
orrow,' Jasper remarked a propos of nothing. Then he
irst time; I mean when I went to live there, seven years ago. What spirits I
straight f
rly half a year at home. I was meant to be a teacher, but the prospect of entering a school by no means appealed to me. A
ou suc
gone to the dogs, you know; but by when I had been in London a year a pretty clear purpose began to form in me.
n lau
see you at the Brit
ll upon Marian's father, who was walking in t
he moment paying no attention to Jasper. 'I wondered whether I
e Jasper explained how he cam
father?' Marian asked, scru
at I should have gone much further.
Mr Yule; at once he offered leave-taking in the most natura
idly hither and thither, now and then standing to observe a poor worn-out beast, all skin and bone, which had presumably been sent here in the hope that a little more labour might still be exacted fr
by a familiar headache, kept her room; so Jasper and Dora sat down together. Each
sper suggested when they had
you
adly, but an absentmindedness which was commonly observable in her had its effect upon the music. She at length broke
what you said about
ef publishers of that kind of thing, you know; I must look him up - what a mistake it is to neglect any acquaintance! - and get some information out of him. But it's obvious what an immense field there is for a
he characteristics of that new generation; it may br
about the subject?'
ss to know something about every subject
ght to think very seriously about the future. You are aware, Jasp
nd confessing to you that the thought troubles me a little now and then; I shouldn't like to see you two going off governessing
and cultivate your writing faculty. Suppose you could both together earn about a
n't know what M
r than I did yesterday. I've had an
dee
What the help amounts to I can't say. There's something very attractive about her. She quoted a line
walking
to make a paying business of literature. Her qualities are personal. And it's pretty clear to me that the vall
rably. Do you think you will keep
woman that mother really is? Can't
about her, except that she
ecent manners. Of course there may be other obj
sat with a book in the garden, he was sur
d in high spirits, 'that you might like t
by the authoress of 'On the Boards,' and drew attention, with much expenditure of witticism, to the confli
at one e
letters on the sub
looks after the minor notices. Fadge,more suo, charged the other man with a desig
his peculiar
d for a turn along t
mother at the window; will
o a laboured account of the blunder just committed by The Study. It was Alfred's Yule's characteristic that he could do nothing lightha
ng contrast with the taciturn mood he had exhibited yesterday and the
ve him The Study - especially after a man like Henry Hawkridge - passes my comprehension. Did you read a paper of his, a few months back, in The Wayside, a preposterous rehabilitation of Elkanah Settle? Ha! ha! That's what such men are driven to. Elkanah Settle! And he hadn't even a competent acquaintance with his paltry subject. Will you credit that he twice or thrice referred to Settle's reply to "Absalom and Achitophel" by the title of "Absalom Transposed," when every schoolgirl knows that the thing was called "Achitophel Transposed"! This was monstrous enough, but there was something still more contemptible. He positively, I assure you, attributed the play o
ound, and the stoop in his shoulders grew more and more pronounced, until at a little distance one might have taken him for a hunchback. At one poin
the Malvern Hills? No? It contains a coup
evidence of c
I shall ever
rious poetry
tanding, and not without perception of humour. He had read vastly; his memory was a literary cyclopaedia. His failings, obvious
f the walk he made a few discreet inquiries regarding Milvain's literary achievements and prospects, and the frank self-confidence of the replies appeared to
ther and sisters at dinner. 'I suspect it's as much as he can do to keep a footing among th
large way of talking made him t
rom all sides. As likely as not Yule will mention my name to someone. "A young fellow who seems to see his way pretty clear before him." The other man will repeat it to somebody else, "A young fellow whose way is clear befo
the expected hour. Jasper purposely kept out of
ould have grown up to a very different, and in all probability a much happier, existence, for their education would have been limited to the strictly needful, and - certainly in the case of the girls - nothing would have encouraged them to look beyond the simple life possible to a poor man's offspring. But whilst Maud and Dora were still with their homely schoolmistress, Wattleborough saw fit to establish a Girls' High School, and the moderateness of the fees enabled these sisters to receive an intellectual training wholly incompatible with the material conditions of their life. To the relatively poor (who are so much worse off than the poor absolutely) education is in most cases a moc
impulse of both to receive her with unusual friendliness. The habit of reticence could not be at once overcome, and Marian's ow
to their visitor, as the three girls walked in
Marian's reply. 'I have no fr
on
t o
something, but in t
e pretty well, after all,' said Jasp
pate anything e
her to come here again before I go. But it's a pi
t always exhausted his capacity for enjoying the companionship of his mother and sisters, and this time he seemed anxious to get to the end of his holiday. For all that, there was no
ept silence through breakfast, and just as all were abou
to London th
ll exclaimed. 'But
this afternoon
Mrs Milvain and the
Sunday will be too wear
' Maud agree
the house for her engagements in Wattleborough, her
le way with you,
e road, he asked her
say good-bye to the Yul
thought you w
int of a wish on their part that I should see them in L
told them you were not going till Monday, and you do
he didn't,' replied
ind
won't do! You understand that I'm a practical man, and I shall keep clear of da
es down, and smi
ou think fit,' she
turn back. You'll b
the hill on which was John Yule's house. Even if he had purposed making a farewell call, it was still far too early; all he wanted to do was to pass an hour of the
She was in the dining-room; in the
ned lately, and my health, you know, grows so uncertain, and, all things considered, I have been feeling very anxious about the girls
rom his brother in Wattleborough, and this debt was still unpaid; for on the death of Jasper's father repayment of the loan was impossible for William, and since then it had seemed hopeless that the sum would ever be recovered. Th
by law now, you k
o the money, law or no
feeling, any more than of compassion. I'm sorry you wrote like that. You won't
this characteristic remark. Anxiety wei
r thoughtless. If it were only myself I would mak
my best to ask you for no more money. It may or may not be practicable, but I'll have a try. So don't worry. If uncle writes that he can't pay, jus
in drove him forth. Towards eleven o'clock he was again ascending in the direction of John Yule
. 'Just to prove I have complete command of mysel
e. That gentleman had gone in the carriage to W
s Yu
s in which Milvain had not yet seen her, and it had the effect of making him regard her attentively. The smile w
r began, in an animated voice. 'I wanted to say g
g sooner than
k the country air is doing you good; you certainly
better
you again. I shouldn't wonder i
e way as when Jasper spoke with her here before, the palms downward. The beautiful outli
ment, 'that they should come to know
ing at him with the slightest possible smile. 'But perhaps th
y girls are not often invited to corre
jocoseness as civility a
ance towards the window and then another towards the door. '
on the girl's face which, under other circu
y, 'he might just call, or
trouble. It's my own fault, for deciding
ered h
our name in the mag
nk you will ever
her a second time, and strode out of the
inner-time, he informed
o knows but you may live in London some day, and then she might be valuable - morally, I m
Yule's seamed visage should present itself; but no acquaintance approached him. Safe in the corner of his third-class carriage