I can't sign my name to
a lie.'
Picture the man. Tall, gaunt, with sharp intellectual features,
and eyes of singular beauty, the face of an enthusiast—under given
circumstances, of a hero. Poorly clad, of course, but with rigorous
self-respect; his boots polished, propria manu, to the point
of perfection; his linen washed and ironed by the indefatigable
wife. Of simplest tastes, of most frugal habits, a few books the
only luxury which he deemed indispensable; yet a most difficult man
to live with, for to him applied precisely the description which
Robert Burns gave of his own father; he was 'of stubborn, ungainly
integrity and headlong irascibility'.
Ungainly, for his strong impulses towards culture were powerless
to obliterate the traces of his rude origin. Born in a London
alley, the son of a labourer burdened with a large family, he had
made his way by sheer force of character to a position which would
have seemed proud success but for the difficulty with which he kept
himself alive. His parents were dead. Of his brothers, two had
disappeared in the abyss, and one, Andrew, earned a hard livelihood
as a journeyman baker; the elder of his sisters had married poorly,
and the younger was his blind pensioner. Nicholas had found a wife
of better birth than his own, a young woman with country kindred in
decent circumstances, though she herself served as nursemaid in the
house of the medical man who employed her future husband. He had
taught himself the English language, so far as grammar went, but
could not cast off the London accent; Mrs. Peak was fortunate
enough to speak with nothing worse than the note of the
Midlands.
His bent led him to the study of history, politics, economics,
and in that time of military outbreak he was frenzied by the
conflict of his ideals with the state of things about him. A book
frequently in his hands was Godwin's Political Justice, and
when a son had been born to him he decided to name the child after
that favourite author. In this way, at all events, he could find
some expression for his hot defiance of iniquity.
He paid his income-tax, and felt a savage joy in the privation
thus imposed upon his family. Mrs. Peak could not forgive her
husband, and in this case, though she had but dim appreciation of
the point of honour involved, her censures doubtless fell on
Nicholas's vulnerable spot; it was the perversity of arrogance, at
least as much as honesty, that impelled him to incur taxation. His
wife's perseverance in complaint drove him to stern impatience, and
for a long time the peace of the household suffered.
When the boy Godwin was five years old, the death of his blind
aunt came as a relief to means which were in every sense overtaxed.
Twelve months later, a piece of unprecedented good fortune seemed
to place the Peaks beyond fear of want, and at the same time to
supply Nicholas with a fulfilment of hopeless desires. By the death
of Mrs Peak's brother, they came into possession of a freehold
house and about nine hundred pounds. The property was situated some
twelve miles from the Midland town of Twybridge, and thither they
at once removed. At Twybridge lived Mrs. Peak's elder sister, Miss
Cadman; but between this lady and her nearest kinsfolk there had
been but slight correspondence—the deceased Cadman left her only a
couple of hundred pounds. With capital at command, Nicholas Peak
took a lease of certain fields near his house, and turned farmer.
The study of chemistry had given a special bent to his economic
speculations; he fancied himself endowed with exceptional aptitude
for agriculture, and the scent of the furrow brought all his
energies into feverish activity—activity which soon impoverished
him: that was in the order of things. 'Ungainly integrity' and
'headlong irascibility' wrought the same results for the
ex-dispenser as for the Ayrshire husbandman. His farming came to a
chaotic end; and when the struggling man died, worn out at
forty-three, his wife and children (there was now a younger boy,
Oliver, named after the Protector) had no very bright
prospects.
Things went better with them than might have been anticipated.
To Mrs. Peak her husband's death was not an occasion of unmingled
mourning. For the last few years she had suffered severely from
domestic discord, and when left at peace by bereavement she turned
with a sense of liberation to the task of caring for her children's
future. Godwin was just thirteen, Oliver was eleven; both had been
well schooled, and with the help of friends they might soon be put
in the way of self-support. The daughter, Charlotte, sixteen years
of age, had accomplishments which would perhaps be profitable. The
widow decided to make a home in Twybridge, where Miss Cadman kept a
millinery shop. By means of this connection, Charlotte presently
found employment for her skill in fine needlework. Mrs. Peak was
incapable of earning money, but the experiences of her early
married life enabled her to make more than the most of the pittance
at her disposal.
Miss Cadman was a woman of active mind, something of a
busy-body—dogmatic, punctilious in her claims to respect, proud of
the acknowledgment by her acquaintances that she was not as other
tradespeople; her chief weakness was a fanatical ecclesiasticism,
the common blight of English womanhood.
1 comment