Ogilvie was dead and Dunster drowned at Jutland; of others
who had witnessed or heard of the incident, probably most had forgotten. And
it had been like that, with other incidents, for centuries. He had a sudden
vision of thousands and thousands of boys, from the age of Elizabeth onward;
dynasty upon dynasty of masters; long epochs of Brookfield history that had
left not even a ghostly record. Who knew why the old fifth-form room was
called “the Pit”? There was probably a reason, to begin with; but it had
since been lost—lost like the lost books of Livy. And what happened at
Brookfield when Cromwell fought at Naseby, near by? How did Brookfield react
to the great scare of the “Forty-Five”? Was there a whole holiday when news
came of Waterloo? And so on, up to the earliest time that he himself could
remember—1870, and Wetherby saying, by way of small talk after their
first and only interview: “Looks as if we shall have to settle with the
Prussians ourselves one of these fine days, eh?”
When Chips remembered things like this he often felt that he would write
them down and make a book of them; and during his years at Mrs. Wickett’s he
sometimes went even so far as to make desultory notes in an exercise book.
But he was soon brought up against difficulties—the chief one being
that writing tired him, both mentally and physically. Somehow, too, his
recollections lost much of their flavor when they were written down; that
story about Rushton and the sack of potatoes, for instance—it would
seem quite tame in print, but Lord, how funny it had been at the time! It was
funny, too, to remember it; though perhaps if you didn’t remember Rushton…
and who would, anyway, after all those years? It was such a long time ago…
Mrs. Wickett, did you ever know a fellow named Rushton? Before your time, I
dare say… went to Burma in some government job… or was it Borneo?… Very
funny fellow, Rushton… And there he was, dreaming again before the fire,
dreaming of times and incidents in which he alone could take secret interest.
Funny and sad, comic and tragic, they all mixed up in his mind, and some day,
however hard it proved, he WOULD sort them out and make a book of them…
And there was always in his mind that spring day in ninety-
eight when he had paced through Brookfield village as in some horrifying
nightmare, half struggling to escape into an outside world where the sun
still shone and where everything had happened differently. Young Faulkner had
met him there in the lane outside the School. “Please, sir, may I have the
afternoon off? My people are coming up.”
“Eh? What’s that? Oh yes, yes…”
“Can I miss Chapel, too, sir?”
“Yes… yes…”
“And may I go to the station to meet them?”
He nearly answered: “You can go to blazes for all I care. My wife is dead
and my child is dead, and I wish I were dead myself.”
Actually he nodded and stumbled on. He did not want to talk to anybody or
to receive condolences; he wanted to get used to things, if he could, before
facing the kind words of others. He took his fourth form as usual after
call-over, setting them grammar to learn by heart while he himself stayed at
his desk in a cold, continuing trance. Suddenly someone said: “Please, sir,
there are a lot of letters for you.”
So there were; he had been leaning his elbows on them; they were all
addressed to him by name. He tore them open one after the other, but each
contained nothing but a blank sheet of paper. He thought in a distant way
that it was rather peculiar, but he made no comment; the incident gave hardly
an impact upon his vastly greater preoccupations. Not till days afterward did
he realize that it had been a piece of April-foolery.
They had died on the same day, the mother and the child just born; on
April 1, 1898.
Chips changed his more commodious apartments in School House
for his old original bachelor quarters. He thought at first he would give up
his housemastership, but the Head persuaded him otherwise; and later he was
glad. The work gave him something to do, filled up an emptiness in his mind
and heart. He was different; everyone noticed it. Just as marriage had added
something, so did bereavement; after the first stupor of grief he became
suddenly the kind of man whom boys, at any rate, unhesitatingly classed as
“old.” It was not that he was less active; he could still knock up a half
century on the cricket field; nor was it that he had lost any interest or
keenness in his work. Actually, too, his hair had been graying for years; yet
now, for the first time, people seemed to notice it. He was fifty. Once,
after some energetic fives, during which he had played as well as many a
fellow half his age, he overheard a boy saying: “Not half bad for an old chap
like him.”
Chips, when he was over eighty, used to recount that incident with many
chuckles. “Old at fifty, eh? Umph—it was Naylor who said that, and
Naylor can’t be far short of fifty himself by now! I wonder if he still
thinks that fifty’s such an age? Last I heard of him, he was lawyering, and
lawyers live long—look at Halsbury—umph—Chancellor at
eighty-two, and died at ninety-nine. There’s an—umph—age for you!
Too old at fifty—why, fellows like that are too YOUNG at fifty… I was
myself… a mere infant…”
And there was a sense in which it was true. For with the new century there
settled upon Chips a mellowness that gathered all his developing mannerisms
and his oft-repeated jokes into a single harmony. No longer did he have those
slight and occasional disciplinary troubles, or feel diffident about his own
work and worth. He found that his pride in Brookfield reflected back, giving
him cause for pride in himself and his position. It was a service that gave
him freedom to be supremely and completely himself.
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