And,
after all, isn't that the right and rational way of looking at the
alphabet?"
And then he went on to wonder whether curiosity, often regarded as
a failing, almost a vice, is not, in fact, one of the greatest
virtues of the spirit of man, the key to all knowledge and all the
mysteries, the very sense of the secret that must be discovered.
With one thing and another: with this treasure of a pupil, with
this enchantment of the strange and beautiful country about him, and
with the extreme kindness and consideration shown him by Mr. and Mrs.
Marsh, Last was in rich clover. He wrote to his friends in town,
telling them of his happy experiences, and Zouch and Noel, meeting by
chance at the Sun, the Dog, or the Triple Tun, discussed their
friend's felicity.
"Proud of the pup," said Zouch.
"And pleased with the prospect," responded Noel, thinking of
Last's lyrics about the woods and the waters, and the scene of the
White House. "Still, timeo Hesperides et dona ferentes. I
mistrust the west. As one of its own people said, it is a land of
enchantment and illusion. You never, know what may happen next. It is
a fortunate thing that Shakespeare was born within the safety line.
If Stratford had been twenty or thirty miles farther west… I don't
like to think of it. I am quite sure that only fairy gold is dug from
Welsh goldmines. And you know what happens to that."
Meanwhile, far from the lamps and rumours of the Strand, Last
continued happy in his outland territory, under the great wood. But
before long he received a shock. He was strolling in the terraced
garden one afternoon between tea and dinner, his work done for the
day; and feeling inclined for tobacco with repose, drifted towards
the stone summer-house—or, perhaps, gazebo—that stood on
the verge of the lawn in a coolness of dark ilex trees. Here one
could sit and look down on the silver winding of the river, crossed
by a grey bridge of ancient stone. Last was about to settle down when
he noticed a book on the table before him. He took it up, and glanced
into it, and drew in his breath, and turning over a few more pages,
sank aghast upon the bench. Mr. Marsh had always deplored his
ignorance of books. "I knew how to read and write and not much more,"
he would say, "when I was thrown into business—at the bottom of
the stairs. And I've been so busy ever since that I'm afraid it's too
late now to make up for lost time." Indeed, Last had noted that
though Marsh usually spoke carefully enough, perhaps too carefully,
he was apt to lapse in the warmth of conversation: he would talk of
"fax," meaning "facts." And yet, it seemed, he had not only found
time for reading, but had acquired sufficient scholarship to make out
the Latin of a terrible Renaissance treatise, not generally known
even to collectors of such things. Last had heard of the book; and
the few pages he had glanced at showed him that it thoroughly
deserved its very bad character.
It was a disagreeable surprise. He admitted freely to himself that
his employer's morals were no business of his. But why should the man
trouble to tell lies? Last remembered queer old Miss Pilliner's
account of her impressions of him; she had detected "a lack of
candour," something reserved behind a polite front of cordiality.
Miss Pilliner was, certainly, an acute woman: there was an undoubted
lack of candour about Marsh.
Last left the wretched volume on the summer-house table, and
walked up and down the garden, feeling a good deal perturbed. He knew
he was awkward at dinner, and said he felt a bit seedy, inclined to a
headache. Marsh was bland and pleasant as usual, and Mrs. Marsh
sympathised with Last. She had hardly slept at all last night, she
complained, and felt heavy and tired. She thought there was thunder
in the air. Last, admiring her beauty, confessed again that Miss
Pilliner had been right. Apart from her fatigue of the moment, there
was a certain tropical languor about her, something of still, burning
nights and the odour of strange flowers.
Marsh brought out a very special brandy which he administered with
the black coffee; he said it would do both the invalids good, and
that he would keep them company. Indeed, Last confessed to himself
that he felt considerably more at ease after the good dinner, the
good wine, and the rare brandy.
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