Of course I know what
you're thinking; but for me, it would have been possible. I don't
mind confessing to you that the thought troubles me a little now
and then; I shouldn't like to see you two going off governessing in
strangers' houses. All I can say is, that I am very honestly
working for the end which I am convinced will be most
profitable.
I shall not desert you; you needn't fear that. But just put your
heads together, and cultivate your writing faculty. Suppose you
could both together earn about a hundred a year in Grub Street, it
would be better than governessing; wouldn't it?'
'You say you don't know what Miss Yule writes?'
'Well, I know a little more about her than I did yesterday. I've
had an hour's talk with her this afternoon.'
'Indeed?'
'Met her down in the Leggatt fields. I find she doesn't write
independently; just helps her father. What the help amounts to I
can't say. There's something very attractive about her. She quoted
a line or two of Tennyson; the first time I ever heard a woman
speak blank verse with any kind of decency.'
'She was walking alone?'
'Yes. On the way back we met old Yule; he seemed rather grumpy,
I thought. I don't think she's the kind of girl to make a paying
business of literature. Her qualities are personal. And it's pretty
clear to me that the valley of the shadow of books by no means
agrees with her disposition. Possibly old Yule is something of a
tyrant.'
'He doesn't impress me very favourably. Do you think you will
keep up their acquaintance in London?'
'Can't say. I wonder what sort of a woman that mother really is?
Can't be so very gross, I should think.'
'Miss Harrow knows nothing about her, except that she was a
quite uneducated girl.'
'But, dash it! by this time she must have got decent manners. Of
course there may be other objections. Mrs Reardon knows nothing
against her.'
Midway in the following morning, as Jasper sat with a book in
the garden, he was surprised to see Alfred Yule enter by the
gate.
'I thought,' began the visitor, who seemed in high spirits,
'that you might like to see something I received this morning.'
He unfolded a London evening paper, and indicated a long letter
from a casual correspondent. It was written by the authoress of 'On
the Boards,' and drew attention, with much expenditure of
witticism, to the conflicting notices of that book which had
appeared in The Study. Jasper read the thing with laughing
appreciation.
'Just what one expected!'
'And I have private letters on the subject,' added Mr Yule.
'There has been something like a personal conflict between Fadge
and the man who looks after the minor notices. Fadge, more so,
charged the other man with a design to damage him and the paper.
There's talk of legal proceedings. An immense joke!'
He laughed in his peculiar croaking way.
'Do you feel disposed for a turn along the lanes, Mr
Milvain?'
'By all means.—There's my mother at the window; will you come in
for a moment?'
With a step of quite unusual sprightliness Mr Yule entered the
house. He could talk of but one subject, and Mrs Milvain had to
listen to a laboured account of the blunder just committed by The
Study. It was Alfred's Yule's characteristic that he could do
nothing lighthandedly. He seemed always to converse with effort; he
took a seat with stiff ungainliness; he walked with a stumbling or
sprawling gait.
When he and Jasper set out for their ramble, his loquacity was
in strong contrast with the taciturn mood he had exhibited
yesterday and the day before. He fell upon the general aspects of
contemporary literature.
'... The evil of the time is the multiplication of ephemerides.
Hence a demand for essays, descriptive articles, fragments of
criticism, out of all proportion to the supply of even tolerable
work. The men who have an aptitude for turning out this kind of
thing in vast quantities are enlisted by every new periodical, with
the result that their productions are ultimately watered down into
worthlessness.... Well now, there's Fadge.
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