The shop was in its right appropriate
place. To the secret race of collectors always ravenously desiring to get something
for much less than its real value, the window in Riceyman Steps was irresistible.
And all manner of people, including book-collectors, passed along King’s Cross
Road in the course of a day. And all the collectors upon catching sight of the shop
exclaimed in their hearts: ‘What a queer spot for a bookshop! Bargains!
…’ Moreover, the business was of old date and therefore had firmly
established connexions quite extra-local. Scores of knowing persons knew about it,
and were proud of their knowledge. ‘What!’ they would say with affected
surprise to acquaintances of their own tastes. ‘You don’t know Riceyman
Steps, King’s Cross Road? Best hunting-ground in London!’ The name
‘Riceyman’ on a signboard, whose paint had been flaking off for twenty
years, also enhanced the prestige of the shop, for it proved ancient local
associations. Riceyman must be of the true ancient blood of Clerkenwell.
The customer, with his hands behind him
and his legs somewhat apart, was staring at a case of calf-bindings. A short,
carefully dressed man, dapper and alert, he had the air neither of a bookman nor of
a member of the upper-middle class.
‘Sorry to keep you waiting. I just
had to slip out, and I’ve nobody else here,’ said the bookseller quietly
and courteously, but with no trace of obsequiousness.
‘Not at all!’ replied the
customer. ‘I was very interested in the books here.’
The bookseller, like many shopkeepers a
fairly sure judge of people, perceived instantly that the
customer must have acquired deportment from somewhere after adolescence, together
with the art of dressing. There was abruptness in his voice, and the fact was that
he had learnt manners above his original station in a strange place –
Palestine, under Allenby.
‘I suppose you haven’t got
such a thing as a Shakspere in stock; I mean a pretty good one?’
‘What sort of a Shakspere?
I’ve got a number of Shaksperes.’
‘Well, I don’t quite know
… I’ve been thinking for a long time I ought to have a
Shakspere.’
‘Illustrated?’ asked the
bookseller, who had now accurately summed up his client as one who might know
something of the world, but who was a simpleton in regard to books.
‘I really haven’t
thought.’ The customer gave a slight good-humoured snigger. ‘I suppose
it would be nice to have pictures to look at.’
‘I have a good clean Boydell, and
a Dalziel. But perhaps they’d be rather big.’
‘Um!’
‘You can’t hold them, except
on a desk or on your knee.’
‘Ah! That wouldn’t do! Oh,
not at all!’ The customer, who was nonplussed by the names mentioned, snatched
at the opportunity given to decline them.
‘I’ve got a nice little
edition in eight volumes, very handy, with outline drawings by Flaxman, and nicely
printed. You don’t often see it. Not like any other Shakspere I know of. Quite
cheap too.’
‘Um!’
‘I’ll see if I can put my
hand on it.’
The shop was full of bays formed by
bookshelves protruding at right-angles from the walls. The first bay was well
lighted and tidy; but the others, as they receded into the gloomy backward of the
shop, were darker and darker and untidier and untidier. The
effect was of mysterious and vast populations of books imprisoned for ever in
everlasting shade, chained, deprived of air and sun and movement, hopeless,
resigned, martyrized. The bookseller stepped over piles of cast books into the
farthest bay, which was carpeted a foot thick with a disorder of volumes, and
lighted a candle.
‘You don’t use the electric
light in that corner,’ said the client, briskly following. He pointed to a
dust-covered lamp in the grimy ceiling.
‘Fuse gone. They do go,’ the
bookseller answered blandly; and the blandness was not in the least impaired by his
private thought that the customer’s remark came near to impudence. Searching,
he went on: ‘We’re not quite straight here yet. The truth is, we
haven’t been straight since 1914.’
‘Dear me! Five years!’
Another piece of good-humoured
cheek.
‘I suppose you couldn’t step
in to-morrow?’ the bookseller suggested, after considerable groping and
spilling of tallow.
‘Afraid not,’ said the
customer with polite reluctance. ‘Very busy … I was just passing and it
struck me.’
‘The Globe edition is very good,
you know … Standard text. Macmillans. Nothing better of the sort. I
could sell you that for three-and-six.’
‘Sounds promising,’ said the
customer brightly.
The bookseller blew out the candle and
dusted one hand with the other.
‘Of course it’s not
illustrated.’
‘Oh, well, after all, a
Shakspere’s for reading, isn’t it?’ said the customer,
for whom Shakspere was a volume, not a man.
While the bookseller was wrapping up the
green Globe Shakspere in a creased bit of brown paper with an addressed label on it
– he put the label inside – the customer cleared his throat and said
with a nervous laugh:
‘I think you
employ here a young charwoman, don’t you?’
The bookseller looked up in mild
surprise, peering. He was startled and alarmed, but his feelings seldom appeared on
his face.
‘I do.’ He thought:
‘What is this inquisitive fellow getting at? It’s not what I call
manners, anyhow.’
‘Her name’s Elsie, I think.
I don’t know her surname.’
The bookseller went on with his packing
and said naught.
‘As I’m here I thought I
might as well ask you,’ the customer continued with a fresh nervous laugh.
‘I ought to explain that my name’s Raste, Dr Raste, of Myddelton Square.
Daresay you’ve heard of me. From your name your family belongs to the
district?’
‘Yes,’ agreed the
bookseller. ‘I do.’
He was very proud of the name Riceyman,
and he did not explain that it was the name only of his deceased uncle, and that his
own name was Earlforward.
‘I’ve got a lad in my
service,’ the doctor continued.
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