I dined at a cheap chop-house on my way back, and reached home
about nine o’clock.
Rain was just beginning to fall as I came in, and the wind was
rising. It promised an ugly night. The alley looked dismal and dreary,
and the hall of the house, as I passed through it, felt chilly as a
tomb. It was the first stormy night I had experienced in my new
quarters. The draughts were awful. They came criss-cross, met in the
middle of the room, and formed eddies and whirlpools and cold silent
currents that almost lifted the hair of my head. I stuffed up the
sashes of the windows with neckties and odd socks, and sat over the
smoky fire to keep warm. First I tried to write, but found it too
cold. My hand turned to ice on the paper.
What tricks the wind did play with the old place! It came rushing
up the forsaken alley with a sound like the feet of a hurrying crowd
of people who stopped suddenly at the door. I felt as if a lot of
curious folk had arranged themselves just outside and were staring up
at my windows.
Then they took to their heels again and fled whispering and
laughing down the lane, only, however, to return with the next gust of
wind and repeat their impertinence. On the other side of my room a
single square window opens into a sort of shaft, or well, that measures
about six feet across to the back wall of another house. Down this
funnel the wind dropped, and puffed and shouted. Such noises I never
heard before. Between these two entertainments I sat over the fire in
a great-coat, listening to the deep booming in the chimney. It was
like being in a ship at sea, and I almost looked for the floor to rise
in undulations and rock to and fro.
Oct. 12.—I wish I were not quite so lonely—and so poor. And yet I
love both my loneliness and my poverty. The former makes me appreciate
the companionship of the wind and rain, while the latter preserves my
liver and prevents me wasting time in dancing attendance upon women.
Poor, ill-dressed men are not acceptable “attendants”.
My parents are dead, and my only sister is—no, not dead exactly,
but married to a very rich man. They travel most of the time, he to
find his health, she to lose herself. Through sheer neglect on her
part she has long passed out of my life. The door closed when, after an
absolute silence of five years, she sent me a cheque for £50 at
Christmas. It was signed by her husband! I returned it to her in a
thousand pieces and in an unstamped envelope. So at least I had the
satisfaction of knowing that it cost her something! She wrote back
with a broad quill pen that covered a whole page with three lines,
“You are evidently as cracked as ever, and rude and ungrateful into
the bargain.” It had always been my special terror lest the insanity of
my father’s family should leap across the generations and appear in
me. This thought haunted me, and she.knew it.
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