. and to find inanity at the first turn. Here was
a man of recognized character and achievement disclosed as an
absurd and dreary chatterer. And it was probably like this
everywhere—from east to west, from the bottom to the top of the
social scale.
A great discouragement fell on me. A spiritual drowsiness.
Giles' voice was going on complacently; the very voice of the
universal hollow conceit. And I was no longer angry with it. There
was nothing original, nothing new, startling, informing, to expect
from the world; no opportunities to find out something about
oneself, no wisdom to acquire, no fun to enjoy. Everything was
stupid and overrated, even as Captain Giles was. So be it.
The name of Hamilton suddenly caught my ear and roused me
up.
"I thought we had done with him," I said, with the greatest
possible distaste.
"Yes. But considering what we happened to hear just now I think
you ought to do it."
"Ought to do it?" I sat up bewildered. "Do what?"
Captain Giles confronted me very much surprised.
"Why! Do what I have been advising you to try. You go and ask
the Steward what was there in that letter from the Harbour Office.
Ask him straight out."
I remained speechless for a time. Here was something unexpected
and original enough to be altogether incomprehensible. I murmured,
astounded:
"But I thought it was Hamilton that you . . ."
"Exactly. Don't you let him. You do what I tell you. You tackle
that Steward. You'll make him jump, I bet," insisted Captain Giles,
waving his smouldering pipe impressively at me. Then he took three
rapid puffs at it.
His aspect of triumphant acuteness was indescribable. Yet the
man remained a strangely sympathetic creature. Benevolence radiated
from him ridiculously, mildly, impressively. It was irritating,
too. But I pointed out coldly, as one who deals with the
incomprehensible, that I didn't see any reason to expose myself to
a snub from the fellow. He was a very unsatisfactory steward and a
miserable wretch besides, but I would just as soon think of
tweaking his nose.
"Tweaking his nose," said Captain Giles in a scandalized tone.
"Much use it would be to you."
That remark was so irrelevant that one could make no answer to
it. But the sense of the absurdity was beginning at last to
exercise its well-known fascination. I felt I must not let the man
talk to me any more. I got up, observing curtly that he was too
much for me—that I couldn't make him out.
Before I had time to move away he spoke again in a changed tone
of obstinacy and puffing nervously at his pipe.
"Well—he's a—no account cuss—anyhow. You just—ask him.
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