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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. — THE CAREER PREVAILS. </h2>
<p>There is an interval of two years and a half and the story resumes with a
much maturer Mr. Lewisham, indeed no longer a youth, but a man, a legal
man, at any rate, of one-and-twenty years. Its scene is no longer little
Whortley embedded among its trees, ruddy banks, parks and common land, but
the grey spaciousness of West London.</p>
<p>And it does not resume with Ethel at all. For that promised second letter
never reached him, and though he spent many an afternoon during his first
few months in London wandering about Clapham, that arid waste of people,
the meeting that he longed for never came. Until at last, after the manner
of youth, so gloriously recuperative in body, heart, and soul, he began to
forget.</p>
<p>The quest of a “crib” had ended in the unexpected fruition of
Dunkerley’s blue paper. The green-blue certificates had, it seemed,
a value beyond mural decoration, and when Lewisham was already despairing
of any employment for the rest of his life, came a marvellous blue
document from the Education Department promising inconceivable things. He
was to go to London and be paid a guinea a week for listening to lectures—lectures
beyond his most ambitious dreams! Among the names that swam before his
eyes was Huxley—Huxley and then Lockyer! What a chance to get! Is it
any wonder that for three memorable years the Career prevailed with him?</p>
<p>You figure him on his way to the Normal School of Science at the opening
of his third year of study there. (They call the place the Royal College
of Science in these latter days.) He carried in his right hand a shiny
black bag, well stuffed with text-books, notes, and apparatus for the
forthcoming session; and in his left was a book that the bag had no place
for, a book with gilt edges, and its binding very carefully protected by a
brown paper cover.</p>
<p>The lapse of time had asserted itself upon his upper lip in an
inaggressive but indisputable moustache, in an added inch or so of
stature, and in his less conscious carriage. For he no longer felt that
universal attention he believed in at eighteen; it was beginning to dawn
on him indeed that quite a number of people were entirely indifferent to
the fact of his existence. But if less conscious, his carriage was
decidedly more confident—as of one with whom the world goes well.</p>
<p>His costume was—with one exception—a tempered black,—mourning
put to hard uses and “cutting up rusty.” The mourning was for
his mother, who had died more than a year before the date when this story
resumes, and had left him property that capitalized at nearly a hundred
pounds, a sum which Lewisham hoarded jealously in the Savings Bank, paying
only for such essentials as university fees, and the books and instruments
his brilliant career as a student demanded. For he was having a brilliant
career, after all, in spite of the Whortley check, licking up paper
certificates indeed like a devouring flame.</p>
<p>(Surveying him, Madam, your eye would inevitably have fallen to his collar—curiously
shiny, a surface like wet gum. Although it has practically nothing to do
with this story, I must, I know, dispose of that before I go on, or you
will be inattentive. London has its mysteries, but this strange gloss on
his linen! “Cheap laundresses always make your things blue,”
protests the lady. “It ought to have been blue-stained, generously
frayed, and loose about the button, fretting his neck. But this gloss ...”
You would have looked nearer, and finally you would have touched—a
charnel-house surface, dank and cool! You see, Madam, the collar was a
patent waterproof one. One of those you wash over night with a
tooth-brush, and hang on the back of your chair to dry, and there you have
it next morning rejuvenesced. It was the only collar he had in the world,
it saved threepence a week at least, and that, to a South Kensington
“science teacher in training,” living on the guinea a week
allowed by a parental but parsimonious government, is a sum to consider.
It had come to Lewisham as a great discovery. He had seen it first in a
shop window full of indiarubber goods, and it lay at the bottom of a glass
bowl in which goldfish drifted discontentedly to and fro. And he told
himself that he rather liked that gloss.)</p>
<p>But the wearing of a bright red tie would have been unexpected—a
bright red tie after the fashion of a South-Western railway guard’s!
The rest of him by no means dandiacal, even the vanity of glasses long
since abandoned. You would have reflected.... Where had you seen a crowd—red
ties abundant and in some way significant? The truth has to be told. Mr.
Lewisham had become a Socialist!</p>
<p>That red tie was indeed but one outward and visible sign of much inward
and spiritual development. Lewisham, in spite of the demands of a studious
career, had read his Butler’s Analogy through by this time, and some
other books; he had argued, had had doubts, and called upon God for
“Faith” in the silence of the night—“Faith”
to be delivered immediately if Mr. Lewisham’s patronage was valued,
and which nevertheless was not so delivered.... And his conception of his
destiny in this world was no longer an avenue of examinations to a remote
Bar and political eminence “in the Liberal interest (D.V.).”
He had begun to realise certain aspects of our social order that Whortley
did not demonstrate, begun to feel something of the dull stress deepening
to absolute wretchedness and pain, which is the colour of so much human
life in modern London. One vivid contrast hung in his mind symbolical. On
the one hand were the coalies of the Westbourne Park yards, on strike and
gaunt and hungry, children begging in the black slush, and starving
loungers outside a soup kitchen; and on the other, Westbourne Grove, two
streets further, a blazing array of crowded shops, a stirring traffic of
cabs and carriages, and such a spate of spending that a tired student in
leaky boots and graceless clothes hurrying home was continually impeded in
the whirl of skirts and parcels and sweetly pretty womanliness. No doubt
the tired student’s own inglorious sensations pointed the moral. But
that was only one of a perpetually recurring series of vivid
approximations.</p>
<p>Lewisham had a strong persuasion, an instinct it may be, that human beings
should not be happy while others near them were wretched, and this gay
glitter of prosperity had touched him with a sense of crime. He still
believed people were responsible for their own lives; in those days he had
still to gauge the possibilities of moral stupidity in himself and his
fellow-men. He happened upon “Progress and Poverty” just then,
and some casual numbers of the “Commonweal,” and it was only
too easy to accept the theory of cunning plotting capitalists and
landowners, and faultless, righteous, martyr workers. He became a
Socialist forthwith. The necessity to do something at once to manifest the
new faith that was in him was naturally urgent. So he went out and
(historical moment) bought that red tie!</p>
<p>“Blood colour, please,” said Lewisham meekly to the young lady
at the counter.</p>
<p>“<i>What</i> colour?” said the young lady at the counter,
sharply.</p>
<p>“A bright scarlet, please,” said Lewisham, blushing. And he
spent the best part of the evening and much of his temper in finding out
how to tie this into a neat bow. It was a plunge into novel handicraft—for
previously he had been accustomed to made-up ties.</p>
<p>So it was that Lewisham proclaimed the Social Revolution. The first time
that symbol went abroad a string of stalwart policemen were walking in
single file along the Brompton Road. In the opposite direction marched
Lewisham. He began to hum. He passed the policemen with a significant eye
and humming the <i>Marseillaise</i>....</p>
<p>But that was months ago, and by this time the red tie was a thing of use
and wont.</p>
<p>He turned out of the Exhibition Road through a gateway of wrought iron,
and entered the hall of the Normal School. The hall was crowded with
students carrying books, bags, and boxes of instruments, students standing
and chattering, students reading the framed and glazed notices of the
Debating Society, students buying note-books, pencils, rubber, or drawing
pins from the privileged stationer. There was a strong representation of
new hands, the paying students, youths and young men in black coats and
silk hats or tweed suits, the scholar contingent, youngsters of Lewisham’s
class, raw, shabby, discordant, grotesquely ill-dressed and awe-stricken;
one Lewisham noticed with a sailor’s peaked cap gold-decorated, and
one with mittens and very genteel grey kid gloves; and Grummett the
perennial Official of the Books was busy among them.</p>
<p>“Der Zozalist!” said a wit.</p>
<p>Lewisham pretended not to hear and blushed vividly. He often wished he did
not blush quite so much, seeing he was a man of one-and-twenty. He looked
studiously away from the Debating Society notice-board, whereon “G.E.
Lewisham on Socialism” was announced for the next Friday, and
struggled through the hall to where the Book awaited his signature.
Presently he was hailed by name, and then again. He could not get to the
Book for a minute or so, because of the hand-shaking and clumsy friendly
jests of his fellow-“men.”</p>
<p>He was pointed out to a raw hand, by the raw hand’s experienced
fellow-townsman, as “that beast Lewisham—awful swat. He was
second last year on the year’s work. Frightful mugger. But all these
swats have a touch of the beastly prig. Exams—Debating Society—more
Exams. Don’t seem to have ever heard of being alive. Never goes near
a Music Hall from one year’s end to the other.”</p>
<p>Lewisham heard a shrill whistle, made a run for the lift and caught it
just on the point of departure. The lift was unlit and full of black
shadows; only the sapper who conducted it was distinct. As Lewisham peered
doubtfully at the dim faces near him, a girl’s voice addressed him
by name.</p>
<p>“Is that you, Miss Heydinger?” he answered. “I didn’t
see, I hope you have had a pleasant vacation.”</p>
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