<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<p class="p2">I do not mean to write at large upon University
life, because the theme has been out–thesed by men
of higher powers. It is a brief Olympic, a Derby
premature, wherein to lose or win depends—training,
health, ability, and industry being granted—upon
the early stoning or late kernelling of the
brain. Without laying claim to much experience,
any one may protest that our brains are worked a
deal too hard at the time of adolescence. We lose
thereby their vivific powers and their originality.
The peach throws off at the critical period all the
fruit it cannot ripen; the vine has no such abjective
prudence, and cripples itself by enthusiasm.</p>
<p>The twins were entered at Merton, and had the
luck to obtain adjoining garrets. Sir Cradock had
begun to show a decided preference for Clayton, as
he grew year by year more and more like his
mother. But this was not the only reason why he
would not listen to some foolʼs suggestion, that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
Cradock, the heir to the property, should be ranked
as a “gentleman–commoner”. That stupid distinction
he left for men who require self–assertion,
admiring as he did the sense and spirit of that
Master, well known in his day, who, to some golden
cad insisting that his son should be entered in that
college as a gentleman–commoner, angrily replied,
“Sir, <i>all</i> my commoners are gentlemen”.</p>
<p>But the brothers were very soon parted. Clayton
got sleeved in a scholarʼs gown, while Cradock
still fluttered the leading–strings. “<i>Et tunicæ
manicas</i>—you effeminate Viley”! said Cradock,
admiring hugely, when his twin ran up to show
himself off, after winning a Corpus scholarship;
“and the governor wonʼt allow me a chance of a
parasol for my elbows”. Sir Cradock, a most
determined man, and a very odd one to deal with,
had forbidden his elder son to stand for any
scholarship, except those few which are of the
University corporate. “A youth of your expectations”,
he exclaimed, with a certain bitterness, for
he often repined in secret that Clayton was not the
heir, “a boy placed as you are, must not compete
for a poor young ladʼs <i>viaticum</i>. You may go in
for a University scholarship, though of course you
will never get one; an examination does good, I
have heard, to the unsuccessful candidates. But
donʼt let me hear about it, not even if, by some
accident, you should be the lucky one”. Craddy
was deeply hurt; he had long perceived his fatherʼs
partiality for the son more dashing, yet more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
effeminate, more pretentious, and less persistent.
So Cradock set his heart upon winning Craven,
Hertford, or Ireland, and never even alluding to it
in the presence of his father. Hence it will be
evident that the youth was proud and sensitive.</p>
<p>“Amy <i>amata, peramata a me</i>”, cried the parson to
his daughter, now a lovely girl of sixteen, straight,
slender, and well–poised; “how glad and proud we
ought to be of Claytonʼs great success”!</p>
<p>“Pa, dear, he would never have got it, I am
quite certain of that, if Cradock had been allowed
to go in; and I think it is most unfair, shamefully
unjust, that because he is the eldest son he is never
to have any honour”. And Amy coloured brilliantly
at the warmth of her own championship;
but her father could not see it.</p>
<p>“So I am inclined to think”—John Rosedew
was never positive, except upon great occasions—“perhaps
I should say perpend, if I were fond of
hybrid English. I donʼt mean about the unfairness,
Amy; for I think I should do the same if I
were in Sir Cradockʼs place. I mean that our
Crad would have got it, instead of Clayton, with
health and fortune favouring. But it stands upon
a razorʼs edge, <i>ἐπὶ ξυροῦς ἵσταται ἀκμῆς</i>. You can
construe that, Amy”?</p>
<p>“Yes, pa, when you tell me the English. How
the green is coming out on the fir–trees! So faint
and yet so bright. Oh, papa, what Greek sub–significance,
as you sometimes call it, is equal to
that composition”?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, my poppet, I am so short–sighted, I
would much rather have a triply composite
verb—— ”</p>
<p>“Than three good kisses from me, daddy?
Well, there they are, at any rate, because I know
you are disappointed”. And the child, herself
more bitterly disappointed, as becomes a hot
partisan, ran away to sit under a sprawling larch,
just getting new nails on its fingers, for the spring
was awaking early.</p>
<p>It was not more than a week after this, and not
very far from All–Foolsʼ–day, when Clayton, directly
after chapel, rushed into Cradockʼs garret, hot,
breathless, and unphilosophical. Cradock, calm
and thoughtful, as he usually was, poked his head
through the open slide of the dusthole called a
scoutʼs room, and brought out three willow–pattern
plates, a little too retentive of the human impress,
and an extra knife and fork, dark–browed at the
tip of the handle. Then he turned up a corner of
tablecloth, where it cherished sombre memories of
a tearful teapot, and set the mustard–pot to control
it. Nor long before he doubled the coffee in the
strainer of the biggin, and shouted “Corker”!
thrice, far as human voice would gravitate, down
the well of the staircase. Meanwhile Master
Clayton stood fidgeting, and doffed not his
scholarly toga. Corker, the scout, a short fat
man, came up the stairs with dignity and indignation
contending. He was amazed that any freshman
“should have the cheek to holler so”. Mr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
Nowell was such a quiet young man, that the scout
looked for some apology. “Corker, a commons of
bread and butter, and a cold fowl and some tongue.
Be quick now, before the buttery closes. And, as
I see I am putting you out in your morning work,
get a quart of ale at your dinner–time”. “Yes, sir,
to be sure, sir; I wish all the gentlemen was as
thoughtful”.</p>
<p>“No, Craddy, never mind that”, cried his brother,
reddening richly, for Clayton was fair as a
lady, “I only want to speak to you about—well,
perhaps, you know what it is I have come for. Is
that fellow gone from the door”?</p>
<p>“I am sure I donʼt know. Go and look yourself.
But, dear Viley, what is the matter”?</p>
<p>“Oh, Cradock, you can so oblige me, and it
canʼt matter much to you. But to me, with nothing
to look to, it does make such a difference”.</p>
<p>Cradock never could bear to hear this—that his
own twin–brother should talk, as he often did, so
much in the pauper strain. And all the while
Clayton was sure of 50,000<i>l.</i> under their motherʼs
settlement. But Crad was full of wild generosity,
and had made up his mind to share Nowelhurst, if
he could do so, with his brother. He began to
pull Claytonʼs gown off; he would have blacked
his shoes if requested. He always thought himself
Vileyʼs prime minister.</p>
<p>“Whatever it is, my boy, Viley, you know I
will do it for you, if it is only fair and honourable”.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Oh, it is no great thing. I was sure you would
do it for me. To do just a little bit under your
best in this hot scrimmage for the Ireland. I am
not much afraid of any man, Crad, except you,
and Brown, of Balliol”.</p>
<p>“Viley, I am very sorry that you have asked
me such a thing. Even if it were in other ways
straightforward, I could not do it, for the sake of
the father, and Uncle John, and little Amy”.</p>
<p>“Donʼt you know that the governor doesnʼt
want <i>you</i> to get it? You are talking nonsense,
Cradock, downright nonsense, to cover your own
selfishness. And that frizzle–headed Amy, indeed”!</p>
<p>“I would rather talk nonsense than fraud, Clayton.
And I canʼt help telling you that what you
say about my father may be true, but is not
brotherly; and your proposal does you very little
honour; and I never could have thought it of you;
and I will do my very utmost. And as for Amy,
indeed, she is too good for you to speak of—and—and—— ”
He was highly wroth at the sneer about
Amyʼs hair, which he admired beyond all reason,
as indeed he did every bit of her, but without
letting any one know it. He leaned upon the
table, with his thumb well into the mustard–pot.
This was the first real quarrel with the brother he
loved so much; and it felt like a skewer poked
into his heart.</p>
<p>“Well, elder brother by about two seconds”,
cried Clayton, twitching his plaits up well upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
his coat–collar. “Iʼll do all I can to beat you. And
I hope Brown will have it, not you. Thereʼs the
cash for my commons. I know you canʼt afford
it, until you get a scholarship”.</p>
<p>Clayton flung half–a–crown upon the table, and
went down the stairs with a heavy tramp, knocking
over a dish with the college arms on, wherein
Corker was bringing the fowl and the tongue.
Corker got all the benefit of the hospitable doings,
and made a tidy dinner out of it, for Cradock
could eat no breakfast. It was the first time bitter
words had passed between the brothers since the
little ferments of childhood, which are nothing
more than sweetword the moment they settle down.
And he doubted himself; he doubted whether
he had not been selfish about it.</p>
<p>It was the third day of the examination, and
when he appeared at ten oʼclock among the forty
competitors, he was vexed anew to see that Clayton
had removed to a table at the other end of the
room, so as not to be even near him. The piece
of Greek prose which he wrote that morning dissatisfied
him entirely; and then again he rejoiced
at the thought that Viley need not be afraid of
him. He had never believed in his chance of success,
and went in for the scholarship to please
others and learn the nature of the examination.
Next year he might have a fairer prospect; this
year—as all the University knew—Brown, of
Balliol, was sure of it.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, by the afternoon he was in good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
spirits again, and found a mixed paper which suited
him as if Uncle John had set it. One of the
examiners had been, some twenty years ago, a
pupil of John Rosedew, and this, of course, was a
great advantage to any successor alumnus; though
neither of them knew the other. It is pleasant to
see how the old ideas germinate and assimilate, as
the olive and the baobab do, after the fires of many
summers.</p>
<p>Clayton, a placable youth (even when he was
quite in the wrong, as in the present instance),
came to Craddyʼs rooms that evening, begged him
not to apologise for his expressions of the morning,
and compared notes with him upon the doings of
the day.</p>
<p>“Bless you, Crad”, he cried, after a glass of
first–rate brown sherry—not the vile molassied
stuff, thick as the sack of Falstaff, but the genuine
thing, with the light and shade of brown olives in
the sunset, and not to be procured, of course, from
any Oxonian wine–dealer;—“oh, Crad, if we could
only wallop that Brown, of Balliol, between us, I
should not care much which it was. He has
booked it for such a certainty, and does look so
cocky about it. Did you see the style he walked
off, before hall, arm in arm with a Master of Arts,
and spouting his own iambics”?</p>
<p>“First–rate ones, I dare say, Viley. Have a
pipe, old fellow. After all, it doesnʼt matter much.
Folk who have never been in them think a deal
the most of these things. The wine–merchant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
laughs at beeswing; and so, I suppose, it is with all
trades”. Cradock was not by any means prone to
the discourse sententious; and the present lapse
was due, no doubt, to the reaction ensuing upon
his later scene with Viley, wherein each had promised
heartily to hold fast by the brotherhood.</p>
<p>On the following Saturday morning, John Rosedewʼs
face flushed puce–colour as he opened his
letters at breakfast–time. “Hurrah! Amy, darling;
hurrah, my child! <i>Terque quaterque, et
novies evoe!</i> Eat all the breakfast, melimel; I
wonʼt tell you till I come back”.</p>
<p>“Oh, wonʼt you, indeed”? cried Amy, with her
back against the door and her arms in mock grimness
folded. “I rather think you will, papa; unless
you have made up your mind to choke me. And
you are half way towards it already”.</p>
<p>John saw that peculiar swell of her throat which
had frightened him so often—her dear mother had
died of bronchitis, and he knew nothing of medical
subjects—and so he allayed her excitement at
once, gave her over to Miss Eudoxia, who was late
in her bedroom as usual, and then set off at his
utmost speed to tell his old friend, Sir Cradock.
And a fine turn of speed he still could show,
though the whiskers under his college–cap (stuck
on anyhow in the hurry) were as white as the
breast of a martin quivering under the eaves.
Since he lost his wife he had never cared to walk
fast, subsiding into three miles an hour, as thoughtful
and placid men will do, when they begin to thumb<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
their waistcoats. But now through the waking life
of “the Chase”, where the brown fern–stalks bent
over the Ammon horn of the lifting frond, and
the fescue grass was beading rough with dew
already, here and among the rabbit–holes, nimbly
dodging the undermine, ran as hard as a boy
of twelve, the man of threescore, John Rosedew.
Without stopping to knock as usual, he burst in
upon Sir Cradock, now sitting all alone at his simple,
old–fashioned breakfast. Classical and theological
training are not locomotive, as we all know to
our cost; and the rector stood gasping ever so
long, with both hands pressed to his side.</p>
<p>“Why, John; quick, quick! You frighten
me. Is your house on fire”?</p>
<p>“Old fellow—old fellow; such news! Shake
hands—ever since the <i>charta forestæ</i>; shake hands
again. Oh, I feel rather sick; pray excuse me;
<i>ἄνω κάτα στρέφεται</i>”.</p>
<p>“What is it, John? Do be quick. I must send
for Mrs. OʼGaghan and the stomach–pump”. Biddy
was now the licensed doctoress of the household,
and did little harm with her simples, if she failed
of doing good.</p>
<p>“<i>Times</i> there? Open it; look, University
news! Crad and Clayton”.</p>
<p>Wondering, smiling, placidly anxious, Sir Cradock
tore open the paper, and found, after turning
a great many corners, the University news. Then
he read out with a trembling voice, after glancing
over it silently:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“The Ireland scholarship has been awarded to
Cradock Nowell, of Merton College. Proxime
accessit Clayton Nowell, scholar of Corpus Christi.
Unless we are misinformed, these gentlemen are
twin–brothers”.</p>
<p class="ppq6 p1">“Grintie, grintie, grunt,<br/>
Oos be arl tew blunt;<br/>
Naw oose Hampshire hogs,<br/>
But to zhow the way in bogs”.</p>
<p class="pn1">So John Rosedew quoted in the fulness of his
glory from an old New Forest rhyme. Johnʼs
delight transcended everything, because he had
never expected it. He had taken his own degree
ere ever the Ireland was heard of; but three pupils
of his had won it while he was still in residence.
Of that he had not thought much. But now to
win it by proxy in his extreme old age, as he began
to consider it, and from all the crack public schoolmen,
and with his own pet alumni, whom no one
else had taught anything—such an Ossa upon Pelion,
such an Olympus on Ossa—no wonder that the
snow of his whiskers shook and the dew trembled
under his eyelids.</p>
<p>Sir Cradock, on the other hand, had never a
word to say, but turned his head like one who waits
for a storm of dust to go by.</p>
<p>“Why, Cradock, old friend, what on earth is
the matter? You donʼt seem at all delighted”.</p>
<p>“Yes, I am, of course, John; as delighted as I
ought to be. But I wish it had been Viley; he
wants it so much more, and he is so like his
mother”.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“So is Crad; every bit as much; an enlarged
and grander portrait. Canʼt you see the difference
between a large heart and a mere good one?
Will no one ever appreciate my noble and simple
Craddy”?</p>
<p>John Rosedew spoke warmly, and was sorry
before the breath from his lips was cold. Not
that he had no right to say it, but because he felt
that he had done far more harm than good.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span></p>
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