<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XI. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>r. Barbecue-Smith
was gone. The motor had whirled him away to the station; a faint smell of
burning oil commemorated his recent departure. A considerable detachment
had come into the courtyard to speed him on his way; and now they were
walking back, round the side of the house, towards the terrace and the
garden. They walked in silence; nobody had yet ventured to comment on the
departed guest.</p>
<p>“Well?” said Anne at last, turning with raised inquiring eyebrows to
Denis.</p>
<p>“Well?” It was time for someone to begin.</p>
<p>Denis declined the invitation; he passed it on to Mr Scogan. “Well?” he
said.</p>
<p>Mr. Scogan did not respond; he only repeated the question, “Well?”</p>
<p>It was left for Henry Wimbush to make a pronouncement. “A very agreeable
adjunct to the week-end,” he said. His tone was obituary.</p>
<p>They had descended, without paying much attention where they were going,
the steep yew-walk that went down, under the flank of the terrace, to the
pool. The house towered above them, immensely tall, with the whole height
of the built-up terrace added to its own seventy feet of brick façade. The
perpendicular lines of the three towers soared up, uninterrupted,
enhancing the impression of height until it became overwhelming. They
paused at the edge of the pool to look back.</p>
<p>“The man who built this house knew his business,” said Denis. “He was an
architect.”</p>
<p>“Was he?” said Henry Wimbush reflectively. “I doubt it. The builder of
this house was Sir Ferdinando Lapith, who flourished during the reign of
Elizabeth. He inherited the estate from his father, to whom it had been
granted at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries; for Crome was
originally a cloister of monks and this swimming-pool their fish-pond. Sir
Ferdinando was not content merely to adapt the old monastic buildings to
his own purposes; but using them as a stone quarry for his barns and byres
and outhouses, he built for himself a grand new house of brick—the
house you see now.”</p>
<p>He waved his hand in the direction of the house and was silent, severe,
imposing, almost menacing, Crome loomed down on them.</p>
<p>“The great thing about Crome,” said Mr. Scogan, seizing the opportunity to
speak, “is the fact that it’s so unmistakably and aggressively a work of
art. It makes no compromise with nature, but affronts it and rebels
against it. It has no likeness to Shelley’s tower, in the ‘Epipsychidion,’
which, if I remember rightly—”</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="indent15">
“‘Seems not now a work of human art,</p>
<p class="indent15">
But as it were titanic, in the heart</p>
<p class="indent15">
Of earth having assumed its form and grown</p>
<p class="indent15">
Out of the mountain, from the living stone,</p>
<p class="indent15">
Lifting itself in caverns light and high.’</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>“No, no, there isn’t any nonsense of that sort about Crome. That the
hovels of the peasantry should look as though they had grown out of the
earth, to which their inmates are attached, is right, no doubt, and
suitable. But the house of an intelligent, civilised, and sophisticated
man should never seem to have sprouted from the clods. It should rather be
an expression of his grand unnatural remoteness from the cloddish life.
Since the days of William Morris that’s a fact which we in England have
been unable to comprehend. Civilised and sophisticated men have solemnly
played at being peasants. Hence quaintness, arts and crafts, cottage
architecture, and all the rest of it. In the suburbs of our cities you may
see, reduplicated in endless rows, studiedly quaint imitations and
adaptations of the village hovel. Poverty, ignorance, and a limited range
of materials produced the hovel, which possesses undoubtedly, in suitable
surroundings, its own ‘as it were titanic’ charm. We now employ our
wealth, our technical knowledge, our rich variety of materials for the
purpose of building millions of imitation hovels in totally unsuitable
surroundings. Could imbecility go further?”</p>
<p>Henry Wimbush took up the thread of his interrupted discourse. “All that
you say, my dear Scogan,” he began, “is certainly very just, very true.
But whether Sir Ferdinando shared your views about architecture or if,
indeed, he had any views about architecture at all, I very much doubt. In
building this house, Sir Ferdinando was, as a matter of fact, preoccupied
by only one thought—the proper placing of his privies. Sanitation
was the one great interest of his life. In 1573 he even published, on this
subject, a little book—now extremely scarce—called, ‘Certaine
Priuy Counsels’ by ‘One of Her Maiestie’s Most Honourable Priuy Counsels,
F.L. Knight’, in which the whole matter is treated with great learning and
elegance. His guiding principle in arranging the sanitation of a house was
to secure that the greatest possible distance should separate the privy
from the sewage arrangements. Hence it followed inevitably that the
privies were to be placed at the top of the house, being connected by
vertical shafts with pits or channels in the ground. It must not be
thought that Sir Ferdinando was moved only by material and merely sanitary
considerations; for the placing of his privies in an exalted position he
had also certain excellent spiritual reasons. For, he argues in the third
chapter of his ‘Priuy Counsels’, the necessities of nature are so base and
brutish that in obeying them we are apt to forget that we are the noblest
creatures of the universe. To counteract these degrading effects he
advised that the privy should be in every house the room nearest to
heaven, that it should be well provided with windows commanding an
extensive and noble prospect, and that the walls of the chamber should be
lined with bookshelves containing all the ripest products of human wisdom,
such as the Proverbs of Solomon, Boethius’s ‘Consolations of Philosophy’,
the apophthegms of Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, the ‘Enchiridion’ of
Erasmus, and all other works, ancient or modern, which testify to the
nobility of the human soul. In Crome he was able to put his theories into
practice. At the top of each of the three projecting towers he placed a
privy. From these a shaft went down the whole height of the house, that is
to say, more than seventy feet, through the cellars, and into a series of
conduits provided with flowing water tunnelled in the ground on a level
with the base of the raised terrace. These conduits emptied themselves
into the stream several hundred yards below the fish-pond. The total depth
of the shafts from the top of the towers to their subterranean conduits
was a hundred and two feet. The eighteenth century, with its passion for
modernisation, swept away these monuments of sanitary ingenuity. Were it
not for tradition and the explicit account of them left by Sir Ferdinando,
we should be unaware that these noble privies had ever existed. We should
even suppose that Sir Ferdinando built his house after this strange and
splendid model for merely aesthetic reasons.”</p>
<p>The contemplation of the glories of the past always evoked in Henry
Wimbush a certain enthusiasm. Under the grey bowler his face worked and
glowed as he spoke. The thought of these vanished privies moved him
profoundly. He ceased to speak; the light gradually died out of his face,
and it became once more the replica of the grave, polite hat which shaded
it. There was a long silence; the same gently melancholy thoughts seemed
to possess the mind of each of them. Permanence, transience—Sir
Ferdinando and his privies were gone, Crome still stood. How brightly the
sun shone and how inevitable was death! The ways of God were strange; the
ways of man were stranger still...</p>
<p>“It does one’s heart good,” exclaimed Mr. Scogan at last, “to hear of
these fantastic English aristocrats. To have a theory about privies and to
build an immense and splendid house in order to put it into practise—it’s
magnificent, beautiful! I like to think of them all: the eccentric milords
rolling across Europe in ponderous carriages, bound on extraordinary
errands. One is going to Venice to buy La Bianchi’s larynx; he won’t get
it till she’s dead, of course, but no matter; he’s prepared to wait; he
has a collection, pickled in glass bottles, of the throats of famous opera
singers. And the instruments of renowned virtuosi—he goes in for
them too; he will try to bribe Paganini to part with his little Guarnerio,
but he has small hope of success. Paganini won’t sell his fiddle; but
perhaps he might sacrifice one of his guitars. Others are bound on
crusades—one to die miserably among the savage Greeks, another, in
his white top hat, to lead Italians against their oppressors. Others have
no business at all; they are just giving their oddity a continental
airing. At home they cultivate themselves at leisure and with greater
elaboration. Beckford builds towers, Portland digs holes in the ground,
Cavendish, the millionaire, lives in a stable, eats nothing but mutton,
and amuses himself—oh, solely for his private delectation—by
anticipating the electrical discoveries of half a century. Glorious
eccentrics! Every age is enlivened by their presence. Some day, my dear
Denis,” said Mr Scogan, turning a beady bright regard in his direction—“some
day you must become their biographer—‘The Lives of Queer Men.’ What
a subject! I should like to undertake it myself.”</p>
<p>Mr. Scogan paused, looked up once more at the towering house, then
murmured the word “Eccentricity,” two or three times.</p>
<p>“Eccentricity...It’s the justification of all aristocracies. It justifies
leisured classes and inherited wealth and privilege and endowments and all
the other injustices of that sort. If you’re to do anything reasonable in
this world, you must have a class of people who are secure, safe from
public opinion, safe from poverty, leisured, not compelled to waste their
time in the imbecile routines that go by the name of Honest Work. You must
have a class of which the members can think and, within the obvious
limits, do what they please. You must have a class in which people who
have eccentricities can indulge them and in which eccentricity in general
will be tolerated and understood. That’s the important thing about an
aristocracy. Not only is it eccentric itself—often grandiosely so;
it also tolerates and even encourages eccentricity in others. The
eccentricities of the artist and the new-fangled thinker don’t inspire it
with that fear, loathing, and disgust which the burgesses instinctively
feel towards them. It is a sort of Red Indian Reservation planted in the
midst of a vast horde of Poor Whites—colonials at that. Within its
boundaries wild men disport themselves—often, it must be admitted, a
little grossly, a little too flamboyantly; and when kindred spirits are
born outside the pale it offers them some sort of refuge from the hatred
which the Poor Whites, en bons bourgeois, lavish on anything that is wild
or out of the ordinary. After the social revolution there will be no
Reservations; the Redskins will be drowned in the great sea of Poor
Whites. What then? Will they suffer you to go on writing villanelles, my
good Denis? Will you, unhappy Henry, be allowed to live in this house of
the splendid privies, to continue your quiet delving in the mines of
futile knowledge? Will Anne...”</p>
<p>“And you,” said Anne, interrupting him, “will you be allowed to go on
talking?”</p>
<p>“You may rest assured,” Mr. Scogan replied, “that I shall not. I shall
have some Honest Work to do.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />