<<MAN AND SUPERMAN>>
Roebuck Ramsden is in his study, opening the
morning letters. The study, handsomely and solidly furnished, proclaims the man
of means. Not a speck of dust is visible: it is clear that there are at least
two housemaids and a parlormaid downstairs, and a
housekeeper upstairs who does not let them spare elbow-grease. Even the top of
Roebuck's head is polished: on a sunshiny day he could heliograph his orders to
distant camps by merely nodding. In no other respect, however, does he suggest
the military man. It is in active civil life that men get his broad air of
importance, his dignified expectation of deference, his determinate mouth
disarmed and refined since the hour of his success by the withdrawal of opposition
and the concession of comfort and precedence and power. He is more than a
highly respectable man: he is marked out as a president of highly respectable
men, a chairman among directors, an alderman among councillors,
a mayor among aldermen. Four tufts of iron-grey hair,
which will soon be as white as isinglass, and are in other respects not at all
unlike it, grow in two symmetrical pairs above his ears and at the angles of
his spreading jaws. He wears a black frock coat, a white waistcoat (it is bright
spring weather), and trousers, neither black nor perceptibly blue, of one of
those indefinitely mixed hues which the modern clothier has produced to
harmonize with the religions of respectable men. He has not been out of doors
yet to-day; so he still wears his slippers, his boots being ready for him on
the hearthrug. Surmising that he has no valet, and seeing that he has no
secretary with a shorthand notebook and a typewriter, one meditates on how
little our great burgess domesticity has been disturbed by new fashions and
methods, or by the enterprise of the railway and hotel companies which sell you
a Saturday to Monday of life at Folkestone as a real
gentleman for two guineas, first class fares both ways included.
How old is Roebuck? The question is important on
the threshold of a drama of ideas; for under such circumstances everything
depends on whether his adolescence belonged to the sixties or to the eighties.
He was born, as a matter of fact, in 1839, and was a Unitarian and Free Trader
from his boyhood, and an Evolutionist from the publication of the Origin of
Species. Consequently he has always classed himself as an advanced thinker and
fearlessly outspoken reformer.
Sitting at his writing table, he has on his right
the windows giving on
A chair stands near the writing table for the
convenience of business visitors. Two other chairs are against the wall between
the busts.
A parlormaid enters with
a visitor's card. Roebuck takes it, and nods, pleased. Evidently
a welcome caller.
RAMSDEN. Show him up.
The parlormaid goes out
and returns with the visitor.
THE MAID. Mr Robinson.
Mr Robinson is really an uncommonly nice
looking young fellow. He must, one thinks, be the jeune
premier; for it is not in reason to suppose that a second such attractive male
figure should appear in one story. The slim shapely frame, the elegant suit of
new mourning, the small head and regular features, the pretty little moustache,
the frank clear eyes, the wholesome bloom and the youthful complexion, the well
brushed glossy hair, not curly, but of fine texture and good dark color, the
arch of good nature in the eyebrows, the erect forehead and neatly pointed chin,
all announce the man who will love and suffer later on. And that he will not do
so without sympathy is guaranteed by an engaging sincerity and eager modest
serviceableness which stamp him as a man of amiable nature. The moment he
appears, Ramsden's face expands into fatherly liking
and welcome, an expression which drops into one of decorous grief as the young
man approaches him with sorrow in his face as well as in his black clothes. Ramsden seems to know the nature of the bereavement. As the
visitor advances silently to the writing table, the old man rises and shakes
his hand across it without a word: a long, affectionate shake which tells the
story of a recent sorrow common to both.
RAMSDEN. [concluding the
handshake and cheering up] Well, well, Octavius, it's
the common lot. We must all face it someday. Sit down.
Octavius takes the visitor's chair. Ramsden replaces himself in his own.
OCTAVIUS. Yes: we must face it, Mr
Ramsden. But I owed him a great deal. He did
everything for me that my father could have done if he had lived.
RAMSDEN. He had no son of his own, you see.
OCTAVIUS. But he had daughters; and yet he was as
good to my sister as to me. And his death was so sudden! I always intended to
thank him—to let him know that I had not taken all his care of me as a matter
of course, as any boy takes his father's care. But I waited for an opportunity
and now he is dead—dropped without a moment's warning. He will never know what
I felt. [He takes out his handkerchief and cries unaffectedly].
RAMSDEN. How do we know that, Octavius?
He may know it: we cannot tell. Come! Don't grieve. [Octavius
masters himself and puts up his handkerchief]. That's right. Now let me tell
you something to console you. The last time I saw him—it was in this very
room—he said to me: "Tavy is a generous lad and the soul of honor; and
when I see how little consideration other men get from their sons, I realize
how much better than a son he's been to me." There! Doesn't that do you
good?
OCTAVIUS. Mr Ramsden: he used to say to me that he had met only one man
in the world who was the soul of honor, and that was Roebuck Ramsden.
RAMSDEN. Oh, that was his partiality: we were very
old friends, you know. But there was something else he used to say about you. I
wonder whether I ought to tell you or not!