<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>TALES<br/> OF THE FIVE TOWNS</h1>
<h3>By</h3>
<h2>ARNOLD BENNETT</h2>
<hr class='short' />
<h4>First published January 1905</h4>
<hr class='short' />
<h3>TO<br/> MARCEL SCHWOB<br/> MY LITERARY GODFATHER IN FRANCE</h3>
<hr class='long' />
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<div class='contents'>
<p class='chapter'>PART I<br/>
AT HOME</p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#HIS_WORSHIP_THE_GOOSEDRIVER'>HIS
WORSHIP THE GOOSEDRIVER</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#THE_ELIXIR_OF_YOUTH'>THE ELIXIR OF
YOUTH</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#MARY_WITH_THE_HIGH_HAND'>MARY WITH THE
HIGH HAND</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#THE_DOG'>THE DOG</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#A_FEUD'>A FEUD</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#PHANTOM'>PHANTOM</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#TIDDY_FOL_LOL'>TIDDY-FOL-LOL</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#THE_IDIOT'>THE IDIOT</SPAN></p>
<p class='chapter'>PART II<br/>
ABROAD</p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#THE_HUNGARIAN_RHAPSODY'>THE HUNGARIAN
RHAPSODY</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#THE_SISTERS_QITA'>THE SISTERS
QITA</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#NOCTURNE_AT_THE_MAJESTIC'>NOCTURNE AT
THE MAJESTIC</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#CLARICE_OF_THE_AUTUMN_CONCERTS'>CLARICE OF THE AUTUMN
CONCERTS</SPAN></p>
<p class='section'><SPAN href='#A_LETTER_HOME'>A LETTER HOME</SPAN></p>
</div>
<hr class='long' />
<SPAN name='Page001' id="Page001"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">001</span>
<SPAN name='PART_I' id="PART_I"></SPAN>
<h2>PART I<br/> AT HOME</h2>
<hr class='long' />
<SPAN name='Page003' id="Page003"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">003</span>
<SPAN name='HIS_WORSHIP_THE_GOOSEDRIVER' id="HIS_WORSHIP_THE_GOOSEDRIVER"></SPAN>
<h3>HIS WORSHIP THE GOOSEDRIVER</h3>
<h4>I</h4>
<p>It was an amiable but deceitful afternoon in the third week of
December. Snow fell heavily in the windows of confectioners' shops,
and Father Christmas smiled in Keats's Bazaar the fawning smile of
a myth who knows himself to be exploded; but beyond these and
similar efforts to remedy the forgetfulness of a careless climate,
there was no sign anywhere in the Five Towns, and especially in
Bursley, of the immediate approach of the season of peace,
goodwill, and gluttony on earth.</p>
<p>At the Tiger, next door to Keats's in the market-place, Mr.
Josiah Topham Curtenty had put down his glass (the port was kept
specially for him), and told his boon companion, Mr. Gordon, that
he must be going. These two men had one powerful sentiment <SPAN name=
'Page004' id="Page004"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">004</span> in
common: they loved the same woman. Mr. Curtenty, aged twenty-six in
heart, thirty-six in mind, and forty-six in looks, was fifty-six
only in years. He was a rich man; he had made money as an
earthenware manufacturer in the good old times before Satan was
ingenious enough to invent German competition, American tariffs,
and the price of coal; he was still making money with the aid of
his son Harry, who now managed the works, but he never admitted
that he was making it. No one has yet succeeded, and no one ever
will succeed, in catching an earthenware manufacturer in the act of
making money; he may confess with a sigh that he has performed the
feat in the past, he may give utterance to a vague, preposterous
hope that he will perform it again in the remote future, but as for
surprising him in the very act, you would as easily surprise a hen
laying an egg. Nowadays Mr. Curtenty, commercially secure, spent
most of his energy in helping to shape and control the high
destinies of the town. He was Deputy-Mayor, and Chairman of the
General Purposes Committee of the Town Council; he was also a
Guardian of the Poor, <SPAN name='Page005' id="Page005"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">005</span> a Justice of the
Peace, President of the Society for the Prosecution of Felons, a
sidesman, an Oddfellow, and several other things that meant dining,
shrewdness, and good-nature. He was a short, stiff, stout,
red-faced man, jolly with the jollity that springs from a kind
heart, a humorous disposition, a perfect digestion, and the
respectful deference of one's bank-manager. Without being a member
of the Browning Society, he held firmly to the belief that all's
right with the world.</p>
<p>Mr. Gordon, who has but a sorry part in the drama, was a
younger, quieter, less forceful person, rather shy; a municipal
mediocrity, perhaps a little inflated that day by reason of his
having been elected to the Chairmanship of the Gas and Lighting
Committee.</p>
<p>Both men had sat on their committees at the Town Hall across the
way that deceitful afternoon, and we see them now, after
refreshment well earned and consumed, about to separate and sink
into private life. But as they came out into the portico of the
Tiger, the famous Calypso-like barmaid of the Tiger a hovering
enchantment in the background, it occurred that a flock of geese
were meditating, <SPAN name='Page006' id="Page006"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">006</span> as geese will, in the middle of the road. The
gooseherd, a shabby middle-aged man, looked as though he had
recently lost the Battle of Marathon, and was asking himself
whether the path of his retreat might not lie through the
bar-parlour of the Tiger.</p>
<p>'Business pretty good?' Mr. Curtenty inquired of him
cheerfully.</p>
<p>In the Five Towns business takes the place of weather as a topic
of salutation.</p>
<p>'Business!' echoed the gooseherd.</p>
<p>In that one unassisted noun, scorning the aid of verb,
adjective, or adverb, the gooseherd, by a masterpiece of profound
and subtle emphasis, contrived to express the fact that he existed
in a world of dead illusions, that he had become a convert to
Schopenhauer, and that Mr. Curtenty's inapposite geniality was a
final grievance to him.</p>
<p>'There ain't no business!' he added.</p>
<p>'Ah!' returned Mr. Curtenty, thoughtful: such an assertion of
the entire absence of business was a reflection upon the town.</p>
<p>'Sithee!' said the gooseherd in ruthless accents, 'I druv these
'ere geese into this 'ere town this morning.' (Here he exaggerated
<SPAN name='Page007' id="Page007"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">007</span>
the number of miles traversed.) 'Twelve geese and two
gander—a Brent and a Barnacle. And how many is there now? How
many?'</p>
<p>'Fourteen,' said Mr. Gordon, having counted; and Mr. Curtenty
gazed at him in reproach, for that he, a Town Councillor, had thus
mathematically demonstrated the commercial decadence of
Bursley.</p>
<p>'Market overstocked, eh?' Mr. Curtenty suggested, throwing a
side-glance at Callear the poulterer's close by, which was crammed
with everything that flew, swam, or waddled.</p>
<p>'Call this a market?' said the gooseherd. 'I'st tak' my lot over
to Hanbridge, wheer there <i>is</i> a bit doing, by all
accounts.'</p>
<p>Now, Mr. Curtenty had not the least intention of buying those
geese, but nothing could be better calculated to straighten the
back of a Bursley man than a reference to the mercantile activity
of Hanbridge, that Chicago of the Five Towns.</p>
<p>'How much for the lot?' he inquired.</p>
<p>In that moment he reflected upon his reputation; he knew that he
was a cure, a card, a character; he knew that everyone would think
it just like Jos Curtenty, the renowned <SPAN name='Page008' id="Page008"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">008</span> Deputy-Mayor of
Bursley, to stand on the steps of the Tiger and pretend to chaffer
with a gooseherd for a flock of geese. His imagination caught the
sound of an oft-repeated inquiry, 'Did ye hear about old Jos's
latest—trying to buy them there geese?' and the appreciative
laughter that would follow.</p>
<p>The gooseherd faced him in silence.</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr. Curtenty again, his eyes twinkling, 'how much
for the lot?'</p>
<p>The gooseherd gloomily and suspiciously named a sum.</p>
<p>Mr. Curtenty named a sum startlingly less, ending in
sixpence.</p>
<p>'I'll tak' it,' said the gooseherd, in a tone that closed on the
bargain like a vice.</p>
<p>The Deputy-Mayor perceived himself the owner of twelve geese and
two ganders—one Brent, one Barnacle. It was a shock, but he
sustained it. Involuntarily he looked at Mr. Gordon.</p>
<p>'How are you going to get 'em home, Curtenty?' asked Gordon,
with coarse sarcasm; 'drive 'em?'</p>
<p>Nettled, Mr. Curtenty retorted:</p>
<p>'Now, then, Gas Gordon!'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page009' id="Page009"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">009</span> The barmaid laughed aloud at this sobriquet,
which that same evening was all over the town, and which has stuck
ever since to the Chairman of the Gas and Lighting Committee. Mr.
Gordon wished, and has never ceased to wish, either that he had
been elected to some other committee, or that his name had begun
with some other letter.</p>
<p>The gooseherd received the purchase-money like an affront, but
when Mr. Curtenty, full of private mirth, said, 'Chuck us your
stick in,' he give him the stick, and smiled under reservation. Jos
Curtenty had no use for the geese; he could conceive no purpose
which they might be made to serve, no smallest corner for them in
his universe. Nevertheless, since he had rashly stumbled into a
ditch, he determined to emerge from it grandly, impressively,
magnificently. He instantaneously formed a plan by which he would
snatch victory out of defeat. He would take Gordon's suggestion,
and himself drive the geese up to his residence in Hillport, that
lofty and aristocratic suburb. It would be an immense, an
unparalleled farce; a wonder, a topic for years, the crown of his
reputation as a card.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page010' id="Page010"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">010</span> He announced his intention with that
misleading sobriety and ordinariness of tone which it has been the
foible of many great humorists to assume. Mr. Gordon lifted his
head several times very quickly, as if to say, 'What next?' and
then actually departed, which was a clear proof that the man had no
imagination and no soul.</p>
<p>The gooseherd winked.</p>
<p>'You be rightly called "Curtenty," mester,' said he, and passed
into the Tiger.</p>
<p>'That's the best joke I ever heard,' Jos said to himself 'I
wonder whether he saw it.'</p>
<p>Then the procession of the geese and the Deputy-Mayor commenced.
Now, it is not to be assumed that Mr. Curtenty was necessarily
bound to look foolish in the driving of geese. He was no
nincompoop. On the contrary, he was one of those men who, bringing
common-sense and presence of mind to every action of their lives,
do nothing badly, and always escape the ridiculous. He marshalled
his geese with notable gumption, adopted towards them exactly the
correct stress of persuasion, and presently he smiled to see them
preceding him in the direction <SPAN name='Page011' id="Page011"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">011</span> of Hillport. He
looked neither to right nor left, but simply at his geese, and thus
the quidnuncs of the market-place and the supporters of shop-fronts
were unable to catch his eye. He tried to feel like a gooseherd;
and such was his histrionic quality, his instinct for the dramatic,
he <i>was</i> a gooseherd, despite his blue Melton overcoat, his
hard felt hat with the flattened top, and that opulent-curving
collar which was the secret despair of the young dandies of
Hillport. He had the most natural air in the world. The geese were
the victims of this imaginative effort of Mr. Curtenty's. They took
him seriously as a gooseherd. These fourteen intelligences, each
with an object in life, each bent on self-aggrandisement and the
satisfaction of desires, began to follow the line of least
resistance in regard to the superior intelligence unseen but felt
behind them, feigning, as geese will, that it suited them so to
submit, and that in reality they were still quite independent. But
in the peculiar eye of the Barnacle gander, who was leading, an
observer with sufficient fancy might have deciphered a mild revolt
against this triumph of the absurd, the accidental, and <SPAN name=
'Page012' id="Page012"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">012</span> the
futile; a passive yet Promethean spiritual defiance of the supreme
powers.</p>
<p>Mr. Curtenty got his fourteen intelligences safely across the
top of St. Luke's Square, and gently urged them into the steep
defile of Oldcastle Street. By this time rumour had passed in front
of him and run off down side-streets like water let into an
irrigation system. At every corner was a knot of people, at most
windows a face. And the Deputy-Mayor never spoke nor smiled. The
farce was enormous; the memory of it would survive revolutions and
religions.</p>
<p>Halfway down Oldcastle Street the first disaster happened.
Electric tramways had not then knitted the Five Towns in a network
of steel; but the last word of civilization and refinement was
about to be uttered, and a gang of men were making patterns with
wires on the skyscape of Oldcastle Street. One of the wires,
slipping from its temporary gripper, swirled with an extraordinary
sound into the roadway, and writhed there in spirals. Several of
Mr. Curtenty's geese were knocked down, and rose obviously annoyed;
but the Barnacle gander fell with a clinging circle of wire round
his <SPAN name='Page013' id="Page013"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">013</span> muscular, glossy neck, and did not rise again.
It was a violent, mysterious, agonizing, and sudden death for him,
and must have confirmed his theories about the arbitrariness of
things. The thirteen passed pitilessly on. Mr. Curtenty freed the
gander from the coiling wire, and picked it up, but, finding it far
too heavy to carry, he handed it to a Corporation road-sweeper.</p>
<p>'I'll send for it,' he said; 'wait here.'</p>
<p>These were the only words uttered by him during a memorable
journey.</p>
<p>The second disaster was that the deceitful afternoon turned to
rain—cold, cruel rain, persistent rain, full of sinister
significance. Mr. Curtenty ruefully raised the velvet of his
Melton. As he did so a brougham rolled into Oldcastle Street, a
little in front of him, from the direction of St. Peter's Church,
and vanished towards Hillport. He knew the carriage; he had bought
it and paid for it. Deep, far down, in his mind stirred the
thought:</p>
<p>'I'm just the least bit glad she didn't see me.'</p>
<p>He had the suspicion, which recurs even to optimists, that
happiness is after all a chimera.</p>
<p>The third disaster was that the sun set and <SPAN name='Page014' id="Page014"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">014</span> darkness
descended. Mr. Curtenty had, unfortunately, not reckoned with this
diurnal phenomenon; he had not thought upon the undesirability of
being under compulsion to drive geese by the sole illumination of
gas-lamps lighted by Corporation gas.</p>
<p>After this disasters multiplied. Dark and the rain had
transformed the farce into something else. It was five-thirty when
at last he reached The Firs, and the garden of The Firs was filled
with lamentable complainings of a remnant of geese. His man Pond
met him with a stable-lantern.</p>
<p>'Damp, sir,' said Pond.</p>
<p>'Oh, nowt to speak of,' said Mr. Curtenty, and, taking off his
hat, he shot the fluid contents of the brim into Pond's face. It
was his way of dotting the 'i' of irony. 'Missis come in?'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir; I have but just rubbed the horse down.'</p>
<p>So far no reference to the surrounding geese, all forlorn in the
heavy winter rain.</p>
<p>'I've gotten a two-three geese and one gander here for
Christmas,' said Mr. Curtenty after a pause. To inferiors he always
used the dialect.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page015' id="Page015"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">015</span> 'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'Turn 'em into th' orchard, as you call it.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'They aren't all here. Thou mun put th' horse in the trap and
fetch the rest thysen.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'One's dead. A roadman's takkin' care on it in Oldcastle Street.
He'll wait for thee. Give him sixpence.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'There's another got into th' cut [canal].'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'There's another strayed on the railway-line—happen it's
run over by this.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'And one's making the best of her way to Oldcastle. I couldna
coax her in here.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>'Collect 'em.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir.'</p>
<p>Mr. Curtenty walked away towards the house.</p>
<p>'Mester!' Pond called after him, flashing the lantern.</p>
<p>'Well, lad?'</p>
<p>'There's no gander i' this lot.'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page016' id="Page016"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">016</span> 'Hast forgotten to count thysen?' Mr. Curtenty
answered blithely from the shelter of the side-door.</p>
<p>But within himself he was a little crest-fallen to think that
the surviving gander should have escaped his vigilance, even in the
darkness. He had set out to drive the geese home, and he had driven
them home, most of them. He had kept his temper, his dignity, his
cheerfulness. He had got a bargain in geese. So much was
indisputable ground for satisfaction. And yet the feeling of an
anticlimax would not be dismissed. Upon the whole, his transit
lacked glory. It had begun in splendour, but it had ended in
discomfort and almost ignominy. Nevertheless, Mr. Curtenty's
unconquerable soul asserted itself in a quite genuine and tuneful
whistle as he entered the house.</p>
<p>The fate of the Brent gander was never ascertained.</p>
<h4>II</h4>
<p>The dining-room of The Firs was a spacious and inviting
refectory, which owed nothing of its charm to William Morris,
Regent Street, <SPAN name='Page017' id="Page017"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">017</span> or the Arts and Crafts Society. Its triple
aim, was richness, solidity, and comfort, but especially comfort;
and this aim was achieved in new oak furniture of immovable
firmness, in a Turkey carpet which swallowed up the feet like a
feather bed, and in large oil-paintings, whose darkly-glinting
frames were a guarantee of their excellence. On a winter's night,
as now, the room was at its richest, solidest, most comfortable.
The blue plush curtains were drawn on their stout brass rods across
door and French window. Finest selected silkstone fizzed and flamed
in a patent grate which had the extraordinary gift of radiating
heat into the apartment instead of up the chimney. The shaded
Welsbach lights of the chandelier cast a dazzling luminance on the
tea-table of snow and silver, while leaving the pictures in a gloom
so discreet that not Ruskin himself could have decided whether
these were by Whistler or Peter Paul Rubens. On either side of the
marble mantelpiece were two easy-chairs of an immense, incredible
capacity, chairs of crimson plush for Titans, chairs softer than
moss, more pliant than a loving heart, more enveloping than a
caress. In one of <SPAN name='Page018' id="Page018"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">018</span> these chairs, that to the left of the
fireplace, Mr. Curtenty was accustomed to snore every Saturday and
Sunday afternoon, and almost every evening. The other was usually
empty, but to-night it was occupied by Mrs. Curtenty, the jewel of
the casket. In the presence of her husband she always used a small
rocking-chair of ebonized cane.</p>
<p>To glance at this short, slight, yet plump little creature as
she reclined crosswise in the vast chair, leaving great spaces of
the seat unfilled, was to think rapturously to one's self: <i>This
is a woman</i>. Her fluffy head was such a dot against the back of
the chair, the curve of her chubby ringed hand above the head was
so adorable, her black eyes were so provocative, her slippered feet
so wee—yes, and there was something so mysteriously thrilling
about the fall of her skirt that you knew instantly her name was
Clara, her temper both fiery and obstinate, and her personality
distracting. You knew that she was one of those women of frail
physique who can endure fatigues that would destroy a camel; one of
those dæmonic women capable of doing without sleep for ten
nights in order to nurse you; capable of dying and <SPAN name=
'Page019' id="Page019"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">019</span> seeing
you die rather than give way about the tint of a necktie; capable
of laughter and tears simultaneously; capable of never being in the
wrong except for the idle whim of so being. She had a big mouth and
very wide nostrils, and her years were thirty-five. It was no
matter; it would have been no matter had she been a hundred and
thirty-five. In short....</p>
<p>Clara Curtenty wore tight-fitting black silk, with a long gold
chain that descended from her neck nearly to her waist, and was
looped up in the middle to an old-fashioned gold brooch. She was in
mourning for a distant relative. Black pre-eminently suited her.
Consequently her distant relatives died at frequent intervals.</p>
<p>The basalt clock on the mantelpiece trembled and burst into the
song of six. Clara Curtenty rose swiftly from the easy-chair, and
took her seat in front of the tea-tray. Almost at the same moment a
neat black-and-white parlourmaid brought in teapot, copper kettle,
and a silver-covered dish containing hot pikelets; then departed.
Clara was alone again; not the same Clara now, but a personage
demure, prim, precise, frightfully upright of back—a <SPAN name=
'Page020' id="Page020"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">020</span> sort of
impregnable stronghold—without doubt a Deputy-Mayoress.</p>
<p>At five past six Josiah Curtenty entered the room, radiant from
a hot bath, and happy in dry clothes—a fine, if mature,
figure of a man. His presence filled the whole room.</p>
<p>'Well, my chuck!' he said, and kissed her on the cheek.</p>
<p>She gazed at him with a look that might mean anything. Did she
raise her cheek to his greeting, or was it fancy that she had
endured, rather than accepted, his kiss? He was scarcely sure. And
if she had endured instead of accepting the kiss, was her mood to
be attributed to his lateness for tea, or to the fact that she was
aware of the episode of the geese? He could not divine.</p>
<p>'Pikelets! Good!' he exclaimed, taking the cover off the
dish.</p>
<p>This strong, successful, and dominant man adored his wife, and
went in fear of her. She was his first love, but his second spouse.
They had been married ten years. In those ten years they had
quarrelled only five times, and she had changed the very colour of
his life. Till his second marriage he had boasted that <SPAN name=
'Page021' id="Page021"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">021</span> he
belonged to the people and retained the habits of the people.
Clara, though she also belonged to the people, very soon altered
all that. Clara had a passion for the genteel. Like many
warm-hearted, honest, clever, and otherwise sensible persons, Clara
was a snob, but a charming little snob. She ordered him to forget
that he belonged to the people. She refused to listen when he
talked in the dialect. She made him dress with opulence, and even
with tidiness; she made him buy a fashionable house and fill it
with fine furniture; she made him buy a brougham in which her
gentility could pay calls and do shopping (she shopped in
Oldcastle, where a decrepit aristocracy of tradesmen sneered at
Hanbridge's lack of style); she had her 'day'; she taught the
servants to enter the reception-rooms without knocking; she took
tea in bed in the morning, and tea in the afternoon in the
drawing-room. She would have instituted dinner at seven, but she
was a wise woman, and realized that too much tyranny often means
revolution and the crumbling of-thrones; therefore the ancient
plebeian custom of high tea at six was allowed to persist and
continue.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page022' id="Page022"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">022</span> She it was who had compelled Josiah (or
bewitched, beguiled, coaxed and wheedled him), after a public
refusal, to accept the unusual post of Deputy-Mayor. In two years'
time he might count on being Mayor. Why, then, should Clara have
been so anxious for this secondary dignity? Because, in that year
of royal festival, Bursley, in common with many other boroughs, had
had a fancy to choose a Mayor out of the House of Lords. The Earl
of Chell, a magnate of the county, had consented to wear the
mayoral chain and dispense the mayoral hospitalities on condition
that he was provided with a deputy for daily use.</p>
<p>It was the idea of herself being deputy to the lovely,
meddlesome, and arrogant Countess of Chell that had appealed to
Clara.</p>
<p>The deputy of a Countess at length spoke.</p>
<p>'Will Harry be late at the works again to-night?' she asked in
her colder, small-talk manner, which committed her to nothing, as
Josiah well knew.</p>
<p>Her way of saying that word 'Harry' was inimitably significant.
She gave it an air. She liked Harry, and she liked Harry's name,
because it had a Kensingtonian sound. Harry, <SPAN name='Page023' id="Page023"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">023</span> so accomplished in
business, was also a dandy, and he was a dog. 'My
stepson'—she loved to introduce him, so tall, manly,
distinguished, and dandiacal. Harry, enriched by his own mother,
belonged to a London club; he ran down to Llandudno for week-ends;
and it was reported that he had been behind the scenes at the
Alhambra. Clara felt for the word 'Harry' the unreasoning affection
which most women lavish on 'George.'</p>
<p>'Like as not,' said Josiah. 'I haven't been to the works this
afternoon.'</p>
<p>Another silence fell, and then Josiah, feeling himself unable to
bear any further suspense as to his wife's real mood and temper,
suddenly determined to tell her all about the geese, and know the
worst. And precisely at the instant that he opened his mouth, the
maid opened the door and announced:</p>
<p>'Mr. Duncalf wishes to see you at once, sir. He won't keep you a
minute.'</p>
<p>'Ask him in here, Mary,' said the Deputy-Mayoress sweetly; 'and
bring another cup and saucer.'</p>
<p>Mr. Duncalf was the Town Clerk of Bursley: legal, portly, dry,
and a little shy.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page024' id="Page024"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">024</span> 'I won't stop, Curtenty. How d'ye do, Mrs.
Curtenty? No, thanks, really——' But she, smiling,
exquisitely gracious, flattered and smoothed him into a chair.</p>
<p>'Any interesting news, Mr. Duncalf?' she said, and added: 'But
we're glad that <i>anything</i> should have brought you in.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Duncalf, 'I've just had a letter by the afternoon
post from Lord Chell.'</p>
<p>'Oh, the Earl! Indeed; how very interesting.'</p>
<p>'What's he after?' inquired Josiah cautiously.</p>
<p>'He says he's just been appointed Governor of East
Australia—announcement 'll be in to-morrow's papers—and
so he must regretfully resign the mayoralty. Says he'll pay the
fine, but of course we shall have to remit that by special
resolution of the Council.'</p>
<p>'Well, I'm damned!' Josiah exclaimed.</p>
<p>'Topham!' Mrs. Curtenty remonstrated, but with a delightful
acquitting dimple. She never would call him Josiah, much less Jos.
Topham came more easily to her lips, and sometimes Top.</p>
<p>'Your husband,' said Mr. Duncalf impressively to Clara, 'will,
of course, have to step <SPAN name='Page025' id="Page025"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">025</span> into the Mayor's
shoes, and you'll have to fill the place of the Countess.' He
paused, and added: 'And very well you'll do it, too—very
well. Nobody better.'</p>
<p>The Town Clerk frankly admired Clara.</p>
<p>'Mr. Duncalf—Mr. Duncalf!' She raised a finger at him.
'You are the most shameless flatterer in the town.'</p>
<p>The flatterer was flattered. Having delivered the weighty news,
he had leisure to savour his own importance as the bearer of it. He
drank a cup of tea. Josiah was thoughtful, but Clara brimmed over
with a fascinating loquacity. Then Mr. Duncalf said that he must
really be going, and, having arranged with the Mayor-elect to call
a special meeting of the Council at once, he did go, all the while
wishing he had the enterprise to stay.</p>
<p>Josiah accompanied him to the front-door. The sky had now
cleared.</p>
<p>'Thank ye for calling,' said the host.</p>
<p>'Oh, that's all right. Good-night, Curtenty. Got that goose out
of the canal?'</p>
<p>So the story was all abroad!</p>
<p>Josiah returned to the dining-room, imperceptibly smiling. At
the door the sight of <SPAN name='Page026' id="Page026"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">026</span> his wife halted him.
The face of that precious and adorable woman flamed out lightning
and all menace and offence. Her louring eyes showed what a triumph
of dissimulation she must have achieved in the presence of Mr.
Duncalf, but now she could speak her mind.</p>
<p>'Yes, Topham!' she exploded, as though finishing an harangue.
'And on this day of all days you choose to drive geese in the
public road behind my carriage!'</p>
<p>Jos was stupefied, annihilated.</p>
<p>'Did you see me, then, Clarry?'</p>
<p>He vainly tried to carry it off.</p>
<p>'Did I see you? Of course I saw you!'</p>
<p>She withered him up with the hot wind of scorn.</p>
<p>'Well,' he said foolishly, 'how was I to know that the Earl
would resign just to-day?'</p>
<p>'How were you to——?'</p>
<p>Harry came in for his tea. He glanced from one to the other,
discreet, silent. On the way home he had heard the tale of the
geese in seven different forms. The Deputy-Mayor, so soon to be
Mayor, walked out of the room.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page027' id="Page027"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">027</span> 'Pond has just come back, father,' said Harry;
'I drove up the hill with him.'</p>
<p>And as Josiah hesitated a moment in the hall, he heard Clara
exclaim, 'Oh, Harry!'</p>
<p>'Damn!' he murmured.</p>
<h4>III</h4>
<p>The <i>Signal</i> of the following day contained the
announcement which Mr. Duncalf had forecast; it also stated, on
authority, that Mr. Josiah Curtenty would wear the mayoral chain of
Bursley immediately, and added as its own private opinion that, in
default of the Right Honourable the Earl of Chell and his Countess,
no better 'civic heads' could have been found than Mr. Curtenty and
his charming wife. So far the tone of the <i>Signal</i> was
unimpeachable. But underneath all this was a sub-title, 'Amusing
Exploit of the Mayor-elect,' followed by an amusing description of
the procession of the geese, a description which concluded by
referring to Mr. Curtenty as His Worship the Goosedriver.</p>
<p>Hanbridge, Knype, Longshaw, and Turnhill laughed heartily, and
perhaps a little viciously, <SPAN name='Page028' id="Page028"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">028</span> at this paragraph,
but Bursley was annoyed by it. In print the affair did not look at
all well. Bursley prided itself on possessing a unique dignity as
the 'Mother of the Five Towns,' and to be presided over by a
goosedriver, however humorous and hospitable he might be, did not
consort with that dignity. A certain Mayor of Longshaw, years
before, had driven a sow to market, and derived a tremendous
advertisement therefrom, but Bursley had no wish to rival Longshaw
in any particular. Bursley regarded Longshaw as the Inferno of the
Five Towns. In Bursley you were bidden to go to Longshaw as you
were bidden to go to ... Certain acute people in Hillport saw
nothing but a paralyzing insult in the opinion of the <i>Signal</i>
(first and foremost a Hanbridge organ), that Bursley could find no
better civic head than Josiah Curtenty. At least three Aldermen and
seven Councillors privately, and in the Tiger, disagreed with any
such view of Bursley's capacity to find heads.</p>
<p>And underneath all this brooding dissatisfaction lurked the
thought, as the alligator lurks in a muddy river, that 'the Earl
wouldn't like it'—meaning the geese episode. It was <SPAN name=
'Page029' id="Page029"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">029</span>
generally felt that the Earl had been badly treated by Jos
Curtenty. The town could not explain its sentiments—could not
argue about them. They were not, in fact, capable of logical
justification; but they were there, they violently existed. It
would have been useless to point out that if the inimitable Jos had
not been called to the mayoralty the episode of the geese would
have passed as a gorgeous joke; that everyone had been vastly
amused by it until that desolating issue of the <i>Signal</i>
announced the Earl's retirement; that Jos Curtenty could not
possibly have foreseen what was about to happen; and that, anyhow,
goosedriving was less a crime than a social solecism, and less a
social solecism than a brilliant eccentricity. Bursley was hurt,
and logic is no balm for wounds.</p>
<p>Some may ask: If Bursley was offended, why did it not mark its
sense of Josiah's failure to read the future by electing another
Mayor? The answer is, that while all were agreed that his antic was
inexcusable, all were equally agreed to pretend that it was a mere
trifle of no importance; you cannot deprive a man of his
prescriptive right for a mere trifle of no <SPAN name='Page030' id="Page030"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">030</span> importance. Besides,
nobody could be so foolish as to imagine that goosedriving, though
reprehensible in a Mayor about to succeed an Earl, is an act of
which official notice can be taken.</p>
<p>The most curious thing in the whole imbroglio is that Josiah
Curtenty secretly agreed with his wife and the town. He was
ashamed, overset. His procession of geese appeared to him in an
entirely new light, and he had the strength of mind to admit to
himself, 'I've made a fool of myself.'</p>
<p>Harry went to London for a week, and Josiah, under plea of his
son's absence, spent eight hours a day at the works. The brougham
remained in the coach-house.</p>
<p>The Town Council duly met in special conclave, and Josiah Topham
Curtenty became Mayor of Bursley.</p>
<p>Shortly after Christmas it was announced that the Mayor and
Mayoress had decided to give a New Year's treat to four hundred
poor old people in the St. Luke's covered market. It was also
spread about that this treat would eclipse and extinguish all
previous treats of a similar nature, and that it might be accepted
as some slight foretaste of the hospitality which <SPAN name='Page031' id="Page031"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">031</span> the Mayor and
Mayoress would dispense in that memorable year of royal festival.
The treat was to occur on January 9, the Mayoress's birthday.</p>
<p>On January 7 Josiah happened to go home early. He was proceeding
into the drawing-room without enthusiasm to greet his wife, when he
heard voices within; and one voice was the voice of Gas Gordon.</p>
<p>Jos stood still. It has been mentioned that Gordon and the Mayor
were in love with the same woman. The Mayor had easily captured her
under the very guns of his not formidable rival, and he had always
thereafter felt a kind of benevolent, good-humoured, contemptuous
pity for Gordon—Gordon, whose life was a tragic blank;
Gordon, who lived, a melancholy and defeated bachelor, with his
mother and two unmarried sisters older than himself. That Gordon
still worshipped at the shrine did not disturb him; on the
contrary, it pleased him. Poor Gordon!</p>
<p>'But, really, Mrs. Curtenty,' Gordon was saying—'really,
you know I—that—is—really—'</p>
<p>'To please me!' Mrs. Curtenty entreated, <SPAN name='Page032' id="Page032"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">032</span> with a seductive
charm that Jos felt even outside the door.</p>
<p>Then there was a pause.</p>
<p>'Very well,' said Gordon.</p>
<p>Mr. Curtenty tiptoed away and back into the street. He walked in
the dark nearly to Oldcastle, and returned about six o'clock. But
Clara said no word of Gordon's visit. She had scarcely spoken to
Topham for three weeks.</p>
<p>The next morning, as Harry was departing to the works, Mrs.
Curtenty followed the handsome youth into the hall.</p>
<p>'Harry,' she whispered, 'bring me two ten-pound notes this
afternoon, will you, and say nothing to your father.'</p>
<h4>IV</h4>
<p>Gas Gordon was to be on the platform at the poor people's treat.
As he walked down Trafalgar Road his eye caught a still-exposed
fragment of a decayed bill on a hoarding. It referred to a meeting
of the local branch of the Anti-Gambling League a year ago in the
lecture-hall of the Wesleyan Chapel, and it said that Councillor
Gordon would occupy the <SPAN name='Page033' id="Page033"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">033</span> chair on that
occasion. Mechanically Councillor Gordon stopped and tore the
fragment away from the hoarding.</p>
<p>The treat, which took the form of a dinner, was an unqualified
success; it surpassed all expectations. Even the diners themselves
were satisfied—a rare thing at such affairs. Goose was a
prominent item in the menu. After the repast the replete guests
were entertained from the platform, the Mayor being, of course, in
the chair. Harry sang 'In Old Madrid,' accompanied by his
stepmother, with faultless expression. Mr. Duncalf astonished
everybody with the famous North-Country recitation, 'The Patent
Hair-brushing Mashane.' There were also a banjo solo, a skirt dance
of discretion, and a campanological turn. At last, towards ten
o'clock, Mr. Gordon, who had hitherto done nothing, rose in his
place, amid good-natured cries of 'Gas!'</p>
<p>'I feel sure you will all agree with me,' he began, 'that this
evening would not be complete without a vote of thanks—a very
hearty vote of thanks—to our excellent host and
chairman.'</p>
<p>Ear-splitting applause.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page034' id="Page034"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">034</span> 'I've got a little story to tell you,' he
continued—'a story that up to this moment has been a close
secret between his Worship the Mayor and myself.' His Worship
looked up sharply at the speaker. 'You've heard about some geese, I
reckon. (<i>Laughter</i>.) Well, you've not heard all, but I'm
going to tell you. I can't keep it to myself any longer. You think
his Worship drove those geese—I hope they're digesting well
(<i>loud laughter</i>)—just for fun. He didn't. I was with
him when he bought them, and I happened to say that goosedriving
was a very difficult accomplishment.'</p>
<p>'Depends on the geese!' shouted a voice.</p>
<p>'Yes, it does,' Mr. Gordon admitted. 'Well, his Worship
contradicted me, and we had a bit of an argument. I don't bet, as
you know—at least, not often—but I don't mind
confessing that I offered to bet him a sovereign he couldn't drive
his geese half a mile. "Look here, Gordon," he said to me: "there's
a lot of distress in the town just now—trade bad, and so on,
and so on. I'll lay you a level ten pounds I drive these geese to
Hillport myself, the loser to give the money to charity." <SPAN name=
'Page035' id="Page035"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">035</span> "Done,"
I said. "Don't say anything about it," he says. "I won't," I
says—but I am doing. (<i>Applause</i>.) I feel it my duty to
say something about it. (<i>More applause</i>.) Well, I lost, as
you all know. He drove 'em to Hillport. ('<i>Good old Jos!</i>')
That's not all. The Mayor insisted on putting his own ten pounds to
mine and making it twenty. Here are the two identical notes, his
and mine.' Mr. Gordon waved the identical notes amid an uproar.
'We've decided that everyone who has dined here to-night shall
receive a brand-new shilling. I see Mr. Septimus Lovatt from the
bank there with a bag. He will attend to you as you go out.
(<i>Wild outbreak and tumult of rapturous applause</i>.) And now
three cheers for your Mayor—and Mayoress!'</p>
<p>It was colossal, the enthusiasm.</p>
<p>'<i>And</i> for Gas Gordon!' called several voices.</p>
<p>The cheers rose again in surging waves.</p>
<p>Everyone remarked that the Mayor, usually so imperturbable, was
quite overcome—seemed as if he didn't know where to look.</p>
<p>Afterwards, as the occupants of the platform descended, Mr.
Gordon glanced into the eyes of Mrs. Curtenty, and found there his
exceeding <SPAN name='Page036' id="Page036"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">036</span> reward. The mediocrity had blossomed out that
evening into something new and strange. Liar, deliberate liar and
self-accused gambler as he was, he felt that he had lived during
that speech; he felt that it was the supreme moment of his
life.</p>
<p>'What a perfectly wonderful man your husband is!' said Mrs.
Duncalf to Mrs. Curtenty.</p>
<p>Clara turned to her husband with a sublime gesture of
satisfaction. In the brougham, going home, she bewitched him with
wifely endearments. She could afford to do so. The stigma of the
geese episode was erased.</p>
<p>But the barmaid of the Tiger, as she let down her bright hair
that night in the attic of the Tiger, said to herself, 'Well, of
all the——' Just that.</p>
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