<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Chapter 6 </h2>
<h3> A RIDDLE WITHOUT AN ANSWER </h3>
<p>Again Mr Mortimer Lightwood and Mr Eugene Wrayburn sat together in the
Temple. This evening, however, they were not together in the place of
business of the eminent solicitor, but in another dismal set of chambers
facing it on the same second-floor; on whose dungeon-like black outer-door
appeared the legend:</p>
<h4>PRIVATE</h4>
<h4>MR EUGENE WRAYBURN</h4>
<h4>MR MORTIMER LIGhTWOOD</h4>
<h4>(Mr Lightwood’s Offices opposite.)</h4>
<p>Appearances indicated that this establishment was a very recent
institution. The white letters of the inscription were extremely white and
extremely strong to the sense of smell, the complexion of the tables and
chairs was (like Lady Tippins’s) a little too blooming to be believed in,
and the carpets and floorcloth seemed to rush at the beholder’s face in
the unusual prominency of their patterns. But the Temple, accustomed to
tone down both the still life and the human life that has much to do with
it, would soon get the better of all that.</p>
<p>‘Well!’ said Eugene, on one side of the fire, ‘I feel tolerably
comfortable. I hope the upholsterer may do the same.’</p>
<p>‘Why shouldn’t he?’ asked Lightwood, from the other side of the fire.</p>
<p>‘To be sure,’ pursued Eugene, reflecting, ‘he is not in the secret of our
pecuniary affairs, so perhaps he may be in an easy frame of mind.’</p>
<p>‘We shall pay him,’ said Mortimer.</p>
<p>‘Shall we, really?’ returned Eugene, indolently surprised. ‘You don’t say
so!’</p>
<p>‘I mean to pay him, Eugene, for my part,’ said Mortimer, in a slightly
injured tone.</p>
<p>‘Ah! I mean to pay him too,’ retorted Eugene. ‘But then I mean so much
that I—that I don’t mean.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t mean?’</p>
<p>‘So much that I only mean and shall always only mean and nothing more, my
dear Mortimer. It’s the same thing.’</p>
<p>His friend, lying back in his easy chair, watched him lying back in his
easy chair, as he stretched out his legs on the hearth-rug, and said, with
the amused look that Eugene Wrayburn could always awaken in him without
seeming to try or care:</p>
<p>‘Anyhow, your vagaries have increased the bill.’</p>
<p>‘Calls the domestic virtues vagaries!’ exclaimed Eugene, raising his eyes
to the ceiling.</p>
<p>‘This very complete little kitchen of ours,’ said Mortimer, ‘in which
nothing will ever be cooked—’</p>
<p>‘My dear, dear Mortimer,’ returned his friend, lazily lifting his head a
little to look at him, ‘how often have I pointed out to you that its moral
influence is the important thing?’</p>
<p>‘Its moral influence on this fellow!’ exclaimed Lightwood, laughing.</p>
<p>‘Do me the favour,’ said Eugene, getting out of his chair with much
gravity, ‘to come and inspect that feature of our establishment which you
rashly disparage.’ With that, taking up a candle, he conducted his chum
into the fourth room of the set of chambers—a little narrow room—which
was very completely and neatly fitted as a kitchen. ‘See!’ said Eugene,
‘miniature flour-barrel, rolling-pin, spice-box, shelf of brown jars,
chopping-board, coffee-mill, dresser elegantly furnished with crockery,
saucepans and pans, roasting jack, a charming kettle, an armoury of
dish-covers. The moral influence of these objects, in forming the domestic
virtues, may have an immense influence upon me; not upon you, for you are
a hopeless case, but upon me. In fact, I have an idea that I feel the
domestic virtues already forming. Do me the favour to step into my
bedroom. Secretaire, you see, and abstruse set of solid mahogany
pigeon-holes, one for every letter of the alphabet. To what use do I
devote them? I receive a bill—say from Jones. I docket it neatly at
the secretaire, <i>Jones</i>, and I put it into pigeonhole J. It’s the next thing
to a receipt and is quite as satisfactory to <i>me</i>. And I very much wish,
Mortimer,’ sitting on his bed, with the air of a philosopher lecturing a
disciple, ‘that my example might induce <i>you </i>to cultivate habits of
punctuality and method; and, by means of the moral influences with which I
have surrounded you, to encourage the formation of the domestic virtues.’</p>
<p>Mortimer laughed again, with his usual commentaries of ‘How <i>can </i>you be so
ridiculous, Eugene!’ and ‘What an absurd fellow you are!’ but when his
laugh was out, there was something serious, if not anxious, in his face.
Despite that pernicious assumption of lassitude and indifference, which
had become his second nature, he was strongly attached to his friend. He
had founded himself upon Eugene when they were yet boys at school; and at
this hour imitated him no less, admired him no less, loved him no less,
than in those departed days.</p>
<p>‘Eugene,’ said he, ‘if I could find you in earnest for a minute, I would
try to say an earnest word to you.’</p>
<p>‘An earnest word?’ repeated Eugene. ‘The moral influences are beginning to
work. Say on.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I will,’ returned the other, ‘though you are not earnest yet.’</p>
<p>‘In this desire for earnestness,’ murmured Eugene, with the air of one who
was meditating deeply, ‘I trace the happy influences of the little
flour-barrel and the coffee-mill. Gratifying.’</p>
<p>‘Eugene,’ resumed Mortimer, disregarding the light interruption, and
laying a hand upon Eugene’s shoulder, as he, Mortimer, stood before him
seated on his bed, ‘you are withholding something from me.’</p>
<p>Eugene looked at him, but said nothing.</p>
<p>‘All this past summer, you have been withholding something from me. Before
we entered on our boating vacation, you were as bent upon it as I have
seen you upon anything since we first rowed together. But you cared very
little for it when it came, often found it a tie and a drag upon you, and
were constantly away. Now it was well enough half-a-dozen times, a dozen
times, twenty times, to say to me in your own odd manner, which I know so
well and like so much, that your disappearances were precautions against
our boring one another; but of course after a short while I began to know
that they covered something. I don’t ask what it is, as you have not told
me; but the fact is so. Say, is it not?’</p>
<p>‘I give you my word of honour, Mortimer,’ returned Eugene, after a serious
pause of a few moments, ‘that I don’t know.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t know, Eugene?’</p>
<p>‘Upon my soul, don’t know. I know less about myself than about most people
in the world, and I don’t know.’</p>
<p>‘You have some design in your mind?’</p>
<p>‘Have I? I don’t think I have.’</p>
<p>‘At any rate, you have some subject of interest there which used not to be
there?’</p>
<p>‘I really can’t say,’ replied Eugene, shaking his head blankly, after
pausing again to reconsider. ‘At times I have thought yes; at other times
I have thought no. Now, I have been inclined to pursue such a subject; now
I have felt that it was absurd, and that it tired and embarrassed me.
Absolutely, I can’t say. Frankly and faithfully, I would if I could.’</p>
<p>So replying, he clapped a hand, in his turn, on his friend’s shoulder, as
he rose from his seat upon the bed, and said:</p>
<p>‘You must take your friend as he is. You know what I am, my dear Mortimer.
You know how dreadfully susceptible I am to boredom. You know that when I
became enough of a man to find myself an embodied conundrum, I bored
myself to the last degree by trying to find out what I meant. You know
that at length I gave it up, and declined to guess any more. Then how can
I possibly give you the answer that I have not discovered? The old nursery
form runs, “Riddle-me-riddle-me-ree, p’raps you can’t tell me what this
may be?” My reply runs, “No. Upon my life, I can’t.”’</p>
<p>So much of what was fantastically true to his own knowledge of this
utterly careless Eugene, mingled with the answer, that Mortimer could not
receive it as a mere evasion. Besides, it was given with an engaging air
of openness, and of special exemption of the one friend he valued, from
his reckless indifference.</p>
<p>‘Come, dear boy!’ said Eugene. ‘Let us try the effect of smoking. If it
enlightens me at all on this question, I will impart unreservedly.’</p>
<p>They returned to the room they had come from, and, finding it heated,
opened a window. Having lighted their cigars, they leaned out of this
window, smoking, and looking down at the moonlight, as it shone into the
court below.</p>
<p>‘No enlightenment,’ resumed Eugene, after certain minutes of silence. ‘I
feel sincerely apologetic, my dear Mortimer, but nothing comes.’</p>
<p>‘If nothing comes,’ returned Mortimer, ‘nothing can come from it. So I
shall hope that this may hold good throughout, and that there may be
nothing on foot. Nothing injurious to you, Eugene, or—’</p>
<p>Eugene stayed him for a moment with his hand on his arm, while he took a
piece of earth from an old flowerpot on the window-sill and dexterously
shot it at a little point of light opposite; having done which to his
satisfaction, he said, ‘Or?’</p>
<p>‘Or injurious to any one else.’</p>
<p>‘How,’ said Eugene, taking another little piece of earth, and shooting it
with great precision at the former mark, ‘how injurious to any one else?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know.’</p>
<p>‘And,’ said Eugene, taking, as he said the word, another shot, ‘to whom
else?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know.’</p>
<p>Checking himself with another piece of earth in his hand, Eugene looked at
his friend inquiringly and a little suspiciously. There was no concealed
or half-expressed meaning in his face.</p>
<p>‘Two belated wanderers in the mazes of the law,’ said Eugene, attracted by
the sound of footsteps, and glancing down as he spoke, ‘stray into the
court. They examine the door-posts of number one, seeking the name they
want. Not finding it at number one, they come to number two. On the hat of
wanderer number two, the shorter one, I drop this pellet. Hitting him on
the hat, I smoke serenely, and become absorbed in contemplation of the
sky.’</p>
<p>Both the wanderers looked up towards the window; but, after interchanging
a mutter or two, soon applied themselves to the door-posts below. There
they seemed to discover what they wanted, for they disappeared from view
by entering at the doorway. ‘When they emerge,’ said Eugene, ‘you shall
see me bring them both down’; and so prepared two pellets for the purpose.</p>
<p>He had not reckoned on their seeking his name, or Lightwood’s. But either
the one or the other would seem to be in question, for now there came a
knock at the door. ‘I am on duty to-night,’ said Mortimer, ‘stay you where
you are, Eugene.’ Requiring no persuasion, he stayed there, smoking
quietly, and not at all curious to know who knocked, until Mortimer spoke
to him from within the room, and touched him. Then, drawing in his head,
he found the visitors to be young Charley Hexam and the schoolmaster; both
standing facing him, and both recognized at a glance.</p>
<p>‘You recollect this young fellow, Eugene?’ said Mortimer.</p>
<p>‘Let me look at him,’ returned Wrayburn, coolly. ‘Oh, yes, yes. I
recollect him!’</p>
<p>He had not been about to repeat that former action of taking him by the
chin, but the boy had suspected him of it, and had thrown up his arm with
an angry start. Laughingly, Wrayburn looked to Lightwood for an
explanation of this odd visit.</p>
<p>‘He says he has something to say.’</p>
<p>‘Surely it must be to you, Mortimer.’</p>
<p>‘So I thought, but he says no. He says it is to you.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I do say so,’ interposed the boy. ‘And I mean to say what I want to
say, too, Mr Eugene Wrayburn!’</p>
<p>Passing him with his eyes as if there were nothing where he stood, Eugene
looked on to Bradley Headstone. With consummate indolence, he turned to
Mortimer, inquiring: ‘And who may this other person be?’</p>
<p>‘I am Charles Hexam’s friend,’ said Bradley; ‘I am Charles Hexam’s
schoolmaster.’</p>
<p>‘My good sir, you should teach your pupils better manners,’ returned
Eugene.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0278m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0278m " /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0278.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></SPAN>
</h5>
<p>Composedly smoking, he leaned an elbow on the chimneypiece, at the side of
the fire, and looked at the schoolmaster. It was a cruel look, in its cold
disdain of him, as a creature of no worth. The schoolmaster looked at him,
and that, too, was a cruel look, though of the different kind, that it had
a raging jealousy and fiery wrath in it.</p>
<p>Very remarkably, neither Eugene Wrayburn nor Bradley Headstone looked at
all at the boy. Through the ensuing dialogue, those two, no matter who
spoke, or whom was addressed, looked at each other. There was some secret,
sure perception between them, which set them against one another in all
ways.</p>
<p>‘In some high respects, Mr Eugene Wrayburn,’ said Bradley, answering him
with pale and quivering lips, ‘the natural feelings of my pupils are
stronger than my teaching.’</p>
<p>‘In most respects, I dare say,’ replied Eugene, enjoying his cigar,
‘though whether high or low is of no importance. You have my name very
correctly. Pray what is yours?’</p>
<p>‘It cannot concern you much to know, but—’</p>
<p>‘True,’ interposed Eugene, striking sharply and cutting him short at his
mistake, ‘it does not concern me at all to know. I can say Schoolmaster,
which is a most respectable title. You are right, Schoolmaster.’</p>
<p>It was not the dullest part of this goad in its galling of Bradley
Headstone, that he had made it himself in a moment of incautious anger. He
tried to set his lips so as to prevent their quivering, but they quivered
fast.</p>
<p>‘Mr Eugene Wrayburn,’ said the boy, ‘I want a word with you. I have wanted
it so much, that we have looked out your address in the book, and we have
been to your office, and we have come from your office here.’</p>
<p>‘You have given yourself much trouble, Schoolmaster,’ observed Eugene,
blowing the feathery ash from his cigar. ‘I hope it may prove
remunerative.’</p>
<p>‘And I am glad to speak,’ pursued the boy, ‘in presence of Mr Lightwood,
because it was through Mr Lightwood that you ever saw my sister.’</p>
<p>For a mere moment, Wrayburn turned his eyes aside from the schoolmaster to
note the effect of the last word on Mortimer, who, standing on the
opposite side of the fire, as soon as the word was spoken, turned his face
towards the fire and looked down into it.</p>
<p>‘Similarly, it was through Mr Lightwood that you ever saw her again, for
you were with him on the night when my father was found, and so I found
you with her on the next day. Since then, you have seen my sister often.
You have seen my sister oftener and oftener. And I want to know why?’</p>
<p>‘Was this worth while, Schoolmaster?’ murmured Eugene, with the air of a
disinterested adviser. ‘So much trouble for nothing? You should know best,
but I think not.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know, Mr Wrayburn,’ answered Bradley, with his passion rising,
‘why you address me—’</p>
<p>‘Don’t you? said Eugene. ‘Then I won’t.’</p>
<p>He said it so tauntingly in his perfect placidity, that the respectable
right-hand clutching the respectable hair-guard of the respectable watch
could have wound it round his throat and strangled him with it. Not
another word did Eugene deem it worth while to utter, but stood leaning
his head upon his hand, smoking, and looking imperturbably at the chafing
Bradley Headstone with his clutching right-hand, until Bradley was
wellnigh mad.</p>
<p>‘Mr Wrayburn,’ proceeded the boy, ‘we not only know this that I have
charged upon you, but we know more. It has not yet come to my sister’s
knowledge that we have found it out, but we have. We had a plan, Mr
Headstone and I, for my sister’s education, and for its being advised and
overlooked by Mr Headstone, who is a much more competent authority,
whatever you may pretend to think, as you smoke, than you could produce,
if you tried. Then, what do we find? What do we find, Mr Lightwood? Why,
we find that my sister is already being taught, without our knowing it. We
find that while my sister gives an unwilling and cold ear to our schemes
for her advantage—I, her brother, and Mr Headstone, the most
competent authority, as his certificates would easily prove, that could be
produced—she is wilfully and willingly profiting by other schemes.
Ay, and taking pains, too, for I know what such pains are. And so does Mr
Headstone! Well! Somebody pays for this, is a thought that naturally
occurs to us; who pays? We apply ourselves to find out, Mr Lightwood, and
we find that your friend, this Mr Eugene Wrayburn, here, pays. Then I ask
him what right has he to do it, and what does he mean by it, and how comes
he to be taking such a liberty without my consent, when I am raising
myself in the scale of society by my own exertions and Mr Headstone’s aid,
and have no right to have any darkness cast upon my prospects, or any
imputation upon my respectability, through my sister?’</p>
<p>The boyish weakness of this speech, combined with its great selfishness,
made it a poor one indeed. And yet Bradley Headstone, used to the little
audience of a school, and unused to the larger ways of men, showed a kind
of exultation in it.</p>
<p>‘Now I tell Mr Eugene Wrayburn,’ pursued the boy, forced into the use of
the third person by the hopelessness of addressing him in the first, ‘that
I object to his having any acquaintance at all with my sister, and that I
request him to drop it altogether. He is not to take it into his head that
I am afraid of my sister’s caring for <i>him</i>—’</p>
<p>(As the boy sneered, the Master sneered, and Eugene blew off the feathery
ash again.)</p>
<p>—‘But I object to it, and that’s enough. I am more important to my
sister than he thinks. As I raise myself, I intend to raise her; she knows
that, and she has to look to me for her prospects. Now I understand all
this very well, and so does Mr Headstone. My sister is an excellent girl,
but she has some romantic notions; not about such things as your Mr Eugene
Wrayburns, but about the death of my father and other matters of that
sort. Mr Wrayburn encourages those notions to make himself of importance,
and so she thinks she ought to be grateful to him, and perhaps even likes
to be. Now I don’t choose her to be grateful to him, or to be grateful to
anybody but me, except Mr Headstone. And I tell Mr Wrayburn that if he
don’t take heed of what I say, it will be worse for her. Let him turn that
over in his memory, and make sure of it. Worse for her!’</p>
<p>A pause ensued, in which the schoolmaster looked very awkward.</p>
<p>‘May I suggest, Schoolmaster,’ said Eugene, removing his fast-waning cigar
from his lips to glance at it, ‘that you can now take your pupil away.’</p>
<p>‘And Mr Lightwood,’ added the boy, with a burning face, under the flaming
aggravation of getting no sort of answer or attention, ‘I hope you’ll take
notice of what I have said to your friend, and of what your friend has
heard me say, word by word, whatever he pretends to the contrary. You are
bound to take notice of it, Mr Lightwood, for, as I have already
mentioned, you first brought your friend into my sister’s company, and but
for you we never should have seen him. Lord knows none of us ever wanted
him, any more than any of us will ever miss him. Now Mr Headstone, as Mr
Eugene Wrayburn has been obliged to hear what I had to say, and couldn’t
help himself, and as I have said it out to the last word, we have done all
we wanted to do, and may go.’</p>
<p>‘Go down-stairs, and leave me a moment, Hexam,’ he returned. The boy
complying with an indignant look and as much noise as he could make, swung
out of the room; and Lightwood went to the window, and leaned there,
looking out.</p>
<p>‘You think me of no more value than the dirt under your feet,’ said
Bradley to Eugene, speaking in a carefully weighed and measured tone, or
he could not have spoken at all.</p>
<p>‘I assure you, Schoolmaster,’ replied Eugene, ‘I don’t think about you.’</p>
<p>‘That’s not true,’ returned the other; ‘you know better.’</p>
<p>‘That’s coarse,’ Eugene retorted; ‘but you <i>don’t</i> know better.’</p>
<p>‘Mr Wrayburn, at least I know very well that it would be idle to set
myself against you in insolent words or overbearing manners. That lad who
has just gone out could put you to shame in half-a-dozen branches of
knowledge in half an hour, but you can throw him aside like an inferior.
You can do as much by me, I have no doubt, beforehand.’</p>
<p>‘Possibly,’ remarked Eugene.</p>
<p>‘But I am more than a lad,’ said Bradley, with his clutching hand, ‘and I
<i>will </i>be heard, sir.’</p>
<p>‘As a schoolmaster,’ said Eugene, ‘you are always being heard. That ought
to content you.’</p>
<p>‘But it does not content me,’ replied the other, white with passion. ‘Do
you suppose that a man, in forming himself for the duties I discharge, and
in watching and repressing himself daily to discharge them well, dismisses
a man’s nature?’</p>
<p>‘I suppose you,’ said Eugene, ‘judging from what I see as I look at you,
to be rather too passionate for a good schoolmaster.’ As he spoke, he
tossed away the end of his cigar.</p>
<p>‘Passionate with you, sir, I admit I am. Passionate with you, sir, I
respect myself for being. But I have not Devils for my pupils.’</p>
<p>‘For your Teachers, I should rather say,’ replied Eugene.</p>
<p>‘Mr Wrayburn.’</p>
<p>‘Schoolmaster.’</p>
<p>‘Sir, my name is Bradley Headstone.’</p>
<p>‘As you justly said, my good sir, your name cannot concern me. Now, what
more?’</p>
<p>‘This more. Oh, what a misfortune is mine,’ cried Bradley, breaking off to
wipe the starting perspiration from his face as he shook from head to
foot, ‘that I cannot so control myself as to appear a stronger creature
than this, when a man who has not felt in all his life what I have felt in
a day can so command himself!’ He said it in a very agony, and even
followed it with an errant motion of his hands as if he could have torn
himself.</p>
<p>Eugene Wrayburn looked on at him, as if he found him beginning to be
rather an entertaining study.</p>
<p>‘Mr Wrayburn, I desire to say something to you on my own part.’</p>
<p>‘Come, come, Schoolmaster,’ returned Eugene, with a languid approach to
impatience as the other again struggled with himself; ‘say what you have
to say. And let me remind you that the door is standing open, and your
young friend waiting for you on the stairs.’</p>
<p>‘When I accompanied that youth here, sir, I did so with the purpose of
adding, as a man whom you should not be permitted to put aside, in case
you put him aside as a boy, that his instinct is correct and right.’ Thus
Bradley Headstone, with great effort and difficulty.</p>
<p>‘Is that all?’ asked Eugene.</p>
<p>‘No, sir,’ said the other, flushed and fierce. ‘I strongly support him in
his disapproval of your visits to his sister, and in his objection to your
officiousness—and worse—in what you have taken upon yourself
to do for her.’</p>
<p>‘Is <i>that </i>all?’ asked Eugene.</p>
<p>‘No, sir. I determined to tell you that you are not justified in these
proceedings, and that they are injurious to his sister.’</p>
<p>‘Are you her schoolmaster as well as her brother’s?—Or perhaps you
would like to be?’ said Eugene.</p>
<p>It was a stab that the blood followed, in its rush to Bradley Headstone’s
face, as swiftly as if it had been dealt with a dagger. ‘What do you mean
by that?’ was as much as he could utter.</p>
<p>‘A natural ambition enough,’ said Eugene, coolly. ‘Far be it from me to say
otherwise. The sister who is something too much upon your lips, perhaps—is
so very different from all the associations to which she had been used,
and from all the low obscure people about her, that it is a very natural
ambition.’</p>
<p>‘Do you throw my obscurity in my teeth, Mr Wrayburn?’</p>
<p>‘That can hardly be, for I know nothing concerning it, Schoolmaster, and
seek to know nothing.’</p>
<p>‘You reproach me with my origin,’ said Bradley Headstone; ‘you cast
insinuations at my bringing-up. But I tell you, sir, I have worked my way
onward, out of both and in spite of both, and have a right to be
considered a better man than you, with better reasons for being proud.’</p>
<p>‘How I can reproach you with what is not within my knowledge, or how I can
cast stones that were never in my hand, is a problem for the ingenuity of
a schoolmaster to prove,’ returned Eugene. ‘Is <i>that </i>all?’</p>
<p>‘No, sir. If you suppose that boy—’</p>
<p>‘Who really will be tired of waiting,’ said Eugene, politely.</p>
<p>‘If you suppose that boy to be friendless, Mr Wrayburn, you deceive
yourself. I am his friend, and you shall find me so.’</p>
<p>‘And you will find <i>him </i>on the stairs,’ remarked Eugene.</p>
<p>‘You may have promised yourself, sir, that you could do what you chose
here, because you had to deal with a mere boy, inexperienced, friendless,
and unassisted. But I give you warning that this mean calculation is
wrong. You have to do with a man also. You have to do with me. I will
support him, and, if need be, require reparation for him. My hand and
heart are in this cause, and are open to him.’</p>
<p>‘And—quite a coincidence—the door is open,’ remarked Eugene.</p>
<p>‘I scorn your shifty evasions, and I scorn you,’ said the schoolmaster.
‘In the meanness of your nature you revile me with the meanness of my
birth. I hold you in contempt for it. But if you don’t profit by this
visit, and act accordingly, you will find me as bitterly in earnest
against you as I could be if I deemed you worth a second thought on my own
account.’</p>
<p>With a consciously bad grace and stiff manner, as Wrayburn looked so
easily and calmly on, he went out with these words, and the heavy door
closed like a furnace-door upon his red and white heats of rage.</p>
<p>‘A curious monomaniac,’ said Eugene. ‘The man seems to believe that
everybody was acquainted with his mother!’</p>
<p>Mortimer Lightwood being still at the window, to which he had in delicacy
withdrawn, Eugene called to him, and he fell to slowly pacing the room.</p>
<p>‘My dear fellow,’ said Eugene, as he lighted another cigar, ‘I fear my
unexpected visitors have been troublesome. If as a set-off (excuse the
legal phrase from a barrister-at-law) you would like to ask Tippins to
tea, I pledge myself to make love to her.’</p>
<p>‘Eugene, Eugene, Eugene,’ replied Mortimer, still pacing the room, ‘I am
sorry for this. And to think that I have been so blind!’</p>
<p>‘How blind, dear boy?’ inquired his unmoved friend.</p>
<p>‘What were your words that night at the river-side public-house?’ said
Lightwood, stopping. ‘What was it that you asked me? Did I feel like a
dark combination of traitor and pickpocket when I thought of that girl?’</p>
<p>‘I seem to remember the expression,’ said Eugene.</p>
<p>‘How do <i>you </i>feel when you think of her just now?’</p>
<p>His friend made no direct reply, but observed, after a few whiffs of his
cigar, ‘Don’t mistake the situation. There is no better girl in all this
London than Lizzie Hexam. There is no better among my people at home; no
better among your people.’</p>
<p>‘Granted. What follows?’</p>
<p>‘There,’ said Eugene, looking after him dubiously as he paced away to the
other end of the room, ‘you put me again upon guessing the riddle that I
have given up.’</p>
<p>‘Eugene, do you design to capture and desert this girl?’</p>
<p>‘My dear fellow, no.’</p>
<p>‘Do you design to marry her?’</p>
<p>‘My dear fellow, no.’</p>
<p>‘Do you design to pursue her?’</p>
<p>‘My dear fellow, I don’t design anything. I have no design whatever. I am
incapable of designs. If I conceived a design, I should speedily abandon
it, exhausted by the operation.’</p>
<p>‘Oh Eugene, Eugene!’</p>
<p>‘My dear Mortimer, not that tone of melancholy reproach, I entreat. What
can I do more than tell you all I know, and acknowledge my ignorance of
all I don’t know! How does that little old song go, which, under pretence
of being cheerful, is by far the most lugubrious I ever heard in my life?</p>
<p>“Away with melancholy,<br/>
Nor doleful changes ring<br/>
On life and human folly,<br/>
But merrily merrily sing<br/>
Fal la!”<br/></p>
<p>Don’t let us sing Fal la, my dear Mortimer (which is comparatively
unmeaning), but let us sing that we give up guessing the riddle
altogether.’</p>
<p>‘Are you in communication with this girl, Eugene, and is what these people
say true?’</p>
<p>‘I concede both admissions to my honourable and learned friend.’</p>
<p>‘Then what is to come of it? What are you doing? Where are you going?’</p>
<p>‘My dear Mortimer, one would think the schoolmaster had left behind him a
catechizing infection. You are ruffled by the want of another cigar. Take
one of these, I entreat. Light it at mine, which is in perfect order. So!
Now do me the justice to observe that I am doing all I can towards
self-improvement, and that you have a light thrown on those household
implements which, when you only saw them as in a glass darkly, you were
hastily—I must say hastily—inclined to depreciate. Sensible of
my deficiencies, I have surrounded myself with moral influences expressly
meant to promote the formation of the domestic virtues. To those
influences, and to the improving society of my friend from boyhood,
commend me with your best wishes.’</p>
<p>‘Ah, Eugene!’ said Lightwood, affectionately, now standing near him, so
that they both stood in one little cloud of smoke; ‘I would that you
answered my three questions! What is to come of it? What are you doing?
Where are you going?’</p>
<p>‘And my dear Mortimer,’ returned Eugene, lightly fanning away the smoke
with his hand for the better exposition of his frankness of face and
manner, ‘believe me, I would answer them instantly if I could. But to
enable me to do so, I must first have found out the troublesome conundrum
long abandoned. Here it is. Eugene Wrayburn.’ Tapping his forehead and
breast. ‘Riddle-me, riddle-me-ree, perhaps you can’t tell me what this may
be?—No, upon my life I can’t. I give it up!’</p>
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