It was on a beautiful March afternoon that I sought out the I approached the lair of England's first poet with a beating heart, the trip-hammer-like thudding of which against my Immediately a window on the top story was opened, and the laureate himself thrust his head out. I could dimly perceive the contour of his noble forehead through the mist. "Who's there, who's there, I fain would know, said he. "I am an American lady journalist," I "How much is that in £ s. d.?" he asked, eagerly. "One pound eight," said I. "I'll be down," he replied, instantly, and drawing his noble brow in out of the wet, he slammed the window to, and, if the squeaking sounds I heard within meant anything, slid down the banisters in order not to keep me waiting longer than was necessary. He opened the door, and in a moment we stood face to face. "Mr. Alfred Austin?" said I. "The same, O Lady Journalist, said he, cordially grasping me by the hand. "Come right up and make yourself perfectly "Hold on, Mr. Austin," said I. "I don't wish to be rude, but I am not authorized to pay you seven dollars apiece for such words as these you are uttering. If you have any explanations to offer the public for condescending to let me peep at you while at work, you must do it at your own expense." A shade of disappointment passed over his delicate features. "There's a hundred guineas gone at a stroke," he muttered, and for an instant I feared that I was to receive my congÉ. By a strong effort of the will, however, the laureate pulled himself together. "If that's the case, O Yankee fair, said he. And then he added, courteously: "I am sorry the elevator isn't running. It's one of these English elevators, you know." "Indeed?" said I. "And what is the peculiarity of an English elevator?" "Like Britons 'neath the foeman's serried guns, he explained. "It's very annoying, too, particularly when you have to carry poems up and down stairs." "You should let your poems do their own walking, Mr. Austin," said I. "I beg your pardon," said he. "But how can they?" "Those I've seen have had feet enough The laureate scratched his head solemnly. "Quite so," he said, at length. "But come, let us hasten." We hastened upward, and five minutes later we were in the sanctum. It was a charming room. A complete set of the British Poets stood ranged in chronological sequence on the table. A copy of Hood's Rhymster, well thumbed, lay open on the sofa, and a volume of popular quotations lay on the floor beside the poet's easy-chair. A full-length portrait of her Majesty the Queen, seven inches high and sixteen wide, hung over the fireplace, and beneath it stood a charming bust of the late Lord Tennyson with the face turned towards the wall. "A beautiful workshop," said I. "Surely one sees now the sources of your inspiration." "'Tis true my dear. 'Tis very, very true. he answered. "That's why I live under the roof instead of hiring chambers on the ground-floor. Up here I am not bothered by what in one of my new poems I shall call 'Mundane Things.' Rather good expression that, don't you think? The first draft reads: "'Mundane things, mundane things, "Rather clever, to be tossed off on a "Yes," said I. "What suggested it?" "The merest accident. I got some soap in my eye and was about to give way to my temper, when I thought to myself that the true poet ought to rise above petty annoyances of that nature—in other words, above mundane things." "Wonderfully interesting," I put in. "Was your appointment a surprise to you, Mr. Austin?" "Surprise? Nay, nay, my lovely maid. he replied. "You see, as a newspaper man I knew what rates the other poets were getting. There was Swinburne getting seven bob a line, and Sir Edwin Arnold asking a guinea a yard, and old Kipling grinding it out for one and six per quatrain, and Watson doing sonnets on the Yellow North, and the Red, White, and Blue East, and the Pink Sow'west, at five pounds a dozen. So when Salisbury rang me up on the 'phone and said I'd better put in a bid for the verse contract, I knew just how to arrange my rates to get the work." "You had a great advantage over the others," said I. "Which shows the value of a newspaper training. Newspaper men know everything," he said. "I had but one fear, and that was your American poets. They are hustlers, and I didn't know but that some enterprising American like Russell Sage or Barnum & Bailey would form a syndicate and corner America's poem-supply, and bowl my wickets from under me. Working together, they could have done it, but they didn't know their power, thank Heaven!—if I may borrow an Americanism."
"Well, Mr. Austin," said I, rising, "I am afraid I shall have to go. I fear your words have already exceeded the appropriation. Ah—how much do I owe you?" The laureate took from beneath his chin a small golden object that looked like a locket. Opening it, he scanned it closely for a moment. "My chinometer says nine hundred and sixty-three words. Let us call it a thousand—I don't care for trifles," said he. "Very well," I replied. "That is $7000 I owe you." "Yes," he said. "But of course I allow you the usual discount." "For what?" said I. "Cash," said he. "Poole does it on clothes, and I've adopted the system. It pays in the end, for, as I say in my next ode to the Queen, to be written on the occasion of her Ruby Jubilee, 'A sovereign in hand is worth two heirs-presumptive in the bush.'" "In other words, cash deferred maketh the heart sick." "Precisely. I'll put that motto down in my note-book for future use." "I thank you for the compliment," said I, as I paid him $5950. "Good-bye, Mr. Austin." "Good-bye, Miss Witherup," said he. "Any time when you find you have a "Say au revoir, but not good-bye, said he, ushering me down-stairs and bowing me out into the fog, which |