The New Man at Littlehill. Market Denborough is not a large town. Perhaps it is none the worse for that, and, if it be, there is compensation to be found in its picturesqueness, its antiquity, and its dignity; for there has been a town where it stands from time immemorial; it makes a great figure in county histories and local guidebooks; it is an ancient corporation, an assize town, and quarter-sessions borough. It does not grow, for country towns, dependent solely on the support of the rural districts surrounding, are not given to growing much nowadays. Moreover, the Delanes do not readily allow new houses to be built, and if a man lives in Market Denborough, he must be a roofless vagrant or a tenant of Mr. Delane. It is not the place to make a fortune; but, on the other hand, unusual recklessness is necessary to the losing of one there. If the triumphs of life are on a small scale, the struggle for existence is not very fierce, and a wise man might do worse than barter the uncertain chances and precarious joys of a larger stage, to play a modest, easy, quiet part on the little boards of Market Denborough. It must not, however, be supposed that the lion and the lamb have quite sunk their differences and lain down together at Market Denborough. There, as elsewhere, the millennium tarries, and there are not wanting fierce feuds, personal, municipal, nay, even, within the wide limits of Mr. Delane's tolerance, political. If it were not so, the Mayor would not have been happy, for the Mayor loved a fight; and Alderman Johnstone, who was a Radical, would have felt his days wasted; and the two gentlemen would not have been, as they continually were, at loggerheads concerning paving contracts and kindred subjects. There was no want of interests in life, if a man were ready to take his own part and keep a sharp eye on the doings of his neighbor. Besides, the really great events of existence happened at Market Denborough much as they do in London; people were born, and married, and died; and while that rotation is unchecked, who can be seriously at a loss for matter of thought or topic of conversation? As Mr. James Roberts, member of the Royal College of Surgeons, a thin young man, with restless eyes and tight-shut lips, walked down High Street one hot, sunny afternoon, it never entered his head that there was not enough to think about in Market Denborough. Wife and child, rent, rates and taxes, patients and prescriptions, the relation between those old enemies, incomings and outgoings, here was food enough for any man's meditations. Enough? Ay, enough and to spare of such distasteful, insipid, narrow, soul-destroying stuff. Here his meditations were interrupted. He had reached, in his progress down the street, a large plate-glass-windowed shop, the shop of a chemist, and of no less a man than Mr. James Hedger, Mayor of Market Denborough. The member of the lower branch of their common art was a richer man than he who belonged to the higher, and when Mr. Hedger was playfully charged with giving the young Doctor his medicines cheap, he never denied the accusation. Anyhow, the two were good friends, and the Mayor, who was surveying his dominions from his doorstep, broke in on Dr. Roberts' train of thought with a cheerful greeting. "Have you heard the news?" he asked. "No; I've no time for the news. I always look to you for it, Mr. Mayor." "It mostly comes round to me, being a center, like," said the Mayor. "It's natural." "Well, what is it this time?" asked the Doctor, calling up a show of interest. He did not care much for Denborough news. "Littlehill's let," replied the Mayor. Littlehill, the subject of Philip Hume's half-ironical description, was a good house, standing on rising ground about half a mile outside the town. It belonged, of course, to Mr. Delane, and had stood empty for more than a year. A tenant at Littlehill meant an increase of custom for the tradespeople, and perchance for the "Indeed?" said Roberts. "Who's taken it?" "Not much good—a young man, a bachelor," said the Mayor, shaking his head. Bachelors do not require, or anyhow do not take, many chemist's drugs. "Still, I hear he's well off, and p'r'aps he'll have people to stop with him." "What's his name?" "Some name like Bannister. He's from London." "What's he coming here for?" asked Roberts, who, if he had been a well-to-do bachelor, would not have settled at Market Denborough. "Why shouldn't he?" retorted the Mayor, who had never lived, or thought of living, anywhere else. "Well, I shouldn't have thought he'd have found much to do. He wouldn't come in the summer for the hunting." "Hunting? Not he! He's a literary gentleman—writes poetry and what not." "Poetry? Why, it's not Dale Bannister, is it?" "Ay, that's the name." "Dale Bannister coming to Littlehill! That is an honor for the town!" "An honor? What do you mean, sir?" "Why, he's a famous man, Mr. Mayor. All London's talking of him." "I never heard his name in my life before," said the Mayor. "Oh, he's a genius. His poems are all the rage. You'll have to read them now." "He's having a lot done up there," remarked the Mayor. "Johnstone's got the job. Mr. Bannister don't know as much about Johnstone as some of us." "How should he?" said Roberts, smiling. "Johnstone's buildin' 'im a room. It'll tumble down." "Oh, come, Mr. Mayor, you're prejudiced." "No man can say that of me, sir. But I knows—I know Johnstone, Doctor. That's where it is!" "Well, I hope Johnstone's room won't fall on him. We can't spare Dale Bannister. Good-day, Mr. Mayor." "Where are you goin'?" "To Tom Steadman's." "Is he bad again?" inquired the Mayor, with interest. "Yes. He broke out last week, with the usual result." "Broke out? Yes! He had two gallons of beer and a bottle o' gin off the 'Blue Lion' in one day, the landlord told me." "They ought to go to prison for serving him." "Well, well, a man drinks or he don't," said the Mayor tolerantly; "and if he does, he'll get it some'ow. Good-day, sir." The Doctor completed his rounds, including the soothing of Tom Steadman's distempered imagination, and made his way home in quite a flutter of excitement. Hidden away in his Women have very often, and the best of women most often, a provoking sedateness of mind. Mrs. Roberts had never read the poems. True, but she had, of course, read about them, and about their author, and about their certain immortality; yet she was distinctly more interested in the tidings of Tom Steadman, a wretched dipsomaniac, than in the unparalleled news about Dale Bannister. In her heart she thought the Doctor a cleverer, as she had no doubt he was a better, man than the poet, and the nearest approach she made to grasping the real significance of the situation was when she remarked: "It will be nice for him to find one man, at all events, who can appreciate him." The Doctor smiled; he was pleased—who would not be?—that his wife should think first of the pleasure Dale Bannister would find in his society. It was absurd, but it was charming of her, and as she sat on the edge of his chair, he put his arm round his waist and said: "I beat him in one thing, anyhow." "What's that, Jim?" "My wife. He has no wife like mine." "Has he a wife at all?" asked Mrs. Roberts, with increased interest. A wife was another matter. "I believe not, but if he had——" "Don't be silly. Did you leave Tom quiet?" "Hang Tom! he deserves it. And give me my tea." Then came the baby, and with it an end, for the time, of Dale Bannister. |