I wrote to Taine at once, telling him of the position and my illness and asking him to send me a letter of recommendation, if he thought I was fit. By return post I got a letter from him recommending me in the warmest way. This letter I sent on to Dr. Bigge, the head-master, together with one from Professor Smith of Lawrence, and Dr. Bigge answered by asking me to come to Brighton to see him. Within twenty-four hours I went and was accepted forthwith, though he thought I looked too young to keep discipline. He soon realized that his fears were merely imaginary, I could have kept order in a cage of hyenas.
A long book would not exhaust my year as a master in Brighton College, but only two or three happenings require notice here as affecting my character and its growth. First of all, I found in every class of thirty lads five or six of real ability, and in the whole school three or four of astonishing minds, well graced, too, in manners and spirit. But six out of ten were both stupid and obstinate, and these I left wholly to their own devices. Dr. Bigge warned me by a report of my work exhibited on the notice board of the sixth form, that while some of my scholars displayed great improvement, the vast majority showed none at all. I went to see him immediately and handed him my written resignation to take place at any moment he pleased. «I cannot bother with the fools who don't even wish to learn,» I said, «but I'll do anything for the others.» Most of the abler boys liked me, I believe, and a little characteristic incident came to help me. There was a form-master named Wolverton, an Oxford man and son of a well-known archdeacon, who sometimes went out with me to the theatre or the roller-skating rink in West Street. One night at the rink he drew my attention to a youth in a straw hat, going out accompanied by a woman. «Look at that,» said Wolverton,
«there goes So-and-So in our colors and with a woman! Did you see him?» «I didn't pay much attention,» I replied, «but surely there's nothing unusual in a sixth form boy trying his wings outside the nest.» At the next masters' meeting, to my horror Wolverton related the circumstance and ended up by declaring that unless the boy could give the name of the woman, he should be expelled. He called upon me as a witness to the fact. I got up at once and said that I was far too short-sighted to distinguish the boy at half the distance, and I refused to be used in the matter in any way. Dr.
Bigge thought the offense very grave. «The morals of a boy,» he declared, «were the most important part of his education. The matter must be probed to the bottom: he thought that on reflection I would not deny that I had seen a college boy that night in colors and in suspicious company.» I thereupon got up and freed my soul; the whole crew seemed to me mere hypocrites. «In the Doctor's own House,» I said, «where I take evening preparation, I could give him a list of boys who are known as lovers, notorious even, and so long as this vice is winked at throughout the school, I shall be no party to persecuting anybody for yielding to legitimate and natural passion.» I had hardly got out the last words when Cotteril, the son of the Bishop of Edinburgh, got up and called upon me to free his House from any such odious and unbearable suspicion. I retorted immediately that there was a pair in his house known as «the inseparables,» and went on to state that my quarrel was with the whole boarding-house system, and not with individual masters who, I was fain to believe, did their best. The vice-principal, Dr. Newton, was the only one who even recognized my good motives: he came away from the meeting with me and advised me to consult with his wife. After this I was practically boycotted by the masters: I had dared to say in public what Wolverton and others of them had admitted to me in private a dozen times.
Mrs. Newton, the vice-principal's wife, was one of the leaders of Brighton society: she was what the French called une maitresse femme, and a born leader in any society. She advised me to form girls' classes in literature for the half-holidays each week; was good enough to send out the circulars and lend her drawing-room for my first lectures. In a week I had fifty pupils who paid me half a crown a lesson, and I soon found myself drawing ten pounds a week in addition to my pay. I saved every penny and thus came in a year to monetary freedom. At every crisis in my life I have been helped by good friends who have aided me out of pure kindness at cost of time and trouble to themselves. Smith helped me in Lawrence and Mrs. Newton at Brighton out of bountiful human sympathy. Before this I had got to know a man named Harold Hamilton, manager of the London amp; County Bank, I think, at Brighton. It amused him to see how quickly and regularly my balance grew; soon I confided my plans to him and my purpose: he was all sympathy. I lent him books and his daughter Ada was assiduous at all my lectures. In the nick of time for me the war broke out between Chili and Peru: Chilean bonds dropped from 90 to 60. I saw Hamilton and assured him that Chili, if left alone, could beat all South America: he advised me to wait and see. A little later Bolivia threw in her lot with Peru, and Chilean bonds fell to 43 or 44. At once I went to Hamilton and asked him to buy Chileans for all I possessed on a margin of three or four. After much talk he did what I wished on a margin of ten: a fortnight later came the news of the first Chilean victory, and Chileans jumped to 60 odd and continued to climb steadily. I sold at over 80 and thus netted from my first five hundred pounds over two thousand pounds and by Christmas was free once more to study with a mind at ease. Hamilton told me that he had followed my lead a little later but had made more from a larger investment. The most important happening at Brighton I must now relate. I have already told in a pen-portrait of Carlyle, published by Austin Harrison in the English Review some twelve years ago, how I went one Sunday morning and called upon my hero, Thomas Carlyle, in Chelsea. I told there, too, how on more than one Sunday I used to meet him on his morning walk along the Chelsea embankment, and how once at least he talked to me of his wife and admitted his impotence. I only gave a summary of a few talks in my portrait of him, for the traits did not call for strengthening by repetition, but here I am inclined to add a few details, for everything about Carlyle at his best is of enduring interest! When I told him how I had been affected by reading Emerson's speech to the students of Dartmouth College and how it had in a way forced me to give up my law-practice and go to Europe to study, he broke in excitedly: «I remember well reading that very page to my wife and saying that nothing like it for pure nobility had been heard since Schiller went silent. It had a great power with it… And so that started you off and changed your way of life?… I don't wonder… It was a great call.» After that Carlyle seemed to like me. At our final parting, too, when I was going to Germany to study and he wished me «Godspeed and Good speed! on the way that lies before ye,» he spoke again of Emerson and the sorrow he had felt on parting with him; deep, deep sorrow and regret, and he added, laying his hands on my shoulders, «Sorrowing most of all that they should see his face no more forever.» I remembered the passage and cried: «Oh, Sir, I should have said that, for mine is the loss, mine the unspeakable misfortune now,» and through my tears I saw that his eyes, too, were full. He had just given me a letter to Froude, «good, kindly Froude,» who, he was sure, would help me in any way of commendation to some literary position, «if I have gone as is most likely,» and in due time Froude did help me, as I shall tell in the proper place. My pen-portrait of Carlyle was ferociously attacked by a kinsman, Alexander Carlyle, who evidently believed that I had got my knowledge of Carlyle's weakness from Froude's revelations in 1904. But luckily for me, Sir Charles Jessel remembered a dinner in the Garrick Club given by him in 1886 or 1887, at which both Sir Richard Quainft and myself were present. Jessel recalled distinctly that I had that evening told the story of Carlyle's impotence as explaining the sadness of his married life and had then asserted that the confession came to me from Carlyle himself. At that dinner Sir Richard Quain said that he had been Mrs. Carlyle's physician and that he would tell me later exactly what Mrs. Carlyle had confessed to him. Here is Quain's account as he gave it to me that night in a private room at the Garrick. He said: «I had been a friend of the Carlyles for years: he was a hero to me, one of the wisest and best of men: she was singularly witty and worldly-wise and pleased me even more than the sage. One evening I found her in great pain on the sofa: when I asked her where the pain was, she indicated her lower belly and I guessed at once that it must be some trouble connected with the change of life. «I begged her to go up to her bedroom and I would come in a quarter of an hour and examine her, assuring her the while that I was sure I could give her almost immediate relief. She went upstairs. In about ten minutes I asked her husband, would he come with me? He replied in his broadest Scotch accent, always a sign of emotion with him: «'I'll have naething to do with it. Ye must arrange it yerselves.' «Thereupon I went upstairs and knocked at Mrs.