Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
ribbons and little bouquet of pale roses, violets, and primroses, from beneath which she
looked out at him, steadily and critically, with her serious brown eyes.
During the many subsequent occasions on which they were obliged to meet over
the course of the summer, Miss Carteret, to the relief of her father, maintained the same
air of calm and courteous detachment towards her former playfellow, little knowing that
after every such occasion the poet would immediately retire to the Rectory to lay furious
pen to paper in the composition of aching paeans to the mistress of his imagination (many
of which were published the following year as an addendum to his second great work,
The Maid of Minsk; a Poem, in Twenty-Two Cantos).
As the year 1841 drew to a close, P. Rainsford Daunt, B.A., set his mind to
conquering both the world of letters, in addition to the heart of Miss Emily Carteret. The
following spring, Lord Tansor arranged for his portrait to be painted, and there was
intense excitement in the bosom of Mrs Daunt when an invitation addressed to the young
gentleman arrived at the Rectory requesting the pleasure of his presence at Her Majesty’s
bal masqué at Buckingham Palace, at which the Court of Edward III and Queen Philippa
was re-created in astonishing magnificence. A week later, he was formally presented at
Court, at a levee at St James’s Palace, absurdly resplendent in knee breeches, buckle
shoes, and a sword.
His saddened father, meanwhile, retreated to his study to correct the proofs of his
catalogue; his Lordship spent a good deal of time in town closeted with his legal man, Mr
Christopher Tredgold; and I had set my feet on the path that was eventually to lead to
Cain-court, Strand.
15:
Apocalypsis?
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I left Heidelberg in February, 1841, travelling first to Berlin and thence to France.
I arrived in Paris two days before my twenty-first birthday, and settled myself in the
Hôtel des Princes? – a little expensive, but not more than I thought I could afford. Having
reached my majority, the residue of my capital, which had been entrusted to Mr Byam
More, was now mine. Inspired by this happy thought, I allowed myself to draw deeply on
my reserves, in anticipation of their being very soon replenished, and abandoned myself
to the infinitely various pleasures Paris can offer a young man of tolerable looks, a lively
imagination, and a good opinion of himself. But there must be an end to all pleasure, and
soon the nagging apprehension that I must soon settle on a way to earn my living began
to intrude most unwelcomingly on my days and nights. Reluctantly, after three highly
entertaining weeks, I began to make my preparations for returning England.
Then, on the morning before my departure, I ran across Le Grice in Galignani’s
Reading Room,? which had been my daily place of resort during my stay. We spent a
delightful evening recounting the separate courses our lives had taken over the four years
since we had last seen each other. Of course he had news of several old schoofellows,
Daunt amongst them. I listened politely, but changed the subject as soon as I decently
could. I had no need to be reminded of Phoebus Daunt: he was constantly in my thoughts,
and the desire to execute effectual vengeance on him for what he had done to me still
burned with a bright and steady flame.
Le Grice was en route to Italy, with no particular purpose in view other than to
pass some time in pleasant surroundings and congenial company whilst he considered
what to do with himself. Given my own uncertainty on this subject, it did not take much
persuading on his part for me to abandon my plan of returning to Sandchurch and join
him on his ramblings. I immediately wrote to Mr More requesting him to transfer the
balance of my capital to my London account, and sent word to Tom that I would be
remaining on the Continent for a little longer. The next morning, Le Grice and I began
our journey south.
After many leisurely detours, we arrived at length in Marseilles, from whence we
proceeded along the Ligurian coast to Pisa, before finally setting ourselves up, in some
splendour, in a noble Florentine palazzo, close to the Duomo. Here we remained,
indolently indulging ourselves, until the heat of the summer drove us to the cooler air of
the mountains and, in due course, to Ancona, on the Adriatic coast.
By the end of August, having made our way north to Venice, Le Grice was
beginning to show signs of restlessness. I could not get my fill of churches, and paintings,
and sculpture; but these were not at all in Le Grice’s line. One church, he would say
wearily, looked very like another, and he expressed similar sentiments when confronted
with a succession of crucifixions and nativities. At last, in the second week of September,
we finally took our leave of each other, promising that we should meet again in London
as soon as our circumstances allowed. Le Grice departed for Trieste to take ship to
England, whilst I, after a few days on my own in Venice, headed south again. For the
next year or so, with Murray’s Hand-book to Asia Minor as my guide,? I wandered
through Greece and the Levant, reaching as far as Damascus, before sailing back through
the Cyclades to Brindisi. After sojourns in Naples and Rome I found myself in Florence
once more, in the late summer of 1842.
On our first visit to the city of the Medici, we had met an American couple, a Mr
and Mrs Forrester. Once back in Florence, I presented myself at the Forresters’ residence
and, finding the position of tutor to their two boys had become vacant, owing to the
unsuitability of the previous incumbent, I immediately offered my services. I remained in
the well-paid and undemanding employment of Mr and Mrs Forrester for the next three
and a half years, during which time I grew lazy and, in my indolence, neglected my own
studies grievously. I thought often of my former life in England, and how I must one day
return; and then this would always call up the shade of Phoebus Daunt, and the
unfinished business that lay between us. (Even in Florence I’d been unable to escape him:
on my twenty-third birthday I was presented with a copy of his latest volume, The Tartar
King: A Story in XII Cantos, by Mrs Forrester, a notable bluestocking ‘I doat on Mr
Daunt,’ she’d said, wiltingly. ‘Such a genius, and so young!’) It was from this time that I
began to form certain habits that have occasionally threatened to nullify irrevocably any
vestige of the higher talents with which I have been blessed. At this period, my lapses
were modest, though I began to hate both myself and the life I was leading. At length,
following an unfortunate incident concerning the daughter of a city official, I made my
apologies to the Forresters and left Florence in some haste.
I still had no desire to return home, and so I set my course northwards. In Milan, I
fell in with an English gentleman, a Mr Bryce Furnivall, from the Department of Printed
Books at the British Museum, who was about to depart for St Petersburg. My
conversations with Mr Furnivall had rekindled my old bibliographical passions; and
when he asked if I had a mind to accompany him into Russia, I readily agreed. In St
Petersburg we were kindly received by the celebrated bibliographer V.S. Sopikov, whose
shop in Gostiny Dvor became my daily place of resort.? I was bewitched by this
extraordinary city of white and gold, its great public buildings and palaces, its wide
prospects, its canals and churches. I found a set of rooms close to Nevsky Prospekt,
began to learn the Russian language, and even embraced the fearsome winter with
delight: bundled in furs I would often wander the streets at night, with the snow falling all
about me, to stand contemplatively on the Lion Bridge by the Griboedova Canal, or
watch the ice floating downstream on the mighty Neva. But then my companion, Mr
Furnivall, was obliged to return to London, and I was left alone again. Before departing,
he requested, with some warmth, that I should come to see him at the Museum on my
return, to discuss the possibility of my filling a vacancy in the Department that had
recently arisen. As I had no other career in view, it began to seem like an attractive
prospect. I had been an exile from my native country for too long. It was time to make
something of myself. And so, in February, 1847, I quit St Petersburg, arriving at last in
Portsmouth at the beginning of April.
Billick brought the trap to meet me off the Portsmouth coach at Wareham. Having
heartily slapped each other on the back for a second or two on first seeing each other, we
travelled back for two hours and more in complete silence, save for the sound of my
companion’s incessant chewing on an old piece of tobacco, to our mutual satisfaction,
until we arrived at Sandchurch.
‘Drop me here, Billick,’ I said, as the trap passed the church.
As he continued on his way up the hill, I knocked on the door of the little leaning
cottage next to the church-yard.
Tom opened the door, spectacles in hand, an open book he had been reading
tucked under his arm.
He smiled and held out his hand, letting the book fall to the ground.
‘The traveller returns,’ he said. ‘Come on in, old chap, and make yourself at
home.’
And a second home it had once been to me, this low, dusty room tumbled from
floor to ceiling, and up the stairs from ground to roof, with books of every shape and size.
Its dear familiarity – the three-legged dresser supported by a groaning stack of
mouldering leather folios, the fishing rods crossed above the fireplace, the discoloured
marble bust of Napoleon on a little shelf by the door – was both poignant and painful.
Tom, too, his long lined face shining in the fire-glow, the great ears with grey tufts
growing out of them, his lilting Norfolk accent, brought a sense of childhood rushing in
on me.
‘Tom’, I said, ‘I believe you’ve lost what little hair you had when I last saw you.’
And we laughed, and there was an end of silence for the night.
‘What will you do, Ed?’ he asked at last.
‘I suppose I shall have to earn a living,’ I sighed. ‘I have used up nearly all my
capital, the house is in a very bad state of repair, and now Mr More has written to say that
my mother borrowed a hundred pounds from him before she died of which he now has
need.’
‘If you still have nothing definite in view,’ Tom said after a pause, ‘I might
venture to suggest something.’
Whilst travelling in the Levant, I had written to him of my new passion for the
ancient civilizations of Asia Minor. Apprised of my imminent return to England, and
unaware that I was considering the position at the British Museum, he had acted on my
behalf to make some enquiries concerning the possibility of my joining an expedition just
then assembling to excavate the monuments at Nimrud.?
‘It would be an experience, Ed, and a little money in your hands, and you could
start to make your name for yourself in a growing field.’
I said it was a splendid idea, and thanked him heartily for putting me in the way of
it, though in truth I had some reservations about the plan. The gentleman leading the
expedition, known to Tom through a relation, lived in Oxford; it was soon agreed that
Tom would write to him immediately, to suggest he and I go up there at the Professor’s
earliest convenience.
On we talked, hour after hour, about what I’d done and seen during my time on
the Continent, as well as reminiscing over old times, until at last, the clock striking
midnight, Tom said he would get the lantern and walk up the hill with me to see me safe
home. He left me at the gate beneath the chestnut tree, and I entered the silent house.
After nine years of wandering, I lay down that night in my own bed again, and
closed my eyes once more to the sound of the sea in my ears.
A week or so later, Tom called to say that he had received a reply from Professor
S––, who had expressed interest in receiving me in New College to talk over my
candidature for the expedition.
The Professor’s rooms were crammed full of casts and fragments of bas-relief,
inscriptions covered in the mysterious cuneiform writing I had read about in Rawlinson’s
account of his travels in Susiana and Kurdistân,? and carvings of muscular winged bulls
in glowering black basalt. Maps and plans lay all about the floor, or were draped over
tables and the backs of chairs; and on an easel in the centre of the room stood what I at
first took to be a monochrome painting of an immense crowned king, bearded and
braided and omnipotent in attitude, beneath whose feet crouched a captive enemy or
rebel, frozen in abject surrender to the might of the conqueror.
On closer inspection I saw that it was not a painting at all, but what the Professor,
seeing my interest, described as a photogenic drawing – a technique invented by Mr
Talbot,? a fellow student of the cuneiform texts. I stood amazed at the sight: for the
image of the king – a gargantuan and looming stone presence standing in a waste of
desert sand – had been made, not by some transient agent devised by man, but by eternal