Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
clients to the firm, I do not think I can avoid. He protests his innocence, of course, but
still it is all a little distasteful.’ He then asked me if I could possibly see any way round
this particular ‘little problem’.
To be short, I did find a way – and, for the first time since I began such work, it
went a little against my conscience. The details need not detain us here, but Pluckrose
was duly acquitted of the murder of his wife, and an innocent man later went to the
gallows. I am not proud of this, but I did my work so well that no one – not even Mr
Tredgold – ever suspected the truth. Good riddance to the odious Pluckrose, then.
Or so I thought.
With the business of Madame Mathilde began a life of which I could have had no
conception only six months earlier, so alien was it to my former pursuits and interests. I
soon discovered that I had a distinct talent for the work I was called upon to perform for
Mr Tredgold – indeed I took to it with a degree of proficiency that surprised even my
self-assured nature. I gathered information, establishing a network of connexions
amongst both high and low in the capital; I uncovered little indiscretions, secured fugitive
evidence, watched, followed, warned, cajoled, sometimes threatened. Extortion,
embezzlement, crim. con.,? even murder – the nature of the case mattered not. I became
adept in seeking out its weak points, and then supplying the means by which the
foundations of an action against a client could be fatally undermined. My especial talent,
I found, was sniffing out simple human frailty – those little seeds of baseness and
self-interest which, when brought to the light and well watered, turn into self-destruction.
And so the firm would prosper, and Mr Tredgold’s seraphic beam would grow all the
broader.
London itself became my workshop, my manufactory, my study, to which I
devoted all my talents of application and assimilation. I sought to master it intellectually,
as I had mastered every subject to which I had turned my mind in the past; to tame and
throw a leash round the neck of what I came to picture as the Great Leviathan, the
never-sleeping monster in whose expanding coils I now existed.
From the heights to the depths, from brilliant civility and refinement to the sinks
of barbarity, from Mayfair and Belgravia to Rosemary-lane and Bluegate-fields, I quickly
discerned its lineaments, its many intertwining natures, its myriad distinctions and
gradations. I watched the toolers and dippers,? and all the other divisions of the swell
mob, do their work in the crowded affluence of the West-end by day, and the rampsmen?
at their brutal work as the shadows closed in. Observed, too, with particular attention, the
taxonomy of vice: the silken courtesans brazenly hanging on the arms of their lords and
gentlemen; the common tails and judies, and every other class of gay? female. Each day I
added to my store of knowledge; each day, too, I extended my own experience of what
this place – unique on God’s earth – could offer a man of passion and imagination.
I have no intention of laying before you my many amorous adventures: such
things are tedious at best. But one encounter I must mention. The female in question was
of that type known as a dress-lodger. It was not long after the affair of Madame Mathilde,
and I had returned to Regent-street to look again at the wares of Messrs Johnson & Co.
She was about to cross the street when she caught my eye. Well dressed, petite, with a
dimpled chin and delicate little ears. It was a dull, damp morning, and I was close enough
to see tiny jewels of moisture clinging to her ringlets. She was about to join a small group
of pedestrians on a swept passage across the street. On reaching the opposite pavement
she stopped, turned half back, fingering an errant lock of hair nervously. It was then I saw
an elderly woman crossing the roadway a few yards behind her. This, I knew by now,
was her watcher, paid by the girl’s bawd to ensure that she did not abscond with the
outfits provided for her – girls such as she were too poor to deck themselves out in the
finery required to hook in custom, like the sharp bobtails of the theatre porticos and the
Café Royal.
I began to follow her. She walked with quick steps through the crowds, sure of
her way. In Long Acre, I drew level with her. The business was swiftly concluded, her
watcher retired to a nearby public-house, whilst the girl and I entered a house on the
corner of Endell-street.
Her name was Dorrie, short for Dorothy. She did it, she said afterwards, to
support her widowed mother, who could find no employment of her own. We talked for
some time, and then she took me, with her watcher still a few paces behind us, to a
cramped and damp chamber in a dreary court hard by.
Her mother, I guessed, was only some forty years of age herself, but she was bent
and frail, with a harsh wheezing cough.
An arrangement was made – I felt it was an appropriate gesture, and never
regretted it. For several years, until circumstances intervened, Mrs Grainger came two or
three times a week to Temple-street, to sweep my room, take my washing away, and
empty my slops.
As she entered of a morning, I would say: ‘Good morning, Mrs Grainger. How is
Dorrie?’
‘She is well, sir, thank you. A good girl still’
And that is all we would ever say.
III
Evenwood
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After taking up residence in Temple-street, and commencing my employment at
Tredgolds, my photographic ambitions had languished for a while, though I continued to
correspond with Mr Talbot. But, once settled, I constructed a little dark-room within a
curtained-off space in my sitting-room. Here also I kept my cameras (recently
purchased from Horne and Thornethwaite),? along with my lamps, gauze, pans and
bowls, trays and soft brushes, fixing and developing solutions, beakers, glasses, quires of
paper, syringes and dippers, and all the other necessary paraphernalia of the art. I worked
hard to familiarize myself with the necessary chemical and technical processes, and on
summer evenings would take my camera down to the river, or to picturesque corners of
the nearby Inns of Court, to practise my compositional techniques. In this way, I began to
build up my experience and knowledge, as well as amassing a good many examples of
my own photographic work.
The satisfaction of close and concentrated observation; the need to observe
minute gradations of light and shadow and to select the correct angle and elevation; the
patient scrutiny of backdrop and setting – these things I found gave me intense fulfilment,
and transported me to another realm, far away from my often sordid duties at Tredgolds.
My principal partiality, artistically speaking, the seed planted by seeing a photogenic
drawing Mr Talbot had made of Lacock Abbey, was to capture the essence of place.
London offered such a variety of subjects – ancient palaces, domestic dwellings of every
type and age, the river and its bridges, great public buildings – that I soon developed a
keen eye for architectural line and form, shadow and sky, texture and profile.
One Sunday, in June, 1851, feeling I had attained to a good level of competence, I
decided I would show Mr Tredgold some examples of my photographic work.
‘These are really excellent, Edward,’ he said, turning over a number of mounted
prints I had made of Pump-court and of Sir Ephraim Gadd’s chambers in King’s
Bench-walk. ‘You have an exceptional eye. Quite exceptional.’ He suddenly looked up,
as if struck by a thought. ‘Do you know, I think I could secure a commission for you.
What would you say to that?’
I replied, of course, that I would be very happy for him to do so.
‘Excellent. I am obliged to pay a visit to an important client next week, and,
seeing what you have done here, it occurs to me that this gentleman might wish to
commission some photographic representations of his country property, to provide an
indelible record for posterity. The property in question would certainly afford the most
ravishing possibilities for your camera.’
‘Then I shall be even more willing to agree to the proposal. Where is the
property?’
‘Evenwood, in Northamptonshire. The home of our most important client, Lord
Tansor.’
Whether Mr Tredgold saw my surprise, I cannot say. He was beaming at me, in
his usual way, but his eyes had a guarded look about them, as if in anticipation of some
disagreeable response. He cleared his throat.
‘I thought,’ he went on, ‘that you might also be curious to see the former home of
Lady Tansor – I allude of course to her friendship with your last employer’s late mother,
Mrs Simona Glyver. But if this proposal is against your inclinations . . .’
I raised my hand.
‘By no means. I can assure you I have no objections at all to such an expedition.’
‘Good. Then it is settled. I shall write to Lord Tansor immediately.’
How could I possibly have refused to go along with Mr Tredgold’s adventitious
proposal, when Evenwood was the one place on earth I wished to see? I was already
familiar, from various published accounts, with the history of the great house, the
disposition of the buildings, and the topography of the extensive Park. Now I had been
given the opportunity to experience, in my waking being, what I had so often fashioned
in imagination.
Since commencing my employment at Tredgolds, I had made little progress in my
pursuit of some piece of objective evidence that would confirm what I had read in my
mother’s journals. I had suggestions and hints – strong and, to me, compelling testimony
to the truth concerning my birth; but they were not indubitable, and shed no light on the
causes of the conspiracy between my mother and Lord Tansor’s first wife, or on how
their plan had been accomplished. By now I had read every word of my mother’s journals
several times over, as well as making copious notes on them, and had begun to
re-examine and index every scrap of paper she had left behind, from bills and receipts to
letters and lists (my mother, I discovered, had been an inveterate list-maker: there were
scores of them). I hoped to find some fragment of the truth that I might have overlooked;
but it was becoming clear to me that little more could be gleaned from the documents in
my possession, and that I would achieve nothing by remaining in my rooms and brooding
on my lost inheritance. If that inheritance was to be recovered, I must begin to widen my
view; and what better way to start than by seeing my ancestral home for myself?
A few days later, Mr Tredgold informed me that Lord Tansor was happy for me to
accompany him to Evenwood, where I would be given liberty to roam as I pleased. Next
morning, both of us relieved to be escaping the heat and dust of London, we took the
train northwards to Peterborough.
Once we had boarded our train, Mr Tredgold and I immediately fell into our
customary bookish talk, which we kept up all the way to Peterborough, despite several
attempts on my part to encourage my employer to speak of Evenwood and its principal
residents. Having arrived in Easton, some four miles from Evenwood, Mr Tredgold went
on ahead to the great house, leaving me to accompany the trunk containing my travelling
equipment in the carrier’s cart. At the gate-house, just beyond the village of Evenwood, I
got out, leaving the cart to trundle off. It was approaching two o’clock when I ascended
the long incline and rested at the top to look down over the river towards the vista spread
out before my hungry eyes.
And now, at last, I am to show you Evenwood, which I first beheld on that perfect
June afternoon – an afternoon, perhaps, like the one that had seen the arrival of Dr Daunt
and his family twenty years earlier. I see it again in memory, as clearly as on that day.
It lies in quiet seclusion on the banks of the slow-moving Nene. A church and
adjoining rectory, a noble Dower House of the late seventeenth century, a cluster of
cottages, some outlying farms, and the great house itself: similar compositions can be
found all over England; but Evenwood is like no other place on earth.
The always-sighing reed beds and the overarching willows, the pale stone houses
with their roofs of thatch or Collyweston stone,? the undulating Park studded with ancient
trees, and the faery splendour of the house itself, are sources of deep and abiding solace
for those weary of the quotidian world. The whole place seems to be somehow beyond
time, shut in and protected from the meanness of existence by the meandering river and
the gently wooded slopes on either side, which, on a fine day, dissolve into long soft
swathes of grey-green.
If you consult Verekker’s dull but dependable Guide to the County of
Northamptonshire (Dr Daunt’s copy of the augmented 1812 edition is now before me as I
write),? you will read of Lord Tansor’s seat being ‘pleasantly situated on a wooded
incline beside the River Nene. The house, or manor, is built of brick and freestone and
stands in an extensive park, walled in and well planted with noble stands of oak, ash, and
elm. The accretions of centuries have bestowed upon the house a pleasing irregularity of