Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
were spurred on by the recent sight of him at Evenwood. Years had passed sinced my
enforced departure from Eton, but my anger at his perfidy was undiminished. He had
prospered; he had made his mark on the world, as I had once hoped to do; but my
prospects had been blighted because of him. Perhaps I might have been a great figure at
the University by now, with even greater distinctions in view. But all that had gone,
stolen from me by his treachery.
Since making the acquaintance of Dr T—, during my visit to Millhead, I had been
regularly regaled with lengthy epistles from that brazenly indiscreet gentleman on the
history of Dr Daunt and his family during their time in Lancashire. The information thus
obtained was of only slight significance, though it served to show me how much
influence the second Mrs Daunt had wielded, and perhaps wielded still, over her step-son.
Then, one day in Piccadilly, I happened to encounter an old school fellow, who, over an
expensive dinner at Grillon’s,? which I could ill afford, was happy to supply me with
some tittle-tattle concerning our mutual acquaintance. According to my informant, Daunt
had enjoyed a little dalliance with a French ballet-dancer, and was rumoured to have
proposed to Miss Eloise Dinever, the banking heiress, but had supposedly been refused.
He dined at his club (the Athenaeum) of an evening when in London, kept a box at Her
Majesty’s,? and could be seen riding out in Rotten Row? on most Saturdays, between five
and seven, during the Season. He had a good house, in Mecklenburgh-square, and was
generally a figure in fashionable, as well as literary, society.
‘But where does he get his money from?’ I asked in surprise, knowing well the
cost of maintaining such a life in London, and strongly suspecting that the writing of
poetic epics would hardly keep him in dinners, let alone a box at the Opera.
‘Bit of a mystery,’ said my informant, lowering his voice. ‘But there’s plenty of
it.’
Now, a mystery was exactly what I was looking for: it spoke to me of something
concealed from public gaze that Daunt might not wish to be known – a secret which,
once unlocked, could perhaps be used against him. It might prove to be nothing at all;
but, where money is in the case, my experience always inclines me to adopt a sceptical
view of things. Yet even with all the means at my disposal, having by now begun to
accumulate quite a little army of agents and scouts about the capital, I failed to locate the
source of Daunt’s evident wealth
Time went on, but no new information on Daunt came to light, and I had made no
further progress in my search for the evidence that would prove my true identity. Weeks
came and went; months passed, and slowly I began to sink into an enfeebling gloom that
I could not shake off. This was a black time indeed. I was perpetually on edge, eaten up
by frustrated rage. To ease my spirits, I passed long oblivious hours in Bluegate-fields,
under the deft ministrations of Chi Ki, my customary opium-master. And then, night after
night, I would wander the streets, taking my accustomed way from the West-end via
London-bridge, along Thames-street, past the Tower, and so on to St Katherine’s-dock
and the fearful lanes and courts around and about the Ratcliffe-highway, in order to
observe the underside of London in all its horror. It was on such excursions, pushing my
way through dirty crowds of Lascars and Jews, Malays and Swedes, and every form of
our British human scum, that I became truly acquainted with the character of our great
metropolis, and learned to trust my ability to frequent its most deadly quarters with
impunity.
Whilst I languished thus in my dull sublunary life, pulled hither and thither by my
demons, the rise of Daunt’s literary star had been ceaseless. The world, I concluded, had
gone quite mad. I could not open a newspaper or a magazine without coming across some
piece of eulogistic clap-trap extolling the genius of P. Rainsford Daunt. The volumes had
flowed thick and fast from his pen, an unstoppable torrent of drivel in rhyming couplets
and blank verse. In 1846 had come that ever-memorable monstrosity, The Cave of
Merlin, in which the poet out-Southeyed Southey at his most execrable, but which the
British Critic unaccountably considered to be ‘sublime in conception’, averring that ‘Mr
Phoebus Daunt is without equal, a master of the poetic epic, the Virgil of the nineteenth
century’. This production was followed, in tedious succession, by The Pharaoh’s Child,
Montezuma, and, in 1850, The Conquest of Peru. With every publication, more inflated
estimates of the poet’s oeuvre would greet me as I idly perused Blackwood’s or Fraser’s,
whilst paragraphs would rise up before my affronted eyes in The Times informing his
eager and adoring public that Mr Phoebus Daunt, ‘the celebrated poet’, was presently in
town, and then proceeding to enumerate his doings in tedious detail. In this way, I learned
that he had been to Gore House to sit to the pencil of the Count d’Orsay,? who also later
modelled a fetching bust of the young genius in plaster. Naturally, his inclusion with
other notables at the ceremonial opening of the Great Exhibition? excited no little interest
amongst a certain impressionable section of society. I recall opening the Illustrated
London News over breakfast that spring and being greeted by a preposterous engraving
of the poet – dressed in dark paletôt, light trousers strapped under the instep, embroidered
waistcoat, and stove-pipe hat – together with his noble patron, Lord Tansor, standing
proudly with the Queen and the Prince Consort beside the gilded cage containing the
Koh-i-Noor diamond.?
With the rest of the world, I had also attended the Exhibition, drawn there by a
desire to view the latest photographic advances. Accompanying me had been Rebecca
Harrigan, Mr Tredgold’s housekeeper, with whom I had struck up a kind of friendship.
On more than one occasion, I had caught her looking at me in an interested way. She had
a fine little figure, and was pretty enough; but, as I quickly discovered, after engaging her
in a little conversation, she also possessed a sharp mind, and a pleasingly audacious
spirit. I soon began to take quite a fancy to her.
One evening, in St Paul’s Church-yard, I encountered her sheltering under the
portico of the Cathedral from a shower of rain. We chatted inconsequentially until the
rain began to ease, and then I asked her if she might care to take some dinner with me. ‘If
your husband wouldn’t mind,’ I added.
‘Oh, ’e ain’t my ’usband,’ she said, looking at me as cool as you like.
‘Not your husband?’
‘Not ’im.’
‘Then . . .’
‘I’ll tell you what Mr Glapthorn,’ she butted in, giving me a quite delightfully sly
little smile, ‘you take me to dinner, and I’ll come clean.’
She was respectably and soberly dressed in blue taffeta, with a matching stole and
bonnet, an ensemble which, with her delicate little reticule, made her look like a vicar’s
daughter. So, after walking a little way, I hailed a hansom in Fleet-street and took her off
to Limmer’s,? where I asked the waiter to find a table for myself and my sister.
Over the course of the evening, Rebecca recounted something of her history. Her
real name was Dickson. Orphaned at the age of nine, she had been obliged to fend for
herself on the unforgiving streets of Bermondsey. But – like me – she was resourceful
and had quickly found a protector, a noted cracksman, for whom, as she said, she
‘thieved like a good ’un’ in return for food and a roof over her head. In due course, she
graduated to whoring; but then, through the good offices of one of her pick-ups, she
succeeded in gaining a place in service, as a maid in the house of a Director of the East
India Company. It was there she’d met Albert Harrigan, a servant in the same
establishment. She and this Harrigan soon formed an attachment to each, even though her
paramour (whose real name was Albert Parker) had an abandoned wife and child
somewhere in Yorkshire. All went along nicely until their employer lost all his money in
a failed railway speculation and committed suicide. His legal adviser had been none other
than Mr Christopher Tredgold, who happened just then to be in need of a manservant for
his private residence. Harrigan was duly taken on, to be joined after a few weeks by his
supposed wife. But their relationship had quickly soured, and now only convenience kept
them together.
She told me all this – peppering her account with several anecdotes of
questionable propriety – with all the gusto of a tavern raconteur; but as soon as the waiter
arrived with each course, the wily little slut instantly assumed an expression of the most
perfect demureness, smiling sweetly and turning the conversation, without once dropping
her aitches, to some topic of unimpeachable dullness.
In the weeks following, Rebecca and I found occasion to promote our friendship,
in ways which I’m sure I do not need to describe. If Harrigan guessed how things lay
between us, then it did not appear to trouble him. As for Rebecca, her good humour and
healthy natural appetites, together with that optimistic artfulness that comes from having
successfully made the most of a very bad lot, soon began to have a beneficial effect on
me; and, as she had no wish to put a rope round my neck and lead me to the altar, we got
on very well, meeting when the inclination took us, and pursuing our own interests
whenever we wished.
This, then, was my life, from 1850 to 1853. And so things would perhaps have
continued, but for two events.
The first occurred in March, 1853. I found myself in St John’s Wood, on Mr
Tredgold’s business, and had just turned into a pleasant tree-lined street when the name
on the gate-piers of a large white-painted villa, half-hidden behind a screen of shrubs,
brought me up short. Blithe Lodge – where the beauteous Isabella Gallini had lived for
the past three years – stood before me. I have already written of how I renewed my
acquaintance with Bella and how, under the auspices of Mrs Kitty Daley, she became my
mistress. To my surprise, I discovered I was able to remain faithful to her, except for
occasional minor indisretions, which I’m sure she would have forgiven me, had I
confessed them. Rebecca, however, I did give up, for Bella’s sake. She received the news
with little emotion.
‘Well,’ she said, ‘that don’t matter. I’ve still got Albert, such as ’e is. An’ I reckon
we’ll stay friends, you an’ me. You’re a chancer, Mr Edward Glapthorn, for all you’re a
gennlemun, and so am I. An’ that makes us equals in a way, don’t it? Friends an’ equals.
So, gimme a kiss, dearie, and let’s ’ear no more about it.’
The second event was of a very different character, and of far more moment.
It was the morning of the 19th of October, 1853 – a date indelibly impressed on
my memory. I was just leaving my room at Tredgolds, and was on the point of
descending the stairs, when I saw Jukes leap up from his desk at the sound of the front
bell. I could not see who the visitor was, but in a moment Jukes was hurrying up the stairs
towards me.
‘Lord Tansor himself,’ he whispered excitedly as he passed.
I leant back against the wall and gazed down.
He was sitting bolt upright, both hands clasping his cane before him. The office,
before his arrival, had been quietly going about its business, with just the usual rustle of
papers and scraping of pens, and the occasional sound of subdued conversation between
the clerks breaking the silence. But in his presence, the atmosphere seemed suddenly
charged, somehow put on alert, and a blanket of strained silence instantly descended. All
conversation ceased; the clerks moved about the room with concentrated deliberation,
opening their drawers with the utmost care, or silently closing doors behind them. I
watched this phenomenon closely, and observed that several of the clerks would look up
from their work from time to time and direct apprehensive glances over towards the
seated figure, as if, sitting there tapping his foot impatiently as he waited for Jukes to
return, he was about to weigh the feather of truth in the scales of justice against their
sinful hearts.
In a few moments, Jukes hurried past me again, heading back down the stairs to
where the visitor sat. I stepped back into my room as his Lordship followed the clerk to
the door of Mr Tredgold’s private office. As Lord Tansor entered, I heard the Senior
Partner’s effusive welcome.
Jukes closed the office door and began to make his way back to his position.
‘Lord Tansor,’ he said again, seeing me as he came past my door. He stopped, and
leaned his head towards me in a confidential manner.
‘There are firms’, he said, ‘who would give a great deal – a very great deal – to
have such a client. But the SP keeps him tight with us. Oh yes, he’s Tredgolds’ as long as
the SP is with us. A great man. One of the first men in the kingdom, you know, though
who has heard of him? And he’s ours.’
He delivered this little speech in a rapid whisper, looking backwards and forwards
to the door of Mr Tredgold’s office as he did so. Then he nodded quickly and scampered
back down the stairs, scratching his head with one hand, and clicking his fingers with the