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Our Mr. Wrenn: The Romantic Adventures of a Gentle Man
CHAPTER V HE FINDS MUCH QUAINT ENGLISH FLAVOR
Sinclair Lewis
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       _ Big wharves, all right. England sure is queen of the sea, heh?
       Busy town, Liverpool. But, say, there is a quaint English
       flavor to these shops.... Look at that: `Red Lion Inn.'...
       `Overhead trams' they call the elevated. Real flavor, all
       right. English as can be.... I sure like to wander around
       these little shops. Street crowd. That's where you get the
       real quaint flavor."
       Thus Morton, to the glowing Mr. Wrenn, as they turned into St.
       George's Square, noting the Lipton's Tea establishment. _Sir_
       Thomas Lipton--wasn't he a friend of the king? Anyway, he was
       some kind of a lord, and he owned big society racing-yachts.
       In the grandiose square Mr. Wrenn prayerfully remarked, "Gee!"
       "Greek temple. Fine," agreed Morton.
       "That's St. George's Hall, where they have big organ concerts,"
       explained Mr. Wrenn. "And there's the art-gallery across the
       Square, and here's the Lime Street Station." He had studied his
       Baedeker as club women study the cyclopedia. "Let's go over and
       look at the trains."
       "Funny little boxes, ain't they, Wrenn, them cars! Quaint
       things. What is it they call 'em--carriages? First, second,
       third class...."
       "Just like in books."
       "Booking-office. That's tickets.... Funny, eh?"
       Mr. Wrenn insisted on paying for both their high teas at the
       cheap restaurant, timidly but earnestly. Morton was troubled.
       As they sat on a park bench, smoking those most Anglican
       cigarettes, "Dainty Bits," Mr. Wrenn begged:
       "What's the matter, old man?"
       "Oh, nothing. Just thinking." Morton smiled artificially.
       He added, presently: "Well, old Bill, got to make the break.
       Can't go on living on you this way."
       "Aw, thunder! You ain't living on me. Besides, I want you to.
       Honest I do. We can have a whole lot better time together, Morty."
       "Yes, but--Nope; I can't do it. Nice of you. Can't do it,
       though. Got to go on my own, like the fellow says."
       "Aw, come on. Look here; it's my money, ain't it? I got a
       right to spend it the way I want to, haven't I? Aw, come on.
       We'll bum along together, and then when the money is gone we'll
       get some kind of job together. Honest, I want you to."
       "Hunka. Don't believe you'd care for the kind of knockabout
       jobs I'll have to get."
       "Sure I would. Aw, come on, Morty. I--"
       "You're too level-headed to like to bum around like a fool hobo.
       You'd dam soon get tired of it."
       "What if I did? Morty, look here. I've been learning something
       on this trip. I've always wanted to just do one thing--see
       foreign places. Well, I want to do that just as much as ever.
       But there's something that's a whole lot more important.
       Somehow, I ain't ever had many friends. Some ways you're about
       the best friend I've ever had--you ain't neither too highbrow or
       too lowbrow. And this friendship business--it means such an
       awful lot. It's like what I was reading about--something by
       Elbert Hubbard or--thunder, I can't remember his name, but,
       anyway, it's one of those poet guys that writes for the back
       page of the _Journal_--something about a _joyous adventure_.
       That's what being friends is. Course you understand I wouldn't
       want to say this to most people, but you'll understand how I mean.
       It's--this friendship business is just like those old crusaders--
       you know--they'd start out on a fine morning--you know; armor
       shining, all that stuff. It wouldn't make any dif. what they met
       as long as they was fighting together. Rainy nights with folks
       sneaking through the rain to get at 'em, and all sorts of things--
       ready for anything, long as they just stuck together. That's the way
       this friendship business is, I b'lieve. Just like it said in the
       _Journal_. Yump, sure is. Gee! it's--Chance to tell folks
       what you think and really get some fun out of seeing places
       together. And I ain't ever done it much. Course I don't mean
       to say I've been living off on any blooming desert island all my
       life, but, just the same, I've always been kind of alone--not
       knowing many folks. You know how it is in a New York
       rooming-house. So now--Aw, don't slip up on me, Morty.
       Honestly, I don't care what kind of work we do as long as we can
       stick together; I don't care a hang if we don't get anything
       better to do than scrub floors!"
       Morton patted his arm and did not answer for a while. Then:
       "Yuh, I know how you mean. And it's good of you to like beating
       it around with me. But you sure got the exaggerated idee of me.
       And you'd get sick of the holes I'm likely to land in."
       There was a certain pride which seemed dreadfully to shut Mr.
       Wrenn out as Morton added:
       "Why, man, I'm going to do all of Europe. From the Turkish
       jails to--oh, St. Petersburg.... You made good on the _Merian_,
       all right. But you do like things shipshape."
       "Oh, I'd--"
       "We might stay friends if we busted up now and met in New York
       again. But not if you get into all sorts of bum places w--"
       "Why, look here, Morty--"
       "--with me.... However, I'll think it over. Let's not talk
       about it till to-morrow."
       "Oh, please do think it over, Morty, old man, won't you? And
       to-night you'll let me take you to a music-hall, won't you?"
       "Uh--yes," Morton hesitated.
       A music-hall--not mere vaudeville! Mr. Wrenn could hardly keep
       his feet on the pavement as they scampered to it and got
       ninepenny seats. He would have thought it absurd to pay
       eighteen cents for a ticket, but pence--They were out at
       nine-thirty. Happily tired, Mr. Wrenn suggested that they go to
       a temperance hotel at his expense, for he had read in Baedeker
       that temperance hotels were respectable--also cheap.
       "No, no!" frowned Morton. "Tell you what you do, Bill. You go
       to a hotel, and I'll beat it down to a lodging-house on Duke
       Street.... Juke Street!... Remember how I ran onto Pete on the
       street? He told me you could get a cot down there for fourpence."
       "Aw, come on to a hotel. Please do! It 'd just hurt me to think
       of you sleeping in one of them holes. I wouldn't sleep a bit
       if--"
       "Say, for the love of Mike, Wrenn, get wise! Get wise, son!
       I'm not going to sponge on you, and that's all there is to it."
       Bill Wrenn strode into their company for a minute, and quoth the
       terrible Bill:
       "Well, you don't need to get so sore about it. I don't go
       around asking folks can I give 'em a meal ticket all the time,
       let me tell you, and when I do--Oh rats! Say, I didn't mean to
       get huffy, Morty. But, doggone you, old man, you can't shake me
       this easy. I sye, old top, I'm peeved; yessir. We'll go Dutch
       to a lodging-house, or even walk the streets."
       "All right, sir; all right. I'll take you up on that. We'll
       sleep in an areaway some place."
       They walked to the outskirts of Liverpool, questing the desirable
       dark alley. Awed by the solid quietude and semigrandeur of the
       large private estates, through narrow streets where dim trees
       leaned over high walls whose long silent stretches were broken
       only by mysterious little doors, they tramped bashfully,
       inspecting, but always rejecting, nooks by lodge gates.
       They came to a stone church with a porch easily reached from the
       street, a large and airy stone porch, just suited, Morton
       declared, "to a couple of hoboes like us. If a bobby butts in,
       why, we'll just slide under them seats. Then the bobby can go
       soak his head."
       Mr. Wrenn had never so far defied society as to steal a place
       for sleeping. He felt very uneasy, like a man left naked on the
       street by robbers, as he rolled up his coat for a pillow and
       removed his shoes in a place that was perfectly open to the
       street. The paved floor was cold to his bare feet, and, as he
       tried to go to sleep, it kept getting colder and colder to his
       back. Reaching out his hand, he fretfully rubbed the cracks
       between stones. He scowled up at the ceiling of the porch.
       He couldn't bear to look out through the door, for it framed the
       vicar's house, with lamplight bodying forth latticed windows,
       suggesting soft beds and laughter and comfortable books. All
       the while his chilled back was aching in new places.
       He sprang up, put on his shoes, and paced the churchyard. It
       seemed a great waste of educational advantages not to study the
       tower of this foreign church, but he thought much more about his
       aching shoulder-blades.
       Morton came from the porch stiff but grinning. "Didn't like it
       much, eh, Bill? Afraid you wouldn't. Must say I didn't either,
       though. Well, come on. Let's beat it around and see if we
       can't find a better place."
       In a vacant lot they discovered a pile of hay. Mr. Wrenn hardly
       winced at the hearty slap Morton gave his back, and he
       pronounced, "Some Waldorf-Astoria, that stack!" as they sneaked
       into the lot. They had laid loving hands upon the hay,
       remarking, "Well, I _guess!_" when they heard from a low stable
       at the very back of the lot:
       "I say, you chaps, what are you doing there?"
       A reflective carter, who had been twisting two straws, ambled
       out of the shadow of the stable and prepared to do battle.
       "Say, old man, can't we sleep in your hay just to-night?" argued
       Morton. "We're Americans. Came over on a cattle-boat. We
       ain't got only enough money to last us for food," while Mr.
       Wrenn begged, "Aw, please let us."
       "Oh! You're Americans, are you? You seem decent enough. I've
       got a brother in the States. He used to own this stable with
       me. In St. Cloud, Minnesota, he is, you know. Minnesota's some
       kind of a shire. Either of you chaps been in Minnesota?"
       "Sure," lied Morton; "I've hunted bear there."
       "Oh, I say, bear now! My brother's never written m--"
       "Oh, that was way up in the northern part, in the Big Woods.
       I've had some narrow escapes."
       Then Morton, who had never been west of Pittsburg, sang somewhat
       in this wise the epic of the hunting he had never done:
       Alone. Among the pines. Dead o' winter. Only one shell in his
       rifle. Cold of winter. Snow--deep snow. Snow-shoes. Hiking
       along--reg'lar mushing--packing grub to the lumber-camp. Way up
       near the Canadian border. Cold, terrible cold. Stars looked
       like little bits of steel.
       Mr. Wrenn thought he remembered the story. He had read it in a
       magazine. Morton was continuing:
       Snow stretched out among the pines. He was wearing a Mackinaw
       and shoe-packs. Saw a bear loping along. He had--Morton had--a
       .44-.40 Marlin, but only one shell. Thrust the muzzle of his
       rifle right into the bear's mouth. Scared for a minute. Almost
       fell off his snow-shoes. Hardest thing he ever did, to pull that
       trigger. Fired. Bear sort of jumped at him, then rolled over, clawing.
       Great place, those Minnesota Big--
       "What's a shoe-pack?" the Englishman stolidly interjected.
       "Kind of a moccasin.... Great place, those woods. Hope your
       brother gets the chance to get up there."
       "I say, I wonder did you ever meet him? Scrabble is his name,
       Jock Scrabble."
       "Jock Scrabble--no, but _say!_ By golly, there was a fellow up in
       the Big Woods that came from St. Cl--St. Cloud? Yes, that was
       it. He was telling us about the town. I remember he said your
       brother had great chances there."
       The Englishman meditatively accepted a bad cigar from Mr. Wrenn.
       Suddenly: "You chaps can sleep in the stable-loft if you'd
       like. But you must blooming well stop smoking."
       So in the dark odorous hay-mow Mr. Wrenn stretched out his legs
       with an affectionate "good night" to Morton. He slept nine
       hours. When he awoke, at the sound of a chain clanking in the
       stable below, Morton was gone. This note was pinned to his
       sleeve:
       DEAR OLD MAN,--I still feel sure that you will not enjoy the
       hiking. Bumming is not much fun for most people, I don't think,
       even if they say it is. I do not want to live on you. I always
       did hate to graft on people. So I am going to beat it off
       alone. But I hope I will see you in N Y & we will enjoy many a
       good laugh together over our trip. If you will phone the P. R.
       R. you can find out when I get back & so on. As I do not know
       what your address will be. Please look me up & I hope you will
       have a good trip.
       Yours truly,
       HARRY P. MORTON.
       Mr. Wrenn lay listening to the unfriendly rattling of the chain
       harness below for a long time. When he crawled languidly down
       from the hay-loft he glowered in a manner which was decidedly
       surly even for Bill Wrenn at a middle-aged English stranger who
       was stooping over a cow's hoof in a stall facing the ladder.
       "Wot you doing here?" asked the Englishman, raising his head and
       regarding Mr. Wrenn as a housewife does a cockroach in the
       salad-bowl.
       Mr. Wrenn was bored. This seemed a very poor sort of man; a
       bloated Cockney, with a dirty neck-cloth, vile cuffs of grayish
       black, and a waistcoat cut foolishly high.
       "The owner said I could sleep here," he snapped.
       "Ow. 'E did, did 'e? 'E ayn't been giving you any of the
       perishin' 'osses, too, 'as 'e?"
       It was sturdy old Bill Wrenn who snarled, "Oh, shut up!" Bill
       didn't feel like standing much just then. He'd punch this
       fellow as he'd punched Pete, as soon as not--or even sooner.
       "Ow.... It's shut up, is it?... I've 'arf a mind to set the
       'tecs on you, but I'm lyte. I'll just 'it you on the bloody nowse."
       Bill Wrenn stepped off the ladder and squared at him. He was
       sorry that the Cockney was smaller than Pete.
       The Cockney came over, feinted in an absent-minded manner, made
       swift and confusing circles with his left hand, and hit Bill
       Wrenn on the aforesaid bloody nose, which immediately became a
       bleeding nose. Bill Wrenn felt dizzy and, sitting on a
       grain-sack, listened amazedly to the Cockney's apologetic:
       "I'm sorry I ayn't got time to 'ave the law on you, but I could
       spare time to 'it you again."
       Bill shook the blood from his nose and staggered at the Cockney,
       who seized his collar, set him down outside the stable with a
       jarring bump, and walked away, whistling:
       "Come, oh come to our Sunday-school,
       Ev-v-v-v-v-v-ry Sunday morn-ing."
       "Gee!" mourned Mr. William Wrenn, "and I thought I was getting
       this hobo business down pat.... Gee! I wonder if Pete _was_ so
       hard to lick?" _