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Unsocial Socialist, An
CHAPTER III
George Bernard Shaw
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       _
       CHAPTER III
       One of the professors at Alton College was a Mrs. Miller, an
       old-fashioned schoolmistress who did not believe in Miss Wilson's
       system of government by moral force, and carried it out under
       protest. Though not ill-natured, she was narrow-minded enough to
       be in some degree contemptible, and was consequently prone to
       suspect others of despising her. She suspected Agatha in
       particular, and treated her with disdainful curtness in such
       intercourse as they had--it was fortunately little. Agatha was
       not hurt by this, for Mrs. Miller was an unsympathetic woman, who
       made no friends among the girls, and satisfied her affectionate
       impulses by petting a large cat named Gracchus, but generally
       called Bacchus by an endearing modification of the harsh initial
       consonant.
       One evening Mrs. Miller, seated with Miss Wilson in the study,
       correcting examination papers, heard in the distance a cry like
       that of a cat in distress. She ran to the door and listened.
       Presently there arose a prolonged wail, slurring up through two
       octaves, and subsiding again. It was a true feline screech,
       impossible to localize; but it was interrupted by a sob, a snarl,
       a fierce spitting, and a scuffling, coming unmistakably from a
       room on the floor beneath, in which, at that hour, the older
       girls assembled for study.
       "My poor Gracchy!" exclaimed Mrs. Miller, running downstairs as
       fast as she could. She found the room unusually quiet. Every girl
       was deep in study except Miss Carpenter, who, pretending to pick
       up a fallen book, was purple with suppressed laughter and the
       congestion caused by stooping.
       "Where is Miss Ward?" demanded Mrs. Miller.
       "Miss Ward has gone for some astronomical diagrams in which we
       are interested," said Agatha, looking up gravely. Just then Miss
       Ward, diagrams in hand, entered.
       "Has that cat been in here?" she said, not seeing Mrs. Miller,
       and speaking in a tone expressive of antipathy to Gracchus.
       Agatha started and drew up her ankles, as if fearful of having
       them bitten. Then, looking apprehensively under the desk, she
       replied, "There is no cat here, Miss Ward."
       "There is one somewhere; I heard it," said Miss Ward carelessly,
       unrolling her diagrams, which she began to explain without
       further parley. Mrs. Miller, anxious for her pet, hastened to
       seek it elsewhere. In the hall she met one of the housemaids.
       "Susan," she said, "have you seen Gracchus?"
       "He's asleep on the hearthrug in your room, ma'am. But I heard
       him crying down here a moment ago. I feel sure that another cat
       has got in, and that they are fighting."
       Susan smiled compassionately. "Lor' bless you, ma'am," she said,
       "that was Miss Wylie. It's a sort of play-acting that she goes
       through. There is the bee on the window-pane, and the soldier up
       the chimley, and the cat under the dresser. She does them all
       like life."
       "The soldier in the chimney!" repeated Mrs. Miller, shocked.
       "Yes, ma'am. Like as it were a follower that had hid there when
       he heard the mistress coming."
       Mrs. Miller's face set determinedly. She returned to the study
       and related what had just occurred, adding some sarcastic
       comments on the efficacy of moral force in maintaining collegiate
       discipline. Miss Wilson looked grave; considered for some time;
       and at last said: "I must think over this. Would you mind leaving
       it in my hands for the present?"
       Mrs. Miller said that she did not care in whose hands it remained
       provided her own were washed of it, and resumed her work at the
       papers. Miss Wilson then, wishing to be alone, went into the
       empty classroom at the other side of the landing. She took the
       Fault Book from its shelf and sat down before it. Its record
       closed with the announcement, in Agatha's handwriting:
       "Miss Wilson has called me impertinent, and has written to my
       uncle that I have refused to obey the rules. I was not
       impertinent; and I never refused to obey the rules. So much for
       Moral Force!"
       Miss Wilson rose vigorously, exclaiming: "I will soon let her
       know whether--" She checked herself, and looked round hastily,
       superstitiously fancying that Agatha might have stolen into the
       room unobserved. Reassured that she was alone, she examined her
       conscience as to whether she had done wrong in calling Agatha
       impertinent, justifying herself by the reflection that Agatha
       had, in fact, been impertinent. Yet she recollected that she had
       refused to admit this plea on a recent occasion when Jane
       Carpenter had advanced it in extenuation of having called a
       fellow-student a liar. Had she then been unjust to Jane, or
       inconsiderate to Agatha?
       Her casuistry was interrupted by some one softly whistling a
       theme from the overture to Masaniello, popular at the college in
       the form of an arrangement for six pianofortes and twelve hands.
       There was only one student unladylike and musical enough to
       whistle; and Miss Wilson was ashamed to find herself growing
       nervous at the prospect of an encounter with Agatha, who entered
       whistling sweetly, but with a lugubrious countenance. When she
       saw in whose presence she stood, she begged pardon politely, and
       was about to withdraw, when Miss Wilson, summoning all her
       Judgment and tact, and hoping that they would--contrary to their
       custom in emergencies--respond to the summons, said:
       "Agatha, come here. I want to speak to you."
       Agatha closed her lips, drew in a long breath through her
       nostrils, and marched to within a few feet of Miss Wilson, where
       she halted with her hands clasped before her.
       "Sit down."
       Agatha sat down with a single movement, like a doll.
       "I don't understand that, Agatha," said Miss Wilson, pointing to
       the entry in the Recording Angel. "What does it mean?"
       "I am unfairly treated," said Agatha, with signs of agitation.
       "In what way?"
       "In every way. I am expected to be something more than mortal.
       Everyone else is encouraged to complain, and to be weak and
       silly. But I must have no feeling. I must be always in the right.
       Everyone else may be home-sick, or huffed, or in low spirits. I
       must have no nerves, and must keep others laughing all day long.
       Everyone else may sulk when a word of reproach is addressed to
       them, and may make the professors afraid to find fault with them.
       I have to bear with the insults of teachers who have less
       self-control than I, a girl of seventeen! and must coax them out
       of the difficulties they make for themselves by their own ill
       temper."
       "But, Agatha--"
       "Oh, I know I am talking nonsense, Miss Wilson; but can you
       expect me to be always sensible--to be infallible?"
       "Yes, Agatha; I do not think it is too much to expect you to be
       always sensible; and--"
       "Then you have neither sense nor sympathy yourself," said Agatha.
       There was an awful pause. Neither could have told how long it
       lasted. Then Agatha, feeling that she must do or say something
       desperate, or else fly, made a distracted gesture and ran out of
       the room.
       She rejoined her companions in the great hall of the mansion,
       where they were assembled after study for "recreation," a noisy
       process which always set in spontaneously when the professors
       withdrew. She usually sat with her two favorite associates on a
       high window seat near the hearth. That place was now occupied by
       a little girl with flaxen hair, whom Agatha, regardless of moral
       force, lifted by the shoulders and deposited on the floor. Then
       she sat down and said:
       "Oh, such a piece of news!"
       Miss Carpenter opened her eyes eagerly. Gertrude Lindsay affected
       indifference.
       "Someone is going to be expelled," said Agatha.
       "Expelled! Who?"
       "You will know soon enough, Jane," replied Agatha, suddenly
       grave. "It is someone who made an impudent entry in the Recording
       Angel."
       Fear stole upon Jane, and she became very red. "Agatha," she
       said, "it was you who told me what to write. You know you did,
       and you can't deny it."
       "I can't deny it, can't I? I am ready to swear that I never
       dictated a word to you in my life."
       "Gertrude knows you did," exclaimed Jane, appalled, and almost in
       tears.
       "There," said Agatha, petting her as if she were a vast baby. "It
       shall not be expelled, so it shan't. Have you seen the Recording
       Angel lately, either of you?"
       "Not since our last entry," said Gertrude.
       "Chips," said Agatha, calling to the flaxen-haired child, "go
       upstairs to No. 6, and, if Miss Wilson isn't there, fetch me the
       Recording Angel."
       The little girl grumbled inarticulately and did not stir.
       "Chips," resumed Agatha, "did you ever wish that you had never
       been born?"
       "Why don't you go yourself?" said the child pettishly, but
       evidently alarmed.
       "Because," continued Agatha, ignoring the question, "you shall
       wish yourself dead and buried under the blackest flag in the coal
       cellar if you don't bring me the book before I count sixteen.
       One--two--"
       "Go at once and do as you are told, you disagreeable little
       thing," said Gertrude sharply. "How dare you be so disobliging?"
       "--nine--ten--eleven--" pursued Agatha.
       The child quailed, went out, and presently returned, hugging the
       Recording Angel in her arms.
       "You are a good little darling--when your better qualities are
       brought out by a judicious application of moral force," said
       Agatha, good-humoredly. "Remind me to save the raisins out of my
       pudding for you to-morrow. Now, Jane, you shall see the entry for
       which the best-hearted girl in the college is to be expelled.
       Voila!"
       The two girls read and were awestruck; Jane opening her mouth and
       gasping, Gertrude closing hers and looking very serious.
       "Do you mean to say that you had the dreadful cheek to let the
       Lady Abbess see that?" said Jane.
       "Pooh! she would have forgiven that. You should have heard what I
       said to her! She fainted three times."
       "That's a story," said Gertrude gravely.
       "I beg your pardon," said Agatha, swiftly grasping Gertrude's
       knee.
       "Nothing," cried Gertrude, flinching hysterically. "Don't,
       Agatha."
       "How many times did Miss Wilson faint?"
       "Three times. I will scream, Agatha; I will indeed."
       "Three times, as you say. And I wonder that a girl brought up as
       you have been, by moral force, should be capable of repeating
       such a falsehood. But we had an awful row, really and truly. She
       lost her temper. Fortunately, I never lose mine."
       "Well, I'm browed!" exclaimed Jane incredulously. "I like that."
       "For a girl of county family, you are inexcusably vulgar, Jane. I
       don't know what I said; but she will never forgive me for
       profaning her pet book. I shall be expelled as certainly as I am
       sitting here."
       "And do you mean to say that you are going away?" said Jane,
       faltering as she began to realize the consequences.
       "I do. And what is to become of you when I am not here to get you
       out of your scrapes, or of Gertrude without me to check her
       inveterate snobbishness, is more than I can foresee."
       "I am not snobbish," said Gertrude, " although I do not choose to
       make friends with everyone. But I never objected to you, Agatha."
       "No; I should like to catch you at it. Hallo, Jane!" (who had
       suddenly burst into tears): "what's the matter? I trust you are
       not permitting yourself to take the liberty of crying for me."
       "Indeed," sobbed Jane indignantly, "I know that I am a f--fool
       for my pains. You have no heart."
       "You certainly are a f--fool, as you aptly express it," said
       Agatha, passing her arm round Jane, and disregarding an angry
       attempt to shake it off; "but if I had any heart it would be
       touched by this proof of your attachment."
       "I never said you had no heart," protested Jane; "but I hate when
       you speak like a book."
       "You hate when I speak like a book, do you? My dear, silly old
       Jane! I shall miss you greatly."
       "Yes, I dare say," said Jane, with tearful sarcasm. "At least my
       snoring will never keep you awake again."
       "You don't snore, Jane. We have been in a conspiracy to make you
       believe that you do, that's all. Isn't it good of me to tell
       you?"
       Jane was overcome by this revelation. After a long pause, she
       said with deep conviction, "I always knew that I didn't. Oh, the
       way you kept it up! I solemnly declare that from this time forth
       I will believe nobody."
       "Well, and what do you think of it all?" said Agatha,
       transferring her attention to Gertrude, who was very grave.
       "I think--I am now speaking seriously, Agatha--I think you are in
       the wrong."
       "Why do you think that, pray?" demanded Agatha, a little roused.
       "You must be, or Miss Wilson would not be angry with you. Of
       course, according to your own account, you are always in the
       right, and everyone else is always wrong; but you shouldn't have
       written that in the book. You know I speak as your friend."
       "And pray what does your wretched little soul know of my motives
       and feelings?"
       "It is easy enough to understand you," retorted Gertrude,
       nettled. "Self-conceit is not so uncommon that one need be at a
       loss to recognize it. And mind, Agatha Wylie," she continued, as
       if goaded by some unbearable reminiscence, "if you are really
       going, I don't care whether we part friends or not. I have not
       forgotten the day when you called me a spiteful cat."
       "I have repented," said Agatha, unmoved. "One day I sat down and
       watched Bacchus seated on the hearthrug, with his moony eyes
       looking into space so thoughtfully and patiently that I
       apologized for comparing you to him. If I were to call him a
       spiteful cat he would only not believe me."
       "Because he is a cat," said Jane, with the giggle which was
       seldom far behind her tears.
       "No; but because he is not spiteful. Gertrude keeps a recording
       angel inside her little head, and it is so full of other people's
       faults, written in large hand and read through a magnifying
       glass, that there is no room to enter her own."
       "You are very poetic," said Gertrude; "but I understand what you
       mean, and shall not forget it."
       "You ungrateful wretch," exclaimed Agatha, turning upon her so
       suddenly and imperiously that she involuntarily shrank aside:
       "how often, when you have tried to be insolent and false with me,
       have I not driven away your bad angel--by tickling you? Had you a
       friend in the college, except half-a-dozen toadies, until I came?
       And now, because I have sometimes, for your own good, shown you
       your faults, you bear malice against me, and say that you don't
       care whether we part friends or not!"
       "I didn't say so."
       "Oh, Gertrude, you know you did," said Jane.
       "You seem to think that I have no conscience," said Gertrude
       querulously.
       "I wish you hadn't," said Agatha. "Look at me! I have no
       conscience, and see how much pleasanter I am!"
       "You care for no one but yourself," said Gertrude. "You never
       think that other people have feelings too. No one ever considers
       me."
       "Oh, I like to hear you talk," cried Jane ironically. "You are
       considered a great deal more than is good for you; and the more
       you are considered the more you want to be considered."
       "As if," declaimed Agatha theatrically, "increase of appetite did
       grow by what it fed on. Shakespeare!"
       "Bother Shakespeare," said Jane, impetuously, "--old fool that
       expects credit for saying things that everybody knows! But if you
       complain of not being considered, Gertrude, how would you like to
       be me, whom everybody sets down as a fool? But I am not such a
       fool as--"
       "As you look," interposed Agatha. "I have told you so scores of
       times, Jane; and I am glad that you have adopted my opinion at
       last. Which would you rather be, a greater fool than y--"
       "Oh, shut up," said Jane, impatiently; "you have asked me that
       twice this week already."
       The three were silent for some seconds after this: Agatha
       meditating, Gertrude moody, Jane vacant and restless. At last
       Agatha said:
       "And are you two also smarting under a sense of the
       inconsiderateness and selfishness of the rest of the world--both
       misunderstood--everything expected from you, and no allowances
       made for you?"
       "I don't know what you mean by both of us," said Gertrude coldly.
       "Neither do I," said Jane angrily. "That is just the way people
       treat me. You may laugh, Agatha; and she may turn up her nose as
       much as she likes; you know it's true. But the idea of Gertrude
       wanting to make out that she isn't considered is nothing but
       sentimentality, and vanity, and nonsense."
       "You are exceedingly rude, Miss Carpenter," said Gertrude.
       "My manners are as good as yours, and perhaps better," retorted
       Jane. "My family is as good, anyhow."
       "Children, children," said Agatha, admonitorily, "do not forget
       that you are sworn friends."
       "We didn't swear," said Jane. "We were to have been three sworn
       friends, and Gertrude and I were willing, but you wouldn't swear,
       and so the bargain was cried off."
       "Just so," said Agatha; "and the result is that I spend all my
       time in keeping peace between you. And now, to go back to our
       subject, may I ask whether it has ever occurred to you that no
       one ever considers me?"
       "I suppose you think that very funny. You take good care to make
       yourself considered," sneered Jane.
       "You cannot say that I do not consider you," said Gertrude
       reproachfully.
       "Not when I tickle you, dear."
       "I consider you, and I am not ticklesome," said Jane tenderly.
       "Indeed! Let me try," said Agatha, slipping her arm about Jane's
       ample waist, and eliciting a piercing combination of laugh and
       scream from her.
       "Sh--sh," whispered Gertrude quickly. "Don't you see the Lady
       Abbess?"
       Miss Wilson had just entered the room. Agatha, without appearing
       to be aware of her presence, stealthily withdrew her arm, and
       said aloud:
       "How can you make such a noise, Jane? You will disturb the whole
       house."
       Jane reddened with indignation, but had to remain silent, for the
       eyes of the principal were upon her. Miss Wilson had her bonnet
       on. She announced that she was going to walk to Lyvern, the
       nearest village. Did any of the sixth form young ladies wish to
       accompany her?
       Agatha jumped from her seat at once, and Jane smothered a laugh.
       "Miss Wilson said the sixth form, Miss Wylie," said Miss Ward,
       who had entered also. "You are not in the sixth form."
       "No," said Agatha sweetly, "but I want to go, if I may."
       Miss Wilson looked round. The sixth form consisted of four
       studious young ladies, whose goal in life for the present was an
       examination by one of the Universities, or, as the college phrase
       was, "the Cambridge Local." None of them responded.
       "Fifth form, then," said Miss Wilson.
       Jane, Gertrude, and four others rose and stood with Agatha.
       "Very well," said Miss Wilson. "Do not be long dressing."
       They left the room quietly, and dashed at the staircase the
       moment they were out of sight. Agatha, though void of emulation
       for the Cambridge Local, always competed with ardor for the honor
       of being first up or down stairs.
       They soon returned, clad for walking, and left the college in
       procession, two by two, Jane and Agatha leading, Gertrude and
       Miss Wilson coming last. The road to Lyvern lay through acres of
       pasture land, formerly arable, now abandoned to cattle, which
       made more money for the landlord than the men whom they had
       displaced. Miss Wilson's young ladies, being instructed in
       economics, knew that this proved that the land was being used to
       produce what was most wanted from it; and if all the advantage
       went to the landlord, that was but natural, as he was the chief
       gentleman in the neighborhood. Still the arrangement had its
       disagreeable side; for it involved a great many cows, which made
       them afraid to cross the fields; a great many tramps, who made
       them afraid to walk the roads; and a scarcity of gentlemen
       subjects for the maiden art of fascination.
       The sky was cloudy. Agatha, reckless of dusty stockings, waded
       through the heaps of fallen leaves with the delight of a child
       paddling in the sea; Gertrude picked her steps carefully, and the
       rest tramped along, chatting subduedly, occasionally making some
       scientific or philosophical remark in a louder tone, in order
       that Miss Wilson might overhear and give them due credit. Save a
       herdsman, who seemed to have caught something of the nature and
       expression of the beasts he tended, they met no one until they
       approached the village, where, on the brow of an acclivity,
       masculine humanity appeared in the shape of two curates: one
       tall, thin, close-shaven, with a book under his arm, and his neck
       craned forward; the other middle-sized, robust, upright, and
       aggressive, with short black whiskers, and an air of protest
       against such notions as that a clergyman may not marry, hunt,
       play cricket, or share the sports of honest laymen. The shaven
       one was Mr. Josephs, his companion Mr. Fairholme. Obvious
       scriptural perversions of this brace of names had been introduced
       by Agatha.
       "Here come Pharaoh and Joseph," she said to Jane. "Joseph will
       blush when you look at him. Pharaoh won't blush until he passes
       Gertrude, so we shall lose that."
       "Josephs, indeed!" said Jane scornfully.
       "He loves you, Jane. Thin persons like a fine armful of a woman.
       Pharaoh, who is a cad, likes blue blood on the same principle of
       the attraction of opposites. That is why he is captivated by
       Gertrude's aristocratic air."
       "If he only knew how she despises him!"
       "He is too vain to suspect it. Besides, Gertrude despises
       everyone, even us. Or, rather, she doesn't despise anyone in
       particular, but is contemptuous by nature, just as you are
       stout."
       "Me! I had rather be stout than stuck-up. Ought we to bow?"
       "I will, certainly. I want to make Pharoah blush, if I can."
       The two parsons had been simulating an interest in the cloudy
       firmament as an excuse for not looking at the girls until close
       at hand. Jane sent an eyeflash at Josephs with a skill which
       proved her favorite assertion that she was not so stupid as
       people thought. He blushed and took off his soft, low-crowned
       felt hat. Fairholme saluted very solemnly, for Agatha bowed to
       him with marked seriousness. But when his gravity and his stiff
       silk hat were at their highest point she darted a mocking smile
       at him, and he too blushed, all the deeper because he was enraged
       with himself for doing so.
       "Did you ever see such a pair of fools?" whispered Jane,
       giggling.
       "They cannot help their sex. They say women are fools, and so
       they are; but thank Heaven they are not quite so bad as men! I
       should like to look back and see Pharaoh passing Gertrude; but if
       he saw me he would think I was admiring him; and he is conceited
       enough already without that."
       The two curates became redder and redder as they passed the
       column of young ladies. Miss Lindsay would not look to their side
       of the road, and Miss Wilson's nod and smile were not quite
       sincere. She never spoke to curates, and kept up no more
       intercourse with the vicar than she could not avoid. He suspected
       her of being an infidel, though neither he nor any other mortal
       in Lyvern had ever heard a word from her on the subject of her
       religious opinions. But he knew that "moral science" was taught
       secularly at the college; and he felt that where morals were made
       a department of science the demand for religion must fall off
       proportionately.
       "What a life to lead and what a place to live in!" exclaimed
       Agatha. "We meet two creatures, more like suits of black than
       men; and that is an incident --a startling incident--in our
       existence!"
       "I think they're awful fun," said Jane, "except that Josephs has
       such large ears."
       The girls now came to a place where the road dipped through a
       plantation of sombre sycamore and horsechestnut trees. As they
       passed down into it, a little wind sprang up, the fallen leaves
       stirred, and the branches heaved a long, rustling sigh.
       "I hate this bit of road," said Jane, hurrying on. "It's just the
       sort of place that people get robbed and murdered in."
       "It is not such a bad place to shelter in if we get caught in the
       rain, as I expect we shall before we get back," said Agatha,
       feeling the fitful breeze strike ominously on her cheek. "A nice
       pickle I shall be in with these light shoes on! I wish I had put
       on my strong boots. If it rains much I will go into the old
       chalet."
       "Miss Wilson won't let you. It's trespassing."
       "What matter! Nobody lives in it, and the gate is off its hinges.
       I only want to stand under the veranda--not to break into the
       wretched place. Besides, the landlord knows Miss Wilson; he won't
       mind. There's a drop."
       Miss Carpenter looked up, and immediately received a heavy
       raindrop in her eye.
       "Oh!" she cried. "It's pouring. We shall be drenched."
       Agatha stopped, and the column broke into a group about her.
       "Miss Wilson," she said, "it is going to rain in torrents, and
       Jane and I have only our shoes on."
       Miss Wilson paused to consider the situation. Someone suggested
       that if they hurried on they might reach Lyvern before the rain
       came down.
       "More than a mile," said Agatha scornfully, "and the rain coming
       down already!"
       Someone else suggested returning to the college.
       "More than two miles," said Agatha. "We should be drowned."
       "There is nothing for it but to wait here under the trees," said
       Miss Wilson.
       "The branches are very bare," said Gertrude anxiously. "If it
       should come down heavily they will drip worse than the rain
       itself."
       "Much worse," said Agatha. "I think we had better get under the
       veranda of the old chalet. It is not half a minute's walk from
       here."
       "But we have no right--" Here the sky darkened threateningly.
       Miss Wilson checked herself and said, "I suppose it is still
       empty."
       "Of course," replied Agatha, impatient to be moving. "It is
       almost a ruin."
       "Then let us go there, by all means," said Miss Wilson, not
       disposed to stand on trifles at the risk of a bad cold.
       They hurried on, and came presently to a green hill by the
       wayside. On the slope was a dilapidated Swiss cottage, surrounded
       by a veranda on slender wooden pillars, about which clung a few
       tendrils of withered creeper, their stray ends still swinging
       from the recent wind, now momentarily hushed as if listening for
       the coming of the rain. Access from the roadway was by a rough
       wooden gate in the hedge. To the surprise of Agatha, who had last
       seen this gate off its hinges and only attached to the post by a
       rusty chain and padlock, it was now rehung and fastened by a new
       hasp. The weather admitting of no delay to consider these
       repairs, she opened the gate and hastened up the slope, followed
       by the troop of girls. Their ascent ended with a rush, for the
       rain suddenly came down in torrents.
       When they were safe under the veranda, panting, laughing,
       grumbling, or congratulating themselves on having been so close
       to a place of shelter, Miss Wilson observed, with some
       uneasiness, a spade--new, like the hasp of the gate--sticking
       upright in a patch of ground that someone had evidently been
       digging lately. She was about to comment on this sign of
       habitation, when the door of the chalet was flung open, and Jane
       screamed as a man darted out to the spade, which he was about to
       carry in out of the wet, when he perceived the company under the
       veranda, and stood still in amazement. He was a young laborer
       with a reddish-brown beard of a week's growth. He wore corduroy
       trousers and a linen-sleeved corduroy vest; both, like the hasp
       and spade, new. A coarse blue shirt, with a vulgar red-and-orange
       neckerchief, also new, completed his dress; and, to shield
       himself from the rain, he held up a silk umbrella with a
       silver-mounted ebony handle, which he seemed unlikely to have
       come by honestly. Miss Wilson felt like a boy caught robbing an
       orchard, but she put a bold face on the matter and said:
       "Will you allow us to take shelter here until the rain is over?"
       "For certain, your ladyship," he replied, respectfully applying
       the spade handle to his hair, which was combed down to his
       eyebrows. "Your ladyship does me proud to take refuge from the
       onclemency of the yallovrments beneath my 'umble rooftree." His
       accent was barbarous; and he, like a low comedian, seemed to
       relish its vulgarity. As he spoke he came in among them for
       shelter, and propped his spade against the wall of the chalet,
       kicking the soil from his hobnailed blucher boots, which were
       new.
       "I came out, honored lady," he resumed, much at his ease, "to
       house my spade, whereby I earn my living. What the pen is to the
       poet, such is the spade to the working man." He took the kerchief
       from his neck, wiped his temples as if the sweat of honest toil
       were there, and calmly tied it on again.
       "If you'll 'scuse a remark from a common man," he observed, "your
       ladyship has a fine family of daughters."
       "They are not my daughters," said Miss Wilson, rather shortly.
       "Sisters, mebbe?"
       "No."
       "I thought they mout be, acause I have a sister myself. Not that
       I would make bold for to dror comparisons, even in my own mind,
       for she's only a common woman--as common a one as ever you see.
       But few women rise above the common. Last Sunday, in yon village
       church, I heard the minister read out that one man in a thousand
       had he found, 'but one woman in all these,' he says, 'have I not
       found,' and I thinks to myself, 'Right you are!' But I warrant he
       never met your ladyship."
       A laugh, thinly disguised as a cough, escaped from Miss
       Carpenter.
       "Young lady a-ketchin' cold, I'm afeerd," he said, with
       respectful solicitude.
       "Do you think the rain will last long?" said Agatha politely.
       The man examined the sky with a weather-wise air for some
       moments. Then he turned to Agatha, and replied humbly: "The Lord
       only knows, Miss. It is not for a common man like me to say."
       Silence ensued, during which Agatha, furtively scrutinizing the
       tenant of the chalet, noticed that his face and neck were cleaner
       and less sunburnt than those of the ordinary toilers of Lyvern.
       His hands were hidden by large gardening gloves stained with coal
       dust. Lyvern laborers, as a rule, had little objection to soil
       their hands; they never wore gloves. Still, she thought, there
       was no reason why an eccentric workman, insufferably talkative,
       and capable of an allusion to the pen of the poet, should not
       indulge himself with cheap gloves. But then the silk,
       silvermounted umbrella--
       "The young lady's hi," he said suddenly, holding out the
       umbrella, "is fixed on this here. I am well aware that it is not
       for the lowest of the low to carry a gentleman's brolly, and I
       ask your ladyship's pardon for the liberty. I come by it
       accidental-like, and should be glad of a reasonable offer from
       any gentleman in want of a honest article."
       As he spoke two gentlemen, much in want of the article, as their
       clinging wet coats showed, ran through the gateway and made for
       the chalet. Fairholme arrived first, exclaiming: "Fearful
       shower!" and briskly turned his back to the ladies in order to
       stand at the edge of the veranda and shake the water out of his
       hat. Josephs came next, shrinking from the damp contact of his
       own garments. He cringed to Miss Wilson, and hoped that she had
       escaped a wetting.
       "So far I have," she replied. "The question is, how are we to get
       home?"
       "Oh, it's only a shower," said Josephs, looking up cheerfully at
       the unbroken curtain of cloud. "It will clear up presently."
       "It ain't for a common man to set up his opinion again' a
       gentleman wot have profesh'nal knowledge of the heavens, as one
       may say," said the man, "but I would 'umbly offer to bet my
       umbrellar to his wideawake that it don't cease raining this side
       of seven o'clock."
       "That man lives here," whispered Miss Wilson, "and I suppose he
       wants to get rid of us."
       "H'm!" said Fairholme. Then, turning to the strange laborer with
       the air of a person not to be trifled with, he raised his voice,
       and said: "You live here, do you, my man?"
       "I do, sir, by your good leave, if I may make so bold."
       "What's your name?"
       "Jeff Smilash, sir, at your service."
       "Where do you come from?"
       "Brixtonbury, sir."
       "Brixtonbury! Where's that?"
       "Well, sir, I don't rightly know. If a gentleman like you,
       knowing jography and such, can't tell, how can I?"
       "You ought to know where you were born, man. Haven't you got
       common sense?"
       "Where could such a one as me get common sense, sir? Besides, I
       was only a foundling. Mebbe I warn's born at all."
       "Did I see you at church last Sunday?"
       "No, sir. I only come o' Wensday."
       "Well, let me see you there next Sunday," said Fairholme shortly,
       turning away from him.
       Miss Wilson looked at the weather, at Josephs, who was conversing
       with Jane, and finally at Smilash, who knuckled his forehead
       without waiting to be addressed.
       "Have you a boy whom you can send to Lyvern to get us a
       conveyance--a carriage? I will give him a shilling for his
       trouble."
       "A shilling!" said Smilash joyfully. "Your ladyship is a noble
       lady. Two four-wheeled cabs. There's eight on you."
       "There is only one cab in Lyvern," said Miss Wilson. "Take this
       card to Mr. Marsh, the jotmaster, and tell him the predicament we
       are in. He will send vehicles."
       Smilash took the card and read it at a glance. He then went into
       the chalet. Reappearing presently in a sou'wester and oilskins,
       he ran off through the rain and vaulted over the gate with
       ridiculous elegance. No sooner had he vanished than, as often
       happens to remarkable men, he became the subject of conversation.
       "A decent workman," said Josephs. "A well-mannered man,
       considering his class."
       "A born fool, though," said Fairholme.
       "Or a rogue," said Agatha, emphasizing the suggestion by a
       glitter of her eyes and teeth, whilst her schoolfellows, rather
       disapproving of her freedom, stood stiffly dumb. "He told Miss
       Wilson that he had a sister, and that he had been to church last
       Sunday, and he has just told you that he is a foundling, and that
       he only came last Wednesday. His accent is put on, and he can
       read, and I don't believe he is a workman at all. Perhaps he is a
       burglar, come down to steal the college plate."
       "Agatha," said Miss Wilson gravely, "you must be very careful how
       you say things of that kind."
       "But it is so obvious. His explanation about the umbrella was
       made up to disarm suspicion. He handled it and leaned on it in a
       way that showed how much more familiar it was to him than that
       new spade he was so anxious about. And all his clothes are new."
       "True," said Fairholme, "but there is not much in all that.
       Workmen nowadays ape gentlemen in everything. However, I will
       keep an eye on him."
       "Oh, thank you so much," said Agatha. Fairholme, suspecting
       mockery, frowned, and Miss Wilson looked severely at the mocker.
       Little more was said, except as to the chances--manifestly
       small--of the rain ceasing, until the tops of a cab, a decayed
       mourning coach, and three dripping hats were seen over the hedge.
       Smilash sat on the box of the coach, beside the driver. When it
       stopped, he alighted, re-entered the chalet without speaking,
       came out with the umbrella, spread it above Miss Wilson's head,
       and said:
       "Now, if your ladyship will come with me, I will see you dry into
       the stray, and then I'll bring your honored nieces one by one."
       "I shall come last," said Miss Wilson, irritated by his
       assumption that the party was a family one. "Gertrude, you had
       better go first."
       "Allow me," said Fairholme, stepping forward, and attempting to
       take the umbrella.
       "Thank you, I shall not trouble you," she said frostily, and
       tripped away over the oozing field with Smilash, who held the
       umbrella over her with ostentatious solicitude. In the same
       manner he led the rest to the vehicles, in which they packed
       themselves with some difficulty. Agatha, who came last but one,
       gave him threepence.
       "You have a noble 'art and an expressive hi, Miss," he said,
       apparently much moved. "Blessings on both! Blessings on both!"
       He went back for Jane, who slipped on the wet grass and fell. He
       had to put forth his strength as he helped her to rise. "Hope you
       ain't sopped up much of the rainfall, Miss," he said. "You are a
       fine young lady for your age. Nigh on twelve stone, I should
       think."
       She reddened and hurried to the cab, where Agatha was. But it was
       full; and Jane, much against her will, had to get into the coach,
       considerably diminishing the space left for Miss Wilson, to whom
       Smilash had returned.
       "Now, dear lady," he said, "take care you don't slip. Come
       along."
       Miss Wilson, ignoring the invitation, took a shilling from her
       purse.
       "No, lady," said Smilash with a virtuous air. "I am an honest man
       and have never seen the inside of a jail except four times, and
       only twice for stealing. Your youngest daughter--her with the
       expressive hi--have paid me far beyond what is proper."
       "I have told you that these young ladies are not my daughters,"
       said Miss Wilson sharply. "Why do you not listen to what is said
       to you?"
       "Don't be too hard on a common man, lady," said Smilash
       submissively. "The young lady have just given me three
       'arf-crowns."
       "Three half-crowns!" exclaimed Miss Wilson, angered at such
       extravagance.
       "Bless her innocence, she don't know what is proper to give to a
       low sort like me! But I will not rob the young lady. 'Arf-a-crown
       is no more nor is fair for the job, and arf-a-crown will I keep,
       if agreeable to your noble ladyship. But I give you back the five
       bob in trust for her. Have you ever noticed her expressive hi?"
       "Nonsense, sir. You had better keep the money now that you have
       got it."
       "Wot! Sell for five bob the high opinion your ladyship has of me!
       No, dear lady; not likely. My father's very last words to me
       was--"
       "You said just now that you were a foundling," said Fairholme.
       "What are we to believe? Eh?"
       "So I were, sir; but by mother's side alone. Her ladyship will
       please to take back the money, for keep it I will not. I am of
       the lower orders, and therefore not a man of my word; but when I
       do stick to it, I stick like wax."
       "Take it," said Fairholme to Miss Wilson. "Take it, of course.
       Seven and sixpence is a ridiculous sum to give him for what he
       has done. It would only set him drinking."
       "His reverence says true, lady. The one 'arfcrown will keep me
       comfortably tight until Sunday morning; and more I do not
       desire."
       "Just a little less of your tongue, my man," said Fairholme,
       taking the two coins from him and handing them to Miss Wilson,
       who bade the clergymen good afternoon, and went to the coach
       under the umbrella.
       "If your ladyship should want a handy man to do an odd job up at
       the college I hope you will remember me," Smilash said as they
       went down the slope.
       "Oh, you know who I am, do you?" said Miss Wilson drily.
       "All the country knows you, Miss, and worships you. I have few
       equals as a coiner, and if you should require a medal struck to
       give away for good behavior or the like, I think I could strike
       one to your satisfaction. And if your ladyship should want a
       trifle of smuggled lace--"
       "You had better be careful or you will get into trouble, I
       think," said Miss Wilson sternly. "Tell him to drive on."
       The vehicles started, and Smilash took the liberty of waving his
       hat after them. Then he returned to the chalet, left the umbrella
       within, came out again, locked the door, put the key in his
       pocket, and walked off through the rain across the hill without
       taking the least notice of the astonished parsons.
       In the meantime Miss Wilson, unable to contain her annoyance at
       Agatha's extravagance, spoke of it to the girls who shared the
       coach with her. But Jane declared that Agatha only possessed
       threepence in the world, and therefore could not possibly have
       given the man thirty times that sum. When they reached the
       college, Agatha, confronted with Miss Wilson, opened her eyes in
       wonder, and exclaimed, laughing: "I only gave him threepence. He
       has sent me a present of four and ninepence!"
       Content of CHAPTER III [George Bernard Shaw's novel: An Unsocial Socialist]
       _