everything I could
dispense with, I had had much night
travelling
amongst native passengers, who so valued
cleanliness that they economised it with religious care. By
the time I reached Warsaw, I may say, without metonymy, that
I was itching (all over) for a bath and a change of linen.
My
irritation, indeed, was at its
height. But there was no
appeal; and on my
arrival I was haled before the authorities.
Again, their head was a general officer, though not the least
like my portly friend at Vienna. His business was to sit in
judgment upon delinquents such as I. He was a spare, austere
man, surrounded by a sharp-looking aide-de-camp, several
clerks in uniform, and two or three men in mufti, whom I took
to be detectives. The
inspector who arrested me was present
with my open despatch-box and
journal. The
journal he handed
to the aide, who began at once to look it through while his
chief was disposing of another case.
To be suspected and dragged before this
tribunal was, for the
time being (as I afterwards learnt) almost tantamount to
condemnation. As soon as the General had sentenced my
predecessor, I was accosted as a self-convicted criminal.
Fortunately he spoke French like a Frenchman; and, as it
presently appeared, a few words of English.
'What country do you belong to?' he asked, as if the question
was but a matter of form, put for decency's sake - a mere
prelude to committal.
'England, of course; you can see that by my
passport.' I was
determined to fence him with his own weapons. Indeed, in
those
innocent days of my youth, I enjoyed a
genuine British
contempt for foreigners - in the lump - which, after all, is
about as
impartial a
sentiment as its
converse, that one's
own country is always in the wrong.
'Where did you get it?' (with a face of stone).
PRISONER (NAIVELY): 'Where did I get it? I do not follow
you.' (Don't forget, please, that said prisoner's apparel
was unvaleted, his hands unwashed, his linen
unchanged, his
hair unkempt, and his face unshaven).
GENERAL (stonily): '"Where did you get it?" was my question.'
PRISONER (quietly): 'From Lord Palmerston.'
GENERAL (glancing at that Minister's signature): 'It says
here, "et son domestique" - you have no domestique.'
PRISONER (calmly): 'Pardon me, I have a domestic.'
GENERAL (with severity), 'Where is he?'
PRISONER: 'At Dresden by this time, I hope.'
GENERAL (receiving
journal from aide-de-camp, who points to a
certain page): 'You state here you were caught by the
Austrians in a pretended escape from the Viennese insurgents;
and add, "They
evidently took me for a spy" [returning
journal to aide]. What is your
explanation of this?'
PRISONER (shrugging shoulders disdainfully): 'In the first
place, the word "pretended" is not in my
journal. In the
second, although of course it does not follow, if one takes
another person for a man of
sagacity or a gentleman - it does
not follow that he is either - still, when - '
GENERAL (with signs of impatience): 'I have here a
PASSIERSCHEIN, found
amongst your papers and signed by the
rebels. They would not have given you this, had you not been
on friendly terms with them. You will be detained until I
have further particulars.'
PRISONER (angrily): 'I will
assist you, through Her Britannic
Majesty's Consul, with whom I claim the right to communicate.
I beg to inform you that I am neither a spy nor a socialist,
but the son of an English peer' (heaven help the relevancy!).
'An Englishman has yet to learn that Lord Palmerston's
signature is to be set at
naught and treated with contumacy.'
The General beckoned to the
inspector to put an end to the
proceedings. But the aide, who had been studying the
journal, again placed it in his chief's hands. A colloquy
ensued, in which I overheard the name of Lord Ponsonby. The
enemy seemed to waver, so I charged with a renewed request to
see the English Consul. A pause; then some remarks in
Russian from the aide; then the GENERAL (in suaver tones):
'The English Consul, I find, is
absent on a month's leave.
If what you state is true, you acted unadvisedly in not
having your
passport altered and REVISE when you parted with
your servant. How long do you wish to remain here?'
Said I, 'Vous avez bien raison, Monsieur. Je suis evidemment
dans mon tort. Ma visite a Varsovie etait une aberration.
As to my stay, je suis deja tout ce qu'il y a de plus ennuye.
I have seen enough of Warsaw to last for the rest of my
days.'
Eventually my portmanteau and despatch-box were restored to
me; and I took up my quarters in the filthiest inn (there was
no better, I believe) that it was ever my
misfortune to lodge
at. It was ancient, dark, dirty, and
dismal. My sitting-
room (I had a
cupboard besides to sleep in) had but one
window, looking into a
gloomycourtyard. The furniture
consisted of two
wooden chairs and a spavined horsehair sofa.
The ceiling was low and lamp-blacked; the stained paper fell
in strips from the sweating walls;
fortunately there was no
carpet; but if anything could have added to the occupier's
depression it was the sight of his own distorted features in
a shattered glass, which seemed to watch him like a detective
and take notes of his
movements - a real Russian mirror.
But the resources of one-and-twenty are not easily daunted,
even by the presence of the CIMEX LECTULARIUS or the PULEX
IRRITANS. I inquired for a LAQUAIS DE PLACE, - some human
being to
consort with was the most pressing of immediate
wants. As luck would have it, the very article was in the
dreary
courtyard, lurking spider-like for the
innocenttraveller just arrived. Elective
affinity brought us at once
to friendly
intercourse. He was of the Hebrew race, as the
larger half of the Warsaw population still are. He was a
typical Jew (all Jews are typical), though all are not so
thin as was Beninsky. His eyes were sunk in sockets deepened
by the sharpness of his bird-of-prey beak; a single corkscrew
ringlet dropped tearfully down each cheek; and his one front
tooth seemed sometimes in his upper, sometimes in his lower
jaw. His skull-cap and his
gabardine might have been
heirlooms from the Patriarch Jacob; and his poor hands seemed
made for clawing. But there was a
humble and contrite spirit
in his sad eyes. The history of his race was written in
them; but it was modern history that one read in their
hopeless and appealing look.
His cringing manner and his soft voice (we
conversed in
German) touched my heart. I have always had a
liking for the
Jews. Who shall
reckon how much some of us owe them! They
have always interested me as a
peculiar people - admitting
sometimes, as in poor Beninsky's case, of purifying, no
doubt; yet, if
occasionallyzealous (and who is not?) of
interested works - cent. per cent. works, often - yes, more
often than we Christians -
zealous of good works, of open-
handed, large-hearted munificence, of
charity in its
democratic and noblest sense. Shame upon the nations which
despise and
persecute them for faults which they, the
persecutors, have begotten! Shame on those who have extorted
both their money and their teeth! I think if I were a Jew I
should
chuckle to see my shekels furnish all the wars in