The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft
by George Gissing
PREFACE
The name of Henry Ryecroft never became familiar to what is called
the
reading public. A year ago obituary paragraphs in the
literarypapers gave such
account of him as was thought needful: the date
and place of his birth, the names of certain books he had written,
an
allusion to his work in the periodicals, the manner of his death.
At the time it sufficed. Even those few who knew the man, and in a
measure understood him, must have felt that his name called for no
further
celebration; like other
mortals, he had lived and laboured;
like other
mortals, he had entered into his rest. To me, however,
fell the duty of examining Ryecroft's papers; and having, in the
exercise of my
discretion,
decided to print this little
volume, I
feel that it requires a word or two of biographical complement, just
so much personal detail as may point the
significance of the self-
revelation here made.
When first I knew him, Ryecroft had reached his fortieth year; for
twenty years he had lived by the pen. He was a struggling man,
beset by
poverty and other circumstances very unpropitious to mental
work. Many forms of
literature had he tried; in none had he been
conspicuously successful; yet now and then he had managed to earn a
little more money than his
actual needs demanded, and thus was
enabled to see something of foreign countries. Naturally a man of
independent and rather
scornfuloutlook, he had suffered much from
defeated
ambition, from disillusions of many kinds, from subjection
to grim necessity; the result of it, at the time of which I am
speaking, was, certainly not a broken spirit, but a mind and temper
so
sternly disciplined, that, in ordinary
intercourse with him, one
did not know but that he led a calm,
contented life. Only after
several years of friendship was I able to form a just idea of what
the man had gone through, or of his
actualexistence. Little by
little Ryecroft had subdued himself to a
modestly" target="_blank" title="ad.谦虚地;有节制地">
modestly industrious
routine. He did a great deal of mere hack-work; he reviewed, he
translated, he wrote articles; at long intervals a
volume appeared
under his name. There were times, I have no doubt, when
bitternesstook hold upon him; not seldom he suffered in health, and probably
as much from moral as from
physical over-strain; but, on the whole,
he earned his living very much as other men do,
taking the day's
toil as a matter of course, and
rarely grumbling over it.
Time went on; things happened; but Ryecroft was still
laborious and
poor. In moments of
depression he spoke of his declining energies,
and
evidently suffered under a haunting fear of the future. The
thought of
dependence had always been
intolerable to him; perhaps
the only boast I at any time heard from his lips was that he had
never incurred debt. It was a bitter thought that, after so long
and hard a struggle with unkindly circumstance, he might end his
life as one of the defeated.
A happier lot was in store for him. At the age of fifty, just when
his health had begun to fail and his energies to show abatement,
Ryecroft had the rare good fortune to find himself suddenly released
from toil, and to enter upon a period of such tranquillity of mind
and condition as he had never dared to hope. On the death of an
acquaintance, more his friend than he imagined, the wayworn man of
letters
learnt with
astonishment that there was bequeathed to him a
life annuity of three hundred pounds. Having only himself to
support (he had been a widower for several years, and his daughter,
an only child, was married), Ryecroft saw in this
income something
more than a competency. In a few weeks he quitted the London suburb
where of late he had been living, and, turning to the part of
England which he loved best, he
presently established himself in a
cottage near Exeter, where, with a
rustichousekeeper to look after
him, he was soon
thoroughly at home. Now and then some friend went
down into Devon to see him; those who had that pleasure will not
forget the plain little house amid its half-wild garden, the cosy
book-room with its fine view across the
valley of the Exe to Haldon,
the host's
cordial, gleeful
hospitality, rambles with him in lanes
and meadows, long talks amid the
illness" target="_blank" title="n.不动;无声,寂静">
stillness of the rural night. We
hoped it would all last for many a year; it seemed, indeed, as
though Ryecroft had only need of rest and calm to become a hale man.
But already, though he did not know it, he was
suffering from a
disease of the heart, which cut short his life after little more
than a lustrum of quiet
contentment. It had always been his wish to
die suddenly; he dreaded the thought of
illness,
chiefly because of
the trouble it gave to others. On a summer evening, after a long
walk in very hot weather, he lay down upon the sofa in his study,
and there--as his calm face declared--passed from
slumber into the
great silence.
When he left London, Ryecroft bade
farewell to authorship. He told
me that he hoped never to write another line for
publication. But,
among the papers which I looked through after his death, I came upon
three
manuscript books which at first glance seemed to be a diary; a
date on the
opening page of one of them showed that it had been
begun not very long after the writer's settling in Devon. When I
had read a little in these pages, I saw that they were no mere
record of day-to-day life;
evidentlyfinding himself
unable to
forego
altogether the use of the pen, the
veteran had set down, as
humour bade him, a thought, a reminiscence, a bit of reverie, a
description of his state of mind, and so on, dating such passage
merely with the month in which it was written. Sitting in the room
where I had often been his
companion, I turned page after page, and
at moments it was as though my friend's voice sounded to me once
more. I saw his worn
visage, grave or smiling; recalled his
familiar pose or
gesture. But in this written
gossip he revealed
himself more
intimately than in our conversation of the days gone
by. Ryecroft had never erred by lack of reticence; as was natural
in a
sensitive man who had suffered much, he inclined to gentle
acquiescence,
shrank from
argument, from self-assertion. Here he
spoke to me without
restraint, and, when I had read it all through,
I knew the man better than before.
Assuredly, this
writing was not intended for the public, and yet, in
many a passage, I seemed to
perceive the
literary purpose--something
more than the turn of
phrase, and so on, which results from long
habit of
composition. Certain of his reminiscences, in particular,
Ryecroft could hardly have troubled to write down had he not,
however
vaguely, entertained the thought of putting them to some
use. I
suspect that, in his happy
leisure, there grew upon him a
desire to write one more book, a book which should be written merely
for his own
satisfaction. Plainly, it would have been the best he
had it in him to do. But he seems never to have attempted the
arrangement of these fragmentary pieces, and probably because he
could not decide upon the form they should take. I imagine him
shrinking from the thought of a first-person
volume; he would feel
it too pretentious; he would bid himself wait for the day of riper
wisdom. And so the pen fell from his hand.
Conjecturing thus, I wondered whether the
irregular diary might not
have wider interest than at first appeared. To me, its personal
appeal was very strong; might it not be possible to cull from it the
substance of a small
volume which, at least for its sincerity's
sake, would not be without value for those who read, not with the
eye alone, but with the mind? I turned the pages again. Here was a
man who, having his desire, and that a very
modest one, not only
felt satisfied, but enjoyed great happiness. He talked of many
different things,
saying exactly what he thought; he spoke of
himself, and told the truth as far as
mortal can tell it. It seemed
to me that the thing had human interest. I
decided to print.
The question of
arrangement had to be considered; I did not like to
offer a mere incondite miscellany. To supply each of the
disconnected passages with a title, or even to group them under
subject headings, would have interfered with the spontaneity which,
above all, I wished to
preserve. In
reading through the matter I
had selected, it struck me how often the aspects of nature were
referred to, and how
suitable many of the reflections were to the
month with which they were dated. Ryecroft, I knew, had ever been
much influenced by the mood of the sky, and by the
procession of the