Brief Candles. Four Stories.
Aldous Huxley
From behind the outspread Times I broke a silence. Your friend Chawdrons dead, I see.
Dead? repeated Tilney, half incredulously. Chawdron dead?
Suddenly, of heart failure, I went on, reading from the obituary, at his residence in St Jamess Square.
Yes, his heart. He spoke meditatively. How old was he? Sixty?
Fiftynine. I didnt realize the ruffian had been rich for so long. the extraordinary business instinct, coupled with a truly Scottish doggedness and determination, which raised him, before he was thirtyfive, from obscurity and comparative poverty to the height of opulence. Dont you wish you could write like that? My father lost a quarter of a centurys savings in one of his companies.
Served him right for saving! said Tilney with a sudden savagery. Surprised, I looked at him over the top of my paper. On his gnarled and ruddy face was an expression of angry gloom. The news had evidently depressed him. Besides, he was always illtempered at breakfast. My poor father was paying. What sort of jam is that by you? he asked fiercely.
Strawberry.
Then Ill have some marmalade.
I passed him the marmalade and, ignoring his bad temper, When the Old Man, I continued, and along with him, of course, most of the other shareholders, had sold out at about eighty per cent dead loss, Chawdron did a little quiet conjuring and the price whizzed up again. But by that time he was the owner of practically all the stock.
Im always on the side of the ruffians, said Tilney. On principle.
Oh, so am I. All the same, I do regret those twelve thousand pounds.
Tilney said nothing. I returned to the obituary.
What do they say about the New Guinea Oil Company scandal? he asked after a silence.
Very little; and the touch is beautifully light. The findings of the Royal Commission were on the whole favourable, though it was generally considered at the time that Mr Chawdron had acted somewhat inconsiderately.
Tilney laughed. Inconsiderately is good. I wish I made fourteen hundred thousand pounds each time I was inconsiderate.
Was that what he made out of the New Guinea Oil business?
So he told me, and I dont think he exaggerated. He never lied for pleasure. Out of business hours he was remarkably honest.
You must have known him very well.
Intimately, said Tilney, and, pushing away his plate, he began to fill his pipe.
I envy you. What a specimen for ones collection! But didnt you get rather bored with living inside the museum, so to speak, behind the menagerie bars? Being intimate with a specimenit must be trying.
Not if the specimens immensely rich, Tilney answered. You see, Im partial to Napoleon brandy and Corona Coronas; parasitism has its rewards. And if youre skilful, it neednt have too many penalties. Its possible to be a highsouled louse, an independent tapeworm. But Napoleon brandy and Coronas werent the only attractions Chawdron possessed for me. I have a disinterested, scientific curiosity about the enormously wealthy. A man with an income of more than fifty thousand a year is such a fantastic and improbable being. Chawdron was specially interesting because hed made all his moneymainly dishonestly; that was the fascinating thing. He was a largescale, Napoleonic crook. And, by God, he looked it! Did you know him by sight?
I shook my head.
Like an illustration to Lombroso. A criminal type. But intelligently criminal, not brutally. He wasnt brutal.
I thought he was supposed to look like a chimpanzee, I put in.
He did, said Tilney. But, after all, a chimpanzee isnt brutallooking. What youre struck by in a chimpanzee is its allbuthuman appearance. So very intelligent, so nearly a man. Chawdrons face had just that look. But with a difference. The chimpanzee looks gentle and virtuous and quite without humour. Whereas Chawdrons intelligent allbuthumanity was sly and, underneath the twinkling jocularity, quite ruthless. Oh, a strange, interesting creature! I got a lot of fun out of my study of him. But in the end, of course, he did bore me. Bored me to death. He was so drearily uneducated. Didnt know the most obvious things, couldnt understand a generalization. And then quite disgustingly without taste, without aesthetic sense or understanding. Metaphysically and artistically a cretin.
The obituarist doesnt seem to be of your opinion. I turned again to The Times. Where is it now? Ah! A remarkable writer was lost when Chawdron took up finance. Not entirely lost, however; for the brilliant Autobiography, published in 1921, remains as a lasting memorial to his talents as a stylist and narrator. What do you say to that? I asked, looking up at Tilney.
He smiled enigmatically. Its quite true.
I never read the book, I confess. Is it any good?
Its damned good. His smile mocked, incomprehensibly.
Are you pulling my leg?
No, it was really and genuinely good.
Then he can hardly have been such an artistic cretin as you make out.
Cant he? Tilney echoed and, after a little pause, suddenly laughed aloud. But he was a cretin, he continued on a little gush of confidingness that seemed to sweep away the barriers of his willed discretion, and the book was good. For the excellent reason that he didnt write it. I wrote it.
You? I looked at him, wondering if he were joking. But his face, after the quick illumination of laughter, had gone serious, almost gloomy. A curious face, I reflected. Handsome in its way, intelligent, aware, yet with something rather sinister about it, almost repulsive. The superficial charm and good humour of the man seemed to overlie a fundamental hardness, an uncaringness, a hostility even. Too much good living, moreover, had left its marks on that face. It was patchily red and lumpy. The fine features had become rather gross. There was a coarseness mingled with the native refinement. Did I like Tilney or did I not? I never rightly knew. And perhaps the question was irrelevant. Perhaps Tilney was one of those men who are not meant to be liked or disliked as menonly as performers. I liked his conversation, I was amused, interested, instructed by what he said. To ask myself if I also liked what he wasthis was, no doubt, beside the point.
Tilney got up from the table and began to walk up and down the room, his pipe between his teeth, smoking. Poor Chawdrons dead now, so theres no reason He left the sentence unfinished, and for a few seconds was silent. Standing by the window, he looked out through the rainblurred glass on to the greens and wet greys of the Kentish landscape. England looks like the vegetables at a Bloomsbury boardinghouse dinner, he said slowly. Horrible! Why do we live in this horrible country? Ugh! He shuddered and turned away. There was another silence. The door opened and the maid came in to clear the breakfast table. I say the maid; but the brief impersonal term is inaccurate. Inaccurate, because wholly inadequate to describe Hawtrey. What came in, when the door opened, was personified efficiency, was a dragon, was stony ugliness, was a pillar of society, was the Ten Commandments on legs. Tilney, who did not know her, did not share my terror of the domestic monster. Unaware of the intense disapproval which I could feel her silently radiating (it was after ten; Tilneys slugabed habits had thrown out of gear the whole of her mornings routine) he continued to walk up and down, while Hawtrey busied herself round the table. Suddenly he laughed. Chawdrons Autobiography was the only one of my books I ever made any money out of, he said. I listened apprehensively, lest he should say anything which might shock or offend the dragon. He turned over all the royalties to me, Tilney went on. I made the best part of three thousand pounds out of his