Derrick Vaughan--Novelist(德里克·凡更)

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Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
1
Derrick Vaughan--
Novelist
by Edna Lyall
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
2
Chapter I.
'Nothing fills a child's mind like a large old mansion; better if un- or
partially occupied; peopled with the spirits of deceased members of the
county and Justices of the Quorum. Would I were buried in the peopled
solitude of one, with my feelings at seven years old!'--From Letters of
Charles Lamb.
To attempt a formal biography of Derrick Vaughan would be out of the
question, even though he and I have been more or less thrown together
since we were both in the nursery. But I have an odd sort of wish to note
down roughly just a few of my recollections of him, and to show how his
fortunes gradually developed, being perhaps stimulated to make the
attempt by certain irritating remarks which one overhears now often
enough at clubs or in drawing-rooms, or indeed wherever one goes.
"Derrick Vaughan," say these authorities of the world of small-talk, with
that delightful air of omniscience which invariably characterises them,
"why, he simply leapt into fame. He is one of the favourites of fortune.
Like Byron, he woke one morning and found himself famous."
Now this sounds well enough, but it is a long way from the truth, and
I--Sydney Wharncliffe, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-law-- desire,
while the past few years are fresh in my mind, to write a true version of
my friend's career.
Everyone knows his face. Has it not appeared in 'Noted Men,' and--
gradually deteriorating according to the price of the paper and the quality
of the engraving--in many another illustrated journal? Yet somehow
these works of art don't satisfy me, and, as I write, I see before me
something very different from the latest photograph by Messrs. Paul and
Reynard.
I see a large-featured, broad-browed English face, a trifle heavy-
looking when in repose, yet a thorough, honest, manly face, with a
complexion neither dark nor fair, with brown hair and moustache, and
with light hazel eyes that look out on the world quietly enough. You might
talk to him for long in an ordinary way and never suspect that he was a
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
3
genius; but when you have him to yourself, when some consciousness of
sympathy rouses him, he all at once becomes a different being. His quiet
eyes kindle, his face becomes full of life--you wonder that you ever
thought it heavy or commonplace. Then the world interrupts in some way,
and, just as a hermit-crab draws down its shell with a comically rapid
movement, so Derrick suddenly retires into himself.
Thus much for his outer man.
For the rest, there are of course the neat little accounts of his birthplace,
his parentage, his education, etc., etc., published with the list of his works
in due order, with the engravings in the illustrated papers. But these tell
us little of the real life of the man.
Carlyle, in one of his finest passages, says that 'A true delineation of
the smallest man and his scene of pilgrimage through life is capable of
interesting the greatest men; that all men are to an unspeakable degree
brothers, each man's life a strange emblem of every man's; and that human
portraits faithfully drawn are of all pictures the welcomest on human
walls.' And though I don't profess to give a portrait, but merely a sketch,
I will endeavour to sketch faithfully, and possibly in the future my work
may fall into the hands of some of those worthy people who imagine that
my friend leapt into fame at a bound, or of those comfortable mortals who
seem to think that a novel is turned out as easily as water from a tap.
There is, however, one thing I can never do:--I am quite unable to put
into words my friend's intensely strong feeling with regard to the
sacredness of his profession. It seemed to me not unlike the feeling of
Isaiah when, in the vision, his mouth had been touched with the celestial
fire. And I can only hope that something of this may be read between my
very inadequate lines.
Looking back, I fancy Derrick must have been a clever child. But he
was not precocious, and in some respects was even decidedly backward.
I can see him now--it is my first clear recollection of him--leaning back in
the corner of my father's carriage as we drove from the Newmarket station
to our summer home at Mondisfield. He and I were small boys of eight,
and Derrick had been invited for the holidays, while his twin brother--if I
remember right--indulged in typhoid fever at Kensington. He was shy
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
4
and silent, and the ice was not broken until we passed Silvery Steeple.
"That," said my father, "is a ruined church; it was destroyed by
Cromwell in the Civil Wars."
In an instant the small quiet boy sitting beside me was transformed.
His eyes shone; he sprang forward and thrust his head far out of the
window, gazing at the old ivy-covered tower as long as it remained in
sight.
"Was Cromwell really once there?" he asked with breathless interest.
"So they say," replied my father, looking with an amused smile at the
face of the questioner, in which eagerness, delight, and reverence were
mingled. "Are you an admirer of the Lord Protector?"
"He is my greatest hero of all," said Derrick fervently. "Do you
think--oh, do you think he possibly can ever have come to Mondisfield?"
My father thought not, but said there was an old tradition that the Hall
had been attacked by the Royalists, and the bridge over the moat defended
by the owner of the house; but he had no great belief in the story, for
which, indeed, there seemed no evidence.
Derrick's eyes during this conversation were something wonderful to
see, and long after, when we were not actually playing at anything, I used
often to notice the same expression stealing over him, and would cry out,
"There is the man defending the bridge again; I can see him in your eyes!
Tell me what happened to him next!"
Then, generally pacing to and fro in the apple walk, or sitting astride
the bridge itself, Derrick would tell me of the adventures of my ancestor,
Paul Wharncliffe, who performed incredible feats of valour, and who was
to both of us a most real person. On wet days he wrote his story in a
copy-book, and would have worked at it for hours had my mother allowed
him, though of the manual part of the work he had, and has always
retained, the greatest dislike. I remember well the comical ending of this
first story of his. He skipped over an interval of ten years, represented on
the page by ten laboriously made stars, and did for his hero in the
following lines:
"And now, reader, let us come into Mondisfield churchyard. There
are three tombstones. On one is written, 'Mr. Paul Wharncliffe.'"
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
5
The story was no better than the productions of most eight-year-old
children, the written story at least. But, curiously enough, it proved to be
the germ of the celebrated romance, 'At Strife,' which Derrick wrote in
after years; and he himself maintains that his picture of life during the
Civil War would have been much less graphic had he not lived so much in
the past during his various visits to Mondisfield.
It was at his second visit, when we were nine, that I remember his
announcing his intention of being an author when he was grown up. My
mother still delights in telling the story. She was sitting at work in the
south parlour one day, when I dashed into the room calling out:
"Derrick's head is stuck between the banisters in the gallery; come
quick, mother, come quick!"
She ran up the little winding staircase, and there, sure enough, in the
musician's gallery, was poor Derrick, his manuscript and pen on the floor
and his head in durance vile.
"You silly boy!" said my mother, a little frightened when she found
that to get the head back was no easy matter, "What made you put it
through?"
"You look like King Charles at Carisbrooke," I cried, forgetting how
much Derrick would resent the speech.
And being released at that moment he took me by the shoulders and
gave me an angry shake or two, as he said vehemently, "I'm not like King
Charles! King Charles was a liar."
I saw my mother smile a little as she separated us.
"Come, boys, don't quarrel," she said. "And Derrick will tell me the
truth, for indeed I am curious to know why he thrust his head in such a
place."
"I wanted to make sure," said Derrick, "whether Paul Wharncliffe
could see Lady Lettice, when she took the falcon on her wrist below in the
passage. I mustn't say he saw her if it's impossible, you know. Authors
have to be quite true in little things, and I mean to be an author."
"But," said my mother, laughing at the great earnestness of the hazel
eyes, "could not your hero look over the top of the rail?"
"Well, yes," said Derrick. "He would have done that, but you see it's
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
6
so dreadfully high and I couldn't get up. But I tell you what, Mrs.
Wharncliffe, if it wouldn't be giving you a great deal of trouble--I'm sorry
you were troubled to get my head back again--but if you would just look
over, since you are so tall, and I'll run down and act Lady Lettice."
"Why couldn't Paul go downstairs and look at the lady in comfort?"
asked my mother.
Derrick mused a little.
"He might look at her through a crack in the door at the foot of the
stairs, perhaps, but that would seem mean, somehow. It would be a pity,
too, not to use the gallery; galleries are uncommon, you see, and you can
get cracked doors anywhere. And, you know, he was obliged to look at
her when she couldn't see him, because their fathers were on different
sides in the war, and dreadful enemies."
When school-days came, matters went on much in the same way; there
was always an abominably scribbled tale stowed away in Derrick's desk,
and he worked infinitely harder than I did, because there was always
before him this determination to be an author and to prepare himself for
the life. But he wrote merely from love of it, and with no idea of
publication until the beginning of our last year at Oxford, when, having
reached the ripe age of one-and-twenty, he determined to delay no longer,
but to plunge boldly into his first novel.
He was seldom able to get more than six or eight hours a week for it,
because he was reading rather hard, so that the novel progressed but
slowly. Finally, to my astonishment, it came to a dead stand- still.
I have never made out exactly what was wrong with Derrick then,
though I know that he passed through a terrible time of doubt and despair.
I spent part of the Long with him down at Ventnor, where his mother had
been ordered for her health. She was devoted to Derrick, and as far as I
can understand, he was her chief comfort in life. Major Vaughan, the
husband, had been out in India for years; the only daughter was married to
a rich manufacturer at Birmingham, who had a constitutional dislike to
mothers-in-law, and as far as possible eschewed their company; while
Lawrence, Derrick's twin brother, was for ever getting into scrapes, and
was into the bargain the most unblushingly selfish fellow I ever had the
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
7
pleasure of meeting.
"Sydney," said Mrs. Vaughan to me one afternoon when we were in
the garden, "Derrick seems to me unlike himself, there is a division
between us which I never felt before. Can you tell me what is troubling
him?"
She was not at all a good-looking woman, but she had a very sweet,
wistful face, and I never looked at her sad eyes without feeling ready to go
through fire and water for her. I tried now to make light of Derrick's
depression.
"He is only going through what we all of us go through," I said,
assuming a cheerful tone. "He has suddenly discovered that life is a
great riddle, and that the things he has accepted in blind faith are, after all,
not so sure."
She sighed.
"Do all go through it?" she said thoughtfully. "And how many, I
wonder, get beyond?"
"Few enough," I replied moodily. Then, remembering my role,--"But
Derrick will get through; he has a thousand things to help him which
others have not,--you, for instance. And then I fancy he has a sort of
insight which most of us are without."
"Possibly," she said. "As for me, it is little that I can do for him.
Perhaps you are right, and it is true that once in a life at any rate we all
have to go into the wilderness alone."
That was the last summer I ever saw Derrick's mother; she took a chill
the following Christmas and died after a few days' illness. But I have
always thought her death helped Derrick in a way that her life might have
failed to do. For although he never, I fancy, quite recovered from the
blow, and to this day cannot speak of her without tears in his eyes, yet
when he came back to Oxford he seemed to have found the answer to the
riddle, and though older, sadder and graver than before, had quite lost the
restless dissatisfaction that for some time had clouded his life. In a few
months, moreover, I noticed a fresh sign that he was out of the wood.
Coming into his rooms one day I found him sitting in the cushioned
window-seat, reading over and correcting some sheets of blue foolscap.
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
8
"At it again?" I asked.
He nodded.
"I mean to finish the first volume here. For the rest I must be in
London."
"Why?" I asked, a little curious as to this unknown art of novel-
making.
"Because," he replied, "one must be in the heart of things to
understand how Lynwood was affected by them."
"Lynwood! I believe you are always thinking of him!" (Lynwood
was the hero of his novel.)
"Well, so I am nearly--so I must be, if the book is to be any good."
"Read me what you have written," I said, throwing myself back in a
rickety but tolerably comfortable arm-chair which Derrick had inherited
with the rooms.
He hesitated a moment, being always very diffident about his own
work; but presently, having provided me with a cigar and made a good
deal of unnecessary work in arranging the sheets of the manuscript, he
began to read aloud, rather nervously, the opening chapters of the book
now so well known under the title of 'Lynwood's Heritage.'
I had heard nothing of his for the last four years, and was amazed at
the gigantic stride he had made in the interval. For, spite of a certain
crudeness, it seemed to me a most powerful story; it rushed straight to the
point with no wavering, no beating about the bush; it flung itself into the
problems of the day with a sort of sublime audacity; it took hold of one; it
whirled one along with its own inherent force, and drew forth both
laughter and tears, for Derrick's power of pathos had always been his
strongest point.
All at once he stopped reading.
"Go on!" I cried impatiently.
"That is all," he said, gathering the sheets together.
"You stopped in the middle of a sentence!" I cried in exasperation.
"Yes," he said quietly, "for six months."
"You provoking fellow! why, I wonder?"
"Because I didn't know the end."
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
9
"Good heavens! And do you know it now?"
He looked me full in the face, and there was an expression in his eyes
which puzzled me.
"I believe I do," he said; and, getting up, he crossed the room, put the
manuscript away in a drawer, and returning, sat down in the window-seat
again, looking out on the narrow, paved street below, and at the grey
buildings opposite.
I knew very well that he would never ask me what I thought of the
story--that was not his way.
"Derrick!" I exclaimed, watching his impassive face, "I believe after
all you are a genius."
I hardly know why I said "after all," but till that moment it had never
struck me that Derrick was particularly gifted. He had so far got through
his Oxford career creditably, but then he had worked hard; his talents were
not of a showy order. I had never expected that he would set the Thames
on fire. Even now it seemed to me that he was too dreamy, too quiet, too
devoid of the pushing faculty to succeed in the world.
My remark made him laugh incredulously.
"Define a genius," he said.
For answer I pulled down his beloved Imperial Dictionary and read
him the following quotation from De Quincey: 'Genius is that mode of
intellectual power which moves in alliance with the genial nature, i.e.,
with the capacities of pleasure and pain; whereas talent has no vestige of
such an alliance, and is perfectly independent of all human sensibilities.'
"Let me think! You can certainly enjoy things a hundred times more
than I can--and as for suffering, why you were always a great hand at that.
Now listen to the great Dr. Johnson and see if the cap fits, 'The true genius
is a mind of large general powers accidentally determined in some
particular direction.'
"'Large general powers'!--yes, I believe after all you have them with,
alas, poor Derrick! one notable exception--the mathematical faculty. You
were always bad at figures. We will stick to De Quincey's definition, and
for heaven's sake, my dear fellow, do get Lynwood out of that awful plight!
No wonder you were depressed when you lived all this age with such a
Derrick Vaughan--Novelist
10
sentence unfinished!"
"For the matter of that," said Derrick, "he can't get out till the end of
the book; but I can begin to go on with him now."
"And when you leave Oxford?"
"Then I mean to settle down in London--to write leisurely--and
possibly to read for the Bar."
"We might be together," I suggested. And Derrick took to this idea,
being a man who detested solitude and crowds about equally. Since his
mother's death he had been very much alone in the world. To Lawrence
he was always loyal, but the two had nothing in common, and though fond
of his sister he could not get on at all with the manufacturer, his brother-
in-law. But this prospect of life together in London pleased him
amazingly; he began to recover his spirits to a great extent and to look
much more like himself.
It must have been just as he had taken his degree that he received a
telegram to announce that Major Vaughan had been invalided home, and
would arrive at Southampton in three weeks' time. Derrick knew very
little of his father, but apparently Mrs. Vaughan had done her best to keep
up a sort of memory of his childish days at Aldershot, and in these the part
that his father played was always pleasant. So he looked forward to the
meeting not a little, while I, from the first, had my doubts as to the felicity
it was likely to bring him.
However, it was ordained that before the Major's ship arrived, his son's
whole life should change. Even Lynwood was thrust into the background.
As for me, I was nowhere. For Derrick, the quiet, the self-contained, had
fallen passionately in love with a certain Freda Merrifield.
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DerrickVaughan--Novelist1DerrickVaughan--NovelistbyEdnaLyallDerrickVaughan--Novelist2ChapterI.'Nothingfillsachild'smindlikealargeoldmansion;betterifun-orpartiallyoccupied;peopledwiththespiritsofdeceasedmembersofthecountyandJusticesoftheQuorum.WouldIwereburiedinthepeopledsolitudeofone,withmyfeelingsa...

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