Heroes and Rebels in the Family Tree—Joseph Dally “Posh” Fletcher
Heroes and Rebels in the Family Tree—Joseph Dally “Posh” Fletcher
From Edward FitzGerald (as published in the ebook “Edward FitzGerald and ‘Posh’” by James Blyth):
“Your ‘Heroes’ put me up to sending
you one of mine—neither Prince, Poet, or Man of Letters, but Captain of a
Lowestoft Lugger, and endowed with all the Qualities of Soul and Body to make
him Leader of many more men than he has under him. Being unused to
sitting for his portrait, he looks a little sheepish—and
the Man is a Lamb with Wife, Children, and dumber Animals. But when the
proper time comes—abroad—at sea or on shore—then it is quite another
matter. And I know no one of sounder sense, and grander Manners, in
whatever Company.”
Joseph Dally Fletcher was born on July
20, 1839 as the seventh child of eight born in Lowestoft, Suffolk, England to
Joseph “Martin” Allerton Fletcher 1805-1879 and Sarah Gardner 1808-1880. Their children were:
1. Judith Fletcher 1827–1827
2. James Ashby Fletcher 1829–1829
3. Sarah Ann Fletcher 1830–1917
4. William Joseph Fletcher 1832–1841
5. James Henry Fletcher 1834–1926
6. John George Fletcher 1837–1855
7. Joseph Dally “Posh” Fletcher 1839–1915
8. Susannah Elizabeth Fletcher 1842–1858
Joseph Dally Fletcher was baptised on
September 1, 1839 at St. Margaret’s
Church in Lowestoft. In 1841, the family was living along beach Road and by 1851,
they had mover to larger quarters on Whapload Way West in Lowestoft. By the age of 14, Joseph started a career as
a fisherman.
On April 5, 1860, Joseph Dally Fletcher married Hannah Jane Ayers at
St. John’s, Lowestoft. Hannah Jane Ayers died on September 14, 1899. They had nine
children:
1. Hannah Jeannette Fletcher 1860–
2. Joseph Fletcher 1866–1886
3. Clara Sarah Fletcher 1867–1900
4. Florence Hennrieta Fletcher 1870–1910
5. Edward Fletcher 1872–1954
6. George Ernest Fletcher 1874–1875
7. Alice Fletcher 1876–1893
8. Edith Eliza Fletcher 1879–1897
9. Margaret Elizabeth Fletcher 1883–1906
Ater his wife’s death in 1899, Joseph
Fletcher moved into the house of the widow Cecelia Capps.
Genealogy: Joseph Dally “Posh” Fletcher 1839-1915 was the son of Joseph "Martin" Allerton Fletcher 1805-1879 and his mother was Elizabeth Ann Allington/Allerton 1770-1834 and her mother was Judith Sowell 1742-1773 and her mother was Ann Mewse 1710- and her father was John Mewse 1669-1742 and his father was Simon Mewse 1632-1708 and his father was Willyam Mewse 1585-1656 and his father was Thomas Mewse 1558-1620 and his son was John Mewse (Fisherman) 1592-1667 and his son was Simon Mewse (butcher) 1641-1719 and his son was Simon Mewse (butcher) 1672-1741 and his son was Simon Mewse 1683-1736 and his daughter was Mary Mewse 1727-1797 and her daughter was Elizabeth Curtis 1756-1831 and her son was John Curtis Adams 1797-1873 and his son was William Frederick Adams 1848-1907 and his son was George "Pikey" William Welch-Adams 1867-1940.
Edward
FitzGerald and "Posh", by James Blyth
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EDWARD FITZGERALD AND “POSH”
“HERRING MERCHANTS”
include a number of letters
from edward fitzgerald to joseph fletcher
or “posh,” not hitherto published
by
JAMES BLYTH
with sixteen illustrations
LONDON
JOHN LONG
NORRIS STREET, HAYMARKET
mcmviii
Copyright by John Long, 1908
All Rights Reserved
to
W. ALDIS WRIGHT, Esq., M.A.
vice-master of trinity college, cambridge
i dedicate this sketch
with most sincere thanks for his
invaluable assistance in connection
therewith
and for his permission to print
the letters of edward fitzgerald
which are now published for the first
time
JAS.
BLYTH
March, 1908
PREFACE
There can be no better foreword to
this little sketch of one of the phases of Edward FitzGerald’s life than the
following letter, written to Thomas Carlyle in 1870, which was generously
placed at my disposal by Dr. Aldis Wright while I was giving the sketch its
final revision for the press. The portrait referred to in the letter is
no doubt that reproduced as the photograph of 1870.
“Dear
Carlyle,
“Your ‘Heroes’ put me up to sending
you one of mine—neither Prince, Poet, or Man of Letters, but Captain of a
Lowestoft Lugger, and endowed with all the Qualities of Soul and Body to make
him Leader of many more men than he has under him. Being unused to
sitting for his portrait, he looks a little sheepish—and
the Man is a Lamb with Wife, Children, and dumber Animals. But when the
proper time comes—abroad—at sea or on shore—then it is quite another
matter. And I know no one of sounder sense, and grander Manners, in
whatever Company. But I shall not say any more; for I should only set you
against him; and you will see all without my telling you and not be
bored. So least said soonest mended, and I make my bow once more and
remain your
“Humble
Reader,
“E. FG.”
Too much has been made by certain
writers, with more credulity than discretion, of some personal characteristics
of a great-hearted man. My purpose in tendering this sketch to the lovers
of FitzGerald is to show that in many ways he has been calumniated. The
man who could write the letters to his humble friend, which are here printed; the man who could show such consistent tenderness and
delicacy of spirit to his fisherman partner, and could permit the enthusiasm of
his affection to blind him to the truth, was no sulky misanthrope; but a man
whose heart, whose intensely human heart, was so great as to preponderate over
his magnificent intellect. Edward FitzGerald was a great poet, and a
great philosopher. He was a still greater man.
Therefore, my readers, if, during the
perusal of these few letters, you “in your . . . errand reach the spot”—whether
it be at Woodbridge, Lowestoft, or in that supper-room in town “Where he made
one”—“. . . turn down an empty glass” to his memory.
For there is no Saki to
do it, either here or with the houris.
James Blyth
Introduction
Towards the end of the summer of 1906,
I received a letter from Mr. F. A. Mumby, of the Daily Graphic, asking me if I
knew if Joseph Fletcher, the “Posh” of the “FitzGerald” letters, was still
alive. All about me were veterans of
eighty, ay, and ninety! hale and garrulous as any longshoreman needs be. But it had never occurred to me before that
possibly the man who was Edward FitzGerald’s “Image of the Mould that Man was
originally cast in,” the east coast fisherman for whom the great translator
considered no praise to be too high, might be within easy reach.
My first discovery was that to most of
the good people of Lowestoft the name of the man who had honoured the town by
his preference was unknown. A solicitor
in good practice, a man who is by way of being an author himself, asked me
(when I named FitzGerald to him) if I meant that FitzGerald who had, he
believed, made a lot of money out of salt!
A schoolmaster had never heard of either FitzGerald or Omar.
It was plain that the educated classes
of Lowestoft could help me in my search but little. So I went down to the harbour basins and the
fish wharves, and asked of “Posh” and his “governor.”
Not a jolly boatman of middle age in
the harbour but knew of both. “D’ye mean
Joe Fletcher, master?” said one of them.
“What—old Posh? Why yes! Alive an’ kickin’, and go a shrimpin’ when
the weather serve. He live up in Chapel
Street. Number tew. He lodge theer.”
So up I went to Chapel Street, one of
those streets in the old North Town of Lowestoft which have seen better
days. A wizened, bent, white-haired old
lady answered my knock, after a preliminary inspection from a third-floor
window of my appearance. This, I learnt
afterwards, was old Mrs. Capps, with whom Posh had lodged since the death of
his wife, fourteen years previously.
“You’ll find him down at the new
basin,” said the old lady. “He’s mostly
there this time o’ day.”
But there was no Posh at the new
basin. Half a dozen weather-beaten
shrimpers (in their brown jumpers, and with the fringe of hair running beneath
the chin from ear to ear—that hirsute ornament so dear to East Anglian
fishermen) were lounging about the wharf, or mending the small-meshed
trawl-nets wherein they draw what spoil they may from the depleted roads.
All were grizzled, most were over
seventy if wrinkled skin and white hair may be taken as signs of age. And all knew Posh, and (oh! shame to the
“educated classes!”) all remembered Edward FitzGerald. The poet, the lovable, cultured gentleman
they knew nothing of. Had they known of
his incomparable paraphrase of the Persian poet, of his scholarship, his
intimacy with Thackeray, Tennyson, Carlyle, the famous Thompson, Master of
Trinity, they would have recked nothing at all.
But they remembered FitzGerald, who has been called by their superiors
an eccentric, miserly hermit. They
remembered him, I say, as a man whose heart was in the right place, as a man
who never turned a deaf ear to a tale of trouble.
“Ah!” said one of them. “He was a good gennleman, was old Fitz.” (They all spoke of him as “old Fitz.” They thought of him as a “mate”—as one who
knew the sea and her moods, and would put up with her vagaries even as they
must do. His shade in their memories was
the shade of a friend, and a friend whom they respected and loved.) “That was a good day for Posh when he come
acrost him. Posh! I reckon you’ll find
him at Bill Harrison’s if he bain’t on the market.”
“Posh” was no fancy name of the poet’s
for Joseph Fletcher, but the actual proper cognomen by which the man has been
known on the coast since he was a lad.
Most east coast fishermen have a nickname which supersedes their
registered name, and “Posh” (or now “old Posh”) was Joseph Fletcher’s.
Bill Harrison’s is a cosy little
beerhouse in the lower North Town. It is
called Bill Harrison’s because Bill Harrison was once its landlord. Poor Bill has left house and life for
years. But the house is still “Bill
Harrison’s.”
Here I found Posh. At that time, little more than a year ago, I
wrote of him as “a hale, stoutly-built man of over the middle height, his
round, ruddy, clean-shaven face encircled by the fringe of iron-grey whiskers
running round from ear to ear beneath the chin.
His broad shoulders were held square, his back straight, his head poised
firm and alert on a splendid column of neck.”
Alas!
The description would fit Posh but poorly now.
“Yes,” said he. “I was Mr. FitzGerald’s partner. But I can’t stop to mardle along o’ ye
now. I’ll meet ye when an’ where ye
like.”
I made an appointment with him, which
he failed to keep. Then another. Then another, and another. I lay wait for him in likely places. I stalked him. I caught stray glimpses of him in various
haunts. But he always evaded me.
I think old Mrs. Capps got tired of
leaning her head out of the third-floor window of No. 2 Chapel Street, and
seeing me waiting patiently on the doorstep expectant of Posh.
At length I cornered him (from
information received) fairly and squarely at the Magdala House, a beerhouse in
Duke’s Head Street, two minutes’ walk from his lodgings.
I got him on his legs and took him
down Rant Score to Bill Harrison’s.
“Now look here,” said I. “What’s the matter? You’ve made appointment after appointment,
and kept none of them. Why don’t you
wish to see me?”
Posh shuffled his feet on, the sanded
bricks. He drank from the measure of
“mild beer” (twopenny), for which he will call in preference to any other
liquid.
“Tha’ss like this here, master,” said
he. “I ha’ had enow o’ folks a comin’
here an’ pickin’ my brains and runnin’ off wi’ my letters and never givin’ me
so much as a sixpence.”
“Oho!” I thought. “That’s where the rub is.”
I gave him a trifling guarantee of
good faith, and his face brightened up.
Gradually I overcame his reserve, and gradually I persuaded him that I
did not seek to rob him of anything. I’m
a bit of a sailor myself, and I think a little talk of winds, shoals, seas, and
landmarks did more than the trifling guarantee of good faith to establish
friendly relations with the old fellow.
But he made no secret of his
grievance, and I tell the tale as he told it, without vouching for its
accuracy, but confident that he believed that he was telling me the truth. And, if he was, the man referred to in his
story, the man who robbed him to all intents and purposes, is hereby invited to
do something to purge his offence by coming forward and “behaving like a
gennleman”—upon which I will answer for it that all will be forgiven and
forgotten by Posh.
“Ye see, master,” said Posh, “that was
a Mr. Earle” (I don’t know if that is the correct way of spelling the name,
because Posh is no great authority on spelling; but that’s how he pronounced
it) “come here, that’ll be six or seven year ago, and he axed me about the
guv’nor, and for me to show him any letters I had. He took a score or so away wi’m, and he took
my phootoo and I told him a sight o’ things, thinkin’ he was a gennleman. Well, he axed me round to Marine Parade,
where he was a stayin’ with his lady, and he give me one drink o’ whisky. And that’s all I see of him. He was off with the letters and all, and
never gave me a farden for what he had or what he l’arnt off o’ me. I heerd arterwards as the letters was sold by
auction for thutty pound. I see it in
the paper. If he’d ha’ sent me five
pound I’d ha’ been content. But he niver
give me nothin’ but that one drink. And
ye see, master, I didn’t know as yew worn’t one o’ the same breed!”
I have endeavoured to trace these
letters, and to identify this Mr. Earle.
Mr. Clement Shorter has been kind enough to do his best to help me. No record can be found. And to clinch matters, Dr. Aldis Wright (whom
I cannot thank enough for all his kindness to me in connection with this
volume) tells me that he has never been able to find out where the letters are
or who has them. One thing is certain:
the person who took advantage of Posh’s ignorance will not be able to publish
his ill-gotten gains in England so long as any copyright exists in the
letters. For no letter of FitzGerald’s
can be published without the consent of Dr. Aldis Wright, and he is not the man
to permit capital to be made out of sharp practice with his consent. I have heard rumours of certain letters to
Posh being published in America, with a photograph of Posh and Posh’s
“shud.” They may have been published
under the impression that they were properly in the possession of the person
holding them. I know nothing of that,
nor of what letters they are, nor who published them, nor when and where they
were issued. But I do know what Posh has
told me, and if the volume (if there is one) was published in America by one
innocent of trickery, here is his chance to come forward and explain.
I was glad to see that Posh no longer
numbered me among “that breed.” But I
was no longer surprised at the difficulty I had experienced in getting to close
quarters with the man. From that time on
he was the plain-speaking, independent, humorous, rough man that he is
naturally. He has his faults. FitzGerald indicates one in several of his
letters. He is inclined to that East
Anglian characteristic akin to Boer “slimness,” and it is easy enough to
understand that the breach between him and his “guv’nor” was inevitable. The marvel is that the partnership lasted as
long as it did, and that that refined, honourable gentleman (and I doubt if any
one was ever quite so perfect a gentleman as Edward FitzGerald) was as infatuated
with the breezy stalwart comeliness of the man as his letters prove him to have
been.
As all students of FitzGerald’s
letters know, the association between FitzGerald and Posh ended in a separation
that was very nearly a quarrel, if a man like FitzGerald can be said to quarrel
with a man like Posh. But Posh never
says a word against his old guv’nor’s generosity and kindness of heart. He puts his point of view with emphasis, but
always maintains that had it not been for other “interfarin’ parties” there
would never have been any unpleasantness between him and the great man who
loved him so well, and whom, I believe in all sincerity, he still loves as a
kind, upright, and noble-hearted gentleman.
And as Posh’s years draw to a close
(he was born in June, 1838) I think his thoughts must often hark back to the
days when he was all in all to his guv’nor.
For evil times have come on the old fellow. He is no longer the hale, stalwart man I
first saw at Bill Harrison’s.
A little before the Christmas of 1906
he was laid up with a severe cold. But
he was getting over that well, when, one Sunday, a broken man, almost decrepit,
came stumbling to my cottage door.
“The pore old lady ha’ gorn,” he
said. “She ha’ gorn fust arter all. Pore old dare. She had a strook the night afore last, and
was dead afore mornin’.”
Into the circumstances of his old
landlady’s death, of the action of her legal personal representatives, I will
not go here. It suffices to say that
Posh and the other lodgers in the house were given two days to “clear out” and
that I discovered that the old fellow had been sleeping in his shed on the
beach for two nights, without a roof which he could call his home. Thanks to certain readers of the Daily
Graphic and to the members of the Omar Khayyám Club, I had a fund in hand for
Posh’s benefit, and immediately put a stop to his homelessness. Indeed, he knew of this fund, and that he
could draw on it at need when he chose.
But I believe the old man’s heart was broken. He has never been the same man since. The last year has put more than ten years on
the looks and bearing of the Posh whom I met first. But his memory is still good, and I was
surprised to see how much he remembered of the people mentioned in the letters
published in this volume when I read them through to him the other day. He cannot understand how it is that these
letters have any value. He tells me he
has torn up “sackfuls on ’em” and strewn them to the winds. The actual letters have been sold for his
benefit, and I think that FitzGerald would be pleased if he knew (as possibly
he does know) that his letters to his fisherman friend, have proved a stay to
his old age.
I have done my best to give approximate dates to the letters, and where I have succeeded in being absolutely correct, I have to thank Dr. Aldis Wright, whose courtesy and kindliness, the courtesy and kindliness from a veteran to a tyro which is so encouraging to the tyro, have been beyond any expression of thanks which I can phrase. I hope that the letters and notes may help to make a side of FitzGerald, the simple human manly side, better known, and to enable my readers to judge his memory from the point of view of those old shrimpers by the new basin as a “good gennleman,” as a noble-hearted, courageous man, as well as the more artificial scholar who quotes Attic scholiasts in a playful way as though they were school classics. Every new discovery of FitzGerald’s life seems to create new wonder, new admiration for him; and there are, I hope, few who will read without some emotion not far from tears the sentence in his sermon to Posh.
CHAPTER I
THE MEETING
The biography of a hero written by his
valet would be interesting, and, according to proverbial wisdom, unbiased by
the heroic repute of its subject. But it would be artificial for all
that. Even though the hero be no hero to his valet, the valet is fully
aware of his master’s fame; indeed, the man will be so inconsistent as to pride
himself, and take pleasure in, those qualities of his master, the existence of
which he would be the first to deny.
Where, however, a literary genius
condescends to an intimacy with a simple son of sea and shore who is not only
practically illiterate but is entirely ignorant of his
patron’s prowess, the opinions of the illiterate concerning the personal
characteristics of the genius obtain a very remarkable value as being honest
criticism by man of man, uninfluenced by the spirit either of disingenuous
adulation or of equally disingenuous depreciation. That these opinions
are in the eyes of a disciple of the great man quaint, almost insolently crude
is a matter of course. But when they tend to show the master not only
great in letters but great in heart, soul, human kindness, and generosity, they
form, perhaps, the most notable tribute to a great personality.
With the exception of Charles Lamb, no
man’s letters have endeared his memory to so many readers as have the letters
of Edward FitzGerald. But FitzGerald’s friends (to whom most of the
letters hitherto published were addressed) were cultured gentlemen, men of the
first rank of the time, of the first rank of all time, men
who would necessarily be swayed by the charm of his culture, by the delicacy of
his wit, by the refinement of his thoughts.
In the case of “Posh,” however (that
typical Lowestoft fisherman who supplied “Fitz” with a period of exaltation
which was as extraordinary as it was self-revealing), there were no extraneous
influences at work. Posh knew the man as a good-hearted friend, a man of
jealous affection, as a free-handed business partner, as a lover of the
sea. He neither knew nor cared that his partner (he would not admit that
“patron” would be the better word!) was the author of undying verse. To
this day it is impossible to make him understand that reminiscences of
FitzGerald are of greater public interest than any recollection of him—Posh.
It was not easy to explain to him that
it was his first meeting with Edward FitzGerald that was the thing and not the
theft of his (Posh’s) father’s longshore lugger which
led to that meeting. However, time and patience have rendered it possible
to separate the wheat from the tares of his narrative; and what tares may be
left may be swallowed down with the more nutritious grain without any
deleterious effect.
In the early summer of 1865 some
daring longshore pirate made off with Fletcher senior’s “punt,” or longshore
lugger, without saying as much as “by your leave.” The piracy (as was
proper to such a deed of darkness) was effected by night, and on the following
morning the coastguard were warned of the act. These worthy fellows (and
they are too fine a lot of men to be disbanded by any twopenny Radical
Government) traced the boat to Harwich. Here the gallant rover had sought
local and expert aid to enable him to bring up, had then raised an awning, as
though he were to sleep aboard, and, after thus satisfying the local talent to
whom he was still indebted for their services, had
slunk ashore and disappeared. Old Mr. Fletcher, on hearing the news,
started off to Harwich in another craft of his, and (fateful fact!) took his
son Posh with him.
Both the Fletchers were known to Tom
Newson, a pilot of Felixstowe Ferry, and they naturally looked him up.
For years Edward FitzGerald had been
accustomed to cruise about the Deben and down the river to Harwich in a small
craft captained by one West. But in 1865 he was the owner of a smart
fifteen-ton schooner, which he had had built for him by Harvey, of Wyvenhoe,
two years previously, and of which Tom Newson was the skipper and his nephew
Jack the crew. According to Posh, the original name of this schooner was
the Shamrock, but she has become famous as the Scandal.
It happened that when the Fletchers were at Harwich in search of the stolen
punt, Edward FitzGerald had come down the river, and
Newson made his two Lowestoft friends known to his master.
There can be no doubt that at that
time, when he was twenty-seven years of age, Posh was an exceptionally comely
and stalwart man. And he was, doubtless, possessed of the dry humour and
the spirit of simple jollity which make his race such charming companions for a
time. At all events his personality magnetised the poet, then a man of
fifty-six, already a trifle weary of the inanities of life.
FitzGerald must have been tolerably
conversant with the Harwich and Felixstowe mariners—with the “salwagers” of the
“Ship-wash”—and the characters of the pilots and fishermen of the east
coast. But Posh seems to have come to him as something new. How it
happened it is impossible to guess. Posh has no idea. He has a more
or less contemptuous appreciation of FitzGerald’s great affection for
him. But he cannot help any one to get to the
root of the question why FitzGerald should have singled him out and set him
above all other living men, as, for a brief period of exaltation, he certainly
did.
From the first meeting to the
inevitable disillusionment FitzGerald delighted in the company of the
illiterate fisherman. Whether he took his protégé cruising with him on
the Scandal, or sat with him in his favourite corner of the kitchen
of the old Suffolk Inn at Lowestoft, or played “all-fours” with him, or sat and
“mardled” with him and his wife in the little cottage (8 Strand Cottages,
Lowestoft) where Posh reared his brood, FitzGerald was fond even to jealousy of
his new friend. The least disrespect shown to Posh by any one less
appreciative of his merits FitzGerald would treat as an insult personal to
himself. On one occasion when he was walking with Posh on the pier some
stranger hazarded a casual word or two to the
fisherman. “Mr. Fletcher is my guest,” said FitzGerald
at once, and drew away his “guest” by the arm.
It must have been soon after their
first meeting that FitzGerald wrote to Fletcher senior, Posh’s father:—
“Markethill, Woodbridge,
“March 1.
“Mr.
Fletcher,
“Your little boy Posh came here
yesterday, and is going to-morrow with Newson to Felixtow Ferry, for a day or
two.
“In case he is wanted at Lowestoft to
attend a Summons, or for any other purpose, please to write him a
line, directing to him at
“Thomas
Newson’s,
“Pilot,
“Felixtow Ferry,
“Ipswich.
“Yours
truly,
“Edward FitzGerald.”
At this time Posh was
earning his living as the proprietor of a longshore “punt,” or beach
lugger. In those days there were good catches of fish to be made inshore,
and it was not unusual for a good day’s long-lining (for cod, haddock, etc.) to
bring in seven or eight pounds. Shrimps and soles fell victims to the
longshoremen’s trawls, and altogether there were a hundred fish to be caught to
one in these days. Moreover, before steam made coast traffic independent
of wind, the sand-banks outside the roads were a great source of profit to the
beach men, who went off in their long yawls to such craft as “missed stays”
coming through a “gat,” or managed to run aground on one of the sand-banks in
some way or other. The methods of the beach men were sometimes rather
questionable, and Colonel Leathes, of Herringfleet Hall, tells a tale of a
French brig, named the Confiance en Dieu, which took the ground on
the Newcome Sand off Lowestoft about the year
1850. The weather was perfectly calm, but a company of beach men boarded
her and got her off, and so established a claim for salvage. As a result
she was kept nine weeks in port, and her skipper, the owner, had to pay £1200
to get clear.
All things considered, it is probable
that a Lowestoft longshoreman, in the sixties and seventies of the nineteenth
century, could make a very good living of it, and even now, now when poverty
has fallen on the beach, no beach man, unspoilt by the curse of visitors’ tips,
would bow his head to any man as his superior.
FitzGerald always took a humorous
delight in the business of “salwaging” (as the men call it), and in his Sea
Words and Phrases along the Suffolk Coast (No. II), he defines
“Rattlin’ Sam” as follows: “A term of endearment, I suppose, used by Salwagers
for a nasty shoal off the Corton coast.” In the same publication (I)
he defines “saltwagin.” “So pronounced (if
not solwagin’) from, perhaps, an indistinct implication of salt (water)
and wages. Salvaging, of course.”
Posh tells how his “guv’nor” would
clap him on the back and laugh heartily over a “salwagin’” story. “You
sea pirates!” he would say. “You sea pirates!”
In the spring of 1866 FitzGerald
stayed at 12 Marine Terrace, Lowestoft, in March and April, and passed most of
his time with Posh. In the evenings he would sit and smoke a pipe, or
play “all-fours.” In the day he liked to go to sea with Posh in the
latter’s punt, the Little Wonder. The Scandal was
not launched that year till June, and although he “got perished with the N.E.
wind”, he revelled in the rough work.
He must have been a quaint spectacle
to the Lowestoft fishermen, for Posh assures me that he always went to sea in a
silk hat, and generally wore a “cross-over,” or a
lady’s boa, round his neck. Now a silk hat and a lady’s boa aboard a
longshore punt would be about as incongruous as a court suit in a shooting
field. But FitzGerald was not vain enough to be self-conscious. He
knew when he was comfortable, and that was enough for his healthy
intelligence. Why should he care for the foolish trifles of convention?
So to sea he went, top hat and all. And a good and hardy sailor man he
was, as all who remember his ways afloat will testify.
Shortly before or after his visit to
Lowestoft in the spring of 1866 FitzGerald wrote to Posh:—
“Markethill, Woodbridge,
“Saturday.
“My
good Fellow,
“When I came in from my Boat yesterday
I found your Hamper of Fish. Mr. Manby has his conger Eel: I gave
the Codling to a young Gentleman in his ninetieth year:
the Plaice we have eaten here—very good—and the Skaite I have just sent in my
Boat to Newson. I should have gone down myself, but that it set in for
rain; but, at the same time, I did not wish to let the Fish miss his
mark. Newson was here two days ago, well and jolly; his Smack had a good
Thing on the Ship-wash lately; and altogether they have done pretty well this
Winter. He is about beginning to paint my Great Ship.
“I had your letter about Nets and
Dan. You must not pretend you can’t write as good a Letter as a man needs
to write, or to read. I suppose the Nets were cheap if good; and I should
be sorry you had not bought more, but that, when you have got a Fleet for
alongshore fishing, then you will forsake them for some Lugger; and then I
shall have to find another Posh to dabble about, and smoke a pipe, with.
George Howe’s Schooner ran down the Slips into the
Water yesterday, just as I was in time to see her Masts slipping along.
In the Evening she bent a new Main-sail. I doubt she will turn out a dear
Bargain, after all, as such Bargains are sure to.
“I was looking at the Whaleboat I told
you of, but Mr. Manby thinks she would . . . you propose.
“Here is a long Yarn; but to-morrow is
Sunday; so you can take it easy. And so ‘Fare ye well.’
“Edward FitzGerald.”
The boat referred to in this letter
was probably a small craft in which FitzGerald had been in the habit of
cruising up and down river with one “West.” It certainly was not
the Scandal, for as transpires in the letter, that “Great Ship” was
not yet painted for the yachting season.
Mr. Manby was a ship agent at
Woodbridge.
The “Ship-wash” was, and
is, the “Rattlin’ Sam” of Felixstowe, and Tom Newson, FitzGerald’s skipper, had
evidently had a good bit of “salwagin’.”
“Dan” is not the name of a man, but of
a pointed buoy with a flag atop wherewith herring fishers mark the end of their
fleets of nets, or (vide Sea Words and Phrases, etc.). “A
small buoy, with some ensign atop, to mark where the fishing lines have
been shot; and the dan is said to ‘watch well’ if
it hold erect against wind and tide. I have often mistaken it for some
floating sea bird of an unknown species.”
The prophecy that as soon as Posh got
his longshore fleet complete he would wish to go on a “lugger,” that is to say,
to the deep-sea fishing, was destined to be fulfilled, and that with the
assistance of FitzGerald himself. But no one ever took Posh’s
place. FitzGerald’s experience as a “herring merchant” began and ended
with his intimacy with Posh.
George Howe, whose
schooner was launched so that FitzGerald was just in time to see her masts
slipping along, was one of the sons of “old John Howe,” who, with his wife, was
caretaker of Little Grange for many years. The schooner was, Posh tells
me, exceptionally cheap, and FitzGerald’s reference to her meant that she was
too cheap to be good.
Since Posh’s letter-writing powers
received praise from one so qualified to bestow it, there must have been a
falling off from want of practice, or from some other cause, for the old man is
readier with his cod lines than with his pen by a very great deal, and it is
difficult to believe that he ever wielded the pen of a ready writer. But
perhaps FitzGerald was so fascinated by the qualities which did exist in his
protégé that he saw his friend through the medium of a glamour which set up, as
it were, a mirage of things that were not. Well, it speaks better for a
man’s heart to descry non-existent merits than to
imagine vain defects, and it was like the generous soul of FitzGerald to
attribute excellencies to his friend which only existed in his imagination.
CHAPTER II
“REMEMBER YOUR DEBTS”
In 1866 Posh became the owner of a
very old deep-sea lugger named the William Tell, and, to enable him
to acquire the nets and gear necessary for her complete equipment as a North
Sea herring boat, he borrowed a sum of £50 from Tom Newson, and a further sum
of £50 from Edward FitzGerald. FitzGerald thought that Newson should have
security for his loan, but Newson refused to accept any such thing. He,
too, seems to have been under the influence of Posh’s fascination. On
October 7th, 1866, FitzGerald wrote: “I am amused to see Newson’s devotion to
his young Friend. . . . He declined having any Bill of Sale on
Posh’s Goods for Money lent; old as he is (enough to
distrust all Mankind) . . . has perfect reliance on his Honour, Industry, Skill
and Luck.”
About this time FitzGerald must have
written the following fragment, in which he refers to Newson’s loan:—
“You must pay him his Interest on it
when you can, and then I will take the Debt from him, adding it to the £50 I
lent you, and letting all that stand over for another time.
“My dear Posh, I write all this to
you, knowing you are as honest a fellow as lives: but I never cease hammering
into everybody’s head Remember your Debts, Remember your Debts. I have
scarcely ever [known?] any one that was not more or less the
worse for getting into Debt: which is one reason why I have scarce ever lent
money to any one. I should not have lent it to you unless
I had confidence in you: and I speak to you plainly now
in order that my confidence may not diminish by your forgetting one
farthing that you owe any man.
“The other day an old Friend sent me
£10, which was one half of what he said he had borrowed of me thirty
years ago! I told him that, on my honour, I wholly forgot ever having
lent him any money. I could only remember once refusing to
lend him some. So here is one man who remembered his
Debts better than his Creditor did.
“I will ask Newson about the Cork
Jacket. You know that I proposed to give you each one: but your Mate told
me that no one would wear them.
“Yesterday I lost my purse. I
did not know where: but Jack had seen me slip into a Ditch at the Ferry, and
there he went and found it. So is this Jack’s Luck, or mine, eh, Mr.
Posh?
“E. FG.”
The debt to Newson was
subsequently taken over by FitzGerald, and a new arrangement made on the
building of the Meum and Tuum in the following year. But
this fragment is important, in that it strikes a note of warning, which had to
be repeated again and again during the partnership between the poet and the
fisherman. Posh was happy-go-lucky in his accounts. I believe he
was perfectly honest in intention, but he did not understand the scrupulosity
in book-keeping which his partner thought essential to any business concern.
FitzGerald himself was very far from
being meticulous where debts due to him were concerned. Dr. Aldis Wright
can remember more than one instance in which FitzGerald tore up an
acknowledgment of a loan after two or three years’ interest had been paid.
“I think you’ve paid enough,” or “I think he’s paid enough,” would be his bland
dismissal of the debt due to him. Many Woodbridge people had good
cause to know the generosity of the man as well as ever
Posh had cause to know it. FitzGerald may not have opened his heart to
his Woodbridge acquaintance so freely as he did to Posh, but he was always
ready to loosen his purse-strings.
The cork jackets were afterwards
supplied to the crew of the Meum and Tuum, as will be apparent in
the letters.
“Jack,” who found the purse, was Jack
Newson, Tom Newson’s nephew, and the “crew” of the Scandal.
CHAPTER III
A SERMON FOR SUNDAY
In 1867 Posh sold the old William
Tell to be broken up. She was barely seaworthy and unfit to
continue fishing. An agreement was entered into with Dan Fuller, a
Lowestoft boat-builder, for a new lugger to be built, on lines supplied by
Posh, at a total cost (including spars) of £360. FitzGerald had suggested
that the boat should be built by a Mr. Hunt, of Aldeburgh, but Posh persuaded
him to consent to Lowestoft and Dan Fuller instead. “I can look arter ’em
better,” said he, with some show of reason.
The agreement was, in the first
instance, between Dan Fuller and Posh, but FitzGerald took a fancy to become
partner with Posh in the boat and her profits. He was
to find the money for the new lugger, and to let the sums already due from Posh
remain in the partnership, while Posh was to bring in the nets and gear he had.
But by this time FitzGerald had seen
symptoms in Posh which caused him anxiety. He loved his humble friend,
and his anxiety was on account of the man and not on account of the
possibilities of pecuniary loss incurred through Posh’s weakness. On
December the 4th, 1866, he wrote to Mr. Spalding, of Woodbridge: “At eight or
half-past I go to have a pipe at Posh’s, if he isn’t half-drunk with his
Friends”.
On January 5th, 1867, he wrote to the
same correspondent referring to Posh: “This very day he signs an Agreement for
a new Herring-lugger, of which he is to be Captain, and to which he will
contribute some Nets and Gear. . . . I believe I have smoked my pipe
every evening but one with Posh at his house, which his
quiet little Wife keeps tidy and pleasant. The Man is, I do think, of a
Royal Nature. I have told him he is liable to one Danger (the Hare with
many Friends)—so many wanting him to drink. He says it’s
quite true and that he is often obliged to run away: as I believe he does: for
his House shows all Temperance and Order. This little lecture I give
him—to go the way, I suppose, of all such Advice. . . .”
I fear that poor Posh’s limbs soon
grew too stiff to permit him to run away from the good brown “bare.” But
the lecture which FitzGerald mentions so casually was surely one of the most
delicately written warnings ever penned. The sterling kindness of the
writer is as transparent in it as is his tenderness to an inferior’s
feelings. No one but a very paragon of a gentleman would have taken the
trouble to write so wisely, so kindly, so tenderly, and so earnestly. The
appeal must surely have moved Posh, for the pathos of
the reference to his patron’s loneliness could not but have its effect.
But to touch on the sacred “bare” of a
Lowestoft fisherman is always dangerous. There are many teetotallers
among them now, and they would resent any imputation on their temperance.
But those who are not teetotallers would resent it much more. FitzGerald
warned his friend in as beautiful a letter as was ever written. But Posh
could never regard the “mild bare,” the “twopenny” of the district, as an
enemy. He rarely touched spirits. Now, at the age of sixty-nine, he
enjoys his mild beer more than anything and cares little for stronger
stuff. But there is no doubt that this same mild beer inserted the edge
of the adze which was to split the partnership in a little more than three
years’ time—this and the “interfarin’ parties,” whom Posh blames for all the
misunderstandings which were to come.
“Markethill, Woodbridge, Thursday.
“My
dear Poshy,
“My Lawyer can easily manage the
Assignment of the Lugger to me, leaving the Agreement as it is between you and
Fuller. But you must send the Agreement here for him to see.
“As we shall provide that the Lugger
when built shall belong to me; so we will provide that, in case of my
dying before she is built, you may come on my executors for
any money due.
“I think you will believe that I shall
propose, and agree to, nothing which is not for your good. For surely I
should not have meddled with it at all, but for that one purpose.
“And now, Poshy, I mean to read you a
short Sermon, which you can keep till Sunday to read. You know I told you
of one danger—and I do think the only one—you are liable to—Drink.
“I do not the least think you
are given to it: but you have, and
will have, so many friends who will press you to it: perhaps I myself
have been one. And when you keep so long without food; could you
do so, Posh, without a Drink—of some your bad Beer [sic] too—now and
then? And then, does not the Drink—and of bad Stuff—take away Appetite
for the time? And will, if continued, so spoil the stomach that it will
not bear anything but Drink. And this evil comes upon us
gradually, without our knowing how it grows. That is why I warn you,
Posh. If I am wrong in thinking you want my warning, you must forgive me,
believing that I should not warn at all if I were not much interested in your
welfare. I know that you do your best to keep out at sea, and watch on
shore, for anything that will bring home something for Wife and Family.
But do not do so at any such risk as I talk of.
“I say, I tell you all this for your
sake: and something for my own also—not as regards the
Lugger—but because, thinking you, as I do, so good a Fellow, and being glad of
your Company; and taking Pleasure in seeing you prosper; I
should now be sorely vext if you went away from what I believe you to be.
Only, whether you do well or ill, show me all above-board, as I
really think you have done; and do not let a poor old, solitary, and sad Man
(as I really am, in spite of my Jokes), do not, I say, let me waste my Anxiety
in vain.
“I thought I had done with new
Likings: and I had a more easy Life perhaps on that account: now I
shall often think of you with uneasiness, for the very reason that I have so
much Liking and Interest for you.
“There—the Sermon is done, Posh.
You know I am not against Good Beer while at Work: nor a
cheerful Glass after work: only do not let it spoil the stomach, or the Head.
“Your’s
truly,
“E. FG.”
CHAPTER IV
THE MUM TUM
FitzGerald having made up his mind to
give Posh a lift by going into partnership with him began by finding not only
the money for the building of the boat but a name for her when she should be
ready for sea. It seemed to him that “Meum and Tuum” would be an
appropriate name, and the Mum Tum is remembered along the
coast to this day as a queer, meaningless title for a boat. At a later
date FitzGerald is reported to have said that his venture turned out all Tuum
and no Meum so far as he was concerned. But it is possible that Posh
dealt more fairly with him than he thought. At all events Posh thinks he
did.
The boat was to be paid for in
instalments. So much on laying the keel, so much
when the deck was on, etc., etc., and FitzGerald took the greatest interest in
her building. He had first thought of christening the lugger “Marian
Halcombe,” after Wilkie Collins’s heroine in The Woman in White, as
appears from a letter to Frederic Tennyson, written in January, 1867 (Letters,
II, 90, Eversley Edition):—
“I really think of having a
Herring-lugger I am building named Marian Halcombe. . . . Yes, a
Herring-lugger; which is to pay for the money she costs unless she goes to the
Bottom: and which meanwhile amuses me to consult about with my Sea-folks.
I go to Lowestoft now and then by way of salutary Change; and there smoke a
Pipe every night with a delightful Chap who is to be Captain.”
Again on June 17th (Letters,
II, 94, Eversley Edition) he wrote to the late Professor Cowell of Corpus
Christi College, Cambridge:—
“I am here in my little
Ship” (the Scandal) “with no company but my crew” (Tom Newson and
his nephew Jack) “. . . and my other—Captain of the Lugger now a-building: a
Fellow I never tire of studying—If he should turn out knave, I
shall have done with all Faith in my own Judgment: and if he should go to the
Bottom of the Sea in the Lugger—I shan’t cry for the Lugger.”
There was some delay in getting the
deck planks on the lugger, for FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding on May 18th,
1867, that she would be decked “next Week,” whereas her planking was not
finished till June, and, on a Friday in June, FitzGerald wrote to Posh:—
“Woodbridge, Friday.
“My
dear Poshy,
“I am only back To-day from London,
where I had to go for two days: and I am very glad to be back. For the
Weather was wretched: the Streets all Slush: and I all
alone wandering about in it. So as I was sitting at Night, in a great
Room where a Crowd of People were eating Supper, and Singing going on, I
thought to myself—Well, Posh might as well be here; and then I should see what
a Face he would make at all this—This Thought really came into my mind.
“I had asked Mr. Berry to forward me
any Letters because I thought you might write to say the Lugger was
planked. But now you tell me it is no such thing: well, there is plenty
of time: but I wished not to delay in sending the Money, if wanted. I
have seen, and heard, no more of Newson; nor of his new Lugger
from Mr. Hunt—I am told that one of the American yachts, The Henrietta,
is a perfect Model: so I am going to have a Print of her that I may try and
learn the Stem from the Stern of a Ship. If this North-Easter changes I
daresay I may run to Lowestoft next week and get a
Sail, but it is too cold for that now.
“Well, here is a letter, you see, my
little small Captain, in answer to yours, which I was glad to see, for as I do
not forget you, as I have told you, so I am glad that you should sometime
remember the Old Governor and Herring-merchant
“Edward FitzGerald.”
It should be observed that in this
letter, as in several of those written to Posh, FitzGerald signed his name,
“Edward FitzGerald,” in full, a practice from which he was averse owing to
certain facts connected with another Edward Fitzgerald. Those who have
heard the story of the historic first meeting between the poet and the late Mr.
Bernard Quaritch will remember why our FitzGerald disliked the
idea of being confused with the other Edward Fitzgerald.
The letter here given forces a
delightful picture upon us. Its simplicity makes it
superbly graphic. Think of FitzGerald, refined in feature and reserved in
manner, a little unconventional in dress, but not sufficiently so to be
vulgarly noticeable—think of the man who has given us the most poetical
philosophy and the most philosophical poetry, all in the most exquisite
English, in our language, sitting probably at Evans’s (it sounds like Evans’s
with the suppers and the music) and looking a little pityingly at the reek
about him like the “poor old, solitary, and sad Man as he really was in spite
of his Jokes”; and then imaging in his mind’s eye the handsome stalwart
fisherman whom he loved so truly, and believing that he was as morally
excellent as he was physically! “What a Face he would make at all this!”
thought the poet.
Five or six years ago a good friend of
mine, the skipper of one of the most famous tugs of Yarmouth, had to go up to
town on a salvage case before the Admiralty Court.
With him as witnesses went one or two beach men of the old school, wind-and
sun-tanned old shell-backs, with voices like a fog-horn, and that entire lack
of self-consciousness which is characteristic of simplicity and good
breeding. My friend the skipper was cultured in comparison with the old
beach men, and he was a little vexed when one old “salwager” insisted on
accompanying him to the Oxford Music Hall. All went well till some
conjurers appeared on the stage. Then the skipper found that he had made
a mistake in edging away from the beach man. For that jolly old salt hailed
him across the house. “Hi, Billeeoh! Bill Berry! Hi! Lor,
bor, howiver dew they dew’t? Howiver dew they dew’t, bor? Tha’ss
whoolly a masterpiece! Hi! Billeeoh! Theer they goo agin!”
The skipper always ends the story
there. He is as brave a man as any on the coast. It was he who
stood out in Yarmouth Roads all night to look for the Caistor life-boat the night of the disaster—a night when the roads could not be
distinguished from the shoals, so broken into tossing white horses was the
whole offing—but I believe he slunk down the stairs of the Oxford that night,
and left the old beach man still expressing his delighted wonder.
Perhaps FitzGerald thought that Posh
would be as excited as the old beach man.
“Mr. Berry” (as every one knows who
knows anything about FitzGerald) was the landlord of the house on Markethill,
Woodbridge, where the poet lodged. (By the way, he was, so far as I know,
no relation of my Bill Berry.) A sum of £50 was due to Dan Fuller on the
planking being completed, and FitzGerald was anxious to let Posh have the money
as soon as it was needed. He “remembered his debts” even before they
became due.
I have already stated that Hunt was a
boat-builder at Aldeburgh, and that FitzGerald had, at first, wished Posh to
employ him to build the Mum Tum, as
the Meum and Tuum was fated to be called.
The kindly jovial relations between
the “guv’nor” and his partner could not be better indicated than by the name
FitzGerald gives himself at the close, just before he once more signs his name
in full. Well, perhaps the legal luminary of Lowestoft would justify his
inquiry if Edward FitzGerald was the man who made a lot of money out of salt by
saying, “Well, he called himself a herring-merchant.”
The schoolmaster who had never heard
of either FitzGerald or Omar Khayyám would (according to the nature of the
breed) sniff and say “What? A herring-merchant and a tent-maker! My
boys are the sons of gentlemen. I can’t be expected to know anything
about tradesfolk of that class.”
But Posh has a sense of humour, and he
says, “Ah! He used to laugh about that, the guv’nor did. He’d catch
hold o’ my jersey, so” (here Posh pinches up a fold of his
blue woollen jersey), “and say, ‘Oh dear! Oh dear, Poshy! Two F’s
in the firm. FitzGerald and Fletcher, herring salesmen—when Poshy catches
any, which isn’t as often as it might be, you know, Poshy!’ And then he’d
laugh. Oh, he was a jolly kind-hearted man if ever there was one.”
And then Posh’s eyes will grow moist
sometimes, I think perhaps with the thought that he might—ah, well! It’s
too late now.
Posh wishes me to give the dimensions
of the lugger, as she was of his own designing and proved a fast and stiff
craft. He had given her two feet less length than her beam called for,
according to local ideas, and FitzGerald called her “The Cart-horse,” because
she seemed broad and bluff for her length. She was forty-five feet in
length, with a fifteen-foot beam and seven-foot depth. She was first
rigged as a lugger, but altered to the more modern “dandy” (something like a
ketch but with more rake to the mizzen and with no
topmast on the mainmast) before she was sold. Any one about the herring
basins who has arrived at fisherman’s maturity (about sixty years) will
remember the Mum Tum, and, so far as she was concerned, the
partnership was entirely successful, for no one has a bad word to say for her.
It is impossible to arrive at the
exact sum of money which FitzGerald brought into the partnership between him
and Posh, but it must have been something like five hundred pounds. The
lugger cost £360 to build, and, in addition, Posh was paid £20 for his services,
and various payments had to be made for “sails, cables, warps, ballast,
etc.” Posh brought in what nets and gear he had, and his services.
The first notion was that FitzGerald should be owner of three-fourths of the
concern; but on a valuation being made it was found that the nets and gear
contributed by Posh were of greater value than had been supposed, and before
the Meum and Tuum put to sea it was understood that Posh should be half owner with his “guvnor.” Posh is very
firm in his conviction that up to the return of the boat from her first cruise
there had been no mention of any bill of sale, or mortgage, of the boat and
gear to FitzGerald to secure the money he had found. According to him his
partner was to be a sleeping partner and no more, and the entire conduct and
control of the business were to be vested in Posh. The quarrels and
misunderstandings which subsequently arose on this point Posh attributes to
certain “interfarin’ parties” (and especially to a Lowestoft lawyer), who were
under the impression that FitzGerald had not looked after himself so well as he
might have done and who thought that this omission should be remedied.
Possibly they had an idea that they might “make somethin’” in the course of the
remedial measures.
Early in August Posh sailed north with
his crew to meet the herring on their way down
south. His luck was poor, and on August 26th FitzGerald wrote him from
Lowestoft:—
“Lowestoft, Monday, August 26.
“My
dear Posh,
“As we hear nothing of you, we suppose
that you have yet caught nothing worth putting in for. And, as I may be
here only a Day longer, I write again to you: though I do not know if I have
anything to say which needs writing again for. In my former letter,
directed to you as this letter will be, I desired you to get a Life Buoy as
soon as you could. That is for the Good of your People,
as well as of yourself. What I now have to say is wholly on your own
Account: and that is, to beg you to take the Advice given by the Doctor to your
Father: namely, not to drink Beer and Ale more
than you can help: but only Porter, and, every day, some Gin and
Water. I was talking to your Father last
Saturday; and I am convinced that you inherit a family complaint: if I had
known of this a year ago I would not have drenched you with all the Scotch, and
Norwich, Ale which I have given you. . . . Do not neglect this Advice, as
being only an old Woman’s Advice; you have, even at your early time of life,
suffered from Gravel; and you may depend upon it that Gravel will
turn to Stone, unless you do something like what I tell you, and
which the Doctor has told your Father. And I know that there is no Disease
in the World which makes a young Man old sooner than Stone: No
Disease that wears him more. You should take plenty
of Tea; some Gin and Water every night; and no Ale,
or Beer; but only Porter; and not much of that. If you do not choose to
buy Gin for yourself, buy some for me: and keep it on board: and
drink some every Day, or Night. Pray remember this: and do it.
“I have been here since I
wrote my first Letter to Scarboro’; that is to say, a week ago. Till
To-day I have been taking out some Friends every day: they leave the place in a
day or two, and I shall go home; though I dare say not for long. Your
wife seems nearly right again; I saw her To-day. Your Father has engaged
to sell his Shrimps to Levi, [Levi was a Lowestoft fishmonger] for this season
and next, at 4s. a Peck. Your old Gazelle came in on
Saturday with all her Nets gone to pieces; the Lugger Monitor came
in here yesterday to alter her Nets—from Sunk to Swum,
I believe. So here is a Lowestoft Reporter for you: and you may never
have it after all. But, if you do, do not forget what I have told
you. Your Father thinks that you may have missed the Herring by
going outward, where they were first caught: whereas the Herring
had altered their course to inshore. . . . Better to miss many Herrings
than have the Stone.
“E. FG.”
Here, again, the delicate
solicitude of this perfect gentleman is apparent. “If you do not choose
to buy Gin for yourself, buy some for me: and keep it on board: and
drink some every Day, or Night.” That is to say, “If you think that you
cannot afford to buy gin for yourself don’t worry about the expense. I’ll
see you are not put to any extra cost. But I can’t bear to think that you
may suffer for the want of a medicine because of your East Anglian parsimony.”
It must be remembered that East Anglia
was notorious for the frequency of the disease in question. The late
William Cadge, of Norwich, probably the finest lithotomist in the world (as
Thompson was the greatest lithotritist), once told me that he had performed
over four hundred operations in the Norwich Hospital for this disease alone.
But FitzGerald’s fears concerning Posh
were not realised. He seems to have had an especial
dread of the disease (as who has not?), for in a letter to Frederic Tennyson of
January 29th previously (II, 89, Eversley Edition) he wrote (of Montaigne):
“One of his Consolations for The Stone is that it makes one
less unwilling to part with Life.”
The Gazelle was the
“punt” or longshore boat which Posh bought at Southwold, and called (by reason
of her splendid qualities) The Little Wonder.
The difference between “sunk” and
“swum” herring nets would be unintelligible to a modern herring fisher.
Now the nets are thirty feet in depth, are buoyed on the surface of the sea,
and are kept perpendicular (like a wall two miles long) by the weight of heavy
cables or “warps” which stretch along the bottom of the nets. I am, of
course, referring to North Sea fishing only, and not to the longshore
punts, whose nets are not half the depth of the North
Sea fleets.
In FitzGerald’s time if the herring
were expected to swim deep the nets were sunk below the cables
or warps which strung them together, and if they were thought to be swimming
high they were buoyed above the warps, the system of fishing being called
“sunk” in the former case and “swum” in the latter. Now all nets
are “swum,” that is to say, all are above the warps and are buoyed on the
surface. But the depth has increased so much (to what is technically
known as “twenty-score mesh,” which comes to about thirty feet) that there is
no need to alter their setting.
Posh’s wife, whose state of health is
referred to in this letter, survived till 1892, but for many years suffered
from tuberculosis in the lungs.
The Monitor was a
Kessingland craft, and belonged to one Hutton.
But whether Posh fished with “sunk”
or “swum” nets his luck was out for the season of
1867. The fish as a rule get down to the Norfolk coast about the
beginning of October, and Posh had followed them down from Scarborough.
About the end of September, or the beginning of October, FitzGerald wrote to
his partner, addressing the letter to 8 Strand Cottages, Lowestoft, in the
expectation that the Meum and Tuum had come south with the
rest of the herring drifters, Yarmouth, Lowestoft, North and South Shields, and
Scotch.
“Woodbridge, Saturday.
“Dear
Posh,
“I write you a line, because I suppose
it possible that you may be at home some time to-morrow. If you are not,
no matter. I do not know if I shall be at Lowestoft next week: but you
are not to suppose that, if I do do [sic] not go there just now I have
anything to complain of. I am not sure but that a Friend may come here
to see me, and also, unless the weather keep warmer
than it was some days ago, I scarce care to sleep in my cabin: which has no
fire near it as yours has.
“If I do not go to Lowestoft just yet,
I shall be there before very long: at my friend Miss Green’s, if my Ship be
laid up.
“I see in the Paper that there have
been some 40 lasts of Herring landed in your market during this last week: the
Southwold Boats doing best. I began to think the Cold might keep the Fish
in deep water, so that swum nets would scarce reach them
yet. But this is mere guess. I told you not to answer all my
letters: but you can write me a line once a week to say what you are
doing. I hope our turn for “Neighbour’s fare” is not
quite lost, though long a coming.
“Newson and Jack are gone home for
Sunday. To-night is a grand Horsemanship, to which I would make you go if
you were here. Remember me to all your People and
believe me yours
“E. FG.
“I see that the . . . [illegible]
vessel: and, as far as I see, deserved to do so.”
Miss Green was the landlady of the
house at 12 Marine Terrace, Lowestoft, where FitzGerald usually stayed when he
did not sleep aboard the Scandal.
Up to the date of the letter, and,
indeed, throughout the season of 1867, the Meum and Tuum had
bad luck. FitzGerald thought it was time that the luck should change, for
“Neighbour’s fare” is defined in Sea Words and Phrases along the
Suffolk Coast as “Doing as well as one’s neighbours. ‘I mayn’t
make a fortune, but I look for “Neighbour’s fare” nevertheless.’”
CHAPTER VI
THE LUCK O’ THE MUM TUM
“Neighbour’s fare” was long in coming
to FitzGerald in his venture as a “herring merchant.” But he was happy
enough in the consciousness that he was doing Posh a good turn. Whether
or not Posh had a greater share of the earnings of the boat than he was
entitled to I cannot say. Certainly he began to thrive exceedingly about
this time, and, as an old longshoreman seven years Posh’s senior, said to me
the other day, “He might ha’ been a gennleman! He used to kape his
greyhounds, and he had as pratty a mare as the’ wuz in Lowestoft. Ah! Mr.
FitzGerald was a good gennleman to him—that he wuz!”
Once again the epithet
“good,” which he so pre-eminently merited.
But whether the year had been bad or
good, it was necessary for the sleeping partner to look into the accounts of
the firm.
On Christmas Day of 1867, when the
season was over and all the herring drifters had “made up,” that is to say, had
worked out their accounts and struck a balance of profit or loss, Fitzgerald
wrote to Posh:—
“Woodbridge, Christmas Day.
“Dear
Captain,
“Unless I hear from you to-morrow
that you are coming over here, I shall most likely
run over myself to Miss Green’s at Lowestoft—by the Train which gets there
about 2.
“I shall look in upon you in the
evening, if so be that I do not see you in the course of the day. I say I
shall look in upon [sic] to-morrow, I dare say:—But, as this
is Christmas time and I suppose you have many friends
to see, I shall not want you to be at school every evening.
“This is Newson’s piloting week, so he
cannot come.
“E. FG.”
Posh did not go to Woodbridge, so
FitzGerald went to Miss Green’s, whence, on December the 28th, he wrote one of
his most characteristic letters (in that it embraced interests so widely
different) to Professor Cowell. The letter begins with a reference to M.
Garcin de Tassy and his “annual oration,” and continues with some passages of
great interest concerning the Rubáiyát and Attar’s
“Birds.” (Dr. Aldis Wright’s Eversley Edition of Letters, II,
100.) Then from a delicate and dainty piece of criticism the poet turns
to his herring business. “I have come here to wind up accounts for our
Herring-lugger: much against us as the season has been a bad one. My
dear Captain [Posh], who looks in his Cottage like King
Alfred in the Story, was rather saddened by all this, as he had prophesied
better things. I tell him that if he is but what I think him—and surely
my sixty years of considering men will not so deceive me at last!—I would
rather lose money with him than gain it with others. Indeed I never
proposed Gain, as you may imagine: but only to have some Interest with this
dear Fellow.”
Well, he had his wish, though Posh
maintains that there was gain in the business at a certain
time to be referred to hereafter, and that there might have been plenty of gain
but for the “interfarin’ parties” before mentioned.
From the first there was a difficulty
in persuading Posh to keep any accounts of either outgoings or incomings.
He seems to have paid a bill when he thought of it, or when he had the money
for it handy. But no idea of book-keeping, even in its most rudimentary form, was ever entertained by him.
And FitzGerald had, before ever the
partnership was an accomplished fact, impressed on Posh the importance of
remembering his debts.
Before the spring fishing began in
1868 the question of accounts came to the fore. On March the 29th the
sleeping partner wrote from Woodbridge:—
“Dear
Poshy,
“I have your Letter of this Morning:—I
suppose that you have got mine also. I hope that you understood what I
said in it—about the Bills, I mean—that you should put down in writing all outgoings,
and in such a way as you, or I, might easily reckon them up: I mean, so as to
see what each amounts to—No man’s Memory can be trusted in
such matters; and I think that your Memory (jostled about, as
you say, with many different calls, [sic no close to parenthesis] needs to have writing to refer
to. Do not suppose for one moment that I do not trust
you, my good fellow: nor that I think you have made any great blunder in what
Accounts you did keep last year. I only mean that a man
ought to be able to point out at once, to himself or to others, all
the items of an Account; to do which, you know, gave you great Trouble—You must
not be too proud to learn a little of some one used to such business: as
Mr. Spalding, for instance.
“If you think the Oil and Cutch are
as good, and as cheap, at Lowestoft as I can get them here, why not get them at
once at Lowestoft? About that green Paint for the
Lugger’s bottom:—Mr. Silver got some so very good for Pasifull’s Smack
last year that I think it might be worth while to get some, if we could,
from his Merchant. You told me that what you got
at Lowestoft was not very good.
“I am very glad that
the Lugger is so well thought of that any one else
wants to build from her. For she was your child, you
know.
“Mr. Durrant has never sent me the
plants. I doubt he must have lost some more children. Do not go to
him again, if you went before. I daresay I shall be running over to
Lowestoft soon. But I am not quite well.
“E. FG.
“Remember me to your Family: you do
not tell me if your Mother is better.”
The Mr. Spalding here referred to was
at that time the manager for a large firm of agricultural implement
makers. Subsequently he became the curator of the museum at Colchester,
and the letters from FitzGerald to him which were handed to Mr. Francis Hindes
Groome formed the most valuable part of the second part of Two Suffolk
Friends called “Edward FitzGerald. An Aftermath.”
“Oil” and “cutch” are
preservatives for the herring nets. The oil is linseed, and the nets are
soaked in it before they are tanned by the cutch. Cutch is a dark
resinous stuff, which is thrown into a copper full of water and boiled till it
is dissolved. Then the liquid is thrown over the nets and permitted to
soak in. After the nets are soaked in linseed oil, and before they are
tanned, they are hung up to dry in the open air. The process has to be
repeated several times during each fishing, and those who are familiar with
Lowestoft and Yarmouth must also be familiar with the sight and smell of the
nets, hanging out on railings, either on public open spaces or in private net
yards. Where rails are not obtainable the nets are often spread on the ground,
and an ingenious idea for the quaint shape of Yarmouth (unique with its narrow
“rows”) is that the rows represent the narrow footpaths between the spaces on
which the nets used to be laid to dry.
“Pasifull” is sometimes
called “Percival,” sometimes “Pasifall,” and sometimes as in this letter.
His Christian name was Ablett, and he was both a fisherman and a yacht hand.
Mr. Durrant was a market gardener and
fruiterer in Lowestoft, and his sons carry on the same business in three shops
in Lowestoft now. One of them remembers FitzGerald as a visitor and “a
queer old chap,” and that’s all he knows about him.
I do not think Posh troubled himself
much about the accounts. But there was another subject already broached
which was to cause some unpleasantness between the partners.
Some of FitzGerald’s friends, both at
Lowestoft and elsewhere, had become uneasy at the hold which Posh had obtained
over him. They feared lest he should become a baron of beef at which Posh
could cut and come again. More than one advised him that he should have
some better security than a mere partnership
understanding, that he should, in fact, insist on having a bill of sale, or
mortgage of the Meum and Tuum and her gear to secure the money
he had found. Possibly he was swayed by Posh’s backwardness in the matter
of account. Certainly he came to the conclusion that his friends were
right, and that he should have a charge on the boat and her gear. Now I
believe that Posh tells the truth when he says that in the first instance there
was no mention of any such charge. And he was not a business man enough
to see the reasonableness of FitzGerald’s demand. He was, moreover, urged
by the secretiveness of his race, the love of keeping private affairs from
outsiders, and he bitterly resented the proposition. Indeed, during the
early months of 1868, there were constant semi-quarrels, which were as
constantly patched up. FitzGerald loved the man too well to quarrel with
him definitely. Besides, Posh had not been
well. In January FitzGerald wrote to Professor Cowell (Letters,
II, 103, Eversley Edition): “I have spent lots of money on my Herring-lugger,
which has made but a poor season. So now we are going (like wise men) to
lay out a lot more for Mackerel; and my Captain (a dear Fellow) is got ill,
which is the worst of all.”
But in this first instance Posh gave
way. On April 14th FitzGerald wrote Mr. Spalding: “I believe that he and
I shall now sign the Mortgage Papers that make him owner of Half Meum
and Tuum. I only get out of him that he can’t say he sees much amiss
in the Deed.” But Posh is still bitter about that deed, and still blames
his old “guv’nor” for having listened to the “interfarin’ parties.” He
does not know what was the matter with him that spring. “I was quare,
sir,” he says. “I don’t know what ta was. But I was quare.”
He got well in time to go off after
the spring mackerel, which used to be a regular fishing
season off Lowestoft, though now mackerel are getting as scarce as salmon off
the Norfolk and Suffolk coast. But the Meum and Tuum’s bad
luck still followed her with the longer and bigger meshed nets. On June
16th, 1868, FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding:—
“Mackerel still come in very slow,
sometimes none at all: the dead calm nights play the deuce with the Fishing,
and I see no prospect of change in the weather till the Mackerel shall be
changing their Quarters. I am vexed to see the Lugger come in Day after
day so poorly stored after all the Labour and Time and Anxiety given to the
work by her Crew; but I can do no more, and at any rate take my share of the
Loss very lightly. I can afford it better than they can. I have
told Newson to set sail and run home any Day, Hour, or Minute, when he wishes
to see his Wife and Family.”
Newson and Jack were down
at Lowestoft with the Scandal, and it was characteristic of
FitzGerald to give his skipper leave to run home when he wished.
FitzGerald always liked the Meum and Tuum to be in harbour on
a Sunday so that the men could see their wives and families and have a “good
hot dinner.”
CHAPTER VII
“FLAGSTONE FITZGERALD”
Now that the Meum and Tuum was
ready for work FitzGerald’s anxiety for the lives of her crew made him insist
upon their taking life-belts aboard with them, although the mate had stated
that no one would wear them. On April 24th a letter was written to Posh
from Woodbridge.
“Dear
Poshy,
“I hear from Mr. Birt this morning
that the Life Belts were sent off to you yesterday—directed to your house.
So I suppose they will reach you without your having to go look for them.
But you can enquire at the Rail if they don’t show up.
“Mr. Birt says that he makes the Belts
of two sizes for the Life Boat. But he has sent all yours
of the large size, except one for the Boy. I had
told him I thought you were all of you biggish Men, except the Boy. I
suppose I have blundered as usual. But if the Jackets are too big you
must change some of them. That will only cost carriage; and that I must
pay for my Blunder.
“I doubt you have been unlucky in your
drying days—yesterday we had such violent showers as would have washed out your
oil, I think. And it must have rained much last night. But you
share in my luck now, you know.
“But I am very glad the children are
better. I thought it was bad weather for fever. There has been
great sickness here, I think. Mr. Gowing and his house are as tedious as
Mr. Dove and my house; we must hope that does not mean to play
as false.
“I am very sorry for your loss of
lines and anchors.
“E. FG.”
Mr. Gowing was, so far as
Posh can recollect, a Woodbridge builder, and Mr. Dove was the Builder who
altered Little Grange for FitzGerald. Whether or not the life-belts
fitted or were ever used I can’t ascertain. But I believe that one was in
existence a year or so ago. The “lines and anchors” were, Posh thinks,
lost from his old punt the Gazelle.
For the sake of convenience I give a
letter here which is somewhat out of date, but inasmuch as it has nothing to do
with the fishing but only with the trust which FitzGerald had in Posh it may
very well come in here.
“Markethill, Woodbridge, October 2nd.
“Dear
Posh,
“I forgot to tell you that I had
desired a Day and Night Telescope to be left for me at the
Lowestoft Railway Station—Please to enquire for it: and, if it be there, this
Letter of mine may be sufficient Warrant for you to
take the Glass.
“Do not, however, take the Glass out
to sea till we have tried it.
“We got here yesterday. I shall
not be at Lowestoft this week at any rate.
“Yours,
“Edward FitzGerald.
“Please to send me word about the
Glass. I left a note for you in George Howe’s hands before we
started. I was sorry not to see you; but you knew where to find me on
Monday Evening.”
The glass was, Posh assures me, a good
one. But no one knows what became of it. Later FitzGerald again
mentions the glass.
“Woodbridge, Monday.
“Dear
Posh,
“If I could have made sure from your
letter that you were going to stop on shore this Day, I would have run over
to see you. You tell me of getting a Job done:
but I cannot be sure if you are having it done To-day: and I do not go to
Lowestoft for fear you may be put to sea again.
“Of course you will get anything done
to Boat or Net that you think proper.
“You did not tell me how the Spy-Glass
answers. But do not trouble yourself to write.
“Yours
truly,
“Flagstone FitzGerald.”
As soon as I asked Posh the meaning of
the signature “Flagstone FitzGerald” he burst out laughing. “What!” said
he. “Hain’t yew niver heard about ole Flagstone? He was a retail
and wholesale grocer and gin’ral store dealer at Yarmouth name ---” (well, we
will say Smith for purposes of reference. As the man’s sons still carry
on his old business here in Lowestoft it is as well not to give the true
name. By the way, I do not mean that the sons
carry on the “flagstone” business), “and he owned tew or t’ree boots and stored
’em hisself. Well, when they come to make up (and o’ coorse he’d chudged
the men for the stores, ah! and chudged ’em high!) they went t’rew the stores
an’ found as he’d weighted up the sugar and such like wi’ flagstone! Well,
they made it sa hot for him at Yarmouth that he had ta mewve ta Lowestoft, and
he was allust called Flagstone Smith arter that. I reckon as the Guv’nor
heerd the yarn and liked it. Ha! Ha! Ha!”
And it isn’t a bad yarn for one which
is actually true in every respect.
About the same time, or a little later
(for it is impossible to fix the date of these letters definitely), Fitzgerald
wrote:—
“Woodbridge, Saturday.
“My
dear Lad,
“I suppose the Lugger had returned,
and that you had gone out in her again before my last
Note, with Newson’s Paper, reached you. I have a fancy that you will go
home this evening. But whether you are not [sic] do not stay at
home to answer me. I have felt, as I said, pretty sure that the Boat was
back from Harwich: and we have had no such weather as to make me anxious about
you. One night it blew; but not a gale: only a strong Wind.
“I shall be expecting Newson up next
week.
“I have thought of you while I have
been walking out these fine moonlight nights. But I doubt your fish must
have gone off before this.
“You see I have nothing to say to you;
only I thought you might to [sic] hear from me whenever you should come
back.
“E. FG.”
CHAPTER VIII
HOW FISHERS FISHED
The poor mackerel season ended in the
second week of July. Why, when mackerel were so scarce, the Meum
and Tuum did not give up the fishing and try for “midsummer herring”
it is difficult to understand, and Posh does not remember the reason, if there
was one. Possibly the change of nets, etc., etc., was too much
trouble. Anyhow, the season was unprofitable for the mackerel
boats. On Monday, July 13th, FitzGerald was still on the Scandal at
Lowestoft, and wrote from there to Mr. Spalding: “Posh made up and paid off on
Saturday. I have not yet asked him, but I suppose he has just paid his
way, I mean so far as Grub goes. . . . Last night it lightened to the South, as we sat in the Suffolk Gardens—I,
and Posh, and Mrs. Posh. . . .”
The “making up” may require some
little explanation. The “drift” fishing—i.e. the herring and mackerel
fishing (for though sprats and pilchards are caught by drift nets, it is
unnecessary to consider them when dealing with the great North Sea drift
fishing)—is carried on on a system of sharing profits between owners and
fishermen. Trawlers, i.e. craft that fish with a “trawl” net for flat
fish, haddocks, etc., etc., are managed differently.
“Making up” is the technical term for
balancing profit and loss of a season, and ascertaining the sums which are due
to owners and crew respectively.
In the days when Fitzgerald was a
“herring merchant,” the systems of Yarmouth and Lowestoft were different.
At Yarmouth the owner of the boat took nine shares out of sixteen, and bore all
losses of damaged or lost nets, etc., the remaining
seven shares being divided among the crew in varying proportions. For
instance, the skipper took 1¾ or two shares, the mate 1¼ or 1½, and so on down
to the boy with his one-half or three-eighths share. At Lowestoft the
shares were also divided into sixteen; but the owner took only eight, and the
crew the other eight. The losses of gear, nets, etc., however, were borne
equally between the two lots of eight shares, and, on the whole, I believe the
Yarmouth system was more favourable to the men, though the Lowestoft system
made the skipper and crew more careful of the nets and gear than they might
have been did not they suffer for any loss of them. The introduction of
steam drifters has made the shares complicated in the extreme. The owners
take so much as owners of the boat, so much for the engines, etc., etc., and,
in fact, the owners get the share of a very greedy lion. However, the
prices rule so high nowadays, and the catches are
occasionally so large (the other day a steam drifter brought in over £200 worth
of fish to Grimsby as the result of one night’s fishing), that the great
Martinmas fishing of the east coast has become a gamble in which fortunes may
be made and lost. Many a boat earns over £2000 from October to
December. A lucky skipper may take £200 for his share of the home fishing
alone. But such figures would have sounded fantastic in FitzGerald’s day,
for I have been assured over and over again by herring fishers that in the
sixties and seventies, ay, even in the eighties of last century, £20 was a
“good season’s share” for a prominent hand of a successful drifter.
Posh, as half owner, would take
four-sixteenth shares, and as skipper would probably take another
two-sixteenths, so that he would draw more than any one else.
Some time during the spring or summer
of 1868 there was great excitement amongst the fishing-boat owners of
Lowestoft and other ports on account of an Act just
passed regulating the building of vessels, having especial regard to the
ventilation of the cuddy, forecastle, or the men’s sleeping quarters.
Posh tells me that many owners of drifters considered that the Act applied to
all craft, including fishing boats, and that great expense was undergone by
some over-conscientious owners in fitting ventilating drums and shafts in
accordance with the Act. If the statute applied to any drifter it would
apply to the Meum and Tuum, and FitzGerald evidently thought that
the intention of the Act was that fishing boats should be exempt. He
proved to be right, for the regulations were never enforced on fishing
boats. He wrote to Posh:—
“Woodbridge, Saturday.
“Dear
Posh,
“You must lay out three halfpence on
the Eastern Times for last Friday. In that Newspaper
there is a good deal written about that Act for
altering Vessels: the Writer is quite sure—that the Act does not apply
to Fishing craft; and he writes as if he knew what he was writing about.
But most likely if he had written just the contrary, it would have seemed as
right to me. Do you therefore fork out three halfpennies, as I tell you,
and study the matter and talk it over with others. The owners of Vessels
should lose no time in meeting, and in passing some Resolution on the Subject.
“I have not seen Newson, but West was
down at the Ferry some days back and saw him. For a wonder, he [Newson]
was Fishing!—for Codlings—for there really was nothing else to do:
no Woodbridge Vessels coming in and out the Harbour, nor any work for the
Salvage Smacks. He spoke of his Wife as much the same: Smith, the Pilot,
thought her much altered when last he saw her.
“You will buy such things as you
spoke of wanting at the Lowestoft Sales if they go at
a reasonable price. As to the claim made by your Yawl, I suppose it will
come down to half. The builders are coming to my house again next week, I
believe, having left their work undone.
“Now, here is a Letter for your
Mantelpiece to-morrow—Sunday—I don’t think I have more to say.
“Yours
E. FG.
“Mr. Durrant has never sent me the
hamper of Flowers he promised.
“P.S. I post this letter before
Noon so as you will receive it this evening: and can get the Newspaper I tell
you of:
“Eastern Times for Friday last
sold at Chapman’s.”
Posh does not remember whether he laid
out the three halfpence or not. But he doubts it. “I knowed as that
couldn’t ha’ nothin’ ta dew along o’ us,” says he. And he stuck to his
guns and proved to be right.
“West” has been mentioned
before as being an old fellow with whom FitzGerald used to navigate the river
Deben in a small boat before the building of the Scandal.
Newson’s wife, like Posh’s, was often ailing. Kind “Fitz” had written
previously (July 25th, 1868; Letters, Eversley Edition, p. 106) to
Professor Cowell:—
“. . . I only left Lowestoft partly to
avoid a Volunteer Camp there which filled the Town and People with Bustle: and
partly that my Captain might see his Wife: who cannot last very much longer I
think: scarcely through the Autumn, surely. She goes about, nurses her
children, etc., but grows visibly thinner, weaker and more ailing.”
The “claim made by your yawl” refers
to a claim for salvage made by the company of beach men (of which Posh was a
member) owning a yawl. FitzGerald (as has been seen before) always took a
humorous interest in the doings of the “sea pirates,”
yclept beach men or “salwagers,” and he doubtless enjoyed his little chuckle at
Posh’s expense.
The builders were at work on Little
Grange, which FitzGerald predicted he would never live in but would die
in. However, he falsified both predictions, for he lived in the house ten
years and died in Norfolk.
Mr. Durrant was still in
default. I doubt if FitzGerald ever got those flowers. They were
plants, Posh tells me, which FitzGerald wished to plant out at Little Grange.
I can find no record of the principal,
the Martinmas or Autumn, fishing of 1868. But in the spring of 1869
the Meum and Tuum went to the “West Fishing” for mackerel,
even as a large number of our modern steam drifters go now, to the indignation
of the pious fishermen of Penzance, Newlyn, and St. Ives. These good
fellows of the west have, I think, some reason to
complain that it is unfair that they should suffer for righteousness’
sake. Looking at the point in dispute impartially, it does seem
hard that the men of the locality should see Easterlings bringing in good
catches of fish as the result of what the Cornishmen regard as a desecration of
“the Lord’s Day.” The religious sentiment which prevents the western and
southern men from putting off on Sunday is genuine and sincere enough.
The Scotch herring boats, which come in their thousands to Yarmouth and
Lowestoft for the autumn fishing, are always in harbour from Saturday night to
Monday morning, though the local boats fish all days and nights. But by
keeping in harbour the Scotchmen offend the sensibilities of no one, whereas
there is much bitterness caused in the west by the refusal of the Easterlings
to fall in with local custom.
On March 1st, 1869, FitzGerald wrote
to Professor Cowell (Letters, II, 107, Eversley
Edition):—
“My
dear Cowell,
“. . . My lugger Captain has just left
me to go on his Mackerel Voyage to the Western Coast; and I don’t know when I
shall see him again. . . . You can’t think what a grand, tender Soul this
is, lodged in a suitable carcase.”
FitzGerald thought very highly of that
“carcase” of Posh’s, as will be seen from the story of the Laurence portrait,
set forth hereinafter, as the lawyers, whom Posh hates so much, would say.
The sleeping partner throughout seems
to have had more anxiety on account of Posh’s sea hazards than on account of
business losses. How the mackerel paid I do not know, but Posh was in
time to go north for the beginning of the herring fishing in July.
CHAPTER IX
ECCENTRICITIES OF A GOOD HEART
There must always be an interval
ashore between the return of the drifters from the western voyage and their
sailing north to follow the herring down from Aberdeen to Yarmouth. And
during this interval, in 1869, FitzGerald wrote one or two letters to Posh
which have survived that wholesale destruction of which their recipient speaks.
“Woodbridge, Friday.
“Newson is up here with the Yacht,
Posh; and we shall start to-morrow with the Tide about 10½. I doubt if we
shall get out of the harbour: or, even if we do that, get to Lowestoft in the
Day. But you can just give a look to the Southward to-morrow
evening, or Sunday. I write this, because we may not
have more than a day to stay at Lowestoft.
“E. FG.”
Despite his silk hat and his boa,
FitzGerald was a keen and genuine lover of yachting. Even in the way in
which he took his enjoyment of this he was original. Posh asserts that he
has seen his “guv’nor” lying in the lee scuppers while the Scandal was
heeling over in a stiff breeze, and permitting the wash of the sea to run over
him till he was drenched to the skin. Indeed, although his long lean body
looked frail, he was reckless in the way in which he treated it. Posh
tells one story which I give in his words. He vouches for its truth, and
I give it on his authority and not as vouching for its accuracy myself.
Personally I believe the tale is true enough, but I admit that it requires a
power of assimilation which is not given to all.
“He! he!” says Posh.
“He was a rum un sometimes, was my guv’nor! I remember one day when
the Scandal was a layin’ agin’ the wharf where the trawl
market is now. Mr. Sims Reeves, the lawyer [this was a prominent counsel
on the Norwich circuit, not the famous tenor], and some other friends came over
for a sail, and they and Tom [Newson] was below while me and Jack and the
guv’nor was on deck, astarn. The mains’l was h’isted, but there wasn’t no
heads’l on her, and we lay theer riddy to get unner way. There was a
fresh o’ wind blowin’ from the eastard, not wery stiddy, and as we lay theer
the boom kep’ a wamblin’ and a jerkin’ from side to side, a wrenchin’ the
mainsheet block a rum un. The guv’nor was a readin’ of a letter as had
just been brought down by the poost. ‘Posh,’ he say, ‘here’s a letter
with some money I niver expected to git,’ he say. ‘That’s a good job,’
when just then the boom come over wallop and caught
him fair on the side of his hid, and knocked him oover into the harbour like
one o’clock. He was a wearin’ of his topper same as us’al, and all of a
sudden up he come agin just as Jack an’ me was raychin’ oover arter him.
His topper come up aisy like, as though ’twas a life-buoy if I may say soo, and
unnerneath it come the fur boa, and then the guv’nor. And as true as I
set here he was still a holdin’ that letter out in front of him in both
hands. Well, I couldn’t help it. I bust out a laughin’, and soo did
Jack an’ all, and then we rayched down and copped hold on him and h’isted him aboord
all right and tight, but as wet as a soused harrin’. He come up a
laughin’, playsed as Punch, an’ give orders to cast off and git up headsail ta
oncet. And would yew believe me, he wouldn’t goo below ta shift afore we
got right out to the Corton light, though Mr. Reeves axed him tew time and time
agin! Not he. That was blowin’ a fresh o’
wind, an’ he jest lay down in the lee scuppers, and ‘I can’t get no wetter,
Posh,’ he say, and let the lipper slosh oover him. Ah! He was a
master rum un, was my ole guv’nor!”
The northern herring voyage of
the Meum and Tuum in 1869, that is to say, the eight weeks’
fishing down the east coast from Aberdeen to Lowestoft from the beginning of
August to the end of September, seems to have been about up to what FitzGerald
might have called “Neighbour’s fare.” He wrote to Mrs. W. H. Thompson
(the wife of the Master of Trinity): “My lugger has had (along with her
neighbours) such a Season hitherto of Winds as no one remembers. We made
£450 in the North Sea” (that is to say, in the north fishing before the home
Martinmas fishing began); “and (just for fun) I did wish to realise £5 in my
pocket. But my Captain would take it all to pay Bills. But if he
makes another £400 this Home Voyage! Oh, then we
shall have money in our pockets. I do wish this. For the anxiety
about all these people’s lives has been so much more to me than all the
amusement I have got from the Business, that I think I will draw out of it if I
can see my Captain sufficiently firm on his legs to carry it on alone.
True, there will still be the same risk to him and his ten men, but they don’t
care; only I sit here listening to the Winds in the Chimney, and always
thinking of the eleven hanging at my own finger ends” (Letters, II, 110,
Eversley Edition).
The number of hands on a herring
drifter used to be eleven, which seemed excessive till the labour of hauling
nearly two miles of nets by hand is remembered. Now that almost every
drifter which goes into the North Sea has a donkey engine to do the hardest
work of the hauling the number aboard the dandies is lessened to nine.
This letter to Mrs. Thompson is the
first suggestion that FitzGerald has any idea of
ending the partnership, a suggestion which became fully developed in 1870.
But before Posh was hard at it every
day, fishing off the Norfolk coast, his “guv’nor” wrote him a note in a much
more cheerful strain. Indeed, this is a letter by itself, unlike any
other of the writer’s which I have seen, though (as Dr. Aldis Wright says)
“FitzGerald never wrote a letter like any one else.” The power of
throwing himself “into the picture,” the humour of conscious imitation, were
never more brilliantly illustrated than by this hail-fellow-well-met letter,
written by the scholar and poet:—
“Markethill, Woodbridge, Wednesday.
“Now then, Posh, here is a letter for
you, sooner than you looked for, and moreover you will have to answer it as
soon as you can.
“I want you to learn from your
friend Dan Fuller what particulars you can
about that Lugger we saw at Mutford Bridge. Draft of Water, Length of
Keel, What sails and Stores; and what Price; and any other
Questions you may think necessary to ask. If the man here who has a
notion of buying such a Vessel to make a Yacht of on this river sees any hope
of doing so at a reasonable rate, and with a reasonable hope of Success, he
will go over next week to look at the Vessel. He of course knows he would
have to alter all her inside: but I told him your Opinion that she would do
well cutter rigged.
“So now, Poshy, do go down as soon as
is convenient, to Dan, and stand him half a pint and don’t
tell him what you are come about, but just turn the conversation (in a Salvaging sort
of way) to the old Lugger and get me the particulars I ask for. Perhaps
Dan’s heart will open—over Half a Pint—as yours has been known to
do. And if you write to me as soon as you can what
you can learn, why I take my Blessed Oath that I’ll be d---d if I don’t stand
you Half a Pint, so help me Bob, the next time I go to Lowestoft. I hope
I make myself understood.
“The Elsie is being
gutted, and new timbered, and Mr. Silver has bought a new dandy of forty tons,
and Ablett Percival” (cf. spelling in other letters) “is to be Captain. I
think of going down the river soon to see Captain Newson. I have been on
the River To-day and thought that I should have been with you on the way to
Yarmouth or Southwold if I had stayed at Lowestoft. Instead of which I
have been to the Lawyer here.
“Good-bye, Poshy, and believe me
always yours to the last Half Pint.
“E. FG.
“I enclose a paper with my questions
marked, to which you can add short answers.”
Dan Fuller was the builder
of the Meum and Tuum. His son is still living, and a
well-known mechanic in Lowestoft. Mutford Bridge will be better
recognised as the bridge at Oulton Broad.
Once again FitzGerald chuckles at the
morality of the “salwagers,” and chuckles again at the expansiveness of the
East Anglian “half a pint,” which may mean anything between its nominal measure
and the full holding capacity of the drinker—which is as vague as “half a
pint,” itself.
The Elsie was a yacht
which belonged to a syndicate of Woodbridge yachtsmen, of whom Mr. Silver (a
Woodbridge friend of FitzGerald’s) was one and Mr. Manby was another. The
two friends who went to Mutford Bridge to look at the lugger were (so far as
Posh can remember) Mr. Silver and Mr. Cobbold, of Cobbold’s Bank. Posh
says that the lugger was a beauty. But nothing came of the visit, and the
Woodbridge man did not buy her.
As yet the warning which
FitzGerald had given Posh in his sermon had (so far as the letters tell us)
served its purpose. But the letters appear to be deceitful in this, and
the next chapter must deal with a painful phase of the partnership.
CHAPTER X
POSH’S SPIRIT OF INDEPENDENCE
The hopes for the home fishing of 1869
should have been good. On August 30th, 1869, FitzGerald wrote to Mr.
Spalding from Lowestoft: “You will see by the enclosed that Posh has had a
little better luck than hitherto. One reason for my not going to
Woodbridge is, that I think it possible that this N.E. wind may blow him hither
to tan his nets. Only please God it don’t tan him and his people first.”
Herring are, as our East Anglian
fishermen say, “ondependable” in their travels. They come south along the
coast from the north of Scotland till they are in
their prime (full-roed, fat fish) off Yarmouth in October. But their
arrival at the various ports along the east coast can never be fixed for a
certain date. This year, for instance (1907), owing to the warm August
and September they have been late in coming south from Hull. Generally
“longshores” are caught off Lowestoft late in August or early in September, and
by the end of September the home and Scotch fleets are congesting the herring
basins. This year, however, I had my first longshores brought me
yesterday, the 1st of October, and there are not a dozen Scotch craft to be
seen in the basins.
FitzGerald stayed at Lowestoft till
the north-easters did blow Posh home. And perhaps he
would have been happier had he gone back to Woodbridge before the return of
the Meum and Tuum. As it was, Posh had “some bare” on regatta
day (very late that year), and this upset his “guv’nor.” He wrote to Mr. Spalding on the 4th September: “I would not
meddle with the Regatta. . . . And the Day ended by vexing me more than
it did him [Newson]. . . . Posh drove in here the day before to tan his
nets: could not help making one with some old friends in a Boat-race on the
Monday, and getting very fuddled with them on the Suffolk Green (where I was)
at night. After all the pains I have taken, and all the real anxiety I
have had. And worst of all after the repeated promises he had made!
I said there must be an end of Confidence between us, so far as that was
concerned, and I would so far trouble myself about him no more. But when
I came to reflect that this was but an outbreak among old friends, on an old
occasion, after (I do believe) months of sobriety; that there was no
concealment about it; and that though obstinate at first as to how little
drunk, etc., he was very repentant afterwards—I cannot
let this one flaw weigh against the general good of the man. I cannot if
I would: what then is the use of trying? But my confidence in that respect
must be so far shaken, and it vexes me to think that I can never be sure of his
not being overtaken so. I declare that it makes me feel ashamed very much
to play the judge on one who stands immeasurably above me in the scale, whose
faults are better than so many virtues. Was not this very outbreak that
of a great genial Boy among his old Fellows? True, a Promise was
broken. Yes, but if the Whole Man be of the Royal Blood of Humanity, and
do Justice in the Main, what are the people to
say? He thought, if he thought at all, that he kept his
promise in the main. But there is no use talking, unless I part company
wholly, I suppose I must take the evil with the good. . . .”
FitzGerald probably got to the very
heart of the misunderstanding between himself and Posh
as to the merits and demerits of “bare” when he wrote that Posh was a little
obstinate as to “how little drunk,” etc. Moreover he understood the
nature of the man—“a great genial boy”—but he did not understand that these
“great genial boys” have all the mischievous tendencies, and all the
irresponsibility of real boys. He was kind and forbearing enough, God
knows. But he had set up his Posh on such a pinnacle of pre-eminence over
all his fellow-men that it is possible that his bitterness in discovering that
after all his protégé was merely a well-built, handsome, ordinary longshoreman
caused a greater revulsion than would have occurred had his first estimate of
Posh’s character been less exalted.
It is to the credit of the great heart
of the man that he never lost his love of Posh (Posh is certain about this),
though he undoubtedly did lose his confidence in and respect for him.
And Posh did not give way
to his “guv’nor” as he might have done. That fine old East Anglian spirit
of independence (which is so generally admirable) was in this particular
instance sheer brutal ingratitude when shown by Posh to FitzGerald. No
one has a greater admiration than I for this magnificent claim of a Man to be Man’s equal. It kept the race
of Norfolk and Suffolk longshoremen worthy of their traditions until the
cockney visitors, with their tips and their hunger for longshore lies, ruined
the nature of many of our beach folk. But with FitzGerald, that kind,
solicitous gentleman who never asserted the claims of his station in life
before an inferior, the obtrusive display of this spirit of independence was as
unnecessary as it was cruel. And I think Posh understands this now.
He certainly never meant to hurt the feelings of his old governor. But he
chafed at the care which his friend took of him. He said to me the other
day that he wished his old master were alive now to
take such care. “Ah!” he said, “he’d take hold o’ me like this here” (and
here, as I have described on a previous page, Posh pinched up his blue knitted
jersey), “and say, ‘Oh, my dear Poshy! Oh dear! Oh dear! To
think you should be like this! Oh dear! Oh dear!’”
And Posh’s old eyes will water.
Indeed, I have noticed a likeness between the thoughts of Posh in reference to
FitzGerald and the remorse of the son of a loving father who had tried his sire
hard in lifetime and understood that he had done so after his father’s
death. Even now, this old man of sixty-nine leans, metaphorically, on the
recollection of the man who loved him so. Even now he says, “Ah! that
would ha’ upset him if he’d known I should ha’ come to this!”
But in 1869 Posh thought that he was a
very fine fellow indeed, and was not going to be “put upon” by any “guv’nor,”
no matter how kind the “guv’nor” had been to
him. He was half owner of a fine drifter and skipper as well, to say
nothing of having designed the boat. He would assert himself.
He did.
Posh says that there “were lots o’
breezes” between him and his “guv’nor,” and when the reader of this study (who
should have got to know something of FitzGerald’s attitude by now) realises
this he will be able to appreciate the long-suffering generosity of this
cultured scholar whom fools have painted as a mere eccentric hermit.
Posh, now that he was well started by the aid of his governor, began to yearn
for independence. Possibly he had some reason to complain that his
sleeping partner interfered in matters of which he was ignorant. On
September 21st, 1869, FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding:—
“Posh came up with his Lugger
last Friday, with a lot of torn nets, and went off
again on Sunday. I thought he was wrong to come up, and not to transmit
his nets by Rail, as is often done at 6d. a net. But I did not say so to
him—it is no unamiable point in him to love home: but I think he
won’t make a fortune by it. However, I may be very wrong in thinking he
had better not have come. He has made about the average
fishing, I believe: about £250. Some boats have £600, I hear; and some
few not enough to pay their way.
“He came up with a very bad cold and
hoarseness; and so went off, poor fellow: he never will be long well, I do
think.”
Probably Posh knew all about the best
way of making a profit out of herring drifters, and FitzGerald may have been
wrong in fearing that he did not. FitzGerald, with his superb culture,
may not (I do not say he did not) have understood that Posh, on his native
North Sea, may have been more than a match for all the
culture in the world. For what I know of the old longshoreman, I am
convinced that if he brought his nets home in his lugger he did so because he
thought it was the most profitable way of bringing them back. But
FitzGerald grew anxious, and his anxiety was not understood by the natural
child of the beach, and caused friction and mutual irritation.
But this did not break out till the
north voyage was over and the Meum and Tuum had been on the
home fishing for more than a month. Then Posh began to have the fingering
of a good deal of money, and FitzGerald had already had reason to doubt his
abilities to keep his credit and debit sides of account in proper order.
Moreover, the usual autumn gales had been bringing the stormy and dark nights
which are as profitable as they are dangerous to the drifters. On Monday,
November 1st, 1869 (one of the few letters of FitzGerald’s which I have seen completely dated), the sleeping partner
wrote on a sheet of paper headed by a monogram which is “S.W. & B.” so far
as I can make out. To make up for the fullness of the date there is no
address.
“I cannot lay blame to myself, Posh,
in this matter, though I may not have known you were so busy with the boat as
you tell me. Hearing of great disasters by last week’s gale, I was, as
usual, anxious about you. Hearing nothing from you, I telegram’d on
Thursday Afternoon to Mr. Bradbeer: his answer reached me at 5 p.m. that you
had come in on Tuesday, and were then safe in harbour. Being then afraid
lest you should put off paying away the money, which, as I told you, was a
positive danger to Wife and Children, I directly telegram’d
to you to do what I had desired you to do the week
before. Busy as you were, five minutes spent in writing me a line would have spared all this trouble and all this vexation
on both sides.
“As to my telegrams telling all the
world what you wish to keep secret; how did they do that? My telegrams to
Mr. Bradbeer were simply to ask if you were safe. My telegram
to you was simply to say, ‘Do what I bid you’; Who should know what that
was, or that it had anything to do with paying the Boat’s Bills? People
might guess it had something to do with the Boat: and don’t
you suppose that every one knows pretty well how things are between us?
And why should they not, I say, when all is honestly done between us? The
Custom House people must know (and, of course, tell others) that you are at
present only Half-owner; and would suppose that I, the other Half,
would use some Authority in the matter.
“You say truly that, when we began
together, you supposed I should leave all to you, and use no Authority
(though you have always asked me about anything you
wished done). Quite true. I never did wish to meddle; nor did I
call on you for any Account, till I saw last year that you forgot a really
important sum, and that you did not seem inclined to help your Memory (as every
one else does) by writing it down in a Book. In two cases this year I
have shown you the same forgetfulness (about your liabilities I mean) and I do
not think I have been unjust, or unkind, in trying to make you bring yourself to
Account. You know, and ought to believe, that I have perfect confidence
in your honour; and have told you of the one defect I observed in
you as much for your sake as mine.
“Quite as much, yes! For
the anxiety I have . . . [word illegible] [? suffered] these two years about
your eleven lives is but ill compensated by all these squalls between us two;
which I declare I excuse myself of raising. If, in this last case, you
really had not time to post me a line or two to say
you were all safe, and that you had done what I desired you to do; I am very
sorry for having written so sharply as I did to you: but I cannot blame myself
for the mistake. No: this I will say: I am not apt to think too much of
my doings, and dealings with others. But, in my whole sixty years, I can
with a clear conscience say that I have dealt with one man fairly,
kindly, and not ungenerously, for three good years. I may have made
mistakes; but I can say I have done my best as conscientiously
as he can say he has done his. And I believe he has done
his best, though he has also made mistakes; and I remain his sincerely,
“E. FG.”
Mr. Bradbeer was a herring merchant,
and his family is still prominent in the fishing industry of Lowestoft.
Posh’s letter, to which the above is a reply, must have been very
characteristic of his race, to which secrecy concerning their private affairs is a first nature. The mistrust of the privacy
of the “telegrams” may possibly have had some justification. Even in
these days there are East Anglian villages where the contents of private
telegrams are sometimes known to the village before the actual information
reaches the addressee. And in 1869 Lowestoft was not much more than a
village, and telegraphy was in its infancy. Possibly Posh exaggerated the
importance of secretiveness, and FitzGerald the security of privacy. But
apart from all questions of “the rights of the matter,” what a letter it
is! What a splendid justification for almost any action. I fear,
however the matter in dispute be looked at, Posh cannot have the best of it in
this case. He had fired up at an imaginary slight, wrong, whatever he
chose to think it, and if he has any excuse at all, it is that, but for his
unreasonableness, we should not have this letter.
One would have thought
that it might have given Posh pause if even he felt disposed to show his
independence again. But this “squall” between these two curious partners
was not destined to be the last. For the time it blew over, and the mutual
relations between Posh and his “guv’nor” were as friendly as ever.
CHAPTER XII
THE HENRIETTA
During the winter of 1869-70 it seems
that Posh conceived the idea that the capital of the firm of FitzGerald and
Fletcher justified the working partner in increasing the stock-in-trade.
A boat-building company at Southwold put up some craft at auction, and among
them was one which had already seen a good deal of sea service named the Henrietta.
This Posh bought for about £100 without consulting his partner. It
transpired afterwards that the sale was not acceptable to all the shareholders
of the company that owned the boat, especially to a Jerry Cole, one of the
principal shareholders, and there was a good deal of bother for Posh in
obtaining delivery of his purchase. It may be as well to include all the letters relating to this transaction in one
chapter without regard to dates.
The first is dated February 1st—that
is to say, February 1st, 1870—and was written at Woodbridge by FitzGerald to
his partner. The letter, as handed to me by Posh, was incomplete, and
lacked signature. No doubt the second sheet had been lost with those
“sackfuls.”
“Woodbridge, February 1st.
“My
dear Posh,
“Mr. Spalding was with me last night;
and I asked him if I was justified in the scolding I gave you about buying the
Lugger and Nets too; telling him the particulars. He would not go so far
as to say I was wrong; but he thought that you were not to blame
either. Therefore I consider that I was wrong; and, as I
told you, I am very glad to find myself wrong, though very sorry to have been
so: and I cannot let a day pass without writing to say so. You may think that I had better have said nothing to anybody
about it: but I always do ask of another if I am right. If Mr. Spalding
had been at Lowestoft at the time all this would not have happened: as it has happened,
I wish to take all the blame on myself.
“All this will make you wish the more
to be quit of such a Partner. I am sure, however, that
I thought myself right: and am glad to recant. Perhaps
another Partner would not do so much: but you say you will not have another.
“Mr. Spalding thinks you would have
done better to stick to one Lugger, considering the double
trouble of two. But he says he is not a proper judge. I think
the chief evil is that this new Boat will keep you ashore in the Net-room,
which I am persuaded hurts you. I told you I was sure the Dust of
the nets hurt you: and (oddly enough) the first thing I saw, on opening a Paper
here on my return, was a Report on the influence
of Dust in causing Disease. I hope you have seen the
Doctor and told him all—about last Summer’s Illness. Let me hear what he
says. I should have advised Worthington, but he is very
expensive. One thing I am sure of: the more you eat, and
the less you drink, the better.”
Even here, when Posh had obviously
gone beyond his rights and bought another boat without consultation with his
capitalist partner, FitzGerald shows his anxiety and solicitude for the man.
There is a good deal
of dust flying about the net chambers; for the cutch and oil and thread all
shred off and poison the air. “Why,” said Posh the other day, “he bought
me one o’ them things that goo oover the mouth” (a respirator), “but lor!
I should ha’ been ashamed ta be seed a wearin’ on it!”
Dr. Worthington referred to in the
letter is one of a long line of medical practitioners,
and was the Lowestoft medical attendant of FitzGerald himself. I have
experienced great kindness from both this Dr. Worthington and his son Dr. Dick
Worthington. The former tells me that FitzGerald would never enter his
house, but would stand on the doorstep to consult. He had no objection to
the doctor entering his (FitzGerald’s) lodgings, and on one occasion when Dr.
Worthington called on him at 12 Marine Terrace the doctor saw all his medicine
bottles unopened in a row. “You know this isn’t fair to me,” said the
justly irritated doctor. “I do what I can for you, and you won’t take my
medicines.” “My dear doctor,” said FitzGerald, “it does me good to see
you.”
Dr. Aldis Wright says that this is
merely an instance of FitzGerald’s rule that he would never enter the house of
his equal. Of course his “social” equal is inferred, for the rule would have been unnecessary if the “equal” bore
another significance. His inferiors in station he would visit and charm
by his manner and speech. But the house of a society equal he avoided,
lest he should be compelled, for mere courtesy, to go where he would not.
I have, of course, chuckled over the
opinion that Dr. Worthington senior was “very expensive.” But I believe
that FitzGerald was one of those (I might almost say “of us”) who regarded all
doctor’s bills as luxuries! At all events, if FitzGerald was right, I can
say that Dr. Dick Worthington is not atavistic in this particular!
Mr. Spalding’s opinion inclined
FitzGerald to make no difficulty about finding the money for the Henrietta.
He lodged it at his bankers’ for Posh to draw when occasion required. But
Posh seems to have been a little in advance. There is no heading whatever
to the following letter.
“I don’t understand your letter.
That which I had on Friday, enclosing Mr. Craigie’s, said that you
had not drawn the money, your letter of To-day tells
me that you had drawn the money, before the Letter
from Southwold came. Was not that letter Mr. Craigie’s letter?
“Anyhow, I think you ought not (after
all I have said) to have drawn the money (to keep in your house) till you
wanted it. And you could have got it at the Bank any morning
on which you got another letter from Southwold, telling you
the business was to be settled.
“Moreover, I think you should have
written me on Saturday, in answer to my letter. You are very
good in attending to any letters of mine about stores, or fish, which I don’t
care about. But you somehow do not attend so regularly to things which
I do care about, such as gales of wind in which you are out,
and such directions as I have given over and over
again about money matters.
“However, I don’t mean to kick up
another row; provided you now do, and at once, what I
positively desire.
“Which is; to take the money directly
to Mr. Barnard, and ask him, as from me, to pay it to my account at
Messrs. Bacon and Cobbold’s Bank at Woodbridge. Then if you tell me the
address of the Auctioneer or Agent, at Southwold who manage [sic] the
business, Bacon and Cobbold will write to them at once that
the money is ready for them directly the Lugger is ready for you. And,
write me a line to-morrow to say that this is done.
“This makes a trouble to you, and to
me, and to Bankers, but I think you must blame yourself for not attending to my
directions. But I am yours not the less.
“E. FG.
Mr. Craigie was an old Southwold
friend of the Fletcher family, with whom Fletcher senior
(Posh’s father) had spent Christmas for over forty years. The criticism
of Posh’s system appears, to the impartial critic, to be both painful and
true. But Posh, in this case, was not altogether to blame. This Mr.
Jerry Cole, before mentioned, was keeping things back. He had a
preponderating interest in that Southwold company, and he thought that
the Henrietta had been sold too cheap, and that hung up the
delivery. At least that’s what Posh tells me, and at this date I can’t
get any better evidence than his.
Shortly after the last letter
FitzGerald wrote again. Now his kind anxiety about this man, whom he
still loved, outweighed all thought of money. It was a bitter winter, and
Posh, he thought, was not over-hale.
“Woodbridge, Saturday.
“Dear
Captain,
“Whatever is to be done about the
money, do not you go over to Southwold while this
weather lasts. I think it is colder than I ever knew. Don’t go, I
say—there can be no hurry for the boat (even if you can get
it) for a a [sic] week or so. Perhaps it may be as well at
Southwold as at Lowestoft.
“I wish you were here to play Allfours
with me To-night.
“Yours,
“E. FG.”
Posh got the lugger in March, 1870,
and on March 2nd FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding: “Posh has, I believe, gone
off to Southwold in hope to bring his Lugger home. I advised him last
night to ascertain first by letter whether she were ready for
his hands; but you know he will go his own way, and that generally is as good
as anybody’s. He now works all day in his Net-loft: and I wonder how he
keeps as well as he is, shut up there from fresh air and among frowsy Nets. . .
. I think he has mistaken in not sending the Meum and Tuum to
the West this spring. . . . But I have not
meddled, nor indeed is it my Business to meddle now. . . .”
I think this must have been written
about the date of the letter with which I commence the next chapter, or
possibly a little later. It would, almost certainly, be after the
catches of mackerel mentioned by “Mr. Manby” as hereinafter appears, and, very
likely, after the termination of the partnership.
CHAPTER XIII
THE END OF THE PARTNERSHIP
Either in March or April, 1870,
FitzGerald wrote to Posh the quaint letter which follows:—
“Dear
Posh,
“I never wanted you to puzzle yourself
about the Accounts any more, but only to tell me at a rough estimate what the
chief expenses were—as, for instance, Shares, &c.—I beg to say that I never
had asked you—nor had you told me this at Lowestoft: if you had I
should not have wanted to ask again. And my reason for asking,
was simply that, on Monday Mr. Moor here was asking me about
what a Lugger’s expenses were, and I felt it silly not to be able to tell him
the least about it: and I have felt so when some one
asked me before: and that is why I asked you. I neither have, nor ever
had, any doubt of your doing your best: and you ought not to think so.
“You must please yourself entirely
about Plymouth: I only wish to say that I had not spoken as if I wanted you to
go. Go by all means if you like.
“When I paid the Landlady of the Boat
Inn for Newson and Jack she asked me if you had explained to me about the Grog
business. I said that you could not understand it at first, but
afterwards supposed that others might have been treated at night. She
said—Yes; drinking rum-flip till two in the morning. She says it was
Newson’s doing, but I think you should have told me at
once, particularly as your not doing so left me with some suspicion of the
Landlady’s fair dealing. You did not choose to leave the blame to Newson,
I suppose, but I think I deserve the truth at your
hands as much as he does the concealment of it.
“Yours,
“E. FG.”
Mr. Moor was FitzGerald’s Woodbridge
lawyer, and no doubt he and other friends of FitzGerald thought that the
affairs of the partnership of FitzGerald and Fletcher were not carried on with
such precision as was desirable. Possibly they were right. But
then, Posh couldn’t be precise. I have failed to get any intelligible
account out of Posh as to that rum-flip orgy. All he could do was to
chuckle. The question of loyalty raised in the letter is a nice
one. But Posh and his kind would only answer it in one way. They
would regard it as treachery to their order to betray each other to a
“gennleman,” however kind the “gennleman,” may have been.
On April 4th FitzGerald wrote to Posh
from Woodbridge:—
“I may be at
Lowestoft some time next week. As it is I have still some engagements
here; and, moreover, I have not been quite well.
“If you want to see me, you have only
to come over here any day you choose. To-morrow (Sunday) there is a Train
from Lowestoft which reaches Woodbridge at about 3 in the afternoon. I
tell you this in case you might want to see or speak to me.
“Mr. Manby told me yesterday that
there was a wonderful catch of Mackerel down in the West. I have no doubt
that this warm weather and fine nights has to do with it. I believe that
we are in for a spell of such weather:—but I suppose you have no thought of
going Westward now.
“I have desired that a . . . [word
missing] of the Green Paint which Mr. Silver used should be sent to you.
But do not you wait for it, if you want to be about the
Lugger at once. The paint will keep for
another time: and I suppose that the sooner the Lugger is afloat this hot and
dry weather the better.
“Remember me to your Family.
“Yours
always,
“E. FG.”
Mr. Manby has been already mentioned,
and we have previously heard of the excellence of Mr. Silver’s green
paint. But this letter must have been almost the last written by the
sleeping partner before the termination of the partnership; for on April the
12th Mr. W. T. Balls, of Lowestoft, valued the Meum and Tuum, and
“Herring and Mackerel Nets, Bowls, Warpropes, Ballast, and miscellaneous
Fishing Stock belonging jointly to Edward FitzGerald and Joseph Fletcher.”
FitzGerald had started Posh, put him
on his legs, and, as he believed, given him a chance to become a successful
“owner.” But the poet was weary of the
partnership. He had found it impossible to persuade Posh to keep accounts
such as should be kept in every business, and had been disappointed more than
once by the intemperance of the man. But as yet the kindly, generous-hearted
gentleman had no thought of breaking with his protégé altogether, or of
depriving him of the use of the Meum and Tuum or Henrietta,
both of which had been bought with his, FitzGerald’s, money. But he would
no longer be a partner. So Mr. Balls was called in to value the
stock-in-trade, with a view to arranging that a bill of sale for the half-value
to which FitzGerald was entitled should be given him, and that Posh should
thereafter carry on the business of a herring-boat owner by himself, subject to
the charge in favour of his old “guv’nor.”
Despite the various “squalls,” there
had, as yet, been no serious quarrel between these two. Indeed,
FitzGerald’s kind heart never forgot Posh, and the
fascination of the man. But for the future FitzGerald and Posh were no
longer partners. FitzGerald’s experience as a “herring merchant” was at
an end.
Previously to the termination of the
partnership FitzGerald had commissioned S. Laurence to paint a portrait of
Posh. On the 13th January, 1870, he wrote to Laurence from Woodbridge (Letters,
II, 113, Eversley Edition):—
“. . . If you were down here, I
think I should make you take a life-size Oil Sketch of the Head and Shoulders
of my Captain of the Lugger. You see by the enclosed” (a copy of the
photograph of 1870, no doubt) “that these are neither of them a bad sort: and
the Man’s Soul is every way as well proportioned, missing in nothing that may
become a Man, as I believe. He and I will, I doubt, part Company; well as
he likes me, which is perhaps as well as a sailor
cares for any one but Wife and Children: he likes to be, what he is born to be,
his own sole Master, of himself, and of other men. So now I have got him
a fair start, I think he will carry on the Lugger alone: I shall miss my Hobby,
which is no doubt the last I shall ride in this world: but I shall also get
eased of some Anxiety about the lives of a Crew for which I now feel
responsible. . . .”
On January 20th FitzGerald wrote
another letter to Laurence on the same subject.
“. . . I should certainly like a
large Oil-sketch like Thackeray’s, done in your most hasty, and worst, style,
to hang up with Thackeray and Tennyson, with whom he shares a certain Grandeur
of Soul and Body. As you guess, the colouring is (when the Man is all
well) the finest Saxon type: with that complexion which Montaigne calls ‘vif, Mâle, et flamboyant’; blue eyes; and strictly
auburn hair, that any woman might sigh to possess. He says it is coming
off, as it sometimes does from those who are constantly wearing the close, hot
Sou’-westers. We must see what can be done about a Sketch” (Letters,
II, 115, Eversley Edition).
In February of the same year
FitzGerald went down to Lowestoft, and wrote another letter from there with
reference to the proposed portrait (Letters, II, 115, Eversley
Edition). It is obvious from these letters that there was no bitterness
on his side which led to the ending of the partnership. His
long-suffering endured to the last.
“My
dear Laurence,
“. . . I came here a few days ago, for
the benefit of my old Doctor, The Sea, and my Captain’s Company, which is as
good. He has not yet got his new Lugger home;
but will do so this week, I hope; and then the way for us will be somewhat
clearer.
“If you sketch a head, you might send
it down to me to look at, so as I might be able to guess if there were any
likelihood in that way of proceeding. Merely the Lines of Feature
indicated, even by Chalk, might do. As I told you, the Head is of the
large type, or size, the proper Capital of a six-foot Body, of the broad
dimensions you see in the Photograph. The fine shape of the Nose, less
than Roman, and more than Greek, scarce appears in the Photograph; the Eye, and
its delicate Eyelash, of course will remain to be made out; and I think you
excel in the Eye.
“When I get home (which I shall do
this week) I will send you two little Papers about the Sea words and Phrases
used hereabout, for which this Man (quite unconsciously) is my main
Authority. You will see in them a little of his
simplicity of Soul; but not the Justice of Thought, Tenderness of Nature, and
all other good Gifts which make him a Gentleman of Nature’s grandest Type.”
The new Lugger was, of course,
the Henrietta. The portrait was, according to Posh, painted
during the summer at Little Grange, the house which FitzGerald built for
himself, or rather altered for himself, at Woodbridge. Dr. Aldis Wright
was under the impression that the portrait was never finished; but Posh is very
certain about it. “I mind settin’ as still as a cat at a mouse-hole,”
says he, “for ten min’t or a quarter of an hour at a time, on and off, and then
a stretchin’ o’ my legs in the yard. Ah! I was somethin’ glad when
that wuz finished, that I was! Tired! Lor! I niver knowed as dewin’
narthen’ would tire ye like that. The picter was sold at Mr. FitzGerald’s
sale, and bought by Billy Hynes o’ Bury St. Edmunds. He kep’ a public there. I reckon he’s dead by now.”
Up to the date of going to press I
have been unable to trace this portrait, and it is, of course, possible, that
in spite of Posh’s vivid recollection, Dr. Aldis Wright’s impression may be the
right one.
A letter to Laurence of August 2nd,
1870, corroborates Posh to the extent of proving that the painter had certainly
seen the fisherman. On that date FitzGerald wrote (Letters, II,
118, Eversley Edition):—
“. . . The Lugger is now preparing in
the Harbour beside me; the Captain here, there, and everywhere; with a word for
no one but on business; the other side of the Man you saw looking for Birds’
Nests: all things in their season. I am sure the Man is fit to be King of
a Kingdom as well as of a Lugger. . . .
“I declare, you and I have seen A
Man! Have we not? Made in the mould of what Humanity
should be, Body and Soul, a poor Fisherman. The proud Fellow had better
have kept me for a Partner in some of his responsibilities. But no; he
must rule alone, as is right he should too. . . .”
Yes. It would certainly have
been better for Posh if he had kept his “guv’nor” for a partner. But the
“squalls,” the occasional beer bouts (or “settin’ ins,” as they call them in
East Anglia), had excited the spirit of independence of my gentleman.
Possibly FitzGerald himself had, by too open a display of his admiration for
his partner, this typical longshoreman, contributed to the personal
self-satisfaction which must have been at the bottom of the man’s reasons for
wishing to be free of one who had befriended him so delicately and so
generously. Posh himself admits, or rather boasts, that the “break” was
owing to his own action. From first to last it seems that FitzGerald, the
cultured gentleman, the scholar, the poet of perfect
language and profound philosophy, regarded Posh as almost more than
man—certainly as more than average man—and there can be no greater token of the
sweet simplicity of the scholar.
In September, 1870 (which would be
just before the home voyage began and after the Northern voyage was over), Posh
seems to have “celebrated” more than his whilome partner and then mortgagee
thought proper. On the 8th of the month FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding:—
“. . . I had a letter from Posh
yesterday, telling me he was sorry we had not ‘parted Friends.’ That he
had been indeed ‘a little the worse for Drink’—which means being at
a Public-house half the Day, and having to sleep it off the remainder: having
been duly warned by his Father at Noon that all had been ready for sailing 2
hours before, and all the other Luggers gone. As Posh
could walk, I suppose he only acknowledges a little Drink;
but, judging by what followed on that little Drink, I wish he had simply
acknowledged his Fault. He begs me to write: if I do so I must speak very
plainly to him: that, with all his noble Qualities, I doubt I can never again
have Confidence in his Promise to break this one bad Habit, seeing that He has
broken it so soon, when there was no occasion or excuse: unless it were the
thought of leaving his Wife so ill at home. The Man is so beyond others,
as I think, that I have come to feel that I must not condemn him by general
rule; nevertheless, if he ask me, I can refer him to no other. I must
send him back his own written Promise of Sobriety, signed only a month before
he broke it so needlessly: and I must even tell him that I know not yet if he
can be left with the Mortgage as we settled it in May. . . .
“P.S.—I enclose Posh’s letter, and the
answer I propose to give to it. I am sure it
makes me sad and ashamed to be setting up for Judge on a much nobler Creature
than myself. . . . I had thought of returning him his written Promise as
worthless: desiring back my direction to my Heirs that he should keep on the
Lugger in case of my Death. . . . I think Posh ought to be made to feel
this severely: and, as his Wife is better I do not mind making him feel it if I
can. On the other hand, I do not wish to drive Him, by Despair, into the
very fault which I have so tried to cure him of. . . .”
His mother did not try to excuse him
at all: his father would not even see him go off. She merely told me
parenthetically, “I tell him he seem to do it when the Governor is here.”
If FitzGerald had not set poor Posh
(for in a way I am sorry for the old fellow) on a pedestal, he would have
understood that to a longshoreman or herring fisher who drinks it (there are many teetotallers now), “bare” can never be
regarded as an enemy. Posh did not think any excuse was necessary for
having had, perhaps, more than he could conveniently carry. It was his
last day ashore (though I can’t quite understand what fishing he was going on
unless the herring came down earlier than they do now), and he was “injyin’ of
hisself.” In the old days they took a cask or so aboard. This is
never done now, and the chief drink aboard is cocoa (pronounced, as FitzGerald
writes, “cuckoo”). Posh no doubt thought himself hard done by that such a
fuss should have been made about a “drarp o’ bare.” He doubtless wished
that FitzGerald should forgive him. For, despite his conduct, he did, I
truly believe, love his “guv’nor.” As for the father and mother, well,
they smoothed down the “gennleman” and sympathised with their son according to
their kind and to mother nature. The Direction to FitzGerald’s Heirs,
which he refers to, is still in existence, and reads
as follows:—
“Lowestoft, January 20th,
1870.
“I hereby desire my Heirs executors
and Assigns not to call in the Principal of any Mortgage by which Joseph
Fletcher the younger of Lowestoft stands indebted to me; provided he duly pays
the Interest thereon; does his best to pay off the Principal; and does his best
also to keep up the value of the Property so mortgaged until he pays it off.
“This I hereby desire and enjoin on my
heirs executors or assigns solemnly as any provision made by Word or Deed while
. . . [word missing] any other legal document.
“Edward FitzGerald.”
This solemn injunction was written on
a sheet of note-paper, and in the fold, over a sixpenny stamp, FitzGerald
wrote: “This paper I now endorse again on legal stamp, so
as to give it the authority I can. Edward FitzGerald, July 31, 1870.”
Surely never man had so kind and
considerate a friend as Posh had in FitzGerald!
CHAPTER XVI
THE SALE OF THE SCANDAL
Though the partnership was over,
FitzGerald by no means gave up his friendship for Posh. From time to time
he saw him, and from time to time he wrote to him, and always he retained the
affection for the longshoreman which had sprung up in him so suddenly and (I
fear) so unaccountably.
On February 5th, 1871, FitzGerald
wrote to Mr. Spalding:—
“. . . Posh and his Father are very
busy getting the Meum and Tuum ready for the West; Jemmy, who
goes Captain, is just now in France with a Cargoe of salt
Herrings. I suppose the Lugger will start in a fortnight or so. . .
. All-fours at night.”
In April of the same year
FitzGerald wrote to Posh:—
“Woodbridge, Monday.
“Dear
Posh,
“Come any day you please. The
Horse Fair is on Friday, you had better come, at any rate; by Thursday, so as
to catch the Market. For I think your Lugger must have got away before
that.
“A letter written by Ablett Pasefield
[otherwise called Percival] yesterday tells me there are four Lowestoft Luggers
in Weymouth. I fancy that even if they were on the Fishing ground, the
wind must be too strong to be at work.
“It was Mr. Kerrich who died suddenly
this day week—and I suppose is being buried this very day.
“Yours,
E. FG.
“Mr. Berry tells me that the Poultry
Show here is on Thursday. You can, as I say, come any Day you
please. I see the Wind is got West, after the
squalls of Hail.”
Ablett Pasefield (or Percival), the
fisherman and yacht hand, has been mentioned before, and will be mentioned
again. He was one of FitzGerald’s favourites. Mr. Kerrich was
FitzGerald’s brother-in-law, the husband of the poet’s favourite sister, who
had predeceased him in 1863. On August 5th in that year FitzGerald wrote
to Professor Cowell (Letters, II, 46, Eversley Edition): “. . . I have
lost my sister Kerrich, the only one of my family I much cared for, or who much
cared for me.”
* * * *
*
Mr. Kerrich lived at Geldeston Hall,
near Beccles, which is still in possession of the same family.
Mr. Berry (as we know) was
FitzGerald’s landlord at Markethill, Woodbridge.
At this time Posh was a man of means,
and drove his smart gig and mare, and it was with some idea of buying a new
horse that he was to go to Woodbridge Horse
Fair. In the seventies the horse fairs of Norwich and other East Anglian
towns were important functions. The Rommany gryengroes had not then all
gone to America, and those who know their George Borrow will remember with
delight his description of the scene at the horse fair on Norwich Castle Hill,
when Jasper Petulengro first brought himself to the recollection of Lavengro
(or the “sap-engro”) as his “pal”—that memorable day when George Borrow saw the
famous entire Norfolk cob Marshland Shales led amongst bared heads, blind and
grey with age, but triumphant in his unequalled fame (Lavengro, p. 74,
Minerva Edition).
But Posh bought no new horse.
And his recollection does not permit of any trustworthy account of his visit.
Perhaps it was during this trip to
Woodbridge (and the carping reader will be justified in saying “and perhaps it
wasn’t”) that Posh witnessed the curious and
characteristic meeting between FitzGerald and his wife.
If this meeting were characteristic,
still more so was the history of the marriage.
FitzGerald had been a great friend of
Bernard Barton, the Woodbridge quaker poet, and on the death of his friend he
wished to save Miss Barton from being thrown on the world almost destitute and
almost friendless. The only way of doing it without creating scandal (and
he changed the name of his yacht from the Shamrock to
the Scandal because he said that scandal was the principal
commodity of Woodbridge) was to make her his wife. This he did. But
there were many reasons why the marriage was not likely to prove a happy
one. It did not, and both parties recognised that the wisest thing to do
was to separate without any unnecessary fuss. They did so. And no
doubt their action proved to be for the happiness of each of them.
Posh was walking with
FitzGerald on one occasion down Quay Lane, Woodbridge, when Mrs. FitzGerald
(who was living at Gorleston at the time, but had gone over to Woodbridge,
possibly to see some old friends) appeared walking towards them.
FitzGerald removed the glove he was wearing on his right hand. Mrs.
FitzGerald removed the glove she was wearing on her right hand. There was
a momentary hesitation as the husband passed the wife. But Posh thinks
that the two hands did not meet. FitzGerald bowed with all his courtesy,
and passed on.
Posh says that Mrs. FitzGerald was a
“fine figure of a woman.” And I believe that she was, indeed, so fine a
figure of a woman that the length of her stride excited the admiration of the
local schoolboys when she was still Miss Barton. She was older than
FitzGerald when he married her, and both were nearer fifty than forty.
In this context I give the following
letter from FitzGerald to Posh, though I have been
unable to fix its date with any certainty.
“Woodbridge, Tuesday.
“Dear
Posh,
“I find that I may very likely have to
go to London on Thursday—not to be home till Friday perhaps. If I do this
it will be scarce worth while your coming over here to-morrow, so far as I am
concerned; though you will perhaps see Newson.
“Poor young Smith of the Sportsman was
brought home ill last week, and died of the very worst Small Pox in a Day or
two. There have been three Deaths from it here: all from
London. As young Smith died in Quay Lane leading down to
the Boat Inn, I should not like you to be about there with any chance of
Danger, though I have been up and down several times myself.
“Ever
yours,
“E. FG.”
“The Sportsman” was a public-house
at Woodbridge, and it is probable that FitzGerald had
helped “poor young Smith” substantially. His anxiety lest Posh should
contract smallpox, and his indifference as to himself, are admirably
illustrative of the man’s unselfishness.
But now that the partnership was at an
end he began to frequent Lowestoft less. During 1871 he sold the Scandal,
and on September 4th he wrote to Dr. Aldis Wright from Woodbridge (Letters,
II, p. 126, Eversley Edition): “I run over to Lowestoft occasionally for a few
days, but do not abide there long: no longer having my dear little Ship for
company. . . .”
Who bought the Scandal I
do not know. Posh has no recollection, and Dr. Aldis Wright has been
unable to trace with certainty the subsequent owner of her, though he has
reason to think that she was sold to Sir Cuthbert Quilter. She had served
her purpose. She was, as Posh assures me, a “fast and handy little
schooner.”
After her sale FitzGerald
still remained the mortgagee of the Meum and Tuum and
the Henrietta. But this was not to last indefinitely.
Posh’s spirit of independence and love of “bare” were fated to put an end to
all business relations between his old “guv’nor” and him.
CHAPTER XVII
BY ORDER OF THE MORTGAGEE
Matters were still progressing fairly
satisfactorily when FitzGerald visited Lowestoft in September, 1872. On
the 29th of that month he wrote to Mr. Spalding:—
“. . . Posh—after no fish caught for 3
weeks—has had his boat come home with nearly all her fleet of nets torn to
pieces in last week’s winds. . . . he . . . went with me to the theatre
afterwards, where he admired the ‘Gays,’ as he called the Scenes; but fell
asleep before Shylock had whetted his knife in the Merchant of Venice. . . .”
“Gays” is East Anglian for pictures.
* * * *
*
Towards the end of 1873 relations
began to be severely strained between mortgagor and
mortgagee. On December the 31st FitzGerald wrote from 12 Marine Terrace,
Lowestoft:—
“12 Marine Terrace,
“December 31.
“Joseph
Fletcher,
“As you cannot talk with me without
confusion, I write a few words to you on the subject of the two grievances
which you began about this morning.
“1st. As to your being under your
Father: I said no such thing: but wrote that he was to be either Partner,
or (with your Mother) constantly employed, and consulted with as to the
Boats. It is indeed for their sakes, and that of your
own Family, that I have come to take all this trouble
“2ndly. As to the Bill of Sale
to me. If you could be calm enough, you would see that this would be a
Protection to yourself. You do not pay your different
Creditors all their Bill at the year’s end. Now,
if any one of these should happen to want all his
Money; he might, by filing a Bankruptcy against you, seize upon your Nets and
everything else you have to pay his Debt.
“As to your supposing that I should
use the Bill of Sale except in the last necessity (which I do not calculate
upon), you prove that you can have but little remembrance of what I have
hitherto done for you and am still willing to do for your Family’s sake quite
as much as for your own.
“The Nets were included in the
Valuation which Mr. Balls made of the whole Property; which valuation (as you
ought to remember) I reduced even lower than Mr. Balls’ Valuation; which you
yourself thought too low at the time. Therefore (however much the Nets,
&c. may have been added to since) surely I have the first
claim on them in Justice, if not by the Mortgage. I repeat, however, that
I proposed the Bill of Sale quite as much as a Protection
to yourself and yours as to myself.
“If you cannot see all this on
reflection, there is no use my talking or writing more about it. You may
ask Mr. Barnard, if you please, or any such competent person, if they object
to the Bill of Sale, I shall not insist. But you had better let me know
what you decide on before the end of the week when I shall be going home, that
I may arrange accordingly.
“Edward FitzGerald.”
Mr. Barnard was a Lowestoft lawyer for
whom Posh had no great love. It is hardly necessary to say that he did
not “ask” him. He still raises his voice and gets excited when he
discusses the grievances of which he made complaint in the winter of
1873. “He wouldn’t leave me alone,” says Posh. “It was ‘yew must ax
yar faa’er this, an’ yew must let yar mother that, and yew mustn’t dew this
here, nor yit that theer.’ At last I up an’
says, ‘Theer! I ha’ paid ivery farden o’ debts. Look a here.
Here be the receipts. Now I’ll ha’e no more on it.’ And I slammed
my fist down like this here.”
(Posh’s fist came down on my
Remington’s table till the bell jangled!)
“‘Oh dear! oh dear, Posh!’ says
he. ‘That it should ever come ta this! And hev yew anything left
oover?’
“‘Yes,’ I say. ‘I’ve got a
matter of a hunnerd an’ four pound clear arter payin’ ivery farden owin’, an’
the stock an’ nets an’ gear and tew boots [184] an’ all wha’ss
mortgaged ta yew. Now I’ll ha’e no more on’t. Ayther I’m master or
I ha’ done wi’t.’
“‘Oh dear! oh dear! Posh,’ he
say, ‘I din’t think as yew’d made so much.’”
That is Posh’s account of the final
disagreement which led to the sale of the boats in 1874. Even if it be
true one cannot say that the bluff independence came off with flying colours in
this particular instance. But FitzGerald could
have told another story, if one may judge from his letter to Mr. Spalding of
the 9th January, 1874, written from Lowestoft:—
“. . . I have seen no more of Fletcher
since I wrote, though he called once when I was out. . . . I only hope he
has taken no desperate step. I hope so for his Family’s sake, including
Father and Mother. People here have asked me if he is not going to give
up the business, &c. Yet there is Greatness about the Man. I
believe his want of Conscience in some particulars is to be referred to
his Salwaging Ethics; and your Cromwells, Cæsars, and
Napoleons have not been more scrupulous. But I shall part Company with
him if I can do so without Injury to his Family. If not I must let him go
on under some ‘Surveillance’: he must wish
to get rid of me also, and (I believe, though he says not) of the
Boat, if he could better himself.”
Posh’s story is that after
the letter of December 31st, 1873, FitzGerald tried to find him. He went
to his father’s house, and (says Posh, which we are at liberty to doubt) “cried
like a child.” He sent Posh a paper of conditions which must be agreed to
if he, Posh, were to continue to have the use of the Meum and Tuum and
the Henrietta. The last one was (Posh says, with a roar of
indignation), “that the said Joseph Fletcher the younger shall be a
teetotaller!”
“Lor’!” says Posh, “how my father did
swear at him when I told him o’ that!”
No doubt he did. And no doubt in
the presence of FitzGerald the “slim” old Lowestoft longshoreman raised his
mighty voice in wrath and indignation that he should have begotten a son to
disgrace him so cruelly! FitzGerald was too open a man, too
honest-hearted, too straightforward to understand that a father could encourage
his son insidiously, and swear at him, FitzGerald, at
the same time as he deprecated that son’s conduct. But FitzGerald’s eyes,
long closed by kindness, were partly open at last. He would not go on
without some better guarantee of conduct, some better security that the boats’
debts would be paid. On January 19th, 1874, he wrote to Posh (and the
handwriting of the letter suggests disturbance of mind) from Woodbridge:—
“I forgot to say, Fletcher, that I
shall pay for any work done to my two Boats, in case that you get another Boat
to employ the Nets in. That you should get such another
Boat, is, I am quite sure, the best plan for you and for me also. As I
wrote you before, I shall make over to you all my Right to the Nets on
condition that you use them, or change them for others to be used, in the
Herring Fishing, in any other Boat which you may buy or hire. I certainly
shall not let you have the use of my Boats, unless under some conditions, none of
which which [sic] you seemed resolved to submit
to. It will save all trouble if you take the offer I have made you, and
the sooner it is settled the better.
“Edward FitzGerald.”
But Posh “worn’t a goin’ ta hev his
faa’er put oover him, nor he worn’t a goin’ ta take no pledge. Did ye
iver hear o’ sich a thing?”
So in due course, on the 17th
February, 1874, Mr. W. T. Balls, of Lowestoft, sold by auction the
“Lugger Meum and Tuum” (she had been converted into a dandy-rigged
craft about 1872) “and the Henrietta by direction of Edward
FitzGerald as mortgagee.”
So Mr. Balls writes me. But he
has no letters from FitzGerald, and was kind enough to look up the valuation
and sale transactions in his books at my request.
The Meum and Tuum was
a favourite of Posh’s and he tried to buy her for himself. But although she had only cost £360 to build in 1867, in 1874
she fetched over £300, and Posh could not go so high as that. So he made
other arrangements, and his fishing interests with FitzGerald were finally
ended.
One would have thought that there
would be no more letters beginning “Dear Posh.” But though FitzGerald had
found himself obliged to end his association with Posh in the herring fishing,
he never ended his friendship, even if, during the last years of his life, he
neither saw nor wrote to his former partner.
The Meum and Tuum made
several more voyages in the North Sea and to the west, and, when she was no
longer strictly seaworthy, was sold to a Mr. Crisp, of Beccles, a maltster and
general provision merchant, who turned her into a storeship, and anchored her
off his wharf in the river Waveney. When she became so rotten as to be
unfit even for a storage ship she was broken up, and
her name-board was bought by Captain Kerrich, of Geldeston Hall (the son of
FitzGerald’s favourite sister), who was kind enough to present it to the Omar
Khayyám Club. But as the club has no “local habitation”—only a name—it
now remains in the charge of Mr. Frederic Hudson, one of the founders of the
club.
CHAPTER XVIII
UNTO THIS LAST
Posh does not remember the last
occasion on which he spoke to his old “guv’nor,” but he says that whenever he
did see him he, FitzGerald, would take him by the blue woollen jersey and pinch
him, and say, “Oh dear, oh dear, Posh! To think it should ha’ come to
this.” Well, this may possibly have been the case. There is no
doubt that FitzGerald resumed friendly relations with the fisherman, for on
August 29th, 1875, he wrote from Woodbridge to his former partner:—
“Woodbridge, August 29.
“Dear
Posh,
“I have posted you a Lowestoft Paper
telling you something of the Regatta there. But as you say you like to
hear from me also, I write to supply what the Paper
does not tell: though I wonder you can care to hear of such things in the midst
of your Fishing.
“I, and every one else, made sure that
the little Sapphire would do well when it came on to blow on
Thursday: she went to her moorings as none of the others did except the Red
Rover. But, directly the Gun fired, the Otter (an
awkward thing) drove down upon, and broke up her Chain-plates, or stenctions [sic],
to which the wire rigging holds: so she could not sail at all: and the Red
Rover got the Prize, after going only two rounds
instead of three: which is odd work, I think. Major Leathes’
mast went over in the first round, as it did a year ago. At Evening,
the Otter grounded as she lay by the South Pier: and would
have knocked her bottom out had not Ablett Pasifull gone off to her and made
them hoist their main-sail.
“Ablett and Jack got more and more
uncomfortable with their new Owner, who is a Fool as
well as a Screw. At last Ablett told him that he himself and Jack had
almost been on the point of leaving him, and that, I think, will
bring him to his senses, if anything can.
“On Friday we saw Mushell coming
in deeply laden, and we heard how he had just missed putting three lasts on
board of you. I sent off a Telegram to you that same evening, as Mushell
knew you would be anxious to know that he had come in safe through the wind and
Sea of Thursday night. He was to have started away again on Sunday: but
one of his men who had gone home had not returned by one o’clock, when I came
away. This, I always say, is one of the Dangers of coming
home, but, as Things were, Mushell could scarce help it,
though he had better have gone to Yarmouth to sell his Fish. He seems a
good Fellow.
“All these mishaps—I wonder any man
can carry on the trade! I think I would rather
be in my own little Punt again. But, while you will go on, you know I
will stand by you. Your mare is well, and the sore on her Shoulder nearly
gone. Mr. and Mrs. Howe send their Regards. Cowell is gone off to
Devonshire instead of coming to meet me at Lowestoft: but I dare say I shall
run over there again before long.
“Yours
always,
“E. FG.”
The “little Sapphire” I
cannot identify. One gentleman has been kind enough to try to help me,
and thinks that she was the Scandal. But this cannot be so,
for the Scandal was built for FitzGerald at Wyvenhoe in 1863,
was first called the Shamrock and then the Scandal.
Personally, I remember the names of a good many of the yachts of the Norfolk
and Suffolk coast of the period, but I can’t identify the Sapphire.
The Red Rover was a river craft, a cutter, with the one big
jib of our river craft instead of jib and foresail,
belonging to the late Mr. Sam Nightingale, of Lacon’s Brewery. She was
originally about twelve tons, but by improvements and additions, when Mr.
Nightingale died in the eighties, was eighteen tons. For many years she
was the fastest yacht in the Norfolk and Suffolk Yacht Club, and though she was
occasionally beaten on fluky days she never lost possession of the challenge
cup for long. Fred Baldry, who steered her with extraordinary skill, is,
I believe, still alive, and lives on Cobholm Island, Yarmouth.
The Red Rover was not
only successful on the rivers and Broads, but in the Yarmouth Roads. I
was on her when she was beating the famous Thames twenty-tonner Vanessa,
when the Red Rover carried away her bowsprit (a new stick) as
she was beating on the sands to dodge the tide, and I remember how we were
hooted all the way up Gorleston Harbour when Mr. William Hall’s steam launch
towed us in.
I believe that when the
little ten-ton Buttercup (unbeaten at her best) came down and
gave the poor old Red Rover the worst dressing down she had
ever experienced it broke Mr. Nightingale’s heart. He died soon after,
and he left a direction in his will that the Red Rover should
be broken up and burnt. It would, I think, have been a kinder and better
direction to have left the yacht to Fred Baldry, who had steered her to victory
so often.
Although I have described her as a
river yacht, she was purely a racing machine, and used to be accompanied (in
the home waters at all events) by a wherry, with all spare spars and sails, on
which everything unnecessary for sailing was stowed before the starting gun was
fired.
Once a year she carried a picnic party
over Breydon Water, on which occasion, I believe, Mrs. Nightingale was
invariably seasick going over to Breydon. Neither Mr. nor Mrs.
Nightingale ever used her for pleasure except on that
one annual excursion up to Reedham.
Well, well! There are no Red
Rovers now, and no Fred Baldrys coming on. But there are plenty
of stinking black tugs and filthy coal barges embellishing the lovely Norfolk
waters. I do not wonder that Colonel Leathes, mentioned in the last
quoted letter, has taken his yacht off the public waters and
confined her to the beautiful wooded reaches of Fritton Mere.
The Otter was a rival
of the Red Rover in the early days of the latter yacht, and
was a clumsy, rather ugly, ketch-rigged craft belonging to Sir Arthur
Preston. Major Leathes’ (now Colonel Leathes) boat was a yawl named
the Waveney Queen, and the Colonel tells me that he carried away
his mast twice, each time because he would “carry on” too long.
I can’t ascertain who was the “new
owner” of Ablett Percival and Jack—and if I could I suppose it wouldn’t do to
name him, in view of FitzGerald’s stringent criticism
of him. Subsequently Jack Newson went on the Mars, the
sea-going craft belonging to the late J. J. Colman, m.p., but this was later than 1875.
“Mushell” was the nickname of Joe
Butcher, the former skipper of the Henrietta, under Posh, as owner.
I must admit that this letter is hard
to fit in with the year 1875, when the Meum and Tuum and
the Henrietta had been sold, and the separation between Posh
and his “guv’nor” final, so far as herring fishing was concerned. The
last paragraph, in which FitzGerald writes that so long as Posh goes on he will
stand by him, seems in flat contradiction to what happened in 1874. But
Colonel Leathes puts the date as 1875, and Dr. Aldis Wright has been kind
enough to look up old almanacs in his possession and corroborates this
view. It speaks with extraordinary eloquence of FitzGerald’s affection
for Posh, of his patience with the man, that after the
want of recognition of his kindness shown in 1874 he should have written to him
in such a manner in 1875.
“Mr. and Mrs. Howe” were, as I have
stated before, the caretakers at Little Grange. “Cowell” was, no doubt,
Professor Cowell, though it seems strange that FitzGerald should have mentioned
him to Posh without any prefix to his name.
That is the last letter in which I can
find any reference to Posh, and the last letter in Posh’s possession which was
written to him. I dare say there were later letters, but if so they have
been destroyed.
FitzGerald had tried a new experiment,
and it was ended.
Myself, when young, did eagerly
frequent
Doctor and Saint, and heard great argument
About it and about: but evermore
Came out by the same door wherein I went.
He had found a new love, a new
interest, and believed that he had found a new trustworthiness. But he returned through the same door by which he entered; and
he was an old man for disillusionment.
Posh was, no doubt, rude, harsh,
overbearing with the old gentleman, but his eyes grow moist now when he speaks
of him. I think he would surrender a good deal of his boasted
independence if only he could have FitzGerald for his friend again.
The last time he was with me I read
him
The Moving Finger writes; and, having
writ,
Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it.
“Well tha’ss a rum un!” said Posh.
THE END
william brendon and son, ltd.
printers, plymouth
In East
Anglia “boat” is pronounced to rhyme with “foot.”
***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
EDWARD FITZGERALD AND "POSH"***
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