Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
that expectation that naturally surrounds the holder of such a prize. Certainly he
continued to display real ability in his studies, but again with that indiscipline and
smartness that would have aroused the severe displeasure of his meticulous father. The
Rector’s old friend, Dr Passingham of Trinity, did his best to maintain a paternalistic eye
on the young man’s doings and would, from time to time, communicate discreet pastoral
reports on his progress back to Northamptonshire. It was not long before such reports
became troublesome to Dr Daunt.
From Le Grice, I received accounts of a number of incidents witnessed by him
that testify to a distinct shabbiness of character, and which luridly corroborate the more
sober notes of concern that flowed, with increasing frequency, between the Master’s
Lodge at Trinity and Evenwood Rectory.
The first might perhaps be seen as an undergraduate prank (though it was not so
construed by his father when it was reported to him). On being good-humouredly
reprimanded by the Dean of the College, for some trivial misdemeanour, young Daunt
placed a game hamper before that gentleman’s door, directed to him ‘With Mr Daunt’s
compliments’. When opened, the hamper was found to contain a dead cat, with an escort
of five skinned rats. On being arraigned and questioned, Daunt coolly maintained his
innocence, arguing that he would hardly have affixed his own name to the hamper had he
been the culprit. And so he was released with due apology.
The second incident is more substantial, with respect to Daunt’s developing
character.
He had been invited to a dinner given by the Provost. At the head of the table, Dr
Okes? sat in earnest discussion with the College’s Visitor, Bishop Kaye, whilst on either
side a dozen or so men conversed at their ease. Daunt, one of three freshmen present,
found himself sitting next to Le Grice; on the other side of the table sat a senior Fellow of
the College, Dr George Maxton, a gentlemen well advanced in years and of much
impaired hearing.
Towards the conclusion of the meal, Daunt leaned forward and, with a fixed
smile, spoke to this venerable figure.
‘Well, Dr Maxton, and how are you enjoying yourself?’
The good gentleman, seeing himself addressed, but hearing nothing above the
surrounding chatter, merely smiled back and nodded.
‘You think it a pretty fair spread, do you, you old fool?’ Another nod.
Daunt continued, still smiling.
‘The oysters were barely tolerable, the hock execrable, the conversation tiresome,
and yet you have found it all perfectly to your taste. What a rattlepate you are.’
He persisted in this impertinent and insulting vein for some minutes, making the
most uncomplimentary remarks to the poor deaf gentleman across the table as though he
were discoursing on the most common topics. All the while, Dr Maxton, unaware of what
was really being said to him, received the young man’s impudence with mute gestures of
touching courtesy.
There were other – indeed numerous – instances of such behaviour during
Daunt’s time at the Varsity, all of them displaying an innate viciousness and egotism. I
eagerly read Le Grice’s reports, which formed the beginnings of what was to become an
extensive repository of information concerning the history and character of Phoebus
Daunt.
I would be revenged on him. This became an article of faith with me. But I must
first come to know him as I knew myself: his family, his friends and acquaintances, his
places of resort – all the externalities of his life; and then the internal impulsions: his
hopes and fears, his uncertainties and desires, his ambitions, and all the secret corners of
his heart. Only when the subject of Phoebus Rainsford Daunt had been completely
mastered would I know where the blow should fall that would bring catastrophe upon
him. For the moment, I must bide my time, until I returned to England, to begin setting
my plans in motion.
At Evenwood, Dr Daunt’s great work on the Duport Library was drawing to its
triumphant close after nearly eight years’ labour. It had become a famous enterprise, with
articles on its progress appearing regularly in the periodical press, and the publication of
the final catalogue, with its attendant notes and commentaries, was eagerly awaited by
the community of scholars and collectors, both in England and on the Continent. The
Rector had written and received hundreds of letters during the course of his work, to the
extent that Lord Tansor had agreed to hire an amanuensis to assist him in the completion
of the great task. His own private secretary, Mr Paul Carteret, had also been seconded to
help the Rector when required; and so, aided by this little team, and driven daily by his
own unbounded eagerness and energy, the end was now in sight.
Mr Carteret’s assistance had proved invaluable, especially his extensive
knowledge of the Duport family, of which he was himself a member. His familiarity with
the family papers, stored in the Muniments Room at Evenwood, enabled Dr Daunt to
establish where, when, and from whom the twenty-third Baron Tansor had purchased
particular items, as well as the provenance of some of the books in the Collection that had
been acquired in earlier times. To Mr Carteret was also delegated the important and
demanding task of listing and describing the manuscript holdings, which were a
particular interest of his.
Lord Tansor had wanted a superior kind of stock-take; but he was not so much the
Philistine that he did not feel satisfied by the true nature of his asset, or pride in what had
been laid down by his grandfather for the benefit of posterity. Its material value proved,
in the end, difficult to calculate, except that it was almost beyond price; but its worth in
other terms had been indubitably confirmed by Dr Daunt’s work, and it now stood to the
world as one of the most important collections of its kind in Europe. For this
confirmation alone, and the great renown it threw on his name by the publication of the
catalogue, Lord Tansor was well pleased.
The intellectual and artistic glories of the Duport Collection had come to him
from his grandfather through his father. To whom would they now pass? How could they
be transmitted, intact, to the next generation, and to the next, and to their heirs and
descendants, and thus become a living symbol of the continuity his soul craved? For still
no heir had been vouchsafed to his union with the second Lady Tansor. In his Lordship’s
mind, the completion of Dr Daunt’s work merely served to underscore his precarious
dynastic position. His wife was now a poor stick of a woman, who meekly followed her
husband around, in town and country, forlorn and ineffectual. There was, it seemed, no
hope.
It was just at this time that Lord Tansor – egged on, I suspect, by his relative, Mrs
Daunt – began to lavish signs of especial favour on the Rector’s son. What follows is
based on information I obtained some years after the events described.
During the Long Vacation of 1839, Lord Tansor began to express the opinion that
it would be good for the young man if he ‘ran around a little’, by which his Lordship
meant to imply that a period of harmless leisure would not go amiss, even for so
accomplished a scholar. He suggested that a few weeks spent in Park-lane, whither he
was himself about to repair with Lady Tansor, would be productive of useful amusement
for the young. The young man’s step-mamma fairly purred with delight to hear Lord
Tansor expatiating so enthusiastically on what might be done for her step-son by way of a
social education.
As to his future, once his time at the Varsity was over, the young man himself
expressed a certain open-mindedness on the subject, which, doubtless, alarmed his father,
but which may not have been displeasing to Lord Tansor, whose tacit nods as the lad held
forth on the various possibilities that might lay before him after taking his degree – none
of which involved ordination and one of which, a career in letters, went completely
against his father’s inclinations – were observed and inwardly deplored by the helpless
Rector.
That summer, Phoebus Daunt duly ‘ran around a little’ under the watchful eye of
Lord Tansor. The debauchery was not excessive. A succession of tedious dinners in
Park-lane, at which Cabinet ministers, political journalists of the more serious persuasion,
distinguished ecclesiastics, military and naval magnates, and other public men,
predominated; for light relief, an afternoon concert in the Park, or an expedition to the
races (which he particularly enjoyed). Then to Cowes for some sailing and a succession
of cheerful parties. ‘My Rector’s boy, up at the Varsity. [Sotto voce] Very sound chap.
Got what it takes. Showing him around a bit. That’s the way.’
He would hold the flat of his right hand out stiffly, fingers and thumb closed tight
together, arm bent at the elbow, just behind the boy’s back, as he introduced him.
‘Phoebus, my boy’ – he had taken to calling him ‘my boy’ – ‘this is Lord Cotterstock, my
neighbour. He would like to meet you.’ ‘Phoebus, my boy, have you made the
acquaintance yet of Mrs Gough-Palmer, wife of the Ambassador?’ ‘The Prime Minister
will be down tomorrow, my boy, and I should like you to meet him.’ And Phoebus would
meet them, and charm them, and generally throw back the rays of Lord Tansor’s good
opinion of him like a mirror until everyone was convinced that he was the very best
fellow alive.
And so it went on, for the rest of the vacation. On his return to Evenwood in
September, he seemed quite the man about town. A little taller, with a gloss and a
swagger about his manner that he had completely lacked as a schoolboy only a little time
before. A gloss, too, about his appearance, for Uncle Julius had sent him off to his tailor
and hatter, and his step-mamma quite caught her breath at the sight of the elegantly clad
figure in bright blue frock-coat, check trousers, chimney-pot hat, and sumptuous
waistcoat , together with incipient Dundreary whiskers, that descended from the Duport
coach.
From then on, whenever he returned to Evenwood, the undergraduate would find
himself immediately invited up to the great house to regale Lord Tansor with an account
of how he had comported himself during the previous term. It was gratifying to his
Lordship to hear how well the boy was regarded by his tutors, and what a great mark he
was making on the University. A Fellowship surely beckoned, he told Uncle Tansor,
though, speaking for himself, he did not feel that such a course quite accorded with his
talents. Lord Tansor concurred. He had little time for University men in general, and
would prefer to see the lad make his way in the great world of the metropolis. The lad
himself could only agree.
Of the making of Phoebus Rainsford Daunt there seemed to be no end. With each
passing month, Lord Tansor devised new ways to raise the young man up in the world,
and lost no opportunity to insinuate him into the best circles, and put him in the way of
meeting people who, like Lord Tansor himself, mattered.
On the last day of December, 1840, in the midst of his last year at the University,
Daunt attained his majority, and his Lordship saw fit to arrange a dinner party in his
honour. It was a most dazzling affair. The dinner itself consisted of soups and fish, two
entrées, turtle heads, roasts, capons, poulards and turkeys, pigeons and snipes, garnishes
of truffles, mushrooms, crawfish and American asparagus; desserts and ices; even several
bottles of the 1784 claret laid down by Lord Tansor’s father, along with footmen and
waiters brought in especially – to the consternation of the existing domestic staff – to
dispense service à la Française.
The guests, some thirty or so in number, had included, for the principal guest’s
benefit, several literary figures; for Lord Tansor, a little against an innate prejudice
towards the profession of writing, had been impressed by the dedication to literature the
young man was beginning to display. He would often come across the lad tucked away in
a corner of the Library (in which he seemed to pass a great deal of his time when he was
home), in rapt perusal of some volume or other: on several occasions he had even found
him absorbed in one of Mr Southey’s unreadable epics, and it would amaze Lord Tansor,
on returning to the same spot an hour later, to discover the young man still engrossed – it
being unaccountable to his Lordship that so much time and attention could be devoted to
something so unutterably tedious. (He had once ventured to look into a volume of the
Laureate’s,? and had sensibly determined never to do so again.) But there it was. Further,
the boy had displayed some talent of his own in this department, having had a simpering
ode in the style of Gray published in the Eton College Chronicle, and another in the
Stamford Mercury. Lord Tansor was no judge, of course, but he thought these poetic
ambitions might be encouraged, as being both harmless and, if successful, conducive to a
new kind of respect devolving upon him as the young genius’s patron.
So up they had trotted to Evenwood, at Lord Tansor’s summons: Mr Horne, Mr