Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
He sighed again and turned away, and I saw him glance up at a small portrait in
oils that hung in an alcove between the bookshelves. It showed a slight ethereal figure in
a pale mauve gown and a neat cap, with misty blue eyes and clusters of airy curls at her
neck. It was plain enough that his love for his first wife was still strong. Clearing his
throat and brushing down his beard, he was about to speak again when the door opened
and a tall figure in rustling black silk swept into the room.
‘Oh! Forgive me. Achilles, I was not aware we had a visitor.’
‘My dear,’ said Dr Daunt, with the air of someone who has been caught in a guilty
act, ‘may I introduce Mr Edward Glapthorn?’
She gazed at me imperiously and held out her hand. I think she was expecting me
to kiss it humbly, like a queen’s; but instead I touched the ends of her outstretched fingers
in the briefest of gestures and bowed stiffly.
‘I am honoured to meet you, Mrs Daunt’ I said, and withdrew a few steps.
Well, she was a deuced handsome woman, I’ll say that. I could easily see how her
good looks, together with a spirited and capable character, would have made it – let us
not say easy, but perhaps less difficult for Dr Daunt, in his grief at the loss of his first
wife, and entombed alive as he had been in Millhead, to succumb to her charms. She had
brought life and hope to that dismal place, and I supposed he’d been glad of it. But he had
never loved her; that was plain.
‘Mr Glapthorn,’ the Rector ventured, ‘is staying at the Dower House.’
‘Indeed,’ came the frosty reply. ‘Are you a friend of the Carterets, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘I came up from London to see Mr Carteret on a matter of business,’ I replied,
intending to dispense as little information concerning my visit as possible. She had seated
herself next to her husband, placing her hand protectively over his whilst we spoke about
the shocking events of recent days and how the placid community of Evenwood had been
riven by what had happened to their well-liked neighbour. She possessed the most
exquisite grey eyes: large and liquid, and constantly darting from her husband to me as
we spoke in turn on the subject of poor Mr Carteret.
‘Mr Paul Carteret was my second cousin,’ intoned Mrs Daunt, ‘and so, naturally,
this terrible crime affects me particularly closely — ’
‘Not, perhaps, as closely as his daughter,’ I interjected.
She shot me a look intended no doubt to crush my impudence.
‘One must of course suppose that Miss Emily Carteret feels the loss of her father
deeply, especially under such dreadful circumstances. Do you know Miss Emily
Carteret?’
‘I have that pleasure.’
She smiled and nodded, as if to signify her complete comprehension of the matter.
‘And do you work in some professional capacity, Mr Glapthorn?’
‘I am a private scholar.’
‘A private scholar? How interesting. And is that a line of business?’
‘I beg your pardon?’
‘You said just now that you had come to see Mr Carteret on a matter of business.’
‘In a manner of speaking.’
‘In a manner of speaking. I see.’
Dr Daunt, looking a little uncomfortable, then broke in.
‘Mr Glapthorn has been so kind as to complement me on my bibliographic
labours, my dear. It is always pleasant for us poor scholars to receive the approval of a
discriminating intellect.’
He was looking at me, in anticipation, I supposed, of some pertinent remark or
other; but before I could say anything, Mrs Daunt had spoken again.
‘My husband’s catalogue has been widely approved, by some of the most eminent
authorities,’ she said, intimating no doubt that my own praise of Dr Daunt’s labours was
poor enough by comparison. ‘And have you published anything in the bibliographical
line yourself, Mr Glapthorn?’
Of course I had to admit that I had not.
‘My husband’s son is also a published author,’ she continued. ‘He is, as you may
know, a poet of some distinction. He has always had a remarkable gift for literary
expression, has he not, Achilles?’
The Rector smiled helplessly.
‘Of course, his genius was immediately discerned by Lord Tansor, who has been
like a second father to Phoebus. Achilles, I’m sure Mr Glapthorn would be interested to
see Phoebus’s new volume. Hot off the presses, you know,’ she said, watching her
husband as he walked over to his desk to pick up the latest production from the pen of P.
Rainsford Daunt – Penelope: A Tragedy in Verse.
I dutifully flicked through the volume, stopping occasionally to read a line or two,
and nodding as if in sage appreciation of the beauties contained therein. It was, of course,
stuffed full of his usual hectic and overblown versifying.?
‘Remarkable,’ I said, ‘quite remarkable. Your son has several such volumes to his
credit, I believe?’
‘Indeed he has,’ replied Mrs Daunt. ‘And they have all been extremely well
received. Achilles, fetch Mr Glapthorn that copy of the New Monthly . . .’
‘Pray don’t trouble yourself, Dr Daunt,’ I said hastily. ‘I believe I have read the
article in question. What a thing, though, to have a poet in the family! Of course his
celebrity precedes him, and I confess I was hoping to have the pleasure of meeting your
son while I was in Northamptonshire.’
‘I’m afraid he is away. Phoebus enjoys the particular confidence of my noble
relative,’ said Mrs Daunt. ‘His Lordship, having been a little unwell of late, is
recouperating on the Isle of Wight, and has asked Phoebus to undertake a business
engagement on his behalf.’
‘It will be a great shock for your son when he learns of the attack on Mr Carteret,’
I said.
‘It will most certainly prostrate him,’ replied Mrs Daunt, with solemn emphasis.
‘His is a most feeling and compassionate nature, and of course he has known Mr Carteret,
and his daughter, since he was a little boy.’
After a moment or two’s silence, I turned to the Rector.
‘I suppose, Dr Daunt, that your son’s rise in the world now precludes him from
following in your footsteps?’
It was a mischievous question, I own, but it was intended for his wife, not for
him; and indeed, before he had time to speak, Mrs Daunt was already answering it.
‘Our lot here is an extremely fortunate one. We are not rich, but we live in the
hand of a most loving and generous master.’
‘You allude to God, perhaps?’
‘I allude, Mr Glapthorn, to the beneficence bestowed on us by Lord Tansor. If
Phoebus had no other prospects, then I am sure the Church would be a most suitable
channel for his talents. But of course he has great prospects, very great prospects, both as
an author and . . . ’ She hesitated for a moment. I looked at her, eyebrows raised in
expectation. But before she could resume, there was a knock at the door and a maid
entered with a tray of tea things.
This fortuitous diversion allowed Mrs Daunt quickly to change the subject, and,
as she poured out and passed around the tea, she began to ask me a number of questions
about myself – Had I lived in London all my life? Was I a Cambridge man, like her
step-son? Was this my first visit to Evenwood? How long had I known Mr Carteret? Was
I a member of the Roxburghe Club, like her husband, and had I known the late Mr
Dibdin,? whom they had often had the honour of entertaining at Evenwood? I answered
all her questions politely, but as briefly as I could. Of course she perceived my evasion
and countered by throwing out still more questions. So we continued in our dance – Dr
Daunt sitting all the while in silence – until the tea had been consumed. Then, placing her
empty cup and saucer back on the tea-tray, she asked me if I had been up to the great
house. I told her that I had visited the chapel briefly that morning, to pay my last respects
to Mr Carteret, but that I hoped to enjoy a fuller acquaintance with Lord Tansor’s
residence in the very near future.
‘But you must at least see the Library before you go,’ cried Dr Daunt suddenly.
‘I’m afraid I must return to London tomorrow.’
‘But we could go now, if that would be convenient.’
Nothing could have been more to my liking, and so I eagerly assented to the
proposal. We quickly finished our tea, and Mrs Daunt rose to leave.
‘Good-bye, Mr Glapthorn. I do hope we shall have the pleasure of seeing you
again soon. Perhaps when you next visit Evenwood, fate will look more kindly on us and
allow us to introduce you to my step-son.’ I said that would be a pleasure I hoped would
not be long deferred.
She had drawn herself up to her full height and I found myself held captive by
those lovely grey eyes. How old was she now? Fifty-three or fifty-four? I could not
remember. But whatever her age, she looked no older than thirty, and still had about her a
fascinating look of practised coquetry. I began to see how she had managed matters with
Lord Tansor in respect of her step-son: her beauty and charm, in concert with her
commanding personality, had no doubt been deployed to the full on his behalf. As she
looked at me with those winning eyes – it was but for the most fleeting of moments – I
felt sure she had divined that, in some way that she could not yet comprehend, I was a
threat to her prosperous condition, and to that of her precious Phoebus. In short, she
disliked and distrusted me, as I did her.
Left to ourselves once more, Dr Daunt and I reverted to an earlier discussion
concerning the Neoplatonic philosophy, with particular reference to Taylor the
Platonist’s? translations of Plotinus and Proclus. The Rector was discoursing on Taylor’s
paraphrastic rendering of Porphyry’s De Antro Nympharum,? which led us on to other
equally engaging topics concerning ancient theology, a subject in which each of us
professed both interest and expertise.
‘Mr Glapthorn,’ said Dr Daunt at length. ‘I wonder if I might ask a favour of
you?’
‘By all means,’ I returned. ‘Name it.’
‘It is just this. Though I am an admirer of Mr Taylor in general, his philological
and linguistic skills do not always match his enthusiastic advocacy of these important
subjects. His translation of Iamblichus is a case in point. I have therefore presumed to
prepare a new rendering of the De mysteriis,? the first part of which is to be published in
the Classical Journal.? The piece is now in proof and is being looked over by my friend,
Professor Lucian Slake, of Barnack. Perhaps you are familiar with Professor Slake’s
work on Euhemerus?? The Professor’s knowledge of Iamblichus is sound, but not so
complete, I think, as yours. The favour I would wish very much to ask of you, therefore,
is this: would you do me the greatest kindness by agreeing to cast your eye also over the
proofs, before the piece goes to press? ’
I told him I would be pleased and honoured to review the work; and so it was
settled that Dr Daunt would immediately send word to Professor Slake, asking him to
direct the proofs to me at the George Hotel before my departure for London.
‘And now,’ he said brightly, ‘let us be off.’
The Library established by William Duport, the twenty-third Baron, soon after the
Revolution in France, was one of the finest private collections in Europe, and bore
comparison with those established by the second Earl Spencer at Althorp, and by the
third Duke of Roxburghe. The twenty-third Baron had inherited some three thousand
volumes, assembled haphazardly by his forebears over the centuries. Shortly after
succeeding to the title, he added to this stock by acquiring the entire library of a
Hungarian nobleman – around five thousand items, and particularly notable for
containing many hundreds of the first printed editions of the Greek and Roman classics,
as well as many outstanding examples of the de luxe printers of the seventeenth and
eighteenth century, such as Baskerville and Foulis. He then set about augmenting his
collection by methodical – and occasionally unscrupulous – means, travelling widely in
order to seek out early editions of those classical authors that had eluded Count Laczkó,
and gathering along the way a large number of early Bibles, fifteeners,? and – a particular
interest of his – examples of early English literature. By the time of his death, in 1799,
the collection had grown to over forty thousand volumes.
The original library at Evenwood had been housed in a dark and rather damp
chamber of the Elizabethan period, on the north side of the building, which was soon
overflowing with his Lordship’s acquisitions. And so in, 1792, as I have previously
described, Lord William wisely determined to refurbish the large ballroom on the West
Front, with its famous ceiling by Verrio, into a place fit to hold his rapidly growing
collection of bibliophilic treasures. The work took but twelve months to complete, and in
the summer of 1793, the books amassed to that date were transferred to their present
home, where they were soon joined by many thousands more.
I saw this wonderful room for the first time, in the company of the Reverend
Achilles Daunt, on the afternoon of the twenty-sixth of October, 1853. We had walked
through the Park from the Rectory, with the declining sun in our eyes, talking of Mr
Carteret.
Away from his wife, Dr Daunt was an altogether different man – voluble,