Volume Iii Part 67 (2/2)

I should like Morley to do a Strike article, and to work into it the greater part of what is here. But I cannot represent myself as holding the opinion that all strikes among this unhappy cla.s.s of society, who find it so difficult to get a peaceful hearing, are always necessarily wrong, because I don't think so. To open a discussion of the question by saying that the men are ”_of course_ entirely and painfully in the wrong,” surely would be monstrous in any one. Show them to be in the wrong here, but in the name of the eternal heavens show why, upon the merits of this question. Nor can I possibly adopt the representation that these men are wrong because by throwing themselves out of work they throw other people, possibly without their consent. If such a principle had anything in it, there could have been no civil war, no raising by Hampden of a troop of horse, to the detriment of Buckinghams.h.i.+re agriculture, no self-sacrifice in the political world. And O, good G.o.d, when ---- treats of the suffering of wife and children, can he suppose that these mistaken men don't feel it in the depths of their hearts, and don't honestly and honourably, most devoutly and faithfully believe that for those very children, when they shall have children, they are bearing all these miseries now!

I hear from Mrs. Fillonneau that her husband was obliged to leave town suddenly before he could get your parcel, consequently he has not brought it; and White's sovereigns--unless you have got them back again--are either lying out of circulation somewhere, or are being spent by somebody else. I will write again on Tuesday. My article is to begin the enclosed.

Ever faithfully.

[Sidenote: Mr. Mark Lemon.]

49, CHAMPS ELYSeES, PARIS, _Monday, Jan. 7th, 1856._

MY DEAR MARK,

I want to know how ”Jack and the Beanstalk” goes. I have a notion from a notice--a favourable notice, however--which I saw in _Galignani_, that Webster has let down the comic business.

In a piece at the Ambigu, called the ”Rentree a Paris,” a mere scene in honour of the return of the troops from the Crimea the other day, there is a novelty which I think it worth letting you know of, as it is easily available, either for a serious or a comic interest--the introduction of a supposed electric telegraph. The scene is the railway terminus at Paris, with the electric telegraph office on the prompt side, and the clerks _with their backs to the audience_--much more real than if they were, as they infallibly would be, staring about the house--working the needles; and the little bell perpetually ringing. There are a.s.sembled to greet the soldiers, all the easily and naturally imagined elements of interest--old veteran fathers, young children, agonised mothers, sisters and brothers, girl lovers--each impatient to know of his or her own object of solicitude. Enter to these a certain marquis, full of sympathy for all, who says: ”My friends, I am one of you. My brother has no commission yet. He is a common soldier. I wait for him as well as all brothers and sisters here wait for _their_ brothers. Tell me whom you are expecting.” Then they all tell him. Then he goes into the telegraph-office, and sends a message down the line to know how long the troops will be. Bell rings. Answer handed out on slip of paper. ”Delay on the line. Troops will not arrive for a quarter of an hour.” General disappointment. ”But we have this brave electric telegraph, my friends,”

says the marquis. ”Give me your little messages, and I'll send them off.” General rush round the marquis. Exclamations: ”How's Henri?” ”My love to Georges;” ”Has Guillaume forgotten Elise?” ”Is my son wounded?”

”Is my brother promoted?” etc. etc. Marquis composes tumult. Sends message--such a regiment, such a company--”Elise's love to Georges.”

Little bell rings, slip of paper handed out--”Georges in ten minutes will embrace his Elise. Sends her a thousand kisses.” Marquis sends message--such a regiment, such a company--”Is my son wounded?” Little bell rings. Slip of paper handed out--”No. He has not yet upon him those marks of bravery in the glorious service of his country which his dear old father bears” (father being lamed and invalided). Last of all, the widowed mother. Marquis sends message--such a regiment, such a company--”Is my only son safe?” Little bell rings. Slip of paper handed out--”He was first upon the heights of Alma.” General cheer. Bell rings again, another slip of paper handed out. ”He was made a sergeant at Inkermann.” Another cheer. Bell rings again, another slip of paper handed out. ”He was made colour-sergeant at Sebastopol.” Another cheer.

Bell rings again, another slip of paper handed out. ”He was the first man who leaped with the French banner on the Malakhoff tower.”

Tremendous cheer. Bell rings again, another slip of paper handed out.

”But he was struck down there by a musket-ball, and----Troops have proceeded. Will arrive in half a minute after this.” Mother abandons all hope; general commiseration; troops rush in, down a platform; son only wounded, and embraces her.

As I have said, and as you will see, this is available for any purpose.

But done with equal distinction and rapidity, it is a tremendous effect, and got by the simplest means in the world. There is nothing in the piece, but it was impossible not to be moved and excited by the telegraph part of it.

I hope you have seen something of Stanny, and have been to pantomimes with him, and have drunk to the absent d.i.c.k. I miss you, my dear old boy, at the play, woefully, and miss the walk home, and the partings at the corner of Tavistock Square. And when I go by myself, I come home stewing ”Little Dorrit” in my head; and the best part of _my_ play is (or ought to be) in Gordon Street.

I have written to Beaucourt about taking that breezy house--a little improved--for the summer, and I hope you and yours will come there often and stay there long. My present idea, if nothing should arise to unroot me sooner, is to stay here until the middle of May, then plant the family at Boulogne, and come with Catherine and Georgy home for two or three weeks. When I shall next run across I don't know, but I suppose next month.

We are up to our knees in mud here. Literally in vehement despair, I walked down the avenue outside the Barriere de l'etoile here yesterday, and went straight on among the trees. I came back with top-boots of mud on. Nothing will cleanse the streets. Numbers of men and women are for ever scooping and sweeping in them, and they are always one lake of yellow mud. All my trousers go to the tailor's every day, and are ravelled out at the heels every night. Was.h.i.+ng is awful.

Tell Mrs. Lemon, with my love, that I have bought her some Eau d'Or, in grateful remembrance of her knowing what it is, and crus.h.i.+ng the tyrant of her existence by resolutely refusing to be put down when that monster would have silenced her. You may imagine the loves and messages that are now being poured in upon me by all of them, so I will give none of them; though I am pretending to be very scrupulous about it, and am looking (I have no doubt) as if I were writing them down with the greatest care.

Ever affectionately.

[Sidenote: Mr. W. Wilkie Collins.]

49, CHAMPS ELYSeES, _Sat.u.r.day, Jan. 19th, 1856._

MY DEAR COLLINS,

I had no idea you were so far on with your book, and heartily congratulate you on being within sight of land.

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