A Stoic is one of my favourite John Galsworthy short stories. The main character is Sylvanus Heythorp, elderly chairman of a shipping company. After a full life, he is almost immobile and close to
death but still retains his grip on the company. His final ambition is to pull one
last stroke and raise enough money to provide for his illegitimate grandchildren.
In the City of
Liverpool, on a January day of 1905, the Board-room of “The Island Navigation
Company” rested, as it were, after the labours of the afternoon. The long table
was still littered with the ink, pens, blotting-paper, and abandoned documents
of six persons — a deserted battlefield of the brain. And, lonely, in his
chairman’s seat at the top end old Sylvanus Heythorp sat, with closed eyes,
still and heavy as an image. One puffy, feeble hand, whose fingers quivered,
rested on the arm of his chair; the thick white hair on his massive head
glistened in the light from a green-shaded lamp
Heythorp's plan is to arrange a secret commission on a shipping deal. He is by no means a sympathetic character, yet the story is a wonderfully atmospheric portrait of a hard man, now on the edge of the Abyss but with absolutely no regrets for a life lived to the full.
Born in the early
twenties of the nineteenth century, Sylvanus Heythorp, after an education
broken by escapades both at school and college, had fetched up in that simple
London of the late forties, where claret, opera, and eight per cent. for your
money ruled a cheery roost. Made partner in his shipping firm well before he
was thirty, he had sailed with a wet sheet and a flowing tide; dancers, claret,
Cliquot, and piquet; a cab with a tiger; some travel — all that delicious
early-Victorian consciousness of nothing save a golden time.
With his last scam safely in
the bag, Haythorp is unexpectedly rumbled by a minor creditor. Yet he still has fire in his belly and is not about to be thwarted at this late stage. He secures the deal via his own death,
brought on by final lavish meal eaten alone and savoured to the
full.
The souffle was before
him now, and lifting his glass, he said: “Fill up.”
“These are the special
glasses, sir; only four to the bottle.”
“Fill up.” The servant
filled, screwing up his mouth. Old Heythorp drank, and put the glass down empty
with a sigh. He had been faithful to his principles, finished the bottle before
touching the sweet — a good bottle — of a good brand! And now for the souffle!
Delicious, flipped down with the old sherry!
So that holy woman [Heythorp’s
detested daughter] was going to a ball,
was she! How deuced funny! Who would dance with a dry stick like that, all
eaten up with a piety which was just sexual disappointment? Ah! yes, lots of
women like that — had often noticed ‘em — pitied ‘em too, until you had to do
with them and they made you as unhappy as themselves, and were tyrants into the
bargain. And he asked: “What’s the savoury?”
“Cheese remmykin,
sir.”
His favourite. “I’ll
have my port with it — the ‘sixty-eight.”
The man stood gazing
with evident stupefaction. He had not expected this. The old man’s face was
very flushed, but that might be the bath. He said feebly: “Are you sure you
ought, sir?”
“No, but I’m going
to.”
“Would you mind if I
spoke to Miss Heythorp, Sir?”
“If you do, you can
leave my service.”
“Well, Sir, I don’t
accept the responsibility.”
“Who asked you to?”
“No, Sir....”
“Well, get it, then; and don’t be an ass.”
“Well, get it, then; and don’t be an ass.”
“Yes, Sir.” If the old
man were not humoured he would have a fit, perhaps!
Sylvanus Heythorp achieves his last ambition by dying replete and contented, still clutching a bottle of his finest brandy.
2 comments:
Oh my goodness - making me hungry now.
James - (:
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