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+Project Gutenberg's With Zola in England, by Ernest Alfred Vizetelly
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: With Zola in England
+
+Author: Ernest Alfred Vizetelly
+
+Release Date: January 10, 2004 [EBook #10670]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH ZOLA IN ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dagny, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+ WITH ZOLA IN ENGLAND
+
+ A STORY OF EXILE
+
+
+ TOLD BY
+
+ ERNEST ALFRED VIZETELLY
+
+
+
+ TO
+ VIOLETTE AND TO VICTOR
+ TO DORA AND TO BOTH MARIES
+ DEAR WIFE AND ROMPING DAUGHTER
+ I LOVINGLY INSCRIBE
+ THIS LITTLE BOOK
+
+
+
+He begged for Light! . . Lo, Darkness fell,
+ And round him cast its stifling pall!
+In vain he clamoured! Ev'ry Hell
+ Poured forth its fumes to drown his call.
+
+He cried for Truth! . . Lo, Falsehood came,
+ In robes of Impudence array'd,
+Polluting Patriotism's name,
+ Degrading Honour to a trade.
+
+He asked for Justice! . . Lo, between
+ Him and the judgment-seat there rose
+The Sword of Menace, ever keen
+ To smite the braggart War-Wolf's foes!
+
+Light, Truth, and Justice all denied,
+ He struggled on 'mid threat and blow--
+A brave Voice battling by his side--
+ Till Error's minions struck him low.
+
+Yet is his faith not dead, nor mine:
+ O'er deepest gloom, o'er worst distress,
+Ever the mighty Sun doth shine
+ Aglow with Truth and Righteousness.
+
+The blackest clouds are rent at last;
+ And the divine resistless flame
+Through all, some morn, its blaze shall cast,
+ The Wrong disclose, the Right proclaim!
+
+ E. A. V.
+
+February 23, 1898.
+
+
+[Printed in 'The Star' on the morrow of M. Zola's condemnation in Paris]
+
+
+
+ PREFACE
+
+All that I claim for this little book, reprinted from the columns of 'The
+Evening News,' is the quality of frankness. I do not desire to check or
+disarm criticism, but I have a right to point out that I have performed
+my work rapidly and have largely subordinated certain literary
+considerations to a desire to write my story naturally and simply, in
+much the same way as I should have told it in conversation with a friend.
+Very rarely, I think, have I departed from this rule.
+
+The book supplies an accurate account of Emile Zola's exile in this
+country; but some matters I have treated briefly because he himself
+proposes to give the world--probably in diary form--some impressions of
+his sojourn in England with a record of his feelings day by day whilst
+the great campaign in favour of the unfortunate Alfred Dreyfus was in
+progress.
+
+First, however, M. Zola intends to collect in a volume all his published
+declarations, articles and letters on the Affair. Secondly, he will
+recount in another volume his trials at Paris and Versailles; and only in
+a third volume will he be able to deal with his English experiences. The
+last work can scarcely be ready before the end of 1900, and possibly it
+may not appear until the following year. And this is one of the reasons
+which have induced me to offer to all who are interested in the great
+French writer this present narrative of mine. Should the master's
+promised record duly appear, my own will sink into oblivion; but if, for
+one or another reason, M. Zola is prevented from carrying out his plans,
+here, then, will at least be found some account of one of the most
+curious passages in his life. And then, perchance, my narrative may
+attain to the rank of _memoire pour servir_.
+
+I have said that I claim for my book the quality of frankness. In this
+connection I may point out that I have made in it a full confession of
+certain delinquencies which were forced on me by circumstances. I trust,
+however, that my brother-journalists will forgive me if I occasionally
+led them astray with regard to M. Zola's presence in England; for I did
+so purely and simply in the interests of the illustrious friend who had
+placed himself in my hands.
+
+That M. Zola should have applied to me directly he arrived in London will
+surprise none of those who are aware of the confidence he has for several
+years reposed in me. A newspaper referring to our connection recently
+called the great novelist 'my employer.' But there has never been any
+question of employer or employed between Mr. Zola and me. I should
+certainly never think of accepting remuneration for any little service I
+might have been able to render him; nor would he dream of hurting my
+feelings by offering it. No. The simple truth is that for some years now
+I have translated M. Zola's novels into English, and that I have taken my
+share of the proceeds of the translations. For the rest our intercourse
+has been purely and simply that of friends.
+
+It is because, I believe, I know and understand Emile Zola so well, that
+I never once lost confidence in him throughout the events which led to
+his exile in England. That exile, curiously enough, I foreshadowed in a
+letter addressed to the 'Star' some months before it actually began.
+When, however, one has been intimate with the French for thirty years or
+so it is not, to my thinking, so very difficult to tell what is likely to
+happen in a given French crisis. The unexpected has to be reckoned with,
+of course; and much depends on ability to estimate the form which the
+unexpected may take. Here experience, familiarity with details of
+contemporary French history, and personal knowledge of the men concerned
+in the issue, become indispensable.
+
+On January 16, 1898, three days after M. Zola's famous 'J'accuse' letter
+appeared in 'L'Aurore,' and two days before the French Government
+instructed the Public Prosecutor to proceed against its author, I wrote
+to the 'Westminster Gazette' a long letter dealing with M. Zola's
+position. In this letter, which appeared in the issue of the 19th, I
+began by establishing a comparison between Zola and Voltaire, whose
+action with regard to the memory of Jean Calas I briefly epitomised.
+Curiously enough at that moment M. Zola, as I afterwards learnt, was
+telling the Paris correspondent of the 'Daily Chronicle' that the
+opposition offered to his advocacy of the cause of Alfred Dreyfus was
+identical with that encountered by Voltaire in his championship of Calas.
+This was a curious little coincidence, for I wrote my letter without
+having any communication with M. Zola respecting it. It contained some
+passes which I here venture to quote. In a book dealing with the great
+novelist these passages may not be out of place, as they serve to
+illustrate his general attitude towards the Dreyfus case.
+
+'Truth,' I wrote, 'has been the one passion of Emile Zola's life.* "May
+all be revealed so that all may be cured" has been his sole motto in
+dealing with social problems. "Light, more light!"--the last words gasped
+by Goethe on his death-bed--has ever been his cry. Holding the views he
+holds, he could not do otherwise than come forward at this crisis in
+French history as the champion of truth and justice. Silence on his part
+would have been a denial of all his principles, all his past life. . . .
+Against him are marshalled all the Powers of Darkness, all the energy of
+those who prefer concealment to light, all the enmity of the military
+hierarchy which has never forgotten "La Debacle," all the hatred of the
+Roman hierarchy which will never forgive "Lourdes" and "Rome." And the
+fetish of Patriotism is brandished hither and thither, rallying even
+free-thinkers to the cause of concealment, while each and every appeal
+for light and truth is met by the clamorous cry: "Down with the dirty
+Jews!"
+
+ * He himself wrote these very words seventeen months later in
+ his article 'Justice,' published in Paris on his return from
+ exile.
+
+'For even as Jean Calas was guilty of being a Protestant so is Alfred
+Dreyfus guilty of being a Jew, and at the present hour unhappily there
+are millions of French people who can no more believe in a Jew's
+innocence than their forerunners could believe a Protestant to be
+guiltless. Zola, for his part, is no Jew, nor can he even be called a
+friend of the Jews--in several of his books he has attacked them somewhat
+violently for certain tendencies shown by some of their number--but most
+assuredly does he regard them as fellow-men and not as loathsome animals.
+In the same way Voltaire wrote pungent pages against the narrow practices
+of Calvinism and yet espoused the causes of Calas and Sirven, even as
+Zola has espoused that of Dreyfus. The only remaining question is whether
+Zola will prove as successful as his famous forerunner. [Nearly the whole
+of the European press was at that stage expressing doubt on this point.]
+In this connection I may say that I regard Zola as a man of very calm,
+methodical, judicial mind. He is no ranter, no lover of words for words'
+sake, no fiery enthusiast. Each of his books is a most laborious,
+painstaking piece of work. If he ever brings forward a theory he bases it
+on a mountain of evidence, and he invariably subordinates his feeling to
+his reason. I therefore venture to say that if he has come forward so
+prominently in this Dreyfus case it is not because he _feels_ that wrong
+has been done, but because he is absolutely _convinced_ of it. Doubtless
+many of the expressions in his recent letter to President Faure have come
+from his heart, but they were in the first place dictated by his reason.
+It is not for me here and at the present hour to speak of proofs, however
+great may be public curiosity; but most certainly Zola has not taken up
+this case without what he considers to be abundant proof. I do not say he
+will be able to prove each and every item of his great indictment, but
+when you wish to bring everything to light it is often necessary to cast
+your net so wide that none shall escape it, none linger in concealment
+with their actions unexplained. And I take it that whatever be the
+verdict of Zola's countrymen, whether or not Alfred Dreyfus be again and
+this time absolutely proved guilty . . . Zola himself will have done good
+work in striving to bring the whole truth to light so that it shall be as
+evident to one and all as the very sun itself. And this, when all is
+said, is really Zola's one great object in this terrible business.
+
+'I may add that he is risking far more than his great predecessor risked
+in favour of Calas. Voltaire pleaded from his retirement on the Swiss
+frontier; Zola pleads the cause he has adopted on the very spot, on the
+very scene of all the agitation. Anonymous assassins threaten him with
+death in letters and postcards. Fanatical Jew-baiters march through the
+streets anxious for an opportunity to wreck his house and murder not only
+himself but his wife also in the sacred name of Patriotism.* Should their
+menaces be escaped there remains the Assize Court with a jury that will
+need to be brave indeed if it is to resist all the pressure of a
+deliberately organised "terror." At the end possibly lie imprisonment,
+fine, disgrace, ruin. How jubilantly some are already rubbing their hands
+in the bishops' palaces, the parsonages, the sacristies of France! Ah! no
+stone will be kept unturned to secure a conviction! But Emile Zola does
+not waver. It may be the truth, the whole truth will only be known to the
+world in some distant century; but he, anxious to hasten its advent and
+prevent the irreparable, courageously stakes all that he has, person,
+position, fame, affections, and friendships. . . . And this he does for
+no personal object whatsoever, but in the sole cause of truth and
+justice, ever repeating the cry common to both Goethe and himself:
+"Light, more light!"
+
+ * There is not the slightest doubt that M. Zola incurred the
+ greatest personal danger between January and April 1898.
+ M. Ranc, the old and tried Republican, who knows what danger
+ is, has lately pointed this out in forcible terms in the
+ Paris journal _Le Matin_.
+
+'Ah! to all the true hearts that have followed and loved him through
+years of mingled blame and praise, hard-earned victory and unmerited
+reviling, he is at this hour dearer even than he was before; for he has
+now put the seal upon his principles, and to the force of precept has
+added that of the most courageous personal example.'
+
+This then is what I wrote immediately after the publication of Zola's
+letter 'J'accuse,' basing myself simply on my knowledge of the master's
+character, of the passions let loose in France, and of a few matters
+connected with the Dreyfus case, then kept secret but now public
+property. And had I to write anything of the kind at the present time, I
+should, I think, have but few words to alter beyond substituting the past
+for the present or future tense. In one respect I was mistaken. I did not
+imagine the truth to be quite so near at hand. Since January 1898,
+however, nine-tenths of it have been revealed and the rest must now soon
+follow. And I hold, as all hold who know the inner workings of l'Affaire
+Dreyfus, that M. Zola's exile, like his letter to President Faure and his
+repeated trials for libel, has in a large degree contributed to this
+victory of truth. For by going into voluntary banishment, he kept not
+only his own but also Dreyfus's case 'open,' and thus helped to foil the
+last desperate attempts that were being made to prevent the truth from
+being discovered.
+
+I should add that in the following pages I deal very slightly with
+l'Affaire Dreyfus, on which so many books have already been written.
+Indeed, as a rule, I have only touched on those incidents which had any
+marked influence on M. Zola during his sojourn in this country.
+
+ E. A. V.
+
+MERTON, SURREY.
+ June 1899.
+
+
+
+ WITH ZOLA IN ENGLAND
+
+
+
+ I
+
+ ZOLA LEAVES FRANCE
+
+From the latter part of the month of July 1898, down to the end of the
+ensuing August, a frequent heading to newspaper telegrams and paragraphs
+was the query, 'Where is Zola?' The wildest suppositions concerning the
+eminent novelist's whereabouts were indulged in and the most
+contradictory reports were circulated. It was on July 18 that M. Zola was
+tried by default at Versailles and sentenced to twelve months'
+imprisonment on the charge of having libelled, in his letter 'J'accuse,'
+the military tribunal which had acquitted Commandant Esterhazy. On the
+evening of the 19th his disappearance was signalled by various telegrams
+from Paris. Most of these asserted that he had gone on a tour to Norway,
+a course which the 'Daily News' correspondent declared to be very
+sensible on M. Zola's part, given the tropical heat which then prevailed
+in the French metropolis.
+
+On the 20th, however, the telegrams gave out that Zola had left Paris on
+the previous evening by the 8.35 express for Lucerne, being accompanied
+by his wife and her maid. Later, the same day, appeared a graphic account
+of how he had dined at a Paris restaurant and thence despatched a waiter
+to the Eastern Railway Station to procure tickets for himself and a
+friend. The very numbers of these tickets were given!
+
+Yet a further telegram asserted that he had been recognised by a
+fellow-passenger, had left the train before reaching the Swiss frontier,
+and had gaily continued his journey on a bicycle. But another newspaper
+correspondent treated this account as pure invention, and pledged his
+word that M. Zola had gone to Holland by way of Brussels.
+
+On July 21 his destination was again alleged to be Norway; but--so
+desperate were the efforts made to reconcile all the conflicting
+rumours--his route was said to lie through Switzerland, Luxemburg, and
+the Netherlands. His wife (so the papers reported) was with him, and they
+were bicycling up hill and down dale through the aforenamed countries.
+Two days later it was declared that he had actually been recognised at a
+cafe in Brussels whence he had fled in consequence of the threats of the
+customers, who were enraged 'by the presence of such a traitor.' Then he
+repaired to Antwerp, where he was also recognised, and where he promptly
+embarked on board a steamer bound for Christiania.
+
+However, on July 25, the 'Petit Journal' authoritatively asserted that
+all the reports hitherto published were erroneous. M. Zola, said the
+Paris print, was simply hiding in the suburbs of Paris, hoping to reach
+Le Havre by night and thence sail for Southampton. But fortunately the
+Prefecture of Police was acquainted with his plans, and at the first
+movement he might make he would be arrested.
+
+That same morning our own 'Daily Chronicle' announced M. Zola's presence
+at a London hotel, and on the following day the 'Morning Leader' was in a
+position to state that the hotel in question was the Grosvenor. Both
+'Chronicle' and 'Leader' were right; but as I had received pressing
+instructions to contradict all rumours of M. Zola's arrival in London, I
+did so in this instance through the medium of the Press Association. I
+here frankly acknowledge that I thus deceived both the Press and the
+public. I acted in this way, however, for weighty reasons, which will
+hereafter appear.
+
+At this point I would simply say that M. Zola's interests were, in my
+estimation, of far more consequence than the claims of public curiosity,
+however well meant and even flattering its nature.
+
+One effect of the Press Association's contradiction was to revive the
+Norway and Switzerland stories. Several papers, while adhering to the
+statement that M. Zola had been in London, added that he had since left
+England with his wife, and that Hamburg was their immediate destination.
+And thus the game went merrily on. M. Zola's arrival at Hamburg was duly
+reported. Then he sailed on the 'Capella' for Bergen, where his advent
+was chronicled by Reuter. Next he was setting out for Trondhiem, whence
+in a few days he would join his friend Bjornstjerne Bjornson, the
+novelist, at the latter's estate of Aulestad in the Gudbrandsdalen.
+Bjornson, as it happened, was then at Munich, in Germany, but this
+circumstance did not weigh for a moment with the newspapers. The Norway
+story was so generally accepted that a report was spread to the effect
+that M. Zola had solicited an audience of the Emperor William, who was in
+Norway about that time, and that the Kaiser had peremptorily refused to
+see him, so great was the Imperial desire to do nothing of a nature to
+give umbrage to France.
+
+As I have already mentioned, the only true reports (so far as London was
+concerned) were those of two English newspapers, but even they were
+inaccurate in several matters of detail. For instance, the lady currently
+spoken of as Mme. Zola was my own wife, who, it so happens, is a
+Frenchwoman. At a later stage the 'Daily Mail' hit the nail on the head
+by signalling M. Zola's presence at the Oatlands Park Hotel; but so many
+reports having already proved erroneous, the 'Mail' was by no means
+certain of the accuracy of its information, and the dubitative form in
+which its statement was couched prevented the matter from going further.
+
+At last a period of comparative quiet set in, and though gentlemen of the
+Press were still anxious to extract information from me, nothing further
+appeared in print as to M. Zola's whereabouts until the 'Times' Paris
+correspondent, M. de Blowitz, contributed to his paper, early in the
+present year, a most detailed and amusing account of M. Zola's flight
+from France and his subsequent movements in exile. In this narrative one
+found Mme. Zola equipping her husband with a nightgown for his perilous
+journey abroad, and secreting bank notes in the lining of his garments.
+Then, carrying a slip of paper in his hand, the novelist had been passed
+on through London from policeman to policeman, until he took train to a
+village in Warwickshire, where the little daughter of an innkeeper had
+recognised him from seeing his portrait in one of the illustrated
+newspapers.
+
+There was something also about his acquaintance with the vicar of the
+locality and a variety of other particulars, all of which helped to make
+up as pretty a romance as the 'Times' readers had been favoured with for
+many a day. But excellent as was M. de Blowitz's narrative from the
+romantic standpoint his information was sadly inaccurate. Of his _bona
+fides_ there can be no doubt, but some of M. Zola's friends are rather
+partial to a little harmless joking, and it is evident that a trap was
+laid for the shrewd correspondent of the 'Times,' and that he, in an
+unguarded moment, fell into it.
+
+On the incidents which immediately preceded M. Zola's departure from
+France I shall here be brief; these incidents are only known to me by
+statements I have had from M. and Mme. Zola themselves. But the rest is
+well within my personal knowledge, as one of the first things which M.
+Zola did on arriving in England was to communicate with me and in certain
+respects place himself in my hands.
+
+This, then, is a plain unvarnished narrative--firstly, of the steps that
+I took in the matter, in conjunction with a friend, who is by profession
+a solicitor; and, secondly, of the principal incidents which marked M.
+Zola's views on some matters of interest, as imparted by him to me at
+various times. But, ultimately, M. Zola will himself pen his own private
+impressions, and on these I shall not trespass. It is because, according
+to his own statements to me, his book on his English impressions (should
+he write it) could not possibly appear for another twelve months, that I
+have put these notes together.
+
+The real circumstances, then, of M. Zola's departure from France are
+these: On July 18, the day fixed for his second trial at Versailles, he
+left Paris in a livery-stable brougham hired for the occasion at a cost
+of fifty francs. His companion was his _fidus Achates_, M. Fernand
+Desmoulin, the painter, who had already acted as his bodyguard at the
+time of the great trial in Paris. Versailles was reached in due course,
+and the judicial proceedings began under circumstances which have been
+chronicled too often to need mention here. When M. Zola had retired from
+the court, allowing judgment to go against him by default, he was joined
+by Maitre Labori, his counsel, and the pair of them returned to Paris in
+the vehicle which had brought M. Zola from the city in the morning. M.
+Desmoulin found a seat in another carriage.
+
+The brougham conveying Messrs. Zola and Labori was driven to the
+residence of M. Georges Charpentier, the eminent publisher, in the Avenue
+du Bois de Boulogne, and there they were presently joined by M. Georges
+Clemenceau, Mme. Zola, and a few others. It was then that the necessity
+of leaving France was pressed upon M. Zola, who, though he found the
+proposal little to his liking, eventually signified his acquiescence.
+
+The points urged in favour of his departure abroad were as follows: He
+must do his utmost to avoid personal service of the judgment given
+against him by default, as the Government was anxious to cast him into
+prison and thus stifle his voice. If such service were effected the law
+would only allow him a few days in which to apply for a new trial, and as
+he could not make default a second time, and could not hope at that stage
+for fresh and decisive evidence in his favour, or for a change of tactics
+on the part of the judges, this would mean the absolute and irrevocable
+loss of his case.
+
+On the other hand, by avoiding personal service of the judgment he would
+retain the right to claim a new trial at any moment he might find
+convenient; and thus not only could he prevent his own case from being
+closed against him and becoming a _chose jugee_, but he would contribute
+powerfully towards keeping the whole Dreyfus affair open, pending
+revelations which even then were foreseen. And, naturally, England which
+so freely gives asylum to all political offenders, was chosen as his
+proper place of exile.
+
+The amusing story of the nightgown tucked under his arm and the bank
+notes sewn up in his coat is, of course, pure invention. A few toilet
+articles were pressed upon him, and his wife emptied her own purse into
+his own. That was all. Then he set out for the Northern Railway Station,
+where he caught the express leaving for Calais at 9 P.M. Fortunately
+enough he secured a first-class compartment which had no other occupant.
+
+M. Clemenceau had previously suggested to him that on his arrival at
+London he might well put up at the Grosvenor Hotel, and it is quite
+possible that the same gentleman handed him--as stated in the 'Times'
+narrative--a slip of paper bearing the name of that noted hostelry. But,
+at all events, this paper was never used by M. Zola. He has an excellent
+memory, and when he reached Victoria Station at forty minutes past five
+o'clock on the morning of July 19, the name of the hotel where he had
+arranged to fix his quarters for a few days came readily enough to his
+lips.
+
+There was, however, one thing that he did not know, and that was the
+close proximity of this hotel to the railway station. So, having secured
+a hansom, he briefly told the Jehu to drive him to the Grosvenor. At
+this, cabby looked down from his perch in sheer astonishment. Then,
+doubtless, in a considerate and honest spirit--for there are still some
+considerate and honest cabbies in London--he tried to explain matters. At
+all events he spoke at length. But M. Zola failed to understand him.
+
+'Grosvenor Hotel,' repeated the novelist; and then, seeing that the cabby
+seemed bent on further expostulation, he resolutely took his seat in the
+vehicle. This driver, doubtless after the fashion of certain of his Paris
+colleagues, must be trying to play some trick in order to avoid a long
+journey. It was as well, therefore, to teach him to refrain from trifling
+with his 'fares.'
+
+However, cabby said no more, or if he did his words failed to reach M.
+Zola. The reins were jerked, the scraggy night-horse broke into a
+spasmodic trot turned out of the station, and pulled up in front of the
+caravansary which an eminent butcher has done so much to immortalise.
+
+Zola was astonished at reaching his destination with such despatch, and
+suddenly became conscious of the cabby's real motive in expostulating
+with him. However, he ascended the steps, entered the hotel, produced one
+of the few hundred-franc notes which his purse contained, and asked first
+for change and afterwards for a bedroom. English money was handed to him
+for his note, and the night porter carried cabby the regulation shilling
+for the journey of a few yards which had been made.
+
+Then, as M. Zola had no luggage with him, he was requested to deposit a
+sovereign with the hotel clerk and to inscribe his name in the register.
+This he did, and the tell-tale signature of 'M. Pascal, Paris,' still
+remains as a token of the accuracy of this narrative.
+
+Such, then, was the way in which M. Zola travelled across London,
+obligingly passed on from policeman to policeman, and carrying a slip of
+paper--a 'way-bill,' as it were--in his hand! As the above account was
+given to me by himself, it will probably be deemed more worthy of credit
+than the amusing romance which was so successfully palmed off on M. de
+Blowitz of the 'Times.'
+
+Of his journey from Paris that night, he reclining alone in his
+compartment as the Calais express rushed across the plains of Picardy
+under a star-lit sky; of his embarking on board the little Channel boat
+amidst the glimmer of lanterns, his transference to a fresh train at
+Dover, followed by another and even faster rush on to London; of his
+gloomy thoughts at this sudden severance from one and all, at speeding in
+this lonely fashion into exile, and returning surreptitiously, as it
+were, to the city where but a few years previously he had been received
+as one of the kings of literature, he will ever retain a keen impression.
+
+It was at Victoria that his journey ended, even as it had ended in 1893;
+but how changed the scene! He finds the station gaunt and well-nigh
+deserted; the few passengers are gliding away like phantoms into the
+morning air; the porters loiter around, and the Customs officers
+discharge their duties in a perfunctory, sleepy way. No crowd of Pressmen
+and sightseers is present; there are no delegates and address, and
+flowers, and cheers as of yore. Only cabby, who expostulates, and who
+doubtless thinks this Frenchman a bit of a crank to insist upon being
+driven just around the corner!
+
+And at the hotel no army of servants appears to marshal the master to the
+best suite of rooms on the principal floor. In lieu thereof comes a
+doubtful greeting and a demand for a deposit of money, for fear lest he
+should be some vulgar bilker. Then, once he is in the lift, he goes up
+and up without stopping, until the very topmost floor is reached. And
+afterwards he is marched along interminable passages, with walls painted
+a crude, hideous shade of blue, so offensive to all artistic instinct as
+verily to make one's gorge rise. Then at last he finds himself in a room
+which, high as it is situated, is of lowly, common aspect. Yet he is only
+too glad to reach it, and throw himself on the bed to rest awhile, and to
+think.
+
+New experiences are awaiting him. He is far away from the mob that pelted
+his windows with stones and yelled 'Conspuez! Conspuez!' whenever he left
+his house. Here there is no hostility. Here quietude prevails, save for
+the shrill whistles of arriving or departing trains. Yet he is also far
+from the great majority of his affections and friendships. But at this
+remembrance a fresh thought comes to him; he takes one of his visiting
+cards from his pocket-book, pencils a few lines on it, and encloses it in
+an envelope ready to be posted. Then he again lies down; tired as he is,
+after his exciting day at Versailles and his wearisome night journey, he
+soon falls soundly asleep.
+
+
+
+ II
+
+ IN LONDON
+
+On Tuesday, July 19, I went to London on business, and did not return to
+my home in the south-western suburbs until nearly seven o'clock in the
+evening. My wife immediately placed in my hands an envelope addressed to
+me in the handwriting of M. Zola. At first, having noticed neither the
+stamp nor the postmark, I imagined that the communication had come from
+Paris.
+
+On opening the envelope, however, I found that it contained a card on
+which was written in French and in pencil:--
+
+
+ 'My dear confrere,--Tell nobody in the world, and particularly
+ no newspaper, that I am in London. And oblige me by coming to
+ see me to-morrow, Wednesday, at eleven o'clock, at Grosvenor
+ Hotel. You will ask for M. Pascal. And above all, absolute
+ Silence, for the most serious interests are at stake.
+
+ 'Cordially,
+ 'EMILE ZOLA.'
+
+
+I was for a moment amazed and also somewhat affected by this message, the
+first addressed by M. Zola to anybody after his departure from France.
+Since the publication of his novel 'Paris,' which had followed his first
+trial, I had not seen him, and we had exchanged but few letters. I had
+written to express my sympathy over the outcome of the proceedings at
+Versailles, but owing to his sudden flitting my note had failed to reach
+him. And now here he was in London--in exile, as, curiously enough, I
+myself had foretold as probable some time before in a letter to one of
+the newspapers.
+
+My first impulse was to hurry to the Grosvenor immediately, but I
+reflected that I might not find him there, and that even if I did I might
+inconvenience him, as he had appointed the following day for my call. So
+I contented myself with telegraphing as follows: 'Pascal, Grosvenor
+Hotel.--Rely on me, tomorrow, eleven o'clock.' And, as a precautionary
+measure, I signed the telegram merely with my Christian name.
+
+
+As I afterwards learnt, M. Zola had spent that day companionless, walking
+about the Mall and St. James's Park, and purchasing a shirt, a collar,
+and a pair of socks at a shop in or near Buckingham Palace Road, where,
+knowing no English, he explained his requirements by pantomime. He had
+further studied several street scenes, and had given some time to
+wondering what purpose might be served by a certain ugly elongated
+building, overlooking a drive and a park. There was a sentry at the gate,
+but the place had such a gaunt, clumsy, and mournful aspect, that M. Zola
+could not possibly picture it as the London palace of her most Gracious
+Majesty the Queen.
+
+However, evening found him once more in his room at the Grosvenor; and
+feeling tired and feverish he lay down and dozed. When he awoke between
+nine and ten o'clock he perceived a buff envelope on the carpet near by
+him. It had been thrust under the door during his sleep, and its presence
+greatly astonished him, for he expected neither letter nor telegram. For
+a moment, as he has told me, he imagined this to be some trap; wondered
+if he had been watched and followed to London, and almost made up his
+mind to leave the hotel that night. But when, after a little hesitation,
+he had opened the envelope and read my telegram, he realised how
+groundless had been his alarm.
+
+On the morrow, when I reached the Grosvenor and inquired at the office
+there for M. Pascal, I was asked my name, on giving which I received a
+note from M. Zola saying that he unexpectedly found himself obliged to go
+out, but would return at 2.30 P.M. As I stood reading this note, I espied
+a couple of individuals scrutinising me in what I deemed a most
+suspicious manner. Both were Frenchmen evidently; they wore billycock
+hats and carried stout sticks; and one of them, swarthy and almost
+brigandish of aspect, had the ribbon of the Legion of Honour in his
+buttonhole. It was easy to take these individuals for French detectives,
+and I hastily jumped to the conclusion that they were on 'M. Pascal's'
+track.
+
+To make matters even more suspicious, when, after placing Zola's note in
+my pocket, I began to cross the vestibule, the others deliberately
+followed me, and in all likelihood I should have fled never to return if
+a well-known figure in a white billycock and grey suit had not suddenly
+advanced towards us from the direction of the staircase. In another
+moment I had exchanged greetings with M. Zola, and my suspicious
+scrutinisers had been introduced to me as friends. One of them was none
+other than M. Fernand Desmoulin. They had arrived from Paris that
+morning, and were about to sally forth with M. Zola in search of Mr.
+Fletcher Moulton, Q.C., to whom they had brought a letter of introduction
+from Maitre Labori.
+
+Hence the note which M. Zola had already deposited for me at the hotel
+office. Had I been a moment later I should have found them gone.
+
+My arrival led to a change in the programme. It was resolved to begin
+matters with lunch at the hotel itself, to postpone the quest for Mr.
+Fletcher Moulton until the afternoon. I made, at the time, a note of our
+menu. The 'bitter bread of exile' consisted on this occasion of an
+omelet, fried soles, fillet of beef, and potatoes. To wash down this
+anchoretic fare M. Desmoulin and myself ordered Sauterne and Apollinaris;
+but the contents of the water bottle sufficed for M. Zola and the other
+gentleman.
+
+With waiters moving to and fro, nearly always within hearing, there was
+little conversation at table, but we afterwards chatted in all freedom in
+M. Zola's room just under the roof. Ah! that room. I have already
+referred to the dingy aspect which it presented. Around Grosvenor Hotel,
+encompassing its roof, runs a huge ornamental cornice, behind which are
+the windows of rooms assigned, I suppose, to luggageless visitors. From
+the rooms themselves there is nothing to be seen unless you throw back
+your head, when a tiny patch of sky above the top line of the cornice
+becomes visible. You are, as it were, in a gloomy well. The back of the
+cornice, with its plaster stained and cracked, confronts your eyes; and
+with a little imagination you can easily fancy yourself in a dungeon
+looking into some castle moat.
+
+'_Le fosse de Vincennes_,' so M. Zola suggested, and that summed up
+everything. Yet it seemed to him very appropriate to his circumstances,
+and he absolutely refused to exchange rooms with M. Desmoulin, who was
+somewhat more comfortably lodged.
+
+The appointments of M. Zola's chamber were, I remember, of a summary
+description. There were few chairs, and so one of us sat on the bed. We
+succeeded in procuring some black coffee, though the chambermaid regarded
+this as a most unusual 'bedroom order' at that hour of the day; and when
+M. Desmoulin had lighted a cigar, his friend a pipe, and myself a
+cigarette, a regular Council of War was held. [N.B.--M. Zola gave up
+tobacco in his young days, when it was a question of his spending
+twopence per diem on himself, or of allowing his mother the wherewithal
+to buy an extra pound of bread.]
+
+The council dealt mainly with two points--first, what was M. Zola to do
+in England? Should he go into the country, or to the seaside, or settle
+down in the London suburbs? Since he wished to avoid recognition, it
+would be foolish for him to remain in London, particularly at an hotel
+like the Grosvenor. Then, for my benefit, the legal position was set
+forth, as well as the object of taking Maitre Labori's letter to Mr.
+Fletcher Moulton.
+
+The chief point was, Could the French Government in any way signify the
+judgment of the Versailles Court to M. Zola personally while he remained
+in Great Britain? If the French officials could legally do nothing of
+that kind, there would be less necessity for M. Zola to court retirement.
+
+After the hurly-burly of _l'affaire Dreyfus_, he certainly needed some
+rest and privacy, but the question was whether retirement would be a
+necessity or a mere matter of convenience. Now the choice of a place of
+sojourn depended on the answer to the second question, and it was
+resolved, _nem. con._, that M. Desmoulin, who spoke a little English and
+knew something of London, should forthwith drive to Mr. Fletcher
+Moulton's house in Onslow Square, S.W., in accordance with the address
+given on M. Labori's letter. M. Desmoulin's friend, on his side, was to
+return to Paris that afternoon by the Club train. So, the council over,
+both these gentlemen went off, leaving M. Zola and myself together.
+
+We had a long and desultory chat, now on the Dreyfus affair generally,
+now on M. Zola's personal position, the probable duration of his exile,
+and so forth. He himself did not think that he would remain abroad beyond
+October at the latest, and as there might be a delay if not a difficulty
+in getting any clothes sent to him from Paris, he proposed to make a few
+purchases.
+
+It was then that he told me how he had already bought a shirt, collar,
+and socks on the previous day.
+
+'I had nothing but what I was wearing,' said he. 'I had been to
+Versailles and had sat perspiring in the crowded court; then I had spent
+the night travelling. I looked dirty, and I felt abominably
+uncomfortable. So I go out, yesterday morning, and see a shop with
+shirts, neckties, collars, and socks in the window. I go in; I take hold
+of my collar, I pull down my cuffs, I tap my shirt front. The shopman
+smiles; he understands me. He measures my neck; he gives me a shirt and
+some collars. But then we come to the socks, and I pull up my trousers
+and point to those I am wearing. He understands immediately. He is very
+intelligent. He climbs his steps and pulls parcels and boxes from his
+shelves.
+
+'Here are socks of all colours, dark and light, spotted, striped, in
+mixtures, in cotton, in wool, some ribbed and some with silk clockings.
+But they are huge! I look at one pair; it is too big; he shows me another
+and another; they are still of a larger size. Then, impatient, and
+perhaps rather abruptly, I hold out my fist for the man to measure it,
+and thus gauge the length of my foot as is done in Paris. But he does not
+understand me. He draws back close to the shelves as if he imagines that
+I want to box him. And when I again lift my foot to call his attention to
+its size, he shows even greater concern. Fortunately an idea comes to me.
+I take one of the mammoth socks that are lying on the counter and fold
+parts of it neatly back, so as to make it appear very much smaller than
+it is. Then the shopman suddenly brightens, taps his forehead, climbs his
+steps again, and pulls yet more boxes and parcels from his shelves. And
+here at last are the small socks! So I choose a pair, and pay the bill.
+And the man bows his thanks, well pleased, it seems, to find that in
+thrusting out my fist and raising my foot I had been actuated by no
+desire to injure him.'
+
+I was still chuckling over M. Zola's anecdote when M. Desmoulin returned
+from his journey to Onslow Square. He had there interviewed a smart boy
+in buttons, who had informed him that his learned master was out of town
+electioneering, and might not be home again for a week or two. Desmoulin
+had, therefore, retained possession of Maitre Labori's note of
+introduction.
+
+I now remembered what I ought to have recalled before--namely that Mr.
+Fletcher Moulton was at that moment a candidate for the parliamentary
+representation of the Launceston division of Cornwall. Under such
+circumstances it was unlikely that his advice would be available for some
+little time to come. And so all idea of applying to him was abandoned. It
+may be that this narrative, should it meet the learned gentleman's eye,
+will for the first time acquaint him with what was intended by M. Zola,
+acting under Maitre Labori's advice.
+
+M. Zola, I should add, remained most anxious to secure an English legal
+opinion on his position, and I therefore suggested to him that I should
+that evening consult a discreet and reliable friend of mine, a solicitor.
+We, of course, well knew that there could be no extradition, but it was a
+point whether a copy of the Versailles judgment might not be legally be
+placed in M. Zola's hands, under such conventions as might exist between
+France and Great Britain.
+
+This, I thought, could be ascertained within the next forty-eight hours,
+and meantime M. Zola might remain where he was, for I could not well
+offer him an asylum in my little home. My connection with him as his
+English translator being so widely known, newspaper reporters were
+certain to call upon me, and what ever precautions I might take, his
+presence in my house would speedily be discovered. On the other hand, M.
+Desmoulin wished to go to Brighton or Hastings, but, in my estimation,
+both those places, crowded with holiday-makers, were not desirable spots.
+
+Leaving the Grosvenor, the three of us discussed these matters while
+strolling up Buckingham Palace Road. It was a warm sunshiny afternoon,
+and the street was full of people. All at once a couple of ladies passed
+us, and one of them, after turning her head in our direction, made a
+remark to her companion.
+
+'Did you hear that?' Desmoulin eagerly inquired. 'She spoke in French!'
+
+'Ah!' I replied. 'What did she say?'
+
+'"Why," she exclaimed, "there's M. Zola!" Our secret is as good as gone
+now! It will be all over London by to-morrow!'
+
+We felt somewhat alarmed. Who could those ladies be? For my part I had
+scarcely noticed them. Desmoulin opined, however, that they might
+perchance be French actresses, members possibly of Madame Sarah
+Bernhardt's company, which was then in London. And again he urged the
+necessity of immediate departure. They must go to Hastings, Brighton,
+Ramsgate--some place at all events where the author of 'J'accuse' would
+incur less chance of recognition.
+
+To me it seemed that some quiet, retired country village would be most
+suitable. In any town M. Zola would incur great risk of being identified.
+Moreover his appearance was conspicuous, his white billycock, his
+glasses, his light grey suit, his rosette of the Legion of Honour, his
+many characteristic gestures all attracted attention. If anything was to
+be done he must begin by Anglicising his appearance. But whatever I might
+urge I found him stubborn on that point; and, as for departure from
+London, he preferred to postpone this until I should have seen my friend
+the solicitor.
+
+'Everything is as good as lost!' cried M. Desmoulin. 'How foolish, too,
+of Clemenceau to have sent you to a swell hotel in a fashionable
+neighbourhood! I am certain there are other French people staying at the
+Grosvenor--I heard somebody talking French there this morning.'
+
+This again might lead to unpleasantness, and I could see that the master
+was gradually growing anxious. By this time, however, we had reached St.
+James's Park, and there, as we seated ourselves on some chairs beside the
+ornamental water, I led the conversation into another channel by
+producing an evening newspaper, and reading therefrom successive
+narratives of how M. Zola had sailed for Norway, how he had taken train
+at the Eastern Terminus in Paris, and how he had been bicycling through
+the Oberland on his way to some mysterious Helvetian retreat. Then we
+laughed--ah! those journalists!--and fears were at an end.
+
+The ducks paddled past us, the drooping foliage of the island trees
+stirred in the warm breeze. On a bench near at hand a couple of vagrants
+sat dozing, with their toes protruding through their wretched footgear.
+Then a soldier, smart and pert, strolled up, a flower between his lips
+and a good-looking girl beside him. Away in front of us were the top
+windows and the roofs of St. Anne's Mansions. Farther, on the left, the
+clock tower of Westminster glinted in the sun-rays.
+
+'Fine ducks!' said M. Zola.
+
+'A pretty corner,' added Desmoulin, waving his hand towards some branches
+that drooped to the water's edge. And suddenly I remembered and told them
+of another French exile, the epicurean St. Evremond, whose needs were
+relieved by Charles II. appointing him governor of yonder Duck Island at
+a salary of three hundred pounds a year.
+
+'Well, I have little money in my pocket,' quoth Zola, 'but I don't think
+I shall come to that. I hope that my pen alone will always yield me the
+little I require.'
+
+But Big Ben struck the hour. It was six o'clock. So we separated, Messrs.
+Zola and Desmoulin to retire to the dungeon at the Grosvenor, and I to go
+in search of my friend the solicitor at his private house at Wimbledon.
+
+
+
+ III
+
+ DANGER SIGNALS
+
+That evening, I called upon my friend--Mr. F. W. Wareham, of Wimbledon,
+and Ethelburge House, Bishopsgate Street--and laid before him the legal
+points. I afterwards arranged to see him on the following morning in
+town, when I hoped to fix a meeting between him and M. Zola. My first
+call on Thursday, July 21, was made to the Grosvenor Hotel, where I found
+both the master and M. Desmoulin in a state of anxiety. M. Zola, for his
+part, felt altogether out of his element. After the excitement of his
+trial and his journey to England, and the novelty of finding himself
+stranded in a strange city, a kind of reaction had set in and he was
+extremely depressed.
+
+M. Desmoulin on his side, having procured several morning newspapers, had
+explored their columns to ascertain whether the ladies by whom the master
+had been recognised in the street on the previous day, had by any chance
+noised the circumstance abroad. However, the Press was still on the
+Norway and Holland scents, and as yet not a paper so much as suggested M.
+Zola's presence in England.
+
+'There has hardly been time,' said Desmoulin to me, 'but there will
+probably be something fresh this afternoon. Those actresses are certain
+to tell people, and we shall have to make ourselves scarce.'
+
+I tried to cheer and tranquillise both him and M. Zola, and then arranged
+that Wareham should come to the hotel at 2 P.M. Meantime, said I,
+whatever M. Desmoulin might do, it would be as well for M. Zola to remain
+indoors. Several commissions were entrusted to me, and I went off,
+promising to return about noon.
+
+I betook myself first to Messrs. Chatto and Windus's in St. Martin's
+Lane, where I arrived a few minutes before ten o'clock. Neither Mr.
+Chatto nor his partner, Mr. Percy Spalding, had as yet arrived, and I
+therefore had to wait a few minutes. When Mr. Spalding made his
+appearance he greeted me with a smile, and while leading the way to his
+private room exclaimed, 'So our friend Zola is in London!'
+
+To describe my amazement is beyond my powers. I could only gasp, 'How do
+you know that?'
+
+'Why, my wife saw him yesterday in Buckingham Palace Road.'
+
+I was confounded. For my part I had scarcely glanced at the ladies whom
+Desmoulin had conjectured to be French actresses--simply because they
+were young, prepossessing, and spoke French!--and certainly I should not
+readily have recognised Mrs. Spalding, whom I had only met once some
+years previously. It now seemed to me rather fortunate that she should be
+the person who had recognised M. Zola, since she would naturally be
+discreet as soon as the situation should be made clear to her.
+
+After I had explained the position, I ascertained that the only person
+besides herself who knew anything so far were her husband and the lady
+friend who had accompanied her on the previous day.
+
+'I will telegraph to my wife at once,' said Mr. Spalding, 'and you may be
+sure that the matter will go no further. We certainly had a hearty laugh
+at breakfast this morning when we read in the "Telegraph" of Zola
+bicycling over the Swiss frontier; but, of course, as from what you tell
+me, the matter is serious, neither my wife nor myself will speak of it.'
+
+'And her friend?' I exclaimed, 'she knows nothing of the necessity for
+secrecy, and may perhaps gossip about it.'
+
+'She is going to Hastings to-day.'
+
+'Hastings!' said I, 'why M. Desmoulin, Zola's companion, does nothing but
+talk of going to Hastings! I am glad I know this. Hastings is barred for
+good, so far as Zola is concerned.'
+
+'Well, I will arrange for my wife to see her friend this morning before
+she starts,' Mr. Spalding rejoined, 'and in this way we may be sure that
+her friend will say nothing.'
+
+This excellent suggestion was acted upon immediately. Mr. Spalding
+telegraphed full instructions to his wife, and later in the day I learnt
+that everything had been satisfactorily arranged. But for this timely
+action, following upon my lucky call at Messrs. Chatto and Windus's
+establishment, it is virtually certain that the meeting in the Buckingham
+Palace Road would have been talked about and the game of 'Where is Zola?'
+brought to an abrupt conclusion. As it happened, both ladies, being duly
+warned, preserved absolute secrecy.
+
+After going to Bishopsgate Street to see Wareham, and executing several
+minor commissions, I returned to the Grosvenor, where Zola and Desmoulin
+were much amused when I told them of the outcome of the previous day's
+fright.
+
+'It was a remarkable coincidence certainly,' said M. Zola. 'At a low
+calculation I daresay a thousand women passed me in the streets
+yesterday; just one of them recognised me, and she, you say, was Mrs.
+Spalding. Shortsighted as I am, not having seen her, too, since I was in
+England, a few years ago, I had no notion she was the person who turned
+as she passed along, and said, "There's Monsieur Zola."
+
+'But the curious part of it is that you should have had to go to
+Chatto's, and should have learnt the lady's name so promptly from her
+husband! Mathematically there were untold chances that this lady who
+recognised me might be some stranger's wife, and that we might never more
+hear anything of her! Yet you discover her identity at once. This is the
+kind of thing which occasionally occurs in novels, but which critics say
+never happens in real life. Well, now we know the contrary.'
+
+And he added gaily, 'You see it is another instance of my good luck,
+which still attends me in spite of all the striving of those who bear me
+grudges.'
+
+So far as the ladies were concerned things were, indeed, very
+satisfactory. But the same could hardly be said of the position at the
+Grosvenor. Neither M. Zola nor M. Desmoulin could leave the hotel or
+return to it without being scrutinised. They had also noticed many a
+glance in their direction at meal-time in the dining-room; and they had
+come to the conclusion that departure was imperative. I did not gainsay
+them, for I shared their views, and, in fact, I had already discussed the
+matter with Wareham. I explained, however, that one must have a few hours
+to devise suitable plans.
+
+Seaside places were dangerous at that time of the year, and the best
+course would probably be to take a furnished house in the country.
+Meantime, said I, Wareham had kindly offered to accommodate M. Zola at
+his residence at Wimbledon, while M. Desmoulin might sleep close by at
+the house of Mr. Everson (Wareham's managing clerk), who also disposed of
+a spare bedroom. Further discussion of these matters was postponed,
+however, until Wareham's arrive at the Grosvenor in the afternoon.
+
+As Zola and Desmoulin both distrusted the inquisitive glances of the
+visitors and the attendants at the hotel, we lunched, I remember, at a
+restaurant in or near Victoria Street--a deep, narrow place, crowded with
+little tables. And here again M. Zola, in his light garments, with the
+rosette of the Legion of Honour showing brightly in his buttonhole,
+became the observed of all observers.
+
+He was, indeed, so conspicuous, so characteristic a figure that, looking
+backward and remembering how repeatedly the illustrated papers had
+portrayed him and how many photographs of him were to be seen in shop
+windows, I often wonder how it happened that he was not recognised a
+hundred times during those few days spent in London. It may be that many
+did recognise him, but held their tongues. As yet, certainly, there was
+not a word in the newspapers to set his adversaries upon his track.
+
+It was in a corner of the smoking-room at the Grosvenor, a hot gloomy
+apartment overlooking Victoria Station, that I introduced Wareham to the
+novelist. The former had already formed some opinion, but a few points
+remained for consideration. The chief of these, as Wareham explained, was
+how far the French Republic might claim jurisdiction over Frenchmen.
+
+In matters of process some countries asserted a measure of authority over
+their subjects wherever they might be; and the question was, what might
+be the law of France in that respect? Of course M. Zola could not be
+extradited. The offence for which he had been sentenced did not come
+within the purview of the Extradition Act. Again (in reply to a query
+from M. Zola), there was no diplomatic channel through which a French
+criminal libel judgment could be signified in England. But suppose that
+French detectives should discover M. Zola's whereabouts, and suppose a
+French process-server should quietly come to England with a couple of
+witnesses, and by some craft or good luck should succeed in placing a
+copy of the Versailles judgment in M. Zola's hands?
+
+Unless a breach of the Queen's peace were committed, it might be
+difficult for the English authorities to interfere. There appeared to be
+no case or precedent in England applying to such a matter. In Germany a
+foreign process-server would be liable to penal servitude. But, of
+course, that was not to the point. Again, although the service by a
+foreigner might not hold good in English law, that had nothing to do with
+it. The process-server and his witnesses would immediately return to
+France; they would there prove to the satisfaction of their employers
+that they had served the judgment on M. Zola personally, and they would
+be able to snap their fingers at English lawyers should the latter
+complain that the thrusting of a document into a man's hand under such
+circumstances was a technical assault. They would have gained their
+point. Judgment would have been served, and in accordance with French law
+M. Zola would be called upon to enter an appearance against it at
+Versailles.
+
+'Things must largely depend,' concluded Wareham, 'on whether French law
+allows process to be served on a subject out of the jurisdiction. And
+that is a point rather for French legal advisers than for me. Still I
+shall look into the matter further; and if at the same time Maitre Labori
+can be communicated with and can supply his opinion on the question, so
+much the better. I now raise the point because it seems the crux of the
+whole matter, and if it goes against us it is certain that M. Zola ought
+to remain in close retirement. For the present it is as well that he
+should run as little risk as possible.'
+
+M. Zola acquiesced in the suggestion of writing to his French counsel on
+the point which had been raised; and the conversation then went on in the
+same low tone that had been preserved from the outset.
+
+On entering the smoking-room we had found it deserted, but whilst Wareham
+was speaking a couple of gentlemen had come in. One, I remember, was an
+elderly, florid man, with mutton-chop whiskers and a buff waistcoat, who
+took his stand beside the fireplace at the further end of the room and
+puffed away at a big cigar. He looked inoffensive enough, and paid no
+attention to us. But the other, a middle-aged individual, tall and slim,
+with military moustaches, eyed us very keenly, changed his position two
+or three times, and finally installed himself in a chair, whence, while
+trifling with a cigarette, he commanded a good view of M. Zola's face.
+Desmoulin, I think, was the first to notice this, and to call the
+novelist's attention to it. Zola then shifted his position, and the
+military looking gentleman soon did the same. At last, doubtless having
+satisfied his curiosity, he left the room, not, however, without a sharp,
+comprehensive survey of our party as he passed us on his way out.
+
+I do not now exactly remember how it happened that Wareham was not
+received in the 'dungeon,' instead of the smoking-room. The choice of the
+latter apartment was unfortunate. I have no doubt that, if some of the
+newspapers were, a day or two afterwards, able to state that M. Zola was
+staying at the Grosvenor Hotel, it was through certain remarks made by
+the inquisitive military looking gentleman to whom I have referred.
+
+On the other hand his curiosity exercised decisive influence over M.
+Zola's subsequent movements. He had hitherto been rather chary of
+accepting Wareham's hospitality, for fear lest he should inconvenience
+him. But the offer now being renewed was promptly accepted, and it was
+agreed that I should take both Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin to Wimbledon
+that evening.
+
+As it was to be expected that several letters from Paris would arrive at
+the hotel, addressed to M. Pascal, I arranged to call or send for them.
+The same course was adopted with regard to a few articles which M. Zola
+had given to be washed and which had not yet been returned to him. Some
+of these things were significantly marked with the letter 'Z,' and for
+this reason it was desirable that they should be recovered. Here I may
+mention that during the next few days my wife repeatedly called at the
+Grosvenor for M. Zola's correspondence, a circumstance which doubtless
+gave rise to the rumour that Mme. Zola had joined her husband in London.
+
+The exodus from the hotel was not particularly imposing. M. Desmoulin had
+originally intended to stay but one day in London, and thus merely had a
+dressing-case with him. As for M. Zola, his few belongings (inclusive of
+a small bottle of ink, which he would not part with) were stuffed into
+his pockets, or went towards the making of a peculiarly shaped newspaper
+parcel, tied round with odd bits of string. Dressing-case and parcel were
+duly brought down into the grand vestibule, where the hotel servants
+smiled on them benignly. There was, indeed, some little humour in the
+situation.
+
+The novelist, with his gold pince-nez and gold watch-chair, his red
+rosette, and a large and remarkably fine diamond sparking on one of his
+little fingers, looked so eminently respectable that it was difficult to
+associate him with the wretched misshapen newspaper parcel--his only
+luggage!--which he eyed so jealously. However, as the attendants were all
+liberally fee'd, they remained strictly polite even if they felt amused.
+I ordered a hansom to be called, and we just contrived to squeeze
+ourselves and the precious newspaper parcel inside it. The dressing-case
+was hoisted aloft. Then the hotel porter asked me, 'Where to, sir?'
+
+'Charing Cross Station,' I replied, and the next moment we were bowling
+along Buckingham Palace Road.
+
+Perhaps a minute elapsed before I tapped the cab-roof with my walking
+stick. On cabby looking down at me, I said, 'Did I tell you Charing Cross
+just now, driver? Ah! well, I made a mistake. I meant Waterloo.'
+
+'Right, sir,' rejoined cabby; and on we went.
+
+It was a paltry device, perhaps, this trick of giving one direction in
+the hearing of the hotel servants, and then another when the hotel was
+out of sight. But, as the reader must know, this kind of thing is always
+done in novels--particularly in detective stories.
+
+And recollections had come to me of some of Gaboriau's tales which long
+ago I had helped to place before the English public. It might be that the
+renowned Monsieur Lecoq or his successor, or perchance some English
+_confrere_ like Mr. Sherlock Holmes, would presently be after us, and so
+it was just as well to play the game according to the orthodox rules of
+romance. After all, was it not in something akin to a romance that I was
+living?
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+ A CHANGE OF QUARTERS
+
+It should be mentioned that the departure of Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin
+from the Grosvenor Hotel took place almost immediately after Wareham had
+returned to his office. We were not to meet our friend the solicitor
+again until the evening at Wimbledon, but the hotel being apparently a
+dangerous spot, it was thought best to quit it forthwith.
+
+When we reached Waterloo the dressing-case and the newspaper parcel were
+deposited at one of the cloak-rooms; and after making the round of the
+station, we descended into the Waterloo Road. At first we sauntered
+towards the New Cut, and of course M. Zola could not help noticing the
+contrast between the dingy surroundings amidst which he now found himself
+and the stylish shops and roads he had seen in the Buckingham Palace
+Road. The vista was not cheering, so I proposed that we should retrace
+our steps and go as far as Waterloo Bridge.
+
+There seemed to be little risk in doing so, for, as usual hereabouts in
+the middle of the afternoon, there were few people to be seen. The great
+successive rush of homeward-bound employers, clerks, and workpeople had
+not yet set in. And, moreover, there was plenty of time; for Wareham,
+having important business in town that day, could not possibly be at
+Wimbledon till half-past six at the earliest.
+
+We reached the bridge--'that monument,' as a famous Frenchman once put
+in, 'worthy of Sesostris and the Caesars'--and went about half-way
+across. It was splendid weather, and the Thames was aglow with the
+countless reflections of the sunbeams that fell from the hot, whitening
+sky. London was before us, 'with her palaces down to the water'; and M.
+Zola stopped short, gazing intently at the scene.
+
+'Up-stream the view was spoilt,' said he, 'by the hideous Hungerford
+Bridge, unworthy alike of the city and the river'--an erection such as no
+Paris municipality would have tolerated for four and twenty hours. It was
+the more obtrusive and aggravating, since beyond it one discerned but
+little of the towers of Westminster. 'Admitting,' added the novelist,
+'that a bridge is needed at that point for railway traffic, surely there
+is no reason why it should be so surprisingly ugly. However, from all I
+see, it seems more and more evident that you English people are very much
+in the habit of sacrificing beauty to utility, forgetting that with a
+little artistic sense it is easy to combine the two.'
+
+Then, however, he turned slightly, and looked down-stream where the
+Victoria Embankment spreads past the Temple to Blackfriars. The
+colonnades of Somerset House showed boldly and with a certain majesty in
+the foreground, whilst in the distance, high over every roof, arose the
+leaden dome of St. Paul's. This vista was rather to M. Zola's liking.
+Close beside us, on the bridge, was one of the semi-circular embrasures
+garnished with stone seats. A pitiful-looking vagrant was lolling there;
+but this made no difference to M. Zola. He installed himself on the seat
+with Desmoulin on one hand and myself on the other, and there we remained
+for some little time looking about us and chatting.
+
+'This was the only thing wanted,' said Desmoulin, who generally had some
+humorous remark in readiness for every situation. 'Yesterday at the
+Grosvenor we were in the _fosse de Vincennes_, and now, as they say in
+the melodrama of "The Knights of the Fog" ("Les Chevaliers du
+Brouillard"*), we are "homeless wanderers stranded on the bridges of
+London."'
+
+ * The French dramatic adaptation of Ainsworth's 'Jack Sheppard.'
+
+The allusion to the fog roused M. Zola from his contemplation.
+
+'But where is the Savoy Hotel, where I stayed in '93?' he inquired. 'It
+must be very near here.'
+
+I pointed it out to him, and he was astonished. 'Why, no--that cannot be!
+It is so large a place, and now it looks so small. What is that huge
+building beside it?'
+
+'The Hotel Cecil,' I replied.
+
+Then again he shook his head in disapproval. From an artistic standpoint
+he strongly objected to the huge caravansary on which builder Hobbs and
+pious Jabez Balfour spent so much of other people's money. Soaring
+massively and pretentiously into the sky it dwarfed everything around;
+and thus, in his opinion, utterly spoilt that part of the Embankment.
+
+'To think, too,' said he, 'that you had such a site, here, along the
+river, and allowed it to be used for hotels and clubs, and so forth.
+There was room for a Louvre here, and you want one badly; for your
+National Gallery, which I well remember visiting in '93, is a most
+wretched affair architecturally.'
+
+'But I want to see rather more of the south side of the river,' he added,
+after a pause. 'I should like to ascertain if my lion is still there. I
+recollect that there was some fog about on the morning after my arrival
+at the Savoy in '93; and when I went to the window of my room I noticed
+the mist parting--one mass of vapour ascending skyward, while the other
+still hovered over the river. And, in the rent between, I espied a lion,
+poised in mid air. It amused me vastly; and I called my wife, saying to
+her, "Come and see. Here's the British lion waiting to bid us good-day."'
+
+We went to the end of the bridge and thence espied the lion which
+surmounts the brewery of that name. M. Zola recognised it immediately.
+Desmoulin would then have led us Strandward; but the Strand, said I, was
+about the most dangerous thoroughfare in all London for those who wished
+to escape recognition; so we went back over the bridge and again down the
+Waterloo road.
+
+'I should like very much to send a line to Paris to-day to stop letters
+from going to the Grosvenor,' said M. Zola. 'Is there any place
+hereabouts where I could write a note?'
+
+This question perplexed me, for the numerous facilities for
+letter-writing which are supplied by the cafes of Paris are conspicuously
+absent in London; and this I explained to M. Zola. A postage stamp may
+often be procured at a public-house, but only now and again can one there
+obtain ink and paper. However, I thought we might as well try the saloon
+bar of the York Hotel, which abuts on the famous 'Poverty Corner,' so
+much frequented by ladies and gentlemen of the 'halls,' when, sorely
+against their inclinations, they are 'resting.'
+
+It was Thursday afternoon; still there were several disconsolate-looking
+individuals lounging about the corner; and in the saloon bar we found
+some fourteen or fifteen loudly dressed men and women typical of the
+spot. I forget what I ordered for Desmoulin and myself, but M. Zola, I
+know imbibed, mainly for the good of the house, 'a small lemon plain.'
+Then we ascertained that the young lady at the bar had neither stamps,
+nor paper, nor envelopes, and so we were again in a quandary. Fortunately
+I recollected a little stationer's shop in the York Road, and leaving the
+others in the saloon bar, I went in search of the requisite materials.
+
+When I returned I found the master an object of general attention. His
+extremely prosperous appearance, his white billycock, his jewellery, and
+so forth, coupled with the circumstance that he conversed in French with
+Desmoulin, had led some of those present to imagine that he was a
+Continental music-hall director on the look out for English 'artists.'
+
+Again and again I noticed, as it were, a 'hungry' glance in his
+direction; and when, after procuring an inkstand from over the bar, I had
+ensconced him in a corner, where he was able after a fashion to pen his
+correspondence, a vivacious and, it seemed to me, somewhat bibulous
+gentleman in a check suit sidled up to where I stood and introduced
+himself in that easy way which repeated 'drops' of 'Mountain Dew' are apt
+to engender.
+
+'Ah!' said he, after a few pointless remarks, 'your friend is over here
+on business, eh? Right thing, splendid thing. It's only by looking round
+that one can get real tip-top novelties. Oh! I know Paree and the
+bouleywards well enough. I was on at the Follee Bergey only a few years
+ago myself. A good place that--pays well, eh? I shouldn't at all mind
+taking a trip across the water again. There's nothing like a change, you
+know. Sets a man up, eh?'
+
+Then mysteriously--lifting his forefinger and lowering his voice, 'Now
+your friend wants "talent," eh? Real, genuine "talent"! I could put him
+in the way----'
+
+But I interposed: 'You've applied to the wrong shop,' I said by way of a
+joke; 'my friend has all the talent he requires. He's quite full up.'
+
+A sorrowful look came over the angular features of the gentleman in the
+check suit. 'It's like my luck,' said he; 'there was a fellow over from
+Amsterdam the other day, but he'd only take girls. I think the
+Continental line's pretty nigh played out.'
+
+He heaved a sigh and glanced in the direction of his empty glass. Then,
+seeing that the novelist and Desmoulin were rising to join me, he
+whispered hurriedly, _'I say, guv'nor, you haven't got a tanner you could
+spare, have you?'_
+
+I had foreseen the request; nevertheless I pressed a few coppers into his
+hand and then hurried out after my wards.
+
+Though it was still early we decided to start at once for Wimbledon. The
+master, I thought, might like to see a little of the place pending
+Wareham's arrival.
+
+The journey through Lambeth, Vauxhall, and Queen's Road is not calculated
+to give the intelligent foreigner a particularly favourable impression of
+London. Still M. Zola did not at first find the surroundings very much
+worse than those one observes on leaving Paris by the Northern or Eastern
+lines. But as the train went on and on and much the same scene appeared
+on either hand he began to wonder when it would all end.
+
+On approaching Clapham Junction a sea of roofs is to be seen on the right
+stretching away through Battersea to the Thames; while on the left a huge
+wave of houses ascends the acclivity known, I believe, as Lavender Hill.
+And at the sight of all the mean, dusty streets, lined with little houses
+of uniform pattern, each close pressed to the other--at the frequently
+recurring glimpses of squalor and shabby gentility--M. Zola exploded.
+
+'It is awful!' he said.
+
+We were alone in our compartment, and he looked first from one window and
+then from the other. Next came a torrent of questions: Why were the
+houses so small? Why were they all so ugly and so much alike? What
+classes of people lived in them? Why were the roads so dusty? Why was
+there such a litter of fragments of paper lying about everywhere? Where
+those streets never watered? Was there no scavengers' service? And then a
+remark: 'You see that house, it looks fairly clean and neat in front. But
+there! Look at the back-yard--all rubbish and poverty! One notices that
+again and again!'
+
+We passed Clapham Junction, pursuing our journey through the cutting
+which intersects Wandsworth Common. 'Well,' I said, 'you may take it
+that, except as regards the postal and police services, you are now out
+of London proper.'
+
+Presently, indeed, we emerged from the cutting, and fields were seen on
+either hand. One could breathe at last. But as we approached Earlsfield
+Station all M. Zola's attention was given to a long row of low-lying
+houses whose yards and gardens extend to the railway line. Now and again
+a trim patch of ground was seen; here, too, there was a little
+glass-house, there an attempt at an arbour. But litter and rubbish were
+only too often apparent.
+
+'This, I suppose,' said the novelist, 'is what you call a London slum
+invading the country? You tell me that only a part of the bourgeoisie
+cares for flats, and that among the lower middle class and the working
+class each family prefers to rent its own little house. Is this for the
+sake of privacy? If so, I see no privacy here. Leaving out the question
+of being overlooked from passing trains, observe the open four-foot
+fences which separate one garden or yard from the other. There is no
+privacy at all! To me the manner in which your poorer classes are housed
+in the suburbs, packed closely together in flimsy buildings, where every
+sound can be heard, suggests a form of socialism--communism, or perhaps
+rather the phalansterian system.'
+
+But Earlsfield was already passed, and we were reaching Wimbledon. Here
+M. Zola's impressions changed. True, he did not have occasion to
+perambulate what he would doubtless have called the 'phalansterian'
+streets of new South Wimbledon. I spared him the sight of the chess-board
+of bricks and mortar into which the speculative builder has turned acre
+after acre north of Merton High Street. But the Hill Road, the Broadway,
+the Worple Road, and the various turnings that climb towards the Ridgeway
+pleased him. And he commented very favourably on the shops in the
+Broadway and the Hill Road, which in the waning sunshine still looked gay
+and bright. At every moment he stopped to examine something. Such
+displays of fruit, and fish, poultry, meat, and provisions of all kinds;
+the drapers' windows all aglow with summer fabrics, and those of the
+jewellers coruscating with gold and gems. Then the public-houses
+--dignified by the name of hotels, though I explained that they had
+no hotel accommodation--bespoke all the wealth of a powerful trade.
+
+There was an imposing bank, too, and a stylish carriage builder's, with
+furniture shops, stationers, pastrycooks, hairdressers, ironmongers, and
+so forth, whose displays testified to the prosperity of the town. Again
+and again did M. Zola express the opinion that these Wimbledon shops were
+by far superior to such as one would find in a French town of
+corresponding size and at a similar distance from the capital.
+
+We sauntered up and down the Hill Road, looking in at the Free Library on
+our way. Then, on passing the Alexandra Road, I explained to Desmoulin
+that he would sleep there, at No. 20, where Wareham has a local office
+and where his managing clerk, Everson by name, resides.
+
+The arrangement with Wareham had been concluded so precipitately that, to
+spare him unnecessary trouble at home, we had arranged to dine that
+evening at a local restaurant--in fact, the only restaurant possessed by
+Wimbledon. Wareham was to join us there. The proprietor, Mr. Genoni, is
+of foreign origin, but Wareham knowing him personally had assured me that
+even should he suspect our friend's identity his discretion might readily
+be relied upon. And so the sequel proved. During our repast, however, I
+felt a little doubtful about one of the waiters who know French, and I
+therefore cautioned M. Zola and M. Desmoulin to be as reticent as
+possible.
+
+After dinner we adjourned to Wareham's house in Prince's Road, where Mrs.
+Wareham gave the travellers the most cordial of welcomes. The
+conversation was chiefly confined to the question of finding some
+suitable place where M. Zola might settle down for his term of exile. He,
+himself, was so taken with what he had seen of Wimbledon that he
+suggested renting a furnished house there. This seemed a trifle
+dangerous, both to Wareham and myself; but the novelist was not to be
+gainsaid; and as Wareham, in anticipation of his services being required,
+had made special arrangements to give M. Zola most of his time on the
+morrow, we arranged to see some house agents, engage a landau, and drive
+round to visit such places as might seem suitable.
+
+It was nearly half-past eleven when I left Wareham's to escort Desmoulin
+to the Alexandra Road. I there left him in charge of his host, Mr.
+Everson, and then turning (by way of a short cut) into the Lover's Walk,
+which the South Western Railway Company so considerately provides for
+amorous Wimbledonians, I hurried homeward, wondering what the morrow
+would bring forth.
+
+
+
+ V
+
+ WIMBLEDON--OATLANDS
+
+It will be obvious to all readers of this narrative that from the moment
+M. Zola left Paris, and throughout his sojourn in London and its
+immediate neighbourhood, there was little if any skill shown in the
+matter of keeping his movements secret. In point of fact, blunder upon
+blunder was committed. A first mistake was made in going to an hotel like
+the Grosvenor; a second in openly promenading some of the most frequented
+of the London streets; and a third in declining to make the slightest
+alteration with regard to personal appearance. Again, although press of
+circumstances rendered departure for Wimbledon a necessity, as it was
+imperative to get M. Zola out of London at once, this change of quarters
+was in the end scarcely conducive to secrecy. A good many Wimbledonians
+were aware of my connection with M. Zola, and even if he were not
+personally recognised by them, the circumstance of a French gentleman of
+striking appearance being seen in my company was fated to arouse
+suspicion. My home is but a mile or so from the centre of Wimbledon, and
+M. Zola's proposal to make that locality his place of sojourn seemed to
+me such a dangerous course that when I returned to Wareham's house on the
+morning of Friday, July 22, I was determined to oppose it, in the
+master's own interests, as vigorously as might be possible.
+
+However, I found Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin ready to start for an
+inspection of such furnished houses as might seem suitable for their
+accommodation; and nothing urged either by Wareham or by myself could
+turn them from their purpose. So the four of us took our seats in the
+landau which had been ordered, and were soon driving in the direction of
+Wimbledon Park, where stood the first of the eligible residences entered
+in the books of a local house agent. The terms for these houses varied,
+if I recollect rightly, from four to seven guineas a week. Some we did
+not trouble to enter; others, however, were carefully inspected.
+
+Nothing in the way of a terrace house would suit; for M. Zola was not yet
+a phalansterian. And in like way he objected to the semi-detached villas.
+He wished to secure a somewhat retired place, girt with foliage and thus
+screened from the observation of neighbours and passers-by. The low
+garden railings and fences usually met with were by no means to his
+taste. The flimsy party walls of the semi-detached villas, through which
+every sound so swiftly passes, were equally objectionable to him. And I
+must say that I viewed with some little satisfaction his dislike for
+several of the houses which we visited; for this made it easier to
+dissuade him from his plan of fixing his abode in Wimbledon, where,
+unless he should rigidly confine himself within doors, it was certain
+that his presence would be known before a week was over.
+
+There were, however, some houses which the master found to his liking;
+and here he lingered awhile, inspecting the rooms, taking stock of the
+furniture, examining the engravings and water-colours on the walls, and
+viewing the trim gardens with visible satisfaction. One place, a large
+house in one of the precipitous roads leading from the Ridgeway to the
+Worple Road, was, perhaps, rather too open for his requirements, but its
+appointments were perfect, and at his bidding I plied the lady of the
+house with innumerable questions about plate, linen, and garden produce,
+the servants she offered to leave behind her, and so forth. She was a
+tall and stately dame, with silver hair and a soft musical voice--a
+perfect type of the old marquise, such as one sees portrayed at times on
+the boards of the Comedie Francaise, and after I had acted as interpreter
+for a quarter of an hour or so, she suddenly turned upon the master and,
+to the surprise of all of us, addressed him in perfect French. It was
+this which broke the spell. Though M. Zola was taken aback, he responded
+politely enough, and the conversation went on in French for some minutes,
+but I could already tell that he had renounced his intention of renting
+the house. When we drove away, after promising the lady a decisive answer
+within a day or two, he said to me:
+
+'That would never do. The lady's French was too good. She looked at me
+rather suspiciously too. She would soon discover my identity. She has
+probably heard of me already.'
+
+'Who hasn't?' I responded with a laugh. And once again I brought forward
+the objections that occurred to me with respect to the plan of remaining
+at Wimbledon. It was a centre of Roman Catholic activity. There was a
+Jesuit college there, numbering both French professors and French pupils.
+Moreover, several French families resided in Wimbledon, and with some of
+them I was myself acquainted. Then also the population included a good
+many literary men, journalists, and others who took an interest in the
+Dreyfus case. And, finally, the town was far too near to London to be in
+anywise a safe hiding-place.
+
+Nevertheless, M. Zola only abandoned his intentions with regret. In that
+bright sunshiny weather there was an attractive _je ne sais quoi_ about
+Wimbledon which charmed him. Not that it was in his estimation an ideal
+place. The descents from the hill and the Ridgeway (though he admired the
+beautiful views they afforded, stretching as far as Norwood) appalled him
+from certain practical standpoints, and he was never weary of expatiating
+on the pluck of the girls who cycled so boldly and gracefully from the
+hill crest to the lower parts of the town. Here it may be mentioned that
+M. Zola has become reconciled to the skirt as a cycling garment. Once
+upon a time he was an uncompromising partisan of 'rationals' and
+'bloomers,' a warm adherent of the views which Lady Harberton and her
+friends uphold. But sojourn in England has changed all that--at least so
+far as the English type of girl is concerned. Those who have read his
+novel, 'Paris,' may remember that he therein ascribed the following
+remarks to his heroine--Marie: 'Ah! there is nothing like rationals! To
+think that some women are so foolish and obstinate as to wear skirts when
+they cycle! . . . To think that women have a unique opportunity of
+putting themselves at their ease and releasing their limbs from prison,
+and yet won't do so! If they fancy they look the prettier in short
+skirts, like schoolgirls, they are vastly mistaken. . . . Skirts are rank
+heresy.'
+
+Well, so far as Englishwomen are concerned, M. Zola himself has become a
+heretic. 'Rationals,' he has more than once said to me of recent times,
+'are not suited to the lithe and somewhat spare figure of the average
+English girl. Moreover, I doubt if there is a costumier in England who
+knows how to cut "rationals" properly. Such women as I have seen in
+rationals in England looked to me horrible. They had not the proper
+figure for the garment, and the garment itself was badly made. For
+rationals to suit a woman, her figure should be of the happy medium,
+neither too slim nor over-developed. Now the great bulk of your girls are
+extremely slim, and appear in skirts to advantage. In cycling, moreover,
+they carry themselves much better than the majority of Frenchwomen do.
+They sit their machines gracefully, and the skirt, instead of being a
+mere bundle of stuff, falls evenly and fittingly like a necessary
+adjunct--the drapery which is needed to complete and set off the
+ensemble.'
+
+At the same time, the master does not cry 'haro' on the 'bloomer.' It is
+admirably suited, he maintains, to the average Frenchwoman, who is more
+inclined to a reasonable plumpness than her English sister. 'The skirt to
+England,' says he, 'the bloomer to France.' The whole question is one of
+physique and latitude. The Esquimaux lady would look ungainly and feel
+uncomfortable if she exchanged her moose furs for the wisp of calico
+which is patronised by the lady of Senegal; and in the like way the
+Englishwoman is manifestly ungainly and uncomfortable when she borrows
+the breeches of the Parisienne.
+
+This digression may seem to carry one away from Wimbledon, but I should
+mention that many of the points enunciated were touched upon by M. Zola
+for the first time, while we postponed further house-hunting to drive
+over Wimbledon Common. The historic mill and Caesar's Camp, and the
+picturesque meres were all viewed before the horses' heads were turned to
+the town once more.
+
+By this time the master had come to the conclusion that however pleasant
+Wimbledon might be, it was no fit place for him, and that his best course
+would be to pitch his tent 'far from gay cities and the ways of men.'
+Within a few hours I had some proof of the wisdom of his decision, and a
+week had not elapsed before I found that M. Zola's sojourn at Wimbledon
+had become known to a variety of people. Mr. Genoni, the restaurateur,
+had been one of the first to identify him; but, as he explained to me, he
+was no spy or betrayer, and whatever he might think of the Dreyfus
+business--he was a reader of that anti-Revisionist print the 'Petit
+Journal'--M. Zola's secret was, he assured me, quite safe in his hands.
+But, independently of Mr. Genoni, the secret soon became _le secret de
+Polichinelle_. A French resident in Wimbledon recognised M. Zola as he
+stood one day by the railway bridge admiring some fair cyclists. Then a
+gentleman connected with the local Petty Sessions court espied him in my
+company, and shrewdly guessed his identity. Subsequently a local
+hairdresser, an Englishman, but one well acquainted with Paris and
+Parisian matters, 'spotted' him in the Hill Road. Others followed suit,
+and at last one afternoon a member of the 'Globe' staff called upon me
+and supplied me with such circumstantial particulars that I could not
+possibly deny the accuracy of his information. But M. Zola had then left
+Wimbledon, and thus I was able to fence with my visitor and inform him
+that, even if the novelist had ever been in the town, he was not there at
+that time.
+
+It had been arranged that some of the leading London house agents should
+be written to, with the view of securing some secluded country house,
+preferably in Surrey, and on the South Western line; but the question
+was, where, in the meantime, could M. Zola be conveniently installed?
+Having left England in the year 1865, and apart from a few brief sojourns
+in London, having remained abroad till 1886, my knowledge of my native
+land is very slight indeed. Years spent in foreign countries have made me
+a stay-at-home--one who nowadays buries himself in his little London
+suburb, going to town as seldom as possible, and without need of country
+or seaside trip, since at Merton, where I live, there are green fields
+all around one and every vivifying breeze that can be wished for. Thus I
+was the worst person in the world to take charge of M. Zola and pilot him
+safely to a haven of refuge.
+
+Fortunately, Mr. Wareham knows his way about, as the saying goes, and his
+cycling experience proved very useful. He suggested that until a house
+could be secured, M. Zola should be installed at a country hotel; and he
+mentioned two or three places which seemed to him of the right character.
+One of these was Oatlands Park; and Wareham, who, although a solicitor,
+claims to have some little poetry in his nature, waxed so enthusiastic
+over the charms of Oatlands and neighbouring localities, that both M.
+Zola and M. Desmoulin, fervent admirers of scenery as they are, became
+curious to visit this leafy district of Surrey, where, as will be
+remembered, King Louis Philippe spent his last years of life and exile.
+
+One afternoon, then, I started with Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin for
+Walton, from which station the Oatlands Park Hotel is most conveniently
+reached. A Gladstone bag had now replaced the master's newspaper parcel,
+and as M. Desmoulin's dressing-case was as large as a valise, there was
+at least some semblance of luggage. I fully realised that it was hardly
+the correct thing to present oneself at Oatlands Park and ask for rooms
+there _ex abrupto_; as with hostelries of that class it is usual for one
+to write and secure accommodation beforehand. However, there was no time
+for this; and we decided to run the risk of finding the hotel 'full up,'
+particularly as Wareham had informed us that in such a case we might
+secure a temporary billet at one or another of the smaller hotels of
+Walton or Weybridge. Thus we went our way at all hazards, and during the
+journey I devised a little story for the benefit of the manager at
+Oatlands Park.
+
+That gentleman, as I had surmised, was a trifle astonished at our
+appearance. But I told him that my friends were a couple of French
+artists, who had been spending a few weeks in London 'doing the lions'
+there, and who had heard of the charming scenery around Oatlands, and
+wished to view it, and possibly make a few sketches. And, at the same
+time, a solicitor's recommendation being of some value, since it might
+mean a good many future customers, I handed the manager one of Wareham's
+cards. There was, I remember, some little difficulty at first in
+obtaining rooms, for the hotel was nearly full; but everything ended
+satisfactorily.
+
+I may mention, perhaps, that in describing Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin as
+French artists, I had at least told half the truth. M. Fernand Desmoulin
+is, of course, well known in the French art world; and, moreover, he had
+already spoken to me of purchasing a water-colour outfit for the very
+purpose of sketching, as I had stated. Then, too, M. Zola first
+distinguished himself in literature as an art critic, the defender of
+Manet, the champion of the school of the 'open air.' And if he made no
+sketches whilst he remained at Oatlands he at least took several
+photographs. Sapient critics will stop me here with the oft-repeated
+dictum that photography is not art. But however that may be, so many
+painters nowadays have recourse to the assistance of photography that M.
+Zola's 'snap-shotting' largely helped to bear out the account which I had
+given of him at the hotel.
+
+Oatlands Park is a large pile standing on the site of a magnificent
+palace built by Henry VIII. Anne of Denmark, wife of James I., resided
+there, and Henrietta Maria there gave birth to the Duke of Gloucester,
+the brother of our second Charles and second James. The palace was almost
+entirely destroyed during the Civil Wars, and subsequently the property
+passed in turn to Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans; Herbert, the admiral, first
+Earl of Torrington; and Henry, seventh Earl of Lincoln. A descendant of
+the last-named sold the estate to Frederick, Duke of York, the son of
+George III. and Commander-in-Chief of the British army. Soon afterwards
+the house at Oatlands was destroyed by fire, and the prince erected a new
+building, some portions of which are incorporated in the present
+hostelry. A pathetic interest attaches to those remains of York House.
+Within those walls were spent many of the honeymoon hours of a fair and
+virtuous princess, one whose early death plunged England into the deepest
+grief it had known for centuries; there she conceived the child who in
+the ordinary course of nature might have become King of Great Britain.
+But the babe, so anxiously awaited by the whole nation (there was no
+Princess Victoria at that time) proved stillborn; and of the unhappy
+'mother of the moment,' Byron wrote in immortal lines:
+
+
+ Of sackcloth was thy wedding garment made;
+ Thy bridal's fruit is ashes; in the dust
+ The fair-hair'd Daughter of the Isles is laid,
+ The love of millions!
+
+
+I am bound to add that the tragic story of the Princess Charlotte was not
+that which most appealed to M. Zola's feelings at Oatlands Park. Nor was
+he particularly impressed by the far-famed grotto which the hotel
+handbook states 'has no parallel in the world.' The grotto, an artificial
+affair, the creation of which is due to a Duke of Newcastle, whom it cost
+40,000 pounds, besides giving employment to three men for twenty years,
+consists of numerous chambers and passages, whose walls are inlaid with
+coloured spars, shells, coral, ammonites, and crystals. This work is
+ingenious enough, but when one enters a bath-room and finds a stuffed
+alligator there, keeping company with a statue of Venus and a terra-cotta
+of the infant Hercules, one is apt to remember how perilously near the
+ridiculous is to the sublime.
+
+Ridiculous also to some minds may seem the Duchess of York's dog and
+monkey cemetery, in which half a hundred of that lady's canine and simian
+pets lie buried with headstones to their tombs commemorating their
+virtues. This cemetery, however, greatly commended itself to M. Zola,
+who, as some may know, is a rare lover of animals. Among the various
+distinctions accorded to him in happier times by his compatriots there is
+none that he has ever prized more highly than the diploma of honour he
+received from the French 'Society for the Protection of Animals,' and I
+believe that one of the happiest moments he ever knew was when, as
+Government delegate at a meeting of that society, he fastened a gold
+medal on the bosom of a blushing little shepherdess, a certain Mlle.
+Camelin, of Trionne, in Upper Burgundy, a girl of sixteen, who, at the
+peril of her life, had engaged a ravenous wolf in single combat, killed
+him, and thereby saved her flock.
+
+And M. Zola's books teem with his love of animals. During his long exile
+one of the few requests addressed to him from France, to which he
+inclined a favourable ear, was an appeal on behalf of a new journal
+devoted to the interests of the animal world. To this he could not refuse
+his patronage, and he gave it enthusiastically, well knowing how much
+remains to be accomplished in inculcating among the masses such affection
+and patience as are rightful with regard to those dumb creatures who
+serve man so well.
+
+The Duchess of York's cemetery reminded him of his own. Below his house
+at Medan a green islet rises from the Seine. This he purchased some years
+ago, and there all his favourites have since been buried: an old horse, a
+goat, and several dogs. During his exile a fresh interment took place in
+this island cemetery, that of his last canine favourite, the poor
+'Chevalier de Perlinpinpin,' who, after vainly fretting for his absent
+master, died at last of sheer grief and loneliness. Those only can
+understand Emile Zola who have seen him as I saw him then, bowed down
+with sorrow, distraught, indifferent to all else, both the weightiest
+personal interests and the very triumph of the cause he had championed;
+and this because his pet dog had pined away for him, and was beyond all
+possibility of succour. It was of course a passing weakness with him;
+such weakness as may fall upon a man of kindly heart. In Zola's case it
+came, however, almost like a last blow amidst the sorrow and loneliness
+of the exile which he was enduring in silence for the sake of his
+much-loved country.
+
+
+
+ VI
+
+ STILL AT OATLANDS
+
+For a time, at all events, Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin found themselves in
+fairly pleasant quarters; they could stroll about the gardens at Oatlands
+or along the umbrageous roads of Walton, or beside the pretty reaches of
+the Thames, amidst all desirable quietude. After all his worries the
+master needed complete mental rest, and he laughed at his friend's
+repeated appeals for newspapers.
+
+At that period I procured a few French journals every time I went to town
+and posted them to Oatlands, where they were eagerly conned by M.
+Desmoulin, on whom the Dreyfus fever was as strong as ever. But M. Zola
+during the first fortnight of his exile did not once cast eyes upon a
+newspaper, and the only information he obtained respecting passing events
+was such as Desmoulin or myself imparted to him. And in this he evinced
+little interest. Half of it, he said, was absolutely untrue, and the
+other half was of no importance. There is certainly much force and truth
+in this curtly-worded opinion as applied to the contents of certain Paris
+journals.
+
+However, communications were now being opened up between the master and
+his Paris friends, and every few days Wareham or myself had occasion to
+go to Oatlands. There were sundry false alarms, too, through strangers
+calling at Wareham's office, and now and again my sudden appearance at
+the hotel threw Messrs. Zola and Desmoulin into anxiety. In other
+respects their life was quiet enough. The people staying at Oatlands
+were, on the whole, a much less inquisitive class than those whom one had
+found at the Grosvenor. There were various honeymoon-making couples, who
+were far too busy feasting their eyes on one another to pay much
+attention to two French artists. Then, also, the family people gave time
+to the superintendence of their sons and daughters; whilst the old folks
+only seemed to care for a leisurely stroll about the grounds, followed by
+long spells of book or newspaper reading, under the shelter of tree or
+sunshade.
+
+Moreover the exiles saw little of the other inmates of the hotel,
+excepting at the table d'hote dinner. M. Zola then brought his faculties
+of observation into play, and after a lapse of a few days he informed me
+that he was astonished at the ease and frequency with which some English
+girls raised their wine-glasses to their lips. It upset all his idea of
+propriety to see young ladies of eighteen tossing off their Moselle and
+their champagne as to the manner born. In France the daughter who is
+properly trained contents herself with water just coloured by the
+addition of a little Bordeaux or Burgundy. And the contrast between this
+custom and incidents which M. Zola noticed at Oatlands--and to which he
+once or twice called my attention--made a deep impression on him.
+
+The people staying at the hotel were certainly all of a good class. There
+were several well-known names in the register; and knowing how much has
+been written on the happy decrease of drinking habits 'in the upper
+middle-class of England,' I was myself slightly surprised at what was
+pointed out to me. When M. Zola discovered, too, that sundry
+gentlemen--leaving wine to their wives and daughters--were addicted to
+drinking whisky with their meals, he was yet more astonished, for he
+claims that in France nowadays, greatly as the consumption of alcohol has
+increased among the masses, it has declined almost to vanishing point
+among people with any claim to culture. On this matter, however, I
+reminded him that wine was often expensive in England, that beer
+disagreed with many people, and that some who felt the need of a
+stimulant were thus driven to whisky and water.
+
+When the master and Desmoulin wandered down to the Thames towing-path,
+they found fresh food for observation and comment among the boating
+fraternity. With some gay parties were damsels whose disregard for
+decorum was strongly reminiscent of Asnieres and Joinville-le-Pont; and
+it was slightly embarrassing to stroll near the river in the evening,
+when at every few yards one found young couples exchanging kisses in the
+shadows of the trees. After all it was surprise rather than embarrassment
+which the exiles experienced, for they had scarcely imagined that English
+training was conducive to such public endearments.
+
+At a later stage a bicycle was procured for the master, and he was then
+able to extend his sphere of observation; but in the earlier days at
+Oatlands his rambles were confined to the vicinity of Walton and
+Weybridge. At the latter village he laid in a fresh stock of linen, and
+was soon complaining of the exiguous proportions of English shirts. The
+Frenchman, it should be remembered, is a man of many gestures, and
+desires all possible freedom of action for his arms. His shirt is cut
+accordingly, and a superabundance rather than a deficiency of material in
+length as well as breadth is the result. But the English shirt-maker
+proceeds upon different lines; he always seems afraid of wasting a few
+inches of longcloth, and thus if the ordinary ready-made shirt on sale at
+shops of the average class is dressy-looking enough, it is also often
+supremely uncomfortable to those who like their ease. Such, at least, was
+the master's experience; and in certain respects, said he, the English
+shirt was not only uncomfortable, but indecorous as well. This astonished
+him with a nation which claimed to show so much regard for the
+proprieties.
+
+The desire to clothe himself according to his wont became so keen that M.
+Desmoulin decided to make an expedition to Paris. All this time Mme. Zola
+had remained alone at the house in the Rue de Bruxelles, outside which,
+as at Medan (where the Zolas have their country residence), detectives
+were permanently stationed. Mme. Zola was shadowed wherever she went, the
+idea, of course, being that she would promptly follow her husband abroad.
+She had, however, ample duties to discharge in Paris. At the same time
+she much wished to send her husband a trunkful of clothes as well as the
+materials for a new book he had planned, in order that he might have some
+occupation in his sorrow and loneliness.
+
+Most people are by this time aware that M. Zola's gospel is work. In
+diligent study and composition he finds some measure of solace for every
+trouble. At times it is hard for him to take up the pen, but he forces
+himself to do so, and an hour later he has largely banished sorrow and
+anxiety, and at times has even dulled physical pain. He himself, heavy
+hearted as he was when the first novelty of his strolls around Oatlands
+had worn off, felt that he must have something to do, and was therefore
+well pleased at the prospect of receiving the materials for his new book,
+'Fecondite.'
+
+At that date he certainly did not imagine that the whole of this work
+would be written in England, that his exile would drag on month after
+month till winter would come and spring return, followed once more by
+summer. In those days we used to say: 'It will all be over in a
+fortnight, or three weeks, or a month at the latest;' and again and again
+did our hopes alternately collapse and revive. Thus the few chapters of
+'Fecondite,' which he thought he might be able to pen in England,
+multiplied and multiplied till they at last became thirty--the entire
+work.
+
+It was M. Desmoulin who brought the necessary materials--memoranda,
+cuttings, and a score of scientific works--from Paris. And at the same
+time he had a trunk with him full of clothes which had been smuggled in
+small parcels out of M. Zola's house, carried to the residence of a
+friend, and there properly packed. Desmoulin also brought a hand camera,
+which likewise proved very acceptable to the master, and enabled him to
+take many little photographs--almost a complete pictorial record of his
+English experiences.
+
+During Desmoulin's absence the master remained virtually alone at
+Oatlands, and as he still cared nothing for newspapers I sent him a few
+books from my shelves, and, among others, Stendhal's 'La Chartreuse de
+Parme.' He wrote me afterwards; 'I am very grateful to you for the books
+you sent. Now that I am utterly alone they enabled me to spend a pleasant
+day yesterday. I am reading "La Chartreuse." I am without news from
+France. If you hear of anything really serious pray let me know about
+it.'
+
+By this time proper arrangements had been made with regard to M. Zola's
+correspondence. His exact whereabouts were kept absolutely secret even
+from his most intimate friends. Everybody, his wife and Maitre Labori
+also, addressed their letters to Wareham's office in Bishopsgate Street.
+Here the correspondence was enclosed in a large envelope and redirected
+to Oatlands. With regard to visitors Wareham and I had decided to give
+the master's address to none. Wareham intended to take their cards,
+ascertain their London address, and then refer the matter through me to
+M. Zola. Later on, a regular supply of French newspapers was arranged,
+and those journals were re-transmitted to the master by Wareham or
+myself.
+
+On the other hand, I usually addressed M. Zola's letters for him to the
+house of a trusty friend in Paris. This precaution was a necessary one,
+as M. Zola's handwriting is so extremely characteristic and so well known
+in France. And thus we were convinced that any letter arriving in Paris
+addressed by him would immediately be sent to the 'Cabinet Noir,' where
+all suspicious correspondence is opened by certain officials, who
+immediately report the contents to the Government.
+
+It has been pretended that of recent years this secret service has been
+abolished; but such is by no means the case. It flourishes to-day in the
+same way as it flourished under the Second Empire, when Napoleon III.
+made a point of acquainting himself with the private correspondence of
+his own relatives, his ministers, and his generals. After the revolution
+of September 1870, hundreds of copies of more or less compromising
+letters, covert attacks on or criticisms of the Imperial Government,
+_billets-doux_ also between Imperial princes and their mistresses, and so
+forth, were found at the Palace of the Tuilleries; and some of them were
+even published by a commission nominated by the Republican Government.
+
+Much of the same kind of thing goes on to-day, and M. Zola, when in Paris
+during the earlier stages of the Dreyfus case, had made it a point to
+trust no letter of the slightest importance to the Postal Service. On one
+occasion, a short time after his arrival in England, we had reason to
+fear that a letter addressed by me to Paris had gone astray, and all
+correspondence on M. Zola's side was thereupon suspended for several
+days. However, the missing letter turned up at last, and from that time
+till the conclusion of the master's exile the arrangements devised
+between him, Wareham, and myself worked without a hitch.
+
+
+
+ VII
+
+ EXCURSIONS AND ALARUMS
+
+Already at the time of M. Zola's arrival in London I had received a
+summons to serve upon the jury at the July Sessions of the Central
+Criminal court. I had been excused from service on a previous occasion,
+but this time I had no valid excuse to offer, and it followed that I must
+either serve or else pay such a fine as the Common Serjeant might direct.
+There is always a certain element of doubt in these matters; and while I
+might perhaps luckily escape service after a day or two, on the other
+hand, I might be kept at the Old Bailey for more than a week. At any
+other time I should have accepted my fate without a murmur; but I was
+greatly worried as to what might befall M. Zola during my absence in
+London, and I more than once thought of defaulting and 'paying up.' But
+the master would not hear of it. He was now located at Oatlands, and felt
+sure that he would have no trouble there. Moreover, said he, it would
+always be possible for me to run down now and again of an evening, dine
+with him, and attend to such little matters as might require my help.
+
+So, on the Monday morning when the sessions opened, I duly repaired to
+town; and on the journey up, I saw in the 'Daily Chronicle' the
+announcement of M. Zola's recent presence at the Grosvenor Hotel. This
+gave me quite a shock. So the Press was on the right track at last!
+Starting from the Grosvenor Hotel, might not the reporters trace the
+master to Wimbledon, and thence to his present retreat? I had no time for
+hesitation. My instructions, moreover, were imperative. For the benefit
+of M. Zola personally, and for the benefit of the whole Dreyfus cause, I
+had orders to deny everything. So I drove to the Press Association
+offices, sent up a contradiction of the 'Daily Chronicle's' statement,
+and then hurried up Ludgate Hill to the Court, where my name was soon
+afterwards called.
+
+I found myself on the second or third jury got together, and that day I
+was not empanelled. But on the morrow I was required to do duty; and
+between then and the latter part of the week I sat upon four or five
+cases--all crimes of violence, and one described in the indictment as
+murder. This position was the more unpleasant for me, as I am, by strong
+conviction, an adversary of capital punishment. I absolutely deny the
+right of society to put any man or any woman to death, whatever be his or
+her crime. My proper course then seemed to lie in the direction of a
+public statement, which would have created, I suppose, some little
+sensation or scandal; but happily the prosecuting counsel in his very
+first words abandoned the count of murder for that of manslaughter, and I
+was thereby relieved from my predicament.
+
+The cases on which I sat, and those to which I listened while I remained
+in attendance, need not be particularised. I will merely mention that
+they were nearly all due to drink. Mr. Justice Lawrance, who sat upon the
+bench, was visibly impressed by the circumstance, to which he more than
+once alluded in his summings up. In one case he was so good as to refer
+to a question, put by me from the jury box, as a proper and pertinent
+one, at which I naturally felt vastly complimented. On the second or
+third day, either before the proceedings began or when the Court rose for
+luncheon--I do not exactly remember which--a gentleman approached me, and
+introduced himself as a member of the Press. Said he, 'I have been asking
+Mr. Avory for you. You are Mr. Vizetelly, I believe?'
+
+'That is my name,' I answered.
+
+'Well, I have come to speak to you about M. Zola's presence in England.'
+
+I should here mention that, in spite of my contradiction of the
+'Chronicle' story, there remained some people who had reason to believe
+it. Moreover, it had been more or less confirmed by the 'Morning Leader,'
+and some editors, rightly surmising that if M. Zola were in London he
+would very likely be in communication with his usual translator, had
+despatched reporters to my house, where my wife had seen them. On
+learning that I was quietly during jury service at the Old Bailey, some
+had apparently concluded that I was not concerned in M. Zola's movements,
+which, so it happened, was the very conclusion I had desired them to
+arrive at. One gentleman, however, not content with his repulse at my
+house, had followed me to the Court.
+
+I answered his inquiries with a variety of suggestions. Zola in England,
+and in London too! Well, we had heard that before, said I. But was it a
+probable course for the novelist to take? He knew no English, and had but
+few personal friends in England. His portraits, however, were in several
+shops and in many newspapers. And only a few years previously he had been
+seen by a thousand English pressmen and others. So would he not be liable
+to recognition almost immediately? Now, the only modern language besides
+French of which M. Zola had any knowledge was Italian. And if I were in
+his place, I said, I should go to Italy--for instance, to one of the
+little towns in the North, whence, if needful, one could cross over into
+Switzerland; though, of course, there was little likelihood that the
+Italian Government would ever surrender the distinguished writer to his
+persecutors.
+
+Continuing in this strain I gave my interviewer material for a very
+plausible article, which I remember was duly published, and which thus
+helped to divert attention from the right scent.
+
+At the week-end, having given considerable time to jury duties, I was
+compelled to spend Saturday morning in London on business, and in the
+afternoon I allowed myself a few hours' relaxation. Reaching Wimbledon
+about eight in the evening I called on Wareham, who received me with a
+great show of satisfaction; for, said he, my services had been required
+for some hours past and nobody had known where I might be. That day, it
+seemed, just before Wareham had left his Bishopsgate Street office, he
+had received a visit from a most singular-looking little Frenchman, who
+had presented one of Maitre Labori's visiting cards and requested an
+interview with M. Zola. Questioned as to his business, the only
+explanation he would give was that he had with him a document in a sealed
+envelope which he must place in M. Zola's own hands. Wareham had wired to
+me on the matter, but owing to my absence from home had of course
+received no reply. Then, on reaching Wimbledon, he had called on me and
+found me out. And, finally, he had gone down to Oatlands and had there
+seen M. Zola, who had handed him a note authorising Maitre Labori's
+messenger to call at the hotel on the morrow. However, the messenger and
+his manners had seemed very suspicious to Wareham--as, indeed, they
+afterwards seemed to me--and the question arose, was he a genuine envoy,
+was the writing on Maitre Labori's card perchance a forgery, and what was
+the document in a sealed envelope which was to be handed to nobody but M.
+Zola himself? Well, said I at a guess, perhaps it is a copy of the
+Versailles judgment, and this is simply an impudent attempt to serve it.
+
+Wareham still had Zola's note in his possession, and we resolved to go to
+town that evening to interview the messenger and extract from him some
+decisive proof of his bona fides before allowing matters to go any
+further.
+
+The envoy's address was the Salisbury Hotel, Salisbury Court, Fleet
+Street, which I thought a curious one, being in the very centre of the
+London newspaper district; and all the way up to town my suspicions of
+having to do with a 'plant' steadily increased. It was quite ten o'clock
+when we reached the hotel, and on inquiring for our party found that he
+had gone to bed.
+
+'Well,' said Wareham, sharply, 'he must be roused. We must see him at
+once.'
+
+I spoke to the same effect, and the hotel servants looked rather
+surprised. I have an idea that they fancied we had come to arrest the
+man.
+
+In about ten minutes he was brought downstairs. His appearance was most
+unprepossessing. He was very short, with a huge head and a remarkable
+shock of coal-black hair. Having hastily risen from bed, he had retained
+his pyjamas, but a long frock-coat hung nearly to his slippers, and in
+one hand he carried a pair of gloves, and in the other a huge eccentric
+silk hat of the true chimney-pot type. These were details, and one might
+have passed them over. But the man's face was sadly against him. He had
+the slyest eyes I have ever seen; that peculiar shifty glance which
+invariably sets one against an individual. And thus I became more and
+more convinced that we had to deal with some piece of trickery.
+
+We entered the smoking-room where the gas was burning low. A gentleman
+stopping at the hotel was snoring in solitary state in one of the arm
+chairs. Reaching a table near a window we sat down and at once engaged in
+battle.
+
+'I have not brought you a definite answer,' said Wareham to the envoy,
+'but this gentleman is in M. Zola's confidence, and wishes further proof
+of your bona fides before allowing you to see M. Zola.'
+
+Then I took up the tale, now in French, now in English, for the envoy
+spoke both languages. Who was he? I asked. Did he claim to have received
+Labori's card from Labori himself? What was the document in the envelope
+which he would only deliver to M. Zola in person? And he replied that he
+was a diamond-broker. Did I know So-and-So and So-and-So of Hatton
+Garden? They knew him well, they did business with him; they could vouch
+for his honorability. But no, I was not acquainted with So-and-So and
+So-and-So. I never bought diamonds. Besides, it was ten o'clock on
+Saturday night, and the parties mentioned were certainly not at their
+offices for me to refer to them.
+
+Afterwards the little envoy began to speak of his family connections and
+his Paris friends, mentioning various well-known names. But the proofs I
+desired were not forth-coming; and when he finally admitted that he had
+not received Maitre Labori's card from that gentleman himself, all my
+suspicions revived. True he added that it had been given him by a
+well-known Revisionist leader to whom Maitre Labori, in a moment of
+emergency, having nobody of his own whom he could send abroad, had handed
+it.
+
+But what was in the envelope? That was the great question. The envoy
+could or would not answer it. He knew nothing certain on that point. Then
+we--Wareham and I--brought forward our heavy artillery. We could not
+allow a document to be handed to M. Zola under such mysterious
+conditions. We must see it. But no, the envoy had strict instructions to
+the contrary; he could not show it to us. In that case, we rejoined, he
+might take it back to Paris. He had produced no proof of any of his
+assertions; for all we knew he might have told us a fairy tale, and the
+mysterious document might simply be a copy of the much dreaded judgment
+of Versailles. This suggestion produced a visible impression on the
+little man, and for half an hour we sat arguing the point. Finally he
+began to compliment us: 'Oh! you guard him well!' he said. 'I shall tell
+them all about it when I get back to Paris. But you do wrong to distrust
+me; I am honourable. I am well known in Hatton Gardens. I have done
+business there, ten, twelve years with So-and-So and So-and-So. I speak
+the truth: you may believe me.'
+
+We shrugged our shoulders. For my part, I could not shake off the bad
+impression which the envoy had made on me. The gleams of craft and
+triumph which now and again I had detected in his eyes were not to my
+liking. Assuredly few men are responsible for any physical repulsiveness;
+we cannot all be 'Belvedere' Apollos; but then the envoy was not only of
+the ugly, but also the cunning-looking class. Yet a more honourable man
+never breathed. He at once thrust one hand into the depths of a capacious
+inner pocket, produced the mysterious envelope, and opened it in our
+presence. It contained simply a long letter from Maitre Labori,
+accompanied by a document concerning the prosecution which had been
+instituted with reference to the infamous articles that Ernest Judet, of
+the 'Petit Journal,' had recently written, accusing Zola's father of
+theft and embezzlement whilst he was a wardrobe officer in the French
+Foreign Legion in Algeria. It was needful that Zola should see this
+document, and return it by messenger to Paris immediately.
+
+The affair in question is still _sub judice_, and I must therefore speak
+of it with some reticence. But all who are interested in M. Zola's origin
+and career will do well to read the admirable volume written by M.
+Jacques Dhur, and entitled 'Le Pere d'Emile Zola,' which the Societe
+Libre d'Edition des Gens de Lettres (30, Rue Laffitte, Paris) published a
+short time ago. This will show them how strong are the presumptions that
+the documents cited by Judet in proof of his abominable charges are rank
+forgeries--similar to those of Henry and Lemercier-Picard! In this
+connection it afforded me much pleasure to be able to supply certain
+extracts from Francesco Zola's works at the British Museum, showing how
+subsequent to the date at which the novelist's father is alleged to have
+purloined State money he was received with honour by King Louis-Philippe,
+the Prince de Joinville, the Minister of War, and other high personages
+of the time--incidents which all tend to establish the falsity of the
+accusations by which Judet, in his venomous spite and malignity, hoped to
+cast opprobrium on the parentage of my dear master and friend.
+
+But I must return to Maitre Labori's envoy. When I had seen the contents
+of his envelope I heartily apologised to him for the suspicions which I
+had cast upon his good faith. At this he smiled more maliciously and
+triumphantly than ever, and then candidly remarked: 'Well, if you have
+tested me, I have tested you, and I shall be able to tell all our friends
+in Paris that M. Zola is in safe hands.'
+
+According to our previous agreement we re-sealed the envelope, writing
+across it that it had been opened in the presence of Wareham and myself.
+And afterwards our reconciliation also was 'sealed' over a friendly
+glass. Nevertheless the envoy never saw M. Zola. M. Desmoulin luckily
+turned up on the morrow, and, armed with a fresh note from the master,
+persuaded our little French friend to hand him the documents.
+
+We left the Salisbury Hotel, Wareham and I, well pleased to find that our
+suspicions had been unfounded. Nevertheless the whole conversation of the
+last hour had left its mark on us; and, for my part, I was in much the
+same state of mind as in the old days of the siege of Paris, when the spy
+mania led to so many amusing incidents. Thus, the circumstance of finding
+two persons at the corner of Salisbury Square as we left it--two persons
+who were speaking in French and who eyed us very suspiciously--revived my
+alarm. They even followed us along Fleet Street towards the Ludgate
+Circus, and though we dodged them through the cavernous Ludgate Hill
+Railway Station, across sundry courts and past the stores of Messrs.
+Spiers and Pond, we again found them waiting for us on our return towards
+the embankment, determined, so it seemed, to convoy us home. We hastened
+our steps and they hastened theirs. We loitered, they loitered also. At
+last Wareham made me dive into a side street and thence into a maze of
+courts, and though the others seemed bent on following us, we at last
+managed to give them the slip.
+
+I never saw these men again, but I have retained a strong suspicion that
+no mere question of coincidence could explain that seeming pursuit. I
+take it that the individuals had come over to England on the track of the
+little French envoy; for it was after he had bidden us good-night outside
+the Salisbury Hotel that they had turned to follow us. He had told us,
+too, that earlier in the evening he had spent a hour smoking and
+strolling about Salisbury Court whilst anxiously awaiting Wareham's
+arrival with his promised answer. Whether these men were French police
+spies, whether they were simply members of some swell mob who know that
+the little gentleman with the huge head and the coal-black hair sometimes
+journeyed to London with a fortune in diamonds in his possession, must
+remain a mystery. As for Wareham and myself, when we had again reached
+Fleet Street we hailed a passing hansom and drove away to Waterloo.
+
+
+
+ VIII
+
+ OTHER PERSONAL ADVENTURES
+
+I had another alarm a few days later. Returning one evening by train from
+Waterloo, I was followed into the compartment I selected by a party of
+five men, two of whom I recognised. One was the landlord of the Raynes
+Park Hotel, now deceased, and the other his son. Their companions proved
+to be Frenchmen, which somehow struck me as a curious circumstance. This
+was the time when a letter addressed by me to Paris for M. Zola appeared
+to have gone astray, and when we were therefore rather apprehensive of
+some action on the part of the French authorities. Could it be that the
+two Frenchmen who had followed me into the railway carriage in the
+company of a local licensed victualler were actually staying at Raynes
+Park, within half a mile of my home? And, if so, what could be their
+purpose?
+
+I remained silent in my corner of the carriage, pretending to read a
+newspaper; but on glancing up every now and then I fancied that I
+detected one or another of the Frenchmen eyeing me suspiciously. They
+conversed in French, either together or with the landlord's son--who
+spoke their language, I found--on a variety of commonplace topics until
+we had passed Earlsfield and were fast approaching Wimbledon. Then, all
+at once, one of them inquired of the other: 'Shall we get out at
+Wimbledon or Raynes Park?'
+
+'We'll see,' replied the other; and at the same time it seemed to me that
+he darted a very expressive glance in my direction.
+
+I now began to feel rather nervous. It was my own intention to alight at
+Wimbledon, as I had an important message from M. Zola to communicate to
+Wareham that evening. But it now occurred to me that the best policy
+might be to go straight home. If these men were French detectives, or
+French newspaper men of the anti-Dreyfusite party, who by shadowing me
+hoped to discover M. Zola's retreat, it would be most unwise for me to go
+to Wareham's. If once the latter's name and address should be ascertained
+by detectives, communications between M. Zola and his friends would be
+jeopardised. On the other hand, of course, I might be mistaken with
+regard to the men; and before all else I ought to make sure whether they
+really had any hostile intentions. So I resolved to leave the train at
+Wimbledon, as I had originally proposed doing, and then shape my course
+by theirs.
+
+As soon as the train pulled up I rose to alight, and at that same moment
+the Frenchman who had said 'We'll see,' exclaimed to his companion:
+'Well, I think we will got out here.'
+
+I waited to hear no more. I rushed off, threw my ticket to an inspector,
+climbed the steps from the platform, descended another flight into the
+station-yard, hurried into the Hill Road, and did not pause until I
+reached the first turning on the right. This happened to be the Alexandra
+Road, in which Wareham's local office is situated.
+
+Then I turned round and, sure enough, I saw the two Frenchmen, the
+licensed victualler and his son, deliberately coming towards me.
+Forthwith, under cover of a passing vehicle, I crossed the street to the
+corner of St. George's Road, which offered a convenient, shady retreat.
+Then I awaited developments. To my great relief the party of four went
+straight on up the Hill Road.
+
+Nevertheless, this might only be a feint, and I hesitated about going to
+Wareham's immediately. Before anything, I had better let those suspicious
+Frenchmen get right away. So I retraced my steps towards the station, and
+entered the saloon bar of the South-Western Hotel. There I found a
+foreign gentleman, whether French or Italian I do not know, whom I had
+previously met about Wimbledon on various occasions. A short, rather
+stout, and elderly man, formerly, I believe, in business in London, and
+now living on his income, he had more than once spoken to me of the
+Dreyfus case, Zola, Esterhazy, and all the others. And on this particular
+evening he approached me with a smile, and inquired if there were any
+truth in the reports he had heard to the effect that M. Zola had lately
+been seen in Wimbledon.
+
+Nervous as I was at that moment, I was about to give him a sharp reply,
+when the door of the saloon bar opened, and to my intense alarm in
+marched the two Frenchmen who had already inspired me with so much
+distrust. Their friends were behind them; and I could only conclude that
+my movements had somehow been observed by them, and that now I was
+virtually caught, like a rat in a trap.
+
+I was the more startled, too, when my foreign acquaintance (about whom I
+really knew very little) abruptly quitted me to accost the new comers.
+But this gave me breathing time. The door was free, and so, leaving the
+refreshment I had ordered untouched, I bolted out of the house in much
+the same way as a thief might have done, and ran, as if for my life,
+right down the Alexandra Road until I reached Wareham's office. And there
+I seized the knocker in a frenzy, and made such a racket as might have
+awakened the dead. The door suddenly opened, and I fell into the arms of
+Everson, Wareham's managing clerk.
+
+'Great Scott!' said he. 'What is the matter? You've nearly brought the
+house down!'
+
+'Shut the door!' I replied. 'Shut the door!'
+
+'But what has happened to you?'
+
+I had seated myself on the stairs, and a full minute went by before I
+could begin my story. Then I told Everson all that had befallen me. Some
+Frenchmen were on Zola's track; they must be the very same men who had
+shadowed Wareham and myself from the Salisbury Hotel some nights
+previously; and now they were in Wimbledon, having heard, no doubt, that
+M. Zola had been seen there. Wareham must be warned of it. Every
+precaution must be taken; we must remove our charge from Oatlands, and so
+forth.
+
+Everson puffed away at his pipe and listened meditatively. At last he
+remarked, 'Well, it is a curious business if what you say is true. What
+were these Frenchmen like?'
+
+Forthwith I began to describe them as accurately as I could. The first
+likeness I sketched must have been a faithful one, for Everson started,
+and exclaimed, 'And the other. Was he not so-and-so and so-and-so?'
+
+'Yes, he was. But how do you know that?' I rejoined, with considerable
+surprise.
+
+'Why, because I know who the men are! Although you saw them with Mr.
+Savage of the Raynes Park Hotel, it doesn't follow that they are staying
+at Raynes Park. As a matter of fact they live here in this very road.
+They have been here I daresay, eight or nine months now. And as for being
+detectives, my dear sir, they are musicians!'
+
+'You don't mean it!'
+
+I collapsed again. To think that out of a mere chain of chance
+coincidences I should have forged a perfect melodramatic intrigue! To
+think that I should have let my fancy run away with me in such a fashion,
+and have worked myself into such a state of nervousness and alarm! I
+could not help feeling a trifle ashamed. 'Well,' I pleaded, 'for my part,
+I had never seen the men before, either in Wimbledon or elsewhere. Of
+course, I am short-sighted, and my eyes sometimes play me tricks;
+however, as you are sure--'
+
+'Sure!' repeated Everson; and again he described the men in such a way as
+to convince me that there was no mistake in the matter. 'Moreover,' he
+added, 'I saw them go past the house this very morning when they went up
+to town.'
+
+'Well,' I rejoined, 'I suppose I am losing my head. Ten minutes ago I
+could have sworn that those men were after me.'
+
+'Your statement that you never saw them before,' said Everson, 'does not
+surprise me. As a rule they go to town every morning, and as you are
+seldom in Wimbledon in the evening you can't very well meet one another.'
+
+'I suppose you regard me as a bit of a fool?' I inquired.
+
+'Oh, no. The circumstances were curious enough, and in your place I might
+have drawn the same conclusions. Only I don't think I should have hurried
+off to a friend's house and have nearly "knocked" it down.'
+
+We both laughed, and then I apologised.
+
+'As a matter of fact,' said I, 'all this is the natural outcome of
+events. The beginning was long ago. I have a secret which I find haunting
+me when I get up in the morning; all day long it occupies my mind; at
+night it clings to me and follows me through my sleep. And I grow more
+and more suspicious; it seems as if everybody I meet has designs upon my
+secret. Every Frenchman I don't know is a detective or a process server
+with a copy of the Versailles judgment in his pockets. And thus I shall
+soon become a monomaniac if I do not discover some remedy. I think I
+shall try the shower-bath system.'
+
+Then I recalled experiences dating from long prior to M. Zola's arrival
+in England. First mysterious offers of important documents bearing on the
+Dreyfus case--documents forged a la Lemercier-Picard, hawked about by
+adventurers who tried to dispose of them, now in Paris, now in Brussels,
+and now in London. Needless to say that I, like others, had rejected them
+with contempt. Then had come an incident that Everson already know of: a
+stranger with divers aliases beseeching me for private interviews in M.
+Zola's interest, a request which I ultimately granted, and which led to a
+rather curious experience. I had declined to see my correspondent alone,
+and had given him the address of Wareham, who had been present at the
+interview. And at first the stranger, a tall and energetic looking man,
+with sunburnt face and heavy moustaches, had refused to disclose his
+business in Wareham's presence. If at last he did so, it was solely
+because I told him that before coming to any decision in the matters
+which he might have to submit to me I should certainly lay them before my
+solicitor. So the result would be the same, whether he spoke out before
+Wareham or not. And Wareham very properly added that a solicitor was, in
+a measure, a confessor bound to observe professional secrecy.
+
+At last the man told us his business, and it proved to be a scheme for
+rescuing Dreyfus from Devil's Island and carrying him to an American
+port. Neither Wareham nor myself was able to take the matter seriously,
+but our visitor spoke with great earnestness, as though he already saw
+the suggested feat accomplished. He had a ship at his disposal, and a
+crew also. He gave particulars about both. If I remember rightly, the
+ship lay at Bristol. He knew Cayenne and Devil's Island, and Royal
+Island, and so forth. He was convinced of the practicability of the
+venture, he had weighed all the _pros_ and _cons_, and it rested with
+Dreyfus's friends and relatives to decide whether or no he (the prisoner)
+should be a free man within another six weeks.
+
+Wareham laughed. He was thinking of 'Captain Kettle,' and said so. But
+the would-be rescuer protested that all this was no romancing. Oh! he was
+not a philanthropist, he should expect to be well paid for his services;
+but the Dreyfus family was rich, and M. Zola, too, was a man of means. So
+surely they would not begrudge the necessary funds to release the unhappy
+prisoner from bondage.
+
+But I replied that though the Dreyfus family and M. Zola also were
+anxious to see Dreyfus free, they were yet more anxious to prove his
+innocence. Personally I knew nothing of the Dreyfus family, and could
+give no letter of introduction to any member of it, such as I was asked
+for. And, as regards M. Zola, I was sufficiently acquainted with his
+character to say that he would never join in any such enterprise. He
+intended to pursue his campaign by legal means alone, and it was useless
+to refer the matter to him.
+
+Then the interview ended rather abruptly. A French client of Wareham's
+happened to call at that very moment, and was heard speaking in French in
+the hall. This seemed to alarm the stranger, who ceased pressing his
+request that I should give him letters of introduction to prominent
+Dreyfusites. He rose abruptly, saying that the time would come when we
+should probably regret having refused to entertain his proposals, and
+hurrying past the waiting French client he ran off down the Alexandra
+Road in much the same way as I myself subsequently ran off from the
+French 'detectives' who were simply harmless disciples of St. Cecilia.
+
+To this day I do not know whether the man was a lunatic, an imposter
+seeking money, or an _agent provocateur_, that is, one who imagined that
+he might through me inveigle M. Zola into an illegal act which would lead
+to prosecution and imprisonment. The last-mentioned status that I have
+ascribed to my interviewer is by no means an impossible one, considering
+the many dastardly attempts made to discredit and ruin M. Zola. And yet,
+suspicious and abrupt as was the man's leave-taking when he heard French
+being spoken outside Wareham's private room (where the interview took
+place), I nowadays think it more charitable to assume that he was a
+trifle crazy. One thing is certain, he had come to the wrong person in
+applying to me to aid and abet him in the foolhardy enterprise he spoke
+of.
+
+This is the first time I have told this anecdote in any detail; but at
+the period when the incident occurred I spoke of it casually to a few
+friends, to which circumstance I am inclined to attribute the earlier
+paragraphs which appeared in the newspapers about American schemes for
+delivering Dreyfus. The person whom I saw was, I believe, a
+German-American.
+
+Well, this incident, preposterous as it may appear (but truth, remember,
+is quite as fantastic as fiction), had proved another link in the chain
+of suspicious occurrences in which I had been mixed up prior to M. Zola's
+exile. Other curious little incidents had followed, and thus for many
+months I had been living--even as we lived long ago in besieged Paris--in
+distrust of all strangers, and the climax had come with my foolish fears
+respecting a couple of French musicians. The story I have told goes
+against me, but the man who cannot tell a story against himself when he
+thinks it a good one can have, I think, little grit in his composition.
+
+From the time of my adventure with the French musicians I steeled myself
+against excessive fears whilst remaining duly vigilant. On one point I
+was still anxious, which was that M. Zola should be able to settle down
+in a convenient retreat where him himself would enjoy all necessary
+quietude; whilst we, Wareham and I, knowing him to be well screened from
+his enemies, would be less liable to those 'excursions and alarums' which
+had hitherto troubled us. As the next chapter will show, this
+consummation was near at hand.
+
+
+
+ IX
+
+ A QUIET HOME AND A HAUNTED HOUSE
+
+It was M. Zola himself who, after some stay at Oatlands, discovered, in
+the course of his excursions with M. Desmoulin, a retreat to his liking.
+It was a house in that part of Surrey belonging to a city merchant, who
+was willing to let it furnished for a limited period. The owner met M.
+Zola on various occasions and showed himself both courteous and discreet.
+
+The details of the 'letting' were arranged between him and Mr. Wareham;
+and my wife hastily procured servants for the new establishment. These
+servants, however, did not speak French, and I settled with M. Zola that
+my eldest daughter, Violette, should stay with him to act in some measure
+as his housekeeper and interpreter. This was thrusting a young girl, not
+quite sixteen, into a position of considerable responsibility, but I
+thought that Violette would be equal to the task, provided she followed
+the instructions and advice of her mother; and as she was then at home
+for the summer holidays she was sent down to M. Zola's without more ado.
+
+I shall have occasion to speak of her hereafter in some detail, in
+connection with a very curious incident which marked M. Zola's exile.
+Here I will merely mention that a Parisienne by birth and speaking French
+from her infancy, it was easy for her to understand and explain the
+master's requirements.
+
+Like M. Zola, she was provided with a bicycle, and the pair of them
+occasionally spent an afternoon speeding along leafy Surrey lanes and
+visiting quaint old villages. The mornings, however, were devoted to
+work, for it was now that M. Zola started on his novel, 'Fecondite,' the
+first of a series of four volumes, which will be, he considers, his
+literary testament.
+
+These books, indeed, are to embody what he regards as the four cardinal
+principles of human life. First Fruitfulness, as opposed to
+neo-Malthusianism, which he holds to be the most pernicious of all
+doctrines; next Work, as opposed to the idleness of the drones, whom he
+would sweep away from the human community; then Truth, as opposed to
+falsehood, hypocrisy, and convention; and, finally, Justice to one and
+all, in lieu of charity to some, oppression to others, and favours for
+the privileged few.
+
+All four books--'Fruitfulness,' 'Work,' 'Truth,' and 'Justice'--are to be
+stories; for years ago M. Zola arrived at the conclusion that mere essays
+on sociology, though they may work good in time among people of culture,
+fail to reach and impress the masses in the same way as a story may do.
+It is, I take it, largely on this account that Emile Zola has become a
+novelist. He has certainly written essays, but he knows how
+inconsiderable have been their sales in comparison with those of his
+works embodying precisely the same principles, but placed before the
+world in the form of novels. To criticise him as a mere story-teller is
+arrant absurdity.
+
+He himself put the whole case in a nutshell when he remarked, 'My novels
+have always been written with a higher aim than merely to amuse. I have
+so high an opinion of the novel as a means of expression that I have
+chosen it as the form in which to present to the world what I wish to say
+on the social, scientific, and psychological problems that occupy the
+minds of thinking men. I might have said what I wanted to say to the
+world in another form. But the novel has to-day risen from the place
+which it held in the last century at the banquet of letters. It was then
+the idle pastime of the hour, and sat low down between the fable and the
+idyll. To-day it contains, or may be made to contain, everything; and it
+is because that is my creed that I am a novelist. I have, to my thinking,
+certain contributions to make to the thought of the world on certain
+subjects, and I have chosen the novel as the best means of communicating
+these contributions to the world.'
+
+If critics in reviewing one or another of M. Zola's books would only bear
+these declarations of the author in mind, the reading public would often
+be spared many irrelevant and foolish remarks.
+
+M. Zola's device is _Nulla dies sine linea_, and even before the
+materials for 'Fecondite' were brought to him from France he had given an
+hour or two each day to the penning of notes and impressions for
+subsequent use. With the arrival of his books and memoranda, work began
+in a more systematic way. At half-past eight every morning he partook of
+a cup of coffee and a roll and butter, no more, and shortly after nine he
+was at his table in a small room overlooking the garden of the house he
+had rented. And there he remained regularly, hard at work, until the
+luncheon hour, covering sheet after sheet of quarto paper with serried
+lines of his firm, characteristic handwriting.
+
+M. Zola has retained possession of the MSS. of almost every work written
+by him, and I know that these MSS. often differ largely from the books
+actually given to the world. The 'copy' is not only extremely clear, but
+remarkably free from erasures and interpolations. But when his first
+proofs reach him M. Zola revises them with the greatest care. He will
+strike out whole passages in the most drastic manner, and alter others
+until they are almost unrecognisable.
+
+He will even at the last moment change some character's name, and I know
+all the inconvenience that arises on certain occasions from having had to
+prepare portions of my translations from first proofs, through lack of
+time to wait for the corrected matter.
+
+This was notably the case with my version of 'Paris.' While that work was
+passing through the Press M. Zola was already in all the throes of the
+Dreyfus affair, and somehow, as he has acknowledged to me with regret, he
+forgot to tell me that at the last moment he had changed the names of
+several personages in the story. Thus Duthil (as originally written and
+given in my translation) became Dutheil in the French book; Sagnier was
+changed to Sanier; the Princess de Horn was renamed Harn and finally
+Harth, and young Lord George Eliott became Elson.
+
+Of course some of the reviewers of my translations attacked me virulently
+for my unwarrantable presumption in changing the very names of M. Zola's
+characters; they were unaware that the names given by me were those first
+selected by the author, who had afterwards altered them and forgotten to
+tell me of it.
+
+Coming back to 'Fecondite,' I should say that M. Zola wrote an average of
+three pages per day of that book during his exile in England. Work ceased
+at the luncheon hour, as I have said, and consequently he could dispose
+of his afternoons.
+
+But it will be remembered that the summer of 1898 was exceptionally hot,
+so hot indeed that M. Zola, though many years of his childhood were spent
+under the scorching sun of Provence, found a siesta absolutely necessary
+after the midday meal. It was only later that he ventured out on foot or
+on his bicycle, often taking his hand camera with him.
+
+At some distance from the house where he was residing, in the midst of
+large deserted grounds, overrun with grass and weeds, there stood a
+mournful-looking, unoccupied private residence of some architectural
+pretensions, on the building of which a considerable sum had evidently
+been expended. The place took M. Zola's fancy the first time he passed it
+on his bicycle. The iron entrance gate was broken, and he was able to
+enter the garden and peep through the ground-floor windows.
+
+All spoke of decay and abandonment; and when, through my daughter, M.
+Zola began to make inquiries about the place, he was told a fantastic
+tragic story. A murder, it was said, had been committed there many years
+previously; a poor little girl had been killed by her stepmother, and her
+remains had been buried beneath a scullery floor.
+
+There was also talk of the child's father, who at night drove up to the
+house in a phantom carriage drawn by ghostly horses, and hammered at the
+door of the mansion and shouted aloud for his dead child!
+
+The story was alleged to be well known, and it was said that not a girl
+from Chertsey to Esher, from Walton to Byfleet, would have dared to pass
+that house after nightfall, when harrowing voices rang out through the
+trees, and the shadowy horses of the ghostly carriage trotted swiftly and
+silently over the gravel.
+
+The story not only impressed my daughter Violette, but it greatly
+interested M. Zola, on whose behalf I made various inquiries. For
+instance, I closely questioned an old gardener who had known the district
+for long years. All he could tell me, however, was that there were
+certainly some strange rumours abroad among the womenfolk, but that for
+his own part he had never heard of any crime and had never seen any
+ghost.
+
+And at last others told me quite a different story of the house's
+abandonment, and this I here venture to give, though I certainly cannot
+vouch for its accuracy. The place had been built, it seemed, some forty
+years previously by a retired and wealthy London pawnbroker, a gaunt,
+shrivelled old man, who, mounted on a white mare, had in his declining
+years been a familiar figure on the roads of the district.
+
+Extremely eccentric, he had largely furnished and decorated the house
+with unredeemed articles that had been pledged with him. There was
+nothing _en suite_. Old chairs of divers patterns were mingled with odd
+tables and sideboards and sofas; there were also innumerable daubs
+'ascribed' to old masters, and a wonderful display of Wardour-street
+_bric-a-brac_. But, indeed, one has only to look at an average
+pawnbroker's shop to picture what kind of articles the house must have
+contained.
+
+It seems that the old fellow in question had three daughters, whom he
+kept more or less imprisoned on his recently-acquired property, though
+they were charming girls well worthy of being sought in marriage; and the
+story I heard was that three officers sojourning in the district had one
+day espied the three forlorn damsels over the garden hedge, and had
+forthwith begun to court them, much to the ire of the misanthropic,
+retired pawnbroker. That stern old gentleman ordered his daughters into
+the house, and then kept them in stricter confinement than ever.
+
+But love laughs at locksmiths, and the amorous officers eventually
+carried the place by storm, and beat down all parental resistance. Three
+weddings followed on the same day, and all ended for a time as in a fairy
+tale. But the old pawnbroker subsequently married again to relieve his
+solitude, and after his death his will was attacked, and an interminable
+lawsuit ensued, with the result that the property was left unoccupied.
+Now, it appeared, it was for sale, and before long would probably be cut
+up into building plots.
+
+Whatever romantic element there might be in the story of the pawnbroker
+and his daughters, M. Zola much preferred the popular and gruesome legend
+of the little girl murdered in the scullery; and, some time later, when
+he consented to write a short story for 'The Star,' it was this legend
+which he took as his basis, building thereon the pathetic sketch of
+'Angeline,' the scene of which he transferred to France.
+
+He has stated in his article 'Justice,' published in Paris on his return
+from exile, that during most of the time he spent in England he was
+virtually in a desert. There were people about him of course; but he
+retired into himself as it were, communing with his own thoughts, and
+seeking no intercourse with strangers. This is true of the period to
+which I am now referring. Still he did not complain of solitude. In fact
+he knew that quiet was essential for his work. Only once or twice did
+anything happen of a nature to cause any anxiety. Neither Wareham nor
+myself was much troubled at this period; there was a lull even in the
+periodical visits which gentlemen of the Press kindly favoured me.
+
+Still we had taken our precautions by admitting a mutual friend, Mr. A.
+W. Pamplin, into our confidence. If M. Zola's communications with Paris,
+through Wareham and myself, should be threatened, Mr. Pamplin was to take
+upon himself the duty of re-establishing them.
+
+At M. Zola's house there was, so far as I am aware, but one brief
+_alerte_. This occurred one afternoon, when a servant came to my daughter
+with the tidings that there was a French hunchback at the door. Violette
+impulsively rushed off to tell M. Zola of it; but when in her turn she
+went to the door to see who the person might be, she found that he was an
+Englishman, a traveller for some county directory, who had merely
+performed his legitimate work in requesting to know the name of the
+occupier of the house. Of course the only name given was that of the
+owner, then absent at the seaside.
+
+Thus the hot days sped by peacefully enough. M. Zola had at least found
+occupation and quietude, though it was naturally impossible that he
+should feel content with his lot. Each day brought more and more home to
+him the consciousness that he was in exile, and that contumely had been
+his reward for seeking to save France from the shame of a great crime.
+
+I have previously mentioned that during the first week or so of his
+sojourn in England he had refused to look at newspapers and--at least so
+it seemed to me--had sought to banish the Dreyfus affair and his own
+troubles from his mind, much as one might seek to drive away a hateful
+nightmare. But before long he again fell under the spell and followed the
+course of events with the keenest interest. And again and again, reading
+of the great battle being waged in France, he longed to return home, and
+grew restless and impatient.
+
+Moreover a complaint from which he has suffered on and off for some years
+troubled him on more than one occasion. He always rallied, however, and
+returned to his work with renewed energy. 'Fecondite' was already taking
+shape in the leafy solitude in which he dwelt. And undoubtedly the steady
+task of creation, resumed morning by morning, greatly helped him to quiet
+the anguish of heart which the course of events in France would otherwise
+have rendered intolerable.
+
+
+ NOTE.--While this work was appearing serially in the 'Evening
+ News' I received numerous letters from readers interested in
+ various matters mentioned by me. With respect to the foregoing
+ chapter, a lady living at Staines wrote saying that she was
+ looking out for 'a cheap haunted house,' and asking for the
+ address of the one I had mentioned. I was unable to comply with
+ her request, as personally I do not believe the house was haunted
+ at all. Moreover, to prevent the sale or letting of any particular
+ house by asserting it to be haunted would be an offence under the
+ libel laws. As I could not tell what course my lady-correspondent
+ might take in the matter, I preferred not to answer her. May she
+ forgive me my impoliteness!
+
+
+
+ X
+
+ 'LE REVE': THE DREAM
+
+When the owner of the house which M. Zola had rented desired to resume
+possession, it became necessary to find new quarters of a similar
+character for the master. And so he was transferred to another Surrey
+country house where the arrangements remained much the same as
+previously: work every morning, resting or bicycling in the afternoon,
+followed by newspaper reading and letter-writing in the evening.
+
+The grounds of M. Zola's new retreat were very extensive, and in part
+very shady, which last circumstance proved extremely welcome to the
+novelist, who on coming to 'cold, damp, foggy England,' as the French put
+it, had never imagined that he would have to endure a temperature
+approaching that of the tropics.
+
+The heat deprived him of appetite, and, moreover, he did not particularly
+relish some of the dishes provided for him by a new cook who had lately
+been engaged. We all know how great is the servant difficulty even under
+the best of circumstances; and when cooks and maids have to be secured in
+hot haste an entirely satisfactory result is hardly to be expected.
+Moreover, many servants refuse to live in country retirement, far away
+from their 'followers,' and thus one has at times to take such as one can
+find.
+
+As for the cookery to which M. Zola was at certain periods treated, he
+beheld it with wonder and repulsion. His tastes are simple, but to him
+the plain, boiled, watery potato and the equally watery greens were
+abominations. Plum tart, though served hot (why not cold, like the French
+_tarte_?) might be more or less eatable; but, surely, apple pudding--the
+inveterate breeder of indigestion--was the invention of a savage race.
+And why, when a prime steak was grilled, should the cook water it in
+order to produce 'gravy,' instead of applying to it a little butter and
+chopped parsley? This, Dundreary-wise, was one of those things which
+nobody, not even M. Zola, could understand.
+
+However, a visit to a fishmonger's shop had made him acquainted with the
+haddock, the kipper, and likewise the humble bloater; and occasionally, I
+believe, when his appetite needed a stimulant he turned to the smoked
+fish, which seemed so novel to his palate. The cook, of course, was
+mightily incensed thereat. For her part, she most certainly would not eat
+haddock or kippers for dinner; she had too much self-respect to do such a
+thing, so she boiled or roasted a leg of mutton for her own repast and
+the maids'. I do not say that she was wrong; and, indeed, M. Zola never
+forced people to eat what they did not care for.
+
+But in the same way he wished for something that he himself could eat,
+and he was weary of the perpetual joint and the vegetables _a l'eau_. One
+day, when in a jocular spirit he was talking to me on this subject, I
+told him that we English had a saying to the effect that 'God sent us
+food, but the devil invented cooks.'
+
+'You are quite right,' he replied, 'only as a Frenchman I should put it
+this way: "God sent us food, but the devil invented English cooks."'
+
+Towards the end of August he again became very dispirited. The 'cause'
+did not at that time appear to be prospering in France, where so many
+people remained under the spell of the deceptive declarations and
+documents which had been made public in the Chamber of Deputies by War
+Minister Cavaignac early in July.
+
+Of course the Revisionists were still hard at work, but in the face of M.
+Cavaignac's speech, placarded throughout the 36,000 townships of France,
+they seemed to have a very uphill task before them. The anti-Dreyfusites
+on their side were more arrogant than ever, and although M. Zola never
+once lost faith in the justice of his cause and its ultimate triumph, he
+did, on more than one occasion, question whether that triumph would come
+in a peaceful way.
+
+Felix Faure was then still President of the Republic, and I am abusing, I
+think, no confidence in saying that M. Zola regarded that vain, showy man
+as one of the great obstacles to the victory of truth and justice. Faure,
+he said to me, had undoubtedly at one time enjoyed well-deserved
+popularity; he, Zola, had been received by him and in the most cordial
+manner. But the President's intercourse with crowned heads, and his
+intimacy with arrogant general officers, coupled with all the flummery of
+the Protocole, all the pomp and display observed whenever he stirred from
+the Palace of the Elysee, had virtually turned his head. He was in the
+hands of those military men who opposed revision, and he shielded them
+because their downfall would mean his own. He was bent on the hushing-up
+course lest his Presidency should become synonymous with a great judicial
+crime; he feared that he might be forced to resign even before his term
+of office was over, or, at all events, that he might have to abandon all
+hope of re-election.
+
+And thus with the President and the more prominent generals opposed to
+revision, M. Zola, though confident in the final issue, more than once
+said to me that there might be serious trouble before all was over.
+
+He was now kept very well informed of all that took place in France;
+intelligence often reached him before it appeared in the newspapers; and
+now and again he told me what was brewing. Going backward, too, he
+confided to me some curious particulars of the genesis of the Revisionist
+campaign. But he will himself some day tell all this in a book of his
+own, and I must not anticipate him. I will only say that various
+important things he mentioned to me in the autumn of 1898 have since
+become well-known, acknowledged facts, and I have every reason to believe
+that time will duly show the accuracy of those which have not as yet been
+publicly revealed.
+
+There is one point to which I must refer at more length. In his
+declaration 'Justice,' published on the expiration of his exile, M. Zola
+stated that he had long suspected Colonel Henry, though he had possessed
+no actual proof of that officer's guilt. This is so true, that I well
+recollect listening to a conversation between him and M. Desmoulin during
+the first days of their sojourn in England, when they compared notes with
+respect to their impressions of Henry, whom they had particularly noticed
+at Versailles on the occasion of M. Zola's sentence by default.
+
+They had then observed how nervous and crestfallen the colonel
+looked--the very picture, indeed, of a man who dreads the discovery of
+his guilt. This was the more remarkable, as Henry's confident arrogance
+at the earlier trial in Paris had been so conspicuous. The man had a
+skeleton in his cupboard--to Zola and Desmoulin that was certain.
+
+M. Zola is a good physiognomist, and his friend (as a portraitist) is
+scarcely less gifted in that respect, and they felt equally certain of
+Henry's culpability. As yet they could not say that it was he who had
+actually forged that famous 'absolute proof' of Dreyfus's guilt, which
+they knew to have been forged by some one, but that time would prove him
+guilty of some abominable machination was to them a foregone conclusion.
+
+One day, it must have been I suppose the 31st of August, a rather strange
+telegram in French reached me for transmission to M. Zola. It came from
+Paris, and was, so far as I remember, to this effect: 'Be prepared for a
+great success.'
+
+A name I was acquainted with followed; but what the telegram might mean I
+knew not. There was absolutely nothing in the newspapers with reference
+to any great success achieved at that moment by the Revisionist party;
+but possibly the message might refer to one or another of M. Zola's
+lawsuits, such as that with the 'Petit Journal' or that with the
+handwriting experts. I re-telegraphed it to M. Zola, and that day, at all
+events, I thought no more of the matter.
+
+But I afterwards learnt that the telegram had perplexed him quite as much
+as it perplexed me. A great success? What could it be? He racked his mind
+in vain. He reviewed all the phases and aspects of the Dreyfus case,
+wondering whether this or that had happened, but not suspecting the
+public revelations which were then impending, the tragedy which was being
+enacted.
+
+For a while he walked up and down, feverish and anxious (he was at the
+time in poor health), and then he would fling himself on a sofa, still
+and ever indulging in his surmises. With that kind of prescience which he
+had so frequently displayed in the Dreyfus affair, he felt certain that
+something very important had occurred, for otherwise such a mysterious
+telegram would never have been sent him. This lasted the whole evening.
+
+My daughter Violette was with him at the time, and his feverishness
+doubtless gained on her. At last she retired to rest, while M. Zola,
+according to his wont, carried a lamp into his own room to sit there a
+while and read some French newspapers which had reached him, via Wareham,
+by the evening delivery. There was nothing in them of a nature to explain
+the mysterious telegram; still he read on and on in the hope, as it were,
+of quieting himself.
+
+It was, I believe, between eleven o'clock and midnight when he rose to go
+to bed, and as he did so he heard some loud exclamations, followed by a
+cry. At first he fancied that the calls came from one of the servants'
+rooms, and he paused on the landing. Then, however, as they were
+repeated, he found that they came from my daughter's apartment. With
+fatherly solicitude he waited and listened. Violette was calling in her
+sleep.
+
+Practical enough in matters of everyday life, this girl of mine has
+literary partialities of a somewhat gruesome kind, and her avowed
+ambition (I quote her own words) is to write, some day, stories full of
+witches and wizards, that shall make people's flesh creep. For this
+reason I keep such of Anne Radcliffe's uncanny novels as I possess
+carefully locked up.
+
+I can well remember my daughter telling me at times of strange things
+dreamt by her in her sleep; but not of being of a romantic or a mystical
+turn myself, I have usually pooh-poohed all this as nonsense. And such I
+believe is the course which fathers usually adopt if their daughters'
+imaginations begin to run riot.
+
+As for M. Zola, when he heard Violette calling in her sleep, his first
+impulse was to rouse her, but all suddenly became still again. The girl
+had probably sunk into a more peaceful slumber. And so, after waiting a
+few minutes longer, he thought it best to leave her as she was.
+
+Nothing further disturbed M. Zola that night; but on the following
+morning, when he met Violette downstairs, he asked her how she felt, and
+told her that he had heard her calling in her sleep. He had probably
+formed the same opinion as I should have formed under the circumstances,
+namely, that it was a case of indigestion or a little excitement.
+
+But she turned to him and replied, 'Oh! I had such a frightful dream. . .
+I was in a big black place, and there was a man on the ground covered
+with blood, and people were crowding round him, talking with great
+excitement. And I saw you, Monsieur Zola, and you came up looking like a
+giant and waved your arms again and again, and seemed well pleased.'
+
+M. Zola was dumbfounded. He could make nothing of it. A man in a pool of
+blood and others round him; and he, Zola, waving his arms and looking
+well pleased! It was nonsense; and he was disposed to laugh at the girl
+and chide her. But a little later, with the arrival of some morning
+newspapers, the position suddenly changed.
+
+Here I should mention that as the Paris journals only reached M. Zola
+with a delay of twelve or four-and-twenty hours, it had just been
+arranged that he should be supplied with two or three London papers every
+morning, and that he and Violette between them should put the telegrams
+concerning the Dreyfus business into French.
+
+He opened one of these English newspapers--which it was I do not
+recollect--and there he saw a whole column dealing with the arrest and
+confession of Colonel Henry. The heading to the telegrams, the very words
+'arrest' and 'confession,' made everything intelligible to M. Zola; and
+beneath all this came a brief wire headed, I think, 'Paris, midnight,'
+and worded much to this effect: 'Colonel Henry has been found dead in his
+cell at Mont Valerien.'
+
+So that was the man whom Violette, in her dream, had seen weltering in a
+pool of blood, surrounded by his custodians, who had rushed in full of
+excitement! M. Zola's presence in that vision was, so to say, symbolical.
+'He had waved his arms and had seemed well pleased'--so the girl had put
+it in her frank, artless way. 'Well pleased' may perhaps appear to be
+scarcely the correct expression. At all events, it needs to be
+interpreted. Most certainly Zola never desired the death of a sinner;
+but, on the other hand, he could only feel some satisfaction at knowing
+that Henry's crime was at last divulged to the world.
+
+This, then, is how my daughter dreamt Henry's death. I do not wish to
+insist unduly on the incident, and I have no intention of appealing to
+the Psychical Research Society to test, corroborate, or disprove the
+case.
+
+There was one rather curious feature that I have not yet mentioned. My
+daughter has assured me that during the same night she dreamt the same
+thing over and over again. She tried to banish the vision, but ever and
+ever it returned, as if to impress itself indelibly upon her mind. And
+ever did she see M. Zola waving his arms as he hovered round the scene.
+
+At that time the girl knew nothing of Colonel Henry; she understood very
+little about the Dreyfus case; and all she had to go upon was the
+enigmatical telegram and M. Zola's talk during the evening, when he was
+expressing his thoughts aloud. But at that moment he had foreseen no
+death, murder, or suicide, and if the possibility of any arrest had
+occurred to him it was that of M. du Paty de Clam, which the Revisionist
+papers were then demanding.
+
+It is true that in infancy my daughter had often seen Mont Valerien, as I
+lived for some years at Boulogne-sur-Seine, and the hill and fortress
+towering across the river were then familiar objects to us all. But the
+girl was little more than a baby at the time, and so this circumstance
+can have exercised no influence upon her. Moreover, she has told me that
+she had no notion as to what might be the actual scene of her dream; it
+merely appeared to her that she was in France, because the people she saw
+raised ejaculations in French.
+
+Passing from this incident, I may point out that the telegram sent to M.
+Zola through me was explained by the news in the English newspapers. It
+was evident that the 'great success' referred to in the message was the
+discovery of Henry's forgery and possibly his arrest.
+
+Directly I saw the news in a London newspaper I hurried off to M. Zola's,
+and when I reached his abode about noon I found him expecting me. We then
+went over matters together, the press telegrams, my daughter's dream and
+the probable outcome of the whole affair.
+
+As was natural, M. Zola was quite excited. First, the document which
+Henry had confessed to having forged was the very one that General de
+Pellieux had imported into the Zola trial in Paris as convincing proof of
+Dreyfus's guilt. At that time already its effect had been very great; it
+had destroyed all chance of M. Zola's acquittal. Then, too, it had been
+solemnly brought forward in the Chamber of Deputies by War Minister
+Cavaignac, who had vouched for its authenticity. And now, as previously
+alleged by Colonel Picquart, it was shown to be a forgery of the
+clumsiest kind.
+
+Here at least was 'a new fact' warranting the revision of the whole
+Dreyfus case. Surely the blindest bigot could not resist such evidence of
+the machinations of those who had sent Dreyfus to Devil's Island; truth
+and justice would speedily triumph, and in a week or two he, Zola, would
+be able to return to France again.
+
+But he did not take sufficient account of human obstinacy and vileness.
+His friends, to whom he appealed on the subject of his return, urged him
+to remain where he was, for the battle, they said, was by no means over,
+and his name was still like the red scarf of the matador that goads the
+bull to fury. The advice proved good, for again were passions stirred.
+Henry, the ignoble forger, was raised to the position of martyr, and
+Cavaignac and Zurlinden and Chanoine in turn strove to impede the course
+of justice. 'Hope deferred maketh the heart sick,' and thus M. Zola,
+finding so many difficulties in the way of his return, abandoned for a
+time all work and fell into brooding melancholy.
+
+
+
+ XI
+
+ THROUGH THE AUTUMN
+
+Important events were now taking place in Paris. Cavaignac resigned the
+position of War Minister and was succeeded by Zurlinden; Du Paty de Clam
+was turned out of the army; Esterhazy, who had likewise been 'retired,'
+fled from France, Mme. Dreyfus addressed to the Minister of Justice a
+formal application for the revision of her unfortunate husband's case;
+and that application was in the first instance referred to a Commission
+of judges and functionaries. Then General Zurlinden resigned his
+Ministerial office, and again becoming Governor of Paris, apprehended the
+gallant Picquart on a ridiculous charge of forgery, and cast him into
+close confinement in a military prison. There was talk, too, of a
+military plot in Paris, and again and again were attempts made to prevent
+the granting of Revision.
+
+Throughout those days of alternate hope and fear M. Zola suffered keenly.
+It was, too, about this time that he heard of the death of his favourite
+dog--an incident to which I have previously referred as coming like a
+blow of fate in the midst of all his anxiety.
+
+When he rallied he spoke to me of his desire to familiarise himself in
+some degree with the English language, with the object principally of
+arriving at a more accurate understanding of the telegrams from Paris
+which he found in the London newspapers. A dictionary, a conversation
+manual, and an English grammar for French students were then obtained;
+and whenever he felt that he needed a little relaxation, he took up one
+or another of these books and read them, as he put it to me, 'from a
+philosophical point of view.'
+
+Later I procured him a set of Messrs. Nelson's 'Royal Readers' for
+children, when he greatly praised, declaring them to be much superior to
+the similar class of work current in France. Afterwards he himself
+purchased a prettily illustrated edition of the classic 'Vicar of
+Wakefield' (the work to which all French young ladies are put when
+learning our language), but he found portions difficult to understand,
+and a French friend then procured him an edition in which the text is
+printed in French and English on alternate pages.
+
+One day when he had been dipping into English papers and books he tackled
+me on rather a curious point. 'Why is it,' said he, 'that the Englishman
+when he writes of himself should invariably use a capital letter? That
+tall "I" which recurs so often in a personal narrative strikes me as
+being very arrogant. A Frenchman, referring to himself, writes _je_ with
+a small _j_; a German, though he may gratify all his substantives with
+capital letters, employs a small _i_ in writing _ich_; a Spaniard, when
+he uses the personal pronoun at all, bestows a small _y_ on his _yo_,
+while he honours the person he addresses with a capital _V_. I believe,
+indeed--though I am not sufficiently acquainted with foreign languages to
+speak with certainty on the point--that the Englishman is the only person
+in the world who applies a capital letter to himself. That "I" strikes me
+as the triumph of egotism. It is tall, commanding, and so brief! "I"--and
+that suffices. How did it originate?'
+
+It was difficult for me to answer M. Zola on the point; I am a very poor
+scholar in such a matter, and I could find nothing on the subject in any
+work of reference I had by me. I surmised, however, that the capital I,
+as a personal pronoun, was a survival of the time when English, whether
+written or printed, was studded with capitals, even as German is to-day.
+If I am wrong, perhaps some one who knows better will correct me. One
+thing I have often noticed is that a child's first impulse is to write
+'i,' and that it is only after admonition that the aggressive and
+egotistical 'I' supplants the humbler form of the letter. This did not
+surprise M. Zola, since vanity, like most other vices, is acquired, not
+inherent in our natures. But in a chaffing way he suggested that one
+might write a very humorous essay on the English character by taking as
+one's text that tall, stiff, and self-assertive letter 'I.'
+
+How far M. Zola actually carried his study of English I could hardly say,
+but during the last months of his exile he more than once astonished me
+by his knowledge of an irregular verb or of the correct comparative and
+superlative of an adjective. And if he seldom attempted to speak English,
+he at least made considerable progress in reading it. By the time he
+returned to France he could always understand any Dreyfus news in the
+English papers. Of course the language in which the news was couched was
+of great help to him, as in three instances out of four it was simply
+direct translation from the French.
+
+In this connection, while praising many features of the English Press, M.
+Zola more than once expressed to me his surprise that so much of the
+Paris news printed in London should be simply taken from Paris journals.
+Some correspondents, said he, never seemed to go anywhere or to see
+anybody themselves. They purely and simply extracted everything from
+newspapers. This he was able to check by means of the many Paris prints
+which he received regularly.
+
+'Here,' he would say, 'this paragraph is taken verbatim from "Le Figaro";
+this other appeared in "Le Temps," this other in "Le Siecle,"' and so
+forth. And he was not alluding to extracts from editorials, but to
+descriptive matter--accounts of demonstrations and ceremonies,
+fashionable weddings and other social functions, interviews, and so
+forth. The practice upset all his ideas of a foreign correspondent's
+duties, which should be to obtain first-hand and not second-hand
+information.
+
+In principle this is of course correct, but a correspondent cannot be
+everywhere at the same time; and nowadays, moreover, English journalists
+in Paris do not enjoy quite the same facilities as formerly. As regards
+more particularly the Dreyfus business, the French, with a sensitiveness
+that can be understood, have all along deprecated anything in the way of
+foreign interference, and the English Pressman of inquiring mind on the
+subject has more than once met with a rebuff from those in a position to
+give information. Again, the political difficulties between the two
+countries of recent years have often placed the Paris correspondents in a
+very invidious position.
+
+This brings me to the Fashoda trouble, which arose last autumn while M.
+Zola was still in his country retreat. The great novelist's enemies have
+often alleged that he was no true Frenchman; but for my part, after
+thirty years' intimacy with the French, I would claim for him that his
+country counts no better patriot. He is on principle opposed to warfare,
+but there is a higher patriotism than that which consists in perpetually
+beating the big drum, and that higher patriotism is Zola's.
+
+The Fashoda difficulties troubled him sorely, and directly it seemed
+likely that the situation might become serious he told me that it would
+be impossible for him to remain in England. The progress of the
+negotiations between France and Great Britain was watched with keen
+vigilance, and M. Zola was ready to start at the first sign of those
+negotiations collapsing. As all his friends were opposed to his return to
+France (they had again virtually forbidden it late in September when the
+Brisson Ministry finally submitted the case for revision to the Criminal
+Chamber of the Cour de Cassation), he would probably have gone to
+Belgium, but I doubt whether he would have remained long in that country.
+
+I have said that M. Zola is opposed to warfare on principle. His views in
+this respect have long been shared by me. Life's keenest impressions are
+those acquired in childhood and youth. And in my youth--I was but
+seventeen, though already acting as a war correspondent, the youngest, I
+suppose, on record--I witnessed war attended by every horror:--A city,
+Paris, starved by the foreigner and subsequently in part fired by some of
+its own children. And between those disasters, having passed through the
+hostile lines, I saw an army of 125,000 men with 350 guns, that of
+Chanzy, irretrievably routed after battling in a snowstorm of three days'
+duration, cast into highways and byways, with thousands of barefooted
+stragglers begging their bread, with hundreds of farmers bewailing their
+crops, their cattle, and their ruined homesteads, with mothers
+innumerable weeping for their sons, and fair girls in the heyday of their
+youth lamenting the lads to whom their troth was plighted. And in that
+'Retraite Infernale,' as one of its historians has called it, I saw want,
+hunger, cupidity, cruelty, disease, stalking beside the war fiend; so no
+wonder that, like Zola, I regard warfare as the greatest of abominations
+that fall upon the world. I often regret that, short of actual war itself
+and its disaster and misery, there should be no means of bringing the
+whole horror of the thing home to those silly, arm-chair, jingo
+journalists of many countries, our own included, who, viewing war simply
+as a means of imposing the will of the stronger upon the weaker, and
+losing sight of all that attends it, save martial pomp and individual
+heroism, ever clamour for the exercise of force as soon as any difficulty
+arises between two governments.
+
+Ties of affection, bonds of marriage, as well as long years of intimacy,
+link me moreover to the French people; and more keenly, perhaps, than
+even the master himself, did I realise what war between France and
+England might mean; thus we both had an anxious time during the Fashoda
+trouble. Fortunately for the general peace hostilities were averted, and
+M. Zola was thus able to remain in his secluded English home, and to
+continue the writing of his novel.
+
+The weather was still very fine, and now and again he ventured upon a
+little excursion. The principal one was to Virginia Water, where he
+strolled round the lake, then drove through part of the Great Park, and
+thence on to Windsor Castle, where he saw all the sights, the State
+apartments, St. George's Hall and Chapel, the Albert Memorial Chapel, and
+so forth. And, as he had brought his hand camera with him, he was able to
+take a few snapshots of what he saw. I was not present on that occasion;
+his companions were a French gentleman, a very intimate friend, and my
+daughter, but I was pleased to hear that he had, at all events, seen
+Windsor. As a rule, it was extremely difficult to induce him to emerge
+from his solitude. When he took a walk or a bicycle ride his destination
+was simply some sleepy Surrey village or deserted common.
+
+He appreciated English scenery. Around Oatlands he had been much struck
+by the beauty of the trees, and was greatly astonished to find such lofty
+and perfect hedges of holly running at times for a mile almost without a
+break on either side of the roads. I suppose that some of the finest
+holly hedges in England are to be found in that district. Then, too, the
+rookeries surprised and interested him. There was one he could see from
+his window at the last half of his country residences, and many an idle
+half-hour was spent by him in watching the flight of the birds or their
+occasional parliaments.
+
+Nobody recognised him on his rambles. I even doubt if people, generally,
+thought him a foreigner. He had long ceased to wear his rosette of the
+Legion of Honour, and he had replaced his white billycock by an English
+straw hat. Towards the close of the fine weather he purchased a 'bowler,'
+which greatly altered his appearance. Indeed, there is nothing like a
+'bowler' to make a foreigner look English.
+
+Wareham and I had now quite ceased to fear that any attempt would be made
+to serve the Versailles judgment on M. Zola. We were only troubled by
+gentlemen of the Press, both French and English, for since Esterhazy had
+fled from France and the case for revision had been formally referred to
+the Cour de Cassation, several newspapers had become desirous of
+ascertaining M. Zola's views on the course of events. My instructions
+remained, however, the same as formerly: I was to tell every applicant
+that M. Zola declined to make any public statement, and that he would
+receive nobody. I was occasionally inclined to fancy that some of those
+who called on me imagined that these instructions were of my own
+invention, and that I was simply keeping M. Zola _au secret_ for purposes
+of my own. But nothing was further from the truth.
+
+Personally, at certain moments, when the revision proceedings began, when
+M. Brisson fell from office, when M. Dupuy, listening to the clamour of a
+pack of jackals, transferred the revision inquiry from the Criminal
+Chamber to the entire Court of Cassation, I thought that it might really
+be advisable for him to speak out. But, anxious though he was, disgusted,
+indignant, too, at times, he would do nothing to add fuel to the flame.
+Passions were roused to a high enough pitch already, and he had no desire
+to inflame them more.
+
+Besides the cause was in very good hands; Clemenceau and Vaughan, Yves
+Guyot and Reinach, Jaures and Gerault-Richard, Pressense, Cornely, and
+scores of others were fighting admirably in the Press, and his
+intervention was not required. Many a man circumstanced as M. Zola was
+would have rushed into print for the mere sake of notoriety, but he
+condemned himself to silence, stifling the words which rose from his
+throbbing heart. And, after all, was not that course more worthy, more
+dignified?
+
+Thus I could only return one answer to the newspaper men who wrote to me
+or called at my house. Late in autumn there was an average of three
+applications a week. One or two gentlemen, I believe, imagined that M.
+Zola was staying very near me, and, failing to learn anything at my
+place, they tried to question one or two tradesmen in the neighbourhood.
+One of these, a grocer, became so irate at the frequent inquiries as to
+whether a Frenchman, who wrote books and had a grey beard, and wore
+glasses, was not staying in the vicinity, that he ended by receiving the
+reporters with far more energy than politeness, not only ordering them
+out of his shop at the double quick, but pursuing them with his
+vituperative eloquence. 'Taking one consideration with another, a
+reporter's lot, at times, is not a happy one.'
+
+A climax was reached when one gentleman, after communicating with M. Zola
+by letter through various channels and receiving no answer from him,
+ascertained my address and called there. As servants are not always to be
+depended upon, we had made it virtually a rule at home that whenever a
+stranger was seen at the front door my wife herself should, if possible,
+answer it. And she did so in the instance I am referring to.
+
+Well, the gentleman first asked for me, and on learning that I was
+absent, he explained that he was a friend, a private friend of M. Zola,
+whom he wished to see on an important private matter. Could she, my wife,
+oblige him with M. Zola's address? No, she could not; he had better
+write, and his letter would be duly forwarded by me. Then the applicant
+started on another story. It was no use his writing, he must see me.
+Should I be at home on the morrow? The matter was of great importance, it
+would mean a large sum of money for myself and so on. My wife had not
+much confidence in what was told her, but she requested the visitor to
+leave his name and address in order that I might make an appointment with
+him, should I think such a course advisable.
+
+She was, at the moment, far more amazed and amused than indignant. She
+bade the gentleman keep his money, and then showed him to the door. To me
+that evening she did not mention the incident, and, indeed, I only heard
+of it after I had taken the trouble to communicate with M. Zola
+respecting the gentleman's urgent private business, which (so it turned
+out) was purely and simply connected with journalism, my visitor having
+acted on behalf of the owner of a well-known London newspaper.
+
+I do not know whether his principal had any knowledge of his impudent
+attempt at bribery. For my own part I much regret that my wife (I suppose
+in the interests of peace) should have kept it from me at that time as
+she did, for the gentleman might otherwise have experienced, as he
+deserved, a rather unpleasant ten minutes.
+
+
+
+ XII
+
+ THE FINAL RESTING-PLACE
+
+At last the time arrived when it became necessary to remove M. Zola from
+his country quarters, and by his desire Wareham and I then looked around
+us for a suitable suburban hotel. The autumn was now far spent and M.
+Zola felt confident that he would be back in Paris by the end of the
+year. Had he foreseen that his exile would prove so long, he would
+certainly have sent for a couple of his French servants, and have set up
+a quiet establishment in some other furnished house. But for another
+month or two he considered that hotel accommodation would well suffice.
+
+The place selected for him by Wareham and myself was the Queen's Hotel,
+Upper Norwood, and there he remained from late in the autumn of 1898
+until his departure from England.
+
+A glance at the Queen's Hotel shows one that it is composed of what were
+once separate houses, now connected together by buildings of one storey
+only. Each of these houses, or, as one may perhaps call them, pavilions,
+has a separate entrance and staircase; and the advantage of this, to one
+circumstanced as M. Zola was, must be obvious. A person lodging in one of
+the pavilions can come and go freely. There is no vast hall to cross,
+with a dozen servants standing around, ready to scrutinise you as you
+pass in and out. You have your suite of rooms in one or another pavilion,
+you take your meals there in your own dining-room, and you can shut
+yourself off, as it were, from the greater part of the establishment and
+enjoy privacy and quiet. This, no doubt, is the reason why so many
+well-to-do people, who dislike the stir and bustle of the ordinary hotel,
+patronise the hostelry at Upper Norwood.
+
+There at one time--when consulting Sir Morell Mackenzie, I
+believe--stayed the unfortunate Emperor Frederick; and now it may add to
+its list of patrons the most famous Frenchman of his day.
+
+It seemed to Wareham and me that the Queen's Hotel would, under the
+circumstances, prove an ideal retreat for M. Zola. Moreover, Upper
+Norwood stands on very high ground, and it was probable therefore that he
+would largely escape the winter fogs. Of course the Crystal Palace was
+comparatively near, but it was not very largely patronised in the winter,
+and, besides, if M. Zola wished to escape a crowd, he had only to take
+his walks in another direction.
+
+The Queen's Hotel stands back from the road; but, in the first instance,
+as a precautionary measure it was thought best to select for M. Zola a
+suite of rooms overlooking the extensive gardens. As time went on,
+however, the trees lost their last leaves, the vista from these rooms,
+charming enough in summer, became very cheerless. So the master's
+quarters were shifted to a larger suite on the ground floor, with the
+windows of the two communicating sitting-rooms overlooking both the road
+and the garden.
+
+The two sitting-rooms were an advantage, particularly during the time
+that Mme. Zola stayed at the Queen's Hotel (for she joined her husband on
+and off), as he could devote one of them entirely to his work. But when
+Mme. Zola finally left England (in a very ailing state, after a terrible
+cold had kept her within doors for some weeks) her husband moved once
+again, and installed himself on the second floor, where the rooms were
+smaller and therefore easier to warm. It was then mid-winter.
+
+The various rooms M. Zola occupied and in which he spent from seven to
+eight months--that is by far the greater portion of his exile--were all
+part of the same house or pavilion, this being the last of the pavilions
+constituting the hotel proper. Adjoining is a lower building, belonging
+to the same proprietary as the hotel, but, in a measure, distinct from
+it. Most of M. Zola's tenancy was spent in the topmost rooms. After
+bringing the master up from the country, I took him one morning down to
+Norwood, and he cordially approved of the arrangements which had been
+made for him. There was only one thing amiss. Wareham and I had been
+promised that he should have a waiter speaking French to attend on him;
+and the one provided knew perhaps just a few words of that language.
+However, he was very intelligent, very discreet, very willing to
+oblige--a pattern waiter of the good old English school. And when I had
+explained to him exactly what would be required, he took due note of
+everything, and for many months the arrangements that were made worked
+virtually without a hitch.
+
+If M. Zola's surroundings had altered, the routine of his life remained
+the same as formerly. With regard to his novel 'Fecondite' he had, as the
+saying goes, 'warmed to his work,' which he pursued at the Queen's Hotel
+with unflagging energy.
+
+Knowing his habits I never (unless under exceptional circumstances)
+visited him till he had finished his daily quantum of 'copy,' that was
+about the luncheon hour. Then we would talk business, communicate to one
+another such news as might be necessary, and at times exchange
+impressions with regard to the incidents of the day.
+
+Among other matters often discussed were the English birth-rate and the
+rearing of English children, points which deeply interested M. Zola, as
+they were germane to the subject of 'Fecondite.' I could at first only
+give him general information, but the Rev. R. Ussher, vicar of Westbury,
+Bucks, the able author of 'Neo-Malthusianism,' very kindly sent me a copy
+of his exhaustive work, which contained many particulars on the points
+that principally interested M. Zola. Moreover, Mr. George P. Brett, the
+President of the Macmillan Company of New York (M. Zola's American
+publishers), supplied him with some interesting information respecting
+the United States.
+
+With regard to England, M. Zola had been much struck by certain
+proceedings instituted during his exile against medical men, midwives,
+and others, proceedings which seemed to point to the existence in this
+country of a state of affairs much akin to that prevailing in France. The
+affair of the brothers Chrimes, who first sold bogus medicines and then
+proceeded to blackmail the women who had purchased them, was, in Zola's
+estimation, particularly significant, for here were hundreds and hundreds
+of Englishwomen applying to those men for the means of accomplishing the
+greatest crime against Nature there could be.
+
+On that point M. Zola spoke in no uncertain language. He understood well
+enough that the authorities could not justly single out a few of those
+hundreds of women for prosecution and punishment: but he censured the
+women quite as much as he censured the convicted men, who were, after
+all, but common scoundrels.
+
+And he was amazed to find that so few English newspapers ventured to
+speak out on the matter. There were plenty of leaderettes on the cunning
+shown by the men, but the alacrity of the women to purchase the bogus
+medicines was, as a rule, lightly passed over; and great as is M. Zola's
+admiration for the English Press in many respects, he could but regard
+its attitude towards the Chrimes case as lamentably inadequate and
+lacking in moral courage.
+
+'A great responsibility,' said he, 'rests with those who, possessing
+commanding influence, refrain from requisite action, and who, instead of
+seeking to cure proved and acknowledged evils, connive at driving them
+beneath the surface, where, in secret, they steadily grow and expand.'
+And all this for the sake of the 'young person,' to whose mythical
+innocence the welfare of a whole nation is often sacrificed. M. Zola's
+views are summed up in the words: 'Let all be exposed and discussed, in
+order that all may be cured!'
+
+He regards Neo-Malthusianism and its practices as abominable, and when he
+had learnt more of the actual situation in England he was emphatically of
+opinion that his book 'Fecondite,' though applied to France alone, might
+well, with little alteration, be applied to this country also.
+
+The fluctuations in the English birth-rate from 1872 to 1897 were to him
+full of meaning. At a certain period, for instance, they showed all the
+harm wrought by the abominable Bradlaugh-Besant campaign. But what he
+dwelt on still more was the absolute physical incapacity of so many
+English mothers to suckle their own offspring. Circumstances are much the
+same both in France and the United States, at least among the older
+Colonial families. In three or four generations the women of a family in
+which the practice of suckling has ceased, are altogether unable to give
+the breast; and the 'bottle' ensues, with its thousand evils and a
+gradual deterioration of the race.
+
+On the last occasion when James Russell Lowell came to England he was
+asked what change, if any, he remarked since his last visit, among the
+people he met, and he replied that he was most struck by the falling off
+in height, and breadth of shoulders, of the average man in the London
+streets.
+
+Though matters have not yet reached such a point as in France and
+elsewhere, it is I think incontestable that the English race, like many
+another, is physically deteriorating. Athletics tend to improve the
+standard, but there must be proper material to work upon, and M. Zola, I
+found, held the view that for a race to be healthy its womenfolk should
+be willing and able to discharge the primary duties of Nature. When he
+discovered that so many Englishwomen would not or could not suckle their
+babes, he remarked that England had started on the same downward course
+as France.
+
+He often watched the troops of nursemaids and children whom he met during
+his afternoon strolls. He noticed and told me how many of the former
+neglected their charges, standing about, flirting or gossiping, or
+looking into shop windows, while the baby in the bassinette or the
+mail-cart sucked away at that vile invention the bone and gutta-percha
+'soother,' and he was astonished that ladies should apparently consider
+it beneath them to accompany baby on the promenade. Indeed the invariable
+absence of the mothers gave him a rather bad opinion of them: for surely
+they must know that many of the nurse-girls neglected the infants and yet
+they exercised no supervision. 'Of course,' said he, 'they are visiting
+or receiving, or reading novels, or bicycling or playing lawn tennis. Ah!
+well, that is hardly my conception of a mother's duty towards her infant,
+whatever be her station in life.'
+
+Now and again at intervals I accompanied him on his afternoon walks.
+These generally took a semi-circular form. We descended from the plateau
+of Upper Norwood on one side to climb to it again on another. Sometimes
+we passed by way of Beulah Spa, then round by some fields and a
+recreation ground, with the name of which I am not acquainted. There were
+several shapely oak trees thereabouts, which he greatly admired and even
+photographed.
+
+'Do you know,' he remarked to me one afternoon, 'when I come out all
+alone for my usual constitutional, and want to shake off some worrying
+thoughts, I often amuse myself by counting the number of hairpins which I
+see lying on the foot-pavement. Oh! you need not laugh, it is very
+curious, I assure you. I already had ideas for two essays--one on the
+capital "I" in its relation to the English character, and another on the
+physiology of the English "guillotine" window and the forms it affects,
+not forgetting the circumstance that whenever an architect introduces a
+French window into an English house, it invariably opens outwardly so as
+to be well buffeted by the wind, instead of into the room as it should
+do. Well, now I am beginning to think that I might write something on the
+carelessness of Englishwomen in fastening up their hair, and the
+phenomenal consumption of hairpins in England. For the consumption must
+be enormous since the loss is so great, as I will show you.'
+
+Then he proceeded to ocular demonstration. As we walked on for half an
+hour or so, principally along roads bordered by the umbrageous gardens of
+villa residences, we counted all the hairpins we could see. There were
+about four dozen. And he was careful to point out that we had chiefly
+followed a route where there was but a moderate amount of traffic.
+
+Not one man in a thousand probably would have thought of counting the
+lost hairpins in the streets; but then M. Zola is an observer, and if I
+tell this anecdote, which some may think puerile, it is by way of
+illustrating his powers of observation and the length to which he
+occasionally carries them.
+
+On one point, I told him, he was rather in the wrong. The great loss of
+hairpins did not proceed so much from the carelessness of women in
+fastening their hair, as from their 'pennywise and pound-foolish' system
+of buying cheap hairpins with few and inefficient 'twists.' These cheap
+hairpins never 'caught' properly in their coiled-up tresses. The women
+went out, walked rapidly, tossed their heads perchance, and one at least
+of their hairpins fell to the ground. Supposing one hundred women passed
+along a certain road or street in the course of the day, it would not be
+surprising to find that at least thirty hairpins were lost there. And I
+concluded by saying that, to the best of my belief, the aforesaid
+hairpins were 'made in Germany.'
+
+Another thing which amused and interested M. Zola when he took his walks
+around Norwood was to note the often curious and often high-sounding
+names bestowed on villa residences. As a rule the smaller the place the
+more grandiose the appellation bestowed on it. Some of the names M. Zola,
+having now made progress with his English, could readily understand;
+others, too, were virtually French, such as Bellevue, Beaumont, and so
+forth; but there were several that I had to interpret, such as Oakdene,
+Thornbrake, Beechcroft, Hillbrow, Woodcote, Fernside, Fairholme,
+Inglenook, etc. And there was one name that I could not explain to him at
+all--an awful name, which I fancied might be Gaelic or Celtic, though I
+appealed in vain to Scottish, Irish, and Welsh friends for an
+interpretation of its meaning. It was written thus: 'Ly-ee-Moon.'
+
+Nobody of my acquaintance was able to explain it to me. M. Zola wrote it
+down in his memorandum-book as an abstruse puzzle. However, while this
+narrative was appearing in the 'Evening News,' several correspondents
+kindly informed me that Ly-ee-Moon (at times written 'Lai-Mun') was
+Chinese, being the name of a narrow passage or strait between the island
+of Hong-Kong and the mainland of China (now transferred to Great
+Britain), at the eastern entrance to the harbour of the city of Victoria
+on the island.
+
+It seems also that Ly-ee-Moon is a name often given to ships sailing in
+the China seas. And in the case of the Norwood house, built by a retired
+shipowner and sea captain, the name was taken from a vessel plying on the
+Australian coast for many years, and ultimately wrecked with great loss
+of life. The owner of the Norwood house had an engraving of the ship
+executed on a plate-glass window of this hall. Until these explanations
+reached me both M. Zola and myself were quite as much at sea (with regard
+to 'Ly-ee-Moon') as ever its owner and captain was.
+
+When I spent an afternoon at Norwood with M. Zola we generally returned
+to the hotel about half-past four for a cup of tea. And on the way back
+(particularly during the last months) I frequently purchased postage
+stamps for him at the chief post-office. He might, of course, have bought
+them himself, and as a matter of fact he did at times do so. But he was
+aware, I think, that he was regarded with some suspicion by the young
+lady clerks under the control of the Duke of Norfolk.
+
+At certain periods, Christmas time and the New Year, for instance, M.
+Zola's correspondence became extensive, and on the first occasion when he
+entered the Upper Norwood post-office and asked for fifty 2 1_2 d. stamps
+he was looked at with surprise. When, a couple of days later, he applied
+for another fifty, the young ladies eyed him as if he were a genuine
+curiosity. A hundred 2 1_2 d. stamps in four days! What could he do with
+them? Nobody could tell. When, shortly afterwards, he returned for
+another supply of the same kind, the Norwood post-office was convulsed.
+And I doubt if even now some of the young ladies have quite got over that
+brief but extraordinary run on the so-called 'foreign stamp.'
+
+I hope they do not imagine that M. Zola was hungry, and bought those
+stamps to eat.
+
+
+
+ XIII
+
+ WINTER DAYS
+
+The winter was hardly a cold one, but it proved very tempestuous, and
+Upper Norwood, standing high as it does, felt the full force of the
+gales. Christmas found M. Zola alone; still, this did not particularly
+affect him, as Christmas, save as a religious observance, is but little
+kept up in France, where festivity and holiday-making are reserved for
+the New Year. In M. Zola's rooms the only token of the season was a huge
+branch of mistletoe hanging over the chimney-piece. This he had bought
+himself, after I had told him of the privileges attached to mistletoe in
+England. There were, however, no young ladies to kiss, and, if I remember
+rightly, Mme. Zola, who had been absent in Paris, did not return to
+Norwood until a day or two before the New Year.
+
+While her husband formed a fairly favourable opinion of England, its
+customs and its climate, Mme. Zola, I fear, was scarcely pleased with
+this country. At all events, she finally left it vowing that she would
+never return. But then for three or four weeks bronchitis and kindred
+ailments had kept her absolutely imprisoned in her room--her illness
+lasting the longer, perhaps, because she was unwilling to place herself
+in the hands of any medical man.
+
+The New Year was but a day or two old, when one of the London morning
+newspapers announced with a great show of authority that an application
+for the extradition of M. Zola was imminent. Somebody, moreover, informed
+the same journal that he had recognised and interviewed M. Zola an
+evening or two previously, to which statement was appended a brief
+account of some of M. Zola's views. All this amazed me the more as on the
+very day mentioned in the newspaper I had been with the master till nine
+P.M. and I could hardly believe than anybody had interviewed him after
+that hour. Moreover, my wife had since seen him, and he had said nothing
+to her of any visit or interview. Nevertheless, as other papers proceeded
+to copy the statements to which I have referred, I thought it well to
+communicate with our exile on the subject.
+
+Through the carelessness of one of M. Zola's friends, Wareham's name and
+address had lately been given to an English journalist usually resident
+in Paris, and this journalist had then come to London to try to discover
+the master's whereabouts. It was therefore possible that there might be
+some truth in the story. But M. Zola promptly wired to me that such was
+not the case, and followed up his telegram with a note in which he said:
+
+
+'My dear confrere and friend,--I have just telegraphed to you that the
+whole story of a journalist having interviewed me is purely and simply a
+falsehood. I have seen nobody. Again, there can be no question of
+extradition in my case; all that could be done would be to serve me with
+the judgment of the Assize Court. Those people don't even know what they
+write about.
+
+'As for -----'s indiscretion, this is to be regretted. I am writing to
+him. For the sake of our communications, I have always desired that
+Wareham's name and address should be known only to those on whom one can
+depend. Tell him that he must remain on his guard and _never_ acknowledge
+that he knows my address. Persevere in that course yourself. I will wait
+a few days to see if anything occurs before deciding whether the
+correspondence arrangements should be altered. It would be a big affair;
+and I should afterwards regret a change if it were to prove uncalled for.
+Let us wait.'
+
+
+Going through the many memoranda and notes I received from M. Zola during
+his exile, I also find this, dated February: 'You did right to refuse Mr.
+----- my address. I absolutely decline to see anybody. No matter who may
+call on you, under whatever pretext it be, preserve the silence of the
+tomb. Less than ever am I disposed to let people disturb me.'
+
+Again, a little later: 'No; I will see neither the gentleman nor the
+lady. Tell them so distinctly, in order that they may worry you no more.'
+
+With the New Year, it will be remembered, had come a succession of
+startling events which kept M. Zola in a state of acute anxiety. The
+violent attacks of the anti-Revisionists on the Criminal Chamber of the
+Cour de Cassation culminated in the resignation of Q. de Beaurepaire, in
+an inquiry into the Criminal Chamber's methods of investigation, and
+finally in the passing of a law which transferred the task of the
+Criminal Chamber to the whole of the Supreme Court. On the many intrigues
+of that period I often conversed with M. Zola, who was particularly
+angered by the blind opposition of President Faure and the impudent
+duplicity of Prime Minister Dupuy. These two were undoubtedly doing their
+utmost to impede the course of justice.
+
+Then suddenly, on February 17, came a thunderbolt. Faure had died on the
+previous evening, and by his death one of the greatest obstacles to the
+triumph of truth was for ever removed. We talked of the defunct president
+at some length, M. Zola adhering to the opinions that he had expressed
+during the summer.
+
+But the great question was who would succeed M. Faure. When M. Brisson
+had fallen from office after initiating the Revision proceedings, M. Zola
+had said to me: 'Brisson's present fall does not signify; it was bound to
+come. But hereafter he will reap his reward for his courage in favouring
+revision. Brisson will be Faure's successor as President of the
+Republic.'
+
+In expressing this opinion M. Zola had imagined that Faure would live to
+complete his full term of office. His death in the very midst of the
+battle entirely changed the position. M. Brisson's time had not come, and
+considering his age it indeed now seemed as if he might never attain to
+the supreme magistracy. The future looked blank; but M. Loubet was
+elected President, and a feeling of great relief followed.
+
+I have reason to believe that M. Zola regards the death of President
+Faure as the crucial turning-point in the whole Dreyfus business. Had
+Faure lived every means would still have been employed to shield the
+guilty; all the influence of the Elysee would, as before, have been
+brought to bear against the unhappy prisoner of Devil's Island.
+
+During those January and February days M. Zola was an eager reader of the
+newspapers. Rumours of all kinds were in circulation, and once again in
+M. Zola's mind did despondency alternate with hopefulness. I must say,
+however, that he was not particularly impressed by Paul Deroulede's
+attempt to induce General Roget to march on the Elysee. He regards
+Deroulede as a scarcely sane individual, and holds views on Parisian
+demonstrations which may surprise some of those who believe everything
+they read in the newspapers.
+
+These views may be epitomised as follows: The Government can always put
+down trouble in the streets when it desires to do so. If trouble occurs
+it is because the Government allows it. Three-fourths of the
+'demonstrations' that have taken place in Paris during the last year or
+two have been simply 'got up' by professional agitators. The men who
+start the shouting and the marching are paid for their services, the
+tariff being as a rule two francs per demonstration. With 500 francs,
+that is 20 l., one can get 250 men together. These are joined by as many
+fools and a small contingent of enthusiasts, and then you have a rumpus
+on the boulevards, and half the newspapers in Europe announcing on the
+morrow: 'Serious Disturbances in Paris. Impending Revolution.' Some
+people may ask, Where does the money for many of these demonstrations
+come from? The answer is that it comes largely from much the same sources
+as those whence General Boulanger's funds were derived--that is, from the
+Orleanist party.
+
+As for military insubordination, plotting, or anything of that kind, M.
+Zola often pointed out to me that no general could effect a revolution,
+for the simple reason that he could not rely on his men to follow him in
+an illegal attempt. It was quite possible that now and again other
+generals besides Boulanger had dreamt of overturning the Republic, but
+they had not the means to do so. It was as likely as not that the officer
+foolhardy enough to make the attempt would be shot in the back by some of
+the Socialists among the rank and file. Boulanger no doubt could have
+counted on a good many men and 'non-coms.,' as he was popular with them,
+but few if any officers above the rank of captain would have followed
+him.
+
+To-day, moreover, intense jealousy still reigns among the French general
+officers. There is not one among them of sufficient pre-eminence and
+popularity to gather round him a large contingent of military men of high
+rank for any political purpose. And this, of course--quite apart from the
+opinions of the masses--largely makes for a continuance of the Republican
+regime.
+
+With a weak Government in office, one with a policy of drift, everything
+may become possible; but, so long as foresight and vigilance are shown,
+the Republic remains impregnable. If military malcontents become
+obstreperous it is only necessary to treat them as General Boulanger was
+treated.
+
+I recollect hearing M. Yves Guyot, who was a member of the Cabinet which
+put down 'the brave general on the black horse,' and who was also one of
+the few French friends who visited M. Zola during his exile, give a brief
+account of some of the decisive steps which were taken to stop the
+Boulangist agitation. The Prefect of Police of that time was summoned to
+the Ministry of the Interior, where two or three members of the
+Government awaited his arrival. Amongst other orders given him was one
+(if I remember rightly) for the dissolution of M. Deroulede's 'League of
+Patriots,' which then, as more recently, was at the bottom of much of the
+agitation.
+
+The Prefect hesitated; he was afraid to execute his orders. 'Very well,
+then,' said M. Constans, M. Guyot, and others, 'you may regard your
+resignation as accepted; you are not the man for the situation; if you
+are afraid, there are plenty who are not; and we shall immediately
+replace you.'
+
+The threat of the loss of office wrought an immediate change in the
+Prefect. He became as brave as he had been timorous, and with all due
+energy he proceeded to carry out his instructions. Boulangism was crushed
+and held up to public opprobrium and ridicule; and but for the culpable
+weakness and connivance of M. Felix Faure and his favourite Prime
+Minister, M. Meline, it would never have revived in its varied forms of
+anti-Semitism, anti-Dreyfusism, etc.
+
+French functionaries, those of the Civil Service, are, as a rule, a
+docile set; but every now and again a Government finding some laxity
+among prefects and sub-prefects makes a few examples. Three or four
+prefects of departments are transferred in disgrace to less important
+towns; two or three are cashiered, and the same method is followed with
+some of the sub-prefects. Thereupon, all the others, prefects and 'subs,'
+throughout the eighty and odd departments of France, hasten to show
+themselves vigilant and, if need be, energetic. Taking one consideration
+with another, this system of frightening the prefects into obedience and
+vigilance has, so far as the maintenance of public order is concerned,
+answered admirably well whenever it has been applied during the last
+fifty years. It has undoubtedly been adopted at times for the furtherance
+of purely despotic or arbitrary aims; but if ever it was justified such
+was the case during the Dreyfus agitation. If the Government had not
+connived, for purposes of its own, at the proceedings of what the French
+call the 'militarist' party, there would have been no turmoil at all.
+
+But those in power desired to shield culprits of high rank and to defend
+the effete organisation of the French War-office. And those who thus
+misused the power they held, who sacrificed the national interests, who
+trampled truth and justice under foot, and rendered their country an
+object of amazement, distrust, and ridicule throughout the length and
+breadth of Europe (Russia not excepted) will be censured and condemned in
+no uncertain voice by the France of to-morrow.
+
+But I am forgetting the prefects and sub-prefects. I mentioned them
+partly because M. Zola himself might have been one of them. It is not
+generally known, I believe, that at the time of the Franco-German war he
+in some degree assisted one of the sub-prefects in the discharge of his
+duties, and (had he only so chosen) might even have become a sub-prefect
+himself. He had been an opposition, a Republican journalist, before the
+fall of the Empire, and M. Gambetta, during his virtual dictatorship
+throughout the latter part of the Franco-German war, was very fond of
+appointing journalists of that description to office, both in the army
+and the Civil Service. M. Zola, then, might have become a sub-prefect to
+begin with; and, later, a full-blown prefect. Picture him in a cocked hat
+and a uniform bedizened with gold lace, and with a slender sword dangling
+by his side. That, at all events, was how sub-prefects and prefects used
+to array themselves when 'in the exercise of their functions.'
+
+I doubt of M. Zola would ever have made a good functionary. His character
+is too independent, and in all likelihood he would have resigned the very
+first time that he happened to have 'a few words' with his Minister. But
+politics having caught him in their grasp he would doubtless (like the
+few functionaries of independent views who throw up their posts in
+France) have next come forward as a candidate for the Chamber or the
+Senate. And then--why not? He might have been an Under-Secretary of
+State, later a Minister, and finally President of the Republic. True, as
+he himself knows, and readily admits, he is no orator; but then orators
+are not always the men who get on in France. Thiers was a ready and
+fluent speaker, but MacMahon could scarcely say (or learn by heart)
+twenty consecutive words. Grevy, it is true, could be long-winded, prosy,
+and didactic; but the powers of elocution which Carnot and Felix Faure
+possessed were infinitesimal. And so the idea of Emile Zola, President of
+the Republic, may not be so far-fetched after all, particularly when one
+remembers Zola's great powers of observation, analysis, and foresight.
+
+Had he taken to politics in his younger days he would at least have made
+his mark in the career thus chosen. And it may be that, in some respects,
+French public life might then have been healthier than it has proved
+during the last quarter of a century. Perchance, too, on the other hand,
+many old maids and young persons, not to mention ecclesiastics and
+vigilance societies, would have been spared manifold pious ejaculations
+and gasps of horror. Again, my poor father--imprisoned, ruined, and
+hounded to his death--might still have been alive.
+
+Unless some other courageous man had arisen to tear the veil away from
+before human life, such as it is in so-called civilised communities, and
+show society its own self in all its rottenness, foulness, and
+hypocrisy--so that on more than one occasion, shrinking guiltily from its
+own image, it has denounced the plain unvarnished truth as libel--there
+would have been no 'Nana' and no 'Pot Bouille,' no 'Assommoir,' and no
+'Germinal.' And no 'La Terre.' 'La Debacle,' and 'Lourdes,' and 'Rome,'
+'Paris,' and 'Fecondite,' and all the other books that have flowed from
+Emile Zola's busy pen would have remained unwritten. But for my own part
+I would rather that the world should possess those books than that Zola
+when tempted, as he was, should have cast literature aside to plunge into
+the abominable and degrading vortex of politics.
+
+Like all men of intellect he certainly has his views on important
+political questions, and again and again he has enunciated them in the
+face of fierce opposition. In the Dreyfus case, however, he has been no
+politician, but simply the indignant champion of an innocent man. And his
+task over, truth and justice vindicated, he asks no reward, no office; he
+simply desires to take up his pen once more and revert to his life
+work:--The delineation and exposure of the crimes, follies, and
+short-comings of society as now constituted, in order that those who
+_are_ in politics, who control human affairs, may, in full knowledge of
+existing evils, do their utmost to remedy them and prepare the way for a
+better and a happier world.
+
+
+
+ XIV
+
+ 'WAITING FOR THE VERDICT'
+
+I can still see before me the sitting-room on the second floor of the
+Queen's Hotel, in which M. Zola spent so much of his time and wrote so
+many pages of 'Fecondite' during the last six months or so of his exile.
+A spacious room it was, if a rather low one, with three windows
+overlooking the road which passes the hotel.
+
+A very large looking-glass in a gilt frame surmounted the mantelpiece, on
+which stood two or three little blue vases. Paper of a light colour and a
+large flowing arabesque pattern with a broad frieze covered the walls.
+There was not a single picture of any kind in the room, neither steel
+engraving, nor lithograph, nor chromo; and remembering what pictures
+usually are, even in the best of hotels, it was perhaps just as well that
+there should have been none in that room at the Queen's. Yet during the
+many hours I spent there the bareness of the walls often worried me.
+
+Against the one that faced the fireplace stood a small sideboard. Then on
+another side was a sofa, and here and there were half a dozen chairs. The
+room was rich in tables, it counted no fewer than five. On a folding
+card-table in one corner M. Zola's stock of letter and 'copy' paper, his
+weighing scales for letters, his envelopes, pens, and pencils, were duly
+set out. Then in front of the central window was the table at which he
+worked every morning. It was of mahogany, little more than three feet
+long and barely two feet wide. Whenever he raised his eyes from his
+writing, he could see the road below him, and the houses across the way.
+On a similar table at another of the windows he usually kept such books
+and reviews as reached him from France.
+
+In the centre of the room, under the electric lights--which, however,
+were only fitted towards the end of M. Zola's sojourn at the hotel, so
+that throughout the winter a paraffin lamp supplied the necessary
+illumination--stood the table at which one lunched and dined. It was
+round and would just accommodate four persons. Finally, beside M. Zola's
+favourite arm-chair, near the fireplace, was a little gipsy table, on
+which he usually kept the day's newspapers, and perchance the volume he
+was reading at the time.
+
+A doorway on the same side as the fireplace gave ingress to the
+bedchamber, which was smaller than the sitting-room, and adequately, but
+by no means luxuriously furnished.
+
+On the little writing-table near the middle window were first a small
+inkstand belonging to the hotel, then a few paper-weights covering
+memoranda jotted down on little square pieces of paper, about three
+inches long either way, together with an old yellowish newspaper which
+did duty as a blotting pad; and a pen with a 'j' nib and a very heavy
+ivory handle, so heavy, indeed, that though the master often offered it
+to me I could never write with it. With this pen, however, he himself did
+all his work. That work he generally cleared away before lunch, and
+locked up in his bedroom wardrobe, so that by the time a visitor arrived
+there was never any litter in the sitting-room.
+
+The road, viewed from the writing-table window, was at times fairly
+lively. Nursemaids and children, bicyclists and others passed constantly
+to and fro. Stylish carriages also rolled by during the afternoon, and at
+intervals a little green omnibus went its way at a slow jog-trot. The
+detached villa residences on the other side of the road were, however,
+singularly lifeless. One day M. Zola remarked to me: 'I have never seen a
+soul in those houses during all the months I have been here. They are
+occupied certainly, for the window blinds are pulled up every morning and
+lowered every evening, but I can never detect who does this; and I have
+never seen anybody leave the houses or enter them.'
+
+At last one afternoon he told me that one of these villas had woke up,
+for on the previous day he had espied a lady in the garden watering some
+flowers.
+
+Rather lower down the road there was a livelier house, one which had a
+balconied window, which was almost invariably open, and here servants and
+children were often to be seen. 'That,' said M. Zola, 'is the one little
+corner of life and gaiety, amidst all the other silence and lack of life.
+Whenever I feel dull or worried I look over there.'
+
+As a rule the Queen's Hotel itself is, as I have already mentioned, a
+very quiet place; but now and again a wedding breakfast was given there.
+Broughams and landaus would then roll over the gravel sweep, and M. Zola
+and I would at times lean out of the windows and exchange opinions with
+respect to the bridal pair and the guests. What surprised and amused him,
+on one occasion when a wedding party came to the hotel, was to notice
+that all the coachmen of the carriages wore yellow flowers and favours;
+for in France yellow is not only associated with jealousy, but also with
+conjugal faithlessness.
+
+'If those flowers ware to be taken as an omen,' said M. Zola to me, 'that
+happy pair will soon be in the Divorce Court.'
+
+During the latter part of his stay at Norwood, when the door between his
+bedroom and sitting-room remained open, one could see on a chest of
+drawers in the former apartment a pair of life-size porcelain cats,
+coloured a purplish maroon, with sparkling yellow glass eyes, and an
+abundance of fantastic yellow spots. These cats had been bought by him as
+a souvenir of England and English art, for he was much struck by their
+oddity. He had been offered others--for instance, white ones with little
+coloured landscapes printed all over their backs and sides--surely as
+idiotic an embellishment as any insane potter could devise--but although
+these had sorely tempted him he had finally decided in favour of the
+maroon and yellow abominations.
+
+A little girl of mine, who found herself face to face with these cats one
+day in his room, was quite startled by them, and has since expressed the
+opinion that Sir John Tenniel ought to have seen them before he drew the
+Cheshire cat for 'Alice in Wonderland.' For my own part I can imagine the
+laughter and the jeers of M. Zola's artistic friends when those choice
+specimens of British art are shown to them in Paris.
+
+At intervals during his long sojourn at the Queen's Hotel M. Zola
+received a few brief visits from French friends, chiefly literary men and
+politicians, whose names need not be mentioned, but who have identified
+themselves with the cause of Revision. At times these gentlemen found
+themselves in London on other matters, and profited by the opportunity to
+run down to Norwood. On other occasions they made the journey from France
+for the especial purpose of quieting M. Zola's impatience, and telling
+him that he must not yet think of returning home. Again, M. Fasquelle,
+the French publisher, came over four or five times, now on business and
+now in a friendly way.
+
+I think that during the seven or eight months that M. Zola stayed at the
+Queen's Hotel, he received altogether some ten visits from compatriots,
+which visits were often of only an hour or two's duration. Thus, Mme.
+Zola having returned to France, he was frequently very much alone.
+
+During the last months of his exile my wife fell seriously ill, and I
+could not then go so often to Norwood. Afterwards ague caught me in its
+grip, and my visits ceased for two or three successive weeks. All I could
+do in an emergency was to place my eldest daughter or my son at M. Zola's
+disposal.
+
+The foreign visitors he received--by foreign I mean non-French--were
+(apart from the Warehams, myself and family) very few in number. I think
+that an eminent Russian _publiciste_ who happened to be a personal friend
+(M. Zola has long been popular in Russia, where even the Emperor has read
+many of his books) saw him on one occasion. Then, when M. Yves Guyot
+called, he brought with him an English friend who was pledged to secrecy.
+
+A well-known English novelist and art critic, M. Zola's oldest English
+friend, and his earliest champion in this country, likewise saw him.
+Further, in a friendly capacity he received an English journalist for
+whom he has much regard, and who came to see him quite apart from any
+journalistic matters. To this list I will add the names of Mr. Andrew
+Chatto and Mr. Percy Spalding of Messrs. Chatto and Windus, and Mr.
+George P. Brett, of the Macmillan Company of New York.
+
+Such, then, were M. Zola's visitors and guests--say, apart from the
+Warehams, myself and family, less than a score of persons, the total
+duration of whose visits added together amounted perhaps to a hundred and
+twenty hours spread over many long and trying months.
+
+At times when we chatted together, M. Zola and myself, and mention was
+made of his friends--of persons occasionally whom we both knew--he
+referred to the many estrangements caused by the divergence of views on
+the Dreyfus affair. Friends of twenty and thirty years' standing, men who
+had laboured sided by side often in pursuit of the same ideal, had not
+only quarrelled and parted but had assailed each other with the greatest
+virulence in the Press and at public meetings.
+
+Many whom he himself had regarded as close and sincere friends had
+trodden upon all the past and attacked him abominably, as though he were
+the veriest scum of the earth. Some in the earlier stages of the affair
+had hypocritically feigned sympathy, in order to provoke his confidence,
+and had then turned round to hold him up to execration and ridicule. One
+or two had behaved so badly that he had refused ever to receive them at
+his house again.
+
+He spoke to me of an eminent French _litterateur_ who at the outset of
+the agitation on behalf of Dreyfus had immediately promised his help, and
+had even prepared articles and appeals on behalf of the prisoner of
+Devil's Island. But this _litterateur_ had of recent years been lapsing
+into mysticism, and at the behests of the reverend father his confessor,
+he had abruptly destroyed what he had written, and gone over to the other
+side to wage desperate warfare upon the cause he had promised to help.
+
+The writer in question (one who will probably leave a name in French
+literature) was tortured by the everlasting fear that he might go to hell
+when he died, and he was the more timorous, the more easily influenced by
+certain persons, as he suffered from a horrible, incurable complaint, and
+feared that his medical man--a bigoted Romanist--might abandon him to all
+the pangs of sudden death if he did not comply with the injunctions of
+the Church.
+
+Then there was a friend of many years' standing, a Minister in successive
+Cabinets, who feigned that by remaining in office he would be able to
+favour the cause, and who, instead of that, did his utmost against it. A
+playwright wrote: 'I am heartily with you, but for God's sake don't say
+it, for my plays might be hissed.'* Another prominent man started on a
+long journey to avoid having to express any opinion. Nearly all the baser
+passions of humanity were made manifest in some degree--treachery,
+rancour, jealousy, and moral and physical cowardice.
+
+ * Apropos of the stage, it is a curious circumstance that
+ nine-tenths of 'the profession' in France are ardent Dreyfusards.
+ Nearly every actor and actress and vocalist of note has been
+ on the same side as M. Zola from the outset.
+
+But, of course, there was another and a brighter side to the picture.
+There were men of high intellect and courage who had not hesitated to
+state their views and plead for truth and justice, men who, when in
+office, had been arbitrarily suspended and removed. There were many who
+had risked their futures, many too who, after years of labour, were well
+entitled to rest and retirement, yet had come forward with all the ardour
+of youth to do battle for great principles and save their country from
+the shame of a cruel crime.
+
+Adversity makes one acquainted with strange bedfellows, and M. Zola was
+more than once struck by the heterogeneous nature of the Revisionist
+army. He found men of such varied political and social views banded
+together for the cause. It all helped to remove sundry old-time
+prejudices of his.
+
+For instance, he said to me one day: 'I never cared much for the French
+Protestants; I regarded them as people of narrow minds, fanatics of a
+kind, far less tolerant and human than the great mass of the Catholics.
+But they have behaved splendidly in this battle of ours, and shown
+themselves to be real men.'
+
+All through the spring M. Zola eagerly followed the inquiry which the
+Cour de Cassation was conducting, and when M. Ballot-Beaupre was
+appointed reporter to the Court, there came a fresh spell of anxiety. M.
+Ballot-Beaupre is a man of natural piety, and the anti-Revisionist
+newspapers, basing themselves on his religious views, at first made
+certain that he would show no mercy to the Jew Dreyfus, but would report
+strongly in favour of the prisoner's guilt. Certain Dreyfusite journals,
+on the other hand, bitterly attacked the learned judge for his supposed
+clerical leanings; and indeed so much was insinuated that M. Zola for a
+short time half believed it possible that M. Ballot-Beaupre might show
+himself hostile to revision.
+
+When I saw M. Zola he repeatedly expressed to me his feelings of
+disquietude. Then everything suddenly changed. Certain newspapers
+discovered that M. Ballot-Beaupre, if pious, was by no means a fanatic,
+and, further, that he was a very sound lawyer, much respected by his
+colleagues. This cleared the atmosphere, for it seemed impossible that
+any man of rectitude and judgment could pass over the damning revelations
+which the Cour de Cassation's inquiry, as published in 'Le Figaro,' had
+produced.
+
+Time went on, and at last the issue, so frequently postponed, so
+longingly awaited, came in sight. The week before the public proceedings
+of the Cour de Cassation opened M. Zola said to me: 'I shall have
+finished the last chapter of "Fecondite" by Saturday or Sunday, so I
+shall have my hands quite free and be able to give all my attention to
+what takes place at the Courts. I am hopeful, yes, very hopeful, and yet
+at moments some horrid doubt will spring up to torture me. But no! you'll
+see, our cause will gain the day, revision will be granted, and justice
+will be done.'
+
+And at last came the fateful week which was to prove the accuracy of his
+surmises.
+
+
+
+ XV
+
+ LAST DAYS--DEPARTURE
+
+I spent the afternoon of Saturday, May 27, with M. Zola, and we then
+spoke of the proceedings impending before the Cour de Cassation. All our
+information pointed to the conclusion that the Court would give judgment
+on the Saturday following, and it was decided that M. Zola should return
+to France a few days afterwards. The date ultimately agreed upon was
+Tuesday, June 6, and the train selected was that leaving Charing Cross
+for Folkestone at 2.45 in the afternoon.
+
+Though according to every probability the Court's judgment would be in
+favour of revision, M. Zola was resolved to return home whatever might be
+the issue, and such were his feelings on the matter that nothing any
+friend might have urged would have prevented him from doing so. As a
+matter of fact one friend did regard the return as somewhat unwise, and
+intimated it both by telegram and letter. This compelled me to see M.
+Zola again on the following Tuesday (May 30), but the objections were
+overruled by him, and the arrangements which had been planned were
+adhered to.
+
+M. Zola had now drafted the declaration which he proposed issuing on the
+morrow of his return home, and this he gave me to read. It was the
+article 'Justice,' published in 'L'Aurore,' to which I have occasionally
+referred in the course of the present narrative.
+
+I left M. Zola rather late that Tuesday night in the expectation that
+everything which had been arranged would follow in due course. As the
+writing of 'Fecondite' was now finished he had time on his hands, and a
+part of this he proposed to devote to taking a few final snapshots of
+Norwood, the Crystal Palace, and surrounding scenery. He needed something
+to do, for he could not sit hour by hour in his room at the Queen's Hotel
+anxiously waiting for news of the proceedings at the Paris Palais de
+Justice.
+
+For my part I had begun to prepare the present narrative, and as he would
+not listen to my repeated offers to take him to the Derby, it was
+arranged that I should not see him again until the end of the week. On
+Friday, however, reports were already in circulation to the effect that
+M. Fasquelle (M. Zola's French publisher) had come to London for the
+purpose of escorting him home.
+
+This was true, and I foresaw that the rumours might lead to some
+modifications of our programme; for M. Zola did not wish his return to
+have any public character. He had forbidden all the demonstrations which
+his friends in Paris were anxious to arrange in his honour, declaring
+that he desired to go back quietly and privately, and then at once place
+himself at the disposal of the public prosecutor.
+
+On Friday I sent my daughter Violette to Norwood with a parcel of M.
+Zola's photographs, received by Messrs. Chatto and Windus from Miss Loie
+Fuller, who being greatly interested in the Clarence Ward of St. Mary's
+Hospital, particularly wished M. Zola to sign these portraits in order
+that they might be sold at a bazaar which was to be held for the benefit
+of the hospital referred to. I told my daughter that I should myself go
+down to the Queen's Hotel on the morrow, and she brought me back a
+message to the effect that I really must go, as complications had arisen,
+and M. Zola particularly desired to see me.
+
+On the following day, Saturday, I therefore betook myself to Norwood with
+a parcel of M. Zola's books, which I had received from Messrs. Macmillan
+& Co. on behalf of the Countess of Bective, who (prompted by the same
+spirit as Miss Loie Fuller) wished to sell these volumes at the
+'Bookland' stall on the occasion of the Charing Cross Hospital Bazaar.
+And when I arrived I found indeed that it was most desirable that the
+programme of M. Zola's departure should be modified.
+
+He had already seen M. and Mme. Fasquelle, the former of whom was much
+annoyed at the reports of his presence in London, and thought it most
+advisable to precipitate the departure. Delay might, indeed, be harmful
+if it was desired to avoid demonstrations. Besides, why should he wait
+until the ensuing Tuesday? Why not return the very next night--that of
+Sunday, June 4--by the Dover and Calais route? Mme. Fasquelle had
+declared that she in no way objected to travelling at night time; and so
+far as the departure from London was concerned, there would be few people
+about on a Sunday evening, which was another point to be considered. I
+cordially assented, for now that the imminence of M. Zola's return to
+Paris had been reported in the newspapers it was certain that delay meant
+a possibility of demonstrations both for and against him. In spite of his
+prohibition, many of his friends still wished to greet him like a
+conquering hero on his arrival at the Northern Railway Station in Paris.
+And the other side would unfailingly send out its recruiting agents to
+assemble a contingent of loafers at two francs per demonstration, who
+would be duly instructed to yell 'Conspuez,' and 'A bas les juifs.' Then
+a brawl would inevitably follow.
+
+Now M. Zola (as I have already mentioned) did not wish for a homecoming
+of that kind. There was no question of refusing to 'face the music,' of
+shunning a hostile crowd, and so forth. It was purely and simply a matter
+of dignity and of doing nothing that might lead to a disturbance of the
+public peace. The triumph of justice was undoubtedly imminent, and it
+must not be followed by disorder.
+
+When I had expressed my concurrence in the views held by M. Zola and M.
+Fasquelle, M. Zola and I attended to business. First came the question of
+Lady Bective's books, in each of which a suitable inscription was
+inserted. Afterwards, in a friend's birthday book M. Zola inscribed his
+famous, epoch-making phrase, 'Truth is on the march, and nothing will be
+able to stop it.' Finally, a few brief notes were written and posted, and
+work was over.
+
+For a little while we chatted together. Some notable incidents connected
+with the interminable Affair had occurred during the last few days.
+Colonel du Paty de Clam, for whose arrest the Revisionist journals had
+clamoured so long and so pertinaciously, had at last been cast into
+prison. In M. Zola's estimation, the Colonel's arrest had been merely a
+question of time ever since the day when one had learnt that he had
+disguised himself with a false beard and blue glasses when he went to
+meet the notorious Esterhazy.
+
+'A man may be guilty of any misdeed and may yet find forgiveness and even
+favour,' M. Zola had then said to me, 'but he must not make himself, his
+profession, and his cause ridiculous. In France, as you know, "ridicule
+kills." The false beard and the blue spectacles, following the veiled
+lady, are decisive. One need scarcely trouble any further about M. du
+Paty de Clam. His fate is as good as sealed.'
+
+And now that the Colonel had at last been arrested, the master remarked,
+'The military party is throwing him over to us as a kind of sop; it would
+be delighted to make him the general scapegoat, and thereby save all the
+other culprits. But it won't do. There are men higher placed than Du Paty
+who must bear their share of censure and, if need be, punishment.'
+
+Then we spoke of Esterhazy, 'that fine type for a melodrama or a novel of
+the romantic school,' as M. Zola often remarked. The Commandant had just
+acknowledged to the 'Times' and the 'Daily Chronicle' that the famous
+_bordereau_ had been penned by him, and we laughed at the remembrance of
+his squabbles on this subject with the proprietress of another newspaper.
+How indignantly he had then denied having ever acknowledged the
+authorship of the _bordereau_, and how complacently he now admitted it!
+As for the circumstances under which he asserted the document to have
+been written, M. Zola could make nothing of them. 'So far, the
+explanations explain nothing,' said he; 'take them whichever way you
+will, there is no sense, no plausibility even, in them. Hitherto I always
+thought Esterhazy a very shrewd and clever man, but after reading his
+statements in the "Times" and the "Chronicle" I no longer know what to
+think. Still, one point is gained; he admits having written the
+_bordereau_, and others hereafter will tell us the exact circumstances
+under which he did so. Colonel Sandherr, at whose bidding he says he
+wrote it, is dead; but others who know a great deal about him are still
+alive.'
+
+While M. Zola thus expressed himself, we sat face to face, he in his
+favourite arm chair on one side of the fireplace, and I on the other, in
+the familiar room, with its three windows overlooking the lively road,
+while all around curvetted the scrolls and arabesques of the light
+fawn-tinted wall paper. And after chatting about Du Paty and Esterhazy we
+gradually lapsed into silence. It was a fateful hour. There were
+ninety-nine probabilities out of a hundred that the decision of the Cour
+de Cassation would be given that same afternoon; and whatever that
+decision might be we felt certain that before it was made public by any
+newspaper in London we should be apprised of it. We knew that five
+minutes after judgment should have been pronounced a telegram would be
+speeding through the wires to the Queen's Hotel, Norwood.
+
+M. Zola did not tell me his thoughts, yet I could guess them. We can
+generally guess the thoughts of those we love. But the hours went by and
+nothing came. How long they were, those judges! Whatever could be the
+cause of their delay? Surely--trained, practised men that they were, men
+who had spent their lives in seeking and proclaiming the truth--surely no
+element of doubt could have penetrated their minds at the final, the
+supreme moment.
+
+Ah! the waiter entered, and there on his salver lay a buff envelope,
+within which must surely be the ardently awaited message that would tell
+us of victory or defeat. M. Zola could scarcely tear that envelope open;
+his hands trembled violently. And then came an anti-climax. The wire was
+from M. Fasquelle, who announced that he and his wife were inviting
+themselves to dinner at Norwood that evening.
+
+It was welcome news, but not the news so impatiently expected. And, at
+last, suspense become intolerable, I resolved to go out and try to
+purchase some afternoon newspapers.
+
+There had been rumours to the effect that as each individual judge might
+preface his decision by a declaration of the reasons which prompted it,
+the final judgment might after all be postponed until Monday. Both M.
+Zola and I had thought this improbable; still, there was a possibility of
+such delay, and perhaps it was on account of a postponement of the kind
+that the telegram we awaited had not arrived.
+
+I scoured Upper Norwood for afternoon papers. There was, however, nothing
+to the point at that hour (about five P.M.) in 'The Evening News,' the
+'Globe,' the 'Echo,' the 'Star,' the 'Sun,' the three 'Gazettes.' They,
+like we, were 'waiting for the verdict.' I went as far as the lower level
+station in the hope of finding some newspaper that might give an inkling
+of the position, and I found nothing at all. It was extremely warm, and I
+was somewhat excited. Thus I was perspiring terribly by the time I
+returned to the hotel, to learn that no telegram had come as yet, that
+things were still _in statu quo_.
+
+Then all at once the waiter came up again with another buff envelope
+lying on his plated salver. And this time our anticipations were
+realised; here at last was the expected news. M. Zola read the telegram,
+then showed it to me.
+
+It was brief, but sufficient. 'Cheque postponed,' it said; and Zola knew
+what those words meant. 'Cheque paid' would have signified that not only
+had revision been granted, but that all the proceedings against Dreyfus
+were quashed, and that he would not even have to be re-tried by another
+court-martial. And in a like way 'cheque unpaid' would have meant that
+revision had been refused by the Court. 'Cheque postponed' implied the
+granting of revision and a new court-martial.
+
+The phraseology of this telegram, as of previous ones, had long since
+been arranged. For months many seemingly innocent 'wires' had been full
+of meaning. There had been no more enigmatical telegrams, as at the time
+of Henry's arrest and death, but telegrams drafted in accordance with M.
+Zola's instructions and each word of which was perfectly intelligible to
+him.
+
+It often happened that the newspaper correspondents 'were not in it.'
+Things were known to M. Zola and at times to myself hours--and even
+days--before there was any mention of them in print. The blundering
+anti-Dreyfusites have often if not invariably overlooked the fact that
+their adversaries number men of acumen, skill, and energy. Far from it
+being true that money has played any role in the affair, everything has
+virtually been achieved by brains and courage. In fact, from first to
+last, the Revisionist agitation, whilst proving that the Truth must
+always ultimately conquer, has likewise shown the supremacy of true
+intellect over every other force in the world, whether wealth, or
+influence, or fanaticism.
+
+But I must return to M. Zola. He now knew all he wished to know. As there
+had been no postponement of the Court's decision there need be none of
+his return. A telegram to Paris announcing his departure from London was
+hastily drafted and I hurried with it to the post-office, meeting on my
+way M. and Mme. Fasquelle, who were walking towards the Queen's Hotel.
+
+We had a right merry little dinner that evening. We were all in the best
+of humours. M. Zola's face was radiant. A great victory had been won; and
+then, too, he was going home!
+
+He recalled the more amusing incidents of his exile; it seemed to him,
+said he, as if for months and months he had been living in a dream.
+
+And M. Fasquelle broke in with a reminder that M. Zola must be very
+careful when he reached his house, and must in no wise damage the
+historic table for which he, Fasquelle, had given such a pile of money at
+the memorable auction in the Rue de Bruxelles.
+
+Ah, that table! We were in a mood to laugh about anything, and we laughed
+at the thought of the table; at the thought, too, of all the
+simple-minded folk who had imagined that they would be able to purchase
+'souvenirs' at the auction so abruptly brought to an end.
+
+Then the Fasquelles, having been to the Oaks on the previous day, began
+to talk of Epsom, and the scene, unique in the whole world, which the
+famous racecourse presents during Derby week. M. Zola half regretted that
+he had missed going. 'But I will go everywhere and see everything,' he
+repeated, 'the next time I come to England. I shall then be able to do so
+openly, without any playing at hide and seek. Oh, it won't be till after
+the Paris Exhibition, that is certain, but I have written an oratorio for
+which Bruneau has composed the music, and if it is sung in London, as I
+hope, I shall come over and spend a month going about everywhere. But, of
+course,' he added, with a twinkle in his eyes, 'I have about two years'
+imprisonment to do as things stand, so I must make no positive promises.'
+
+The rest is soon told. Final arrangements were made, and we came away, M.
+and Mme. Fasquelle and myself, about ten o'clock. 'It is your last night
+of exile,' I said to M. Zola as I pressed his hand, 'and it will soon be
+over. You must try to sleep well.'
+
+'Sleep!' he replied. 'Oh, there is no sleep for me to-night. From this
+moment I shall be counting the hours, the very minutes.'
+
+'It will make a change for you, Vizetelly,' said M. Fasquelle, as he,
+Mme. Fasquelle, and myself walked towards the railway station. 'You will
+be missing him now.'
+
+This was true. All the routine, all the _alertes_, the meetings, the
+missions of those eleven months were about to cease abruptly. What had at
+first seemed to me novel had with time become confirmed habit, and for
+the first few days after M. Zola's departure I felt my occupation gone.
+
+That departure took place, as arranged, on Sunday evening, June 4. It was
+the day when President Loubet was cowardly assailed at a race-meeting by
+the friends and partisans of the foolish Duke of Orleans; but of all that
+we remained (_pro tem._) in blissful ignorance. The Fasquelles went down
+to Norwood and brought M. Zola to Victoria. I was busy during the day
+preparing for the 'Westminster Gazette' an English epitome of the
+declaration which 'L'Aurore' was to publish on the morrow. That work
+accomplished, I met the others on their arrival in town. Wareham had been
+warned of the change in the programme on the previous night, and came up
+from Wimbledon with my wife. There was a hasty scramble of a dinner at a
+restaurant near Victoria. We were served, I remember, by a very amusing
+and familiar waiter, who, addressing M. Zola by preference (I wonder if
+he recognised him?), kept on repeating that he was a 'citizen of the most
+noble Helvetian Confederation,' and assured us that potatoes for two
+would be ample, and that chicken for three would be as much as we should
+care to eat. 'Take this,' said he, 'it's to-day's. Don't have that, it
+was cooked yesterday.' And all this made us extremely merry. 'It seems to
+me more than ever that I am living in a dream,' said M. Zola after a
+final laugh. 'That waiter has given the finishing touch to my illusion.'
+
+The train started at nine P.M., and we had a full quarter of an hour at
+our disposal for our leave-takings in the dimly-lighted station. There
+were few passengers travelling that night, and few loiterers about. We
+made M. Zola take his seat in a compartment, and stood on guard before it
+talking to him. Only one gentleman, a short dapper individual with
+mutton-chop whiskers (Wareham suggested that he looked like a barrister),
+paid any attention to the master, and, it may be, recognised him. For the
+rest, all went well. There were _au revoirs_ and handshakes all round,
+and messages, too, for one and another. And M. Zola would have his little
+joke. 'If you should come across Esterhazy,' he said to me, 'tell him
+that I've gone back, and ask him when he's coming.'
+
+'Well,' I replied, 'he will probably want another safe-conduct before
+answering that question.'
+
+'Do you think that a safe-conduct to take Dreyfus's place would suit
+him?' was M. Zola's retort.
+
+But the clock was now on the stroke of the hour, the carriage doors were
+hastily closed, and the signal for departure was given.
+
+'Au revoir, au revoir!' A last handshake, and the train started. For
+another half-minute we could see our dear and illustrious friend at his
+carriage window waving his arm to us. And then he was gone. The
+responsibility which had so long rested on Wareham and myself was ended;
+Emile Zola's exit was virtually over: shortly after five o'clock on the
+following morning he would once more be in Paris, ready to take his part
+in the final, crowning act of one of the greatest dramas that the world
+has ever witnessed. Truth was still marching on, and assuredly nothing
+would be able to stop it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's With Zola in England, by Ernest Alfred Vizetelly
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