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We had one or two other peo˙le with us, in particular a man named Paley Gardner, who had been with Eckenstein at Wastdale at Ester.  He was a man of giant strength, but could not be taught to climb the simplest rocks. He always tried to pull the mountain down to him instead of pulling himself up to it!  He was one of the best fellows that ever walked and had led an extraordinary life of which he was too silent and too shy to speak.   But he loosened up to some extent in camp; and two of his adventures are so remarkable that I feel they ought to be rescued from oblivion.

He was a rich man, but on once occasion found himself stranded in Sydney and too lazy to wire for money.  At this juncture he met a man who offered to take him trading in the islands.  They got a schooner, a crew and some stores; set off; sold their stuff; and started home.  Then small pox broke out on board and every man died by Paley, who sailed the schooner, singlehanded, seven days back to Sydney.

On another occasion he found himself at Lima during the battle; if you can call it a battle when everyone thought it the best bet to shoot anyone he saw as a mater of general principle.  Paley, being a man of peace, took up a position on a remote wall with the idea of shooting anyone that approached in case of his proving unfriendly.  However, the first person that arrived was obviously an Englishman.  They recognized each other and proceeded to concert measures for escape.

The newcomer, a doctor with long experience of South America, suggested that if they could only cross a broad belt of country inhabited by particularly malignant Indian tribes, and the Andes, they could reach the head waters of the Amazon and canoe down to Iquitos, where they would be in clover, as the doctor was a close friend of Dom Somebody, a powerful minister or other high official.  They started off on this insane programme and carried it out (after innumerable adventures) with success.  Arriving at Iquitos, ragged and penniless, but confident that the minister's friendship would put them on a good wicket at once, they sought the local authorities --- and learnt that their friend had been hanged a few days before, and that anyone who knew him might expect a similar solution to his troubles!

The two Englishmen were thrown into prison, but broke out and bolted down the river.   The hue and cry was raised; but, just as their pursuers were closing in on them, the managed to steal a fishing smack, with which they put out into the o˙en Atlantic.   Luckily, a few days later, when they were on

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the brink of starvation, they fell in with an English steamer bound for Liverpool.   The captain picked them up and took them home in triumph.

The weather made it impossible to do any serious climbing; but I learnt a great deal about the work of a camp at high altitudes, from the management of transport to cooking; in fact, my chief claim to fame is, perhaps, my "glacier curry".  It was very amusing to see these strong men, inured to every danger and hardship, dash out of the tent after one mouthful and wallow in the snow, snapping at it like mad dogs.  The admitted, however, that it was very good as curry and I should endeavour to introduce it into London restaurants if there were only a glacier. Perhaps, some day, after a heavy snowfall ---

I had been led, in the course of my reading, to The Kabbalah Unveiled, by S. L. Mathers.  I didn't understand a word of it, but it fascinated me all the more for that reason, and it was my constant study on the glacier. My health was not good during this summer and I had gone down to Zermatt for a rest.  One night in the beer hall I started to lay down the law on alchemy, which I nowise understood.  But it was a pretty safe subject on which to spread myself and I trust that I impressed the group of men with my vast learning.  However, my destiny was in ambush.  One of the party, named Julian L. Baker, was an analytical chemist.  He took me aside when the group broke up and walked back to the hotel with me.  He was himself a real practical alchemist --- I don't know whether he had been fooled by my magpie display of erudition.   He may simply have deduced that a boy, however vain and foolish, who had taken so much pains to read up the subject, might have a really honest interest after all; and he took me seriously.  He had accomplished some remarkable work in alchemy.  For one thing, he had prepared "fixed mercury"; that is to say, the pure metal in some form that was solid at ordinary temperatures.

As for me, I made no mistake.  I felt that the moment of opportunity was come.   I had sent out the S.O.S. call for a Master during that Easter at Wastdale Head; and here was a man who was either one himself or could put me in touch with one.  It struck me as more than a coincidence that I should have been led to meet him partly through my ill-health and partly through my fatuous vanity.  That night I resolved to renew my acquaintance with Baker in the morning and tackle him seriously about the intricate question which lay close about my heart.

The morrow dawned.  At breakfast I inquired for Baker.  He had left the hotel; no one knew where he had gone.  I telegraphed all over the valley.  He was located at the Gorner Grat.  I sped up the mountain to find him.  Again he had gone.  I rushed back.  In vain I hunted him through the hotels and at the railway station.  At last I got a report than an Englishmen corresponding to

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his description had started to walk down the valley to Brigue.  I hurled myself headlong in pursuit.  This time I was rewarded.  I caught up with him some ten miles below Zermatt.  I told him of my search for the Secret Sanctuary of the Saints and convinced him of my desperate earnestness.  He hinted that he knew of an Assembly which might be that for which I was looking.  He spoke of a Sacrament where the elements were four instead of two.  This meant nothing to me; but I felt that I was on the right track. I got him to promise to meet me in London.  He added, "I will introduce you to a man who is much more of a Magician than I am."

To sum the matter in brief, he kept his word.  The Secret Assembly materialized as the "Hermetic Order of the G.·. D.·.,"  and the Magician as one George Cecil Jones.

During the whole summer, the weather got steadily worse and my health took the same course.  I found myself obliged to leave the camp and go to London to see doctors.   I took rooms in an hotel in London, attended to the necessary medical treatment and spent my time writing poetry.  The play Jephthah was my principal work at this period.  It shows a certain advance in bigness of conception; and has this notable merit, that I began to realize the possibility of objective treatment of a theme.   Previous to this, my lyrics had been more or less successful expressions of the ego; and I had made few attempts to draw characters who were not more than Freudian wish phantasms --- I mean by this that they were either projections of myself as I fancied myself or aspired to be; otherwise, images of women that I desired to love.  When I say "to Love", I doubt whether the verb meant anything more than "to find myself through".  But in Jephthah, weak as the play is, I was really taking an interest in other people.  The characters are not wholly corrupted by self-portraiture, I suck to the Hebrew legend accurately enough, merely introducing a certain amount of Cabbalistic knowledge.

The passionate dedication to Swinburne is significant of my literary hero-worship.   With this play were published (in 1899) a number of lyrics entitled "Mysteries, Lyrical and Dramatic".  The shallow critic hastily assumed that the influence of Swinburne was paramount in my style, but on rereading the volume I do not think that the accusation is particularly justifiable.  There are plenty of other authors who might more reasonably be served with an affiliation summons.  Indeed, criticism in England amounts to this: that if a new writer manifests any sense of rhythm, he is classed as an imitator of Swinburne; if any capacity for thought, of Browning.

I remember one curious incident in connection with this volume.  I had a set of paged proofs in my pocket one evening, when I went to call on W. B. Yeats.  I had never though much of his work; it seemed to me to lack virility.  I have given an extended criticism of it in The Equinox (vol. I No. II, page 307).   However, at that time I should have been glad to have a

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kindly word from an elder man.  I showed him the proofs accordingly and he glanced through them.  He forced himself to utter a few polite conventionalities, but I could see what the truth of the matter was.

I had by this time become fairly expert in clairvoyance, clairaudience and clairsentience.  But it would have been a very dill person indeed who failed to recognize the black, billious rage that shook him to the soul.  I instance this as a proof that Yeats was a genuine  poet at heart, for a mere charlatan would have known that he had no cause to fear an authentic poet.  What hurt him was the knowledge of his own incomparable inferiority.

I was little of him and George Moore.  I have always been nauseated by pretentiousness; and the Celtic revival, so-called, had all the mincing, posturing qualities of the literary Plymouth Brother.  They pretended to think it an unpardonable crime not to speak Irish, though they could not speak it themselves; and they worked in their mealymouthed way towards the galvanization of the political, ethnological and literary corpse of the Irish nation.  Ireland has been badly treated, we all know; but her only salvation lay in forgetting her nonsense.  What is the use of setting up a scarecrow provincialism, in re-establishing a barbarous and fantastic language which is as dead as Gothic and cannot boast sufficient literature to hold the attention of any but a few cloistered scholars --- at the price of cutting Ireland off from the main stream of civilization?  We see already that the country has slunk into the slough of anarchy.  When the Kilkenny cats have finished shooting each other from behind hedges, the depopulated island will necessarily fall into the hands of practical colonists, who will be content to dwell peaceably together and communicate with the world in a living language.

Like Byron, Shelly, Swinburne and Tennyson, I left the university without taking a degree.  It has been better so; I have accepted no honour from her; she has had much from me.

I wanted the spirit of the university and I passed my examinations in order to be able to imbibe it without interference from the authorities, but I saw no sense in paying fifteen guineas for the privilege of wearing a long black gown more cumbersome than the short blue one, and paying thirteen and fourpence instead of six and eightpence if I were caught smoking in it.  I had no intention of becoming a parson or a schoolmaster; to write B.A. after my name would have been a decided waste of ink.

I felt that my career was already marked out for me.  Sir Richard Burton was my hero and Eckenstein his modern representative, as far as my external life was concerned.   A vaccalaureate would not assist me noticeably in the Himalayas or the Sahara.   As for my literary career, academic distinction would be a positive disgrace.   And with regard to my spiritual life, which I already felt to be the deepest thing in me, the approbation of the faculty was beneath troubling to despise.  I have always objected to incurring positive

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disgrace.  I see no sense in violating conventions, still less in breaking laws.   To do so only gives one unnecessary trouble.

On the other hand, it is impossible to make positive progress by means of institutions which lead to one becoming a lord chancellor, an archbishop, an admiral, or some other flower of futility.  I had got from Cambridge what I wanted: the intellectual and moral freedom, the spirit of initiative and self-reliance; but perhaps, above all, the indefinable tone of the university.  The difference between Cambridge and Oxford is that the former makes you the equal of anybody alive; the latter leaves you in the invidious position of being his superior.

NOTE ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN
OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE

One of the most significant points in English character is thrown into relief by the contemplation of Oxford and Cambridge.  I should be very puzzled to have to say that that point is, but the data are unmistakable. The superficial likeness between the universities is very clear, yet their fundamental spiritual difference can only be described as "a great gulf fixed".  Contrast this with America, where even long experience does not enable one to distinguish at a glance between men from the four principal universities, or even to detect, in most cases, the influence of any university training soever, as we understand the idea.  But to mistake an Oxford for a Cambridge man is impossible and the converse exceedingly rare.

I hope it is not altogether the blindness of filial affection that inclines me to suggest that the essential difference depends upon the greater freedom of the more famous university.  Oxford makes a very definite  effort to turn out a definite type of man and even his ingrained sense that he is not as other men operates finally as a limitation.  At Cambridge the ambitions and aspirations of any given undergraduate are much less clearly cut and are of wider sco˙e than those of his equivalent on the Isis.   It seems to me no mere accident that Cambridge was able to tolerate Milton, Byron, Tennyson and myself without turning a hair, while Oxford inevitably excreted Shelly and Swinburne.  Per contra, seh suited Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde perfectly.  Had they been at Cambridge, the nonsense would have been knocked out of them.  They would have had to succeed or fail entirely on their own virtues; whereas, as things were, the Oxford atmosphere and the Oxford manner shielded them from the rude blasts of all-round criticism.

These ideas receive some support from the consideration of the relations normally obtaining between undergraduates and dons.  On the Granta we are no doubt in statu puillari; the Oxonian is in statu quo pupillari.   He is taught, trained and, if necessary, trounced, to respect the principle of authority.  It is really fair to say that no Cambridge man would ever dream

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of adducing authority in the course of an argument.  He might indeed bring forward a great name on his side, but never without being ready to support it with the heavy artillery of patent proof.  No fame is fixed with us as it is with them.  The spirit of criticism never sleeps.

We see accordingly much stricter discipline with them than with us. We tend to trust the good sense and good will of the fluffiest fresher.  Our dons never get nervous lest a rag should go too far, and we never betrayed their trust, at least not till quite recently.  Since my time the tone of both universities has been lowered.  Before 1900 a rag capable of scaring the women students would have been unthinkable.

Tyranny  always trembles, and I remember only too well the wave of sympathy which swept through Cambridge at the news that the Oxford authorities, panic-stricken at some projected demonstration, had actually imported mounted police from London.  Our own dons would have cut their throats rather than do anything so disgraceful; but if they had, we should have pounded those police into pulp.

This particular contrast is manifest to both universities.  Whenever the subject comes up, anecdote answers anecdote to the point.  The psychology extends to the individual.  Our conception of the ideal proctor is very different to theirs.  I my second year one proctor effected some capture by watching his victim from the darkness of a doorway.  The story want round and within a week dishonour met its due.   The dirty dog was ducked in the Cam.  Nor were the avengers sent down.   On the contrary, the proctor was obliged to burn his bands.  Such conduct was practically
unprecedented.

The typical tale is this.  The grounds of Downing College are surrounded by a long low wall.  One dark windy night a passing proctor saw his cap, caught by a gust, soar gracefully over the rampart. His bulldogs climbed the wall and retrieved it.  But the cap was not their only prize. They dragged with them a most discomfited undergraduate, and a companion who was open to criticism from the point of view of the university regulations.  But the proctor simply thanked the man for bringing back his cap and apologized for disturbing him.  He refused to take advantage of an
accident.

One very instructive incident concerns that brilliant Shakespeare scholar and lecturer Louis Umfraville Wilkinson.  One summer night he came into college at Oxford a little lively with liquor.  His with had made the evening memorable and he went on to his rooms without curbing his conversation, which happened to deal with the defects of the dean in various directions.  Fortune favoured him --- I balance the books in perspective! --- the dean's window was open and the reprobate heard to his horror that one at least of his flock failed to estimate his eminence at the same exalted rate as he did himself.  He actually brought a formal charge of blasphemy against Wilkinson, pressed it to the utmost and succeeded in getting him sent down.

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     Wilkinson shrugged his shoulders, came over to us and entered his name at John's.  Now comes an infamy almost incredible.  The dean pursued his revenge.  He wrote a long, bitter, violent letter to Wilkinson's tutor, giving an account of the affair at Oxford, and urging --- in such language that it was more like a command than a threat --- that Wilkinson be forthwith kicked out of Cambridge.  The tutor sent for the offender and the following dialogue ensued:

"I believe you know Mr. So-and-So, Mr. Wilkinson."

"I have that honour, sir."

"Dean of Blank, Oxford, I understand."

"That is so, sir."

"I have a letter from him, which I propose to read to you."

"Thank you, sir."

The tutor read through the letter, made no comment, asked no questions.  He tore it slowly in pieces and threw them into the fire.

"May I hope that you will be with us at breakfast tomorrow?"

"Thank you, sir."

"Good morning, Mr. Wilkinson."

"Good morning, sir."

I confess that it seems to me that the method of Oxford in such matters errs in two different directions.  On the one hand, the undergraduate is treated as an irresponsible infant, to be dragooned into decency; and on the other, punished with a sternness which postulates that he is as accountable for his actions as a fully adult man, with comprehensive knowledge of the ways of the world.  The result is to hinder his development, by withholding experience from him, and at the same time to punish his inexperience by making a mere mistake ruinous.  The system tends to atrophy his ethical develo˙ment by insisting on a narrow and inelastic code, while encouraging moral cowardice and unfitting him to face the facts which so presumptuously force themselves into notice as soon as the college conventions are done with.

Cambridge realizes that (within very wide limits) the more experience a man has, the better is he equipped to make his way in the world.  We think it wiser to let men find out for themselves what dangers lie ahead, and pay the penalty for imprudence while recovery is comparatively easy. Better learn how to fall before the bones become brittle.

Another advantage of our idea of the relationship between long gowns and short is that, even if at the cost of some superficial respect, it is possible to establish more intimate communion in a spirit of comradeship between the old and the young. The intellectual gain is obvious; but
perhaps even more valuable is the moral profit.  To draw a hard and fast
line between pupil and teacher limits both.  Misunderstanding leads to mistrust, mistrust to enmity.  It is better to realize the identity of interests.

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I became aware of my feeling on this point quite suddenly.  The impression is the more intense.  One night there had been a regular rag.  I forget what about, but we built a big bonfire in the middle of the market place and otherwise spread ourselves.   Things began with no definite pulse of passion discernible, but as the evening advanced, we found ourselves somehow or other at odds with the townees.  I think we must have resented their attempt to participate in the general gaiety.  Sporadic free fights sprang up here and there, but nothing really serious.  On the whole we gave and took in good temper.  Just before twelve o'clock I turned to go home. Just beyond the tobacconist's -- Bacon, celebrated by Calverley in his overrated ode --- swirled a swarm of townees shouting an swearing in a way that struck me as ugly.  It was no affair of mine and I did not want to be late.  But even as I changed my course to avoid the mob I saw that their game was to reinforce half a dozen roughs who were surrounding a doorway and hustling one of the proctors.  My immediate impulse was to gloat upon the evil that had befallen my natural enemy, for until that moment my absurd shyness had prevented me from realizing my relations with the authorities.  I had timidly accepted the conventional chaff, but now almost before that first thought was formulated my inmost instincts sprang into consciousness.  I shouted to the few scattered gownsmen that were still in the square and hurled myself headlong to the rescue of my detested tyrant. He was pretty well under the weather, warding off feebly the brutal blows that the cowardly cads rained on his face.  His cap was gone and his gown was in shreds.  His bulldogs had been handled still more roughly.  I suppose the townees saw them as traitors to the cause, hirelings of the aristocracy.  They had been knocked clean down and were being battered by the boots of the mob.  We must have been about a dozen, not more, and we had to fight off forty.  It was the first time that I had ever had to face the animal anger, unreasoned and uncontrolled, of a mass of men whose individual intelligences, such as they were, had been for the moment completely swamped by the savage instinct to stamp on anything that seemed to them sensitive.

Fate familiarized me with this psychology in another form. It breaks out every time any man speaks or acts so as to awaken the frantic fear which is inherent in all but the rarest individuals, that anything new is a monstrous menace.  For the first time I observed the extraordinary fact that in such situations one's time sense runs at two very different rates. The part of one's mind that is concerned with one's actions races riotously with their rhythm.  Another part stands aloof, observing, analysing, imperturbable; a train of thought which might, in normal circumstances, occupy an hour reduced to a few minutes, and seeming slow at that.

The roughs were, to all intents and purposes, insane.  The neither knew nor cared whether they ended by murder.  And yet I have no idea why we

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mastered them easily enough.  We had neither arms nor discipline.  We were younger, certainly weaker, man for man, and we lacked the force which fury lends to its victims.  I found myself puzzling it out and the only conclusion was that, whatever science may say, there is such a thing as moral superiority, a spiritual strength independent of material or calculable conditions.

The fight went of for twenty minutes or so and ended queerly enough. The mob thinned out, melted away at its outskirts, and the front rank men became aware of the fact simultaneously without any more reason than had marked their entire proceedings.   They took to their heels and ran like rabbits.

I was half-past twelve before I got home.  I took a tub and found I was black and blue.  Of course my breach of the rule about midnight was duly reported.  I was halled and explained why I had been late.  The proctor whom we had conveyed to Christ's had not taken our names and I have no reason to think that he knew me.  But my tutor asked no questions.  He took my story for true; in fact, he treated me simply as another gentleman. That could not have happened at Oxford.

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