became of the sweetest and most mellifluous key, as
he bent before the peer. "Lord ----," he would add gently, and turning to
the company, "has been saying, with much force," etc.
I recall the Guild fête down at Knebworth, where Forster was on a visit
to its noble owner, Lord Lytton, and was deputed to receive and
marshal the guests at the station, an office of dread importance, and
large writ over his rather burly person. His face was momentous as he
patrolled the platform. I remember coming up to him in the crowd, but
he looked over and beyond me, big with unutterable things. Mentioning
this later to Boz, he laughed his cheerful laugh, "Exactly," he cried.
"Why, I assure you, Forster would not see me!" He was busy pointing
out the vehicles, the proper persons to sit in them, according to their
dignity. All through that delightful day, as I roamed through the fine
old halls, I would encounter him passing by, still in his lofty dream,
still controlling all, with a weight of delegated authority on his broad
shoulders. Only at the very close did he vouchsafe a few dignified,
encouraging words, and then passed on. He reminded me much of
Elia's description of Bensley's Malvolio.
There was nothing ill-natured in Boz's relish of these things; he heartily
loved his friend. It was the pure love of fun. Podsnap has many touches
of Forster, but the writer dared not let himself go in that character as he
would have longed to do. When Podsnap is referred to for his opinion,
he delivers it as follows, much flushed and extremely angry: "Don't ask
me. I desire to take no part in the discussion of these people's affairs. I
abhor the subject. It is an odious subject, an offensive subject that
makes me sick, and I"--with his favourite right arm flourish which
sweeps away everything and settles it for ever, etc. These very words
must Forster have used. It may be thought that Boz would not be so
daring as to introduce his friend into his stories, "under his very nose"
as it were, submitting the proofs, etc., with the certainty that the portrait
would be recognised. But this, as we know, is the last thing that could
have occurred, or the last thing that would have occurred to Forster. It
was like enough someone else, but not he.
"Mr. Podsnap was well to do, and stood very high in Mr. Podsnap's
opinion." "He was quite satisfied. He never could make out why
everybody was not quite satisfied, and he felt conscious that he set a
brilliant social example in being particularly well satisfied with most
things and with himself." "Mr. Podsnap settled that whatever he put
behind him he put out of existence." "I don't want to know about it. I
don't desire to discover it." "He had, however, acquired a peculiar
flourish of his right arm in the clearing the world of its difficulties."
"As so eminently respectable a man, Mr. Podsnap was sensible of its
being required of him to take Providence under his protection.
Consequently he always knew exactly what Providence intended."
These touches any friend of Forster's would recognise. He could be
very engaging, and was at his best when enjoying what he called a
shoemaker's holiday--that is, when away from town at some
watering-place, with friends. He was then really delightful, because
happy, having left all his solemnities and ways in London.
Forster was a man of many gifts, an admirable hard-working official,
thoroughly business-like and industrious. I recall him through all the
stages of his connection with the Lunacy Department, as Secretary and
Commissioner and Retired Commissioner, when he would arrive on
"melting days" as it were. But it was as a cultured critic that he was
unsurpassed. He was ever "correct," and delivered a judgment that
commended itself on the instant; it was given with such weight and
persuasion. This correctness of judgment extended to most things,
politics, character, literature, and was pleasant to listen to. He was one
of the old well-read school, and was never without his edition of
Shakespeare, the Globe one, which he took with him on his journeys.
He had a way of lightly emphasising the beauty of a special passage of
the Bard's.
Once, travelling round with Boz, on one of his reading tours, we came
to Belfast, where the huge Ulster Hall was filled to the door by ardent
and enthusiastic Northerners. I recall how we walked round the rather
grim town, with its harsh red streets, the honest workers staring at him
hard. We put up at an old-fashioned hotel, the best--the Royal it was
called, where there was much curiosity on the part of the ladies to get
sly peeps at the eminent
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