the unambitious tyros
and unfledged novitiates of the establishment. It is a very fine thing to
be pointed out by envying fathers as a promising clerk in the Weights
and Measures, and to receive civil speeches from mammas with
marriageable daughters. But a clerk in the Weights and Measures is
soon made to understand that it is not for him to--
Sport with Amaryllis in the shade.
It behoves him that his life should be grave and his pursuits laborious,
if he intends to live up to the tone of those around him. And as, sitting
there at his early desk, his eyes already dim with figures, he sees a
jaunty dandy saunter round the opposite corner to the Council Office at
eleven o'clock, he cannot but yearn after the pleasures of idleness.
Were it not better done, as others use?
he says or sighs. But then comes Phoebus in the guise of the chief clerk,
and touches his trembling ears--
As he pronounces lastly on each deed, Of so much fame, in Downing
Street--expect the meed.
And so the high tone of the office is maintained.
Such is the character of the Weights and Measures at this present
period of which we are now treating. The exoteric crowd of the Civil
Service, that is, the great body of clerks attached to other offices, regard
their brethren of the Weights as prigs and pedants, and look on them
much as a master's favourite is apt to be regarded by other boys at
school. But this judgement is an unfair one. Prigs and pedants, and
hypocrites too, there are among them, no doubt--but there are also
among them many stirred by an honourable ambition to do well for
their country and themselves, and to two such men the reader is now
requested to permit himself to be introduced.
Henry Norman, the senior of the two, is the second son of a gentleman
of small property in the north of England. He was educated at a public
school, and thence sent to Oxford; but before he had finished his first
year at Brasenose his father was obliged to withdraw him from it,
finding himself unable to bear the expense of a university education for
his two sons. His elder son at Cambridge was extravagant; and as, at
the critical moment when decision became necessary, a nomination in
the Weights and Measures was placed at his disposal, old Mr. Norman
committed the not uncommon injustice of preferring the interests of his
elder but faulty son to those of the younger with whom no fault had
been found, and deprived his child of the chance of combining the
glories and happiness of a double first, a fellow, a college tutor, and a
don.
Whether Harry Norman gained or lost most by the change we need not
now consider, but at the age of nineteen he left Oxford and entered on
his new duties. It must not, however, be supposed that this was a step
which he took without difficulty and without pause. It is true that the
grand modern scheme for competitive examinations had not as yet been
composed. Had this been done, and had it been carried out, how awful
must have been the cramming necessary to get a lad into the Weights
and Measures! But, even as things were then, it was no easy matter for
a young man to convince the chief clerk that he had all the
acquirements necessary for the high position to which he aspired.
Indeed, that chief clerk was insatiable, and generally succeeded in
making every candidate conceive the very lowest opinion of himself
and his own capacities before the examination was over. Some, of
course, were sent away at once with ignominy, as evidently incapable.
Many retired in the middle of it with a conviction that they must seek
their fortunes at the bar, or in medical pursuits, or some other
comparatively easy walk of life. Others were rejected on the fifth or
sixth day as being deficient in conic sections, or ignorant of the exact
principles of hydraulic pressure. And even those who were retained
were so retained, as it were, by an act of grace. The Weights and
Measures was, and indeed is, like heaven--no man can deserve it. No
candidate can claim as his right to be admitted to the fruition of the
appointment which has been given to him. Henry Norman, however,
was found, at the close of his examination, to be the least undeserving
of the young men then under notice, and was duly installed in his
clerkship.
It need hardly be explained, that to secure so high a level of
information as that required at the Weights and Measures, a scale of
salaries equally exalted has been found necessary. Young men
consequently
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