The close of his first year’s life in London
found him living in lodgings with Henry Norman.
At that time Norman’s income was nearly three
times as good as his own. To say that Tudor selected
his companion because of his income would be to ascribe
unjustly to him vile motives and a mean instinct.
He had not done so. The two young men had been
thrown, together by circumstances. They worked
at the same desk, liked each other’s society,
and each being alone in the world, thereby not unnaturally
came together. But it may probably be said that
had Norman been as poor as Tudor, Tudor might probably
have shrunk from rowing in the same boat with him.
As it was they lived together and were fast allies;
not the less so that they did not agree as to many
of their avocations. Tudor, at his friend’s
solicitation, had occasionally attempted to pull an
oar from Searle’s slip to Battersea bridge.
But his failure in this line was so complete, and
he had to encounter so much of Norman’s raillery,
which was endurable, and of his instruction, which
was unendurable, that he very soon gave up the pursuit.
He was not more successful with a racket; and keeping
a horse was of course out of the question.
They had a bond of union in certain common friends
whom they much loved, and with whom they much associated.
At least these friends soon became common to them.
The acquaintance originally belonged to Norman, and
he had first cemented his friendship with Tudor by
introducing him at the house of Mrs. Woodward.
Since he had done so, the one young man was there
nearly as much as the other.
Who and what the Woodwards were shall be told in a
subsequent chapter. As they have to play as important
a part in the tale about to be told as our two friends
of the Weights and Measures, it would not be becoming
to introduce them at the end of this.
As regards Alaric Tudor it need only be further said,
by way of preface, of him as of Harry Norman, that
the faults of his character must be made to declare
themselves in the course of our narrative.
CHAPTER II
THE INTERNAL NAVIGATION
The London world, visitors as well as residents, are
well acquainted also with Somerset House; and it is
moreover tolerably well known that Somerset House
is a nest of public offices, which are held to be
of less fashionable repute than those situated in
the neighbourhood of Downing Street, but are not so
decidedly plebeian as the Custom House, Excise, and
Post Office.
But there is one branch of the Civil Service located
in Somerset House, which has little else to redeem
it from the lowest depths of official vulgarity than
the ambiguous respectability of its material position.
This is the office of the Commissioners of Internal
Navigation. The duties to be performed have reference
to the preservation of canal banks, the tolls to be
levied at locks, and disputes with the Admiralty as
to points connected with tidal rivers. The rooms
are dull and dark, and saturated with the fog which
rises from the river, and their only ornament is here
and there some dusty model of an improved barge.
Bargees not unfrequently scuffle with hobnailed shoes
through the passages, and go in and out, leaving behind
them a smell of tobacco, to which the denizens of
the place are not unaccustomed.
Copyrights
The Three Clerks from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.