cellaret, with a sofa near it. There is a generous fire burning; and the hearth, with a comfortable armchair and a japanned flower-painted coal scuttle at one side, a miniature chair for a boy or girl on the other, a nicely varnished wooden mantelpiece, with neatly moulded shelves, tiny bits of mirror let into the panels, and a travelling clock in a leather case (the inevitable wedding present), and on the wall above a large autotype of the chief figure in Titian’s Virgin of the Assumption, is very inviting. Altogether the room is the room of a good housekeeper, vanquished, as far as the table is concerned, by an untidy man, but elsewhere mistress of the situation. The furniture, in its ornamental aspect, betrays the style of the advertised “drawing-room suite” of the pushing suburban furniture dealer; but there is nothing useless or pretentious in the room. The paper and panelling are dark, throwing the big cheery window and the park outside into strong relief.

The Reverend James Mavor Morell is a Christian Socialist clergyman of the Church of England, and an active member of the Guild of St. Matthew and the Christian Social Union. A vigorous, genial, popular man of forty, robust and goodlooking, full of energy, with pleasant, hearty, considerate manners, and a sound, unaffected voice, which he uses with the clean, athletic articulation of a practised orator, and with a wide range and perfect command of expression. He is a first rate clergyman, able to say what he likes to whom he likes, to lecture people without setting himself up against them, to impose his authority on them without humiliating them, and to interfere in their business without impertinence. His wellspring of spiritual enthusiasm and sympathetic emotion has never run dry for a moment: he still eats and sleeps heartily enough to win the daily battle between exhaustion and recuperation triumphantly. Withal, a great baby, pardonably vain of his powers and unconsciously pleased with himself. He has a healthy complexion, a good forehead, with the brows somewhat blunt, and the eyes bright and eager, a mouth resolute, but not particularly well cut, and a substantial nose, with the mobile, spreading nostrils of the dramatic orator, but, like all his features, void of subtlety.

The typist, Miss Proserpine Garnett, is a brisk little woman of about 30, of the lower middle class, neatly but cheaply dressed in a black merino skirt and a blouse, rather pert and quick of speech, and not very civil in her manner, but sensitive and affectionate. She is clattering away busily at her machine whilst Morell opens the last of his morning’s letters. He realizes its contents with a comic groan of despair.

Proserpine Another lecture?
Morell Yes. The Hoxton Freedom Group want me to address them on Sunday morning Great emphasis on “Sunday,” this being the unreasonable part of the business. What are they?
Proserpine Communist Anarchists, I think.
Morell Just like Anarchists not to know that they can’t have a parson on Sunday! Tell them to come to church if they want to hear me: it will do them good. Say I can only come on Mondays and Thursdays. Have you the diary there?
Proserpine Taking up the diary. Yes.
Morell Have I any lecture on for next Monday?
Proserpine Referring to diary. Tower Hamlets Radical Club.
Morell Well, Thursday then?
Proserpine English Land Restoration League.
Morell What next?
Proserpine Guild of St. Matthew on Monday. Independent Labor Party, Greenwich Branch, on Thursday. Monday, Social-Democratic Federation, Mile End Branch. Thursday, first Confirmation class⁠—Impatiently. Oh, I’d better tell them you can’t come. They’re only half a dozen ignorant and conceited costermongers without five shillings between them.
Morell Amused. Ah; but you see they’re near relatives of mine, Miss Garnett.
Proserpine Staring at him. Relatives of yours!
Morell Yes: we have the same father⁠—in Heaven.
Proserpine Relieved. Oh, is that all?
Morell With a sadness which is a luxury to a man whose voice expresses it so finely. Ah, you don’t believe it. Everybody says it: nobody believes it⁠—nobody. Briskly, getting back to business. Well, well! Come, Miss Proserpine, can’t you find a date for the costers? What about the 25th?: that was vacant the day before yesterday.
Proserpine Referring to diary. Engaged⁠—the Fabian Society.
Morell Bother the Fabian Society! Is the 28th gone too?
Proserpine City dinner. You’re invited to dine with the Founder’s Company.
Morell That’ll do; I’ll go to the Hoxton Group of Freedom instead. She enters the engagement in silence, with implacable disparagement of the Hoxton Anarchists in every line of her face. Morell bursts open the cover of a copy of The Church Reformer, which has come by post, and glances through Mr. Stewart Hendlam’s leader and the Guild of St. Matthew news. These proceedings are presently enlivened by the appearance of Morell’s curate, the Reverend Alexander Mill, a young gentleman gathered by Morell from the nearest University settlement, whither he had come from Oxford to give the east end of London the benefit of his university training. He is a conceitedly well-intentioned, enthusiastic, immature person, with nothing positively unbearable about him except a habit of speaking with his lips carefully closed for half an inch from each corner, a finicking articulation, and a set of horribly corrupt vowels, notably ow for o, this being his chief means of bringing Oxford refinement to bear on Hackney vulgarity. Morell, whom he has won over by a doglike devotion, looks up indulgently from The Church Reformer as he enters, and remarks: Well, Lexy! Late again, as usual.
Lexy I’m afraid so. I wish I could get up in the morning.
Morell Exulting in his own energy. Ha! ha! Whimsically. Watch and pray, Lexy: watch and pray.
Lexy I know. Rising wittily to the occasion. But how can I watch and pray when I am asleep? Isn’t that so, Miss Prossy?
Proserpine Sharply. Miss Garnett, if you please.
Lexy I beg your pardon⁠—Miss Garnett.
Proserpine You’ve got to do all the work today.
Lexy Why?
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