The Wisdom of Father Brown by G. K. Chesterton (best manga ereader txt) đ
- Author: G. K. Chesterton
Book online «The Wisdom of Father Brown by G. K. Chesterton (best manga ereader txt) đ». Author G. K. Chesterton
Father Brown seemed to cogitate; he lifted a little whitebait on his fork. âYou are sure the grey envelope was in the left cupboard?â he asked.
âPositive,â replied Flambeau. âThe grey envelopeâit was a white envelope reallyâwasââ
Father Brown put down the small silver fish and the fork and stared across at his companion. âWhat?â he asked, in an altered voice.
âWell, what?â repeated Flambeau, eating heartily.
âIt was not grey,â said the priest. âFlambeau, you frighten me.â
âWhat the deuce are you frightened of?â
âIâm frightened of a white envelope,â said the other seriously, âIf it had only just been grey! Hang it all, it might as well have been grey. But if it was white, the whole business is black. The Doctor has been dabbling in some of the old brimstone after all.â
âBut I tell you he couldnât have written such a note!â cried Flambeau. âThe note is utterly wrong about the facts. And innocent or guilty, Dr Hirsch knew all about the facts.â
âThe man who wrote that note knew all about the facts,â said his clerical companion soberly. âHe could never have got âem so wrong without knowing about âem. You have to know an awful lot to be wrong on every subjectâlike the devil.â
âDo you meanâ?â
âI mean a man telling lies on chance would have told some of the truth,â said his friend firmly. âSuppose someone sent you to find a house with a green door and a blue blind, with a front garden but no back garden, with a dog but no cat, and where they drank coffee but not tea. You would say if you found no such house that it was all made up. But I say no. I say if you found a house where the door was blue and the blind green, where there was a back garden and no front garden, where cats were common and dogs instantly shot, where tea was drunk in quarts and coffee forbiddenâthen you would know you had found the house. The man must have known that particular house to be so accurately inaccurate.â
âBut what could it mean?â demanded the diner opposite.
âI canât conceive,â said Brown; âI donât understand this Hirsch affair at all. As long as it was only the left drawer instead of the right, and red ink instead of black, I thought it must be the chance blunders of a forger, as you say. But three is a mystical number; it finishes things. It finishes this. That the direction about the drawer, the colour of ink, the colour of envelope, should none of them be right by accident, that canât be a coincidence. It wasnât.â
âWhat was it, then? Treason?â asked Flambeau, resuming his dinner.
âI donât know that either,â answered Brown, with a face of blank bewilderment. âThe only thing I can think of.... Well, I never understood that Dreyfus case. I can always grasp moral evidence easier than the other sorts. I go by a manâs eyes and voice, donât you know, and whether his family seems happy, and by what subjects he choosesâand avoids. Well, I was puzzled in the Dreyfus case. Not by the horrible things imputed both ways; I know (though itâs not modern to say so) that human nature in the highest places is still capable of being Cenci or Borgia. Noâ, what puzzled me was the sincerity of both parties. I donât mean the political parties; the rank and file are always roughly honest, and often duped. I mean the persons of the play. I mean the conspirators, if they were conspirators. I mean the traitor, if he was a traitor. I mean the men who must have known the truth. Now Dreyfus went on like a man who knew he was a wronged man. And yet the French statesmen and soldiers went on as if they knew he wasnât a wronged man but simply a wrong âun. I donât mean they behaved well; I mean they behaved as if they were sure. I canât describe these things; I know what I mean.â
âI wish I did,â said his friend. âAnd what has it to do with old Hirsch?â
âSuppose a person in a position of trust,â went on the priest, âbegan to give the enemy information because it was false information. Suppose he even thought he was saving his country by misleading the foreigner. Suppose this brought him into spy circles, and little loans were made to him, and little ties tied on to him. Suppose he kept up his contradictory position in a confused way by never telling the foreign spies the truth, but letting it more and more be guessed. The better part of him (what was left of it) would still say: âI have not helped the enemy; I said it was the left drawer.â The meaner part of him would already be saying: âBut they may have the sense to see that means the right.â I think it is psychologically possibleâin an enlightened age, you know.â
âIt may be psychologically possible,â answered Flambeau, âand it certainly would explain Dreyfus being certain he was wronged and his judges being sure he was guilty. But it wonât wash historically, because Dreyfusâs document (if it was his document) was literally correct.â
âI wasnât thinking of Dreyfus,â said Father Brown.
Silence had sunk around them with the emptying of the tables; it was already late, though the sunlight still clung to everything, as if accidentally entangled in the trees. In the stillness Flambeau shifted his seat sharplyâmaking an isolated and echoing noiseâand threw his elbow over the angle of it. âWell,â he said, rather harshly, âif Hirsch is not better than a timid treason-monger...â
âYou mustnât be too hard on them,â said Father Brown gently. âItâs not entirely their fault; but they have no instincts. I mean those things that make a woman refuse to dance with a man or a man to touch an investment. Theyâve been taught that itâs all a matter of degree.â
âAnyhow,â cried Flambeau impatiently, âheâs not a patch on my principal; and I shall go through with it. Old Dubosc may be a bit mad, but heâs a sort of patriot after all.â
Father Brown continued to consume whitebait.
Something in the stolid way he did so caused Flambeauâs fierce black eyes to ramble over his companion afresh. âWhatâs the matter with you?â Flambeau demanded. âDuboscâs all right in that way. You donât doubt him?â
âMy friend,â said the small priest, laying down his knife and fork in a kind of cold despair, âI doubt everything. Everything, I mean, that has happened today. I doubt the whole story, though it has been acted before my face. I doubt every sight that my eyes have seen since morning. There is something in this business quite different from the ordinary police mystery where one man is more or less lying and the other man more or less
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