Fleeming’s Marriage—His Married
Life—Professional Difficulties—Life at
Claygate—Illness of Mrs. F. Jenkin; and of
Fleeming—Appointment to the Chair at Edinburgh.
On Saturday, Feb. 26, 1859,
profiting by a holiday of four days, Fleeming was married to Miss
Austin at Northiam: a place connected not only with his own
family but with that of his bride as well. By Tuesday
morning, he was at work again, fitting out cableships at
Birkenhead. Of the walk from his lodgings to the works, I
find a graphic sketch in one of his letters: ‘Out over the
railway bridge, along a wide road raised to the level of a ground
floor above the land, which, not being built upon, harbours
puddles, ponds, pigs, and Irish hovels;—so to the dock
warehouses, four huge piles of building with no windows,
surrounded by a wall about twelve feet high—in through the
large gates, round which hang twenty or thirty rusty Irish,
playing pitch and toss and waiting for employment;—on along
the railway, which came in at the same gates and which branches
down between each vast block—past a pilot-engine butting
refractory trucks into their places—on to the last block,
[and] down the branch, sniffing the guano-scented air and
detecting the old bones. The hartshorn flavour of the guano
becomes very strong, as I near the docks where, across the
Elba’s decks, a huge vessel is discharging her cargo
of the brown dust, and where huge vessels have been discharging
that same cargo for the last five months.’ This was
the walk he took his young wife on the morrow of his
return. She had been used to the society of lawyers and
civil servants, moving in that circle which seems to itself the
pivot of the nation and is in truth only a clique like another;
and Fleeming was to her the nameless assistant of a nameless firm
of engineers, doing his inglorious business, as she now saw for
herself, among unsavoury surroundings. But when their walk
brought them within view of the river, she beheld a sight to her
of the most novel beauty: four great, sea-going ships dressed out
with flags. ‘How lovely!’ she cried.
‘What is it for?’—‘For you,’ said
Fleeming. Her surprise was only equalled by her
pleasure. But perhaps, for what we may call private fame,
there is no life like that of the engineer; who is a great man in
out-of-the-way places, by the dockside or on the desert island or
in populous ships, and remains quite unheard of in the coteries
of London. And Fleeming had already made his mark among the
few who had an opportunity of knowing him.
His marriage was the one decisive incident of his career; from
that moment until the day of his death, he had one thought to
which all the rest were tributary, the thought of his wife.
No one could know him even slightly, and not remark the absorbing
greatness of that sentiment; nor can any picture of the man be
drawn that does not in proportion dwell upon it. This is a
delicate task; but if we are to leave behind us (as we wish) some
presentment of the friend we have lost, it is a task that must be
undertaken.
For all his play of mind and fancy, for all his
indulgence—and, as time went on, he grew
indulgent—Fleeming had views of duty that were even
stern. He was too shrewd a student of his fellow-men to
remain long content with rigid formulæ of conduct.
Iron-bound, impersonal ethics, the procrustean bed of rules, he
soon saw at their true value as the deification of
averages. ‘As to Miss (I declare I forget her name)
being bad,’ I find him writing, ‘people only mean
that she has broken the Decalogue—which is not at all the
same thing. People who have kept in the high-road of Life
really have less opportunity for taking a comprehensive view of
it than those who have leaped over the hedges and strayed up the
hills; not but what the hedges are very necessary, and our stray
travellers often have a weary time of it. So, you may say,
have those in the dusty roads.’ Yet he was himself a
very stern respecter of the hedgerows; sought safety and found
dignity in the obvious path of conduct; and would palter with no
simple and recognised duty of his epoch. Of marriage in
particular, of the bond so formed, of the obligations incurred,
of the debt men owe to their children, he conceived in a truly
antique spirit: not to blame others, but to constrain
himself. It was not to blame, I repeat, that he held these
views; for others, he could make a large allowance; and yet he
tacitly expected of his friends and his wife a high standard of
behaviour. Nor was it always easy to wear the armour of
that ideal.
Acting upon these beliefs; conceiving that he had indeed
‘given himself’ (in the full meaning of these words)
for better, for worse; painfully alive to his defects of temper
and deficiency in charm; resolute to make up for these; thinking
last of himself: Fleeming was in some ways the very man to have
made a noble, uphill fight of an unfortunate marriage. In
other ways, it is true he was one of the most unfit for such a
trial. And it was his beautiful destiny to remain to the
last hour the same absolute and romantic lover, who had shown to
his new bride the flag-draped vessels in the Mersey. No
fate is altogether easy; but trials are our touchstone, trials
overcome our reward; and it was given to Fleeming to
conquer. It was given to him to live for another, not as a
task, but till the end as an enchanting pleasure.
‘People may write novels,’ he wrote in 1869,
‘and other people may write poems, but not a man or woman
among them can write to say how happy a man may be, who is
desperately in love with his wife after ten years of
marriage.’ And again in 1885, after more than
twenty-six years of marriage, and within but five weeks of his
death: ‘Your first letter from Bournemouth,’ he
wrote, ‘gives me heavenly pleasure—for which I thank
Heaven and you too—who are my heaven on earth.’
The mind hesitates whether to say that such a man has been more
good or more fortunate.
Any woman (it is the defect of her sex) comes sooner to the
stable mind of maturity than any man; and Jenkin was to the end
of a most deliberate growth. In the next chapter, when I
come to deal with his telegraphic voyages and give some taste of
his correspondence, the reader will still find him at twenty-five
an arrant school-boy. His wife besides was more thoroughly
educated than he. In many ways she was able to teach him,
and he proud to be taught; in many ways she outshone him, and he
delighted to be outshone. All these superiorities, and
others that, after the manner of lovers, he no doubt forged for
himself, added as time went on to the humility of his original
love. Only once, in all I know of his career, did he show a
touch of smallness. He could not learn to sing correctly;
his wife told him so and desisted from her lessons; and the
mortification was so sharply felt that for years he could not be
induced to go to a concert, instanced himself as a typical man
without an ear, and never sang again. I tell it; for the
fact that this stood singular in his behaviour, and really amazed
all who knew him, is the happiest way I can imagine to commend
the tenor of his simplicity; and because it illustrates his
feeling for his wife. Others were always welcome to laugh
at him; if it amused them, or if it amused him, he would proceed
undisturbed with his occupation, his vanity invulnerable.
With his wife it was different: his wife had laughed at his
singing; and for twenty years the fibre ached. Nothing,
again, was more notable than the formal chivalry of this
unmannered man to the person on earth with whom he was the most
familiar. He was conscious of his own innate and often
rasping vivacity and roughness and he was never forgetful of his
first visit to the Austins and the vow he had registered on his
return. There was thus an artificial element in his
punctilio that at times might almost raise a smile. But it
stood on noble grounds; for this was how he sought to shelter
from his own petulance the woman who was to him the symbol of the
household and to the end the beloved of his youth.
I wish in this chapter to chronicle small beer; taking a hasty
glance at some ten years of married life and of professional
struggle; and reserving till the next all the more interesting
matter of his cruises. Of his achievements and their worth,
it is not for me to speak: his friend and partner, Sir William
Thomson, has contributed a note on the subject, which will be
found in the Appendix, and to which I must refer the
reader. He is to conceive in the meanwhile for himself
Fleeming’s manifold engagements: his service on the
Committee on Electrical Standards, his lectures on electricity at
Chatham, his chair at the London University, his partnership with
Sir William Thomson and Mr. Varley in many ingenious patents, his
growing credit with engineers and men of science; and he is to
bear in mind that of all this activity and acquist of reputation,
the immediate profit was scanty. Soon after his marriage,
Fleeming had left the service of Messrs. Liddell & Gordon,
and entered into a general engineering partnership with Mr.
Forde, a gentleman in a good way of business. It was a
fortunate partnership in this, that the parties retained their
mutual respect unlessened and separated with regret; but
men’s affairs, like men, have their times of sickness, and
by one of these unaccountable variations, for hard upon ten years
the business was disappointing and the profits meagre.
‘Inditing drafts of German railways which will never get
made’: it is thus I find Fleeming, not without a touch of
bitterness, describe his occupation. Even the patents hung
fire at first. There was no salary to rely on; children
were coming and growing up; the prospect was often anxious.
In the days of his courtship, Fleeming had written to Miss Austin
a dissuasive picture of the trials of poverty, assuring her these
were no figments but truly bitter to support; he told her this,
he wrote, beforehand, so that when the pinch came and she
suffered, she should not be disappointed in herself nor tempted
to doubt her own magnanimity: a letter of admirable wisdom and
solicitude. But now that the trouble came, he bore it very
lightly. It was his principle, as he once prettily
expressed it, ‘to enjoy each day’s happiness, as it
arises, like birds or children.’ His optimism, if
driven out at the door, would come in again by the window; if it
found nothing but blackness in the present, would hit upon some
ground of consolation in the future or the past. And his
courage and energy were indefatigable. In the year 1863,
soon after the birth of their first son, they moved into a
cottage at Claygate near Esher; and about this time, under
manifold troubles both of money and health, I find him writing
from abroad: ‘The country will give us, please God, health
and strength. I will love and cherish you more than ever,
you shall go where you wish, you shall receive whom you
wish—and as for money you shall have that too. I
cannot be mistaken. I have now measured myself with many
men. I do not feel weak, I do not feel that I shall
fail. In many things I have succeeded, and I will in
this. And meanwhile the time of waiting, which, please
Heaven, shall not be long, shall also not be so bitter.
Well, well, I promise much, and do not know at this moment how
you and the dear child are. If he is but better, courage,
my girl, for I see light.’
This cottage at Claygate stood just without the village, well
surrounded with trees and commanding a pleasant view. A
piece of the garden was turfed over to form a croquet green, and
Fleeming became (I need scarce say) a very ardent player.
He grew ardent, too, in gardening. This he took up at first
to please his wife, having no natural inclination; but he had no
sooner set his hand to it, than, like everything else he touched,
it became with him a passion. He budded roses, he potted
cuttings in the coach-house; if there came a change of weather at
night, he would rise out of bed to protect his favourites; when
he was thrown with a dull companion, it was enough for him to
discover in the man a fellow gardener; on his travels, he would
go out of his way to visit nurseries and gather hints; and to the
end of his life, after other occupations prevented him putting
his own hand to the spade, he drew up a yearly programme for his
gardener, in which all details were regulated. He had begun
by this time to write. His paper on Darwin, which had the
merit of convincing on one point the philosopher himself, had
indeed been written before this in London lodgings; but his pen
was not idle at Claygate; and it was here he wrote (among other
things) that review of ‘Fecundity, Fertility,
Sterility, and Allied Topics,’ which Dr.
Matthews Duncan prefixed by way of introduction to the second
edition of the work. The mere act of writing seems to cheer
the vanity of the most incompetent; but a correction accepted by
Darwin, and a whole review borrowed and reprinted by Matthews
Duncan are compliments of a rare strain, and to a man still
unsuccessful must have been precious indeed. There was yet
a third of the same kind in store for him; and when Munro himself
owned that he had found instruction in the paper on Lucretius, we
may say that Fleeming had been crowned in the capitol of
reviewing.
Croquet, charades, Christmas magic lanterns for the village
children, an amateur concert or a review article in the evening;
plenty of hard work by day; regular visits to meetings of the
British Association, from one of which I find him
characteristically writing: ‘I cannot say that I have had
any amusement yet, but I am enjoying the dulness and dry bustle
of the whole thing’; occasional visits abroad on business,
when he would find the time to glean (as I have said) gardening
hints for himself, and old folk-songs or new fashions of dress
for his wife; and the continual study and care of his children:
these were the chief elements of his life. Nor were friends
wanting. Captain and Mrs. Jenkin, Mr. and Mrs. Austin,
Clerk Maxwell, Miss Bell of Manchester, and others came to them
on visits. Mr. Hertslet of the Foreign Office, his wife and
his daughter, were neighbours and proved kind friends; in 1867
the Howitts came to Claygate and sought the society of ‘the
two bright, clever young people’; [113] and in a house close by, Mr. Frederick
Ricketts came to live with his family. Mr. Ricketts was a
valued friend during his short life; and when he was lost with
every circumstance of heroism in the La Plata, Fleeming
mourned him sincerely.
I think I shall give the best idea of Fleeming in this time of
his early married life, by a few sustained extracts from his
letters to his wife, while she was absent on a visit in 1864.
‘Nov. 11.—Sunday was too wet to
walk to Isleworth, for which I was sorry, so I staid and went to
Church and thought of you at Ardwick all through the
Commandments, and heard Dr. — expound in a remarkable way a
prophecy of St. Paul’s about Roman Catholics, which
mutatis mutandis would do very well for Protestants in
some parts. Then I made a little nursery of Borecole and
Enfield market cabbage, grubbing in wet earth with leggings and
gray coat on. Then I tidied up the coach-house to my own
and Christine’s admiration. Then encouraged by
bouts-rimés I wrote you a copy of verses; high time
I think; I shall just save my tenth year of knowing my lady-love
without inditing poetry or rhymes to her.
‘Then I rummaged over the box with my father’s
letters and found interesting notes from myself. One I
should say my first letter, which little Austin I should say
would rejoice to see and shall see—with a drawing of a
cottage and a spirited “cob.” What was more to
the purpose, I found with it a paste-cutter which Mary begged
humbly for Christine and I generously gave this morning.
‘Then I read some of Congreve. There are admirable
scenes in the manner of Sheridan; all wit and no character, or
rather one character in a great variety of situations and
scenes. I could show you some scenes, but others are too
coarse even for my stomach hardened by a course of French
novels.
‘All things look so happy for the rain.
‘Nov. 16.—Verbenas looking well. . . . I am
but a poor creature without you; I have naturally no spirit or
fun or enterprise in me. Only a kind of mechanical capacity
for ascertaining whether two really is half four, etc.; but when
you are near me I can fancy that I too shine, and vainly suppose
it to be my proper light; whereas by my extreme darkness when you
are not by, it clearly can only be by a reflected brilliance that
I seem aught but dull. Then for the moral part of me: if it
were not for you and little Odden, I should feel by no means sure
that I had any affection power in me. . . . Even the muscular me
suffers a sad deterioration in your absence. I don’t
get up when I ought to, I have snoozed in my chair after dinner;
I do not go in at the garden with my wonted vigour, and feel ten
times as tired as usual with a walk in your absence; so you see,
when you are not by, I am a person without ability, affections or
vigour, but droop dull, selfish, and spiritless; can you wonder
that I love you?
‘Nov. 17.—. . . I am very glad we married
young. I would not have missed these five years, no, not
for any hopes; they are my own.
‘Nov. 30.—I got through my Chatham lecture
very fairly though almost all my apparatus went astray. I
dined at the mess, and got home to Isleworth the same evening;
your father very kindly sitting up for me.
‘Dec. 1.—Back at dear Claygate. Many
cuttings flourish, especially those which do honour to your
hand. Your Californian annuals are up and about.
Badger is fat, the grass green. . . .
‘Dec. 3.—Odden will not talk of you, while
you are away, having inherited, as I suspect, his father’s
way of declining to consider a subject which is painful, as your
absence is. . . . I certainly should like to learn Greek and I
think it would be a capital pastime for the long winter evenings.
. . . How things are misrated! I declare croquet is a noble
occupation compared to the pursuits of business men. As for
so-called idleness—that is, one form of it—I vow it
is the noblest aim of man. When idle, one can love, one can
be good, feel kindly to all, devote oneself to others, be
thankful for existence, educate one’s mind, one’s
heart, one’s body. When busy, as I am busy now or
have been busy to-day, one feels just as you sometimes felt when
you were too busy, owing to want of servants.
‘Dec. 5.—On Sunday I was at Isleworth,
chiefly engaged in playing with Odden. We had the most
enchanting walk together through the brickfields. It was
very muddy, and, as he remarked, not fit for Nanna, but fit for
us men. The dreary waste of bared earth, thatched
sheds and standing water, was a paradise to him; and when we
walked up planks to deserted mixing and crushing mills, and
actually saw where the clay was stirred with long iron prongs,
and chalk or lime ground with “a tind of a mill,” his
expression of contentment and triumphant heroism knew no limit to
its beauty. Of course on returning I found Mrs. Austin
looking out at the door in an anxious manner, and thinking we had
been out quite long enough. . . . I am reading Don Quixote
chiefly and am his fervent admirer, but I am so sorry he did not
place his affections on a Dulcinea of somewhat worthier
stamp. In fact I think there must be a mistake about
it. Don Quixote might and would serve his lady in most
preposterous fashion, but I am sure he would have chosen a lady
of merit. He imagined her to be such no doubt, and drew a
charming picture of her occupations by the banks of the river;
but in his other imaginations, there was some kind of peg on
which to hang the false costumes he created; windmills are big,
and wave their arms like giants; sheep in the distance are
somewhat like an army; a little boat on the river-side must look
much the same whether enchanted or belonging to millers; but
except that Dulcinea is a woman, she bears no resemblance at all
to the damsel of his imagination.’
At the time of these letters, the oldest son only was born to
them. In September of the next year, with the birth of the
second, Charles Frewen, there befell Fleeming a terrible alarm
and what proved to be a lifelong misfortune. Mrs. Jenkin
was taken suddenly and alarmingly ill; Fleeming ran a matter of
two miles to fetch the doctor, and, drenched with sweat as he
was, returned with him at once in an open gig. On their
arrival at the house, Mrs. Jenkin half unconsciously took and
kept hold of her husband’s hand. By the
doctor’s orders, windows and doors were set open to create
a thorough draught, and the patient was on no account to be
disturbed. Thus, then, did Fleeming pass the whole of that
night, crouching on the floor in the draught, and not daring to
move lest he should wake the sleeper. He had never been
strong; energy had stood him instead of vigour; and the result of
that night’s exposure was flying rheumatism varied by
settled sciatica. Sometimes it quite disabled him,
sometimes it was less acute; but he was rarely free from it until
his death. I knew him for many years; for more than ten we
were closely intimate; I have lived with him for weeks; and
during all this time, he only once referred to his infirmity and
then perforce as an excuse for some trouble he put me to, and so
slightly worded that I paid no heed. This is a good measure
of his courage under sufferings of which none but the untried
will think lightly. And I think it worth noting how this
optimist was acquainted with pain. It will seem strange
only to the superficial. The disease of pessimism springs
never from real troubles, which it braces men to bear, which it
delights men to bear well. Nor does it readily spring at
all, in minds that have conceived of life as a field of ordered
duties, not as a chase in which to hunt for gratifications.
‘We are not here to be happy, but to be good’; I wish
he had mended the phrase: ‘We are not here to be happy, but
to try to be good,’ comes nearer the modesty of
truth. With such old-fashioned morality, it is possible to
get through life, and see the worst of it, and feel some of the
worst of it, and still acquiesce piously and even gladly in
man’s fate. Feel some of the worst of it, I say; for
some of the rest of the worst is, by this simple faith,
excluded.
It was in the year 1868, that the clouds finally rose.
The business in partnership with Mr. Forde began suddenly to pay
well; about the same time the patents showed themselves a
valuable property; and but a little after, Fleeming was appointed
to the new chair of engineering in the University of
Edinburgh. Thus, almost at once, pecuniary embarrassments
passed for ever out of his life. Here is his own epilogue
to the time at Claygate, and his anticipations of the future in
Edinburgh.
‘ . . . . The dear old house at Claygate is
not let and the pretty garden a mass of weeds. I feel
rather as if we had behaved unkindly to them. We were very
happy there, but now that it is over I am conscious of the weight
of anxiety as to money which I bore all the time. With you
in the garden, with Austin in the coach-house, with pretty songs
in the little, low white room, with the moonlight in the dear
room up-stairs, ah, it was perfect; but the long walk, wondering,
pondering, fearing, scheming, and the dusty jolting railway, and
the horrid fusty office with its endless disappointments, they
are well gone. It is well enough to fight and scheme and
bustle about in the eager crowd here [in London] for a while now
and then, but not for a lifetime. What I have now is just
perfect. Study for winter, action for summer, lovely
country for recreation, a pleasant town for talk . . .’
