wrinkles; and the front row was completed by a chemist.
The three immediately behind, Mr. Bosengate did not
thoroughly master; but the three at the end of the
second row he learned in their order of an oldish
man in a grey suit, given to winking; an inanimate
person with the mouth of a moustachioed codfish, over
whose long bald crown three wisps of damp hair were
carefully arranged; and a dried, dapperish, clean-shorn
man, whose mouth seemed terrified lest it should be
surprised without a smile. Their first and second
verdicts were recorded without the necessity for withdrawal,
and Mr. Bosengate was already sleepy when the third
case was called. The sight of khaki revived
his drooping attention. But what a weedy-looking
specimen! This prisoner had a truly nerveless
pitiable dejected air. If he had ever had a
military bearing it had shrunk into him during his
confinement. His ill-shaped brown tunic, whose
little brass buttons seemed trying to keep smiling,
struck Mr. Bosengate as ridiculously short, used though
he was to such things. ‘Absurd,’
he thought—’Lumbago! Just where
they ought to be covered!’ Then the officer
and gentleman stirred in him, and he added to himself:
‘Still, there must be some distinction made!’
The little soldier’s visage had once perhaps
been tanned, but was now the colour of dark dough;
his large brown eyes with white showing below the
iris, as so often in the eyes of very nervous people—wandered
from face to face, of judge, counsel, jury, and public.
There were hollows in his cheeks, his dark hair looked
damp; around his neck he wore a bandage. The
commercial traveller on Mr. Bosengate’s left
turned, and whispered: “Felo de se!
My hat! what a guy!” Mr. Bosengate pretended
not to hear—he could not bear that fellow!—and
slowly wrote on a bit of paper: “Owen Lewis.”
Welsh! Well, he looked it—not at
all an English face. Attempted suicide—not
at all an English crime! Suicide implied surrender,
a putting-up of hands to Fate—to say nothing
of the religious aspect of the matter. And suicide
in khaki seemed to Mr. Bosengate particularly abhorrent;
like turning tail in face of the enemy; almost meriting
the fate of a deserter. He looked at the prisoner,
trying not to give way to this prejudice. And
the prisoner seemed to look at him, though this, perhaps,
was fancy.
The Counsel for the prosecution, a little, alert, grey, decided man, above military age, began detailing the circumstances of the crime. Mr. Bosengate, though not particularly sensitive to atmosphere, could perceive a sort of current running through the Court. It was as if jury and public were thinking rhythmically in obedience to the same unexpressed prejudice of which he himself was conscious. Even the Caesar-like pale face up there, presiding, seemed in its ironic serenity responding to that current.