“No—it is only my experience of the world.”

“Well, sir, talkin' of experience, I've had about enough, as I tell you, and I beg to place my resignation in your hands. I shall do the same by Mr. Oscard if I reach that Platter, God willin', as the sayin' is.”

“All right, Joseph.”

Still there was something left to say. Joseph paused and scratched the back of his neck pensively with one finger.

“Will you be writin' to Mr. Oscard, sir, for me to take?”

“Yes.”

“Then I should be obliged if you would mention the fact that I would rather not be left alone with that blackguard Durnovo, either up at the Platter or travelling down. That man's got on my nerves, sir; and I'm mortal afraid of doing him a injury. He's got a long neck—you've noticed that, perhaps. There was a little Gourkha man up in Cabul taught me a trick—it's as easy as killing a chicken—but you want a man wi' a long neck—just such a neck as Durnovo's.”

“But what harm has the man done you,” asked Meredith, “that you think so affectionately of his neck?”

“No harm, sir, but we're just like two cats on a wall, watchin' each other and hating each other like blue poison. There's more villainy at that man's back than you think for—mark my words.”

Joseph moved towards the door.