A dreadful calm fell upon me.
“Was he anywise pale?” I asked.
“Well, it don’t seem to me as though he were. But I tell you truly, I didn’t take much heed to that.”
“Did he look like a drinking man?”
“Well, no. If you please, sir, he looked more like an eating one.”
“O, he was stout, was he?”
“No, sir. I couldn’t go so far as that. No, he wasn’t not to say stout. If anything, lean rather.”
I need not go on with the infuriating interview. It ended as it began, except that Rowley was in tears, and that I had acquired one fact. The man was drawn for me as being of any height you like to mention, and of any degree of corpulence or leanness; clean-shaved or not, as the case might be; the colour of his hair Rowley “could not take it upon himself to put a name on”; that of his eyes he thought to have been blue—nay, it was the one point on which he attained to a kind of tearful certainty. “I’ll take my davy on it,” he asseverated. They proved to have been as black as sloes, very little and very near together. So much for the evidence of the artless! And the fact, or rather the facts, acquired? Well, they had to do not with the person but with his clothing. The man wore knee breeches and white stockings; his coat was “some kind of a lightish colour—or betwixt that and dark”; and he wore a “moleskin weskit.” As if this were not enough, he presently hailed me from my breakfast in a prodigious flutter, and showed me an honest and rather venerable citizen passing in the Square.
“That’s him, sir,” he cried, “the very moral of him! Well, this one is better dressed, and p’raps a trifler taller; and in the face he don’t favour him noways at all, sir. No, not when I come to look again, ’e don’t seem to favour him noways.”
“Jackass!” said I, and I think the greatest stickler for manners will admit the epithet to have been justified.