summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 14:55:57 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 14:55:57 -0800
commit14c9f374b5554d134f139a3ddb175c3c7810e35a (patch)
tree93c56c3f4dc0f09b91ae88eb8a77fdc92742f99a
parent3d6c4c26b247561f95d18546064dbe2623007e06 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/55468-0.txt11494
-rw-r--r--old/55468-0.zipbin217325 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55468-h.zipbin274765 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55468-h/55468-h.htm13775
-rw-r--r--old/55468-h/images/cover.jpgbin45390 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55468-h/images/i_002.jpgbin15432 -> 0 bytes
9 files changed, 17 insertions, 25269 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a46a1ca
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55468 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55468)
diff --git a/old/55468-0.txt b/old/55468-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 3e6318d..0000000
--- a/old/55468-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11494 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Storm in a Teacup, by Eden Phillpotts
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Storm in a Teacup
-
-Author: Eden Phillpotts
-
-Release Date: August 31, 2017 [EBook #55468]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORM IN A TEACUP ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STORM IN A TEACUP
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
- ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
-
- MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
- LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
- TORONTO
-
-
-
-
- STORM IN A TEACUP
-
- BY
- EDEN PHILLPOTTS
-
- Author of
- “Old Delabole,” “Brunel’s Tower,” etc.
-
-
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1919
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1919
- BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
-
-
- Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1919.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I BOW CREEK 1
-
- II MAGIC PICTURES 8
-
- III PRIORY FARM 14
-
- IV A NEW VATMAN 26
-
- V THE RAG HOUSE 30
-
- VI THE MARTYR 40
-
- VII THE BLUE MARK 51
-
- VIII ASSAULT AND BATTERY 62
-
- IX THE OLD PRIORY 73
-
- X THE LETTER 87
-
- XI LYDIA’S DAY 98
-
- XII MEDORA’S NIGHT 113
-
- XIII IN LONDON 122
-
- XIV THE DRYING LOFTS 132
-
- XV GOING UP CORKSCREW HILL 139
-
- XVI AT “THE WATERMAN’S ARMS” 149
-
- XVII TRAGEDY IN THE SIZING ROOM 159
-
- XVIII NED HEARS MR. KNOX 170
-
- XIX EMOTIONS OF MEDORA 181
-
- XX PHILANDER’S FATE 192
-
- XXI THE PROTEST 207
-
- XXII A TEST FOR JORDAN KELLOCK 220
-
- XXIII THE WISDOM OF PHILANDER 229
-
- XXIV NED AND MEDORA 239
-
- XXV THE EXPLANATION 249
-
- XXVI THE STROKE 258
-
- XXVII THE DOCTOR 271
-
- XXVIII THE CONFESSION 279
-
- XXIX THE BARGAIN 286
-
- XXX FIRE BEACON HILL 297
-
-
-
-
-STORM IN A TEACUP
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-BOW CREEK
-
-
-How musical are the place names on the tidal water of Dart. Tuckenhay
-and Greenway, Stoke Gabriel and Dittisham, Sharpham and Duncannon—a
-chime of bells to the native ear that knows them.
-
-To-day autumn rainbows burnt low on the ferny hills and set their
-russet flashing. Then hailstorms churned the river into a flurry
-and swept seaward under a grey cowl. They came with a rush of wind,
-that brought scarlet leaves from the wild cherry and gold dust from
-the larch; but soon the air cleared and the sun returned, while the
-silver fret of the river’s face grew calm again to mirror far-off
-things. Easterly the red earth arched low on the blue sky; west spread
-cobweb-grey orchards, their leaves fallen, their last of apples still
-twinkling—topaz and ruby—among the lichens of their ancient boughs.
-Then broad, oaken hangers met the beech scrub and the pale oak foliage
-was as a flame dancing above the red-hot fire of the beeches. Their
-conflagrations blazed along the tideway and their reflected colour
-poured down over the woods into the water.
-
-Then elm trees rolled out along the river, and above them, in billows
-mightier than they, sailed the light-laden clouds, that seemed to lift
-another forest, bossed and rounded as the elm trees, and carry up their
-image into the sky. But the cloud glory was pale, its sun touched
-summits faint against the ardour of the earthborn elms.
-
-At water’s brink, above Stoke Gabriel’s little pier and gleam of white
-and rose-washed cots, black swine were rooting for acorns; while
-westerly an arm of Dart extended up Bow Creek through such sunlight as
-made the eyes throb and turn to the cool shadows. Another silver loop
-and Duncannon cuddled in an elbow of the river; then, higher yet, the
-hills heaved along Sharpham’s hanging woods turned from the sun. The
-immense curtain of trees faced north in tapestry of temperate tones
-painted with purple and grey and the twilight colours of autumn foliage
-seen through shadows. The ash was already naked—a clean skeleton
-against the dun mass of dying foliage—and other trees were casting
-down their garments; but the firs and spruce made rich contrast of blue
-and green upon the sere.
-
-Beyond Sharpham, long river flats rolled out, where plover and gulls
-sat on tussocks of reed, or rush, and curlew wheeled and mewed
-overhead. Then opened a point, where, robbed of colour, all mist-laden,
-amid gentle passages of receding banks and trees, there lifted the
-church tower of Totnes, with Dartmoor flung in a dim arc beyond.
-
-So Dart came, beside old, fern-clad wharves, through sedge-beds and
-reed ronds to the end of her estuary under the glittering apron of a
-weir. Then the pulse of the sea ceased to beat; the tide bade farewell,
-and the salmon leapt from salt to fresh.
-
-Worthy of worship in all her times and seasons; by her subtleties and
-sleights, her sun and shadow; by her laughter and coy approaches;
-by her curves and colours; her green hills and delight of woods
-and valleys; by her many voices; her changing moods and little
-lovelinesses, Dart is all Devon and so incomparably England.
-
-A boat moved on Bow Creek, and in it there sat two men and a young
-woman. One man rowed while his wife and the other man watched him.
-He pulled a long, powerful stroke, and the little vessel slipped up
-the estuary on a tide that was at flood, pondering a moment before the
-turn. The banks were a blaze of autumn colour, beneath which shelving
-planes of stone sank down to the water. The woman twirled an umbrella
-to dry it from the recent storm. She was cold and shivered a little,
-for though the sun shone again, the north wind blew.
-
-“I’m fearing we oughtn’t to have come, Medora,” said the man who sat
-beside her.
-
-“Take my coat,” advised Medora’s husband. “It’s dry enough inside.”
-
-He stopped rowing, took off his coat and handed it to his wife, who
-slipped it over her white blouse, but did not thank him.
-
-Medora Dingle was a dark-faced girl, with black hair and a pair of
-deep, brown eyes—lovely, but restless—under clean, arched eye-brows.
-Her mouth was red and small, her face fresh and rosy. She seemed
-self-conscious, and shivered a little more than was natural; for she
-was strong and hearty enough in body, tall and lithe, one who laboured
-six days a week and had never known sickness. Two of her fingers were
-tied up in cotton rags, and one of the wounds was on her ring finger so
-that her wedding ring was not visible.
-
-Presently Edward Dingle put down the oars.
-
-“Now you can take it on, old chap,” he said, and then changed places
-with his companion. The men were very unlike, but each comely after
-his fashion. Dingle was the bigger—a broad-shouldered, loose-limbed
-youth of five-and-twenty, with a head rather small for his bulk,
-and a pleasant laughter-loving expression. He was fair and pretty
-rather than handsome. His features were regular, his eyes blue, his
-hair straw-coloured and curly. A small moustache did not conceal his
-good-humoured mouth. His voice was high-pitched, and he chattered
-a great deal of nothing. He was a type of the slight, kindly man
-taken for granted—a man whose worth is under-valued by reason of his
-unimportance to himself. He had a boundless good nature combined with a
-modest mind.
-
-Jordan Kellock stood an inch or two shorter than Dingle and was a
-year or two older. He shaved clean, and brushed his dark, lustreless
-hair off his high forehead without parting it. Of a somewhat sallow
-complexion, with grey, deliberate eyes and a clean-cut, thin-lipped
-mouth, his brow suggested idealism and enthusiasm; there was a light in
-his solemn eyes and a touch of the sensitive about his nose. He spoke
-slowly, with a level, monotonous accent, and in this also offered an
-abrupt contrast to his companion.
-
-It seemed that he felt the reality of life and was pervious to
-impressions. He rowed with less mannerism, and a slower stroke than his
-friend; but the boat moved faster than it had with Dingle at the oars,
-for Kellock was a very strong man, and his daily work had developed his
-breast and arms abnormally.
-
-“A pity now,” said Ned, “that you didn’t let me fetch your thick coat,
-Medora, like I wanted to.”
-
-“You ought to have fetched it,” she answered impatiently.
-
-“I offered, and you said you didn’t want it.”
-
-“That’s like you. Throw the blame on me.”
-
-“There’s no blame to it.”
-
-“You ought to have just brought the thing and not bothered me about
-it,” she declared.
-
-Then her husband laughed.
-
-“So I ought,” he admitted; “but it takes a man such a hell of a time to
-know just what he ought to do where a woman’s concerned.”
-
-“Not where his wife’s concerned, I should think.”
-
-“Hardest of all, I reckon.”
-
-“Yes, because a wife’s truthful most times,” replied Medora. “It’s no
-good her pretending—there’s nothing to gain by it. Other women often
-pretend that a man’s pleasing them, when he’s not—just for politeness
-to the stupid things; but a man’s wife’s a fool to waste time like
-that. The sooner she trains her husband up to the truth of her, the
-better for him and the better for her.”
-
-They wrangled a little, then Ned laughed again.
-
-“Now Jordan will let on you and me are quarrelling,” he said.
-
-Thus challenged, the rower answered, but he was quite serious in his
-reply.
-
-“Last thing I should be likely to do—even if it was true. A man and
-his wife can argue a point without any feeling, of course.”
-
-“So they can,” declared Medora. “And a proud woman don’t let even a
-friend see her troubles. Not that I’ve got any troubles, I’m sure.”
-
-“And never will have, I hope,” answered Kellock gravely.
-
-The creek began to close, and ahead loomed a wharf and a building
-standing upon it. The hills grew higher round about, and the boat
-needed steering as her channel became narrower.
-
-“Tide’s turning,” said Ned, and for answer, the rower quickened his
-stroke.
-
-They passed the wharf, where a trout stream from a coomb ran into the
-estuary, then, ascending to the head of the boatable waters, reached
-their destination. Already the tide was falling and revealing weedy
-rocks and a high-water mark on either bank of the creek. To the right
-a little boathouse opened its dark mouth over the water, and now they
-slipped into it and came ashore.
-
-Medora thanked Jordan Kellock warmly.
-
-“Don’t you think I didn’t enjoy it because I got a bit chilly after the
-hailstorm,” she said. “I did enjoy it ever so much, and it was very
-kind of you to ask me.”
-
-“The last time we’ll go boating this year,” he answered, “and it was a
-good day, though cold along of the north wind. But the autumn woods
-were very fine, I’m sure.”
-
-“Properly lovely—poetry alive you might call them.”
-
-“So I thought,” he answered as he turned down his sleeves and presently
-put on his coat and tie again. The coat was black and the tie a subdued
-green.
-
-Ned made the boat ship-shape and turned to his wife.
-
-“A good smart walk up the hill will warm you,” he said.
-
-She hesitated and whispered to him.
-
-“Won’t you ask Jordan to tea?”
-
-“Why, certainly,” he answered aloud. “Medora’s wishful for you to come
-to tea, old man. So I hope you will.”
-
-“I should have liked to do it,” replied Kellock; “but I’ve promised to
-see Mr. Trenchard. It’s about the moulds for the advertisements.”
-
-“Right. He’ll want me, too, I reckon over that job.”
-
-“He will without a doubt. In fact it’s more up to you than me.
-Everything depends on the pulp.”
-
-“So it does with all paper,” declared Ned.
-
-“True enough. The beaterman’s master. For these fancy pictures for
-exhibition you’ve got to mix stuff as fine as clear soup—just the
-contrary of what you may call real paper.”
-
-“Are you coming, Ned?” asked Medora. “I’ve got to get over to mother
-to-morrow and I don’t want to go with a cold.”
-
-“Coming, coming,” he said. “So long, Jordan.”
-
-“Good-bye till Monday,” answered the other. Then he stood still and
-watched the young couple tramp off together.
-
-He gazed thoughtfully and when they disappeared up a steep woodland
-path, he shook his head. They were gone to Ashprington village, where
-they dwelt; but Mr. Kellock lived at Dene where the trout stream
-descended from the hills to the river. He crossed from the boat-house
-by a row of stepping-stones set athwart the creek; then he turned to
-the left and soon found himself at the cottage where he lodged.
-
-This man and Dingle had both loved Medora Trivett, and for some time
-she had hesitated between them. But Ned won her and the loser, taking
-his defeat in a large and patient spirit, continued to remain good
-friends with both.
-
-Mr. Kellock knew, what everybody guessed, that after a year of
-marriage, the pair were not happy together, though why this should be
-so none could at present determine.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-MAGIC PICTURES
-
-
-Stopping only to wash his hands and brush his hair, Kellock left his
-rooms and hastened up the coomb, where towered immense congeries of
-buildings under the slope of the hills. Evening sunshine fell over the
-western height which crowned the valley, and still caught the upper
-windows of the factory; but the huge shadow quickly climbed upward as
-the sun set.
-
-A small house stood at the main gate of Dene Paper Mill, and at the
-door sat a man reading a paper and smoking his pipe.
-
-It was Mr. Trood, foreman of the works.
-
-“Guvnor’s asking for you, Kellock,” he said. “Five o’clock was the
-time.”
-
-Jordan hurried on to the deserted mills, for the day was Saturday
-and work had ceased at noon. Threading the silent shops he presently
-reached a door on an upper floor, marked “Office,” knocked and was told
-to enter.
-
-On the left of the chamber sat a broad-shouldered man writing at a
-roll-top desk; under the windows of the room, which faced north,
-extended a long table heaped with paper of all descriptions and colours.
-
-The master twisted round on his office chair, then rose and lighted a
-cigarette. He was clean-shaved with iron-grey hair and a searching but
-genial expression. His face shone with intelligence and humour. It was
-strong and accurately declared the man, for indomitable perseverance
-and courage belonged to Matthew Trenchard.
-
-His own success he attributed to love of sport and love of fun. These
-pursuits made him sympathetic and understanding. He recognised his
-responsibilities and his rule of conduct in his relations with the
-hundred men and women he employed was to keep in closest possible
-touch with them. He held it good for them and vital for himself that
-he should know what was passing in their minds; for only thus could he
-discover the beginning of grievances and destroy them in the egg. He
-believed that the longer a trouble grew, the more difficult it was to
-dissipate, and by establishing intimate relations with his staff and
-impressing upon them his own situation, his successes and his failures,
-he succeeded in fixing unusual bonds.
-
-For the most part his people felt that Trenchard’s good was their
-own—not because he said so, but because he made it so; and save for
-certain inevitable spirits, who objected on principle to all existing
-conditions between capital and labour, the workers trusted him and
-spoke well of him.
-
-Kellock was first vatman at Dene, and one of the best paper makers in
-England. Both knew their worth and each was satisfied with the other.
-
-“I’ve heard from that South American Republic, Kellock,” said Mr.
-Trenchard. “They like the new currency paper and the colour suits them.”
-
-“It’s a very fine paper, Mr. Trenchard.”
-
-“Just the exact opposite of what I’m after for these advertisements.
-The public, Kellock, must be appealed to by the methods of Cheap Jack
-at the fair. They love a conjuring trick, and if you can stop them
-long enough to ask ‘how’s it done?’ you often interest them and win
-them. Now samples of our great papers mean nothing to anybody but the
-dealers. The public doesn’t know hand-made paper from machine-made.
-What we’ve got to do is to show them—not tip-top paper, but a bit of
-magic; and such a fool is the public that when he sees these pictures
-in water-mark, he’ll think the paper that produces them must be out of
-the common good. We know that it’s not ‘paper’ at all in our sense,
-and that it’s a special brew for this special purpose; but the public,
-amazed by the pictures, buys our paper and doesn’t know that the better
-the paper, the more impossible such sleight of hand would be upon it.
-We show them one thing which awakes their highest admiration and causes
-them to buy another!”
-
-All this Jordan Kellock very well understood, and his master knew that
-he did; but Trenchard liked to talk and excelled in lucid exposition.
-
-“That’s right,” said the vatman; “they think that the paper that can
-take such pictures must be good for anything; though the truth is that
-it’s good for nothing—but the pictures. If there was any quality to
-the pulp, it could never run into such moulds as these were made in.”
-
-He began to pick up the impressions of a series of large, exhibition
-water-marks, and hold them to the windows, that their transparent
-wonders might be seen.
-
-“Real works of art,” he said, “with high lights and deep shadows
-and rare half tones and colour, too, all on stuff like tissue. The
-beaterman must give me pulp as fine as flour to get such impressions.”
-
-“Finer than flour, my lad. The new moulds are even more wonderful. It
-is no good doing what your father did over again. My father beat my
-grandfather; so it’s my duty to beat him—see?”
-
-“These are wonderful enough in all conscience.”
-
-“And for the Exhibition I mean to turn out something more wonderful
-still. Something more than craft—real art, my friend. I want the
-artists. I want them to see what our art paper for water-colour work
-is. They don’t know yet—at least only a handful of them.”
-
-“But this is different. The pulp to do this sort of thing must be as
-thin as water,” said Kellock.
-
-“Fibre is the first consideration for paper that’s going to be as
-everlasting as parchment; but these water-mark masterpieces are _tours
-de force_—conjuring tricks as I call them. And I want to give the
-public a conjuring trick more wonderful than they’ve ever seen in paper
-before; and I’m going to do it.”
-
-“No paper maker ever beat these, Mr. Trenchard,” declared Kellock. He
-held up large sheets of the size known as “elephant.” They appeared
-to be white until illuminated; then they revealed shades of delicate
-duck-green, sunrise yellow, dark blue, light blue and umber.
-
-A portrait by Romney of Lady Hamilton shone through the first, and
-the solidity of the dark masses, the rendering of the fabric and the
-luminous quality of the flesh were wonderfully translated by the
-daylight filtering through.
-
-“There can be no painted pictures like these,” said Matthew Trenchard
-stoutly. “And why? Because the painter uses paint; I use pure daylight,
-and the sweetest paint that ever was isn’t a patch on the light of day.
-Such things as these are more beautiful than pictures, just because the
-living light from the sky is more beautiful than any pigment made by
-man.”
-
-Kellock was too cautious to agree with these revolutionary theories.
-
-“Certainly these things would be very fine to decorate our windows, if
-we didn’t want to look out of them,” he admitted.
-
-Then he held up a portrait of Her Majesty, Queen Victoria.
-
-“Pure ultramarine blue, you see,” commented the master, “and the light
-brings out its richness, though if you looked at the paper, you’d be
-puzzled to find any blue in it. That’s because the infinitely fine
-atoms of the colour would want a microscope to see their separate
-particles. Yet where the pulp sank to the depths of the mould, they
-collected in millions to give you those deep shadows.”
-
-Kellock delayed at the copy of a statue: the Venus Victrix from
-Naples—a work which certainly reproduced the majesty of the original
-in a rounded, lustrous fashion that no reproduction on the flat could
-echo.
-
-“We can’t beat that, though it is fifty years old,” declared Kellock.
-
-“We’re going to, however; and another statue is my idea. Marble comes
-out grandly as you see. I’m out for black and white, not colour. I’ve
-an idea we can get something as fine as the old masters of engraving,
-and finer.”
-
-“The vatman is nought for this work,” confessed Kellock. “He makes
-paper in his mould and that’s all there is to it—whether for printing,
-or writing, or painting. The man who matters is him who makes the
-mould.”
-
-“But we can help him; we can experiment at the vat and in the beating
-engine. We can go one better in the pulp; and the stroke counts at the
-vat. I reckon your stroke will be invaluable to work the pulp into
-every cranny of such moulds as I’m thinking about.”
-
-“I’ll do my best; so will Dingle; but how many men in England are there
-who could make such moulds as these to-day?”
-
-“Three,” replied Trenchard. “But I want better moulds. I’m hopeful that
-Michael Thorn of London will rise to it. I go to see him next week, and
-we put in a morning at the British Museum to find a statue worthy of
-the occasion.”
-
-“I can see a wonderful thing in my mind’s eye already,” declared
-Kellock.
-
-“Can you? Well, I never can see anything in my mind’s eye and rest
-content for an hour, till I set about the way to see it with my body’s
-eye.”
-
-“We all know that, Mr. Trenchard.”
-
-“Here’s my favourite,” declared the other, holding up a massive head of
-Abraham Lincoln. “Now that’s a great work in my judgment and if we beat
-that in quality, we shall produce a water-mark picture worth talking
-about.”
-
-“You ought to show all these too,” said Jordan Kellock.
-
-“I shall—if I beat them; not if they beat me,” replied the other.
-“I wanted you to see what my father and grandfather could do, so that
-you may judge what we’re up against. But they’re going to be beaten at
-Dene, or else I’ll know the reason why.”
-
-“It’s good to see such things and worth while trying to beat them,”
-answered the vatman.
-
-“To improve upon the past is the business of every honest man in my
-opinion,” declared Trenchard. “That’s what we’re here for; and that’s
-what I’ve done, I believe, thanks to a lot of clever people here who
-have helped me to do it and share what credit there may be. But I don’t
-claim credit, Ned. It’s common duty for every man with brains in his
-head to help push the craft along.”
-
-“And keep its head above water,” added the listener.
-
-Matthew Trenchard eyed him doubtfully and lighted another cigarette.
-
-“Yes,” he admitted rather reluctantly. “You’re right. Hand-made paper’s
-battling for its life in one sense—like a good many other hand-made
-things. But the machine hasn’t caught us yet and it will be a devil of
-a long time before it does, I hope.”
-
-“It’s for us not to let it,” said Jordan—a sentiment the paper master
-approved.
-
-“I’m fair,” he said, “and I’m not going to pretend the machine isn’t
-turning out some properly wonderful papers; and I’m not going to say it
-isn’t doing far better things than ever I thought it would do. I don’t
-laugh at it as my grandfather did, or shake my head at it as my father
-used. I recognise our craft is going down hill. But we ain’t at the
-bottom by a long way; and when we get there, we’ll go game and die like
-gentlemen.”
-
-They talked awhile longer; then the dusk came down, Kellock departed
-and Trenchard, turning on an electric light, resumed his writing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-PRIORY FARM
-
-
-From Dene a mighty hill climbs southward to Cornworthy village. “The
-Corkscrew” it is called, and men merciful to their beasts choose a
-longer and more gradual ascent. But not a few of the workers engaged
-at the paper mill tramped this zig-zag steep six days out of every
-seven, and among these Lydia Trivett, the mother of Medora, could boast
-twenty years of regular perambulation. Only on rare occasions, when
-“Corkscrew” was coated with ice, did she take the long detour by the
-little lake above the works.
-
-She had lived at Ashprington until her husband died; then she and her
-daughter came to live with her brother, Thomas Dolbear, of Priory Farm.
-He was a bachelor then; but at forty he wedded; and now Medora had her
-own home, while her mother still dwelt with Mr. Dolbear, his wife,
-Mary, and their increasing family.
-
-Lydia was a little brisk woman of fifty—the mistress of the rag house
-at the mills. She was still comely and trim, for hard work agreed with
-her. A very feminine air marked her, and Medora had won her good looks
-from her mother, though not her affectation, for Mrs. Trivett was a
-straightforward and unassuming soul. She had much to pride herself
-upon, but never claimed credit in any direction.
-
-Priory Farm stood under a great slope of orchard and meadow, upon the
-crown of which the priory ruins ascended. The farm was at the bottom
-of a hill, and immediately opposite climbed the solitary street of
-Cornworthy village capped by the church. The church and the old
-Cistercean ruin looked across the dip in the land at each other.
-
-Now, on Sunday afternoon, Lydia, at the garden gate of her brother’s
-house, started off six children to Sunday school. Five were girls and
-one was a boy. They ranged from twelve years old to three; while at
-home a two year old baby—another girl—remained with her mother. Mary
-Dolbear expected her tenth child during the coming spring. Two had died
-in infancy. She was an inert, genial mass of a woman, who lived only
-for her children and the business of maternity. Her husband worshipped
-her and they increased and multiplied proudly. Their house, but for
-Lydia’s sleepless ministrations, would have been a pigstye. They were
-indifferent to dirt and chose to make all things subservient to the
-demands of their children.
-
-“The cradle rules the world, so enough said,” was Tom Dolbear’s
-argument when people protested at the chaos in which he lived. He was
-a stout man with a fat, boyish face, scanty, sandy hair and a narrow
-forehead, always wrinkled by reason of the weakness of his eyes. He had
-a smile like a baby and was indeed a very childish man; but he knew his
-business and made his farm suffice for his family needs.
-
-In this house Lydia’s own room was an oasis in a wilderness. There one
-found calm, order, cleanliness, distinction. She trusted nobody in it
-but herself and always locked the door when she left for work.
-
-It was regarded as a sacred room, for both Mary and her husband
-reverenced Lydia and blessed the Providence that had sent her to them.
-They treated her with the greatest respect, always gave way to her and
-recognised very acutely the vital force she represented in the inert
-and sprawling domesticity of their establishment. Once, when an idea
-was whispered that Tom’s sister might leave him, Mary fell absolutely
-ill and refused to eat and drink until she changed her mind and
-promised to stay.
-
-To do them justice they never took Lydia for granted. Their gratitude
-flowed in a steady stream. They gave her all credit and all admiration,
-and went their philoprogenitive way with light hearts.
-
-Now Mrs. Trivett watched her nieces and nephew march together in their
-Sunday best along the way to Sunday school. Then she was about to shut
-the wicket and return up the garden path, when a man appeared on the
-high road and a fellow worker at the Mill accosted her.
-
-Nicholas Pinhey was a finisher; that is to say the paper passed
-through his hands last before it left the works. With the multifarious
-processes of its creation he had nothing to do; but every finished
-sheet and stack of sheets touched his fingers before it entered the
-world, and he was well skilled in the exacting duties of his own
-department.
-
-He was a thin, prim bachelor of sixty—a man of nice habits and
-finicking mind. There was much of the old maid in him, too, and he
-gossiped inordinately, but never unkindly. He knew the life history,
-family interests and private ambitions of everybody in the Mill. He
-smelt mystery where none existed and much feared the modern movements
-and threats of labour. Especially was he doubtful of Jordan Kellock and
-regarded him as a dangerous and too progressive spirit.
-
-His interest in other people’s affairs now appeared; for he had come
-to see Lydia; he had climbed “The Corkscrew” on Sunday from most
-altruistic motives.
-
-“The better the day the better the deed,” he said. “I’ve walked over
-for a cup of tea and a talk, because a little bird’s told me something
-I don’t much like, Mrs. Trivett, and it concerns you in a manner of
-speaking.”
-
-“You always keep to the point, Mr. Pinhey; and I dare say I know what
-the point is for that matter. Come in. We can talk very well, because
-we shall be alone in a minute.”
-
-Nicholas followed her into the parlour, a room of good size on the left
-hand side of the entrance. They surprised Mrs. Dolbear nodding beside
-the fire. She liked Mr. Pinhey, but she was glad of the excuse to leave
-them and retire to her own room.
-
-She shook hands with the visitor, who hoped she found herself as well
-as could be expected.
-
-“Oh, yes,” she said. “I take these things from whence they come. I feel
-no fear except in one particular.”
-
-“I won’t believe it,” he declared. “You’ve got the courage to fight
-lions and the faith to move mountains. We all know that. If the women
-in general would come to the business of the next generation with
-your fearless nature, we might hear less about the decrease of the
-population.”
-
-“It’s not my part I trouble about; it’s the Lord’s,” explained Mrs.
-Dolbear. “If I have another girl, it’ll break Tom’s heart. Six maids
-and one boy is the record so far, though of the two we’ve buried, one
-was a boy. And such is my perfect trust in myself, if I could choose
-what I want from the Almighty at this moment, it would be two men
-children.”
-
-“Magnificent!” said Mr. Pinhey.
-
-“I take Lydia to witness I speak no more than the truth,” replied the
-matron. “But these things are out of our keeping, though Tom read in a
-paper some time since a remarkable verdict, that if a woman with child
-ate enough green stuff, she might count on a boy.”
-
-“That’s a painful subject,” said Lydia, “and you’d better not talk
-about it, Polly.”
-
-“It was painful at the time,” admitted Mrs. Dolbear, “because Tom’s one
-of they hopeful men, who will always jump at a new thing like a trout
-jumps at a fly. And what was the result? From the moment he hit on that
-cussed paper, he fed me more like a cow than a creature with a soul.
-’Twas green stuff morning, noon and night—lettuce and spinach—which
-I hate any time—and broccoli and turnip tops and spring onions and
-cauliflower and Lord knows what mess till I rebelled and defied the
-man. I didn’t lose my temper; but I said, calm and slow, ‘Tom,’ I said,
-‘if you don’t want me to be brought to a bed of cabbage next September,
-stop it. God’s my judge,’ I said, ‘I won’t let down another herb of the
-field. I want red meat,’ I told him, ‘or else I won’t be responsible.’
-He argued for it, but I had my way and Lydia upheld me.”
-
-“And what was the result in the family line if I may venture to ask?”
-inquired Mr. Pinhey.
-
-“The result in the family line was Jane Ethel,” answered Mrs. Dolbear;
-“and where is Jane Ethel now, Lydia?”
-
-“In her little grave,” answered Mrs. Trivett.
-
-Her sister-in-law immediately began to weep.
-
-“Don’t you cry, my dear, it wasn’t your fault. The poor baby was born
-with death in her eyes, as I always said.”
-
-Mrs. Dolbear sighed and moved ponderously across the room. She was
-short and broad with a touzled head of golden hair and a colourless
-face. But her smile was beautiful and her teeth perfect.
-
-“I dare say you’ll want to talk before tea,” she suggested; “and I’ll
-go and have a bit of a sleep. I always say, ‘where there’s sleep,
-there’s hope.’ And I want more than most people, and I can take it any
-time in the twenty-four hours of the clock.”
-
-She waddled away and Mrs. Trivett explained.
-
-“Polly’s a proper wonder for sleep. It’s grown into a habit. She’ll
-call out for a nap at the most unseasonable moments. She’ll curl up
-anywhere and go off. We shan’t see her again till supper I shouldn’t
-wonder. Sit you down and tell me what you come for.”
-
-“The work you must do in this house!” said Mr. Pinhey.
-
-“I like work and this is my home.”
-
-“A home I suppose, but not what I should call an abiding place,”
-hazarded the man.
-
-“I don’t want no abiding place, because we know, if we’re Christians,
-that there’s no abiding place this side of the grave.”
-
-“You take it in your usual high spirit. And now—you’ll forgive me if
-I’m personal, Mrs. Trivett. You know the man that speaks.”
-
-“You want to better something I’m sure, else you wouldn’t be here.”
-
-“It is just as you say: I want to better something. We bachelors look
-out on life from our lonely towers, so to say, and we get a bird’s eye
-view of the people; and if we see a thing not all it might be, ’tis our
-duty in my opinion to try and set it right. And to be quite frank and
-in all friendship, I’m very much afraid your Medora and her husband
-ain’t heart and soul together as they should be. If I’m wrong, then
-thank God and enough said. But am I wrong?”
-
-Mrs. Trivett considered some moments before answering. Then she replied:
-
-“No, Nicholas Pinhey, you’re not wrong, and I wish I could say you
-were. You have seen what’s true; but I wouldn’t say the mischief was
-deep yet. It may be in our power to nip it in the bud.”
-
-“You grant it’s true, and that excuses me for touching it. I know my
-manners I hope, and to anybody else I wouldn’t have come; but you’re
-different, and if I can prevail upon you to handle Medora, I shall feel
-I have done all I can do, or have a right to do. In these delicate
-cases, the thing is to know where the fault lies. And most times it’s
-with the man, no doubt.”
-
-“I don’t know about that. It isn’t this time anyway.”
-
-Mr. Pinhey was astonished.
-
-“Would you mean to say you see your own daughter unfavourable?” he
-asked.
-
-“You must know the right of a thing if you want to do any good,”
-declared Lydia. “Half the failure to right wrong so far as I can see,
-is owing to a muddled view of what the wrong is. I’ve hung back about
-this till I could see it clear, and I won’t say I do see it clear yet.”
-
-“I speak as a bachelor,” repeated Mr. Pinhey, “and therefore
-with reserve and caution. And if you—the mother of one of the
-parties—don’t feel you can safely take a hand, it certainly isn’t for
-anybody else to try.”
-
-“As a matter of fact, I was going to do something this very day. My
-daughter’s coming to tea and I mean to ask her what the matter is.
-She’s not prone to be exactly straight, is Medora, but seeing I want
-nothing but her good, I hope she’ll be frank with me.”
-
-The man felt mildly surprised to hear a mother criticise her daughter
-so frankly.
-
-“I thought a child could do no wrong in its parents’ eyes,” he said.
-
-“Depends on the parent, Mr. Pinhey. If you want to help your child,
-’tis no use beginning by taking that line. If we can do wrong, as God
-knows we can, so can our children, and it’s a vain sort of love to
-suppose they’re perfect. Medora’s got a great many good qualities, but,
-like other pretty girls, she’s handicapped here and there. A right
-down pretty girl don’t know she’s born most times, because everybody
-in trousers bows down before her and helps to shut reality out of her
-life.”
-
-“It’s the same with money,” surmised Nicholas. “Let a young person
-have money and they look at the world through tinted glasses. The
-truth’s hidden from them, and some such go to their graves and never
-know truth, while others, owing to chance, lose the stuff that stands
-between them and reality and have a very painful wakening. But as to
-beauty—you was a woman to the full as fair as your girl—yet look how
-you weathered the storm.”
-
-“No,” answered Lydia, “I never had Medora’s looks. In her case life’s
-been too smooth and easy if anything. She had a comfortable home with
-Tom here after her father died; and then came along a choice of two
-good men to wed her and the admiration of a dozen others. She was in
-two minds between Kellock and Dingle for a while; but her luck held and
-she took the right one.”
-
-“Are you sure of that?”
-
-“Yes—for Medora. That’s not to say that Jordan Kellock isn’t a
-cleverer chap than my son-in-law. Of course he is. He’s got more
-mind and more sight. He has ideas about labour and a great gift of
-determination; and he’s ambitious. He’ll go a long way further than
-Ned. But against that you can set Ned’s unshakable good temper and
-light heart. It’s grander for a man to have a heavy heart than a light,
-when he looks out at the world; but they heavy-hearted, earnest men,
-who want to help to set life right, call for a different fashion of
-wife from Medora. If such men wed, they should seek women in their
-own pattern—the earnest—deadly earnest sort—who don’t think of
-themselves, or their clothes, or their looks, or their comforts. They
-should find their helpmates in a kind of female that’s rare still,
-though they grow commoner. And Medora ain’t that sort, and if she’d
-took Kellock she’d have been no great use to him and he’d have been no
-lasting use to her.”
-
-“Dear me!” murmured Mr. Pinhey, “how you look into things.”
-
-“Ned’s all right,” continued Mrs. Trivett. “He’s all right, for Medora;
-and she ought to be all right for him. He loves her with all his heart
-and, in a word, she doesn’t know her luck. That’s what I must try and
-show her if I can. It’s just a sort of general discontent about nothing
-in particular. You can’t have it both ways. Ned’s easy and likes a bit
-of fun. He’s a good workman—in fact above the average, or he wouldn’t
-be where he is. As a beaterman you won’t find his better in any paper
-mill; but it ends there. He does his work and he’s reached his limit.
-And away from work, he’s just a schoolboy from his task. He’s light
-hearted and ought to be happy; and if she is not, he’ll worry a great
-deal. But he won’t know what’s the matter, any more than Medora
-herself.”
-
-Mr. Pinhey’s conventional mind proceeded in its natural groove.
-
-“To say it delicately, perhaps if a child was to come along it would
-smooth out the crumpled rose-leaves,” he suggested.
-
-“You might think so; but it isn’t that. They both agree there. They
-don’t like children and don’t want them.”
-
-“Well, I should be the last to blame them, I’m sure. It may not be true
-to nature, but it’s true to truth, that the young married couples ain’t
-so keen about families as they used to be.”
-
-“Nature’s at odds with a good deal we do,” answered Lydia. “Time
-was when a quiver full of young ones seemed good to the people. But
-education has changed all that. There’s selfishness in shirking a
-family no doubt; but there’s also sense. And the better the education
-grows, the shorter the families will.”
-
-They talked on until Medora herself arrived and the children came back
-from Sunday school. Then Mrs. Trivett and a maid prepared the tea and
-Mr. Pinhey, against his inclination, shared the meal. He noticed that
-Medora was kind to the little ones, but not enthusiastic about them.
-His own instincts made him shrink before so much happy and hungry youth
-feeding heartily. The children scattered crumbs and seemed to create an
-atmosphere of jam and a general stickiness around them. They also made
-a great deal of noise.
-
-Their mother did not appear and when Nicholas asked for their father,
-the eldest daughter told him that Mr. Dolbear was gone out for the day
-with his dogs and a ferret.
-
-He whispered under his breath, “Ferreting on the Sabbath!”
-
-After tea he took leave and returned home. Then Medora and her mother
-went into the orchard with the children, and Mrs. Trivett, wasting no
-words, asked her daughter what was vexing her.
-
-“Say as much or as little as you please, my dear—nothing if I can’t
-help you. But perhaps I can. It looks as though everybody but Ned sees
-there’s something on your mind. Can’t you tell me what it is—or better
-still, tell him?”
-
-Medora flushed.
-
-“There’s nothing the matter that can be helped,” she said. “Ned can’t
-help being himself, I suppose, and if anybody’s talking, they ought to
-be ashamed. It’s a cowardly, mean thing.”
-
-“It’s not cowardly, or mean to want to put a wrong right and make
-people better content. But nobody wants to interfere between husband
-and wife, and the people are very fond of you both as you well know.
-You say ‘Ned can’t help being himself.’ Begin there, then. You’ve been
-married a year now and you didn’t marry in haste either. He was what he
-is before you took him. He hasn’t changed.”
-
-“I didn’t think he was such a fool, if you must know,” said Medora.
-
-“What d’you mean by a fool?”
-
-“Simple—like a dog. There’s nothing to Ned. Other men have character
-and secrets and a bit up their sleeve. They count, and people know
-they ain’t seeing the inside of them. Ned’s got no inside. He’s a boy.
-I thought I’d married a man and I’ve married a great boy. I’m only
-telling you this, mind. I’m a good wife enough; but I’m not a brainless
-one and I can’t help comparing my husband to other men.”
-
-“You always compare everything you’ve got to what others have got,”
-answered Lydia. “When you was a tiny child, you’d love your toys till
-you saw the toys of other children. Then you’d grow discontent. At
-school, if you took a prize, it was poisoned, because some other girl
-had got a prettier book than you; and everybody else’s garden was
-nicer than ours; and everybody else had better furniture in their
-houses and better pictures on their walls and better clothes on their
-backs. And now it’s your husband that isn’t in it with other people’s
-husbands. Perhaps you’ll tell me, Medora, what husbands round about
-can beat Ned for sense and cheerfulness and an easy mind and the other
-things that go to make a home comfortable.”
-
-“Everybody isn’t married,” answered Medora. “I don’t look round and
-compare Ned to other husbands. I’ve got something better to do. But I
-can’t help seeing with all his good nature and the rest of it that he’s
-a slight man—not a sort for woman to repose upon as something with
-quicker wits—stronger, more masterful than herself.”
-
-“Like who?” asked Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“Well—I’m only speaking to you, mother—take yesterday. Jordan Kellock
-asked us to go for a row in the gamekeeper’s boat and see the river—me
-and Ned. And we went; and how could I help seeing that Jordan had the
-brains? Nothing he said, for he’s a good friend and above smallness;
-but while Ned chattered and laughed and made a noise, there was Jordan,
-pleasant and all that; but you felt behind was strength of character
-and a mind working and thinking more than it said; while my husband was
-saying more than he thinks. And I hate to hear him chatter and then,
-when he’s challenged, climb down and say he sees he was wrong.”
-
-“You’ve got to take the rough with the smooth in human nature, Medora.
-And it’s a bit staggering to hear you mention Kellock, of all men,
-seeing the circumstances. If you feel like that, why didn’t you take
-Kellock when you could?”
-
-Medora’s reply caused her mother consternation.
-
-“God knows why I didn’t,” she said.
-
-The elder gave a little gasp and did not answer.
-
-“It’s wrong when you have to correct your husband in front of another
-man,” continued Medora; “but I’ve got my self respect I believe—so
-far—and I won’t let Ned say foolish things before people and let
-others think I’m agreeing with him. And if I’ve spoken sharp when
-men or women at the works heard me, Ned’s got himself to thank for
-it. Anyway Jordan knows I’m not without brains, and I’m not going to
-pretend I am. I laughed at Ned in the boat yesterday, and he said after
-that he didn’t mind my laughing at him, but he wouldn’t have it before
-people.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett left the main issue as a subject too big for the moment.
-
-“You ought not to laugh at him before Mr. Kellock,” she said; “because
-he’s one of them serious-minded men who don’t understand laughter. I’ve
-seen a man say things in a light mood that had no sting in them really,
-yet one of the humourless sort, listening, didn’t see it was said for
-fun, and reported it after and made trouble. Kellock’s a solemn man and
-would misread it if you scored off Ned, or said some flashy thing that
-meant nought in truth. You know what I mean.”
-
-They had strolled to the top of the orchard now, where the children
-were playing in the Priory ruin. And here at dusk they parted.
-
-“We’ll leave it till we can have another talk,” said Lydia; “seemingly
-there’s more to talk about than I thought. Be patient as well as proud,
-Medora. And don’t feel so troubled about Ned that you haven’t got no
-spare time to look into your own heart and see if you’re satisfied
-with yourself. Because very often in my experience, when we’re seeing
-misfortune and blaming other people, if we look at home, we’ll find the
-source of the trouble lies with ourselves and not them.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-A NEW VATMAN
-
-
-A man stood on the crown of a limestone quarry, where it bit into the
-slope of a green hill. Perched here, three hundred feet above the
-valley bottom, a varied scene spread round about, but he was only
-concerned with the other side of the coomb and the great pile of Dene
-Paper Mill that stood over against him.
-
-On his left opened the creek heavily fringed with trees. Mud banks
-oozed out upon it and the river channel twinkled in the midst of them.
-The beholder saw that the sea ascended to this rural scene, bringing
-its weeds and shells to the little beaches and its birds to the air.
-From this inlet, the great valley broke and pointed west. It expanded
-and widened among such rolling green steeps as that upon which the
-stranger stood, and the heights were capped at the skyline, here by
-clumps of Scotch fir; here, by spinneys of oak and elm; here, by arable
-or pasture. Rows of small houses lay among the orchards in the bottom,
-where a stream wound, and the methodical ordering of those tenements
-marked a sharp contrast with the irregular and older cottages round
-them. They were the homes of busy people drawn hither for one purpose,
-and above them towered the great hive wherein they worked. The Mill
-spread under a knoll of trees on the hillside and shone out grey and
-blue against the autumn colour of the hanging woods behind it.
-
-Wide roofs glittered with glass and the northern face rose finely
-with tier on tier of windows outlined in red brick. Lesser buildings
-supported the mass to right and left and a clock-tower and weather-vane
-surmounted the whole. The architectural form, piled without design
-through the accretion of years, had yet taken a dignified and
-significant completeness. It was stern and plain, but not ugly and
-meaningless. Its shape, with outstretched wings and uplifted turret,
-like a head, suggested a sentient organism that could well fight
-for itself and protect its interests. It seemed not aggressive, but
-watchful; no tyrant to destroy, but a potent, receptive and benevolent
-over-lord of the green valley, which it had indeed modified and
-awakened, but not robbed of its distinction and beauty.
-
-The building must have been imposing on a plain, but the hills rolling
-round about tended to dwarf its size by their immense contours. Under
-some lights indeed the Mill bulked greater than the surrounding scene
-and to the meditative mind far transcended the inert matter heaved and
-heaped around it; but to-day Nature was clad in glory and no building
-built with hands could compete against her splendour of blue sky,
-emerald green grass lands and autumn groves of beech and oak. Seen in
-this brilliant setting Dene Mill was an impression of restrained grey
-and silver. Broad lights and shadows brooded over it and sunshine found
-the roofs but not the face of the buildings. Yet no sobriety marked the
-mass. It never brooded or sulked, unless the sky lowered and dropped
-darkness upon it. There was joy in the feathers of steam that leapt,
-and laughter in the broad golden weather-vane above the clock-tower.
-Labour pursued in this rural valley seemed to offer some hope of
-lessened asperity. Eyes weary with work might lift to the windows and
-mirror green and gracious things—meadows climbing and orchards and
-thatched roofs; or shorn stubbles spreading like cloth of gold upon the
-shoulders of the eastern hills.
-
-The beholder marked the people moving about the many mouths of the
-great hive beneath him, and being a man apt to link impressions, he
-guessed that the Mill had been built of the stone from the quarry that
-gaped at his feet. The rift in the hill extended to a road at the
-valley bottom, then sprang trees to fill the space between, so that
-the works beyond seemed bowered in foliage on all sides and framed in
-thinning boughs.
-
-A bell rang and the people streamed away—men and women—in a little
-thin trickle, like beads irregularly scattered on a thread. Here and
-there the line was brightened by a flash of colour from a bright sun
-bonnet, or gown. The watcher descended now, gained the road below, then
-climbed the other side to the Mill.
-
-He was a middle-aged, good-looking man, with a round face, hair turning
-grey, and black, rather shifty eyes. Humour homed on his countenance
-and merriment and cunning shared his expression. He carried a large,
-brown paper bundle and wore a new, homespun suit, a paper collar, a
-sky-blue tie and a cloth cap.
-
-As he passed Mr. Trood’s house at the entrance of the works and
-proceeded towards them, looking round about him, there emerged the
-master, and the new-comer guessed that he was so.
-
-He touched his hat therefore and said:
-
-“You’ll be the boss, I reckon.”
-
-“Right—and what do you want?”
-
-“Work, Mr. Matthew Trenchard.”
-
-It was not strange to see a wandering paper maker. The body of these
-men is small; they know their own value and, being always precious, can
-count upon making a change with safety. They are sought and a first
-rate workman need be in no fear of not winning a welcome where hand
-paper continues to be manufactured.
-
-“What department?” asked Trenchard.
-
-“A vatman, if so be you’re wanting a good one.”
-
-“I’m always wanting a good vatman. We’ve got three of the best in
-England here.”
-
-“Take me and you’ll have four,” said the man.
-
-Trenchard laughed and looked at him.
-
-“Why are you changing?” he asked.
-
-“Tired of a town. I come from the midlands; but I want to be in the
-country, and knowing about Dene Works, I thought I’d come down and
-offer.”
-
-They were standing opposite Mr. Trood’s house at the main gate and the
-master turned and knocked at the door. Trood himself appeared.
-
-“A vatman,” said Trenchard.
-
-“By name, Philander Knox,” explained the stranger. “I must tell you,”
-he added, “that I’ve got rather a queer stroke at the vat. People laugh
-to see me with a mould; but they don’t laugh when they see the paper.”
-
-“We shan’t quarrel with your stroke if we don’t with your sheet,” said
-Trood. “I’m for a nice, easy stroke myself, because it goes farther
-and faster; but we all know no two men have the same stroke. We’ve got
-a man now with a stroke like a cow with a musket; but his paper’s all
-right.”
-
-“You can come for a week on trial,” declared Trenchard. “Begin
-to-morrow if you’re agreeable to terms. We’re very busy. This is Mr.
-Trood, our foreman.”
-
-He went homewards and left the others together, while Mr. Knox produced
-his credentials.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE RAG HOUSE
-
-
-The place where Lydia Trivett worked and controlled the activities
-of twenty other women was a lofty, raftered hall lighted from the
-north by a row of windows under which the sorters sat. In the midst
-of the chamber the material was piled in huge, square bales covered
-with sacking. The parcels came from all parts of Europe, where linen
-and cotton rag could be obtained; and before they were handled, the
-contents entered a thresher for preliminary dusting. The thresher
-throbbed and thundered within a compartment boarded off from the
-workshop. Here in a great wooden case, a roller with iron-shod teeth
-revolved, while above this lower, moving wheel, fixed prongs stood
-similarly armed, so that their teeth passed between each other at every
-turn. Here spun the rags and whirled and tossed, while the dust of
-France, Belgium, England, Ireland, Scotland was sucked away from them.
-Every rag that entered Dene Mill was subjected to this rough initial
-embrace, where Alice Barefoot, a tall, strong woman, attended the
-thresher. She was herself of the colour of dust, with a high complexion
-and lion-coloured hair, tied up in a yellow kerchief. She prided
-herself on doing man’s work and, indeed, accomplished her heavy labours
-very completely. The dusted rag she piled in tall baskets, stopped the
-thresher, then opened the door of the chamber and bore the rag out to
-the sorters. They sat each before her lattice with the material heaped
-at her left. The practised workers dealt very swiftly with the stuff,
-running it between their hands and knowing its composition by touch.
-Wool or silk sometimes intruded, but was flung aside, for only cotton
-passed to the empty baskets at each woman’s right. The workers were
-clad in white overalls and their heads were covered with white caps and
-bonnets. Wonderful cleanliness marked them and the atmosphere of the
-brightly lighted shop was clear despite the flocculent material that
-passed through it.
-
-For purity of air and water, chemicals and working hands is a vital
-matter to the paper maker. Every operation must needs be as cleanly as
-sleepless precaution can make it.
-
-From the mountain of rags on her left the sorter plucked material and
-picked it over the lattice, an open wire-work sieve spread before
-her. Standing beside it was a short upright knife used to cut the
-rags and sever from them the buttons, hooks and eyes, whalebones
-and other extraneous additions that had belonged to their earlier
-incarnations. These knives were made from old steel scythes worn too
-thin for husbandry, but here answering a final purpose of value. The
-hones hummed from time to time, for the busy knives needed constant
-sharpening. Their cutting edge turned away from the workwoman and to it
-she brought the material—fragments of every garment ever manufactured
-from spun cotton.
-
-The history of many a single rag had been a feminine epic, from its
-plucking in a far off cotton field to its creation, use, adventures,
-triumphs, tragedies and final dissolution. Here they were from the dust
-heaps of a continent, from the embracing of bodies noble and simple,
-high and low, young and old, sweet and foul.
-
-Their tags and buttons were swiftly cut away and each grille exhibited
-a strange assortment of trophies—pearl and glass, metal and foil,
-whalebone and indiarubber. Even so many foreign substances escaped the
-sorters, to be captured at a later period in the purification of the
-rag.
-
-The women sat back to back and there was little speech among them.
-Their hands twinkled in a sort of rhythmic measure from right to left
-and left to right. Then, as their baskets were filled, came Alice
-Barefoot to carry them away and pile fresh accumulations from the
-thresher.
-
-To-day the work was old rag; but sometimes a consignment of fragments
-and overplus from the collar and shirt factories arrived clean and
-white. Out of them had garments been cut and the remnants needed
-nothing but shortening and dismemberment upon the knives and picking
-over for coloured threads, or rubbish that hang about them.
-
-Here reigned Lydia and herself worked at a lattice with the rest. She
-had only come to the Mill when her husband died; but her skill proved
-great and her influence greater. Blind-folded she could have done her
-sorting and separated by touch the cotton, or linen, from any other
-textile fabric. She was clad in a big white garment and had wrapped
-her head and neck in a pale blue handkerchief so that her face only
-appeared.
-
-Next to her sat a girl, and sometimes they spoke.
-
-Daisy Finch was a big blonde maiden, a friend of Medora’s; and
-concerning Medora the pair kept up a fitful conversation. But Lydia’s
-eyes were about her while her hands swiftly ran through the rags. She
-marked all that was going on from her place at the end of the row, and
-sometimes cried out a direction, or word of admonition.
-
-“She don’t tell me nothing,” said Daisy. “She just leaves you with
-a sort of general feeling she ain’t happy, then she’ll turn it off
-and say, ‘talk of something else,’ though all the time we haven’t
-been talking of anything in particular. Of course it ain’t anybody’s
-business.”
-
-“Nobody’s and everybody’s,” declared Lydia; “but nobody’s in the sense
-that you can meddle directly in it.”
-
-“They was made for each other you might say—such a laughing thing as
-Medora used to be.”
-
-“You never know who’s made for each other till they come to be fit
-together. And then life wears down the edges with married people most
-times, like it do with a new set of false teeth. Keep her good luck
-before Medora. Remind her, when you get a chance, how fortunate she
-is. Life’s gone so easy with her that she takes for granted a lot she
-ought to take with gratitude.”
-
-“It’s just a passing worry I dare say,” suggested Daisy. “When she
-forgets herself, she’ll often laugh and chatter in the old way.”
-
-“Well, she’s fonder of you than most, so you help her to forget herself
-as often as you can.”
-
-Daisy promised to do so and the elder thanked her.
-
-When the bell rang, they stopped work, and while some, Lydia among
-them, went to their baskets for dinner, most flung off their overalls,
-donned hats and jackets and hurried home.
-
-As for Mrs. Trivett, she stopped in the shop, ate her meal, then
-produced a newspaper and read while others talked.
-
-The day was fine and warm and many groups took their food together in
-the sun round about the Mill.
-
-Outside the vat house were Jordan Kellock and Robert Life, another
-vatman, while the new-comer, Philander Knox, ate his dinner beside
-them. On a bench at hand, Medora and Ned shared the contents of their
-basket, and the talk ran up and down.
-
-Mr. Knox had won permanent employment without difficulty. Indeed he
-proved a paper maker of the first rank, and while Mr. Trood deprecated
-Knox’s very unusual stroke, he admitted that the result was as good as
-possible.
-
-Of this matter they were now speaking.
-
-“Ernest Trood is a great formalist,” said Kellock. “He believes in what
-you may call tradition and a sort of stroke that you’d say was the
-perfection of the craft. But you can’t make a man to a model. You can
-show him another man who works on a good pattern—no more.”
-
-“The stroke comes just like every other stroke, whether it’s cricket,
-or billiards, or shooting, I reckon,” said Ned Dingle. “It comes, or
-else it don’t come. Take me: I’ve tried a score of times to make
-paper; but I can’t do it. I can’t get the stroke. But you might have an
-apprentice new to it and find, after a month or two, he’d prove himself
-in the way to be a paper maker.”
-
-Mr. Knox, who had already won a friendly greeting from his new
-associates, in virtue of an amiable character and humorous disposition,
-admitted that the vatman was born, not made.
-
-“And you may very near say as much for the beaterman,” he added. “I
-never want to see better pulp than you send down to the vat room, Ned
-Dingle.”
-
-“’Tis the life and soul of the paper to have such pulp as yours, Ned,”
-confirmed Kellock, and the beater was pleased. Praise always excited
-Ned and made him chatter.
-
-“I don’t know what there is to it—just thoroughness no doubt and a
-keen eye and no scamping of the tests. I take a lot more tests than
-most beaters I reckon,” he said.
-
-They discussed their craft and Ned told how for the purposes of
-the new water-mark pictures destined for a forthcoming exhibition,
-extraordinary pulp would be necessary.
-
-“Soft as milk it will have to be,” he declared.
-
-“I’ve seen the like,” said Knox. “Stuff you’d think couldn’t hold
-together. It’s got to find every tiny crevice of the mould; but such
-pulp takes the dyes exceeding well.”
-
-“Our dyes are Trenchard’s secret,” answered Dingle. “He’s a great
-chemist, as a paper master needs to be. I’d give a lot to look in the
-laboratory; but only Trood goes there.”
-
-“A very understanding foreman is Ernest Trood,” admitted Mr. Knox; then
-he turned to Medora.
-
-“How’s they fingers?” he asked.
-
-“Better,” she said. “You knock your fingers about rattling them against
-the crib.”
-
-“The fingers always suffer,” he admitted. “For my part I shake when
-there’s a spell of very hot pulp for the thick papers. I’m feared of my
-life the skin will go somewhere and put me out of action for a bit. If
-some man could invent a possible glove, many a tender-skinned vatman
-would bless him. But a glove would kill the stroke no doubt.”
-
-Dingle pressed more food from their basket on Medora and the well meant
-action apparently annoyed her. What passed between them was not heard,
-save the last words.
-
-“Don’t be a fool,” she said. “Can’t I have my own way even in that?”
-
-“Hush!” replied Ned. “Have it as you will.”
-
-But she grew angry; her face lowered and she pressed her lips together.
-
-The others joked and Mr. Knox offered Medora a piece of pie.
-
-“Hard hearted devil, you are, Dingle,” he exclaimed. “To eat the cheese
-and offer your poor girl the bread.”
-
-Medora jumped up and at the same moment Daisy Finch came along to seek
-her. They departed together and strolled from the works up the valley.
-
-But Ned Dingle was evidently disturbed. His face had fallen and he lit
-his pipe and went slowly after the women.
-
-“Take my tip and leave her alone,” shouted Knox; then he caught sight
-of Kellock’s perturbed countenance and turned to him.
-
-“Aren’t they good friends?” he asked.
-
-“Of course they are—none better.”
-
-“Sometimes a bit of chaff makes a breeze end in laughter,” said the
-elder; “and sometimes it don’t.”
-
-“Chaff’s a ticklish thing,” answered Jordan.
-
-“To you it might be, because you’re one of the serious sort, that never
-see much to laugh at in anything,” retorted Philander; “but that’s your
-loss. Alice Barefoot in the rag house is the same. Can’t see a joke and
-mistook my fun yesterday for rudeness. I might have known by her eye
-she weren’t a laughter-loving creature. But Mrs. Dingle can laugh.”
-
-“She laughs when there’s anything to laugh at,” said Kellock drily.
-
-“The art is to find something to laugh at in everything,” explained
-Philander Knox. “And married people ought to practice that for their
-own salvation more than any.”
-
-“How is it you ain’t married?” asked Robert Life. He was a man of few
-words and his wife worked in the glazing house with Medora.
-
-“For the very good reason that my wife’s dead,” replied Mr. Knox. She’s
-left me for a better place and better company—a very excellent wife
-according to her lights, and I missed her.”
-
-“I dare say you’ll find another here,” suggested a man who had come
-along a minute before. It was Henry Barefoot, Alice’s brother, the
-boilerman—an old sailor, who had drifted into the Mill when his
-service days were done.
-
-“If I do, Henry, it won’t be your sister, so don’t throw out no hopes,”
-answered Knox.
-
-Henry laughed.
-
-“No man ever offered for her and no man ever will,” he declared. “Her
-pride is to do man’s work and she never will do woman’s—not if all the
-men in Devon went on their knees to her.”
-
-“I’ve known others the same,” declared Philander. “They’re neuter bees,
-to say it kindly, and they hum so terrible sorrowful over their toil
-that the male give ’em a wide berth. Duty’s their watchword; and they
-do it in a way to make us common people hate the word.”
-
-“That’s Alice. You know the sort seemingly,” said Henry.
-
-“I’ve met with ’em. They are scattered about. I used to pity ’em till
-I found there wasn’t no need. They’re quite satisfied with themselves
-for the most part, but seldom satisfied with other people.”
-
-“Alice is a withering woman, though a very good housekeeper and looks
-after me very well,” said Mr. Barefoot.
-
-“As housekeepers they can’t be beaten,” admitted the other. “But Mrs.
-Dingle is a very different pattern—a pretty creature—prettiest
-I’ve seen for a month of Sundays. They pretty women are exacting in
-marriage, because nine times out of ten they’ve been spoiled before.
-She looks to me as though she wanted something she ain’t got.”
-
-“Dingle don’t know what she wants, for in a minute of temper he told me
-so,” said Mr. Life.
-
-“Don’t he? Then you tell him to be quick and find out,” advised
-Philander, “because with a rare piece like that, if he don’t, some
-other young fellow very likely will.”
-
-Then Kellock spoke, for this sentiment seemed outrageous to him.
-
-“How can you say such an indecent thing!” he exclaimed. “A man of your
-age ought to know better.”
-
-“A man of your age perhaps don’t,” answered Mr. Knox. “And yet you’re
-old enough to know the meaning of a pretty girl. But I’m afraid you’re
-one of those chaps that’s had some useful things left out of him,
-Kellock. You ain’t called ‘Jordan’ for nothing I expect. No doubt you
-wouldn’t wish to comfort Mrs. Dingle; but then you’re not everybody,
-and other young men might feel called to cheer her up—no more than
-that of course. And why you should flush so red and use the word
-‘indecent’ to such a decent man as me, I can’t guess.”
-
-“You would if you knew more about it, however,” said Henry Barefoot.
-“You ain’t up in our history yet, else you’d understand that Kellock
-here was one of the ‘also ran’ lot after Medora Dingle. No offence,
-Jordan—of course such things can’t be hid.”
-
-“You oughtn’t to talk about such private matters, Barefoot,” answered
-Kellock calmly, “and a conversation like this is improper, and for my
-part I don’t wish to hear any more of it. No self-respecting man would
-pry into such a delicate subject.”
-
-“Who’s prying?” asked Philander. “I merely say, from my knowledge of
-human beings in general, that if a pretty young woman’s not happy
-and her husband hasn’t got the trick to make her so, ’tis almost any
-odds some other chap will come along and have a try. That’s what
-would happen in most Christian countries anyway—whether Devonshire’s
-different I don’t know, being a stranger to these parts.”
-
-“We men mind our own business in Devonshire,” said Kellock, and Knox
-answered promptly.
-
-“Then I’m right,” he said, “because a pretty girl down on her luck is
-every man’s business.”
-
-“She’ll get a fright I dare say,” prophesied Robert Life. “I’ve known
-more than one young married woman, restless like, who ran a bit of
-risk; but as a rule their eyes are opened in time and the husband makes
-good.”
-
-Kellock, heartily loathing this conversation, left the others, and when
-he was gone, Life explained to Mr. Knox the situation.
-
-“Another man might be dangerous,” said Henry Barefoot, “for by all
-accounts Medora liked him very well and was in two minds to the last
-which she’d take. But Kellock’s a good and sober creature and a great
-respecter of law and order. You can trust him not to break out.”
-
-“You speak as a bachelor and your sister’s brother, Henry,” answered
-Philander. “Where there’s a woman and a man that once loved her, you
-can no more trust either of ’em not to break out than you can trust a
-spring in autumn. Kellock’s clearly a virtuous soul, and he certainly
-won’t break out if he can help it. You can see by his eyes he’s not
-a lady’s man, and never will be in any large and generous sense. But
-so much the more danger, for where that sort dines they sleeps when
-love’s the trouble. Let them love once and they’ll love for ever, no
-matter what happens; and if she was fool enough to go playing about
-with him, she might overthrow him to his own loss in the long run.”
-
-These forebodings were cut short by the work bell and Mr. Knox,
-expressing a hope that he might be mistaken, shook out his pipe and
-followed Robert back into the vat room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE MARTYR
-
-
-On a Saturday afternoon full of sunshine was presented the rich but
-simple picture of Ashprington village under conditions of autumn. The
-hamlet lay on a slope under a hillcrest and through it fell steep paths
-by meadow and orchard past the cottages to Bow Bridge far distant in
-the vale.
-
-Crowning Ashprington rose the church-tower of uniform grey,
-battlemented, with a great poplar standing on its right, and a yew tree
-throwing shadow upon the western porch. Then fell the land abruptly,
-and the whole foreground was filled with an apple orchard, that rippled
-to the churchyard walls and spread a rich cloth of scarlet and gold
-around them.
-
-At this hour the tree-foundered village seemed oppressed and smothered
-with falling leaves. Its over-abundant timber mastered the place and
-flung down foliage in such immense masses that the roads and alleys,
-drinking fountain, little gardens subtending the street and the roofs
-of the cottages were all choked with them.
-
-But it was a dry and joyous hour, the latter rains had yet to fall and
-submerge Ashprington in mud and decay. Virginian creeper flamed on the
-house fronts and dahlias, michaelmas daisies and chrysanthemums still
-flaunted in the gardens.
-
-Through this cheerful scene came Miss Finch and Medora Dingle with
-their baskets to pick blackberries. Medora’s home was a stone’s throw
-from the church and they now crossed the churchyard to enter certain
-fields beyond it.
-
-The well-kept sward spread level with the arms of the apple trees over
-the wall, for the ground fell sharply from the graveyard to the orchard
-below; and now, at the limits of the burial place, cider apples fell on
-the graves and spattered their mounds and flat surfaces with gold.
-
-Daisy stopped at a tomb and removed a windfall of fruit from the broken
-marble chips that covered it.
-
-“That’s old Mr. Kellock,” she said. “He wouldn’t like them there, would
-he—such a thrifty old man as he was.”
-
-“And such a tidy one,” added Medora.
-
-“He was Mr. Jordan’s grandfather and left him all his money I believe,”
-continued Daisy; but her friend knew more about that matter than she
-did.
-
-“He hadn’t anything to leave over and above his cottage. That was left
-to Jordan Kellock and he sold it, not wanting to be troubled with house
-property. It wasn’t worth much.”
-
-They passed through the shining fruit trees and stopped to admire them;
-then Medora, since Mr. Kellock had been mentioned, felt she might
-return to that subject.
-
-“I often wonder what he’ll do,” she said. “You feel that he won’t be
-content to stop at Dene all his life.”
-
-“Why not?” asked Daisy. “He’s got proper good money and is a big man
-here.”
-
-“He’d be a big man anywhere,” answered Medora. “It isn’t only a matter
-of wages with him,” she added. “Of course we know as a vatman he’s one
-of the best in England, and makes as good paper as there is in the
-world, I suppose. But he’s got more to him than that, Daisy. He’s not
-content with being prosperous and well-thought of. He thinks great
-thoughts and has great ambitions. I dare say the people here don’t see
-that, for he’s a cut above the most of them.”
-
-“He is,” admitted Daisy. “There’s something, I don’t know what about
-him; but it makes me uncomfortable with him.”
-
-“That’s just his greatness acting on you,” explained Medora. “I felt
-like that once too, but he did me the kindness to explain himself.”
-
-“We all know he would have given all he’d got to marry you.”
-
-“Don’t speak about that. At any rate I understand him better than any
-other woman—or man for that matter. And though it wasn’t to be, I
-understand him still; and I know he’s out for big things sooner or
-later. He’ll make a mark in the world of labour some day.”
-
-Daisy looked with admiration at Medora.
-
-“I’m sure I shouldn’t know what to answer if he talked to me about such
-deep subjects,” she said. “But then you’re married, and you’ve always
-got a man in the house to help your brain power.”
-
-Medora, secretly nettled at the preposterous suggestion of Ned
-enlarging her mental outlook, turned to the blackberries and felt a
-helpless disappointment that even her friend should guess so little
-of her difficulties and troubles. For now she began day by day to
-weave round herself and her married life a hollow and false tissue of
-imaginary tribulations and trials supposed to be sprung from her union
-with Edward Dingle. Medora set about a sort of histrionics inspired
-by nothing but her own vague unrest and her own amazing ignorance of
-reality. Even to herself she could not explain this futile experiment
-in emotions, yet she persisted and presently, finding certain of her
-circle were deceived, and even hearing words of pity on a woman’s
-lips, she deluded herself as to the truth of her gathering misfortunes
-and assured her conscience that the disaster came from without and
-not within. For at first, in the perpetration of this stupid pose,
-conscience pricked before Ned’s puzzled eyes; but presently, when
-a silly woman told Medora that she was a martyr, this nonsense of
-her own brewing seemed indeed the bitter drink life had set to her
-lips. She echoed and amplified the notion of martyrdom. It was just
-what she wanted to excuse her own folly to herself. From accepting
-the idea, she soon began to credit it. To win the full flavour of
-the make-believe this was necessary. Then developed the spectacle of
-a masquerading woman, herself creating the atmosphere in which she
-desired her world to see her suffer and shine.
-
-As all who acquire a taste for martyrdom, Medora proved amazingly
-ingenious in plaiting the scourges and selecting the members of the
-inquisition from her own household. She had reached a preliminary stage
-in this weak-minded pastime and enjoyed it exceedingly. Ned was much
-mystified; but the attitude of Ned mattered little. Her real object and
-the goal of the game lay far beyond Ned. Whereunto all this would lead,
-Medora did not know; and she told herself that she did not care.
-
-The day was to add a considerable scene to her unfolding drama, though
-Mrs. Dingle did not guess it when she set out. She had no premonition
-of the interesting adventure that awaited her when presently she
-drifted, by hedgerows and lanes, somewhat westward of Ashprington, upon
-the high road to Totnes.
-
-They were filling their baskets, and for a time Medora had forgotten
-all about herself and was taking a healthy interest in Daisy’s
-suspicions concerning a young man who worked at Dene Mill, when a
-bicycle bell warned them and there flashed along upon his way home,
-Jordan Kellock.
-
-He stopped and they showed him their blackberries and invited him to
-help himself. Then, together they walked homeward and Medora became
-concerned to part from Daisy if possible. An opportunity occurred ere
-long and when the elder pointed out that Miss Finch would gain half a
-mile by a short cut, her friend took the hint.
-
-“My basket’s heavy and you’ve got company, so I’ll go this way home,”
-said Daisy with great tact. Then she bade them good-bye and descended a
-steep lane to Bow Bridge.
-
-Immediately she had gone, Medora’s manner changed from cheerfulness to
-a more pensive mien.
-
-“Sometimes it’s so hard to pretend you’re happy,” she explained.
-
-“I’m sorry you’ve got to pretend,” he answered.
-
-He had fought awhile against any sort of secret understanding with
-Medora, but something of the kind now existed, though Jordan could not
-have explained how it had come about. It seemed not unnatural, however,
-because he knew the woman so well and felt so supremely interested in
-her happiness. He believed, in his youthful inexperience, that he might
-be able to help both Ned and Medora by virtue of his brains and good
-sense; and he imagined that his championship of Medora, so to call it,
-emanated entirely from his own will to right and justice. Had anybody
-hinted to him that Medora was amusing herself with this very delicate
-material, he must have refused to believe it. He believed in her good
-faith as he believed in the stars, and he trusted himself completely
-for a man above the power of temptation. Indeed, as yet he had felt
-none.
-
-To-day, however, the young woman went further than she had ventured to
-go.
-
-“I can talk to you, Jordan, and I often thank God I can,” she said,
-“because there’s nobody else on earth—not one who understands me like
-you do.”
-
-Not in the ear of him who really understands her does a woman ever
-confess to be understood; but the listener quite agreed with Medora and
-believed the truth of what she asserted.
-
-“If thought and true friendship could make me understand, then I do,”
-he answered. “Ned’s such a real good chap at heart that—”
-
-“He’s not,” she said positively. “To my bitter grief I know he’s not.
-Like you, I thought so, and I made myself go on thinking so, for
-loyalty; but it’s no good pretending that any more. He’s deceived you
-as he has me. He’s not good hearted, for all his laughter and noise,
-else he wouldn’t persecute me.”
-
-“Don’t say that.”
-
-“I’m not going into details,” declared Medora, quite aware that there
-were no details to go into; “but he’s that rough and harsh. Loses his
-temper if you look at him. He wasn’t like you, and showed me everything
-about himself when we were courting. He hid the things that matter, and
-if I’d known then half, or a quarter, of what I know now, I wouldn’t
-have taken him, Jordan.”
-
-“Don’t say that,” he begged again.
-
-“I’ve got to say it. And I’ll say more. It’s a relief to speak where
-your honesty is known, and no false meaning is put to your words. I’ll
-say this, that I made a dreadful mistake, and every year that goes over
-my head will show it clearer. I can bear it, of course. We women are
-built to suffer and keep our mouths shut. It’s only men that run about
-with their troubles. Yes, I can bear it, Jordan, and I shall bear it to
-my grave; but it’s hard for a girl of my age to look ahead through all
-the years of her life and see nothing but dust and ashes. And though
-I’m brave enough to face it, I’m too frank and open-natured to hide it,
-and the bitter thing is that people guess that I’m not happy.”
-
-“Don’t put it as strongly as that, Medora. Don’t actually say you’re an
-unhappy woman.”
-
-“You’re either happy, or else you’re not—at any rate, when you’re
-young,” she said. “I see the old get into a sort of frozen condition
-sooner or later, when they’re neither one nor the other, being sunk to
-a kind of state like a turnip in ground; but the young are different.
-They feel. Why, Daisy, only a few minutes ago, saw my mind was
-troubled, though I tried ever so to hide it. You know people know it.”
-
-“I won’t deny that. Everybody’s more or less sorry. But between husband
-and wife, of course, no wise man or woman ventures to come.”
-
-“Yes, they do,” she answered. “My own mother for one. Kindness made
-alive to everybody else no doubt, but not to me. She doesn’t blame my
-husband anyway, so she must blame me, I suppose.”
-
-“I wouldn’t say that. It may be no matter for blame—just the point of
-view. The great thing is to get at a person’s point of view, Medora.”
-
-“And don’t I try? Don’t I interest myself in Ned? I’ve got a brain,
-Jordan.”
-
-“I know that very well.”
-
-“And I can’t help seeing only too bitter clear, that my husband’s not
-interested in anything that wants brains to it. He’s all for sport and
-talk and pleasure. I like to think about interesting subjects—human
-nature and progress, and the future of labour, and so on. And if I try
-to talk about anything that really matters, he just yawns and starts
-on shooting birds and football. For the less brains a person has got,
-the more they want to be chattering. I’ve married a boy in fact, when I
-thought I’d married a man; and my charge against Ned is that he hid the
-truth of himself from me, and made me think he was interested in what
-interested me, when he was not.”
-
-She had mentioned the subjects which she knew attracted Jordan. It was
-indeed his wearisome insistence on such things that had made her turn
-of old to the less intelligent and more ingenuous Dingle. In reality
-she had no mind for abstractions or social problems.
-
-“As we grow older, we naturally go for the subjects that matter,” said
-Kellock. “I’ve always wanted to leave the world better than I found it,
-you know, Medora.”
-
-“And so you will—you’re built to do it,” declared she. “And I shall
-watch you do it, Jordan. And though I’ve lost it all, I shall see some
-other woman at your right hand helping you to make a name in the world.
-And I shall envy her—yes, I shall. I can say that to you, because I
-can trust you never to repeat it.”
-
-“You shake me up to the roots of my being when you talk like this,” he
-assured her. “Oh, my God, Medora, it seems a cruel sort of thing that
-just at the critical time, and before it was too late, you couldn’t
-have seen and felt what you see and feel now. It was bad enough then.
-You’ll never know or guess what I felt when you had to say ‘no’ to
-me. But I had one thing to keep me going then—the certainty you were
-too clever to make a mistake. I said to myself a million times: ‘She
-knows best; she knows that Dingle will make her a happier woman than I
-could.’ But now—now—when you say what you’ve said. Where am I now?”
-
-They talked in this emotional strain for ten minutes, and she wove with
-native art a web of which both warp and woof were absurdly unreal. Her
-nature was such that in a task of this sort she succeeded consummately.
-By a thousand little touches—sighs, looks, and shakes or droops of
-the head—she contributed to her comedy. She abounded in suggestions.
-Her eyes fell, her sentences were left unfinished. Then came heroic
-touches, and a brave straight glance with resolution to take up the
-staggering weight of her cross and bear it worthily to the end.
-
-Medora was charming, and in her subconscious soul she knew that
-her performance carried conviction in every word and gesture. She
-revelled in her acting, and rejoiced in the effect it occasioned on
-the listener. Long ago, Kellock had set her, as she guessed, as a
-lovely fly in amber, never to change, though now for ever out of his
-reach. He had accepted his loss, but he continued to regard her as
-his perfect woman, and she cherished the fact as a great possession.
-Perhaps, had it been otherwise, she had not entered upon her present
-perilous adventure; but she knew that Jordan Kellock was a knight of
-weak causes, and one who always fought for the oppressed, when in his
-power to do so; and now she had created a phantom of oppression, which
-his bent of mind and attitude to herself prevented him from recognising
-as largely unreal.
-
-Kellock was young; he had loved Medora in the full measure of a
-reserved nature, and to-day she deluded him to the limit of his
-possibilities. Her complete triumph indeed almost frightened her. For a
-few moments he became as earnestly concerned as on the great occasion
-when he had asked her to marry him. Then she calmed the man down, and
-told him that he must not waste his time on her troubles.
-
-“It’s selfish of me to tell you these things—perhaps it’s wrong,”
-she said, truly enough; but he would not grant that. His emotion was
-intense; his pain genuine. Her intuition told her that here was a man
-who might err—if ever he erred—in just such a situation as she was
-creating. She was surprised to find the ease with which it was possible
-to rouse him, and felt this discovery enough for that day. She grew
-elated, but uneasy at the unexpected power she possessed. Her sense of
-humour even spoke in a still, small voice, for humour she had.
-
-Chance helped her to end the scene, and, a hundred yards from home, Ned
-himself appeared with his gun over his shoulder and a hare in his hand.
-
-Dingle was in cheerful spirits.
-
-“A proper afternoon I’ve had,” he said. “Ernest Trood asked me to go
-out shooting along with him and some friends, and we’ve enjoyed sport,
-I promise you. A rare mixed bag. We began in the bottom above the
-Mill, and got a woodcock first go off, and then we worked up and had a
-brace and a half of partridges, a brace of pheasants, and a hare, and
-eight rabbits. I knew what you’d like, Medora, and I took a partridge,
-and the hare for my lot. I shot them, and four rabbits and one of the
-pheasants.”
-
-“What a chap for killing you are,” said Jordan, while Ned dragged a
-partridge from his pocket and handed it to his wife.
-
-Nobody loved nice things better than she, but she took the bird
-pensively and stroked its grey and russet feathers.
-
-“Poor little bird, your troubles are ended,” she said. Then she
-assumed a cheerful air, which struck Jordan as unspeakably pathetic.
-
-“I’ve been busy, too. Look at my blackberries.”
-
-Ned praised the blackberries, and in his usual impulsive fashion
-offered Kellock the hare; but Jordan declined it.
-
-“Thrown away upon me,” he said.
-
-“Come and help us to eat it one night then,” suggested Dingle, and
-Medora echoed his wish.
-
-“I’m sure you’re very kind. I’ll come up to supper any evening, if you
-mean it.”
-
-Then he mounted his bicycle and rode off down the hill.
-
-“He came along from Totnes, while Daisy and I were picking
-blackberries, and he stopped and would carry my basket for me,” she
-explained.
-
-“He looked a bit down in the mouth, didn’t he?”
-
-“He was. He’s such a man to feel other people’s troubles.”
-
-“Whose? Not yours, I should hope?”
-
-She laughed.
-
-“Good powers, no! I’m not one to tell my troubles—you know that, or
-ought to. I’m a proud woman, whatever you may be. It isn’t personal
-things, but general questions that bother him. Poverty and want and
-injustice, and all that. I cheered him up, and tried to make him
-forget.”
-
-“He’ll do better to leave such subjects alone,” said Dingle. “The woes
-of the world in general ain’t his job; and if he tries to make them his
-job, he may find it won’t pay him to do so.”
-
-“That’s your pettifogging opinion; but if every man in good employment
-was as selfish as you, the poor might remain poor for ever,” she
-answered.
-
-“Well, don’t you be a fool, anyway, there’s a dear. You’ve got to look
-after me, not the poor in general. And nobody can look after me better
-than you, when you please. It’s a choice between beer and tea this
-minute, so choose which I’m to have.”
-
-“Tea,” she said. “If you can be patient for a little.”
-
-They went in together, and he was pleased to find Medora amiable and
-willing, though ignorant that her good temper sprang not from his
-inspiration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE BLUE MARK
-
-
-From the rag house, through trap doors, the rag descended from Lydia
-and her fellow workers to a huge object like a mowing machine. The rags
-came to this monster and passed through its whirling knives. Then,
-having been clipped pretty small, they were carried on an endless
-ribbon up again to the magnet. Two great magnetized rollers revolved,
-and, in a dingy niagara, every fraction of the old rag tumbled over
-them, to run an electric gauntlet and receive a challenge. The bossy
-rollers were even quicker than the women’s fingers, and a fraction of
-metal, however small, responded to their attraction instantly. There
-was a click and instead of falling with its neighbours, the offending
-rag found itself arrested and pilloried on a boss. It clung to the
-roller, and, as the cylinder turned, became de-magnetized again and
-fell in a place apart. The danger to future processes was thus lessened
-materially and but little foreign matter in shape of metal escaped to
-be a nuisance later on.
-
-To the duster then came the harassed rag and in open wire barrels amid
-revolving wooden prongs it was whirled round and round and further
-cleansed.
-
-Then to Henry Barefoot it went, and Henry always declared that in his
-hands the material received first serious treatment.
-
-“The rag don’t know it’s born till it gets to the boilerman,” he was
-wont to say.
-
-The boiler-house lay under an arched roof of corrugated iron. It was
-a damp place, full of hot air and the heavy scent of washing. The
-steam thinned and feathered away through holes in the roof. In the
-floor were deep square hollows and here the boilers revolved, with
-a solemnity proper to their size. They were huge metal receptacles
-capable of holding a ton each; and when the rag was packed, with water
-and alkalies to cleanse it, the loaded giant turned ponderously over
-and over, churning the mass for three or four hours. Then the seething
-clouts were dragged forth, their pollutions drained away and further
-stages of lustration entered upon.
-
-Thus far the rag had come under rough control and reign of law. By air
-and water and chastening of many blows it was reduced to a limp and
-sodden condition, amenable to discipline, more or less prepared for the
-tremendous processes between its final disintegration as rag and its
-apotheosis as paper.
-
-A paper man will tell you he turns “old shirts into new sheets”: and
-that indeed is what he does; but a long and toilsome journey lies
-between the old shirt and its apotheosis.
-
-Henry Barefoot was a placid man, as long as the rag came to him exactly
-when he wanted it. Under ordinary circumstances he accomplished his
-part in the great machine as obscurely as any invisible wheel, or
-steam pipe. But if the women delayed, or he was “hung up,” as he put
-it, then his chivalry broke down and he swore long and loud at those
-who interfered with his activities. At such times he became tragic and
-exceedingly profane. He expanded and broke into uncouth gestures and
-simian scowls. He appealed to Heaven in these great moments and asked
-of the sky why women had been created. Sometimes his sister, Alice, was
-sent for from the thresher to pacify him, and when she failed, Lydia
-Trivett, at the sound of Henry’s roaring in the boiler-house, would
-slip from her lattice and strive to calm his fury.
-
-The women had fled before him at one of these explosions and Alice
-having also failed, approached Mrs. Trivett and begged her to
-intervene.
-
-She went, to find Mr. Barefoot standing with steam about him and his
-hand lifted to the corrugated iron roof above his grey head.
-
-“Oh, my God, my God!” he said. “What have I done to be the prey of a
-lot of worthless females—”
-
-“Your rag’s waiting, Henry,” interrupted Lydia.
-
-“His rag’s out, I should think,” said a woman from behind Lydia. “An
-evil-speaking toad—always blasting us. And how can we help it?”
-
-“You know very well, Henry, there must be a hitch sometimes with such a
-lot of dirty rag,” explained Lydia. “We’ve all got to keep going, and
-it’s no more good or sense cussing us than it is for them in the engine
-house to cuss you. And men wouldn’t do this work half as well as women,
-as you’d very soon find if we were gone. And it’s a very ill-convenient
-thing for you to lose your temper, and nobody will be sorrier than you
-in an hour’s time.”
-
-As the rag now awaited him, Henry subsided.
-
-“It’s a plot against me,” he said, “and I’ve no quarrel with you,
-Lydia. It ain’t your department. It’s they baggering women at the
-magnet, and they want for me to get the sack as I very well know. But
-they’ll get fired themselves—every trollop of ’em—afore I shall.”
-
-“They don’t want you to get fired. Why should they? What have you done
-to them? Why, you haven’t even asked one of ’em to marry you,” said
-Lydia.
-
-“No—they needn’t hope that,” he answered. “I’ve seen too much of woman
-since I came here ever to want one for my own.”
-
-So the breeze subsided and Henry filled his empty boiler, growling
-himself back to his usual calm the while. It was characteristic of
-him that between these dynamic discharges, he preserved an amiable
-attitude to those among whom he worked, and when a storm had passed, he
-instantly resumed friendly relations.
-
-Within an hour of this scene, when dinner time came, he descended to
-the ground floor and cautioned two girls who were skipping off down a
-flight of steps that led from the rag house to the ground below.
-
-“Don’t you go so fast,” he said. “When slate steps are wet with rain,
-they’re beastly slippery, and some day one of you maidens will fall and
-break yourselves.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett put on her old black bonnet, for she was going out
-to dinner with another woman; but as she prepared to depart, her
-son-in-law met her.
-
-“It’s important,” he said. “I want half an hour with you, mother, and
-I dare say Mrs. Ford won’t mind if you go along with her to-morrow
-instead.”
-
-Mrs. Ford made no difficulty and Lydia returned to the rag house with
-Ned, who brought his meal with him.
-
-“I’ve got a tid-bit for you here,” he explained. “A bit of jugged hare
-which you’ll like. And I wouldn’t trouble you but for a very good
-reason.”
-
-They sat in a corner among some rag bales, beyond earshot of others who
-were eating their meal in the rag house.
-
-“Where’s Medora?” asked Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“She’s having dinner in the glazing room to-day. So I took the
-opportunity. It’s about her I want to talk. But eat first. I don’t want
-to spoil the jugged hare.”
-
-He brought out a small pudding basin containing the delicacy and his
-mother-in-law ate heartily and declared the dish very good.
-
-“Medora can cook, whatever she can’t do,” said Lydia.
-
-“There’s nothing she can’t do,” he answered; “but there’s a damned lot
-of things she won’t do. And that’s the trouble to me. Time was when we
-saw alike every way and never had a word or a difference of opinion;
-but that time’s past seemingly, and I want to know why; and if you
-know, I wish you’d tell me. It’s all in a nutshell so far as I can
-see. What am I doing to vex her? God’s my judge I don’t know. I’m the
-same as I always have been. A chap like me don’t change. I only want
-to be patient and cheerful and go on with my life as I’m going. It’s
-her that’s changed. She used to love a bit of fun and laughter and be
-friendly and easy-going and jolly and kind. That’s what she was when
-I married her anyway. But she’s changed and I’m getting fairly fed
-up, because I don’t know of any fault in myself to explain it. If I’d
-pretended to be different from what I am before we were married and
-deceived her in anything, then she’d have a case against me. But nobody
-can say I did. She knew just what I was, and I thought I knew just what
-she was.”
-
-“You did, Ned,” said Mrs. Trivett earnestly. “You take my word that you
-did know just what she was. And what she was, she is still under her
-skin. She can’t change really, any more than you can, or anybody else.
-She took you because you suited her and she knew she’d be happy with
-you. And what’s happening to her just now is a passing thing calling
-for patience. Women have their funny moods and whims—Medora like the
-rest.”
-
-“I grant that, but how long is it going to last? I know they get queer
-in their heads sometimes, but she’s down in the mouth always now. I
-can’t pleasure her, do what I may, and the things that always delighted
-her a year ago bore her now. Damn it! She looks at me sometimes as if
-she was a schoolmistress and I was a wicked boy.”
-
-“It’s like this with her; and it’s the same with lots of people who
-have had nothing but a good time all their lives. Instead of knowing
-their luck, they take their luck to be just the usual state of things,
-and they don’t look round and see the scores of people without their
-good fortune: they only fancy that other people are more fortunate
-than them. They get so bored with the good that they begin to picture
-something better. Everybody wants better bread than is made of wheat
-sometimes, and especially them that have never tasted worse. We, that
-have had to eat barley bread, know our luck—t’others don’t. The thing
-for you is to be patient. You’re all right and you’re going on all
-right so far as I can tell. I’ll take your word of that and I very
-well understand your difficulties. But you’re a man and you’ve got the
-brains.”
-
-“She says not,” he answered. “That’s one of the nice things I’m called
-to hear now. She didn’t quarrel with my sense or my nonsense a year
-ago. Now she says right out that she wishes I had more intellects.
-Not a very nice thing to hear. I might be a stone-breaker, or a
-hedge-tacker with no sense at all.”
-
-“Be patient with her. It’s a whim, and what’s responsible for it I
-don’t know more than you. But it will pass. She can’t go on pretending
-she’s an unhappy woman—”
-
-“No, and she shan’t,” he said. “I’m only a human man myself, and it’s a
-proper outrage for her to make out she’s being bullied and evil treated
-by a chap that worshipped the ground under her feet and would again.
-She’s mean, mother.”
-
-“No, Ned, she’s foolish; she ain’t mean.”
-
-“She is mean. List to this. Two night ago Kellock came to supper with
-us—to help eat that jugged hare—and the talk was serious to death,
-as it always is with him—him being such a serious man. And presently,
-among a lot of other soaring notions, Medora wondered what was the
-height of bliss. And she said the height of bliss was to feel she was
-doing good, noble work in the world and helping to make people happier.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett sniffed, but did not respond.
-
-“Well,” continued Ned, “I didn’t say nothing to that, though it sounded
-a bit thin to me; but Kellock declared it was a very grand thought, and
-for his part the height of bliss was to feel you’d got a move on, and
-was leaving a mark and doing solid spade work, that would lift the next
-generation to more happiness. And, of course, Medora purred over that.
-And then she asked me what my height of bliss was—in a pitying tone of
-voice, as though she and Jordan belonged to another world. Well, I said
-my height of bliss was lying in my new bath-room of a Saturday night,
-with the hot water up to my chin, thinking of my savings in the bank.”
-
-“You didn’t, Ned!”
-
-“I did—just to give ’em a shake up. And just to remind Medora I built
-that bath-room on to my house—not because I wanted it, but because she
-did. Well, I knew Kellock wouldn’t see the joke, because he ain’t built
-to; but, damn it—I did think Medora would. I expected she’d laugh
-and lighten up the talk a bit. But not her. She pulled a long face,
-and said I ought to be ashamed to confess such ideas. And that was
-mean—you can’t deny it.”
-
-“It was,” admitted Medora’s mother. “Her sense of fun’s deserted her;
-or else she’s hiding it of a purpose.”
-
-“Another thing,” grumbled Mr. Dingle, “that same night when Kellock
-was gone, I got a bit angered with her, God forgive me, and I took her
-rough by the arm, and it left a bit of a blue mark on her skin. I very
-nearly went on my knees for sorrow after, and she forgave me, and made
-it up. Well, you’d think a decent woman would have kept her sleeve down
-for a day or two till the mark was gone; but I went to speak to her in
-the glazing room yesterday, and there was her forearm bare for all the
-women to see, and the chaps at the presses. And when they asked her
-how she came by it, as they did, she made a business of not telling
-them—which, of course, did tell them. And that was mean, too.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett looked anxious, and put her hand on his arm.
-
-“Don’t you knock her about, Ned. I know how aggravating a woman can be;
-but don’t you do that. I’m not standing up for her, and I’ll talk to
-her again and try to show her what she’s doing; but don’t you give her
-a shadow of excuse for this silliness, because, in her present mood,
-she’ll be very quick to take advantage of it. I know you very well, and
-I was properly glad when Medora took you and not the other, because I
-knew her, too, and felt she’d be happier with you in the long run. But
-I only say again, be patient until seventy times seven, there’s a good
-man, for that’s all you can do about it at present.”
-
-“So I will then,” he promised, “and we’ll leave it at that. And if
-you’ll take your chance to talk sense to her, I’ll be a good bit
-obliged.”
-
-The rain had ceased, and Lydia went out for a breath of air, while Ned
-lighted his pipe and accompanied her. A good few of the workers were
-at hand, and Mr. Knox, seeing Mrs. Trivett and her son-in-law, joined
-them. Kellock passed, but did not stop, and Philander Knox praised him.
-
-“Now, there’s a chap that’ll go far—either here or somewhere else,”
-he said. “Most of you Devon people I’ve yet met with are pretty
-easy-going, like myself; but that man is not. He’s more than a paper
-maker. Dingle here, and Life, and old Pinhey, the finisher, and Trood
-are content to go on their way, and leave other people to do the same.
-Kellock is not.”
-
-“He’s got ideas,” said Lydia.
-
-“He has. I’ve took a room in the same house where he lodges, and I’ve
-heard him air his notions. They’re commonplace talk where I come from,
-but a bit ahead of the times in the West Country. We middle-aged folk
-ain’t interested in ’em, but the rising generation is. He told me
-straight out that we ought to have shop stewards in the Mill.”
-
-“Not at all,” said Dingle. “We don’t want nothing of that here.”
-
-“A burning mind for the rights of labour,” continued Knox, “and though
-you may think we don’t want shop stewards, and I may think so, and the
-boss may think so, shop stewards are a sign of the times, and they’ll
-come everywhere before long.”
-
-“I hope not,” said Lydia.
-
-“And shop stewardesses,” added Philander; “and if that happened, you’d
-have to rise to it, Mrs. Trivett, for the good of the young women.”
-
-Lydia laughed.
-
-“They might be wanted in some places—not here,” she said. “We all
-work very comfortably and steady, and there’s none discontented in my
-department, that I know about.”
-
-“Just because you’re the head of it and are a very clever and human
-sort of woman,” answered Mr. Knox. “You’ve got the touch, and you
-understand the nature of the female and how to keep her in a good
-temper, and how to get a fair day’s work for a good day’s wages.”
-
-Ned left them at this juncture, and Mr. Knox proceeded. Much to her
-surprise he praised Mrs. Trivett in good set terms.
-
-“Well, well!” she said. “It ain’t often I hear my virtues mentioned,
-and I’m afraid you’ve named a good few I can’t lay claim to. Women’s
-only a greater puzzle than men, in my experience, and I don’t pretend
-that I know half that goes to either sort.”
-
-“Character is a great mystery,” he added.
-
-“So it is then, and I don’t want to look farther than at home to know
-it.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett was speaking to herself rather than Philander in this
-speech; she did not design any confession, but he appeared to guess
-what was in her mind. Indeed, he did, for he had seen her in company
-with Dingle, which was an unusual incident at the Mill, and he heard
-much of the rumour that Ned and his wife were out. He had also heard
-of the blue mark on Medora’s arm, from Mr. Pinhey, whose operations as
-finisher took place in the glazing room.
-
-“And if there’s a blue mark on her arm, who knows what marks there may
-be hidden elsewhere?” murmured Mr. Pinhey, with horrified eyes, behind
-his spectacles.
-
-“As a man once married, though without a family, I can understand
-that,” answered Knox to Lydia. “And if I may say so, I venture
-respectfully to sympathise with what’s in your mind. I’ve heard about
-Mrs. Dingle, and nothing but kindness, for I’m sure everybody likes
-her, though not as well as they like you. And if it’s not pushing in,
-which is the last thing I would do, I should be interested to know
-if, between Kellock and her husband, she took the right one in your
-opinion.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett felt some concern that a newcomer should have learned so
-much of the family history. But he spoke with such propriety that she
-could not be annoyed. She liked Mr. Knox, and found him, as everybody
-else did, a good-natured and amiable person. It was true that Mr. Trood
-had said that Knox was “downy,” but his downiness had not yet appeared
-to simpler eyes.
-
-She parried his question.
-
-“You know them both—what do you think?”
-
-“I know them, but I can’t say I know her,” he answered. “However, I
-know her mother, if I may say so, without offence, and if Mrs. Dingle
-favours you, then I’d say without hesitation that she chose the right
-party.”
-
-“She’s like me and not like me,” explained Lydia. “I was pretty near
-what she is at her age.”
-
-“Better looking, I expect,” he interrupted.
-
-“No, nothing like so fine—just a little go-by-the-ground woman, same
-as I am now. But in character, not unlike her. And if I’d had so good a
-time as she has had, no doubt I should have made the same mistakes and
-not known reality better than her.”
-
-“You can have too much reality,” declared Philander. “Most of us poor
-people have such a deuce of a lot of reality that we get tired of it.
-There’s thousands for that matter that never have anything else; and
-reality ain’t fattening if you belong to the labouring classes. But if
-she’d took Jordan Kellock, then she’d have known what reality was, and
-very likely gone down under it, like a mole under a cart wheel. He’s a
-wonderful good, earnest man—worth all the rest of us put together,
-I dare say; but as a husband for a young, pretty, laughter-loving
-woman—no. He ain’t built that way, and if your Medora finds that
-Dingle isn’t all she dreamed—as what man is after the gilt’s off the
-gingerbread?—then let her be sure she’d have done still worse along
-with Kellock.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett was moved, and nodded vigorously. “Very good sense, and
-you echo me,” she answered. “I’ve thought much the same. You’re an
-understanding man, and kind-hearted seemingly, and have been married
-yourself, so you see things in a large spirit. I think my girl took the
-right one.”
-
-“Then she did, for you’d make no mistake,” declared Knox. “And if the
-right one, then we can trust time to prove it. I’m a great believer in
-the marriage state myself. It’s a power for good most times, and so I
-hope you found it.”
-
-But Mrs. Trivett was not prepared for any further confidences on this
-occasion. She did not answer his question, though she expressed herself
-a believer in marriage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-ASSAULT AND BATTERY
-
-
-In the engine house a small, hump-backed man sat picking over the
-masses of wet rag brought to him by Henry Barefoot from the boilers.
-For, despite the sorters and the magnet, enemies to paper still lurked
-in the sodden rag, and the little man ran the sloppy stuff through his
-fingers, extracting from time to time fragments of rubber, whalebone,
-pearl, and other substances.
-
-The engine house was a lofty chamber on two floors, with windows that
-faced the west. Here, Ned Dingle reigned, and half a dozen men worked
-under him. Much happened to the rag before it came to Ned, for after
-its final picking, it was washed again, and broken before the beater
-turned it into pulp. When the little hump-backed man had passed it,
-the rag was set revolving with water in oval, lead-lined breakers.
-On one side the washer, like a steamer’s paddle-wheel, churned in a
-bladed barrel, so that the rag was not only cleaned again, but also
-torn to the smallest fragments; on the other side a drum of brass wire
-sucked away the dirty water, while from the upper end clean water was
-perpetually spurting in. Round and round the rag revolved for three
-hours, by which time its character had changed entirely. It was, in
-fact, rag no more, but a substance like curds: “half stuff,” or rag
-transformed and half-way to its final stages.
-
-From the breakers the pulpy mass left the engine house for a time,
-and sojourned in the bleaching tanks beneath. It flowed down through
-pipes to a subterranean chamber, where the air was sharp with the
-smell of chemicals, and twelve great, gaping wells ranged round a
-narrow passage way. Here came the “half stuff” to repose on beds of
-Delabole slate, and endure the operations of the bleach for half a day
-or more. Then the liquid was drained off, the snow-white, solid masses
-forked out on to little trolleys, and so returned to Ned Dingle in the
-engine house. Again it revolved until the bleach was thoroughly washed
-out of it, for it is a principle of great paper making that the less
-chemicals, the better the pulp; and now perfected, washed, broken and
-bleached, the material came to the beater for final dissection.
-
-The beaters’ engines were oval in form and resembled the breakers. They
-stood upon the lower floor of the engine house, and each communicated
-directly with the breaker above it, and the vat room far beneath. From
-final washing, the pulp flowed directly to Mr. Dingle, and, as before,
-revolved, and was churned by a paddle-wheel set with fine knives. Ned
-controlled it, and on his judgment depended the quality of the pulp
-that would presently flow down to Kellock, Knox, and the other vatmen.
-
-He was explaining the process to a young man, who had just been
-promoted to his assistant from the breakers above.
-
-“It’s got to meet every test that experience can bring against it,
-Jacob,” he said. “And if it did not, I should mighty soon hear of it.”
-
-He regulated the churning wheel with a footplate, and presently,
-satisfied that the mass, which was now like fine cream after revolving
-in the beating tank for many hours, had reached perfection, Ned took a
-test to satisfy himself.
-
-Two hand-bowls, or dippers, he lifted, scooped up a few ounces of the
-pulp, then mixed it with pure water, and flung the liquid backwards
-from one dipper to the other, pouring off and adding fresh water until
-what was left in his bowl resembled water barely stained with soap. The
-pulp was now so diluted that it needed sharp eyes to see anything in
-the water at all; but Dingle, taking it to the window, set it slowly
-dribbling away over the edge of the bowl, and as it flowed, the liquid
-revealed tiny fragments and filaments all separate, and as fine as
-spider’s thread. The spectacle of these attenuated fibres of cotton
-told the beaterman that his engine was ready and the pulp sufficiently
-fine. The masses of rag, once linen and lace, and every sort of textile
-fabric woven of cotton, had become reduced to its limit of tenuity, and
-was now far finer stuff than in the cotton pod of its creation. It had
-been beaten into countless millions of fibrils, long and short, and all
-so fine as to need sharpest scrutiny of human eye to distinguish them.
-
-Jacob—a future beaterman—followed Ned’s operations closely; then he
-made a test himself and watched the cotton gossamer flow over the edge
-of his bowl.
-
-“And next week,” declared Ned, “something finer still has got to be
-made—so fine that I shall have to borrow a pair of spectacles to see
-it—good as my eyes are. And that’s the pulp for the Exhibition moulds.
-It’s to be a record—such paper as never before was made in the world.
-But this is just ordinary, first class rag pulp—stuff that will last
-till doomsday if properly handled. Now it’s going down to Knox’s vat.”
-
-He sent a boy to the vat room to warn Philander that a re-inforcement
-was about to descend. Then he sought a square shaft in the corner of
-the engine house, took off the lid and revealed an empty, lead-lined
-box, having six holes at the bottom. Each was securely stopped and all
-communicated with the great chests that held the pulp for the paper
-makers below.
-
-He opened one hole, drew a valve from the beating engine and allowed it
-slowly to empty into the box. The white mass sank away out of it; there
-was a gurgle and a splash of air from the valve as the engine emptied;
-while with a wooden rake Ned scraped the last of the pulp to the
-aperture, whence it ran to the box above the chests in the vat room.
-
-“No. 4 chest is being filled, so it’s No. 4 hole I’ve opened in the
-box,” he explained. “Now it’s all run down very quick you see, and my
-beater is empty.”
-
-Then the breaker above disgorged another load of “half stuff” into the
-beater, and after he had used a beating roll, he set the paddle-wheel
-going again and the new consignment revolved on its way.
-
-Ned took a keen interest in his work and though he might be casual and
-easy-going in all other affairs of life, it was clear that he could be
-serious enough over the operations of the beater. He was very thorough
-and never left anything to chance. Opportunity for initiative did not
-enter into his labours; but the hard and fast lines of perfection he
-followed with keen application, and it was his fair boast that he had
-never sent bad pulp to the vatmen. Though a mechanical calling, Ned did
-not approach it in a mechanical spirit. It was his particular gift and
-privilege to feel a measure of enthusiasm in the craft, and he prided
-himself upon his skill.
-
-Novelty now awaited him, for the pulp presently to be made would differ
-in quality from the familiar material. The beating it to an impalpable
-fineness would be his work. The pulp was also to be dyed with new
-tinctures, not used until now.
-
-For not only snowwhite material descended to the vat room. The dyeing
-was a part of Mr. Dingle’s operation in many cases, and the various
-colours of foreign currency papers went into the stuff during its
-sojourn in the beaters.
-
-Dingle, satisfied with his pupil, put on his coat when the dinner bell
-rang, the steam pulses of the works subsided and the power stopped.
-He took his basket and descended a long flight of steps to the vat
-room, where Kellock, Life and the other paper makers had just knocked
-off work. Others joined them, for the vast and airy vat room was a
-favourite place for dinner; but Medora did not come. For several weeks
-now she had ceased to meet Ned at the hour of the mid-day meal. The
-fact was, of course, noted and debated behind Dingle’s back; but none
-spoke of it in front of him.
-
-The change in Medora at this stage of her existence was obvious enough
-to all; while that which marked her husband did not appear so clearly.
-The reason had been easy to see, though few knew enough about them to
-see it. Medora, while really disingenuous, revealed her tribulation,
-because she desired everybody to perceive it; while Ned, naturally an
-open and simple creature, endeavoured with the instinct of a decent
-male to hide his worries from the public eye. He failed, however,
-because he was not built to play a part, while Medora succeeded to
-perfection. Thus she created an impression of secret woes that did not
-really exist, while Ned attempted to conceal anxieties which were real
-enough. His temper suffered under a strain that he was not created to
-endure, for his wife’s attitude, having first puzzled him, began to
-anger him. He lost his temper with her on certain occasions and her
-sublime patience under his rough tongue by no means turned his wrath
-from her. For nothing is more maddening, if you are the smiter, than to
-have the other cheek turned to you by a sufferer, who displays obvious
-gusto at your chastisement. Ned soon saw that Medora liked him to be
-violent and brutal. It was meat and drink to her to see him in a rage.
-He guessed, and not wrongly, that if he had beaten her, she must have
-relished the pain—not for itself, but for the exquisite pleasure of
-relating her sufferings to other people afterwards.
-
-She was changed, as any woman is who for pleasure or profit plays a
-part. Indeed many persist in such histrionics when profit has long
-ceased, for simple artistic delight at the impersonation. It is natural
-to prefer a rôle which we can perform to perfection, before others
-wherein we are not so effective.
-
-The suffering and wronged and ill-treated heroine proved an
-impersonation that suited Medora’s temperament exactly, and having once
-assumed it, she promised to persist in it beyond the limits of her
-husband’s patience. She would doubtless tire sooner or later, since it
-is the instinct of every actor to desire new parts and new successes;
-but she was not going to tire of it while she made such a hit, won so
-much attention and created such a dramatic and exciting atmosphere
-about her. In fact Medora now felt herself to be the centre of her own
-little stage, and the experience so much delighted her that it was
-difficult sometimes to retain the air of crushed, Christian resignation
-proper to the character.
-
-But the situation she had created out of nothing real, now developed
-and began to take unto itself dangerous elements of reality. Such
-theatricals do not stand still, and instead of subsiding, as Lydia
-hoped it would, Mrs. Dingle’s objections and grievances, woven of
-gossamer at first, began to grow tougher. She guessed that she would
-catch more than herself in these elaborate reticulations, and she
-persisted until she found another was becoming entangled also.
-
-At first, to do her justice, Medora hesitated here. But she could not
-pour her woes into Kellock’s ears without a reaction from him, and his
-attitude towards her confession naturally influenced her. For, while
-some of her elders suspected, according to the measure of their wits,
-that Medora was acting, one man saw no shadow of deception. Every word
-rang true on his ear, for circumstances combined hopelessly to hoodwink
-him. His own serious nature, from which any powers of illusion or
-sleight were excluded, read nothing but the face value into Medora’s
-woeful countenance and the word value into her hopeless speeches. Not
-for him to answer mock heroics with banter, or reply to burlesque with
-irony. Had he been made of different stuff, he might have saved Medora
-from herself at this season; but being himself, the admirable man was
-terribly perturbed and indeed found himself beset with sore questions
-and problems from which both his character and personal attitude to
-the girl precluded escape. For he loved her, and the fact that she
-was an unhappy woman did not lessen his love; while, beyond that, his
-altruistic instincts must have brought him into a delicate complication
-in any case when once invited to participate. And now he did enter,
-with motives that could not honestly be considered mixed, for he was
-thus far influenced only by a conviction that it might be possible to
-help both sufferers to a better understanding. He knew that he enjoyed
-a far larger measure of intellect than Ned, and he felt that to shirk
-an effort for Medora’s sake would be cowardly. He had indeed convinced
-himself that it was his duty to act.
-
-He proceeded to tackle Ned, but he approached the task without the
-attitude of mind vital to success. For success in such a ticklish
-matter demanded in Kellock a standpoint of absolute impartiality. He
-must, if he were to do any good whatever, come to Dingle with a mind
-as open and unprejudiced as possible; whereas, though he knew it not,
-Jordan’s mind by no means stood in that relation to the pair. Had it
-done so, he had probably not interfered; for in truth it could not
-be altruism alone that prompted him to the step he was now about to
-take, but a very active and sincere sympathy for Medora in her alleged
-griefs. He believed her with all his heart and he had a great deal more
-concern for Mrs. Dingle’s point of view, which he accepted, than for
-her husband’s, which he had neither heard nor considered.
-
-The men had eaten their dinner, and Ned, out of a cheerful demeanour,
-which he brought from his work, presently sank into taciturnity. From
-no will to do so, but powerlessness to prevent it, he showed those
-about him that his thoughts were not pleasant. Indeed the most casual
-had noticed that he was of late only himself in the engine house, and
-that nothing but work sufficed to take him out of himself. Away from
-it, he brooded and did not chatter and jest as of old.
-
-To-day he was more than usually abstracted and Kellock seized the
-opportunity. Ned’s meal was finished in ten minutes and when he began
-to stuff his pipe, the other asked him to come for a stroll up the
-valley.
-
-“Let’s go up to the ponds and see if there are any birds about, Ned,”
-he said.
-
-A little surprised, since the bird that interested Kellock was unknown,
-Ned nevertheless agreed to take a walk.
-
-“Certainly,” he answered. “Me and Trood flushed a woodcock there
-yesterday, and I dare say on Saturday Trood will bring him down. He’s a
-mark on a woodcock—never misses ’em.”
-
-They strolled together up the valley where it fell gently to the Mill.
-
-A quarter of a mile above the works the coomb narrowed to a
-bottle-neck, through which a water-fall came down. The road wound
-through this gap and on one side of it rose old, blue limestone
-quarries, their jagged scarps and ridges fledged with gorse and oak
-scrub; while on the other side of the water a limestone bluff ascended,
-weathered to fine colour, and above it towered Scotch firs and ivy-clad
-beeches that followed the foot of the hill and flung their arms around
-a little mere, lying in the hollow of the undulating land.
-
-In spring this cup shone emerald green; but now the place was grey and
-silver. Alders and sallows towered black against the bright water;
-sedges and reed mace had huddled into tangle of russet and amber. They
-brightened where the sun touched them and burned over the placid lake,
-while the highest colour note was a spindle tree, whereon hung its
-harvest of pink and orange fruit, though all the leaves were fled. The
-flame of it cast a brilliant reflection into the face of the mirror
-below; and as Ned and Jordan approached by a winding way, that skirted
-the mere, coot and moorhen scuttled off leaving double trains behind
-them, widening out upon the waters.
-
-Here it was that Kellock broached the great matter at his heart; and
-because it was at his heart, whereas he imagined it solely in his head,
-he found within the space of two minutes that he had made a very
-grievous mistake.
-
-Beside the lake spoke Jordan, while Ned had his eyes in the sedges and
-distant mud flats for a woodcock.
-
-“It’s about your wife I wanted to say a word, and I know we’re too good
-friends for you to object. You see, Ned, when you look at the past—”
-
-“To hell with the past,” answered Dingle shortly. “It’s the future I
-look at. You take my tip and keep out of this—specially seeing you
-wanted her yourself once.”
-
-“I must speak,” answered the vatman mildly, “and just for that
-reason, Ned. When she took you, you’ll remember I followed a very
-self-respecting line about it. But at your wish—at your wish, Ned—I
-kept my friendship for Medora and you; and it’s out of that friendship
-I want to say I think things might be bettered.”
-
-“She’s been washing our dirty linen for your pleasure then?”
-
-“Not at all. But—”
-
-“God damn it!” burst out the other. “Ain’t there to be any peace left
-in the world? You get out of this and keep out of it, or—”
-
-“Don’t be silly, Ned,—listen.”
-
-“To you? Not much. There’s some hooken-snivey going on here by the
-looks of it. Blast you—there—that’s my answer to you!”
-
-Dingle, in a white-hot passion, swung his arm, hit Kellock on the side
-of his head with a tremendous blow and knocked him down. They were on
-the edge of the lake and Medora’s champion rolled over and fell into
-water ten feet deep. He was stunned and sank, then came to the surface
-again.
-
-Ned’s rage vanished with the blow, for now he saw in a moment the
-gravity of the situation. Kellock appeared to be unconscious and would
-certainly drown if left in the water.
-
-The man on the bank flung himself upon his stomach, leant over, gripped
-his victim by the collar and dragged him breast high under the bank. In
-this position Kellock came at once to his senses.
-
-“I’m sorry—I’m cruel sorry,” said Dingle. “Lift up your hands and put
-’em round my neck—then I’ll heave you out.”
-
-Kellock opened his eyes and panted, but did nothing for a moment.
-
-“For God’s sake make an effort—I can’t help you else. Get your arms
-round my neck, Jordan.”
-
-The other obeyed and in a few moments he was safe. Ned fished his cap
-out of the water, wrung it and handed it to him.
-
-“I’m bitter sorry—my cursed temper.”
-
-Kellock sat down for a moment and pressed the water out of his clothes.
-He was quite calm.
-
-“I dare say it was natural,” he answered. “If you’d but listened—”
-
-“You can’t listen to things if you’re in hell. Take my arm. No good
-biding here. I’ll see you to your house. You can have the law of me.
-I deserve it. I’m no bloody good to anybody in the world now-a-days.
-Better I was locked up, I reckon.”
-
-“Don’t talk rot. We’re all learners. You’ve learned me something
-anyway. See me home. I’m dazed, but I shall be all right in a minute.
-And don’t let on about this. I shall say I slipped on the edge of the
-water and fell in and bruised my head—just an accident and my fault.
-And so it was my fault.”
-
-“I won’t have that. You rub it in. I’ve earned it. I shall tell the
-people what I am, if you don’t.”
-
-“That won’t do,” answered the other. “Think of me as well as yourself
-in that matter. You’re popular; I’m not; and if they hear you’ve
-knocked me into the water, they’ll say there was a reason for it.”
-
-Dingle did not answer, but he knew this to be true.
-
-“Least said soonest mended then.”
-
-“For your wife’s sake, Ned.”
-
-“Leave her out, please. I’m in your debt and I shan’t forget it.”
-
-They met some women returning to the works and lied to them. All
-expressed great concern. Then Ned brought Kellock to his rooms and
-begged him to drink some spirits which he refused to do.
-
-“Mind we tell the same tale about this,” said Jordan. “I fell in and
-you grabbed me from the bank and brought me ashore. After all it’s the
-truth, so far as it goes.”
-
-Dingle agreed and then returned to his work; while the injured man,
-though in considerable pain, only waited to change his clothes and then
-hastened back to the Mill, to explain his accident and be chaffed for
-his carelessness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE OLD PRIORY
-
-
-There was none to drag up the melancholy blossoms of Medora’s woe
-and display the fact that they had no roots; but she kept them alive
-nevertheless; and since she was tickled to persist in folly by the
-increasing interest created from her alleged sufferings, she woke up
-to find those sufferings real at last. She had now earned a great
-deal of pity and won a reputation for patience and endurance. She had
-also awakened a certain measure of feeling against Ned, which was
-inevitable, and now conditions which she had implied, knowing at the
-bottom of her heart they did not exist, began to develop in reality.
-The man was not built to watch Medora’s histrionics in patience for
-ever, and she found him growing harsh and rough.
-
-Then there was no more play-acting for Medora. Outraged in every
-instinct, her sense of humour dead and her self-consciousness morbidly
-hypertrophied, she began to hate the man she had married. The cause of
-his changed attitude she forgot; and the bad usage for which she had
-deliberately played, when it came she resented with all her soul. Now
-she ceased to be a wife to him and daily threatened to leave him.
-
-A series of incidents more or less painful led to the threshold of
-complete estrangement and Medora was always ahead of her husband and
-always a good stage farther advanced to the final rupture than was he.
-Indeed he never knew until the climax burst upon him that it was so
-near. He did wrong things at this season, was hard when he should have
-been gentle, and allowed himself brutalities of speech and action.
-But again and again after such ebullitions, he was contrite, abased
-himself and implored Medora to help him to a better comradeship and
-understanding.
-
-Each sought to confide, and Ned confided in Medora herself, while she
-went elsewhere. Her interest was rapidly shifting and her husband’s
-efforts at reconciliation meant nothing now. For the time being she
-heartily loathed him, and the sound of his voice in the house, and
-the fall of his foot. Yet between his furies he had struggled hard to
-restore their friendship. He had confessed the incident with Kellock
-and described to Medora how, in his passion that anybody should presume
-to come between them, even with good advice, he had turned on the
-vatman, knocked him into the water and then pulled him out again.
-
-“He meant well; but it shows what a state I’m in that I could do it. He
-forgave me quickly enough, but I couldn’t forgive myself. And I only
-tell you, Medora, to show what a perilous and unnatural frame of mind
-I’ve got to. It’s all so properly cruel—as if some unseen devil had
-poked his claws into our affairs and was trying to tear ’em apart. And
-God knows I’ll do any mortal thing that man can do to right it.”
-
-She was, however, much more interested in the disaster to Kellock.
-
-“What did he say that made you try to murder him?” she asked.
-
-“I didn’t try to murder him—I only shut his mouth. So I don’t know
-what he was going to say. He admitted I was right anyway, and that it
-was not his place to interfere.”
-
-“Nobody’s got the right to talk sense to you seemingly.”
-
-“I’m not telling you this for you to begin on me again,” he said. “I’m
-telling you to show you what you’re doing and what you’ve done to my
-temper. If anybody had told me a year ago I’d forget myself and knock a
-man down for trying to do me a good turn, I’d never have believed it.
-Yet such is my state that I did so. And since then I’ve asked Jordan to
-speak about the thing and give me any advice he could; but he’s told me
-frankly the time has passed for that. He won’t speak now. He forgave
-me for knocking him into the water; but I can see with half an eye he
-don’t want any more to do with me.”
-
-Medora, well knowing why this was, yet pretended not to know.
-
-“You must ask yourself for a reason then and no doubt your conscience
-will find it, Ned. We must cut a loss before long—you and me—for I
-don’t want to die under this. I can’t stand very much more and I dare
-say you feel the same.”
-
-“What d’you mean by ‘cut a loss’?” he asked.
-
-But after any pregnant remark of this description, Medora temporised
-for a time and preferred to be indefinite.
-
-“I don’t know what I mean,” she answered. “There’s times when I wish I
-was out of it, young as I am. I can suffer and suffer of course. I’m
-strong and there’s no limit to my endurance. But I’m beginning to ask
-myself ‘why?’ And for that matter there are one or two others asking me
-the same question.”
-
-“No doubt,” he said. “The woman’s always right if her face is pretty
-enough. You’ve got the art always to be in the right, and there’s only
-one on God’s earth, and that’s me, who knows you’re wickedly in the
-wrong quite as often as I am. It’s your wrongs in other people’s mouths
-that made me do wrong; and when you saw me setting out with all my
-heart to be patient and win you back again, you set yourself wickedly
-to work to break down my patience and egg me on. Again and again you’ve
-kept at me till I’ve gone too far and done evil; and then you’ve run
-about everywhere and let everybody know what a coward and brute I am.”
-
-“That’s the way you talk,” she said, “and I can only listen with my
-heart broken. You say these things for no reason but to make me angry,
-and as to patience, even you will grant, if there’s any justice left
-in you, that my patience has never broke down from the first. And when
-the people have talked, I’ve laughed it off and put a bright face on
-it.”
-
-“Yes, I know that bright face—as though you were saying, ‘you see I’m
-an angel already and only want the wings.’”
-
-“Oh, your tongue!” she answered. “To think that ever you could scourge
-a good wife with such bitter, biting words.”
-
-Then she wept and he cursed and went out. It was a scene typical of
-others; but from the moment that Medora heard of Kellock’s immersion
-she could not rest until she had let him know she knew it. They were
-meeting now unknown to Dingle, for though Jordan at first protested
-against any private conference, Medora quickly over-ruled him. For
-a month she had made it clear that only the wisdom of Mr. Kellock
-was keeping her sane; and he believed it. Nor was this altogether
-untrue, for Medora, now genuinely miserable, began to seek increasing
-sustenance and support from her old lover.
-
-As in the case of all her other schemes for entertainment and
-exaltation, she crept to this and let it develop slowly. As the rift
-between her and Ned grew wider, the gap narrowed between her and Jordan
-Kellock. At each meeting she decreased the distance between them, yet
-never by definite word or deed appeared to be doing so. Kellock himself
-did not realise it. He knew the fact and taxed his own conscience with
-it at first; but then for a time his conscience left him in doubt as
-to his duty, until in the light of Medora’s increasing sufferings, it
-spoke more distinctly and chimed dangerously with his inclination.
-
-His whole life was dominated by this great matter. It had become
-personal and he wrestled with his difficulties by day and night. Medora
-was one of those women who have a marvellous power of influencing
-other judgments. She had a fatal gift to waken dislike and distrust
-of another person in the mind of a third. She had already created
-aversion for Ned in the minds of several women; now Jordan, despite
-his own reason, felt himself beginning to hate Dingle as heartily
-as Medora appeared to do. He fought this emotion for a time; but
-found it impossible any longer to maintain an impartial attitude.
-He told himself that it was only false sentiment to pretend farther
-impartiality. Justice demanded antagonism to Ned in the future—not
-because Medora had once been Jordan’s whole hope and desire and was now
-herself unhappy and friendless; but because, as an honest man, Kellock
-could not longer be impartial.
-
-His views of life were changing; his orderly mind was beginning to
-suspect that strong action might be necessary. Justice was the word
-most often on his lips; and yet knowing that he loved Medora, he was
-intelligent enough to perceive that inclination might be deluding him
-and making apparently simple what, in reality, was complex. For a time
-he hesitated; then came a day when he met Medora by appointment and
-felt it impossible to stand outside her life any longer. She, indeed,
-forced his hand and made it clear that she was going to take definite
-steps for her own salvation.
-
-Medora, on her way to Priory Farm one Sunday afternoon, had arranged to
-meet Kellock at the ruins of the building that gave the farm its name.
-Here they would be safe from any interruption.
-
-The fragment of masonry crowned Mr. Dolbear’s orchard on the summit of
-the hill that fell into Cornworthy. Here, heaved up against the sky
-in its ivy mantle, stood the meagre remains of an old priory, one of
-the smaller houses of the Austin nuns, founded by the Norman lords of
-Totnes.
-
-It consisted of a great gateway with a roof vaulted, ribbed and bossed,
-and a lesser entrance that stood to the north of the first. They
-pierced the mass and bore above them a chamber, of which only the floor
-and ruined walls remained. It was reached by a stair, where stone
-steps wound in the thickness of the wall and opened on to the crown
-of the ruin fifty feet above. The space aloft was hung with polypody
-and spleenwort in the chinks of its crumbling mortar, and ivy knots
-seemed to hold the mass together. A whitethorn had found foothold
-and rose above the central block of stone. Through a ruined aperture
-facing east, one might see the orchard sloping to the valley bottom and
-Cornworthy’s scattered dwellings, ascending on the farther hill. The
-picture, set in the grey granite frame of the priory window, revealed
-thatched houses grouped closely, with land sweeping upwards on either
-side, so that the hamlet lay in a dingle between the breasts of the
-red earth. The land climbed on beyond the village and threw a hogged
-back across the sky. Here were broad fallows and hedgerows where the
-leafless elms broke the line with their grey skeletons. To this exalted
-but secret place, Medora and Kellock were come. He had indeed been
-there some time when she arrived.
-
-“If you sit here,” he said, “you’re out of the wind.”
-
-“We’re safe now,” she answered. “And ’twas like you to put yourself
-about and tramp all this way. But I’ve got to be terrible careful,
-Jordan, for if my husband thought I’d any friends working for me and
-thinking for me, I don’t know what awful thing he’d do against me. Nuns
-used to live here in past ages,” she continued. “Oh, my God! I wish I’d
-been one of them. Then I should have spent my days in peace and be at
-rest now.”
-
-“Sit down and let’s use our time as best we can,” he advised.
-
-“Time—time—I want for time to end. For two pins I’d jump out of that
-window and end all time so far as I’m concerned.”
-
-“You mustn’t talk or think like that, or else I shall fear I can’t be
-any use. I tell you, before God, that my life’s all centred in you and
-your troubles now. I shan’t have no peace till you have peace.”
-
-“I’ll live for you then; and that’s about all I want to live for any
-longer,” declared Medora. She felt in a theatrical mood and Ned’s
-recent confession enabled her to speak with a great oncoming of warmth
-and emotion. Her perception had fastened upon it from the first and
-measured its value.
-
-And now in the Priory ruin, she made the most of the matter. She had
-worked it up and found it a tower of strength.
-
-“I know what happened,” she said. “You hid it, Jordan, like the man you
-are; but he told me how he knocked you into the water—cruel devil.”
-
-“I’m sorry he told you.—I asked him not to.”
-
-“He wanted me to see what he could do, and would do again, and will do
-again. He properly hates me now, and I shall soon be going in fear of
-my life—I know that well enough. Not that I care much for my life; but
-it’s awful to live with a tiger.”
-
-“You don’t mean that, Medora?”
-
-“I do then. He’s far ways different from what he was, or what
-anybody thinks. He may pretend in the works; but he’s got the temper
-of a devil; and sometimes I wish he’d strike and finish me; and
-sometimes—I’m young and I don’t like to think of dying—sometimes I
-say to myself I’ll make a bolt for it and go out into the world and
-chance it. The world would be kinder than him and anyway it couldn’t be
-crueller.”
-
-“This is fearful—fearful,” he exclaimed. “I can’t stand you saying
-these things, Medora.”
-
-“I wouldn’t if they weren’t true. It can’t go on. I hate to distress
-you, but there’s not a soul in the world cares a button what becomes
-of me but you. I’m punished for the past I suppose. I deserve it.
-I took that cruel tyrant when I might have took you—there, don’t
-listen to me. I’m mad to-day.” She worked herself into tears and wept
-convulsively, while he stared helplessly out at the world. His mind
-moved. He could not stand her continued suffering, and the confession
-and assurance of danger inspired him to thoughts of action. Something
-must be done. She was in evident peril now. Any day might bring the
-awful news of a disaster beyond repair. Such things were in every
-newspaper. Not for an instant did he doubt the critical nature of the
-situation. He hated to think Medora must presently return home to sleep
-under the same roof as her husband. To his order of mind the situation
-appealed with the uttermost gravity, for not an inkling of the true
-Medora tinctured his impression and he was as ignorant of the true
-Ned. He trusted the woman absolutely and he loved her. He steadfastly
-believed now that the most precious life in the world to him was in
-torment and in danger. She had, under dreadful stress of emotion as it
-appeared, more than once expressed her regret at the fatal step in the
-past. She had mourned frankly and explicitly at taking Dingle, when she
-might have married Kellock himself.
-
-Here then was the tremendous problem for him; and so pressing and
-immediate did it appear, that the young man was driven out of his usual
-level attitude of mind and customary deliberation before the demands of
-life. For the moment his future ambitions and purposes were lost: he
-was only urged by the instant necessity to decide what might best be
-done for Medora’s sake. Immense prospects opened before him—knightly
-deeds, and unconventional achievements calling for great efforts and an
-indifference to all commonplace, social standards.
-
-He was prepared at a future time to make war upon society for the sake
-of his class, if the occasion demanded it. He fully intended presently
-to stand forth with the protagonists of labour and fight for socialism.
-He anticipated that battle and was educating and priming himself for
-it. As yet the great revolt belonged to the future and there his
-ultimate ambition lay; but now an immediate personal appeal confronted
-him—a matter in which he himself and his own happiness were deeply
-involved. And more than himself, for he felt that Medora’s future now
-hung in the balance. Her destiny waited on him.
-
-But he did not tell Medora the result of his reflections. For the
-moment he bade her be of good cheer and trust him.
-
-While she sobbed, he considered and then, feeling it was time to speak,
-comforted her.
-
-“I’m glad you’ve told me all this,” he said. “It shows you know where
-you can put your faith. And since you come to me with it, Medora, I’ll
-make it my business. I’m only a human man and I loved you with all my
-heart, and I do love you with all my heart still, and now the case is
-altered. I should never have thought of you again—not in that way—if
-your married life had turned out all right; but as it’s turned out all
-wrong, then it’s up to me to come into your life again. May I do so?”
-
-“You’re the only thing in my life,” she said, drying her eyes.
-“Everything else makes me want to end it—yes, I’ve thought often of
-that, Jordan. But I’ll thankfully put myself in your hands and be
-patient a bit longer if you tell me to.”
-
-“It ain’t a case for waiting,” he said. “It’s a case for doing. I don’t
-know what fear is myself, and more did you till he made you. It looks
-very much to me as if you’d have to come to me, Medora.”
-
-“Oh, my God—could you?”
-
-“Yes, I could, and I will.”
-
-“Think of yourself—it’s like your bravery to put me first and I’d be
-your slave and live for you and thank Heaven for its blessings; but I
-don’t want to ruin your life, you good, brave man.”
-
-“Nobody can ruin your life but yourself,” he answered, “and if I save
-your life, it won’t be to ruin my own. Say you’d like it to be so and
-leave the rest to me. I mean it, Medora.”
-
-A dream that had often filled the girl’s waking thoughts suddenly
-promised to come true and for a moment she was frightened. But only for
-a moment. She hardly hesitated. Here was romance, fame, the centre of
-the stage—everything. She knew very well that she could trust him, and
-if ever she loved and adored the impassive vatman it was at this moment.
-
-She took his hand and pressed her lips to it.
-
-“Like it!” she cried. “It would be heaven on earth—heaven on earth.
-And God’s my judge you shan’t repent it. I’ll live for you and die for
-you.”
-
-“So be it, Medora. It’s done.”
-
-He put his arms round her and kissed her. Then both felt a secret
-desire to be alone and consider the magnitude of the decision. He
-voiced this wish.
-
-“We’ll part now,” he said. “You go down to your mother and I’ll go
-home. Be quite easy in your mind and cheerful and content. Leave the
-rest to me. I’ll write to you to-night after I’ve gone all through it.
-It ain’t so difficult as it sounds if we back each other up properly.
-I’ll see you get the letter to-morrow out of sight of everybody at the
-works. Be round by the vat house half after eleven. You’ve got a man to
-deal with—remember that.”
-
-“God bless you,” she answered very earnestly. “I’m yours now, and
-never, never shall you repent of it, Jordan. You can trust me same as I
-trust you in everything.”
-
-They descended the winding stair of the ruin and then parted. Medora
-went down through the orchard to her mother’s home at Priory Farm,
-while Kellock, climbing through the hedge, presently set his face to
-Dene and strolled down the Corkscrew Lane with his mind full of the
-future. He found that thought persisted in drifting away from Medora to
-her husband. He had just told her that she had a man to deal with; and
-now it was impressed on Kellock that he, also, had to deal with a man.
-
-Meantime Ned’s wife reached the farm, and before she did so, she bathed
-her eyes at a little stream under the orchard hedge.
-
-She appeared in an unusually contented frame of mind and Lydia was
-glad to see her so. Another guest had arrived, for Philander Knox, at
-Mrs. Trivett’s invitation, visited Priory Farm. A friendship had sprung
-up between him and the widow, for modest though Lydia might be, she
-could not fail to perceive her company was agreeable to Mr. Knox. He
-would listen to her opinions in a flattering manner and often expressed
-surprise to mark how her sense chimed with his experience. His own
-philosophy and general outlook on life were approved by Mrs. Trivett
-and on this occasion she had invited him to drink tea at Priory Farm
-and meet her brother and his family.
-
-He had come and, as all who first penetrated into the life of the
-farm, found himself bewildered by its complications. The children, the
-mother, and the helpless father appeared to revolve as a system of
-greater and lesser planets around the steadfast sun of Lydia. She moved
-in the chaos as though it were her proper environment—“like a ship in
-a storm,” as Mr. Knox afterwards told her.
-
-Philander had designed to enliven the tea with humorous chatter. He
-wished to impress Mr. Dolbear and his wife favourably, for he was a
-sociable person and anxious to increase the number of friends in his
-new home; but he found a meal at Priory Farm no occasion for much
-intercourse or advancement of amenities. It proved a strenuous and
-rather exasperating affair. The children dominated the tea and the tea
-table. They chattered until they had eaten all they could and departed;
-then, when the visitor hoped that his opportunity had come, he found,
-instead, that their mother took up the conversation and discussed the
-vanished youngsters one by one. She lingered over each as a gardener
-over his treasures, or a connoisseur over his collection. They were an
-incomparable group of children, it appeared; and what puzzled Philander
-was to find that Lydia enjoyed the subject as much as Mary herself. She
-also knew the children by heart and was evidently devoted to each and
-all of them.
-
-Tom Dolbear said very little, but enjoyed listening. His brood rejoiced
-him and he lived now in hope of another boy.
-
-It was Medora who strove to change the subject and allow Bobby and
-Milly and Clara and Jenny and the rest to drop out of the conversation.
-
-“Mr. Knox will be sick to death of your babies, Aunt Polly,” she said.
-
-“Far from it,” he declared. “A finer, hopefuller family I never wish to
-see.”
-
-Mr. Dolbear then invited Philander to come into the garden and smoke,
-but finding the ladies were not prepared to accompany them, he declined.
-
-“If it’s all the same to you, I’ll rest here until I must get going,”
-he answered. “I’m not used to your hills yet and they weary my legs a
-lot. Never a great walker—after the way of town birds that have lived
-all their lives by a tram line.”
-
-So he sat and smoked, while Lydia cleared the tea things and Medora
-helped her.
-
-With Mrs. Trivett there were few opportunities for speech. She came
-and went and worked. Then the dusk fell and the younger Dolbears were
-brought in to go to bed. Medora nursed the baby for a time and her
-mother noticed that she was more than usually cheerful.
-
-Knox then declared that he must be going home and offered to escort
-Medora. She agreed and having thanked Tom for his hospitality and hoped
-that he might be privileged to accept it again at some future time, he
-took his leave. On the way home he spoke to his companion.
-
-“Your mother’s a wonderful woman, Mrs. Dingle,” he said. “I see these
-things from the outside and I’m properly astonished at her cleverness.”
-
-“So she is,” admitted Medora. “But I wish she wouldn’t work so hard all
-the same. She does her day at the Mill and then comes back home and
-instead of getting her proper rest—well, you see what it is.”
-
-“She’s like the mainspring of a watch,” declared Philander. “’Tis a
-most delicate contrivance, yet all depends upon it; and if I may say
-so, as an outsider, you can see with half an eye that her relations
-depend upon her for everything.”
-
-“They do—they do. If anything happened to mother, I don’t know what
-would become of Aunt and Uncle—let alone all the children.”
-
-“They don’t know their luck,” he said, and Medora agreed with him.
-
-“I’m glad you see it. I’ve often thought that—so have other people. My
-mother at Priory Farm is like a cheese-cake in a pigstye.”
-
-“Strong, but not too strong. She must have great affection for them to
-stand it.”
-
-“Once a man offered for mother,” said Medora; “and, at the first
-whisper of it, Uncle Tom and Aunt Polly pretty well went on their knees
-to her not to leave them.”
-
-“I can well believe it. It didn’t come to anything, however?”
-
-“No, no—mother’s not for another husband.”
-
-“If anything might make her think upon such a change, it would be that
-household surely.”
-
-“No,” answered Medora. “It’s just that helpless household that would
-make her sacrifice herself. Duty’s her God. She’s mother to all those
-children—more their mother than Aunt Polly in a way—for my aunt is so
-busy bringing them into the world, that she’s got to leave all the rest
-of the work to other people.”
-
-Mr. Knox shook his head.
-
-“It’s contrary to nature that such a fine woman as Mrs. Trivett should
-hide her light under that bushel,” he asserted. “It’s a very selfish
-thing to let her slave and wear her fingers to the bone like that; but
-it often happens so. A husband and wife with a long family always seem
-to fasten on some good-natured, kindly creature and drag her in their
-house to be a slave to their children. There’s no selfishness like the
-selfishness of a pair with a long quiver. They’ll fairly batter the
-life out of anybody who’s fool enough to lend a hand; and the more such
-a person does for the other woman’s children, the more she may do. But
-I should hope your mother was too proud to let herself be used as a
-nursemaid to her own nieces.”
-
-“She’s never proud where children are concerned,” answered Medora.
-“She’ll stop there till she’s worn out.”
-
-“A very gloomy picture and I hope you’re wrong, Mrs. Dingle,” he
-answered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE LETTER
-
-
-In the vat house there took place the transformation from liquid to
-solid, from pulp to paper, from a gruel-like, tenuous compound to a
-substance strong enough to stand strain of many pounds and last for
-centuries.
-
-Here was the largest building in the Mill—a very lofty, brightly
-lighted, airy hall, from whose open roof descended electric lights
-hanging above each vat. A steady whirr and throb of noisy engines made
-a din here, but the vatmen and their couchers were used to it and could
-hear themselves speak through the familiar riot.
-
-To the right, elevated under the roof, stood the range of chests—huge,
-round vessels, like little gasometers, into which the pulp descended
-from Ned Dingle when he had perfected it. There were eight of these fat
-monsters ranged in a row, and from them flowed the material to the vats
-as it was needed. The vats stood on the floor of the chamber—large,
-wide-mouthed troughs heated by steam from within. For the pulp is warm
-for the vatman, and some of the finest and most enduring papers demand
-such a high temperature that an operative’s hands are blistered and
-boiled at his work. Beside each vat is a hand-box of cold water, to dip
-and refresh the vatman’s fingers when the need arises.
-
-Within the vat revolves the “hog,” a toothed roller, which keeps the
-heavy pulp mixed and moving, and prevents any settlement of the fibre.
-
-On stages before the breasts of the vats stood the paper makers, and
-the wooden bands against which they leaned were polished with the
-friction of their aprons. Their tools were two—the mould—a flat,
-rectangular tray, or sieve, of copper wire as fine as gauze, with the
-water-mark let in upon it to tell the story of the future paper, and
-the deckle—a light wood and metal frame of four sides which fitted
-exactly over the mould and lifted an edge all round it to hold the
-pulp. The moulds varied from the size of two open sheets of notepaper,
-to great squares of “double elephant,” the noblest stuff the Mill
-produced. Moulds for these immense pieces once immersed in the pulp,
-called for great physical power to draw them cleanly and steadily back
-from the clinging fluid with their weight of material spread upon them.
-
-Kellock was making “double elephant” in a mighty mould. With his thumbs
-firmly set on the deckle edge, he lowered the tray into the snow-white
-pulp, sloping it towards him as he did so. He put it in, sank it flat
-under the pulp and drew it out again with one beautiful, rhythmic
-movement.
-
-The pulp sucked hard at the great mould, to drag it to the depths,
-but the man’s strength brought it steadily forth; and then he made
-his “stroke”—a complicated gesture, which levelled and settled the
-pulp on the mould and let the liquid escape through the gauze. Kellock
-gave a little jog to the right and to the left and ended with an
-indescribable, subtle, quivering movement which completed the task. It
-was the work of two seconds, and in his case a beautiful accomplishment
-full of grace and charm. He stood easily and firmly while every muscle
-of breast and arm, back and loins played its appointed part in the
-“stroke.”
-
-Mr. Trood often stood and watched Jordan for the pleasure of the sight.
-It was the most perfect style he had ever seen. He was a theorist and
-calculated that Kellock produced the very greatest amount of physical
-power for the least possible expenditure of muscular loss; while
-others, who made as good paper as he, squandered thousands of pounds
-of dynamical energy by a stroke full of superfluous gesture. But the
-stroke is never the same in any two vatmen. It develops, with each
-artificer’s knowledge of the craft, to produce that highly co-ordinated
-effort embraced in the operation of making a sheet of paper.
-
-Mr. Knox operated at the next vat and offered an object lesson. He did
-the same things that Kellock did; dipped his mould, drew it to him,
-brought it squarely out, jogged to right and left and gave that subtle,
-complex touch of completion; yet in his achievement a wholly different
-display met the observer. It seemed that he performed a piece of
-elaborate ritual before the altar of the vat.
-
-He bowed his head to right and left; he moved his tongue and his knees;
-he jerked his elbows and bent his back over the trough as a priest
-consecrating the elements of some sacramental mass. Then he bowed and
-nodded once more and the created sheet emerged from his mould. The
-effect was grotesque, and seen at a little distance a stranger had
-supposed that Mr. Knox was simply playing the fool for the amusement of
-his coucher and layer; but in reality he was working hard and making as
-fine and perfect paper as Kellock himself. His muscles were tuned to
-his task; he had lifted his sheer weight of forty tons or more by the
-end of the day and was none the worse for it. Nor could he have omitted
-one gesture from his elaborate style without upsetting everything and
-losing his stroke.
-
-So the transformation became accomplished and the millions of linen
-and cotton fibres scooped on to the mould ran into a thin mat or wad,
-which was a piece of paper. Why all these fragile and microscopic
-atoms should become so inter-twisted and mingled that they produce
-an integral fabric, it is difficult to understand; but this was the
-result of the former processes; and those to come would change the
-slab of wet, newly created stuff—now no more than a piece of soaked
-blotting-paper—to the perfected sheet.
-
-His stroke accomplished and the sediment levelled on the mould, Kellock
-brought his mould to the “stay”—a brass-bound ledge on his left hand.
-He lifted the deckle from it as he did so and the full mould was drawn
-up the stay to the “asp,” where his coucher stood. Then Kellock clasped
-the deckle on to his second mould, now returned from the coucher, and
-dipped again, while his assistant, taking the full mould from the asp,
-turned it over on to the accumulating pile of sheets rising on his
-plank. Then he ran the empty mould back along the bridge to Kellock’s
-hand and drew to himself the next full mould now waiting for him on the
-stay.
-
-So the process was endlessly repeated, and when the coucher’s pile
-of paper, with woollen welts between each new sheet, had grown large
-enough, it was removed, drawn away on a little trolley, which ran upon
-rails down the centre of the vat house, and taken to a press. Here the
-mass under a steady strain showed that the new sheets were still half
-water, for a fountain poured and spurted away on every side as the
-lever was turned.
-
-From this initial pressing each pile came back to the place of its
-creation and the layer, the third worker in the trinity at each vat,
-separated the paper from the woollens between the sheets and handed the
-felts back to the coucher as he needed them for his own task. The three
-men worked together like a machine with rhythmic action and wonderful
-swiftness. Then came the interval; the din of the machinery ceased for
-a while and the vatmen washed their hands.
-
-Each manual craft leaves its own marks, by which one skilled may tell
-a worker’s business, and the paper maker’s hands are deeply corned and
-calloused along the palms and joints. They are his stock in trade and
-he takes the utmost care of them, for a bleeding corn, or cut, or any
-wound instantly disables him and he cannot tend the vat until they are
-sound again.
-
-At this moment Robert Life was out of action, with a sore on his
-thumb, and employed for the time at other labour; but he joined the
-men in the dinner hour and shared a discussion concerning the supreme
-disaster which may fall to the vatman’s lot.
-
-“Did you ever lose your stroke?” asked Life of Mr. Knox. “I’ve heard of
-men that did—and never got it back no more.”
-
-“May it never happen to you, Robert,” answered the elder, “for anything
-more dreadful and shattering you can’t imagine. Yes, I lost my stroke
-eight years ago; and I can remember every item of the tragedy as if it
-was yesterday.”
-
-“Along of illness?” asked Life, “or your own fault?”
-
-“As I’m among friends,” replied Philander, “I’ll confess that it was
-my own fault. I tell you these things as a warning to you younger men.
-It was whiskey. I’d go on the burst sometimes, though never what you’d
-call a drinker. But I held an opinion it was better to have a fair
-wallow in it now and again with teetotal intervals, than to be always
-drinking, you see; and once I overdid it and lost my stroke. I came
-to the vat and dipped, but the touch was gone. I tried and failed and
-washed off again and again; but I couldn’t make paper. They came round
-me and said hopeful things, and I stood like a stuck pig among ’em and
-the sweat poured down my face. Then I dropped the mould and sneaked
-away and felt as if the end of the world had come. For I knew bitter
-well that often and often the stroke once lost is never got back.”
-
-“You got yours back, however?”
-
-“In my terror I signed the pledge and promised the Almighty a lot of
-very fine things if He’d be merciful and let me regain my skill. My
-self-respect was gone and I’d have grovelled to God, or anybody who
-could help me. My foreman was a very good chap and understood the
-nature of the disaster. He cheered me and felt so positive sure I
-should get it back, that I began to think I should myself. For in such
-case half the battle is to have cheerful, hopeful people about you,
-who’ll make light of the tragedy and say it’s going to be all right.
-The moral effect of that helps you to hope against hope and recover
-your nerve, when you come to try again. It’s all nerve really, and if
-you can get back your nerve, then you’ll probably get back your stroke.”
-
-“At the third trial I got mine back anyway, and ’twas a very fine
-example of the best in human nature to see how my coucher and layer
-shook hands with me when I made my first sheet and how glad my fellow
-vatmen were about it.”
-
-“And did you keep all your good promises?” asked Kellock.
-
-“For practical purposes, yes,” answered Philander. “I improved a good
-bit after that adventure and never went on the burst again. The pledge,
-however, I did not keep, because by experiment I found I could work
-better on beer than water; but spirits are a thing of the past. I don’t
-drink more than a whiskey or two a week now-a-days.”
-
-Kellock, at one stage in his secret thoughts at this season, had found
-his heart faint somewhat, for by temperament thus far he had been
-a thinker rather than a doer. His work ended, his leisure had been
-largely devoted to the welfare of his class, and he doubted not that he
-would turn a great part of his energies to labour questions and even
-abandon paper-making for a political career some day. Such was his
-dream; but for the present that had been swept aside.
-
-Thoughts of his own future gave him no lasting uneasiness. Whether
-he stopped at Dene, or went elsewhere, after running away with Mrs.
-Dingle, mattered nothing to him. His skill commanded a ready market
-and he could get work for the asking. He guessed, indeed, that Medora
-must desire to live as far from the haunts of her tragedy as possible;
-but he also knew that Matthew Trenchard would wish to keep him if
-he could. A more pressing problem concerned the future of Medora’s
-husband. Kellock’s orderly mind above all things would have liked to go
-to Ned, state the case clearly, prove to him that he was never destined
-to make his wife a happy woman and frankly suggest a change of partners
-for Medora. He was actually tempted to do this, and even went so far as
-to suggest it to Mrs. Dingle; but she, hiding a secret amazement at any
-enterprise so unromantic, assured him that such an action could only
-serve greatly to complicate their future if it did not actually ruin
-their plans altogether.
-
-“If he was like you,” she said, “and could listen to sense it might
-work; but you don’t want to get your head broken, Jordan, and that’s
-all that would happen. The more he knows he’s wrong and being wicked
-to me, the more he’d fight to keep me. He’s got into a horrible way
-of torturing me now. He properly feeds on my sufferings I believe.
-It’s now or never, for he’s breaking me down and I shan’t be company
-for any man much longer. Don’t think I want to make a scene, or add
-difficulties to your life. God knows I only want to be your right hand,
-and help you, and work as best I can for all the noble things you mean
-to do. But before that happens, you’ve got to play the hero a bit I’m
-afraid, and meet his brute force with your bravery and courage.”
-
-In fact Medora would not have missed the necessary theatricals for the
-world, and a peaceful interchange of husbands did not at all appeal to
-her. She had no desire to forego the excitement or the fame. She had
-thought a thousand times of the hum at the Mill when her place knew
-her no more, and there came the news that she had left her husband for
-a better and greater man. Probably she loved Kellock after a fashion;
-certainly she believed she did. In the unreal atmosphere that she now
-breathed, it seemed to her that Kellock was about to play Perseus to
-her Andromeda; but she had no wish that the matter should be settled
-amicably with the dragon. Jordan must do his part; otherwise her rôle
-would be lessened and reduced below the dignity proper to it.
-
-Since Ned was to blame for everything, reason demanded that retribution
-fall upon him. Only so could justice—poetical or otherwise—be done.
-If her departure were not to inflict adequate punishment upon him, then
-the salt was out of the situation. To Kellock this sounded vindictive,
-but he could not deny that it was human and natural. He remembered that
-Medora must not be expected to consider Ned’s feelings; though secretly
-he wished that she had been able to do so.
-
-But Medora was out for blood and her carnivorous instincts extended
-even to Kellock himself. He too must suffer, that she might complete
-her performance with due triumph. She pictured Jordan ostracised and
-turning to her for comfort and support. She saw herself doubted,
-misunderstood, but presently triumphing over everybody. She imagined
-Kellock lifted to heights unattainable without her steadfast aid. She
-felt a boundless confidence in her own intelligence and inspiration to
-help him. But he must certainly run away with her as a preliminary. He
-must outrage convention, focus all eyes and appear in the lurid light
-that beats on people who have the courage to do such things. She told
-him so and assisted at the simple preliminaries.
-
-He was about to take a fortnight’s holiday and it was decided that
-a day after he left Dene, Medora would join him at Newton Abbot and
-proceed to London with him.
-
-He agreed to this arrangement as the most seemly, and together they
-concocted the letter which Mr. Dingle would receive by post on the
-morning of Medora’s disappearance. She invited Jordan to assist her in
-this composition, but was sorry afterwards that she had done so, for
-her lover differed from her on certain particulars and deprecated the
-writing of several things that she desired to write.
-
-They planned the communication in the secrecy of the Priory ruin on
-a Sunday afternoon, and it was some time before the man had produced
-a clean draft for Medora to take away and copy. She wished to insert
-a demand, couched somewhat insolently, that Mr. Dingle would divorce
-his wife as swiftly as possible; but Kellock forbade this, because he
-felt that advice to Ned under such circumstances was undignified and
-altogether improper.
-
-“You can’t do that,” he said. “You must be reasonable and take it in a
-high-minded way. It’s for you to tell him what you’re going to do and
-the reason; but it ain’t for you to tell him what he’s got to do. You
-can safely leave that to him. You see in these cases, when they get in
-the papers, that a man and woman always go to an hotel together; and
-when that’s proved, the other man divorces her as a matter of course.
-That’s all there is to it.”
-
-At other points also he declined to support Medora’s wishes. She had
-designed some rather flagrant sentiments for this letter and felt that
-her action needed them. It was to be the letter of her life and, as
-she said, it had become her first wish to make Dingle feel what he had
-made her feel. But Kellock was calm and collected upon the subject, and
-finding composition of the letter awakened very considerably passion in
-Medora, he begged her to let him draft it and accept his idea of what
-such a document should be.
-
-“It may be read in open Court some day,” he said—a possibility that
-cheered her.
-
-She agreed therefore and hid her disappointment at what she regarded as
-a very colourless indictment. Jordan’s idea was something as lifeless
-as a lawyer’s letter, but equally crushing in its cold and remorseless
-statement of fact. Not a shadow of emotion marked it. There was nothing
-but the statement that finding she failed to please or satisfy her
-husband, and knowing their continued union could only destroy their
-happiness and self-control and self-respect, therefore—for both their
-sakes—Medora had decided to leave Ned and cast in her lot with
-Jordan Kellock, who was willing and anxious to make her his wife.
-Neither anger nor sorrow appeared in this communication as it left
-Kellock’s hands.
-
-She took the letter and thanked him gratefully for helping her. Then
-they tore up into very tiny fragments the various attempts before the
-finished article and so parted—not to meet again until they met for
-ever.
-
-And Medora, when alone, read his letter again and liked it less than
-before. That night her husband was out and she began her transcription,
-but when it came actually to copying Kellock’s sentences, their
-icy restraint began to annoy her. She stopped once or twice to ask
-herself how it was possible for any human being to write in a manner
-so detached. First she praised him for such amazing power and such
-remarkable reserve; then she reminded herself that this was to be her
-letter to her husband, not Jordan’s. Jordan proposed to write himself
-from London. She wondered a great deal what Jordan’s letter would be
-like. If the letter he had written for her made her shiver, surely
-the letter he wrote for himself would be a freezing matter. She told
-herself that Kellock was a saint. She felt uneasily proud of him
-already. She kept his heroism in her mind, and felt proud of herself,
-too, that such a man was willing to let her share his future, brilliant
-as it must certainly be.
-
-But the letter—her letter—stuck. She began arguing with herself about
-it. She told herself that it was not her style and Ned would know it.
-Obviously Ned must not suppose that Kellock had written the letter.
-She noted down a few sentences of the sort of letter she would have
-written without anybody’s assistance—the letter she had dreamed of
-writing—and it pleased her much. She found such a flow of words as
-seemed proper to the tremendous occasion. They glittered and flashed
-like knives. Invective and self-justification shared the burning pages.
-She surprised herself at the force and vigour of the phrases. Turning
-again to Kellock’s composition, she now found it hopelessly inadequate
-as compared with her own. It was true that she had promised Jordan
-to post it; but she changed her mind and determined to despatch her
-own production, as better suited to the parting, far more forcible,
-far more dramatic and far more the sort of letter she pictured Ned as
-showing to other people, after the blow had fallen.
-
-She paltered with the situation to the extent of writing another letter
-embodying a part of Kellock’s. And then she copied this, and copied it
-again. She destroyed the debris, including Kellock’s original draft,
-and left one letter perfect in every way—an exceedingly outrageous
-production.
-
-She sealed it up and next morning assured herself that, for all
-practical purposes, it was the letter Kellock had designed. From a
-decision to tell him that she had added a phrase or two, she doubted
-whether it was worth while. Finally she determined not to tell him that
-she had altered the letter.
-
-“It’s no good making needless complications,” she thought.
-
-She was very happy and excited. She lived in a dream for a week, and
-the reality of the things she had decided to do lay altogether outside
-her calculations and anticipations.
-
-Probably her greatest joy at this juncture centred, not so much in
-the happiness she had planned for herself and Jordan, as the thought
-of what people would say at Dene about their flight. She felt that to
-be invisible among her acquaintances on the morning of her departure,
-would have been even a greater delight than the first day in London
-with her future husband.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-LYDIA’S DAY
-
-
-Lydia Trivett always remembered the seventeenth day of March as the
-most remarkable anniversary in her career. For upon that day she
-experienced such a succession of extraordinary and unexpected shocks
-and strains, that, looking back afterwards, she marvelled how any human
-mind was strong enough to endure them and not break down under such
-massive and accumulated provocation.
-
-Enough adventures overtook Lydia on the seventeenth of March to suffice
-a well balanced woman for ten years.
-
-The day was Sunday and opened without incident; but hardly had Mrs.
-Trivett got her brother’s children off to church, when Tom Dolbear
-descended from his wife with the news that he was going for the doctor
-and calling for the nurse.
-
-“To-day makes or mars me,” he said. “If ’tis another girl, Lydia, I
-don’t know how I’ll bear up against it.”
-
-“Be hopeful,” she urged. “There’s a law called the law of averages, so
-Mr. Knox tells me, and according to that, a boy’s very nearly certain.”
-
-But Mr. Dolbear did not understand.
-
-“Tell the man he’s a fool then,” he answered as he laced up his boots.
-“Children can’t be regulated by law, though it’s just like the cussed
-conceit of lawyers to think they can. And God help us if they could
-ordain these things, for they’d drive tidy hard bargains I’ll warrant.”
-
-“’Tis a law of nature, not of lawyers,” explained his sister. “I don’t
-know nothing about it myself, but the common sense is that after such
-a lot of girls, you’ve a right to expect a boy, and no doubt so it will
-be.”
-
-He departed and Lydia went to Mary. She was in no way concerned for
-her, because Mrs. Dolbear managed these matters very successfully and
-with the least possible trouble to herself. Nature invariably smiled
-upon her and her present anxiety merely echoed her husband’s.
-
-“God send it’s a man-child, or else I shan’t hear the last of it,” she
-murmured.
-
-All was ready to welcome the new-comer and in half an hour Mrs.
-Dolbear’s ally, Mrs. Damerell from the village, joined her. The
-children came home from church and Lydia gave them their dinner and
-told them that a new brother or sister was about to arrive. They shared
-the family ambition and prayed Aunt Lydia to let it be a brother.
-
-“I think it will be,” she said, “but that’s for God to decide.”
-
-“Nobody don’t want no more girls,” declared the eldest daughter, and
-her aunt told her not to speak so.
-
-“’Tisn’t what we want; ’tis what our Father in Heaven wants, Milly. And
-if He sends father and mother a little girl, we must welcome it just so
-hearty as you and your sisters were welcomed in your turn.”
-
-Mr. Dolbear was restless, but he ate as good a dinner as usual and
-then, having heard that all was going well, went into the orchard with
-his pipe. The children were despatched to Sunday school and presently
-an old doctor arrived, visited Mary and then joined the farmer under
-the apple trees.
-
-“A matter of form,” he said. “I come as a matter of form, Tom.”
-
-Mr. Dolbear enquired as to the law of averages, and the medical man
-advised him to set no faith upon it.
-
-“When you’re dealing with the statistics and the population as a whole,
-such things work out pretty regular, I grant you,” he explained, “but
-when you’re dealing with one woman, who has got into a habit, then
-it’s not wise to indulge in general principles. Habit is stronger than
-anything but death, Tom; and though you may fairly hope for a son, I
-may say in sporting language that the betting is a shade against.”
-
-“You think ’twill be a girl, doctor?”
-
-“I do—not long odds, but about two to one.”
-
-Within doors Lydia was standing reading a letter with shaking hands,
-while silent, strained, staring, humped up in the chair opposite her,
-sat Ned Dingle. He had come from Ashprington, burst in upon her while
-she was helping a maiden to wash up, ordered her to follow him to the
-parlour and then broken the fatal news.
-
-“She’s gone—run away—Medora,” he said. “She rose afore I was awake
-this morning, and when I came down house, I got this to breakfast. The
-post-man brought it, just as I was wondering what the mischief had
-become of her. Read it.”
-
-He handed Lydia Medora’s epistle and sat and watched her while she read
-it. He did not interrupt but kept his eyes on her face and gnawed his
-knuckles as she read.
-
-When she had finished, she let the fatal sheet fall on the ground and
-took off her glasses. Then she bent down and picked up the letter.
-
-“A cheerful, damned sort of thing for a husband to get,” said Ned.
-“Going to marry Kellock, you see.”
-
-“As to that, she’ll marry Kellock when you please and not before,”
-answered Lydia quietly. “I don’t know what to say to you, Ned. This
-is beyond anything. I never guessed for a moment she’d sink to such
-wickedness. God’s my judge I didn’t know she was having any truck with
-that man.”
-
-The nurse looked in.
-
-“Where’s doctor?” she asked.
-
-“In the orchard with Mr. Dolbear,” answered Lydia. Mrs. Damerell
-departed and she turned again to Ned.
-
-“It’s an insulting letter. I’m terribly shocked. I don’t pretend to
-understand the rising generation, my dear. After they grow out of
-childhood, they get too deep for me. But I couldn’t have thought any
-daughter of mine and my husband’s would ever have done this.”
-
-“It’s all very plain to understand now,” he answered. “She wanted that
-man and she couldn’t chuck me without some sort of excuse, so she
-worked up this idea, that I was a brute and tormenting her to death and
-so on. Then she made Kellock believe it; and though he kept perfectly
-straight, so far as I know, while he thought Medora was happily married
-to me, as soon as she began about me being a cruel devil that made her
-life hell and all that, then Kellock no doubt believed her. Why, he
-went so far as to lecture me a while back along, and I knocked him in
-the water for doing so. I’ll swear he had no thought to run away with
-her then—unless he’s the biggest traitor that ever walked the earth.
-But he ain’t that sort. I simply can’t see that man doing this job.”
-
-“I’m glad you can keep so cool and sensible, Ned. Nothing’s gained
-by getting angered, though I’m angered I promise you, and anger’s a
-righteous thing sometimes. I’m struck to the heart over this; and if
-I’d thought for an instant ’twas in her wicked mind even as a shadow,
-I’d have given you due notice. But I never dreamed it. I’ve talked
-to her again and again and tried to show her sense; but she’s doomed
-herself by her own nature.”
-
-“The mischief is I couldn’t read her,” answered Mr. Dingle. “Not that
-I didn’t at first. She married me for love—no other reason—and for
-the first six months—nay ten—of our life together, I read her like a
-book. But after that she changed. And she got stranger and stranger,
-as we went on, till be damned if I didn’t find myself living with a
-different woman! And, mind this, I was never rough nor harsh to her,
-till she’d egged me on to being so. I put up with a devil of a lot and
-kept my temper in a manner that surprised myself if not her; but she
-was out to make me lose it, because, till I did so, the things she
-wanted to happen couldn’t. And after a bit I did lose it. Who wouldn’t?
-Yet God’s my judge I was never very much enraged with her, because I
-always felt she was play-acting and making believe half the time; and
-that had a funny side; and sometimes it amused me more than it angered
-me. And above that was the sure knowledge that any open quarrel would
-be an unmanly thing and might lead to lasting trouble; and above that,
-again, was the fact that I loved Medora well. I never ceased to love
-her in her maddest tantrums.
-
-“Then comes this letter, and I can assure you it’s a bolt from the
-blue. And yet it’s all unreal somehow—I can’t grasp it home to me. I
-can’t believe it. I could almost laugh and say to myself it’s a dream
-and I shall wake up alongside Medora any minute.”
-
-His face was full of pain, as yet he showed more stunned surprise than
-anger.
-
-“I knew her so well—think of it,” he went on. “She must have her bit
-of fun and her bit of flattery; and she got both with me. But him—good
-God Almighty—she turned him down once for all eighteen months ago,
-and she told me why in very good plain words. And now she’s gone to
-him. Yet he’s not changed. He can’t change. There’s men I can see
-her with perhaps—though none as easy as I can see her with me—but
-him—Kellock—he’ll never satisfy her. It’s impossible.”
-
-“You’re right there,” said Lydia. “My daughter’s not the sort to be
-content to shine with her husband’s reflected light. The little fool
-wants to be somebody herself. It’s vanity quite as much as wickedness
-has made her do this. But she won’t shine with Kellock anyway; and
-after doing such a hateful, wicked thing, he won’t shine either. His
-light’s out now in the eyes of all self-respecting, honourable people.”
-
-“No, it isn’t,” he answered. “It will make a deuce of a lot of
-difference to Medora, but not to him, because he’s the sort that don’t
-let any outward thing alter their inward disposition. He’s thought it
-all out. He knows there’s not half a dozen men in the kingdom can make
-paper like him, and so he’s safe and beyond any punishment whatever he
-does. He’s done nothing the law can touch him for. And when I touch
-him, the law will be on his side against me.”
-
-Ned was still amazingly calm. Indeed his self-control astonished her.
-
-“So far I don’t know what’s happening,” he proceeded. “I don’t know
-where they are, or what they have planned. I’m keeping an open mind. I
-shall see him presently. I may swing for him yet; or I may find—Lord
-knows what I may find. It’s all hidden so far.”
-
-“I feel as if I was twenty years older for this news—older and broken
-too,” said Lydia. “If there was time, I’d weep a river for this, and
-I shall yet; but not now. There’s a baby coming upstairs, and you
-can’t think of two things to once and do ’em both justice. I’ll see
-you to-morrow in the dinner hour. Perhaps you’ll hear more by then.
-Kellock was a man very nice on speech, as well as manners. He’ll feel
-it’s up to him to—there, what am I saying?—the strangeness! Well may
-you say as though you was in a dream. So I feel; and I won’t throw up
-hope either. God often waits till the very last minute afore He throws
-the light of truth into a mind. He may prevail with Medora, and so I
-wouldn’t say nothing yet—nothing to nobody.”
-
-“I’m dazed,” he told her. “I scarce know what I’ve been doing since
-breakfast. Here’s your children coming back from Sunday school. I’ll be
-gone. It’s a bad job—an ugly, cruel job; but grasp hold of this tight,
-and whether you tell or whether you do not tell, remember the fault
-weren’t mine. I never treated her bad, not yet bullied her, nor played
-tyrant upon her; and if she said I did, she was a liar; and if ever I
-handled her rough, I was sorry after; and the worst ever I did weren’t
-a twentieth part of what she deserved.”
-
-“I know all that,” said Lydia; then the children clattered down the
-passage with shrill questions: “Be the baby come?” “Be it a boy?” “Oh,
-say ’tis a boy, Aunt Lydia!”
-
-Ned went off through the orchards, while his mother-in-law, scarce
-knowing what she did, gave the children their tea.
-
-Under the trees Mr. Dolbear padded up and down. He was in no fear for
-Mary, but suffering the extremity of anxiety as to the sex of the
-coming child.
-
-Ned told him the news.
-
-“My wife’s run away from me, Tom,” he said.
-
-“Have she? Fancy! The Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Blessed be
-the Name. I never did like Medora, and you’ll bear me out. Where’s she
-run then?”
-
-“I don’t know. She’s gone with Jordan Kellock, the vatman.”
-
-“God’ll see to it—trust Him, and don’t take the law in your own hands.”
-
-They talked for ten minutes; then a child appeared at the gate by the
-house. It was Milly, Mr. Dolbear’s favourite.
-
-“The news be come,” cried Tom, and ignoring Dingle, he hastened to his
-daughter, while Ned departed. The first shock was over and his deep
-disgrace and bitter wrong began to grind into him. So far he had kept
-amazingly temperate. But he was to experience many moods before he
-slept that night.
-
-Meantime Milly in tears broke bad news to the farmer.
-
-“There’s another beastly little girl come,” she piped, and her father
-gazed tragically at her and turned silently to his home. Lydia met him
-at the door.
-
-“Did Ned tell you of this awful misfortune?” she asked.
-
-“No,” he answered. “Milly told me, and I say here and now that it’s an
-outrage and undeserved.”
-
-“I’m thinking of Medora, Tom.”
-
-But Dolbear had no room in his mind for Medora. The children were all
-cast down and some wept.
-
-“I must go and comfort the woman,” said Mary’s husband. “She’ll feel
-this only less than I do. And I should like to hear parson justify
-it—not that he could. Just a piece of saucy cruelty against them
-who’ve done nought to deserve it. That’s what it is.”
-
-“Don’t you go souring her mind against the baby,” urged Lydia. “That
-wouldn’t be kind after all her trouble and patience. Say you’re
-pleased, Tom, and cheer her up.”
-
-“’Twould only be a lie if I did and nobody would know it better than
-her. I’ll go up and forget myself and comfort her as best I can—and
-God’s my judge, Lydia, I won’t have no more children.”
-
-“Don’t you say what you’ll be sorry for.”
-
-“I mean it. Them that plant the seed have a right to call the crops in
-my opinion; and there did ought to be fair give and take between the
-creature and his Creator. There weren’t no rhyme nor reason in planting
-another girl on me, and I ain’t going to be the plaything of the
-Almighty no more—and more shan’t Mary. We’ve done—through no fault of
-our own neither.”
-
-He ascended to a weary and apologetic partner who shared his view of
-the situation.
-
-“It’s the living daps of the last,” she said. “A nice little, heavy
-girl; but I can’t do no more, Tom; I can’t fight against Providence.”
-
-“No you can’t,” he declared, “and what’s more, you shan’t. You’ve
-broke the law of averages by all accounts; and that’s about the limit.
-And Somebody shall see that two can play at that game in the future.
-Providence have shut down on the boys; and I’ll shut down on the girls.
-It ain’t going to be all one way.”
-
-Mrs. Dolbear shed tears, but she shared his indignation and did not
-blame his attitude to the baby.
-
-Mrs. Damerell was shocked.
-
-“I wouldn’t open my mouth so wide if I was you, farmer,” she answered.
-“Who are you to dictate what you want? Here’s a fine female child come
-into the world, to be your right hand and the joy of your life for all
-you know to the contrary. I’m sure I never yet saw a pair receive a
-child in such a way, since the day that Honor Michelmore got one with
-no thumbs and cussed God. But in your case, Nature have always done
-her part to the full, and you’re saying things you didn’t ought, Mr.
-Dolbear.”
-
-“If you’re so pleased with it, you’d better take it home with you,”
-he answered. “It never can be no favourite of mine now, and I won’t
-pretend different.”
-
-Beneath Lydia was seeking to allay the disappointment of the family.
-
-“I shouldn’t wonder if she was the nicest little sister any of you ever
-had, my dears. A proper little fairy very likely, and the one you’ll
-all like best.”
-
-They vowed it never could be and Milly said: “Father hates her a’ready,
-so I be going to do the same.”
-
-Then Mrs. Trivett preached very seriously against this inhuman spirit
-and was still preaching when there came Philander Knox.
-
-“I thought the better the day the better the deed,” he explained, “and
-I hoped your young people would be going to church after their tea, so
-I might have a yarn with you.”
-
-“Very kind of you, I’m sure. Perhaps you’ll be able to distract my
-brother’s mind a thought. He’s very much under the weather. And I dare
-say it would be a good thing if a few of you was to go to church.”
-
-Milly, who loved church, but did not often attend evening service, was
-pleased at this plan and she took her younger sisters with her. Tom
-came down, smoked a pipe and grew calmer in the company of Mr. Knox;
-Lydia put the other children to bed—for the present the penultimate
-baby was in her room—and then Philander’s opportunity arrived, and
-after Mr. Dolbear had gone up the village, he enjoyed Lydia’s society
-for half an hour before interruption came.
-
-She told him what had happened to Medora and he wondered, while he
-discussed the tragedy, whether it might not, after all, help rather
-than hinder his own designs.
-
-“At first sight,” he said, “the human instinct is always to say that
-anything out of the common must be wrong; but that’s only our natural
-cowardice and love of letting life alone. And I, for one, am not going
-to say that because a woman changes husbands, or a man changes wives,
-it follows they are doing the wrong thing. Often a pinch of pluck
-will break a partnership to the advantage of both parties, and it’s a
-darned sight better than shaking their chains and making a nuisance
-of themselves in the face of the people. An unhappy marriage is a bad
-advertisement for the institution, and a man like me, who believes
-heart and soul in marriage, is always sorry to see an unhappy marriage
-go on.”
-
-“But if every young pair who quarrelled before their first child came
-was to part like this, the world couldn’t go on. Those that God have
-joined let no man put asunder.”
-
-“No man can,” he answered. “You needn’t worry about that. If God
-joins up a man and woman, man can’t put ’em asunder, nor yet anything
-else. They’re one body and soul till death parts ’em. But because a
-pair marry, it don’t follow that God have had anything to do with it.
-There’s a lot of other institutions besides God. We make mistakes in
-all walks of life and in none oftener than in marriage. And in my
-opinion it’s one of the things, like any other partnership, that God
-don’t specially take under His protection. Love is a trick of nature,
-and Nature says to herself, ‘if at first you don’t succeed, try
-again.’ Nature’s trying again with your daughter, Mrs. Trivett.”
-
-She sighed.
-
-“I wish to Heaven as Nature had left her alone then, for she was
-married to a good man, and whatever she feels about him, there’s no
-doubt he was ready and willing enough to love her to the end of his
-life.”
-
-“It often happens,” he answered, “and of course that sort of parting’s
-the saddest, where one party don’t want to part and t’other does. When
-both are fed up, then they can break loose with self-respect and mutual
-applause; but if one’s got to run away from the other, then the case is
-altered. But no doubt Ned Dingle will rise to it. He’s clever enough
-to know that it’s useless keeping a wife if she’s breaking her heart
-to escape. The fact that Medora has done this venturesome act and gone
-to another man, will show your son-in-law the game’s up. If she’d just
-gone off on her own, he might have hunted after her and won her back
-perhaps—if he wanted her back; but since she’s gone with somebody else
-and is ready to face all that means—well, that leaves her husband in
-no doubt of her meaning, don’t it?”
-
-“None whatever,” admitted Lydia. “You’ve got a brain, Mr. Knox, so
-perhaps you’ll tell me what you think of Kellock. She was divided
-between ’em in the past and decided for Ned—wisely as I thought,
-because it always seemed to me that Jordan Kellock was too wrapped up
-in reading and learning and high views about labour to make a young
-woman happy. If you’d asked me, I should have said it weren’t in him to
-run away with another man’s wife. I should have thought he was such a
-well-drilled man in his mind that he’d have stopped loving Medora the
-moment he heard she was going to marry Dingle.”
-
-“Kellock,” answered Philander Knox, “is all you say; but he’s young
-and he’s got a romantical turn, though it takes the practical shape of
-wanting to better the world at large. That’s all true, but he’s short
-of thirty still, and, under thirty, you never can say with certainty a
-man is complete in his make-up. He loved her, and if he thought she’d
-took a fatal mistake and married the wrong one, and if she told him
-so, as no doubt she did, then it’s not out of his character to find
-himself loving her again. And the instinct to fight the cause of the
-weak, which is a part of the man, wouldn’t be any less strong because
-he happened to love the weak party for herself. So it all fits in very
-natural so far, and your daughter may trust Kellock to champion her and
-be very tender and jealous and all that. He’ll treat her well without a
-doubt.”
-
-“And what sort of a husband will he make for my girl?”
-
-“That I can’t say,” answered Knox. “For the reason that I don’t know
-what your girl wants. If Ned didn’t suit her, then as Kellock’s just
-the opposite of him in every way, perhaps he will.”
-
-“Ned did suit her—that’s the shocking thing,” declared Lydia. “He
-suited her so perfectly that he suited her too well, if you can
-understand that. There was all sunshine and no shade, and Medora, so
-far as I can see, instead of blessing her good luck got sick of so much
-uneventful happiness, like a child gets sick of too much barley-sugar.
-Then she turned by a sort of restless instinct to find a bit of change.
-Of course she’s said for months that she was miserable; but she
-invented most of her misery in my opinion.”
-
-“Very interesting, and no doubt you know. But we middle-aged people can
-always see the young looking for trouble. ’Tis part of their natural
-curiosity and daring. They don’t know they’re born in fact, and that’s
-a thing you can’t teach a person. Each has got to learn it themselves.
-And some never do. We’ll watch and pray, Mrs. Trivett. That’s about all
-we can do for the young. And now I’ll tell you what I came about. And
-I’ll also promise that, so far as it lies in my power, I’ll befriend
-Medora if she comes back here.”
-
-“She can’t come back—she can’t do that.”
-
-“Leave her—you never know what the young can do, and what they can’t
-do. I’m here about you, not her. We’ve not known each other above six
-months, but knowledge of our fellow creatures ain’t a matter of time.
-’Tis understanding of character and like to like and so on. Another,
-finding you in trouble to-day, would hold off no doubt. But, just
-because you are in trouble, I’m going to hold on and say what I came
-to say. I respect and admire you very much out of the common, Mrs.
-Trivett, and I feel that it’s a crying shame to see you in this rabbit
-hutch, living the life of a maid-of-all-work for other people, when you
-ought to be the mistress of your own home. I say you ought to have a
-man to work for you, and look after you, and not let you toil and wear
-your fingers to the bone, either here, over your brother’s children, or
-in the rag shop. Your sense of justice must cry out against it, and so
-it ought and I feel it very much to heart. You drew me, from the first
-minutes I set eyes on you, for I saw all that you were and found, as I
-knew you better, you were even better than I thought. And, in a word,
-if you’ll throw over these Dolbears and come to me, I can promise a
-very faithful and friendly husband and one who will make it his first
-business and pleasure in life to give you a good time. ’Tis thought
-silly of a man over fifty-two to speak of love; but rest assured that
-such a man knows a darned sight more about it than green youth. You’ve
-had a good husband and I’ve had a good wife, according to her lights;
-then what’s to prevent us joining forces if you think half so well of
-me as I do of you?”
-
-Lydia was inconsequent.
-
-“If anybody had told me when I opened my eyes this morning what the day
-was going to bring forth,” she said, “God’s my judge I shouldn’t have
-had the heart, or courage to put on my clothes.”
-
-“Yes, you would,” he answered. “You’re the sort to meet all that comes
-steadfast and patient, with the pluck of an army. You’d have rose up as
-usual. And what about it?”
-
-“Nothing on earth is farther from my thoughts at present than a
-second,” she answered. “I regard myself as an old woman.”
-
-“Only because you live among all these messy children. You’re not old:
-you’re in your prime, and if you was to rest your flesh a bit, instead
-of wearing it out morning, noon and night, you’d very soon be surprised
-to find what a comely creature you’d find yourself.”
-
-“That’s all past. Duty is duty and God’s found the work to do.”
-
-“God’s also found me,” answered Mr. Knox, “and you must weigh me along
-with everything else. And if, as I see in your face, your inclination
-is to say ‘no,’ then I beg you’ll not say it—at any rate not this
-evening. You’re far too nice to decide the future career of a fellow
-creature, let alone your own, without turning it over fairly in your
-mind. I didn’t ask you to say ‘yes,’ all of a minute, because this is
-sprung upon you—you expected no such thing; but though I didn’t count
-on ‘yes,’ Lydia, I’m equally determined not to hear ‘no.’ So you can
-think all round it, and I wish you’d got more time to do so. However
-you’re a fair woman—fair and just to all but yourself—so I very well
-leave it at that for the present.”
-
-“To think a good-looking, clever man like you should have looked at a
-little every-day woman like me!” she said.
-
-“You won’t be every day no more if you’re Mrs. Knox,” he promised. “Far
-from it. You should go in a carriage and pair if it could be done, and
-though I can’t promise that, I can promise a nice house, and a bit of
-garden, and a professed cook to look after the kitchen and do your
-bidding. Think upon it.”
-
-“Don’t hope, however; ’tis a very unlikely thing that I should change
-my state with so many calls.”
-
-“Come to your own conclusions anyway,” he said. “I know what human
-nature is very well and I know what you are in this house. But don’t
-let selfishness on the part of other people decide you against me.
-That would be very unfair to me, and you can’t be unfair to a man that
-thinks of you as I do.”
-
-“I’ll do nothing unfair to you, Mr. Knox. In fact I’ll do nothing at
-all for the present. My sister-in-law mustn’t hear a word in her weak
-state, or the consequences might be bad; and my brother’s cast down
-also, and so am I. In fact trouble’s everywhere.”
-
-“Regard me as the silver lining to the cloud then. I quite see it was
-a bit of a staggerer this coming to-day of all days; but at any rate
-you know now you’ve got a valuable friend. And such I shall remain,
-whatever happens. Now, no doubt, you’re itching to get supper for
-all them brats, so I’ll go my way. And I pray God’s blessing on your
-thoughts, Lydia—I do indeed.”
-
-“Thank you,” she replied. “Yes, you go now. I can’t stand no more, else
-I shall break down—a thing I’m never known to do. I dare say I’ll see
-you at the works to-morrow. And don’t say nothing about Medora.”
-
-“Trust me,” he answered. “My one hope will be to help you in that
-quarter if I can. Don’t you despair. It may straighten out yet, though
-where two men and a woman’s the matter, there’s seldom more than one
-chance in fifty that things will come right.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-MEDORA’S NIGHT
-
-
-In a rowan-red gown and her best hat, Medora had left Ashprington while
-it was yet twilight of morning. She carried only a light travelling
-basket made of cane, for she took little more than the clothes on her
-back. She proposed to begin the new life in new clothes, which would be
-bought in London. Even her wedding ring was left behind and she told
-herself that she would not wear such a thing again until Jordan Kellock
-set it on her finger.
-
-She met him as they had arranged, at Newton Abbot, and together they
-proceeded to London. He was serious on the journey and extraordinarily
-solicitous for Medora’s mental and physical comfort. She told him all
-that she had done and he explained his own purposes. At Bristol he
-got her a cup of tea and a piece of cake. They had enjoyed privacy so
-far; but now others entered the carriage and they could talk no more.
-So Mrs. Dingle fell back on her thoughts and pictured the sequence of
-events at home, while Kellock read a newspaper. Her heart beat high
-when London was reached and the train plunged into Paddington.
-
-“I’m afraid we must practice a little guile, Medora,” he said as they
-walked down Praed Street, Jordan carrying their luggage; “but as little
-as possible.”
-
-They proceeded to Edgeware Road, where the man knew a small hotel.
-
-“Keep on your gloves for the moment,” he advised. “The first thing I
-shall do to-morrow will be to buy you a wedding ring.”
-
-“We are married,” declared Medora. “Already I feel as properly married
-to you as I can be.”
-
-But he soared to no such imaginative heights.
-
-“Marriage is marriage,” he answered. “We must possess our souls in
-patience.”
-
-He spoke as though he were not going to find this difficult. Indeed he
-was nervous and anxious to have certain preliminaries completed. At the
-“Edgeware Arms” Kellock asked for two bedrooms with a firm voice and
-registered their names as “Mr. and Mrs. Jordan Kellock, from Totnes,
-Devonshire.”
-
-They went upstairs together, led by a boy who carried Medora’s
-travelling basket and the man’s leather portmanteau. The bedrooms
-adjoined and Kellock invited Medora to choose her room. He then left
-her luggage there and went into the other himself.
-
-She unpacked with some emotion and wondered when he would come in to
-see her; but he did not come. She put on a pair of shoes and a white
-blouse. She washed and did her hair again, for it was untidy. Then she
-sat down to wait. Presently he knocked at the outer door.
-
-“Are you coming to supper?” he asked, and she rose and joined him.
-
-“Are you rested? I’m afraid you must be sinking.”
-
-“I’m quite all right. Is your room nice?”
-
-“Very comfortable. You don’t mind them adjoining?”
-
-“Why should I?”
-
-“There’s certainly no reason,” he admitted.
-
-They supped together cheerfully and he made her drink hot soup. He was
-a teetotaller but Medora asked for some beer.
-
-“I dare say I’ll get used to giving it up soon,” she said. “In fact I
-mean to. Where I can be like you, Jordan, I shall be. But I’m used to a
-glass for supper and I’m extra tired to-day.”
-
-He ordered a small bottle of Bass and under the stimulant she grew
-happy and confidential. She talked a great deal.
-
-“I didn’t think I should have been able to eat a bit,” she said, “but I
-never enjoyed a meal more.”
-
-“Nor me,” he answered. “When you’ve done, we’ll go and sit in the
-writing room. That’ll be empty, and we can chat. But I know you’re
-dog-tired, so I shan’t let you stop up long.”
-
-The smoking room looked more attractive to Medora. There was a haze
-in the air and a tang of cigar about the portal. A chink of glass and
-sound of laughter might be heard there. She would have liked to be
-seen sitting by Mr. Kellock in some comfortable corner, while he too
-smoked a cigar and drank some whiskey and soda perhaps, or one of the
-bright drinks in very little glasses. But she blamed herself for the
-wish. There must be no small fancies of this sort. Her triumph would
-never be displayed in public smoking rooms. She must realise that from
-the first. As though to mark the austere heights on which henceforth
-she would move, Jordan led the way to an empty writing room silent and
-dark. A decayed fire was perishing in the grate. He fumbled for an
-electric light and turned it on. Then he shut the door and drew an arm
-chair to the remains of the fire for her. He took a light chair and
-placed it opposite her.
-
-“Here we can talk in private,” he said.
-
-She looked at a sofa, but he failed to perceive her glance.
-
-“To-morrow,” he told her, “I begin the day by writing to Mr. Trenchard
-and your husband.”
-
-“For God’s sake don’t call him that any more. You’ll be telling me I’m
-Mrs. Dingle in a minute.”
-
-“As a matter of fact you are, Medora. We mustn’t dream beautiful dreams
-yet. We’ve got to face reality till we alter reality.”
-
-“My life’s not been reality so far—only a nightmare.”
-
-“Reality is nothing more than a question of time now. In fact you may
-say it’s begun, Medora.”
-
-“Yes, indeed, Jordan dear. You can’t guess what heaven it is to me to
-know I’m in your strong hands. I’ve come to rest after being tossed by
-cruel storms—to rest in your arms.”
-
-“I hope I’ll prove all you think me. I want to have the future clear
-and the past off our minds; and then we’ll just enjoy ourselves and
-have a bit of good fun.”
-
-She wondered what his idea of good fun would be. But she was not yet
-feeling much like fun. While the evening wore on and the fire went out
-and Kellock’s level voice proceeded to indicate the future as he hoped
-and desired it to be, she began to feel cold and depressed.
-
-“I shall inform Mr. Trenchard that I will return, or leave as he
-prefers. It really doesn’t matter to me; because, thank God, my ability
-makes me independent. Of course if you don’t want to go back, I
-shouldn’t think of doing so; but you do want to.”
-
-“Yes, I want to. I like the country.”
-
-“That will mean that your—that Mr. Dingle leaves.”
-
-“So he should; but he’s just the man not to see it.”
-
-“Obviously he must leave, or I must. I bear him a very bitter grudge
-for his cruelty to you, and I’m not going to pretend that I care about
-his future.”
-
-“I should hope not, Jordan.”
-
-“Far from it. Wrong done to you was wrong done to me. At least that is
-what it amounts to now. My feeling to Dingle will be the feeling of the
-strong to the weak, Medora. He must go if you wish to stop. Of course
-I’ve got very different ideas from him.”
-
-“I should hope you had.”
-
-“For instance, I wouldn’t let my wife work as he let you work.”
-
-She yawned presently and he exclaimed that he must not keep her up any
-longer.
-
-“You put everything out of your mind and go to bed,” he advised.
-“Would you like a cup of tea or anything before you go?”
-
-“Not if you wouldn’t,” she said.
-
-But he explained that he never took anything after his supper, and that
-the lighter his last meal, the better he slept.
-
-So she left him. He clasped her right hand in both his and shook it
-affectionately for some seconds; but he did not kiss her.
-
-“I shall turn in pretty soon myself,” he said. “But it’s not above ten
-o’clock yet. I’ll stop here and draft out those letters—that’ll save
-time to-morrow.”
-
-She went upstairs and presently, for curiosity, tried the door between
-her room and his. It was open and she went in. Through a Venetian blind
-slants of electric light from the street illuminated the chamber; but
-that did not show enough, so Medora turned on the light and looked for
-evidence of Jordan. They were starkly simple: a brush and comb on the
-dressing table, a shaving brush and a tooth brush and a nail brush
-and sponge on the washing-stand. Upon his bed lay a night shirt and
-against the door hung his overcoat and black squash hat and dark blue
-silk neckerchief. A few newspapers and books on economic and industrial
-subjects he had also brought. In a drawer of a chest of drawers were
-some collars and socks and two blue flannel shirts.
-
-What Medora expected to see she did not know, but what she did see
-depressed her. She put out the light and went back to her own room.
-Then all manners of doubts and wonders occupied her mind and her first
-purpose was to undress and get into bed as fast as possible before the
-man came upstairs. She hesitated about locking the door between them
-and decided to do so. His importunities would be rather delightful and
-human. For she felt that the humanity of Jordan was what she hungered
-and thirsted for. She adored his chivalry and wonderful tenderness
-and forethought; she perceived what a white knight he was—all these
-manifestations were duly recorded and valued. But now—surely it was
-her turn to reward a spirit so rare and worthy of reward?
-
-She was soon in bed with her light out; and presently she heard him
-arrive and saw a streak of illumination beneath the intervening door.
-She listened and heard him take off his boots and put them outside his
-door. But at last he flicked off his light and pulled up the Venetian
-blind. She remembered that he had told her he always slept with his
-blind up.
-
-Her heart beat hard now and her ears strained for the next sound. It
-was not, however, the door-handle that creaked, but Kellock’s bed.
-There was a squeak and jolt followed by silence.
-
-The unwonted noise of the streets kept Medora awake and she became the
-prey of thoughts that grew more and more unpleasant. A brief peace
-sank over London, but bells beating the hour would not let her sleep.
-During the small hours and with vitality at low ebb, her mind sank into
-a region of nervous gloom. For the moment her triumph became divested
-of all its brilliance and there was thrust upon her very forcibly
-the other aspect of such action as she had taken. She considered her
-mother and Ned. For some reason, and not a little to her annoyance,
-thought took the bit in its teeth respecting Ned and absolutely refused
-to dwell on the black side of him. As a matter of fact Medora proved
-too weary to pretend any longer. She was now disarmed; the sleight
-of her own creation, which had risen as a sort of shield between her
-and reality, for the present fell; and she found that her reflections
-obstinately refused to follow the line she had of late persisted in.
-The mind that she had drilled to think as she wished, for once in a way
-threw off allegiance and refused to be loyal to Medora’s impersonation.
-Instead it stumbled painfully but with determination along the way
-of truth and reduced her to despair by persistently bringing before
-her vision pictures of good days with Ned and memories from the past
-wherein he figured to advantage.
-
-She tossed and turned, grew very sorry for herself and finally centred
-her thoughts on Kellock. She considered his chaste attitude to the
-present situation rather absurd. Then she fell to wondering whether
-this delicate matter did not more properly belong to her. He was so
-high-minded where she was concerned—a miracle of tender refinement.
-For a long time she resisted an inclination to go to him, but presently
-persuaded herself that it would be the truest kindness to do so. Her
-own nature prompted her strongly to seek comfort from him, for she
-was exceedingly miserable now and awake with a hateful alertness. She
-thought it was more than probable that he lay on the other side of the
-wall similarly enduring. Surely if she went to him, an everlasting bond
-would be established between them and their union sealed gloriously
-by her initiative. He was just that subtle man to appreciate such
-an evidence of her perfect trust. Still some voice in her argued
-contrariwise and not until a clock chimed three did Medora decide. Then
-she made a dash for him.
-
-She unlocked the door between their rooms, opened it gently and found
-Kellock lying peacefully asleep with the wan light from his bared
-window irradiating the chamber. The window was open and the room
-felt exceedingly cold. She had not wakened him and for a moment she
-hesitated and even went so far as to creep half-way back to the door.
-
-He looked very pale and very handsome asleep. He slumbered easily with
-a pleasant, happy expression upon his face. She fastened upon it and
-told herself that he was glad to have won her and more than strong
-enough to keep her for ever. She longed to be close to him and feel his
-arms round her. A man so strong and physically splendid could not lack
-for fire. It only awaited Medora’s awakening, and she was in a mood to
-wake it. If she was to sleep at all that night, she must sleep with
-him, she told herself.
-
-Perhaps even now a whisper warned her; but she was beyond warning. She
-wanted him and bent down and kissed him on the mouth.
-
-“My darling dear, I can’t sleep alone,” she said. “Why didn’t you come
-to me?”
-
-He started up instantly, and she saw him break from sleep to waking and
-stare with half-seeing eyes as round as an owl’s. He grew exceedingly
-white and his jaw fell. From an expression of content and peace, his
-countenance became miserable and rather idiotic. It is not too much
-to say that as soon as he found himself awake with Medora in her
-nightdress beside him, he grew frightened.
-
-“Good God—what’s the matter?” he asked in a hollow voice.
-
-“I’m the matter,” she answered. “I can’t be martyred all night. I want
-to come and sleep beside you.”
-
-Then his face grew suddenly red with a wave of blood and he was as wide
-awake as Medora herself.
-
-He did not mince his words.
-
-“Go back to bed, Medora, at once! You don’t know what you’re doing.
-You’re dreaming—sleep-walking—surely. You mean it innocently. I’ll
-explain in the morning. Please, please go—instantly, Medora.”
-
-She stared at him, stood upright and did not immediately obey his
-command to depart.
-
-“We don’t want to look back at this great thing we have done and feel
-any shadow upon it,” he declared. “We want to be able to look into
-each other’s faces and know that we have nothing whatever, before God
-or man, to reproach ourselves with. We’ve started on the highest plane
-and we’ll keep on the highest plane. You understand me. Indeed the
-beautiful thing has always been that we do understand each other so
-perfectly. So—please, Medora.”
-
-She did not answer, but obeyed. Burning and shaking to her very bones
-she vanished and slammed the door behind her; then she leapt into her
-bed and huddled under the clothes in a fury. But she did not hate
-herself long; she hated Kellock. It took Medora till five o’clock
-in the morning to cool down. An incident contributed to return of
-calm, because, after she had left him, the man turned on his electric
-light—she saw it under the door. And apparently he kept it on. She
-could also hear him walking about. It was clear therefore that she had
-disturbed him a good deal.
-
-“I wonder he didn’t turn over and go to sleep again,” she reflected
-bitterly.
-
-It was long before she forgave him.
-
-“Even if he didn’t want me, he oughtn’t to have said so,” reflected
-Medora. “He ought to have pretended he was glad. To send me away like a
-naughty school child after all I’ve done for him!”
-
-She determined that he must be punished and decided that she would not
-get up at all next day, but stop in her room and pretend to be ill.
-And in a thousand other ways she would punish him also. He should see
-that she could be as frosty as he. Indeed he had frozen her effectually
-now. And she told herself that it would be a very long time before she
-thawed again.
-
-She slept heavily at last, and when she was called, found that her
-will to hit back had weakened. By daylight she perceived that nothing
-was to be gained in quarrelling with Jordan. He had said that he would
-explain in the morning and she felt it would be better to hear him.
-She smouldered still and resented her experience extremely; but she
-was ready when he knocked at her door and they went down to breakfast
-together.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-IN LONDON
-
-
-Jordan Kellock made no allusion whatever to Medora’s nocturnal
-aberration as they ate together, but directed her as to his taste in
-tea and was very anxious to know her own likes and dislikes in matters
-of food.
-
-“I’ll write final copies of my letters,” he said, “then we’ll go out
-and get the ring.”
-
-Could it be possible, she wondered, that a ring made any difference to
-his mind? It seemed too childish; yet even the cleverest men retained a
-streak of the boy. It was from the eternal boy, as exemplified in Ned,
-that she had escaped. Was Kellock going to be boyish also? He had never
-shown any sign of it.
-
-She need not have feared.
-
-He did not ask Medora to read the letters to Mr. Trenchard and Ned
-Dingle; but he had finished them and posted them by ten o’clock and
-then they set out.
-
-He knew London and took Medora to the British Museum first. She had
-waited for him to speak about the previous night, while he, apparently,
-expected her to do so. She had changed her views as to his punishment
-and believed that she had quite forgiven him. But this was not the case
-and before the end of the day he found it out.
-
-At the Museum he surprised her by the extent of his knowledge. She had
-heard enough by the time they went to lunch and better liked the Park,
-where they sat for a while in the afternoon. Medora saw wealth and
-beauty and power pass by while Kellock commented.
-
-“That’s the sort of thing we’re out to alter,” he said. But she was not
-feeling in a socialistic mood.
-
-“Why?” she asked. “Why shouldn’t there be beautiful horses and
-beautiful clothes in the world?”
-
-“It isn’t the horses and clothes. It’s where they come from, Medora.
-The horses are bred for money, and the clothes are spun and made for
-money. But who makes the money? Do the people that ride the horses and
-wear the clothes make it? No—you and I make it. The workers make it.
-You and I have just as much right to ride in a carriage as the Queen of
-England.
-
-“The wealth of the world is exploited,” he explained, “and the result
-is poverty and superfluity. The world could get on perfectly well
-without those horses and those clothes—yes, and those people; but it
-couldn’t get on without us. We’re carrying on the work of civilisation,
-not those dolls and puppets toying together. Poverty and wealth are
-the result of the same vicious factor in our social system. They are
-interdependent and spring from the same rotten roots. Banish poverty
-and you do away with hunger and ignorance and misery and immorality
-and other ills, all of which spring from it. And there’s only one
-way to banish poverty, and that’s to banish wealth. Then you get a
-self-respecting order of humanity instead of the present arrangement.
-If the nation’s rich, the people are rich. It all comes back to brain
-power, and the moment labour is strong enough in brain power, the rest
-follows. The Trade Unions are only a first little instalment. In fact
-they’re almost past their work now. We’ve gone beyond them. Syndicalism
-says good-bye to the poor and good-bye to the rich. Then we shall get
-face to face with reality.”
-
-“And what becomes of all these handsome, dashing, prosperous people
-then?” she asked.
-
-“Nothing worse than what becomes of us. They will be left with a great
-deal more than they deserve, because they’ve never lifted their fingers
-to help the real good of the world. The revolution in this country,
-when it comes, will be bloodless—merely a readjustment in conformity
-with reason and justice. We’re out against the system, not against the
-individual which battens on it. When we make war on rats and sparrows
-and wood pigeons, we’re not quarrelling with the individual rat or
-sparrow, but against the class. They’ve got to go, because they’re
-unsocial and harm the community and take for themselves what was grown
-and garnered for their betters. And that’s what the classes are doing.
-They take for themselves what was earned by their betters.”
-
-“Why are we their betters?”
-
-“Because we justify our existence and they do not. Our lives are a
-round of work; their lives are a round of luxury and pleasure. We earn
-the money and they spend it. We save and they waste. Do they spend it
-on the community? No. They spend it on themselves.”
-
-“They’re taxed and all that.”
-
-“So are we. And taxing is a wrong system anyway. All sources of wealth
-ought to pour straight into the State and return to everybody in the
-shape of dignified conditions of life. Money is the source of all
-evil to people and it ought not to be handled by people, but by the
-State. If you once knock the idea of money out of the human mind and
-teach it to think in different values and occupy itself, not with mean
-necessities and still meaner luxuries and possessions, but the things
-of the soul—then you get on a higher plane at once.”
-
-But she was more interested in things as they were. A man or two
-obviously admired her, and the fact that she sat beside Kellock did not
-seem to prevent their open admiration. This cheered her and put her
-into good spirits.
-
-“How cheeky the gentlemen are,” she said. “They don’t seem to have any
-manners at all. They look at you that bold, as if they’d known you all
-their lives.”
-
-“Because they’re rich and know that money is power. These silk-hatted
-brutes have got nothing better to do than to make eyes at every pretty
-woman they pass. Many of them have never done a stroke of honest work
-in their lives, and never intend to. They are lower than the tom cats
-and yet—that’s the amazing thing—satisfied with themselves—pleased
-with themselves—and treated as decent members of society by the
-trash like them. I’d have them breaking stones if I could, instead of
-insulting women with their goggling eyes.”
-
-“I dare say some of them are dukes and earls, if we only knew it,” said
-Medora.
-
-“Very likely indeed,” he admitted; “they’re pretty much what you’d
-expect dukes and earls to be.”
-
-But even Medora felt this was crude.
-
-“There’s plenty of good men among the Upper Ten,” she assured him. “You
-think if a chap isn’t born in the gutter, he can’t be any good.”
-
-This was the first of a succession of little snubs; though Jordan
-hardly felt them at the time. But looking back afterwards, he realised
-that Medora had her opinions and that, apparently, they did not always
-echo his own.
-
-He invited her to end the day where she pleased, and she chose a music
-hall.
-
-Here he was obviously and painfully ill at ease; and he was also
-surprised to see the extent of Medora’s enjoyment. He felt absolute
-astonishment to hear her laugh so heartily at comic songs on the old
-familiar lines, and still more amazed that sentimental ditties of the
-most puling description should have power to move her. She, for her
-part, could not fail to see that the entertainment cast him down. Not
-an item of the programme appealed to him and the smoke made him cough.
-
-As they came out, he hoped she had enjoyed it.
-
-“How could I with you so glum?” she asked.
-
-“I wasn’t glum. That sort of thing rather misses me—that’s all. I’ve
-not got the bent of mind for it.”
-
-“You’re so clever, you never see anything to make you wonder, and so
-wise, you never see anything to make you laugh,” she said.
-
-His eyes grew rather round, but Medora was smiling and had not meant
-the speech to be acerb.
-
-“I see plenty to make me wonder in London. Who doesn’t? And I like
-a good joke; but these stage people didn’t seem funny to me. And
-honestly, the longer I live, the less I see to laugh at in the world,
-for a thinking man with high resolves to better things. People laugh
-for two reasons, I believe: to throw their neighbours off the scent of
-the truth; or else because they are rattle-pated, light-minded fools,
-with no more in them than an empty pot. The ‘empties’ make the most
-noise, don’t they? All the same, I like to hear you laugh, because you
-laugh honest and it means you’re happy. And God knows if there’s one
-thing I want to make happy before everybody on earth, it’s you, Medora.”
-
-She relented before this speech and took his arm. He was gallant
-and very jealous for her. He was also very tender and gentle. She
-acknowledged his consideration as they sat at supper; but he spoiled
-all by explaining the very special reason for his care and attention.
-
-“The position is a most delicate one,” he said, “and naturally I must
-do nothing to make it more so. You’re at the mercy of the world now, in
-a manner of speaking, Medora—a defenceless creature—not maid, wife
-or widow, as they say. And so it’s up to me to be extra awake and very
-quick to champion you in every way I can think.”
-
-Medora felt that if this were indeed the case, Jordan and not she might
-be said to stand in the limelight. She, in fact, must remain as much in
-the shade as possible. But he proceeded and explained his future course
-of action. It surprised her exceedingly.
-
-“Talking of that and all I owe you for coming to me, you may be sure
-I shall pay the debt in a proper manner, Medora. I honour you far too
-much to treat you with anything but the greatest respect and delicacy,
-I hope; and I certainly would demean myself, or you, to live with
-you as a husband till we’re married. But let the world think as it
-pleases—which is mostly evil—we shall know what we really are, and
-we’ll always be—a self-respecting, high-minded pair. It’s easy enough
-to be better than the world thinks you, because it judges others by
-itself and the mass of people have a very base standard. The law
-itself is disgusting and bestial in this matter. It sticks to the old,
-shameful conditions and demands adultery before divorce. So there must
-be evidence of that—we’re ordered to sink to furnishing evidence
-of it; but we’re made of much too fine stuff to sink to the heathen
-reality. We’re a cut above the dirty law—you and me. We want to live
-our future lives on a plane of mutual respect and admiration. We don’t
-mean all the future to be spoiled by the memory of human weakness.”
-
-He made no other allusion to the previous night and Medora’s wonderful
-eyes bent upon him with apparent adoration, while her wonderful heart
-grew a little hard. She remembered that she had been married and he
-never had.
-
-“You’re a saint,” she said.
-
-“Oh, no—only a clean-minded, honourable man, Medora.”
-
-She fell asleep gently hating him that night; but after many hours of
-dreamless slumber, she awoke in better spirits and found herself loving
-Kellock again. He was a hero and somewhat abnormal, as heroes must be;
-but, after all, she was a heroine, and should therefore find no supreme
-difficulty in rising to the heights on which he moved. She saw indeed
-that this would be necessary if she wished to be happy.
-
-She met him radiantly next morning and he found her mood easy and
-humble. He knew a man at Doulton’s Pottery, and when he suggested going
-to see the famous works, she agreed.
-
-“We shall be among our own sort there,” he said. “It will be good for
-us. I don’t think sitting in Hyde Park watching the rich was good for
-us. I may have said a bit more than I meant about them. They’re not all
-worthless wasters, of course, and it’s quite true what you said, that
-there may be a bit of class prejudice in me.”
-
-“No, there isn’t—not a scrap,” she answered. “And if there is, they
-deserve it. Nobody looks all round things like you do. You’ll live to
-see it all altered no doubt, and do your bit to help alter it.”
-
-“If I had my way, them that don’t work shouldn’t eat,” he declared.
-“Work’s the saving of mankind, and you can’t be healthy-minded if you
-sit and look on at life, any more than you can be healthy-bodied if you
-take no exercise. We all owe a lot to every one else, and them that
-won’t pay that debt and want to take all and give nought, are wicked
-enemies to the State.”
-
-At Doulton’s Medora was genuinely interested, and best she liked the
-painting rooms.
-
-“That’s beautiful work,” she said. “If I’d been brought up to that,
-I’d have joyed in it, because there’s something to show for it, and
-you’d know the flowers and ribbons you painted was brightening up other
-people’s homes. But my work—just shifting paper and putting the zinc
-between the sheets for the glazing rollers—there’s nothing to it.”
-
-“Don’t you say that. All necessary work is fine if it’s done well, same
-as you did it. But there’ll be no more of that sort of work for you.
-Your place will be at home; and I shouldn’t be content for you just to
-do housewife’s work neither, Medora. You’re going to be my right hand
-and look after my papers and help me with the big things I hope to
-do—not in the Mill, but out of it.”
-
-“I never shall be clever enough.”
-
-“Yes, you will. You’ll come to it when you get a grasp of all the
-questions we’re out to solve. You’ll begin at the beginning, where I
-did, and master the theory of socialism—the theories I should say,
-because it’s a science that’s in the making and clever men are still
-working out the details. There’s a lot of difference of opinion,
-and so far as I can see, our leaders—the ‘intellectuals,’ as they
-are called—don’t see eye to eye by any means yet. They’re all for
-universal democracy, of course, and the government of the people by the
-people and the redistribution of wealth and the uplift of the worker
-and so on; but they differ as to how it’s to be done and how the mass
-is to be brought out of slavery to the promised land. In fact no two of
-’em think the same, strange to say.”
-
-“It’s a big subject,” said Medora blankly.
-
-“It’s the only subject.”
-
-“I lay you’ve thought it all out.”
-
-“I’ve got my ideas, and in our evenings I shall put ’em before you and
-read you a lot I’ve written about it. We’ll go over it together, and
-you’ll bring your own wits to work on it when you’ve mastered all the
-different opinions.”
-
-“I wish I was half as clever as you think,” she said.
-
-“You don’t know what you can do till you try. The first thing is to get
-interested in it and let it soak into you. Once you feel like I do,
-that it is the only thing that really matters for the race, then you’ll
-properly live for it.”
-
-“I expect I shall,” replied Medora, with a fainting soul.
-
-“There’s noble women giving up their lives to it, and I hope you’ll be
-one of them some day.”
-
-She began to experience the discomfort of the mountain climber, who
-ascends into more rarefied air than he is accustomed to breathe. It was
-not until she had enjoyed a good lunch and a bottle of lemonade that
-Medora felt lighter-hearted.
-
-They went to no more music halls, but Jordan took her to a play of
-Shakespeare and a concert. They also visited the Mint, the Tower of
-London and the Zoological Gardens. At the last she was interested
-and happy. He improved every occasion. On one afternoon they went
-to a meeting of the Labour Party and heard great lights discuss the
-Internationale. Kellock flamed with enthusiasm afterwards and talked
-ceaselessly till bed time. She had never seen him so excited. She
-retired with a headache, bewildered and bored to tears.
-
-Of personal matters the only interest centred in a communication from
-Mr. Trenchard. As for Dingle, he did not answer Jordan’s letter. Nor
-did he come to see Jordan, as Medora half hoped he might. She trusted
-that some emotional scenes were to occur in the future; but if drama
-lay in store for her, it would doubtless be at Dene, not in London.
-
-She wrote to her mother justifying her conduct; but Lydia did not reply.
-
-“I’ve lost mother,” said Medora, after three days’ silence. “She’s
-not going to answer that nice letter I showed you. In fact I’ve lost
-everybody but you. And I’d lose them all a hundred times over for you,
-Jordan.”
-
-“We must be patient,” he said. “We know we’re right, and those
-that know they’re right can afford to be patient. The rest will be
-brought to see it in process of time. They must be educated to the
-truth. Everything depends on education, Medora. It works through
-everything—in private affairs and public affairs alike. Ignorance
-makes all the trouble in the world; and once the spread of education
-brings the light, then we get a move on and see our way clear. It is
-for you and me to show the people that we are sure of ourselves and set
-them the example of how to behave.”
-
-“We’ll live it down,” said Medora.
-
-“No; we’ve got nothing to live down,” he declared.
-
-“It’s for them to live down their ignorance of the case. And it is for
-us to help them to do it and show them, day by day, that we were right
-and they were wrong. But you can’t do big things without suffering big
-things. I warn you there will be a lot at first who will side against
-us—the sort that judge by the outside, as most do.”
-
-“I dare say we’ll be sent to Coventry.”
-
-“They may cabal against us like that. But the harder the opposition,
-the greater the triumph when we show them what we are. We must look to
-each other for our comfort and support and to our own hearts and good
-conscience. I’m not afraid for myself. A man can weather anything if
-he knows he is right. But for a tender creature like you, all full of
-nerves and that, it will be harder. But you may trust me to be pretty
-wide awake on your behalf, Medora. I’ll be sleepless to shield you and
-come between you and every hard word. I’ll fight for you, I promise
-you.”
-
-“I know that,” she said. “The pinch will be before we’re married.
-Afterwards they’ll soon calm down.”
-
-Her affection and trust were unbounded. She believed that he would
-fight for her, and she looked forward not a little to seeing him do so.
-
-Through the atmosphere of the Metropolis, the people at Dene shrank
-a little. She was prepared to return with a mind enlarged and a
-perspective widened. No doubt she and Jordan would come to London
-themselves some day, when he took his place among the leaders. But in
-the meantime she would not for anything have missed the return to her
-native village. Her new clothes alone must have sufficed to dictate
-this step. He, too, at her wish, had bought some new clothes, and
-though he hesitated at her choice, which led to rather more radiant
-colours than Kellock was wont to wear, yet he told himself, very truly,
-that in such a matter no principle was involved. He also felt that it
-became him to fall in with his future wife’s wishes when and where it
-was possible and reasonable to do so.
-
-They visited the Arts and Crafts Exhibition, where the new Dene
-water-mark pictures created daily admiration, completed their holiday
-and so returned; and their homecoming was anticipated in various ways,
-showing, though ignorance is the root of all evil, as Jordan never
-wearied of declaring, that even ignorant hearts may soar to heights of
-distinguished humanism.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE DRYING LOFTS
-
-
-A dozen great piles of “water leaf” had come up from the vat room to
-the hand presses, and here the paper, from which tons of crystal water
-had already been expressed below, under new and tremendous pressure
-yielded still more. Indeed, with half a dozen men bearing on the levers
-of the presses, the “water leaf,” that had appeared so dry, beaded and
-glittered and then exuded further rivulets of moisture. For the last
-turn of the screw a great beam was thrust into the press and as many
-men as could get purchase upon it lent their united strength. Ernest
-Trood, passing through the pressing room, gave a hand, and a stack of
-newly made paper was subjected to such strain that one had thought it
-must disintegrate beneath it.
-
-Here, under this tremendous impost, the grain mark, or pattern imparted
-to each sheet by the felts at the first pressing in the vat room, was
-removed.
-
-For the drying lofts the paper was next destined and hither Ernest
-Trood now found himself summoned by a messenger. Mr. Trenchard desired
-to speak with him.
-
-The drying lofts were enormous airy chambers that ascended to an
-unceiled roof. Through the twilight gloom of these apartments,
-the sheets of paper, large and small, glimmered, hanging aloft in
-multi-coloured reams like fairy washing; pink and blue, yellow and
-snow-white. The paper seemed to make dim rainbows aloft, where it
-ascended tier on tier in many thousands of separate pieces. Every sheet
-was suspended over ropes, strung across transverse beams on light
-scaffolding, that filled the lofts and ascended into the dark dome of
-the roof. Above them spun drying fans, to expel the exhausted air and
-suck away the moisture exuding from the masses of paper; while on the
-floors beneath there wound and twisted an elaborate system of hot-air
-pipes, which raised the temperature at will.
-
-Drying is a process that demands watchfulness and judgment, for wet
-paper suspended here on the tackle does not respond in all its parts
-simultaneously. From the deckle edge it dries inward and the last spot
-to dry is the centre of each sheet. The dry workers, with a hand-tool
-like a T square, hang their sheets over the russet, cow-hair ropes;
-then when the rope is loaded, pull it aloft; but the art of drying lies
-in the regulation of heat and air. The heat is great, yet regular;
-every operation is ordered for cleanliness and purity, so that not a
-speck of dust may fall to mar a sheet.
-
-Here came Matthew Trenchard upon a question of temperature. The talk
-concerned technical details of ventilation and did not take long, since
-Trood and his master seldom differed. But there was a more doubtful
-human problem upon which Trenchard desired to learn Trood’s opinion.
-
-“I’ve heard from Kellock,” he said, “and before I answer him, I want to
-hear you speak—also Pinhey.”
-
-“It’s not likely that Nicholas Pinhey and me would say the same,”
-answered Ernest. “We differ where we can on most subjects, and shall on
-this, I reckon.”
-
-“He won’t influence me—more will you,” answered Trenchard. “You and
-I will probably think alike, as we’re used to do. What I want from
-Nicholas has to do with Mrs. Dingle, who works in the glazing house—or
-did. Let’s go into the flat room and I’ll send for him.”
-
-The flat room was another chamber for paper drying. Hither came
-the great sheets of “double elephant” and “imperial”—precious and
-wonderful papers for the artist and draughtsman, that could not be hung
-over a rope or creased. They rested upon beds of webbing, which were
-lifted one above the other and offered free access to the warm air that
-plied through them. Here dried noble sheets of a quality that rejoiced
-the painter who touched their surface, and felt their solid texture.
-
-Nicholas Pinhey, spotless and trim, with shining spectacles and a white
-apron, appeared and Mr. Trenchard briefly stated the situation. He
-was carrying a “cross,” the little tool used to hang the paper on the
-lines, and he tapped his points against the wall of the flat room as he
-uttered them.
-
-“It seems Kellock, who is on holiday, has run away with Mrs. Dingle.
-I’ve just heard from him stating the facts as far as they may be
-supposed to concern me. He doesn’t seem to think it is anybody’s
-business but his own.”
-
-“A man may be ill and not know it,” said Mr. Pinhey, “and he may be
-suffering from the sickness of sin and not know it. But we know it.”
-
-“I’m not a sin-doctor—I’m a paper maker, Nicholas. And the sole
-question for me is whether Kellock comes back, or does not. He writes
-very decently, says he is prepared to justify his conduct if I feel it
-is any concern of mine, and adds that he will be well pleased to return
-if I want him.”
-
-“Don’t let him slip, for the Lord’s sake,” begged Ernest Trood. “You’ll
-wait a month of Sundays before you’ll get another vatman in the same
-street as him. Vatmen will be as rare as curates very soon. He’s a
-most orderly chap and a rare worker, which the clever ones often are
-not, and a great believer in discipline. You may be sure, according to
-his lights, that he’s done the best for all parties in this matter of
-Medora Dingle.”
-
-“How can you, Trood?” asked Mr. Pinhey indignantly. “And you call
-yourself a Christian man, for I’ve heard you do it.”
-
-“The mistake you make, Nicholas, is to drag religion into a lot of
-things where it don’t belong,” answered Trood.
-
-“There’s nothing where religion don’t belong,” declared the finisher,
-“and if that was understood and religion applied to every problem of
-living and working and dying, this world would be different from what
-it is.”
-
-“The question is, of course, Ned Dingle,” explained Trenchard. “I don’t
-want to back up one man against the other or interfere in any way over
-their domestic affairs. I’m not here to probe and pry, but to make
-paper along with the rest of you. Both Ned and Jordan are very good
-fellows; but it’s quite clear they won’t see alike in this matter.”
-
-“Don’t be too sure,” advised Mr. Trood. “Least said soonest mended, and
-for all anybody can swear to the contrary it may be a put-up thing.
-Of course Ned would have to pretend a lot of temper in that case—to
-blind the public eye; because if it got out that Kellock had agreed
-to take over his wife for the better happiness and understanding of
-all parties, the Law would step in very quick and queer their pitch.
-If these things were settled by common sense, the Law would lose
-money—the last thing it ever loses. But it may be like that—Kellock
-being such a shrewd and long-sighted man. So I should just keep Jordan
-and let Dingle say what he’s going to do. Ned’s not showing more
-feeling, so far, than the case demands. He may be thanking God in
-secret and be quite as religious-minded as Nicholas could wish.”
-
-“It’s generally known of course,” said Trenchard.
-
-“Such things can’t be hid and didn’t ought to be,” replied Mr. Pinhey.
-“We’re a very high-toned lot here for the most part, and me and Trood
-have something to do with that I believe; and I should be very sorry if
-he was to pander to evil.”
-
-“Nobody’s pandering to evil, Nicholas,” explained Matthew Trenchard.
-“But business is business and will continue to be so. I don’t lose
-Kellock if I can help it; but Dingle’s a very good man, too, and I wish
-to consider him.”
-
-“Dingle’s nothing to Kellock,” asserted Trood; “and I shouldn’t for an
-instant say Kellock was all wrong and Dingle all right. Women don’t run
-away from their husbands for nothing. I believe Ned’s been knocking her
-about, and she was divided between them in the past, and now, finding
-she backed the wrong one, she’s gone over to the other. It seems to be
-a private affair in my opinion.”
-
-“Sin’s never a private affair. It’s everybody’s affair and ought to be
-everybody’s enemy,” said Pinhey.
-
-“Then let nature take its course,” suggested Ernest Trood. “Let Dingle
-divorce her in a respectable way, and let us spare their feelings all
-we can.”
-
-“Obviously they can’t both stop here after this,” observed Trenchard,
-“and if Kellock comes back, Dingle will go.”
-
-“You’ll be putting a premium on vice if you agree to that, Mr.
-Trenchard.”
-
-“There’s no vice in it, Nicholas,” answered Trood. “It’s like an old
-woman to talk that way. You know very well indeed that Jordan Kellock’s
-not a vicious person.”
-
-“I know very well he is, then. And them as don’t go to church, or
-chapel, like him, have nothing to stand between them and temptation.
-And this is the result.”
-
-Trenchard laughed at Pinhey.
-
-“That’s where the shoe pinches—eh, Nicholas? But we mustn’t be
-narrow-minded because we live in a narrow valley. That’s what I tell
-others besides you. Kellock is a man of high feelings and great ideals.
-I don’t agree with much that he dreams; but I know this: that the
-dreamer who makes his dreams come true is the salt of the earth. He’s
-very young and he’s got a mighty lot to learn—and he’ll learn it.
-Whether he has the brains to go far I can’t say, but at present he’s
-very valuable to me and as he’s willing to come back, I take him back.
-As for Ned, I shall see him to-day and hear all that he cares to tell
-me. I’m heartily sorry for his troubles; but he’s a sane sort of chap,
-too, and no doubt has come to some conclusion about the future.”
-
-“That only leaves the woman then,” said Trood.
-
-“She’ll go in any case,” declared the master.
-
-“I won’t answer for the glazing room if she don’t,” promised Mr.
-Pinhey. “In a manner of speaking, after five-and-twenty years there,
-I may be said to set the tone of the glazing room, Mr. Trenchard, and
-if she were to come into it again and take her place at the crib, the
-other women, if I know ’em, would rise up and depart.”
-
-“Not them, Nicholas. You don’t know women if you think that. Women
-don’t cut off their noses to spite their faces in my experience.”
-
-“You can’t touch pitch and not be defiled, Ernest.”
-
-“Who wants to touch pitch? The girl ain’t pitch; and if she were, she’s
-not the sort to influence anybody. Just a silly, everyday, selfish
-creature, vain of her good looks and with no more sense than, please
-God, she should have. The mystery is that Lydia Trivett, who’s made of
-sense, should have put none into her child.”
-
-“She’ll go as a matter of course,” repeated Matthew Trenchard. “Her own
-feeling would decide that question. I hate interfering with anybody
-here, Pinhey, and because a great many of you pay me the compliment to
-consult me about your private affairs, that’s no reason why I should
-ever go into them on my own account.”
-
-“But when those that work under you do wrong, then, as their employer
-and leader, I submit in all civility it’s up to you to learn them
-right,” argued Nicholas. “It’s putting a bonus on sin if Kellock stops
-here.”
-
-Trood snorted and called Pinhey a fool; but Trenchard spoke gently to
-him.
-
-“I admire your clean and resolute religious views of life, if I don’t
-always share them,” he answered; “but we mustn’t be self-righteous,
-Nick, and we mustn’t think our own standard of conduct covers all the
-ground. You wait till we know more about it. Sin’s like conscience, a
-matter of education, Nicholas, and what’s sin in one man is no sin at
-all in another. We mustn’t fling the first stone too readily, because
-few of us have got the judicial mind, or the impartial and unprejudiced
-outlook, or the knowledge of the facts that belong, or ought to belong,
-to the judgment seat.”
-
-“We can all read the Scriptures,” answered Mr. Pinhey firmly, “and if
-our judgment is founded on the Word, Mr. Trenchard, it is founded on
-the Rock of Ages, with Whom is no shadow of turning. And I don’t say
-I’ll stop under the same roof as an adulterer, I don’t indeed.”
-
-“You’ll do your duty, Nicholas; I’m sure of that,” answered the other,
-and Pinhey, sighing profoundly, went his way.
-
-“There’s no fool like a pious fool,” said Trood scornfully, “and I hope
-to Heaven you’ll let Kellock stop. Beatermen, like Dingle, are got
-again, but such vatmen as Jordan Kellock are not.”
-
-“I know that mighty well, Ernest, and just for that reason we must
-look sharp into it and not let self-interest bend us into anything
-wrong. With some men I’d fire them on a job like this and have no more
-words about it; but Kellock’s different. He’s honourable, so far as my
-experience goes, and scrupulous in small things—a straight man every
-way. He has himself well in hand and he’s got ambitions. He would
-hardly have done such a grave thing as this on foolish impulse. But I
-don’t want to be prejudiced for him any more than against him. I’ll
-leave it till I’ve heard Ned.”
-
-“And don’t you let Dingle turn you from him,” begged Ernest. “It stands
-to reason that Dingle won’t have much good to say of him. Whatever he
-feels in secret, he must curse Kellock openly. In my opinion you ought
-to hear Kellock also on his own defence, before you sack him.”
-
-“Perhaps I ought; and perhaps I will,” answered the other. “I shan’t
-lose Kellock if it’s in right and reason to keep him. Send Ned to me
-after dinner at one o’clock.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-GOING UP CORKSCREW HILL
-
-
-Below Bow Bridge a row of narrow-headed stepping-stones are regularly
-placed across the river with their noses pointing up stream. The
-current sets thin lines of light trickling away, where the stones break
-its surface. Above the crossing, trees overhang the water and throw
-shadows to break the white sheen of stickles and the flash of foam;
-beneath the stepping-stones the channel widens and flows forward to the
-estuary. A dead tree had fallen here and upon one bough, overhanging
-a still pool, sat a kingfisher, like a spark of blue fire against the
-grey and umber colours spread round him. Beyond, where the stream
-bent eastward, there rose a fir-clad hill, and at water’s brink stood
-cottages with irregular thatched roofs. Their white-washed faces
-represented the highest light of the scene and were a centre and focus
-for that rural picture.
-
-Beside the stepping-stones Ned Dingle sat and smoked his pipe. The
-water at his feet had run fine after a spell of dry weather, and there
-was only the motion of the lazy stream, broken now and then by a small
-fish. White ducks paddled close by in a shallow, where the afternoon
-sunshine turned the water to liquid amber and made the birds golden
-bright.
-
-Ned thought of an autumn day, when he had landed not far off with
-Kellock and Medora at the boathouse; and he retraced all the months
-between. He was in melancholy mood and as yet had not determined on his
-future actions; but he had seen Matthew Trenchard, given notice and
-left the Mill.
-
-The master was sympathetic and friendly. He accepted the situation and
-on this Saturday, as Dingle awaited others at the stepping-stones, the
-beaterman reflected that his activities at Dene were ended. He was now
-about to seek work elsewhere. On Monday, Kellock would return, and Mrs.
-Trivett reported that Jordan had already taken rooms for the present at
-“The Waterman’s Arms,” a little inn standing up the valley between Dene
-and Ashprington, at Bow Bridge.
-
-Dingle still failed to grasp the extent of the disaster that had
-overtaken him. His moods alternated between wrath and grief and
-bewilderment at his loss. Mrs. Trivett supported him frankly and she
-introduced an element of mystery into the scandal, for she continued
-to declare it was not in Kellock’s character to do this thing. Even
-the fact that he had done it was powerless to alter her reiterated
-assertion. She never greatly blamed Kellock, even when others pointed
-out that men do not run away with other men’s wives on compulsion; and
-one fact she never ceased to dwell upon, which comforted Dingle in a
-negative sort of fashion.
-
-She repeated her assurance this evening; for now there came to Dingle,
-Lydia and the girl, Daisy Finch, Medora’s friend. They were at leisure,
-since the day was Saturday, and they had joined him by appointment to
-fulfil a certain task. Mrs. Trivett, unaware of Medora’s sentiments on
-the subject, had suggested that her daughter’s things should be moved
-from Ned’s house and taken to “The Waterman’s Arms,” there to await
-her, and Ned agreed. His purpose was to leave no trace of Medora in his
-house; and soon there would be no trace of him either, for he was about
-to seek work elsewhere and doubted not to find it.
-
-As they ascended the hill to Ashprington, Lydia repeated her assurance.
-She had good private reasons for uttering more ferocious sentiments
-than perhaps she felt.
-
-“It can’t be that he’ll ever make her happy,” she said. “It’s out of
-that man’s power to do it. And not only I say so, for Philander Knox,
-who is very understanding, said so, last week without any promptings
-from me. He said so from his knowledge of Kellock, while I say so from
-my knowledge of my child. And so I tell you, Ned, as I’ve told you
-before, that you’ll be very properly revenged, without lifting your
-hand to anybody.”
-
-“I shall do what I shall do,” he answered, “and I don’t know more than
-you what I shall do. I may take forty shillings or a month out of the
-man yet. Some days I feel like that; other days I do not. For all she’s
-done I know this: I understand your blasted daughter better than ever
-Kellock will.”
-
-“Mr. Knox says they’ll both get their punishment and he hopes you’ll
-let ’em be. And if you did, that would be the worst punishment. In
-Philander’s opinion there’s no call for anybody to interfere, because
-let ’em alone and they’ll punish each other to their dying day. That’s
-the terrible picture he paints of it.”
-
-“I’ll never understand,” he answered. “I’ll never know what choked her
-off me. There must have been secret enemies at work lying against me
-I reckon. But she could never put a case against me worth its weight
-in words, and to the last I didn’t dream what she was up to. A base,
-treacherous bit of play-acting I call it. And to crown all by that
-beastly letter.”
-
-“If you could believe in such things, I’d say Medora had the evil eye
-put upon her and was ill-wished into this,” said Daisy. “Such a girl as
-she was—so happy, and so fond of an outing, and so fond of cheerful
-company; and used to be so fond of Ned, I’m sure, for when you was
-first married, she was always telling me how she cared for you. Then
-the change came over her like bad weather. What did Jordan Kellock say,
-Ned, if I may ask?”
-
-“There’s no secrets. The letter’s like the man—cut and dried. Nobody
-else on God’s earth could have written it I should think. He feels that
-Medora made a mistake, but that it needn’t be fatal to all three of us;
-and that, as we all respect ourselves, and are responsible members of
-society, we can put the mistake right in a reasonable and dignified
-sort of way. Never a word of shame. He seems to think he’s only got to
-state the facts, as he sees them, for me to fall in with them. He says,
-of course, my first thought will be consideration for Medora, so that
-her sensitive and delicate nature may be spared as much as possible.
-He feels quite sure that he can leave the subject in my hands, and
-assures me that he will do everything possible to assist me. That’s the
-divorce of course. Medora wasn’t so nice in her letter. She ordered me
-to divorce her sharp. But even so, I’d sooner have her insults than
-his civility. Civility by God! From him. She’d worked herself up to a
-pitch of temper when she wrote that trash, and let out the poison he’s
-put into her mind. She’s a damned silly woman and that’s all there is
-to her; but faithless, worthless wretch that she is, I can forgive her
-easier than him. I don’t feel as if I wanted to shoot her, or cut her
-throat, or anything like that. My feeling to her is beyond my power to
-put into words at present, though no doubt it will clear itself. But I
-see him clear enough for a foul hypocrite—smug and sly and heartless.
-He’s played for his own hand for a year and slowly worked her up to the
-outrage she’s put on me. In fact I don’t see how I can very well help
-breaking his neck, when it comes to the point.”
-
-“It ain’t for me to stand up for him against you,” admitted Lydia. “All
-the same, my instinct tells me to pray you not to be rough, Ned. You’ve
-got right on your side, and it’s easier in some ways to suffer wrong
-than commit it.”
-
-“Depends what you call wrong,” he answered. “If Kellock thought it no
-wrong to kindiddle my wife away from me, why should I think it wrong
-to get back a bit of my own? Men have killed men for less than this,
-and a jury of husbands have said they wasn’t guilty. I may not be the
-sort to kill anybody; but I’ll let him that bleats such a lot about
-self-respect see I’ve got my self-respect as well as he has, and mean
-to act according. It’s all in the air—I don’t know what I shall do.
-I’ve got to make him eat his self-respect somehow and show him what he
-is; and that’s a long way different from what he thinks he is. I’ll
-make ’em look a pair of fools sooner or later—if no worse.”
-
-“So you will then; and take it in a high spirit and do nought to make
-yourself look a fool,” urged Lydia; but he declared that it was too
-late for that.
-
-“I look a fool all right,” he said. “I’m not such a sand-blind sort of
-man that I don’t know very well what I look like. People always laugh
-at a chap in my fix. Let ’em. Perhaps I shall laugh too presently.
-The difference between me and that man is that I can stand a bit of
-laughter; but he couldn’t. Laughter would kill him. He’d stand up to
-blame and hard words and curses. He likes ’em—he told me so—because
-it shows his ideas go deep and fret people’s accepted opinions. Every
-reformer must make enemies, or he’s not doing his job right—so he
-said to Knox one day, and I heard him. But laughter and scorn and
-contempt—that’s different.”
-
-They reached Ned’s house and, for his sake, set about their painful
-task with resolution.
-
-“It’s like as if we was going through a dead woman’s things,” whispered
-Daisy to Mrs. Trivett and the elder agreed.
-
-“She is dead as far as poor Ned’s concerned,” she answered. “And if
-anything on earth could shame her to death, surely it will be to see
-all her clothes and everything she’s got in the world waiting for her
-when she arrives.”
-
-Daisy, however, argued for her friend while they collected her garments
-and tied them in brown paper parcels.
-
-“I don’t want to say a word against Mr. Dingle, but all the same no
-such dreadful thing could have happened if he’d been the right one.
-There’s always two sides to every trouble and there must be excuses
-that we don’t know about.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett admitted this.
-
-“There’s always excuses for everybody that we don’t know about, Daisy.
-We all do things we can’t explain—good as well as bad; and if we can’t
-explain ourselves to ourselves, then it’s right and reasonable as we
-shouldn’t be too sure we can explain other people.”
-
-They made parcels of everything that belonged to Medora, then Ned
-brought to them a work-box, two pictures in frames and a sewing-machine.
-
-“These have all got to go also,” he said. “And this lot you’d better
-give her when you see her. It’s her trinkrums and brooches and such
-like.”
-
-He gave Mrs. Trivett a little box which she put in her pocket without
-speaking.
-
-Another woman joined them. She was Ned’s old aunt, who had come to
-him to keep his house as long as he should remain in it. She talked
-venomously of Medora.
-
-Presently they carried the parcels down the lane to the foot of the
-hill and left them at “The Waterman’s Arms,” in a little parlour on
-one side of the entrance. Then Ned went home and Daisy Finch and Mrs.
-Trivett returned to Dene. There the girl left Lydia, and the latter,
-after a cup of tea with a neighbour, prepared to climb the Corkscrew
-Hill and return to Cornworthy.
-
-Then it was that she found a man waiting for her and Philander Knox
-appeared.
-
-“I knew your movements,” he said, “and I knew that you’d be setting out
-for the farm just about now, so I thought as I’d keep you company up
-the hill. For I always find, going up the Corkscrew, that it’s easier
-travelled in company.”
-
-She was gratified.
-
-“You’re a kind soul and I’m very glad, if you’ve got nothing better to
-do. My thoughts ain’t pleasant companions to-night, Mr. Knox.”
-
-“They should be,” he answered, “for your thoughts can’t bully you, nor
-yet accuse you of things left undone, or done ill, like most of us have
-got to suffer from them. You can face your thoughts same as you can
-face your deeds, with a good conscience all the time.”
-
-“Who can? I can’t. I’m cruel vexed now. That slip of a child, Daisy
-Finch, have been showing me that I may have been too hard on my
-own daughter. And yet—how can one feel too hard? ’Tisn’t as if I
-didn’t know Ned Dingle. But I do. He’s took this in a very Christian
-spirit—so far. I’d never have thought for a moment he’d have held in
-so well, or been such a gentleman over it. Some people might almost
-think he didn’t care and didn’t feel it; but he does—with all his
-heart he does. He couldn’t speak when I left him just now.”
-
-“That’s true—he certainly does feel it properly. But it’s a very
-peculiar case, along of Kellock being the man he is. I haven’t got to
-the bottom of the thing yet. As a rule I’m not great on other people’s
-business, as you know, but in this case, along of my hopes where you’re
-concerned, Lydia, I take this to be a part of my business; and I’m
-going to get to the bottom of it by strategy and find out what made him
-take her away from Ned.”
-
-“It don’t much matter now. The past is past and it won’t help us to
-know more than we know.”
-
-“You can’t say that. You can read the future in the past if you’ve got
-understanding eyes. And I haven’t hid from you I’m far from hopeful
-about the future, because I can’t see them two suiting each other
-through a lifetime. They won’t.”
-
-“So you said.”
-
-They stood to rest at a bend in the tremendous hill. Mr. Knox dabbed
-his brow with a red cotton handkerchief.
-
-“This blessed mountain brings the beads to the forehead every time I
-come up to it,” he declared. “You’re a wonder; you hop up like a bird.”
-
-“I’m Devonshire—born to hills.”
-
-“You can’t have valleys without ’em.”
-
-“That’s true. We’ve all got to take the rough with the smooth, and the
-steep with the level.”
-
-“To take the rough smoothly is the whole art of living,” declared
-Philander, “and I thought I was pretty clever at it till I met you. But
-you can give us all a start and a beating. Well, this may or may not be
-a likely moment to come back to the all important question; but impulse
-guides right as often as wrong, and if I’m wrong there’s no harm done I
-hope. Have you had time to turn it over, or have you been too busy?”
-
-“I owed it to you to turn it over,” she answered after a short pause.
-“You’ve got as much right to go on with your life as I have to go on
-with mine. Time don’t stand still because men and women are in two
-minds.”
-
-“If you’re in two minds—”
-
-“I don’t say that; yet I don’t deny it. I have thought about you.
-You’re a good chap and very restful to the nerves; and your sense,
-coming on the foolishness of some people, shows up in a bright light.”
-
-“You’ve hardly seen a twinkle of it yet, Lydia. I don’t want to blow my
-own trumpet, or nothing like that; but with all my faults, you’d find
-the sense was here, and the patience.”
-
-“You’re a marrying sort of man, no doubt, and you’ve got all the
-makings of a good, restful husband—I see that too. But I reckon you
-haven’t looked round far enough yet. There’s a lot against me. I ain’t
-a free woman by any manner of means, and you don’t want to be saddled
-with my troubles. That’s the worse of marriage in my opinion. A man
-says, ‘I take the woman and not her family,’ and the woman says the
-same; but things don’t fall out like that in life. There’s always the
-families, and nobody can escape from ’em.”
-
-“True, but we can be very good friends with our relations without
-doing nursemaid’s work for ’em as well as our own work. ’Tis time you
-stopped working altogether in my opinion, and had a bit of rest and
-comfort to your life—such a dignified creature as you are by nature.
-The farm gets stuffier and stuffier and you can’t deny it. It will tell
-on your health and break you down. So why not do as I beg of you and
-come to me?”
-
-“Have you ever thought of that nice woman, Alice Barefoot?” asked Lydia
-suddenly, and Mr. Knox stopped dead, stared at her through the gloaming
-and mopped his head and neck again.
-
-“Good God! What d’you mean?”
-
-“A woman without a care or encumbrance and—”
-
-“Stop,” he said. “That’s not a worthy remark, and I’ll start to forget
-and forgive it, if you please, this moment. If you just think all
-that goes to such a speech as that, you’ll be sorry you made it. A
-man tells you he loves you, and you say ‘Try next door.’ That’s bad
-enough in itself; but there’s more to it and worse even than that. For
-it means either you don’t know Alice, or you don’t know me. You ought
-to understand perfectly well that a woman like her is no more use to
-me than a Red Indian. And you do know it; and if you’d thought half a
-minute, you’d never have let yourself say such a wild and unkind and
-silly thing as that. It shows a very great lack of interest in me—far
-less interest than I thought you felt in fact. I’m shook, Lydia; I
-thought we understood each other better.”
-
-“She’s a fine and a good woman,” said Mrs. Trivett feebly.
-
-“Good she may be, in a bleak sort of way; fine she is not and you know
-it. Besides, surely at my time of life a man wants a mind, if he’s
-got one himself. No doubt you think the world of Alice Barefoot; but
-even you ain’t going to argue she’s got more mind than would go on a
-three-penny piece and leave a margin.”
-
-“I’m sorry—I was quite wrong,” confessed Lydia.
-
-“You were, and since you’re sorry, enough said. I’ll resume another
-time. Here’s the top and I won’t go no farther to-night. You ain’t
-yourself, I’m afraid.”
-
-“Do please come and have a glass of cider. Tom thinks the world of you,
-Philander.”
-
-“That’s better. If you say ‘come,’ then of course I’ll come. But don’t
-let there be any false pretences about it. We’ve all got to pretend
-a lot in this world; but I ain’t going to pretend nothing about Tom
-Dolbear. I don’t visit at Priory Farm for his company, but for yours;
-and, if God wills, I’ll get you out of it sooner or later, Lydia.”
-
-“He don’t suspect nothing like that,” she said.
-
-“He does not—that’s certain, else he wouldn’t offer me his cider or
-anything else. But a time is at hand when he’ll have to face it—and
-his wife also. Most women would have seen through it by now; but she’s
-always asleep, or half asleep, while you do her work.”
-
-“Poor Mary,” said Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“Her doom is coming near I hope and trust,” he answered. “You’re not
-doing right at all in standing between that woman and her duty. You
-come to me, and then she’ll find that she’s only got time to sleep
-eight hours in the twenty-four; and she’ll also find the meaning of a
-family.”
-
-They proceeded together and Knox presently smoked a pipe with Tom; but
-he seemed not as amiable as usual and contradicted the farmer’s opinion
-flatly on more than one occasion.
-
-Mr. Dolbear, however, thought very highly of the vatman and doubted not
-that Mr. Knox was right.
-
-“I learn from you,” he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-AT “THE WATERMAN’S ARMS”
-
-
-A measure of argument arose between Abel Hayman and his wife, master
-and mistress of “The Waterman’s Arms.” He had held that to receive
-Medora and Kellock was quite impossible, while she took a contrary
-opinion, and her word was law.
-
-“Morals is morals, and business is business,” said Mrs. Hayman, “and
-I know Jordan Kellock by reputation, and his reputation is all it
-should be. Dingle will get a bill of divorcement and they’ll be married
-according to law; and if they don’t come to us, they’ll go to the ‘Ring
-of Bells,’ so enough said.”
-
-Mr. Hayman relented at sound of “The Ring of Bells,” and was ready to
-welcome the guests when they arrived.
-
-It seemed strange to Medora, who had passed the little inn by the
-bridge so many times, to enter the door and find it her home for a
-season. It was a cool and restful spot, and the private rooms, facing
-the stream, were removed some way from the bar. A yellow rose straggled
-over the face of the building and in the garden were old world flowers,
-now pushing up to renewed life—columbines and bleeding hearts, orange
-lilies and larkspurs.
-
-Medora arrived weary, and Kellock, to his own surprise, proved nervous
-and found himself wishing very heartily that his first day at work was
-ended. He knew not what might be in store for him, and Medora, who was
-not in a happy mood, had, in the train, deplored the fact that they
-were returning. Nothing would have disappointed her more than not to
-do so; yet she meant it at the moment when she said it, for who does
-not often contradict his own deep-seated desire and side, as it were,
-against himself at some passing whim from within, or inspiration from
-without?
-
-When she found all her clothes and possessions waiting for her, Medora
-fell very silent, and Jordan puzzled to know how they should have come
-there.
-
-“I told my mother where we were going to stop,” she explained, “but, of
-course, I never said nothing about my clothes. I didn’t regard them as
-mine no more—nor yet the ornaments.”
-
-“They meant well. You needn’t wear them.”
-
-Their supper was laid in a little parlour on one side of the private
-entrance, and when Medora descended, she found Mrs. Hayman turning up
-the lamp.
-
-“You’ll be tired, my dear, I expect,” said the elder, “and Mr. Kellock
-also. Shall I send in bottled beer or draught?”
-
-“We shan’t want nothing in that way. Yes, I will too—I’ll have a Bass,
-Mrs. Hayman; but he won’t—he’s teetotal. Was it my mother brought my
-things?”
-
-“She did—her and Daisy Finch. And your mother’s coming over to see you
-to-morrow morning. I was to be sure and tell you.”
-
-“I suppose it have made a bit of stir, Mrs. Hayman?”
-
-“What have, my dear?”
-
-“Me, running away with Mr. Kellock.”
-
-“Not that I have heard of. There’s such a lot of running away
-now-a-days. Though, as a man said in the bar a few nights ago, there
-ain’t much need for most women to run. They can go their own pace,
-so long as it takes ’em away from their lawfuls. Take my own niece.
-She married a wheelwright, and ran away with a carpenter six months
-after. And when she did, far the happiest of them three people was
-the wheelwright. Yet the guilty pair, so to call ’em, thought he’d do
-dreadful things; they didn’t draw a breath in comfort till they’d got
-to Canada, and put the ocean between. Marriage, in fact, ain’t what it
-was. In my opinion it won’t stand the strain much longer. It was never
-built to endure against such facilities for getting about and seeing
-new faces as the people have now—let alone the education. These here
-life-long partnerships—however, no doubt you know all about it. I’m a
-very broad-minded woman myself, and never throw a stone, though I don’t
-live in a glass house, for me and my husband are two of the lucky ones.
-I’ve never wished for no change, and God help him if he’d shown any
-feeling of that sort.”
-
-Medora little liked the assumption that her achievement was an affair
-of every day.
-
-“Few have got the courage and self-respect to do it,” she said.
-
-“’Tain’t that. It’s selfishness in some cases, and just common sense in
-others. We small people are much freer to act than the upper sort. And
-as divorce costs a mint of money, there’s thousands and thousands fling
-up all hope of an orderly release, and part, and go their own way, and
-live respectable lives that make the Church properly yelp and wring its
-hands. But the Church is powerless against the Law, so my husband says;
-and the Law takes very good care to keep the whip-hand and make divorce
-a great source of income for lawyers. However, Dingle is a prosperous
-man, and no doubt he’ll run to it and do the needful. The trouble in
-these cases is the children, and lucky that don’t arise this time. ’Tis
-a very great thing in my view that a woman should have her children by
-the man she prefers.”
-
-“Who wants children?” asked Medora. “They’re nothing but a curse and a
-nuisance most times. Me and Mr. Kellock want to do important things in
-the world, Mrs. Hayman.”
-
-“If you can think of anything more important than getting a brace of
-good healthy children, I’d be glad to know what it is,” answered the
-landlady. “I speak without prejudice in that matter, never having
-had none myself. But that’s no fault of ours—merely the will of
-Providence, and nothing more puzzling or outrageous ever happened, for
-I was one of seven and Abel one of ten; and yet God willed me barren—a
-good mother blasted in the bud, you might say. I sometimes wish the
-Almighty would let Nature take its course a bit oftener.”
-
-Medora was glad that Kellock arrived at this moment.
-
-“I’m going to have a glass of beer, Jordan,” she said. “I’m properly
-tired to-night, and I shan’t sleep if I don’t.”
-
-He answered nothing, for she had promised to give up stimulant. Then
-Mrs. Hayman went to fetch their supper.
-
-Medora enjoyed familiar Devon food, ate well, and slept well enough
-presently in a comfortable feather bed, with the murmur of Bow River
-for a lullaby.
-
-The next day was Sunday, and Mrs. Trivett duly arrived, to be received
-in the little parlour. Medora kissed her, and Kellock offered to shake
-hands; but he found that Lydia was far from cordial. She kissed Medora
-coldly, and ignored the man.
-
-“I felt it my duty to see you, Medora,” she began, “because I don’t
-want for you, nor yet Mr. Kellock, to be under any doubt about my
-feelings. I think you’ve done a very evil and ill-convenient thing,
-and I’d like to know what would become of the world if everybody was
-to break their oaths and make hay of their marriage lines, same as you
-have.”
-
-Medora quoted from Mrs. Hayman, and Kellock ventured to think that each
-case ought to be judged on its own merits.
-
-“I quite understand I’m in a very delicate position so far as you’re
-concerned. I don’t expect you to take my side in the matter, though I’m
-quite confident that in a year’s time, Mrs. Trivett, you’ll see this is
-a blessing in disguise. And I tell you that Medora’s husband that was,
-abused his rights, so that it was up to me, who loved and respected
-Medora, to rescue her from him. Because, if she’d stopped under his
-cruel tyranny much longer, she’d have lost everything that makes life
-worth living for man or woman.”
-
-“And where did you get this news from? Where did you hear Ned Dingle
-was a cruel tyrant, and all the rest of it?”
-
-“On the best possible authority surely. I had it from Medora herself.”
-
-There was a pause, then Lydia proceeded.
-
-“Yesterday, at Ned’s wish—at his wish, mind—me and Daisy Finch went
-to his house and packed up every stitch belonging to my daughter—every
-tiniest thing that was hers—and brought ’em here for her comfort. You
-wouldn’t call that a cruel thing, would you?”
-
-“You might have saved yourself the trouble, because Mr. Kellock
-wouldn’t let me wear them even if I wanted to,” said Medora. “It shows
-his nice feeling against my late husband’s coarse feeling—as if any
-proper thinking man could suppose I wanted anything about me to remind
-me of the bitter past. I’ve got everything new from London.”
-
-“A pity you couldn’t have got a new—however, I’m not here to lecture
-you. I’m your mother. I’ve only a few things to say.”
-
-“How’s Mr. Dingle took it?” asked Medora.
-
-“Like a Christian, so far, and will, I hope, to the end.”
-
-“Will he see me?” enquired Kellock. “He didn’t answer my letter.”
-
-“I can’t tell as to that. Like the rest of us, he was a lot surprised
-that you could come back here after a thing like this. And Mr. Knox
-said your point of view was beyond his experience. He wondered if you
-expected to see a triumphal arch put up. But Ned feels more like an
-ordinary, decent person, I reckon. He’s going. He’s left the Mill, and
-he’s going to put up his house for sale.”
-
-“If he’s took it like a Christian, as you say, perhaps he’ll go
-farther still,” suggested Kellock. “There’s only one house in these
-parts that’s like to suit Medora and myself; but perhaps Dingle’s
-house—?”
-
-His dry mind saw nothing impossible about the idea, but Lydia stared at
-him.
-
-“What on earth are you made of?” she asked.
-
-“It sounds unreasonable to you? But, if you think of it, there’s
-nothing unreasonable really. If we’re all going to carry this through
-in a high-minded way, there’s no more reason why I shouldn’t buy, or
-rent, Dingle’s house than anybody else.”
-
-“Except me,” said Medora. “And mother’s right there. I wonder
-at you thinking of such a thing, and putting me in such a false
-position—seeing his ghost at every corner, and hearing him whistling
-at every turn. You haven’t got no imagination, Jordan. I wouldn’t go
-back to that house or cross the threshold, not if it was built of gold
-with diamond windows.”
-
-“I stand corrected,” answered Kellock mildly. “As for imagination,
-Medora, you mustn’t think I lack for that. I’ve got my vision, else I
-shouldn’t have done what I have done, or be going to do what I hope to
-do; but I grant that while the house is only bricks and mortar to me,
-like another, it means more to you—a prison and a place of torment.”
-
-“Tom-foolery!” said Lydia. “Nobody ever tormented Medora but her own
-silly self, and if you’d got half the sense you think you’ve got,
-Jordan Kellock, you’d have found that out long ago. However, you will
-find it out; and I say it before her, for I’d never say a word behind
-her back that I’d fear to say to her face. You’ve took her at her own
-valuation.”
-
-“No—no,” he replied, flushing. “I take her at a much higher valuation
-than her own. I want to put her in a place worthy of her, where she
-can expand, and be herself, and reveal what she really is. I want for
-Medora to show the world all that’s hid in her. She doesn’t know
-herself yet; but I know her, and I’m going to help her to let the world
-see what she is. And I hope as you’re not for us, at any rate, you
-won’t be against us, Mrs. Trivett.”
-
-“If anybody had told me you’d ever do a thing like this, I wouldn’t
-have believed them,” she answered. “I’m not going to pretend to you, or
-Medora either, that I’m on your side. I think you’ve done a very wicked
-thing, and what beats me, and will always beat me, is how such a man as
-you could have done it.”
-
-“But I don’t think I’ve done a wicked thing, Mrs. Trivett. I only ask
-you not to judge. It’s no good talking or explaining all the thousand
-and one points that decided me. I only ask you to give me credit
-on the strength of my past, and to understand I’m no headstrong,
-silly creature who dashes at a thing on impulse, regardless of the
-consequences to the community at large. Nobody can say of me I haven’t
-got a proper respect for the community.”
-
-“It’s her husband you ought to have respected I should think.”
-
-“You mustn’t ask that. When I remember the way he treated Medora,
-I can’t respect Mr. Dingle. Otherwise these things wouldn’t have
-happened. I admit I love Medora and always did do; but I can honestly
-say that if Medora had been nothing to me, I should none the less have
-tried to save her from such a fate, for common good feeling to humanity
-at large. Being as she was and finding, as she did, that she could love
-me, of course that simplified it and made it possible for me to put her
-in the strong and unassailable position of my future wife.”
-
-“Stuff and nonsense,” answered Lydia. “You think all this, and I
-suppose you really believe all this; but you’re blinded by being in
-love with my daughter. However the mischief’s done now. Only I want
-you both to understand that you’ll get no sympathy from me—or anybody
-else.”
-
-“We don’t want no sympathy,” declared Medora. “We’ve got each other
-and we don’t expect a little country place like this to understand.”
-
-Jordan dwelt upon a word that Mrs. Trivett had spoken.
-
-“You say ‘the mischief is done,’ but I can’t allow that. No mischief is
-done at all—far from it. The mischief would have been if Medora and
-her husband had been bound to stop together—chained together against
-all their proper feelings and against all decency. But for them to
-separate like responsible beings was no mischief.”
-
-“And it’s up to him to get on with it,” added Medora. “We’ve done our
-share and took the law in our hands, because we were fearless and knew
-we were right; and more we can’t do until he acts.”
-
-“Has he moved in the matter, Mrs. Trivett?” enquired Kellock. “I can
-supply his lawyer with the necessary data.”
-
-Lydia flushed.
-
-“No; he’s done nothing to my knowledge. He’s got to think of himself
-and his future work.”
-
-“He’ll be reasonable I’m sure. The world being what it is—a very
-critical place—I’m exceedingly jealous for Medora’s good name.”
-
-“In common decency and duty I should think he ought to feel the same,”
-said Medora. “He can’t martyr me no more and the least he can do is to
-set me free the first moment possible. He’s took ten years off my life
-and my looks; and that’s about enough.”
-
-“No, he hasn’t,” returned her mother. “You’re looking a lot better than
-you deserve to look, and as to decency and duty, there’s nobody here
-will come to you to learn about either. You’re no more a martyr than
-anybody else. Ned’s the martyr, and it ill becomes you to talk of him
-in that hateful tone of voice.”
-
-Kellock was much pained and Medora began to cry.
-
-“I do implore you—I do implore you, Mrs. Trivett, to think about this
-subject on a lofty plane. God’s my judge I have taken as high a line
-about this as I knew how to take. We’ve looked at it in a religious
-spirit and had every respect for our own characters and every respect
-for Mr. Dingle. That’s the truth about it. I don’t want to preach or
-explain how we saw our duty, because in your present biased frame of
-mind, you wouldn’t believe me; but I may say that Medora is a sacred
-object in my eyes—just as sacred as anybody else’s property is
-sacred—and I’d no more treat her with less reverence and honour than
-I always did before and after she married, than I’d treat any other
-woman. I’m not going to do anything on which I could look back with a
-sigh, or her with a blush. We’re not that sort by any means.”
-
-“I should hope not,” murmured Medora. “We’re a lot too proud to explain
-ourselves to such people as live here; we move on a higher walk of
-conscience than what they do, but all I know is that Jordan’s a saint
-and they’re not worthy to black his boots or tie the laces.”
-
-Through tears she spoke.
-
-“No, I’m not a saint; but I’m a reasonable man and know what’s due to
-my reputation and my peace of mind,” declared Mr. Kellock, “and knowing
-that, I abide by it and don’t risk losing the only thing that matters,
-and don’t put myself in such a position that Medora shall ever think
-less of me than she does now.”
-
-“I think more of you—more of you every minute of my life!” sobbed
-Medora.
-
-“So there it is, Mrs. Trivett,” summed up the man. “I’m glad you called
-and I wish it was in my power to make you see the light in this matter.
-But we shall appeal to the future and we’re not in the least afraid of
-the verdict of posterity. There’s no support like the consciousness of
-right. In fact for my part I’d never take on anything, big or little,
-if I didn’t feel to the bed-rock of my conscience it was right. And one
-thing you can be quite sure about, and that is that your daughter is as
-safe in my hands as it is humanly possible for her to be.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett looked at him helplessly and then at her weeping child.
-
-“You’re one too many for me, Jordan Kellock,” she said. “You’ve thrown
-over every law and gone the limit so far as I can see; and yet you talk
-about your honour and Medora’s as the only thing you really care about.
-You’re beyond me, both of you, and I think I’ll wish you good evening.”
-
-“I feel perfectly sure that light will come into your mind as the
-future unfolds itself, Mrs. Trivett.”
-
-“I hope so,” she answered; “but your idea of light and mine ain’t the
-same and never will be—unless you change.”
-
-“There’s no shadow of changing with me,” he answered. “Medora’s the
-first thing in my life henceforth and, though you don’t agree with
-us, I hope you’ll reach a frame of mind when you’ll respect us as we
-respect ourselves.”
-
-“You might stop to tea, mother,” suggested Medora, but Mrs. Trivett
-declined.
-
-“I don’t want to talk no more,” she said, “so I’ll go; and you needn’t
-think I’m an enemy or anything of that. I’m your mother, Medora, and
-I’m about the most puzzled mother living this minute.”
-
-Lydia went away deeply mystified and disliking Kellock more than when
-she had come. Yet she told herself it was folly to dislike him. He was
-no hypocrite, and though his sentiments had seemed ridiculous in any
-other mouth, they were really proper to his.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-TRAGEDY IN THE SIZING ROOM
-
-
-Jordan Kellock accepted the attitude of the Mill to his achievement
-with as little emotion as possible. He concealed his own feelings, and
-since he did not attach great importance to the opinions of his fellow
-workers, their jests or silence were alike indifferent to him. He was
-conscious of well-doing and felt no doubt that the future would serve
-amply to justify his action.
-
-He worked as usual and presently discovered that neither Ernest Trood,
-the foreman, nor Matthew Trenchard himself proposed to discuss his
-private affairs with him. The master never mentioned it, and when he
-met Kellock, shook hands with his usual large friendliness and trusted
-the vatman had enjoyed his holiday.
-
-“You went to the Exhibition I hope?” he asked. And Jordan replied that
-he had done so.
-
-“Our pictures made a proper sensation,” he declared. “I stood by and
-watched the public for an hour, and the people were more astonished at
-our water-mark pictures than anything in the show.”
-
-“You shall see what the press said,” replied Trenchard. “We’ve had very
-good notices about it and far beyond the trade too. Art papers have
-taken up water-marks and pointed out what I told you long ago, that the
-craft ought to have a great future.”
-
-Of Medora nothing was said, but Trood mentioned her briefly a few days
-later. He took Kellock aside.
-
-“It’s official, and no more,” he remarked. “But I suppose you stand for
-Mrs. Dingle now, and are going to marry her as soon as it can be done?”
-
-“That is so, Trood.”
-
-“Well, she went away without warning, and forfeits her money
-accordingly. You know the law on that subject.”
-
-“That’s all right,” said Kellock. “She didn’t mean nothing uncivil or
-improper, but the circumstances required her to act as she did.”
-
-Trood nodded and left him. In common with most of the other responsible
-men in the Mill, he never addressed Kellock on the subject of Medora.
-Jordan noticed this, and felt that though people abstained from
-comment, his action had created a body of opinion that was to some
-extent unfriendly. None hesitated to regret the departure of Ned
-Dingle, and none attempted to conceal that regret in the presence
-of Kellock. A few men refused to recognise him farther, and when he
-saluted them as usual, cut him. Robert Life was one of these, and he
-found that those who came immediately under the influence of Nicholas
-Pinhey—the men at the glazing rollers—had been imbued with particular
-animosity. There Medora herself had worked.
-
-As for her, she lived through a familiar experience, and discovered
-that anticipation is greater than reality, both for good and evil. She
-had built up a very elaborate picture of her return to Dene, and of
-the attitude of her circle. It was a vision wherein she occupied the
-centre, as a being mysterious and arresting, a figure to challenge
-hatred, or enthusiasm, a compelling heroine, who might provoke furious
-enemies, or win loyal friends, but could by no possibility leave anyone
-indifferent. She had pictured herself as the protagonist, the cynosure,
-the paramount object of interest. When she walked abroad in her London
-clothes, all eyes would be upon her, and she would move among them,
-gentle, indifferent, inscrutable, her secrets hidden, herself doubtless
-a subject of ceaseless and heated discussion.
-
-But she missed the least consciousness of creating a sensation; she
-even missed the unpleasantness which she had designed to endure so
-finely, that Jordan might see the superb stuff of which she was really
-made. The limelight of public attention was wanting, and her return
-fell almost as flat as when she had come home from her honeymoon
-with Ned Dingle. So far as Medora could see, nobody really cared a
-button about her. She met with the same experiences as Jordan, but
-took them differently. He returned to his occupation and, in the full
-tide of work, was able to keep his mind free of his private affairs,
-and find other interests among his fellow craftsmen. But Medora had
-no distraction during this period. She possessed not even a house to
-look after, until Kellock found a house. Following on the first clash
-with her fellow creatures, and the discovery that some were amiable as
-usual, and some unprepared to recognise her, or have anything more to
-do with her, Medora began to be unspeakably bored with life and this
-flat anticlimax. The spring days dragged, and she knew not how to fill
-them. But her partner, perceiving this, set her a variety of tasks, and
-she found herself making notes for him from books, and copying extracts
-out of speeches delivered by the leaders of labour’s cause. At first
-she performed her tasks with energy, and Kellock praised her devotion;
-but he blamed her handwriting, which was very indifferent.
-
-“Some day I’ll run to a typewriter,” he had promised.
-
-The matter upon which he occupied her quite failed to interest Medora.
-It was dreary in itself and depressing in all that it implied, because
-their future, so far as she could see, held mighty little promise of
-much comfort or prosperity, if Jordan proposed to devote his life to
-these thorny and controversial subjects. It was magnificent, and might
-mean fame for him after he was dead; but promised remarkably little fun
-for Mrs. Kellock in the meantime.
-
-Daisy Finch proved faithful and often came to see Medora at “The
-Waterman’s Arms.” She believed that the opposition need not be taken
-seriously.
-
-“It’s only a nine days’ wonder,” declared Daisy. “When you’re married
-to Mr. Kellock, everybody will come round.”
-
-Then Miss Finch plunged into her own affairs. She was betrothed to
-Kellock’s coucher at the Mill, one Harold Spry.
-
-“And your mother thinks he’s a very sensible man, and we’re going into
-Paignton on Saturday, by the motor bus for him to buy me a proper
-engagement ring.”
-
-“He’s a very good coucher, for I’ve heard Jordan say so; and I know
-he’s very nice looking, and I’m very glad about it, Daisy. It’s good
-news, for certain.”
-
-“I never encouraged him, I’m sure,” declared Miss Finch, “but I always
-felt greatly addicted to him in a manner of speaking, Medora.”
-
-“I hope you’ll be happy, but don’t hurry it; get to know each other’s
-natures well, and all that. And if you find you can’t agree about
-anything that’s vital to happiness, then part before it’s too late,”
-said her friend. “It isn’t given to every girl to do what I did, Daisy.
-You want a rare lot of courage, and the power to rise superior to the
-world against you.”
-
-“He agrees with me in everything,” said Daisy.
-
-“They always begin like that. But I feel you’re going to be one of the
-happy ones.”
-
-“And you, too, I hope soon.”
-
-“There are greater things than happiness, I find,” confessed Medora,
-“though like all young creatures, I used to put happiness first and
-last. But if you’ve got much in the way of brains, you can’t be happy
-for long. Jordan very soon learned me that.”
-
-“Surely to God he’s going to make you happy?” asked Daisy.
-
-“Oh, yes, but it’s the happiness of people at large he’s out for. He’s
-got a great mind and thinks in numbers, not in individuals, even though
-one of them’s his wife. That may sound sad to you.”
-
-“It do,” said Daisy.
-
-“But it isn’t really. It makes you forget yourself—in time. I shall
-rise to it as I age, and I’m ageing fast.”
-
-“I don’t want to forget myself,” said Daisy, “and I’m sure Mr. Spry
-wouldn’t let me if I did. He’s death on spoiling me.”
-
-“Be happy while you can,” advised Medora. “And bring your young man to
-supper one night.”
-
-They talked of the works, for despite the larger interests of Kellock,
-Medora still found the politics of the Mill her chief subject.
-
-“Do you think they’d be nasty if I was to go in one day on some
-pretence and see ’em?” she asked.
-
-Daisy considered.
-
-“You’d be welcome for your mother’s sake in the rag house,” she
-answered; “but I wouldn’t go in your own shop, if I was you. I dare say
-it’s jealousy, but the women in the glazing shop—it’s old Pinhey’s
-fault largely, I believe. He’s a religious old devil.”
-
-“For some things I’d almost like to be back again,” declared Medora.
-“Just for the minute, till we’ve got a house and so on, I’m at a loose
-end. I do a lot of writing for Jordan, and he finds me very useful,
-and is going to get me a typewriter. But just for the minute—it would
-distract my mind. There’s nothing small about Mr. Trenchard—he’d let
-me come back, I reckon.”
-
-Daisy did not venture an opinion, and the talk returned to Harold
-Spry. But from that day, Medora’s determination to go into the works
-increased. She did not tell Jordan, suspecting that he would have
-forbidden such an experiment, nor did she mention the matter to her
-mother; but she decided that she would stroll in some day.
-
-Ned Dingle had not yet left Dene, and once she passed him returning
-home from Totnes. He took no notice of her, and she hesitated whether
-to speak, but perceived that he desired no such thing, for he hurried
-past. She stole one glance under her eyelids at him, and thought he
-looked much as usual. He stared straight in front of him, and blushed
-as he passed her.
-
-She mentioned the incident to Kellock.
-
-“I haven’t seen him yet,” he said. “He hasn’t got work to his liking,
-so Knox tells me. I’m waiting to hear from him.”
-
-Two days later, Medora took her courage in her hands, and went up to
-the Mill at eleven o’clock, while work was in full swing. She had
-considered where to go, and decided that she would drop into the
-vat room and speak to Jordan about some trivial matter. She took an
-addition to his dinner in the shape of an orange. But having actually
-arrived, an inspiration led her to the sizing room. Thither came the
-paper from the drying lofts, and the simple work was done by little
-girls. No sharp word or unpleasant attitude of mind was likely to reach
-her there.
-
-She entered unseen, and passed through the dim and odorous chambers
-where the sizerman, old Amos Toft, mixed the medium. Here, in two
-steaming vats, Amos melted his gelatine, made of buffalo hide, and
-added to the strong-smelling concoction those ingredients proper to
-the paper to be sized. Trade secrets controlled the mixture, but alum
-contributed an important factor, for without it, the animal compound
-had quickly decayed.
-
-In the sizing room a narrow passage ran between long troughs. The place
-steamed to its lofty, sunny roof, and was soaked with the odour of the
-size. Through the great baths of amber-coloured liquid there wound an
-endless wool blanket, and at one end of each great bath sat two little
-girls with stacks of dry paper beside them. They disposed the sheets
-regularly two together on the sizing felt, and the paper was drawn into
-the vats and plunged beneath the surface. For nearly three minutes it
-pursued its invisible way, and presently, emerging at the other end,
-was lifted off by other young workers and returned to the drying lofts
-again.
-
-Little Mercy Life, the vatman’s daughter, was sizing some pretty,
-rose-coloured sheets, and Medora admired them.
-
-“Well, Mercy, how are you?” she asked, and the child smiled and said
-she was very well.
-
-“What lovely paper! And how are you, Nelly? How’s your sister?”
-
-“To home still,” said Mercy’s companion, “but the doctor says she’ll
-get well some day.”
-
-An impulse brought the orange out of Medora’s pocket.
-
-“Here’s something for you,” she said. “You can share it between you
-presently.”
-
-They thanked her, and chatted happily enough about their work and play.
-Medora told them that she had been in London, and interested them with
-what she saw at the Zoological Gardens.
-
-“My! To think!” said Mercy. “I thought squirrels was always red.”
-
-A few adults passed through the sizing house, among them Mr. Trood. He
-hesitated, seemed surprised to see her, but said “good morning,” not
-unpleasantly, and hoped she was all right.
-
-“I dare say you half wish you were back again, Medora?” he asked, and
-she jumped at the suggestion and told him that she often did.
-
-“Just peeped in for the pleasure of seeing friends,” she said.
-
-He went his way and Medora was about to leave the children and seek
-Kellock, when an adventure very painful befell her.
-
-For old Amos Toft belonged to the tribe of Mr. Pinhey. He was inflamed
-with indignation at the spectacle of Medora contaminating youth, and
-departed presently that he might tell Mrs. Life, in the glazing shop,
-what was happening. Whereupon, Mercy Life, the elder, leapt from
-her stool at the crib, and much incensed, hastened to her child’s
-protection.
-
-Medora greeted her with a smile, but it vanished before the other’s
-sharp challenge.
-
-They were talking of primroses at the time, for Nelly and Mercy had
-plucked a great bunch on Sunday and promised to bring some to Medora.
-They were to come to tea with her when they could.
-
-“Here—I’ll thank you to get out of this, Mrs.—whatever you call
-yourself!” began the angry woman.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?” asked Medora, “and who are you to tell me
-what I’m to do? Where’s your manners?”
-
-The other snorted scornfully.
-
-“You brazen-faced thing,” she cried. “Yes, a front of brass to come
-here, or show your face among honest women I should think. But you
-can’t have it both ways. You can’t be a friend for children and give
-’em oranges—give it back, Mercy—and be a scarlet woman both. And I
-won’t have you talking to my child anyway.”
-
-Medora adopted a superior tone. She took the orange from the girl and
-addressed her.
-
-“I’m sorry you’ve got such a fool for a mother, Mercy. And I hope when
-you grow up, you’ll have more sense than she has.”
-
-Then she addressed Mrs. Life.
-
-“How little you understand,” she said. “I’m sorry for you being such a
-narrow-minded creature. I always thought you was one of the sensible
-sort. And you needn’t fear for your little girl. I was only asking her
-to come to tea and bring me some primroses.”
-
-She marched out, regardless of Mrs. Life’s reply, and went to seek
-Jordan who was at his vat making big paper. He handled a heavy mould
-and passed over snow-white sheets to his coucher, who turned them on
-to the felt with extreme care. Jordan became very nervous at sight
-of Medora, but she felt quite at ease among the men and none in the
-vat room quarrelled with her. She congratulated Harold Spry on his
-engagement and told him that Daisy was a treasure. Then she gave
-Kellock the orange and watched him.
-
-But Medora was only hiding herself. Her heart flamed and her
-indignation at the recent affront burned fiercely within her. Her
-sole purpose at that moment was to get level and more than level with
-Mrs. Life, whose husband worked at the vat next to Jordan’s, and she
-now turned on him unwisely and addressed him. He was employed with
-brilliant, orange-coloured pulp and making currency paper.
-
-“You tell your wife to be broader-minded, Robert Life,” she said
-suddenly, and he stared at her.
-
-“She’s broad-minded enough for me and all God-fearing creatures I
-believe,” he answered. “If you want to keep on the narrow path, you’ve
-got to be narrow-minded about some things, young woman.”
-
-This was too much for Kellock. His pale face flushed. He set down his
-mould, dried his hands and beckoned to Medora.
-
-“I want to speak to you for five minutes,” he said and they moved
-together into the open space outside the vat house. But she gave him no
-time to speak. She poured out her wrongs in a flood.
-
-“It’s up to you now,” she said. “This isn’t going on. I’m not going to
-have my life made a burden by every beastly, cross-grained cat in Dene
-for you, or anybody. An ignorant creature like her to call me a bad
-woman! That’s the limit.”
-
-“You must be patient,” he said. “You shouldn’t have come, Medora. It
-was a very doubtful thing to do. You must allow for people. We’ve
-talked all this out before.”
-
-“If we’ve done right, we’ve done right,” she answered; “and if we’ve
-done right, it isn’t for me to sit down under insult, or for you to let
-me be insulted. I was born a fighter and you say you was; and if so,
-you’d best to begin with fighting your future wife’s enemies.”
-
-“That’s all right,” he admitted. “But I ask you to be reasonable. It
-wasn’t reasonable to come here and face the women.”
-
-“I didn’t face the women then. I didn’t go near ’em. I was only asking
-a child or two to come into tea. Then that sour slattern, Mercy Life,
-flew at me as if I’d come to poison her little girl. And I want to know
-what you’re going to do about it; and I’ve a right to know.”
-
-“Keep calm, keep calm and go home, Medora. Go back to the ‘Arms.’ We’ll
-talk about it to-night. It’s hard waiting, but—”
-
-“I won’t wait. I’ve no right to be asked to wait.”
-
-“Well, as to that, we’ve got to wait. You say it’s up to me. But you
-know different.”
-
-“I’ll drown myself if there’s much more of it—God’s my judge,” vowed
-Medora, then she went her way as the bell rang the dinner hour.
-
-Kellock felt deeply perturbed, and was glad of the interval, for he
-could not have resumed his work just then. He ate his meal alone and
-then wandered up the valley with painful thoughts for companions. That
-Medora could have done so foolish and inconsiderate a thing surprised
-him harshly. It was part of his illusion concerning her that she was
-a girl of unusual reasoning powers and excellent mental endowments.
-Once or twice, indeed, she had said and done what cast a shadow on
-this conviction; but never had she indicated the possibility of such a
-futile act as this. That she should have come to the Mill at her own
-inclination appeared flagrantly foolish.
-
-But that evening, in face of her tears and hysterical emotion, he
-undertook to anticipate the position and hasten the solution if
-possible. Not, indeed, until he promised to seek out Ned Dingle and
-demand action from him, did Medora recover. Then she was herself again,
-humble and grateful and penitent and full of admiration for Jordan.
-
-“You’re so large-minded and look at things with a male grasp and a
-male’s power of waiting,” she said, “but you can’t expect that from
-me. You must make allowances, Jordan. I suffer a lot more than you do,
-because I’ve got such a power of feeling and I’m cruel proud.”
-
-“I’m properly jealous for you,” he answered, “and I’d come between
-every breath of scandal and you if I could. But we must allow for human
-nature and prejudice.”
-
-“And jealousy,” she said.
-
-“We must allow for the outlook of every-day people and give ’em as
-little chance to scoff as possible. I’ll put it to Mr. Dingle the first
-minute I can; and you must do your part, Medora, and lie low till I’ve
-seen him and shown him his duty.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-NED HEARS MR. KNOX
-
-
-Kellock thought twice about going to see Ned Dingle, for instinct told
-him that what might seem a reasonable course to such a reasonable being
-as himself, would possibly appear in another light to Medora’s husband.
-But he reflected that, as the more intelligent and better educated man,
-it was his place to act. Even should Dingle use violence, that much he
-must be prepared to face, if by so doing he could advance the situation
-between them.
-
-Ned was still at his house, and, on an evening in early April, when
-the trees of Ashprington were washed with green again and the white
-blossoms of the pears opened ghostly to the embrace of the east wind,
-Jordan called.
-
-Ned himself opened the door.
-
-“You!” he said. “What the hell do you want? I’ve kept off you—God
-knows how. Are you asking for it?”
-
-“I want to do what’s right, Mr. Dingle. I haven’t come for any less
-reason. I beg you’ll let me speak to you.”
-
-Ned breathed through his nostrils and did not reply immediately. At
-last he answered.
-
-“To do what’s right! You’ll never do what’s right, because you’re a
-hypocrite, and all your talk about helping labour and the rest of it
-is humbug and lies coming from a thing like you. You’re the worst sort
-of man—the sort that does his dirty work behind a lot of cant and
-pretended virtue and honesty. The gutter’s too good for you.”
-
-“I can see your point of view; but after her letter, you ought to
-think different. I say nothing about mine; but hers was all it ought to
-be under the circumstances.”
-
-“You dare to say that? All it ought to be? Did you read it?”
-
-“Yes, I did.”
-
-“And thought it right for her to say I was ‘a godless beast’ where she
-was concerned?”
-
-“She never said nothing like that, Mr. Dingle.”
-
-“Come in then,” said the other shortly. “You come in and sit down and
-read what she said.”
-
-They went into the kitchen, and Ned lighted a candle. Then he took out
-his pocket book, produced Medora’s letter, and flung it on the table.
-
-“Read that, please.”
-
-Kellock obeyed, and his face grew long. It was clear that Medora had
-not sent the letter they concocted so carefully together in the Priory
-ruin. He put it down.
-
-“Was that the only letter you got from her, if I may ask?”
-
-“It was.”
-
-“I never heard nothing about this letter.”
-
-“You’re lying I expect when you say that.”
-
-“Indeed, I am not. I never lie. This letter was evidently the result
-of temper. She never meant it. It’s a sort of play-acting—all females
-indulge in it.”
-
-“She meant every word. But you’re right, there’s a lot of play-acting
-about the whole business. She’s been play-acting ever since she was
-born, and now she’ll damned soon find that’s ended. Life with you won’t
-be play-acting.”
-
-“It will not,” answered Kellock. “I promise her that. But she’s no
-dreamer. If you’ll be so patient as to listen to me, I’d like to speak
-a few words for her and myself. That letter is not Medora—not what she
-is now. She shall say she’s sorry, and write in her present frame of
-mind, which is very different.”
-
-“She’ll be sorry all right. That won’t be a lie anyway.”
-
-“I venture to ask you to look ahead, Mr. Dingle. There’s no doubt,
-owing to one thing and another, you and her wouldn’t have settled
-down into a happy husband and wife. That’s not to cast any reflection
-on you, or her either. You wasn’t made for each other as we all
-thought, myself included, when she took you. But owing to differences
-of character and such like, she fretted you by her nature, which she
-couldn’t alter, and you treated her harsh according to your nature,
-which you couldn’t change. There it was, and her spirit told her you
-and her must part. She meant to go I solemnly assure you. She’d made
-up her mind to do that; and finding it was so—that’s where I came
-in. I thought she was right, for her self-respect and yours, to leave
-you, and knowing that she would then be free in every real sense, I,
-who had loved her in the past, felt it was no wrong to you under the
-circumstances, to love her again. But I’ll say this, and I hope you’ll
-believe it: if I had thought Medora was wrong, I wouldn’t have taken
-her part. You’ll remember I spoke to you as an outsider, and only for
-your good, when you knocked me in the water. I’d no thought of having
-Medora for my wife till after that happened. But when she made me see
-clearly she was a martyred creature, then I took a different line. And
-that’s how we stand.”
-
-“Play-acting still,” answered the other. “It’s all play-acting, and a
-wicked, heartless piece of work; and you know it. And a brainless piece
-of work too, for all you think you’re such a smart pair. You see I’m
-calm. I’m not taking you by the scruff of your neck and battering your
-head against that wall, as I well might do. I may yet; but I’ll answer
-you first. You knew Medora, and knew she was a mass of airs and graces,
-and humbug; and you knew me, and therefore you ought to have known,
-when she said I was a tyrant and a brute, that she was lying. But
-you fooled yourself and took her word and made yourself believe her,
-because you wanted her. You lusted after another man’s wife, and all
-your fine opinions went to hell under the temptation, when you found
-you could get her so easy.”
-
-“Don’t say that; I beg you not to put it in that way. I’m not that sort
-of man.”
-
-“I judge of a man by what he does, not by what he says. That’s what
-you’ve done, and that’s what you’ll pay for sooner or late.”
-
-“A time will come when you’ll withdraw that, Mr. Dingle. It’s a cruel
-libel on my character and you’ll live to know it. At present I’m only
-wishful to do things decently and in order, and I’ll ask you again to
-look forward. I should be very glad to know, please, when you’re going
-to go on with this? I venture to think you ought to move in the matter.”
-
-“You beat anything I’ve ever heard of,” said Dingle. “What are you made
-of—flesh and blood, or stone? To tell me my duty!”
-
-“Why not, if you don’t see it? I’m not thinking of myself—only the
-situation as it affects her.”
-
-“And I’m thinking of it as it affects me. I’ve been pretty badly
-damaged in this racket—the lawyer’s made that clear to me. I shall get
-it out of you somehow—how I don’t know at present. You can clear now,
-and I shan’t come to you to decide what I’m going to do about it—or
-to that wicked, little fool either. Yes, a wicked, little fool—that’s
-what she is—and she’ll look at home presently, when you’ve knocked the
-life out of her, and find it out for herself.”
-
-Kellock rose and prepared to depart.
-
-“I’m sorry I called if it was only to anger you,” he said.
-
-“Yes; and you’ll be sorry for lots of things presently I shouldn’t
-wonder. You’re a fool too, come to think of it—that’s part of my
-revenge I reckon—to know you, who thought yourself so wonderful, are
-only a young fool after all.”
-
-So the interview ended and Kellock went his way outwardly unruffled but
-inwardly perturbed. He had never considered the possibility of Dingle
-doing anything in the way of damages. He had, in fact, thought far too
-little about Dingle. Ned was a man of no force of character and he had
-assumed that he would proceed upon the conventional lines proper to
-such cases. But Ned’s very weakness now grew into a danger, because he
-was evidently in the hands of a lawyer and might be easily influenced
-by a stronger will than his own. The law would probably not learn the
-real human facts of the situation as between Ned and Medora. The law
-never did go into these subtleties of character upon which such things
-depended. Superficially the law might hold him, what he—Kellock—was
-so far from being, and perhaps actually punish him in his pocket—an
-event that had not entered his calculations. Did Dingle make any such
-claim, it would certainly be his place to plead against it, or get a
-lawyer to do so for him. He felt anxious, for he feared the law and
-knew it to be a terribly costly matter to defend the most righteous
-cause.
-
-And meantime Ned received another caller, who knew Kellock better than
-he did, and left him with some curious information to consider. Indeed
-it was not Jordan’s own visit that threw any new light on Jordan, but
-that of an older man. Philander Knox now arrived to see Dingle on
-private business.
-
-Philander, true to his philosophic and tolerant attitude, had not
-evinced any unfriendly feelings towards Kellock on his return to the
-vat house, and the paper makers, who were all junior to Mr. Knox,
-followed his lead with the exception of Robert Life, who took his
-wife’s view of the situation. Thus it came about that finding Knox to
-be impartial and knowing him for a large-minded man, only puzzling
-when he displayed humour, which Kellock did not understand, Jordan had
-to some extent confided in him and revealed various facts concerning
-his opinions and his relations with Medora. These, while imparted in
-confidence, possessed none the less very considerable significance and
-Philander was now tempted to use his information.
-
-It depended on the trend of his conversation with Dingle whether he
-would do so, for he called upon his own affairs and had no intention,
-when he arrived, to touch those of other people.
-
-He came by appointment on the subject of Dingle’s house.
-
-“I’d like it very well,” he said, “and I’d close to-night if I was in a
-position to do so; but though hopeful as my custom is, for hope costs
-nothing, I’m not able yet to close definitely.”
-
-“There’s one or two after it, I must tell you.”
-
-“I know. But I’ll make a bargain. To let the house is, of course, a
-certainty. Houses are so few in these parts that a fine quality of
-house like this don’t go begging very long; but if you’ll stand by and
-give me first refusal for a clear month, I’ll pay you two quid down on
-the nail for the privilege.”
-
-Dingle considered.
-
-“All right,” he said. “That’s a bargain. There’s nothing settled and
-I’d be very well pleased for you to have the house. But what are you
-waiting for?”
-
-“That’s private,” answered Philander bringing out his purse and
-depositing two sovereigns. “I’m waiting for another party to come to a
-decision on a certain subject. If it goes right, I’ll take your house;
-if it don’t, then I shan’t have no use for it.”
-
-Dingle nodded.
-
-“I guess your meaning,” he said. “As for me, I’m marking time, though I
-can’t much longer. I must go on with my work and I’ve got a very good
-offer for Liverpool; but I don’t see myself in a town somehow. And
-there’s people at Ivybridge could do with me; but the money’s less. I’m
-all over the shop, to be honest. Of course it won’t go no farther. But
-I can trust you. I keep a stiff upper-lip, being a man; but this have
-knocked the stuffing out of me. I don’t care what becomes of me really,
-though of course I pretend I’m all right.”
-
-Knox nodded.
-
-“You’ve took a very proper line in the opinion of me and Mrs. Trivett,”
-he said. “Mrs. Trivett shares your feelings about it. As for me, I’m
-properly sorry, because one can’t do nothing to help. She’s done for
-herself now, and she’ll smart long after you’ve done smarting, if
-that’s any consolation.”
-
-“I know; but I don’t want her to smart particular,” said Ned. “She’s
-been sinned against—took at her own ridiculous valuation. She had to
-be herself, poor wretch; but the more I think of it—I ain’t sure now
-if it wouldn’t be best to break that man’s neck, Knox. Yes, I reckon
-I’ll go to Liverpool. I don’t want to bide here within a few miles of
-her. A clean break’s the best. How’s the new beaterman going on?”
-
-“None too well. Trenchard don’t like him and Trood hates him. He
-told Trood to mind his own business last week; and coming from
-Bulstrode—Bulstrode’s his name—to the foreman, that was a startler.
-In fact Trood won’t be himself till Bulstrode’s gone now. He’s a doomed
-man you may say. Then there was a little affair with Trenchard too.
-He wants some more of the advertisements made—the pictures—and he
-explained the pulp to Bulstrode, and Bulstrode, good though he is at
-everyday work, have a rigid mind and said he was there to make paper
-pulp, not do conjuring tricks. An unyielding sort of man in fact; and
-though of course he’s doing what he’s told as well as he can, he don’t
-like it, and no doubt he’ll soon be gone.”
-
-“He was here a bit ago—Kellock, I mean,” said Ned. “I often wonder
-how I keep my hands off the man that’s ruined my home; but so far I
-have. There’s something uncanny to him. He ain’t human, Knox. He’s got
-a something else in him that puts him outside the run of humans. A bit
-of fish or frog. I ain’t frightened of smiting him; I may come to it;
-but I can’t explain. He’s not like other people. I always feel he’s an
-image—a machine made to look and talk like a man.”
-
-“I understand that. If another chap had done this, I should have
-expected you to go for him; but I quite see the case is altered with
-Kellock. Because you feel he’s not stuffed with the same stuffing as
-most of us. Stop me if I’m on dangerous ground; but such a man has
-the qualities of his failings. He’s got a properly absurd side—like
-all such owl-like people, who never laugh. He’s a crank and amazingly
-ignorant in some directions. If he don’t approve of the law, he won’t
-obey it. He puts religion and morals higher than law; but he brews his
-own religion and don’t know in his innocence that religion in this
-country always does what the State tells it. You’d think religion might
-up and speak to the law, in the name of its Master sometimes. Kellock
-pointed that out. He would do things and talk to the law if he had
-the power, because he’s fearless and doesn’t waste his energy, but
-concentrates. He said, speaking of natural children, that under our
-laws they were treated with wicked injustice. He said to me about it,
-‘If the Archbishop of Canterbury got up in the House of Lords and said
-that it was a black, damnable disgrace to England to have such a law
-blotting the Statute Book and leaving us behind Scotland and Germany
-and America—if he did that, all men and women of good will would
-support him and the State would have to end the loathsome scandal.’ But
-I told him to hope nothing either from bishops or lawyers. ‘The man who
-alters that infamous law will be somebody bigger than either one or
-t’other,’ I told Kellock. ‘He’ll be a brave man, ashamed to face both
-ways and sit on the fence for his own safety; and he’ll be a man who
-knows that mankind wasn’t made for the lawyers, but the lawyers for
-mankind.’ There are such men still, thank God.”
-
-“Kellock ain’t human, so how should he care for the ways of the world?
-It’s a blind to his villainy.”
-
-“I’ve had a good deal of speech with him of late and heard his
-opinions. He’s dead sure he’s right. It’s all in a nutshell. He had to
-rescue your wife from you, and now he’s as jealous for her as a hen
-with one chick. It’s damned hard to look at the situation from his
-point of view, Dingle—hard for me or anybody—and impossible for you;
-but he sees it in a certain way and no doubt she’s helped him to do
-so. And now he won’t have a breath on her name and feels he’s got to
-stand between her and the rest of the world. He smarts worse than she
-does when hard things are said. He’s a lot more high strung than your
-wife herself. In fact he’s so delicate about her that he’d rather die
-than leave her in a false position. It’s an attitude that would be cant
-in most chaps, but coming from him you’re bound to believe it. It may
-be part fish or frog, as you say; but so it is. Of course nobody who
-didn’t know him would believe it; but I do believe it.”
-
-“Believe what?” asked Dingle.
-
-“Believe she’s not married to him.”
-
-“That’s certain while she’s married to me.”
-
-“I don’t mean that. I mean Kellock’s not all a man, as I’ve just said.
-You may say he’s a bit of a saint, or you may say he’s only half baked;
-but say what you like, the fact remains he’s different from other men
-and his opinions guide his conduct, which is a lot more than opinions
-always do. He’s told me that she’s not his wife in any sort of way—far
-too much respect for her and himself. That’s gospel you may be sure,
-for he’d rather die than lie.”
-
-“She’ll soon get fed up with that,” said Dingle.
-
-“Sooner than him I dare say; but so it is, and I’m glad to let you know
-it. I shook him by telling him he was a child in these things and that
-the law would refuse to let you divorce Mrs. Dingle, if it knew he was
-not fulfilling its requirements. But he’s got a feeling of contempt
-for the divorce laws which, of course, every decent man must share—a
-feeling of contempt which extends to the lawyers who live by them, and
-the parsons who like ’em. I give him all credit there.”
-
-“And how do these fine ideas strike my wife that was?” asked Ned.
-“Because if I knew anything about her in her palmy days, she was built
-of quite different mud from that.”
-
-“How it strikes her I can’t tell you, because her opinions are hid from
-me. Perhaps Mrs. Trivett’s heard her views upon the subject. She may
-not agree with Kellock; but more likely he’s made her do so—especially
-seeing it won’t pay her to have any other opinions than his in future.”
-
-“He’ll never break her in, Knox.”
-
-“He will, give him time. There’s something about him that makes weaker
-wills go down sooner or late. He’s like the tide. He will come on.
-He’ll settle her all right.”
-
-“She deserves what she’ll get anyway.”
-
-“If she do, she’s one in a thousand,” answered Knox, “for in my
-experience we always get more or less than we deserve, never a fair,
-honest deal. You can’t tell what she’s going to get, but you can bet
-your boots it won’t be what she deserves. Be it as it will, you’re in
-the position of Providence to both of them; because whatever she may
-think about it, we know what he does. He’s in your hand—to make, or
-mar, so far as Medora’s concerned. I tell you for friendship, and to a
-man like myself, who loves a joke, these things are funny in a manner
-of speaking.”
-
-“The question is if they’re true.”
-
-“They’re true as sure as Kellock is true. Make no mistake about that.”
-
-“Well, I’m not the sort to stab in the dark, though that’s how they
-served me. But I don’t feel no particular call to put myself out of the
-way for either of ’em. You can’t get this job through for nothing, and
-I’ve got no spare cash for the minute.”
-
-“They chose their own time to run; they must await yours for the rest,”
-admitted Mr. Knox.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-EMOTIONS OF MEDORA
-
-
-When Jordan returned to Medora, by a quality of our common nature
-which he would have been the first to deprecate, he was not entirely
-sorry to bring her unpleasant news. To himself he said that a trial
-of her patience would be good for her character, and so explained his
-own frame of mind; but the truth was different. He had heard something
-concerning Medora which annoyed him and made him anxious; and the
-result of his annoyance was that he imparted painful facts without any
-very great regret. It was true that they affected him as well as his
-future wife, but his nature was qualified to bear them far better than
-was hers.
-
-“I am a great deal hurt,” he began, as they sat together in their
-little parlour at the inn.
-
-“You were bound to be,” she answered. “And you might have been hurt in
-body as well as in mind. It’s something if he’s enough broken in to
-treat you properly.”
-
-“As to that, he did. I’ll come to him. But what’s hurt me, Medora, a
-long way worse than anything Mr. Dingle had to say has got to do with
-you.”
-
-“If you’ve been believing his lies—”
-
-“It ain’t so much his lies as yours. I’m not one to use hard words as a
-rule. But it’s your letter to him.”
-
-“Well, what about it?”
-
-“I’ve read it—that’s all.”
-
-She realised the significance of this and blushed hotly.
-
-“Why didn’t you send the letter I helped you to write?” he asked.
-
-“Because—because when you’re boiling with injustice and wicked
-injury—when I read it, I saw it was you and not me. He’d have known
-you wrote it, yet it was to be my letter; so I made it mine and told
-him the ugly truth about himself, which you’d been careful not to do.
-According to your letter, there was no reason why I should leave him
-at all that I could see. It was that nice and cool. But I was going to
-do things that you don’t do when you’re nice and cool, so I told him
-the truth straight out, as he deserved to hear it. It’s no good mincing
-your meaning with a man like him.”
-
-“You told me you’d sent our letter, however.”
-
-“I couldn’t when I came to read it. It was a silly letter.”
-
-“Well, I’m not one to go back to the past, because it’s generally a
-waste of time, Medora. It would have been honester if you’d told me the
-truth. Your letter was pretty hot, certainly.”
-
-“I hope he found it so.”
-
-“He did, and unfortunately he’s kept it. If he’d been wiser than he is,
-he’d have burned it; instead of that he’s letting it burn him, if you
-understand me. From the look of the letter, I should say he’d read it a
-great many times and the result is that he’s still in a very bad frame
-of mind.”
-
-“What frame of mind did you think he’d be in? We can’t all keep a hand
-on ourselves, like you.”
-
-“I hoped that time enough had passed over him to steady him. But I
-can’t honestly say it has. He made some curious remarks. I thought once
-he was going to let himself go and fly at me. But I kept my eye on him
-and never raised my voice. There’s plenty of good qualities in him.”
-
-“I’m glad you’re so pleased with him,” she said, growing hot again.
-“Naturally you think well of a man who’s used me so kindly!”
-
-“No, I’m not much pleased with him. In fact, quite the reverse,
-Medora. There’s good in everybody—that’s all I mean. But he’s got no
-good will to us.”
-
-“Thank God for that then!”
-
-“You needn’t thank God in too much of a hurry. In a word, he’s going to
-take his own time about this business. He’s done nothing so far.”
-
-“Done nothing!” gasped Medora.
-
-“Nothing whatever.”
-
-“That’s my letter—the coward.”
-
-“I shouldn’t have said so to you; but I’m glad you’re clever enough to
-see it, Medora. Yes, your letter no doubt. You can’t have anything for
-nothing in this world, and as you gave yourself the pleasure of telling
-him what you thought of him, he’ll give himself the pleasure apparently
-of making us pay for your fun.”
-
-“‘Fun’! A lot you know about fun.”
-
-“You wrote what you thought would hurt; and I expect it did hurt; and
-the result, so far as I can see, is a very nasty and obstinate frame of
-mind in Mr. Dingle. I won’t tell you all he said, though he was more
-respectful to you than me. But he hasn’t done with it by a lot and
-he’ll very likely ask for heavy damages.”
-
-“What does that mean?”
-
-“My money, Medora.”
-
-“Could he sink to that?”
-
-“It wouldn’t be sinking from his point of view. It ain’t regarded as
-sinking by the law. The idea certainly hadn’t struck me till I heard
-him on the subject; but I dare say it will happen. It’s within his
-power.”
-
-“Doesn’t that show I said nothing in my letter he didn’t deserve? A man
-who’d do that—”
-
-Medora felt a shadow of dislike towards Jordan. It was not the first
-time that any suspicion of such an alarming sensation had coloured her
-thoughts before his temperate statements and unimpassioned speeches.
-Was he never to let himself go? But she fled from her impatience as
-from a supreme danger. Kellock must be her hero, or nothing. She must
-continue to see in him her salvation and her tower of strength; she
-must let him feel and understand the reverence, the adoration in which
-she held him and his superb sacrifice on the altar of the conventions.
-For such a man the things that he had done were greater far than they
-had been in the case of others. He had his future to think of as well
-as Medora’s. He must not be allowed off his pedestal in her regard for
-an instant. She realised that, and perceived how her own peace of mind
-depended entirely on keeping him there. Her histrionic gifts were again
-to be called to her assistance.
-
-Watchfully she would guard her own mind against any doubt of Jordan’s
-essential qualities. His virtue and valour culminated, of course, in
-the heroism that had run away with her and rescued her from her dragon.
-The only weak and unintelligent action impartial judges might have
-brought against Kellock must be to Medora his supreme expression of
-masterful will and manly humanity. Even granting his love, indifferent
-spectators had criticised Kellock most for believing Medora at all,
-or allowing the assurances of such a volatile person to influence him
-upon such a crucial matter. His real heroism and distinction of mind
-was lost upon Medora; the achievements she valued in him belonged to
-his weakness of imagination and a lack of humour destined to keep him
-a second class man. He belonged to the order of whom it may be said
-that they are “great and good,” not that they are “great.” But the good
-qualifies—even discounts—the great.
-
-While Jordan had to be supported on his pillar at any cost if Medora’s
-position was to be endurable, conversely it was necessary to preserve
-her acute sense of Ned Dingle’s evil doing. There must be no slackening
-of her detestation there; and that it now became necessary to practise
-a large patience with Jordan and take no farther steps to impress upon
-him her scorn of one so mean and base as Ned, quite distracted Medora.
-Herein Kellock’s composure at first mystified her until he made clear
-the need for it.
-
-“To reasonable minds like yours and mine,” he said, “no doubt it does
-appear rather improper that we should have to be worldly wise about Mr.
-Dingle. But, though the wisdom of the world is foolishness in the mind
-of most clean thinking and honourable men, Medora, especially in a case
-like this, yet I don’t see that we can do anything. We must just bend
-to the law and mark time, I suppose. I don’t go so far as to say we
-should demean ourselves to cultivate Mr. Dingle and be humble to him,
-or anything like that; but it’s no good going out of the way to vex him
-more than we are bound to do; because, the law, being what it is—all
-on his side seemingly, we’re more or less powerless and quite in his
-hands. It’s abominably wrong it should be; but we’ve got to recognise
-the world as it is, and pay it the hypocrisy that virtue owes to vice
-sometimes. In fact we’ve got to keep our nerve and lie low and wait for
-him. And being what he is—hard and up against us and still smarting
-under what happened—he may not be moved to do right all in a minute.”
-
-“He’s making fools of us in fact—that’s his low revenge,” said Medora.
-
-“He may think so in his ignorance, but he’s wrong. Only two people can
-make fools of us,” answered Jordan, “and that’s we ourselves. We’ve
-took the high line and we’re safe accordingly. All he’ll get out of
-delay is the pangs of conscience; and what’s more he’ll put himself
-wrong with the rest of the world.”
-
-“That’s some comfort,” said Medora. “They smart most who smart last, I
-reckon. All the same it’s a blackguard thing on his part.”
-
-“The law moves a lot slower than human passion,” he explained, “and
-though we say hard speeches against it, there is some advantage in
-a machine that can’t be got to gallop as fast as man’s hate. It may
-happen that, as time goes on, he’ll come to see that it’s a very
-unmanly thing to talk about damages, because when it comes to that,
-what price the damage he inflicted on your heart and nature? Many a
-woman would have gone down under the persecution, and it was only your
-own fine spirit and bed-rock pluck and courage that kept you from doing
-so.”
-
-Medora approved these opinions, for praise was her favourite food, and
-had Kellock understood the powers of flattery, he had always succeeded
-in calming her tempests and exacting patience and obedience. But he
-loved her and his love saw her in roseal light as a rule. He forgave
-her little turpitudes and bitternesses and ebullitions, for was it not
-natural that one who had so cruelly suffered should sometimes betray
-those human weaknesses from which none is free?
-
-And for her, if the man had only been a husband to her, nothing on
-earth would have shaken her resolution, or weakened her will power. But
-that he was not, and her state of widowhood proved exceedingly painful
-to one of Medora’s sanguine temperament, though this was the last
-thing in her heart she could confess to Kellock. She panted in fact
-for a lover sometimes; yet the consciousness that Jordan never panted
-for anything of the sort made it impossible to hint at such a human
-weakness.
-
-She found the line of least resistance was humble surrender to
-Kellock’s high qualities. She abased her spirit at thought of his
-sacrifice and really saw aright in the question of his love for her.
-About that she could not make any mistake, for she had a mind quick
-enough in sundry particulars and sufficiently realised that she had
-won a man who would never fail her—a tower of strength—even though
-the tower threw rather a heavy shadow. Her own nature was subdued to
-what it had to work in; she wandered far from herself under these
-excitations. She was, indeed, so little herself that she did not want
-to be herself any more. But that ambition could not last. She felt
-herself moving sometimes—the love of laughter and pleasure, the need
-for stimulus, the cry for something to anticipate with joy. There was
-no room for these delights, at any rate at present, in the purview of
-Kellock. He continued solemn and staid, patient and wise, sometimes
-quite inscrutable. He was magnificent, but not life—as Medora saw
-life. Living with Jordan almost suggested living in church; and church
-never had been Medora’s life, but rather an occasional interlude,
-depending for its charm on the clothes she was wearing at the time. She
-became a good deal depressed at this season and wept many secret tears.
-
-Then a little relaxation offered of the mildest. Mrs. Trivett was able
-to report that Mary Dolbear and her husband had forgiven Medora, and
-she and Kellock were invited to tea at Priory Farm.
-
-He agreed to go and assured her that here promised the beginning of
-better times.
-
-“The people are coming to see the light of truth,” he said. “You can
-always count on the natural good feeling of your fellow creatures,
-Medora, if you’ll only be patient with them and give them time.”
-
-They arrived upon a Sunday afternoon in Spring and Jordan improved the
-occasion as they walked through the green lanes.
-
-“The Spring teaches us that nothing is an end to itself, but everything
-a beginning to something else,” he said. “You realise that more in the
-Spring than the Summer, or Winter, and yet it’s just as true all the
-year round.”
-
-“I’m sure it is,” said Medora.
-
-“And so with our present situation. It’s not complete in itself.”
-
-“Good Lord, no; I hope not.”
-
-“But just a becoming.”
-
-“It’s becoming unbearable if you ask me.”
-
-“No; we can stand it, because our position is impregnable. We can
-afford to be patient; that’s the fine thing about rectitude: it can
-always be patient. Wrong-doing can’t. Perhaps he’s spoken to your
-mother on the subject. If he has not, then I shall feel it will soon be
-my duty to see him again, Medora.”
-
-She was silent and presently, as they topped the hill and reached the
-Priory ruins in Tom Dolbear’s orchard, Jordan spoke again.
-
-“That crowing cock reminds me of something I thought on in the night,”
-he said; and Medora, glad that the ruin had not put him in recollection
-of the last time they were there, expressed interest.
-
-“You think a lot at night, I know,” she said.
-
-“It was a bird in the inn yard crowing, and I thought how wise men are
-like the cock and crow in the night of ignorance to waken up humanity.
-But nobody likes to be woke up, and so they only get a frosty greeting
-and we tell them to be quiet, so that we may sleep again.”
-
-“A very true thought, I’m sure,” she answered, smothering a yawn. Then,
-as they entered the orchard by a side gate, a child or two ran to meet
-Medora. At tea Mrs. Dolbear expressed tolerant opinions.
-
-“I judge nobody,” she said. “More does my husband. I only hope you’ll
-soon put it right, so as not to give evil-disposed people the power to
-scoff. However, of course, that’s not in your power. Ned Dingle will
-suit his own convenience no doubt, and you must try and bear it best
-way you can.”
-
-“There’s no difficulty as to that,” declared Medora, “knowing we’re in
-the right.”
-
-“You bluffed it through very well by all accounts,” said Tom Dolbear;
-“but you can’t defy the laws of marriage and expect the people as a
-whole to feel the same to you. However, you’ll live it down no doubt.”
-
-Medora asked her mother whether Ned had taken further steps and Lydia
-did not know.
-
-“Not to my knowledge,” she said. “He’s not one to do anything he’ll
-regret. He’s thinking of damages against Mr. Kellock, and I believe his
-lawyer’s of the same mind.”
-
-“Is he going to leave here?”
-
-“When he’s suited. Not sooner, I think.”
-
-“Knox is after his house, I hear, and has got the first refusal for
-it,” said Tom Dolbear. “There’s a man in a hundred—Knox, I mean.
-That’s what I call a philosopher sort of man—looks ahead and sees the
-future’s only an echo of the past. So nothing he hears surprises him.
-We are very much alike in our opinions. What he wants with a house I
-don’t know, however. He may think to marry again, which would account
-for it.”
-
-“I should hope Mr. Dingle would be gone pretty soon,” said Kellock.
-“It’s a bit callous him stopping, I think, things being as they are.
-It would be better for all parties if he went off in a dignified way,
-before the decree is pronounced.”
-
-“I dare say he thought it was a bit callous when you bolted with his
-wife,” answered Mrs. Dolbear. “Least said soonest mended, if you ask
-me, young man.”
-
-Whereupon Medora, who was nursing the new baby, hated it suddenly and
-handed it back to its mother.
-
-“If you’re going to talk like that, Aunt Polly,” she said, “it wasn’t
-much good us coming.”
-
-“Yes, it was,” returned Mrs. Dolbear, “if only to hear sense. You must
-be large-minded, or else you’re lost, and instead of quarrelling with
-everybody who thinks you’ve done wrong, which will take you all your
-time, Medora, better be sensible and sing small and tread on nobody’s
-corns more than you can help. We’ve forgiven you for your dear mother’s
-sake, and when you’re married to Mr. Kellock, you will be welcome here
-and treated without any thought of the past. And so will he; and if
-that isn’t Christianity made alive, I should like to know what is.”
-
-Mrs. Dolbear was so pleased with her own charity that neither Medora
-nor Jordan had the heart to argue about it. Indeed argument would have
-been wasted on Mary’s intelligence. She made Medora nurse the new baby
-again, and consideration of the infant occupied her.
-
-“After your mother she has been called,” said Mrs. Dolbear, “and her
-name’s the brightest thing about her so far. She’s healthy and seems
-to have a live and let live sort of nature.”
-
-“She’s got lovely blue eyes,” said Medora.
-
-“They’ll fade, however,” explained her aunt. “Most of my children have
-blue eyes to start with, but it ain’t a fast colour and can’t stand
-the light. If you look at my husband’s eyes, you’ll see they be a very
-pale, washed-out blue; and the children mostly take after him.”
-
-Lydia, her daughter and Mr. Kellock presently went for a walk before
-supper. As a treat, Billy, Milly, Clara and Jenny Dolbear accompanied
-them, and Tom himself started with the party. But he disappeared at the
-“Man and Gun,” and they proceeded alone to the churchyard, that Lydia
-might put some flowers on a new-made grave.
-
-The evening light brought out detail in the great grey tower above
-them. Seed of fern had found the ledges and run little lines of dim
-green along them. Over the battlements a white image of a cock hung for
-weather-vane. The churchyard extended so that the evening sun flung
-the shadows of the gravestones upon neighbour mounds, and Mrs. Trivett
-pointed this out.
-
-“All his life long Noah Peeke darkened his daughter’s life,” she said,
-“and now you see his slate flings a shadow on her grave, poor woman.”
-
-She put her nosegay on the raw-grass-clods built up over the sleeping
-place of Miss Peeke, and removed some dead flowers. Then they climbed
-the hill and extended their ramble with the children running on before.
-
-“My friend, Nancy Peeke, was father-ridden,” explained Lydia. “She
-sacrificed herself to her widowed father, and though a good few offered
-for her, she never left him. He reigned over her like a proper tyrant,
-but he never saw what he was doing and wasn’t grateful to the day she
-closed her eyes. By that time it was too late to do much herself; and
-he ruled from the grave you may say, because up to her last illness,
-what her father would have done was always the ruling passion in her.
-It worked unconsciously; but it worked. He ruined her life so far as
-we can say it. However, she’s at peace now. Death’s only a King of
-Terrors to the living. He can’t fright her no more—nor her father
-can’t neither.”
-
-“Take care people don’t say the same of you,” warned Medora. “You’re
-Aunt Polly’s drudge at present, and many people know it quite well and
-think it a shameful thing at your age—nobody more than Mr. Knox; and
-when Jordan understands about it, he’ll protest as much as I do.”
-
-But Mrs. Trivett never allowed conversation personal to herself if she
-could prevent it.
-
-Now she challenged Kellock, who had been very silent, and made him
-talk.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-PHILANDER’S FATE
-
-
-Medora’s mother found increasing matter for agitation in the attitude
-of Ned Dingle. She had seen him twice and urged the need of action. She
-had even offered to give him all her small savings towards the legal
-cost of the operation. And then he had startled and shocked her a good
-deal by two statements, neither of which Lydia had expected.
-
-“All in good time,” he had said. “I don’t feel any particular call to
-hurry myself on their account. Plenty of time when I’ve settled my new
-job. As to the cost, it would be particular hard if you, of all people,
-was called to part on such a subject, and I wouldn’t allow it for a
-moment. But when I do start on to it, my lawyer thinks I can bring a
-pretty hot case against Kellock for damages; so I dare say I shall
-knock expenses out of him, and a bit over. And the harder his savings
-are hit, the better every right thinking person will be pleased.”
-
-So he had spoken, and two days later had disappeared from Ashprington,
-and left no direction behind him. Where he was gone and whether he
-would return, none knew. Kellock deplored the delay and Medora bitterly
-resented it. She was very unhappy and her troubles now occupied her
-mother’s mind. Mrs. Trivett felt chiefly concerned to approach Ned
-Dingle again.
-
-“If he’s down Ivybridge way, at the paper mills there, I might go and
-see him,” she said to Philander Knox in the luncheon hour; but Mr. Knox
-either could not or would not assist Lydia to find her son-in-law.
-
-“I don’t know where he’s gone,” he answered, “and I shouldn’t worry in
-that matter, because you can’t alter it, or turn Ned Dingle from his
-plans, whatever they may be. On the whole, I should back him to do the
-fair thing in his own time. You can’t expect him to go out of his way
-for them.”
-
-“He wants to punish them seemingly,” said Lydia. “He told me the harder
-Kellock was hit, the better people would be pleased. In fact he’s
-getting a bit of his own back, I suppose, or thinks he is.”
-
-“In this case, it’s all or none,” answered Mr. Knox. “He can’t get a
-bit of his own back, and he can’t call it his own if it’s ceased to be
-his own. The subject’s wrapped in mystery, Lydia Trivett, and only time
-will hatch what’s really in Ned’s mind.”
-
-“He oughtn’t to keep them on tenterhooks like this,” she said; but
-Philander felt no call to criticise Mr. Dingle.
-
-“He’ll suit himself, and why not? I’ve given him a bit of useful
-advice. Whether he’ll take it or not I can’t of course, say; but don’t
-you fret, that’s all. Medora’s broke up a bit, I fancy. She’s just
-beginning to see in a dim sort of way she’s not everybody. Being your
-daughter, I’m willing to offer friendship; but if she’s going to thrust
-me out of your thoughts, then she’ll have one more enemy than she’s got
-at present, I warn you of that.”
-
-“You mustn’t talk so, my dear man, if you please,” said Mrs. Trivett.
-“My daughter’s affairs and your affairs are two different things, and
-you needn’t fear I’m forgetting all you’ve told me. You must let me
-have the full fortnight I bargained for last week. But you’re on my
-mind too—working underground like a mole—and though I may not exactly
-see you at it, there’s the marks of you. In fact I do think of you a
-lot, and if it’s any comfort to you, I’ve dreamed of you once or twice.”
-
-“In a friendly way, I hope?”
-
-“Quite friendly. We was shopping in a great shop, and I was carrying a
-lot of parcels.”
-
-“I don’t believe in dreams,” he said. “Give me reality, and make up
-your mind. Above all things don’t be influenced against me by—well,
-you know. That’s where the danger lies, in my opinion, and you’ll be
-going under your character if you let sentiment and silliness and a
-barrow-load of other people’s children come between you and your duty
-to yourself—not to mention me. Because I warn you, Lydia, that the
-grand mistake you make is that you forget your duty to yourself. A lot
-of good Christians do that; though your duty to yourself is quite as
-much a part of righteousness as your duty to your neighbour. We’re told
-to love our neighbour as ourselves, I believe, not better. And there’s
-another side; by doing that woman’s work, and coming between her and
-the lawful consequences of that litter of children, you’re not doing
-her any good, but harm. You’re ruining her character, and helping her
-to live a lazy life. You’ve taught her and your brother to take you
-as an every-day creature, and all as much in the course of nature as
-their daily bread, whereas the truth is that you are that rare thing,
-an angel in the house, and your qualities are clean hidden from their
-stupid eyes. It’s making a couple naturally selfish, ten times more so;
-and that’s what you unselfish people bring about so often as not. You
-toil and moil and work your fingers to the bone doing your duty, as you
-think, when half the time you’re only doing somebody else’s duty. And
-what’s the result? You’re not even respected for it. You’re taken for
-granted—that’s all the reward you get—you’re taken for granted—never
-a nice thing at best. And I tell you that you’re up against justice
-to me and yourself, Lydia. For though we’ve not known each other a
-year yet, there’s that in our natures that belongs to each other. It
-would be a very proper thing to happen, and we should be teaching your
-brother’s family a very simple but valuable lesson, which is that to
-have anything for nothing in this world is robbery.”
-
-“All as true as true,” she answered. “I never find myself questioning
-your sense, and I quite admit there’s often nobody so properly selfish
-as your unselfish sort. I’ve seen them play the mischief with other
-people’s lives, and create a very mistaken state of security in other
-people’s houses.”
-
-“Once grasp that, and I shall live in hope,” said Philander. “Let each
-man do his own work is a very good rule, because if you’re always
-helping others, there’s a tidy chance your own job’s not being properly
-done; and though you might argue that your own work here isn’t hurt
-by what you do at Priory Farm, it’s quite possible that other work is
-hurt. I mean the time for thought and self-improvement, and—in fact,
-me. For I’ve a fair call upon your time under the present conditions,
-and though it’s all right for Mrs. Dolbear to know you’re putting years
-on to your life before you’ve lived them, it isn’t all right for your
-true friends to hear about; and it isn’t all right for your Maker, Who
-certainly never intended you for a nurse-maid at fifty odd years of
-age—or for a rag-sorter, either. You’re ripe for higher things, and
-there’s independence and peace waiting for you.”
-
-“I’m going to think of it,” said Lydia. “For many reasons I’d like it,
-Philander Knox. You suit me very well, because you’ve got sense and
-character, and we seem to think alike in a lot that matters. You’ve
-made me fond of you, and I trust you. In fact, there’s such a lot
-that looks promising about it, that, for that reason, one can’t help
-mistrusting it. Life teaches anybody to doubt the bright side of a
-thing till you’ve weighed it fairly against the dark side.”
-
-“This hasn’t got no dark side,” he declared; “and if you’re honest, the
-longer you look at it, the brighter it will shine. So be fair to us
-both. Trust your own brain-power; I can’t give you better advice than
-that.”
-
-She promised, and that evening, though she had hardly meant to be so
-prompt, Lydia raised the question among her relations. Accident led to
-this, and threw so forcible a commentary on the conversation with Mr.
-Knox, that the matter sprang to her lips unsummoned, and surprised
-herself. Yet voiced in the kitchen of Priory Farm, from behind a pile
-of the children’s mending, Lydia’s tremendous statement struck even
-herself as almost impossibly shocking and heartless.
-
-Jenny had just suffered from an attack of croup and Lydia, of course,
-took the sick child into her own room, as Tom Dolbear would not let
-Mary do so.
-
-“I must have my night’s rest, or else I can’t do my day’s work,” he
-said, and his wife agreed with him.
-
-“I know Lydia will take Jenny, won’t you, dear Lydia? Jenny’s that fond
-of you, too. And there’s no peace for me and Tom like the peace when
-the childer are along with you. Because then we know they’re put first.”
-
-This evening Jenny would not go to sleep and Lydia had run up and down
-stairs once or twice. Then she went into a room where Milly and Clara
-slept—to find them also awake and clamouring for biscuits. Having fed
-and silenced them, she returned to the pile of mending.
-
-It was a rough, wet night and Mr. Dolbear sat and smoked by the fire,
-while his wife drowsed on the other side of the hearth. The last baby
-was asleep in its cradle near her.
-
-Tom told of a successful stroke at Totnes market and was pleased with
-himself.
-
-“The year’s begun well,” he said. “I ain’t one to count my chickens
-before they’re hatched, but I never had such lambs in my life and the
-quality’s as high as the numbers.”
-
-“And no more than you deserve,” said his wife; “rewards come where
-they are due, and such a man as you did ought to be looked after. Oh,
-dear—there’s Jenny again, I’m afraid, Lydia.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett departed a third time and presently returned.
-
-“A little bit of temper, I’m afraid. She’s crying out for an orange to
-suck, and that’s the last thing she can have.”
-
-“I wouldn’t call it temper,” argued Jenny’s mother. “No child of mine
-have got what you’d call temper, Lydia.”
-
-“That’s where we don’t agree then,” answered her sister-in-law. “I’m
-fond of Jenny, as you well know; but what she’s got to fight against is
-temper, in my opinion. We mustn’t spoil her.”
-
-“If that happens, it won’t be me, nor yet her father that does the
-harm,” declared Mary placidly. “Where children come, you’ll generally
-find that wisdom is sent to manage them, and I do think that Tom and me
-know something about how to manage our own.”
-
-“It’s so long ago since you had your daughter to bring up, that very
-like you’ve forgotten the early stages, Lydia,” suggested Tom.
-
-“And in any case, though God knows I’d never have whispered it to you
-if you hadn’t said Jenny suffered from temper—in any case, when you
-look at Medora, you can’t be none too sure your way of upbringing was
-the best,” murmured Mrs. Dolbear.
-
-Mrs. Trivett smiled to herself and threaded another needle. She knew
-Mary very well and was not in the least concerned for this little
-flash. It meant nothing whatever. Mary was a worm who only wriggled
-if one of her progeny was trodden on. There was another shout from
-Jenny and Lydia took no notice, while both Tom and Mary looked at her
-inquiringly.
-
-Then she spoke.
-
-“I never like to trouble you people about my own affairs, because,
-naturally, you’ve got no time to think about a humble person like me.”
-
-“Don’t say that, Lydia,” said her brother. “Ain’t you one of us and
-ain’t our good your good?”
-
-“Yes; but it’s borne in on me, Tom, we can’t live for other people.
-I’ve got my own life to live too. I’ve got my work, and I earn my
-living just as much as you do.”
-
-“Meanwhile that sick child’s yowling her head off,” said Mary sadly.
-
-“She said she hated me last time I went up, so I can’t go up again,”
-declared Mrs. Trivett, “not till she’s asleep.”
-
-“A child’s a child,” replied the mother, “and if you’re going to take
-that line about ’em—”
-
-She rose ponderously and lumbered from the room.
-
-“You’ve hurt her feelings,” grumbled Tom. “What’s the matter with you
-this evening, Lydia? If anybody’s vexed you, best to have it out and
-not sulk over it.”
-
-“Funny I should be in hot water with you and Polly to-night,” answered
-Mrs. Trivett. “But you ought to choose your words cleverer, Tom. I
-don’t sulk, my dear, whatever my faults.”
-
-“I stand corrected,” answered Mr. Dolbear instantly. “God knows I’ve
-no wish to quarrel with you, Lydia—no, nor would Polly. We’ve got a
-great respect for you. As for our children—but you know what you are
-to them. And we feel that nothing’s too good for you; and if I could
-afford to let you live here without paying your seven and six-pence a
-week, I’d thankfully let you—thankfully. But with such a family as
-mine—”
-
-“For some things, however, if you had a paid woman to look after the
-children, it might suit their mother better. She’d feel freer to speak
-her mind.”
-
-“Certainly not,” he answered. “We don’t want no hirelings about the
-children—not while we’ve got you. We couldn’t trust anybody like we
-trust you; and Polly would never be the same woman, or get her needful
-share of rest and peace with a lesser than you. And some day, I hope
-to make you free of everything, and not let any money question arise
-between us.”
-
-“I’m not worrying about my keep, Tom. Whatever else he may be, Jordan
-Kellock has got a very good respect of me, and though I shall never
-like him as well as Ned, yet he’s an honourable, upright man according
-to his lights and I can trust him. Indeed he’s gone so far as to say
-he’d like me to lead a different life; for he’s the same as Dingle
-there: he doesn’t think it’s a very wise thing for an elderly woman to
-be quite so busy as I am.”
-
-“Like his damned impertinence! And what does he mean by that, Priory
-Farm, or the Mill?”
-
-Mrs. Dolbear returned at this moment; she was fretful.
-
-“I don’t know whatever you’ve done to Jenny. A proper tantarra the poor
-maid’s in.”
-
-“I told her she couldn’t have another orange to-night, that’s all.”
-
-“Listen to this!” burst out Tom. “That blasted Kellock has been saying
-Lydia’s over-worked!”
-
-“Who by?” asked his wife.
-
-“That’s just what I want to know.”
-
-“If he means the Mill, he’s right, I believe,” continued Mary. “I’ve
-often wished she’d see her way to give up that troublesome work in the
-rag house and stop here with us, in comfort and ease, with our little
-ones to play with her.”
-
-“Or I might marry again and have a home of my own,” suggested Lydia.
-“I’m the independent sort, Mary, and I often think it would be wiser to
-do that than stop along with you as a lodger.”
-
-There was a moment of silence, then Mr. Dolbear flung his clay pipe
-upon the hearth with such fury that it splintered into a thousand
-fragments.
-
-“What in hell’s happened to-day?” he almost shouted. “Here I come home
-with good news—great news, you may say—and instead of sharing our
-pleasure and being glad, for the children’s sake if not for ours, that
-I’ve had a stroke of luck, you do every damned thing you can think of
-to pour cold water on it!”
-
-“My dear Tom, don’t be a fool,” answered Lydia calmly. “You and Polly
-are getting so wrapped up in number one, that you can’t imagine anybody
-having any interest or thought outside this house and the welfare of
-you and your children. But the world goes on outside Priory Farm, and
-I say again, it’s come to be a question with me whether I’m doing the
-best I can do in the world by stopping here. A question of duty, mind.
-I may tell you both that some very straight things have been spoke to
-me of late, and I can’t pretend they haven’t got a lot of truth in
-’em—perhaps more than the man who spoke them thought. For looking
-back, as I have a good bit since this business of Medora, I see only
-too bitter clear that it’s possible to be too unselfish and to spoil
-young folk and unfit them for the battle of life by coming between them
-and their duty. That’s what I did with Medora, as you reminded me just
-now, Polly, and that’s my inclination with your little ones; and I’m
-growing very doubtful if I’m not thinking of my own inclinations, or
-personal desires, more than what’s right.”
-
-“Either you’re mad, Lydia, or you’ve been talking to somebody that’s
-mad,” declared Tom furiously. “This is about the most shattering speech
-I’ve ever heard from you, and for cruelty and unreason I never heard
-the like. Look at my wife—ain’t that enough? If she’d seen a spectrum,
-she couldn’t have gone whiter in the gills—and her chin’s dropped and
-all her teeth showing. And if such a shock ain’t enough to turn her
-milk sour and poison that baby, then I’m a fool.”
-
-Indeed Mrs. Dolbear had changed colour and did look extremely
-frightened.
-
-“I know what you’re hinting at, Lydia,” she said, “and I can only
-tell you if you was to do such a thing as to leave your brother at
-a time like this, after you’d practically promised to help me with
-his family—if you were to go on some selfish pretext and marry some
-creature and lose your comfortable home and your fame for sense—if
-you did that, you’d never have another peaceful moment from your
-conscience.”
-
-“And you’d never deserve to have one,” added Tom. “Looked at on high
-grounds, Lydia, it don’t bear thinking on for a second, and well you
-know it. Bring your religion to bear on it, woman, and you’ll feel a
-good pinch of shame, I shouldn’t wonder.”
-
-“That’s what I’m doing, if you could see it,” answered Lydia. “It’s
-only a matter for religion, so far, and the welfare of the young
-folk. I’m thinking for them and their characters. It would be a poor
-come-along-of-it, Tom, if years hence you and Polly was to turn round
-and say that I had marred your children’s natures.”
-
-“We’re the best judge of that,” he answered. “And if we’re satisfied
-with your way of handling the children, whose business is it to put all
-these wicked ideas in your head? God’s truth! I never heard of such
-impudence. And you, at your age—as if you didn’t know what was duty
-and what was not. Perhaps ’tis thought you spoil us as well as our
-children, and give everything and get nothing in exchange?”
-
-He snorted with indignation when Lydia admitted that this was actually
-the case.
-
-“Some do think so for that matter,” she confessed.
-
-Her brother honestly felt this to be an undeserved blow. He had built
-up a very different picture of Lydia’s existence and believed that her
-privileges at Priory Farm at least balanced any advantages that accrued
-from her presence. This, however, was what Mary understood very much
-better than Tom. She dwelt under no delusion on the subject and fully
-appreciated the significance of her sister-in-law in the cosmic scheme.
-
-“If that’s the sort of thing outsiders say and you believe, then the
-sooner you’re gone from my roof, the better pleased I shall be,”
-shouted Mr. Dolbear. “I was under the impression that after your
-husband died, Lydia, you turned to me for comfort and put me first
-henceforth, and felt that this was a blessed haven for your middle age.
-But, of course, if I’m wrong and you’re only a slave and I’m only a
-slave-driver, then—”
-
-He stopped, for Mary did an uncommon thing and suddenly burst into an
-explosion of noisy tears.
-
-“There!” said Mr. Dolbear tragically, “look at your work!”
-
-“It ain’t Lydia,” wept the other, “it’s you. I never was so cut to the
-heart in all my life, and I can’t stand much more of it. Lydia’s as
-much a part of this house as the door handles, and dearer to me, next
-to my children and you, than anything on God’s earth; and when you talk
-of her going away from us, you might as well talk of cutting off my
-leg. We’re three in one and one in three, you and Lydia and me, and the
-man or woman who came between us would be doing the devil’s work and
-ought to be treated according.”
-
-“There’s a heart!” said Mr. Dolbear. “If that ain’t offering the other
-cheek, Lydia—”
-
-“No,” continued Mary, drying her eyes, “there’s some sorrows I could
-face, if it was the will of God, but the sorrow of living my life
-without Lydia’s wisdom and help, and the light of her countenance—I
-couldn’t do it. I wouldn’t be responsible. I know all she is in this
-house, and though you in your manly way—which is to be annoyed when
-you get a surprise you don’t like—though you, Tom, may foolishly
-think Priory Farm could go on without Lydia, that only shows the gulf
-there’s fixed between the male and female mind. I know Lydia’s the
-lynch pin to our cart, and so do my girls, down to that innocent infant
-in the cradle, if she could talk; and so do Lydia herself, for though
-modest as a violet, she’s far too witty to misunderstand a thing like
-that. And if I thought any evil influence was upon Lydia to make her
-restless, I’d go on my knees to God to touch her heart and keep it in
-the old pattern; and I’d stop on ’em till He had.”
-
-Here Mary wept again and Tom, impressed by so much emotion, moderated
-his warmth.
-
-“If I said anything over and above, I’m sorry,” he declared. “But when
-I get a shock, it nearly always loosens my tongue; and to think that
-evil disposed persons have been poisoning Lydia’s mind against her own
-is a bit beyond reason and justice.”
-
-“If we’re falling short in our duty and undervaluing you, Lydia, you
-must tell us,” added Mary, “for we’re not the sort to fail in gratitude
-I should hope. We may not voice our thanks; but God knows if they’re in
-our prayers or not.”
-
-Then Lydia spoke.
-
-“It’s nothing like that. It’s only a natural difference of opinion.
-There’s a man wants to marry me, and he can’t be blamed, looking at me
-from his romantical point of view, for thinking he’d like to see me in
-my own home.”
-
-Heavy silence followed, and only a cricket behind the oven broke it.
-
-Mrs. Dolbear’s heart sank. She was prepared to go to any possible
-extremes of conduct rather than lose Lydia. Without Mrs. Trivett, her
-own life must inevitably become a far more complicated and strenuous
-matter than she desired.
-
-“It’s not for us to advise you,” she said, “but I hope the Almighty
-will help you out of temptation, Lydia, for anything more dreadful and
-unbecoming than that couldn’t happen to you.”
-
-“I dare say you’re right, Mary.”
-
-“I don’t tell you this for selfishness, nor yet because you’d leave a
-house of mourners and break a lot of young, innocent hearts, if you was
-to go. I tell you this, because I do believe your high nature wouldn’t
-brook another man, or return into the wedded state with comfort after
-all these widowed years of freedom. I can’t see you happy so; and I
-can’t see any nice man wishing to take you out of this house.”
-
-Lydia rose to retire.
-
-“As to that, Polly, it’s all the point of view. Nobody can fairly
-quarrel with the man. He’s all right.”
-
-“I’m sure I hope you don’t think of it all the same, after hearing my
-wife, Lydia,” murmured Tom, now subdued.
-
-“I must think of it. I owe it to him. I’m sorry you can’t trust a woman
-of my age to behave sensibly; but I dare say that’s natural. Only be
-sure I’ve no wish to give either of you a pang. You know what I think
-of you and the children, and how happy I’ve been to see them come into
-the world so full of promise and hope. And if you look back, Polly,
-you’ll see I’ve always tried to be on the side of discipline and sense,
-and never lost a chance to strengthen your hand and win all proper
-obedience for you and Tom.”
-
-“We know all that,” answered her brother. “You mustn’t think because
-I’m a man of slow speech that my heart’s slow likewise. Far from it. I
-like for everything to go smooth and peaceful; I hate change; and if
-changes are coming, all I can say is I haven’t deserved ’em and more’s
-my poor wife.”
-
-“Good night, Lydia. God bless you,” said Mary, mopping her eyes. Then
-Mrs. Trivett left them and retired to the peace of her own sanctum. It
-was true that Jenny at present shared this ark, but Jenny had at last
-gone to sleep and Lydia meditated without interruption about her future.
-
-She came to a preliminary conclusion that, for once, duty was not
-directly involved. It seemed at a first glance that her own inclination
-might reasonably be considered, and that no choice between right and
-wrong awaited her. To marry was a very reasonable step, whatever Mary
-might say, for she was not old, and Mr. Knox could be trusted to make
-a worthy spouse and treat her with all due respect and consideration.
-She liked him and felt it quite possible to share his life and devote
-herself to his comfort and welfare. But to refuse him would be no more
-difficult than to accept him. Her present life, that looked so grey
-seen from the outside, was agreeable enough to her. She loved work and
-she loved children, especially her brother’s children. She had been
-largely responsible for their up-bringing and they owed much to her.
-Moreover they loved her quite as much as their mother. Indeed she was
-the sun to their mother’s moon, and she very well knew what a disaster
-her departure must be in the eyes of Milly and Bobby, Jenny and Clara.
-
-Nor could she well see her own life separated from theirs. She had
-not decided when she went to sleep, but there was little doubt in her
-subconscious mind as to how she would decide. Mary’s attitude had
-also influenced her. The real terror in Mary’s eyes, when the threat
-of departure broke upon her, Lydia could not easily forget. She dwelt
-on these things and did not allow her sister-in-law’s craft, or her
-brother’s anger and selfishness to influence her.
-
-As for Mr. and Mrs. Dolbear, they lay awake till dawn, racking their
-brains to devise means by which Lydia might be preserved alive to them.
-
-“One thing’s certain in my mind,” said Tom. “We know the man; and that
-ought to be a tower of strength. There’s no doubt it’s Philander Knox,
-and all his sucking up to us and pretended friendship is now explained.”
-
-“We must get at him—for Lydia’s sake,” declared Mary. “She shan’t be
-trapped to her doom by an unknown creature like that if I can prevent
-it.”
-
-“There’s surely something beastly to the man,” asserted Tom,
-“otherwise, after he’d once seen what my sister was in this house, he’d
-have understood it was a vain and selfish plot to try and get her out
-of it.”
-
-“She’s always talking about the greatest good to the greatest number,”
-added Mary, “and now ’tis for her to practise what she preaches. Here
-there’s ten want her; and is one doubtful male, come from Lord knows
-where, to count against all her nearest and dearest? God forbid!”
-
-“Well, I hope she’ll see it like that; and if she don’t, we must make
-it our business to queer that man’s pitch. If you and me, working
-heart and soul for our children and the family in general, can’t get
-this foreigner on the run, we’re not what I think we are.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning Mary was far too indisposed to rise, and before she went
-to work, Lydia took her up a cup of tea and three slices of toast and
-butter.
-
-“I’ve decided, Mary,” she said, “and if it’s any comfort to you to know
-it, I may tell you that I shall stop here.”
-
-Whereupon Mary wept again, held Mrs. Trivett’s hand and kissed it.
-
-“Blessed be your name,” she gurgled, “and may God’s reward meet the
-case, Lydia. I’d give you all the kingdoms of earth if they was mine.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-THE PROTEST
-
-
-At one end of the glazing house—a lofty and bright workroom at the
-top story of the Mill—stood the dry press, to which the choice papers
-demanding extra finish came after glazing. Here they were piled between
-heavy slabs of hot metal and subject to great pressure; but the primal
-business of glazing had already been done between metal rollers. A
-range of these presented the principal object in this workshop.
-
-Girls prepared the paper for the rollers, and Medora had once been of
-this cheerful and busy throng. Hither came the paper from its final
-drying after the size bath, and the workers stood with a heap of sheets
-on one side of them and a little stack of polished zinc plates on the
-other. With her left hand each girl snatched a sheet of paper, with
-her right a plate of zinc; and then she inter-leaved the paper with
-the metal until a good wad rose in her crib. The paper was now ready
-for the glazing rollers, and men, who tended these massive machines,
-ran the sheets and zinc wads between the steel rollers, backward and
-forward twice and thrice under tremendous strain. Then what was dim and
-lustreless reappeared with a bright and shining surface, and the sheets
-returned again to the girls, who separated zinc and paper once more.
-
-Mr. Pinhey had often preached on this text—indeed his simile was worn
-threadbare, though he repeated it to every new-comer in the glazing
-house and rolling room.
-
-“With paper as with humans,” he would say, “nothing like a sharp pinch
-to bring out the polish; that is if a man’s built of stuff good enough
-to take a polish. Of course some are not; we know that only too well.”
-
-The distinctive sounds in this great shop were three and did he hear
-them, a paper maker with his eyes shut would know exactly where he was.
-First, the steady thud of the plates on the side of the wooden cribs;
-next, the ceaseless rustle and hiss of the paper flying between the
-girl’s hands as it is laid upon the zinc or snatched off it; and lastly
-the rumble of the rolling machines sounding a bass as they grip the
-piles of paper and metal and squeeze them up and down.
-
-The very precious papers went to the dry press; but the mass of them
-passed directly to the sorters, who graded all stock into three
-qualities—perfect, less perfect, and inferior. No inferior paper
-ever left Dene Mill. It was pulped again; but could not aspire to the
-highest standard having once sunk beneath it.
-
-And lastly it came to Mr. Pinhey—the finisher—who seemed a figure
-conceived and planned for this lofty purpose. Spick and span in his
-snowy apron, with delicate hands and quick eyes behind their shining
-glasses, he moved spotless through the mountains and masses of the
-finished article; he passed amid the ordered blocks magisterially—a
-very spirit of purity who reigned over the reams and called them
-by their names. Wove and laid Imperial, Super-royal, Medium, Demy,
-Foolscap and Double Foolscap were all included. Here towered orange
-and old rose sections; here azure and ultramarine; here sea green,
-here opaline pink and every delicate shade of buff and cream, to the
-snowy whiteness of the great papers and mightiest sheets. From fairy
-note to “double elephant” ranged Mr. Pinhey’s activity. He worked among
-the papers, great and small, and put the last touch of perfection and
-completeness before they passed away into the larger world.
-
-But to-day Nicholas was concerned with a little affair outside the
-province of the finisher. On a sheet of palest pink, a sheet that
-seemed actually itself to blush at the delicacy of its task, Mr. Pinhey
-had written a few sentences in his happiest manner and was handing it
-round the shop, that men and women might set their names thereto. He
-told everybody that he much disliked such an appeal and protest, but
-that his sense of propriety made it necessary, for conscience sake, to
-proceed. He was honest in this assurance and did not deceive himself.
-Some of his co-workers, who declined to sign, thought that Mr. Pinhey
-was conducting his cathartic mission from private motives, not of
-the highest, and frankly told him so; but they were wrong. The man
-steadfastly believed that religion demanded his action. He had debated
-the problem for many weeks and at last come to the conclusion that a
-strong step must be taken.
-
-The fact that Jordan Kellock should continue to earn his living at
-Dene Mill, while he lived in sin out of it, had become a mental
-possession with Mr. Pinhey. He believed that such a situation must
-be an active challenge to Providence, a perpetual blister to the
-Everlasting Intelligence on Whose watchful keeping that human hive
-depended. It seemed to Nicholas that this negation of right could not
-go on for ever, and he presently convinced himself that what appeared
-to be nobody’s business, was in reality everybody’s business. He
-suspected that many of the more sober and God-fearing agreed with
-him, and he knew that, so far as the glazing house was concerned, the
-majority always agreed as a matter of course with his views. Only
-the irreligious or low-minded ever questioned him, and when they had
-committed that error, he did not rest until he had got them out of his
-department.
-
-And now he had drafted an appeal to Mr. Trenchard and was procuring all
-possible signatures for it.
-
-It began “We the undersigned,” and it expressed a pious conviction that
-the presence of Jordan Kellock in the vat house was a source of danger
-to the prosperity of the Mill, and a threat to the spiritual stability
-of younger people, who would see in his support and encouragement an
-indication that morals counted for less than professional ability and
-that skill and craft were rated higher than a right way of living and
-scrupulous obedience to Divine precept.
-
-He was pleased with the composition, but took no credit to himself.
-He felt that his hand had been guided when he wrote it, and believed
-that every word was in the right place by a direct act of inspiration.
-And now he desired the largest number of signatures possible—from the
-heads of departments for choice. Unhappily there were strong forces
-opposed to Nicholas and he knew that not only would the foreman,
-Ernest Trood, refuse to sign, but he might influence others against
-so doing. Neither could Medora’s mother be easily approached, though
-she had always represented a force for good. He decided, however, to
-invite Lydia’s opinion. She could at least see the other side, and Mr.
-Pinhey felt that she would not misunderstand a man of his repute if he
-discussed the painful subject on the plane where he habitually moved.
-For he, too, very constantly spoke of “moving on a plane,” even as the
-unregenerate Kellock was used to do. Indeed, they had no little in
-common—a fact that came to Mr. Pinhey’s shocked ear on this identical
-day.
-
-During the dinner hour, fountain-pen in hand, Nicholas proceeded upon
-his task, nerved thereto by most exalted sentiments. The certainties
-all signed with gusto; but among the doubtful attestors, Mr. Pinhey was
-disappointed to find few prepared to support him. Lydia he approached,
-where she sat reading a newspaper in her workroom. Indeed her thoughts
-were far from the printed page, but she opened it from force of habit
-until the work bell rang again.
-
-“I’ll thank you to read this, Mrs. Trivett,” said Nicholas, as he
-presented his blushing manifesto. “You may for a moment doubt whether
-I ought to ask you, of all people, to sign it. I’ve been advised not.
-But we’re old friends, I believe, and I know you’ll never quarrel with
-the man who does his duty, even if you don’t see his duty with the same
-eyes as him.”
-
-“Duty’s often a doubtful matter,” she said, “and we mistake inclination
-for duty sometimes. You can easily hoodwink yourself about duty,
-Nicholas.”
-
-She read the protest and gave it back to him and shook her head.
-
-“Do as you think right,” she said. “But don’t ask me to sign that.
-You’ll guess without being told what a sad thing this is for a mother;
-but I’m not going to take sides this time of day. I’ve told them what
-I think about it and how I’ve suffered over it, and I’ve told other
-people also; but there’s nothing gained that I can see by this. There’s
-more in it than meets the eye, and Jordan Kellock is the sort of man to
-feel the punishment of his own conscience much sharper than the voice,
-or vote, of his fellow men.”
-
-“‘Conscience!’” exclaimed Mr. Pinhey. “How can you say that the man who
-does a thing like that have got a conscience, Mrs. Trivett?”
-
-“Because I know he has—so do you if you’ll think. There’s very few
-so fussy and nice about life and its duties and bearings as Jordan
-Kellock. We all know what he is; and until this happened, nobody
-respected him more than you. And now he’s done a thing that your
-conscience and mine don’t approve. But remember this, he’d never have
-done it if his own conscience hadn’t supported him.”
-
-“It was the devil getting the better of his conscience,” argued
-Nicholas. “He was always weak, because he was self-righteous, though
-Lord knows, seeing his foggy religious opinions, none had less reason
-to be. He had got his own theory of morals seemingly, and since it
-didn’t come out of the Word, it was worthless as you’d expect. So when
-the trial came and your daughter—”
-
-“Leave it, there’s a good man. I’m not going to argue upon it. I hope
-they’ll soon be properly married and this sad business allowed to pass
-by and be forgot. For the minute it’s up to Ned Dingle, and I’ve been
-bitter sorry for him, and he knows all I think about it; but there’s no
-more can be done to right the wrong and ease people who feel like you,
-till Ned does it.”
-
-“Your heart is speaking against your morals, Lydia, if I may say so.”
-
-“You may say what you like, of course.”
-
-“You can’t rise to the thought that it is painful for some of us to
-earn our living under the same roof as that man?”
-
-“No,” she said. “I’ve never met the man or woman so bad that I couldn’t
-work under the same roof with them.”
-
-He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“It’s doubtfully Christian to be so large-minded in my opinion,” he
-said. “Do the other women up here think the same?”
-
-“Alice Barefoot will sign; but her brother, Henry, will not.”
-
-“Being an old sailor, no doubt he won’t,” said Mr. Pinhey. He won Miss
-Barefoot’s support, however, and then skirmished in the neighbourhood
-of the vat house. Jordan was not there, and after Mr. Life had appended
-his signature and Harold Spry, Kellock’s coucher, had declined to do
-so, Nicholas approached Philander Knox.
-
-“I don’t know your exact opinions,” he said; “but I should be glad if
-you can feel on this subject with most of us serious people. You know
-the facts and feel it oughtn’t to go on, I expect—that is if you take
-life seriously, as no doubt you do.”
-
-“The thing is to take other people’s lives seriously and your own
-pretty light,” said Knox. “That’s the best way, because it keeps your
-sense of proportion about fair, Pinhey.”
-
-Nicholas liked these problems, but was doubtful here.
-
-“Do you mean as a matter of morals?” he asked.
-
-“No—as a matter of business,” replied Philander. “Because if you put
-yourself first always, your fellow creatures will be mighty quick to
-put you second, or third, or out of the running altogether. Nobody
-bores people worse than the man who is always thinking about himself.
-But if you show a proper interest in others and their hopes and fears
-and likes and dislikes, then the better sort will gladly give as well
-as take. If you want anything for nothing in this world, you won’t get
-it; but the more you give, the more you’ll receive, in my experience.
-In the matter of giving don’t stint and don’t squander; and don’t give
-where you’ll get nothing back of course—that’s foolish.”
-
-Mr. Pinhey shook his head.
-
-“Worldly wise, not heavenly wise,” he declared. “Be so good as to read
-this document, Knox, and let me have the pleasure of seeing you sign
-it. It’s the elder people I want to do so. In fact I’m not showing it
-to the young ones. Better such things should not enter their innocent
-minds.”
-
-Mr. Knox read Kellock’s indictment and grinned.
-
-“What do you know of sin, you old caterpillar?” he asked very rudely.
-“Good powers, my man, d’you see what you’re doing? You’re shaving with
-a blunt razor over another chap’s wounds. Blow out reason’s candle if
-you like to walk without light; but don’t from your darkness presume to
-show other people their road. That’s damned impertinent and only makes
-the other sort cuss.”
-
-Mr. Pinhey shrank resentfully.
-
-“If you make reason your guide,” he said, “God help you, Philander
-Knox. And—”
-
-“Tear it up—tear it up and save Trenchard the trouble, Pinhey. Be
-guided by a man who’s moved in a larger world than yourself.”
-
-“A larger and a wickeder world, if you can talk like that about sin,”
-answered Nicholas, who had grown pinker than his paper.
-
-“I’m not talking about sin. I’d as soon talk about sin to a bluebottle
-as you. You’re one of the born good sort, you are, and the funny thing
-is that you’ve worked in the same business with Kellock all these years
-and years and don’t know he’s the same order of creation as yourself.
-Why, my dear man, he might be your son!”
-
-“This is too much and I won’t stand it,” answered Mr. Pinhey. “I ask
-you to recall that, Knox; or I won’t know you from this hour forward.”
-
-“Don’t be fussy. We’re both well past our half century and can air our
-opinions without getting cross. I mean that Kellock is a serious-minded
-chap with a strong character and steadfast opinions. He’s just as
-anxious to leave the world better than he found it as you are. And he
-means to do so; and very likely, if he’s not too deadly in earnest
-and too narrow in his virtues, he may. You must grant him his good
-character, Pinhey, and then ask yourself whether a man with his past
-would have done this without what seemed good and high reasons. I’m not
-saying he was right for a minute; but I’m saying he weighed it in all
-its bearings and from his mistaken and inexperienced point of view made
-this big error.”
-
-“And aren’t we here to show him his error?”
-
-“No, we can’t show it to him. You wouldn’t convince him if you talked
-for a month from your point of view. Sit tight—that’s all you’ve got
-to do. I believe he’s made a big mistake and I believe he’ll see it for
-himself before he’s six months older. But let his own nature work and
-don’t say more till you know more. What looks like wickedness to one
-man’s eye may seem goodness to another man’s.”
-
-Mr. Pinhey had now grown calm.
-
-“Then I won’t waste more of your time,” he answered. “You speak, I
-suppose, what you believe according to reason; but I wouldn’t say you
-were a very good advertisement even for reason, Knox. I know your eyes
-will be opened about that man sooner or later. I can only trust that
-he’s one by himself. I stand on the old paths and I believe most of us
-here do the same. But if we’re going to set up Kellock and his ways as
-a model, then I don’t see myself what’s to become of civilisation, or
-religion either.”
-
-He departed, completed his rounds and confessed to disappointment at
-the result. Still he had mustered a respectable following and the
-document he left at Matthew Trenchard’s private house that evening
-was signed by twenty-eight men and women in more or less responsible
-positions.
-
-To his everlasting surprise and indignation, Mr. Pinhey never heard of
-the protest again. He might as well have dropped it into the Dart, or
-posted it on the west wind.
-
-A week passed and nothing happened. Nicholas had met the master
-frequently and found him just as usual—cheery, practical, busy. He
-fumed in secret. He told Robert Life and old Mr. Amos Toft, who mixed
-the size, that were it not for the fact that he only wanted a year to
-qualify for his pension, he would resign.
-
-Mrs. Trivett and Philander Knox discussed the matter on an occasion
-when they met at close of work. It was the day on which Lydia had to
-announce her decision with respect to her admirer, and they both knew
-the time had come.
-
-“We’ll give the Corkscrew a miss and go round the pond,” he said. “You
-can’t talk climbing that Jacob’s ladder of a hill—at least I can’t.”
-
-Her heart sank, for she had desired to make the painful interview
-as brief as possible. But the event proved that Lydia need not have
-feared, for Mr. Knox took her black news in an unexpected spirit.
-
-They spoke first, however, of Medora and Jordan Kellock.
-
-“I never heard the like,” said Lydia. “It shows the danger of doing
-such things and not counting the cost. They was so wrapped up in
-their own affairs that they never saw it takes three people to make a
-divorce, and now that injured man is opening their eyes. It’s all as
-wrong as wrong can be, yet where are you going to put the blame?”
-
-“I’m not going to put the blame anywhere,” answered Mr. Knox. “There’s
-a lot too much meddling, in my opinion, and if they’re only left alone,
-those three people may work out their own salvation in their own way.
-I’m fed up with ’em: one would think the welfare of Dene hung on their
-capers. To hear old Pinhey, you’d say it depended on our opinion
-about ’em whether we’d ever get to heaven ourselves. Where you can’t
-help, don’t worrit. They’re all right; but what about me? This is the
-appointed time, Lydia, and I hope I may add that this is the day of
-salvation.”
-
-She jumped at the suggestion to lighten her refusal.
-
-“I expect you may; and you’ll look back at this evening and feel you
-are better a free man. Yes, you must regard yourself as free, please—I
-couldn’t do it—I couldn’t take another. I’m fond of you, if that is
-anything, and I’m proud you could have a fancy for me; for a reminder
-that I’m a woman, coming from such a man as you, naturally makes me a
-bit above myself. But my life’s run into a mould, you see. It’s found
-its channel, like a river does; and it’s made its bed. I say again I
-like you—I even love you, if the word ain’t nonsense at fifty; but
-I’ve seen my duty clear since we spoke about it. I couldn’t fairly
-leave my sister-in-law and brother. ’Twould be like taking a screw out
-of a machine. The screw ain’t much in itself but a lot depends upon it.”
-
-“You won’t marry me, you mean?”
-
-“Won’t ain’t the word. I’d be very pleased to be your wife if I was a
-free party, but in a sense I’m not free. You can’t be in two places at
-once, like a flash of lightning, and I can’t keep house for you and
-look after Mary’s family and do my bit at Priory Farm. And it amounts
-to this—my brother, when he heard what was afoot, made it very clear
-that Priory Farm simply couldn’t get on without me. That may seem a
-vain thing to you; but it’s the truth—absurd, I dare say; but they’re
-built like that. You, on the contrary, would get on without me well
-enough.”
-
-“Speak for yourself, but not for me,” he said, “and not for your
-brother, Tom, and his mate. Rabbits in a hutch have got to be looked
-after, I grant, but you mustn’t believe everything you hear—even from
-Tom Dolbear. Answer this: if you died to-morrow, what would happen at
-Priory Farm? Why, my dear woman, in six weeks they’d have somebody
-in your place who looked after the children all her time; and they’d
-wonder why they never thought of that before. We won’t argue about it,
-however. When you say ‘duty,’ I’m dumb, of course. But tell me this
-before we drop the subject: would you marry me if things were otherwise
-and your sense of duty didn’t come between?”
-
-Mrs. Trivett was immensely relieved to find how quietly he had taken
-his reverse.
-
-“Of course I would,” she said. “You’re one of the best, and if it
-hadn’t been that I’d got to work out my life same as I’m doing, I’d
-have been glad enough to come to you. People at our time of day have
-got judgment, if ever they’re going to have it, and in my opinion we
-should have made a well-matched pair enough. But such good things are
-not for me. I’ve been happily married once, and can’t expect it again.”
-
-He continued to be quite restrained.
-
-“I venture to think you’re about as wrong as you can be, Lydia, and
-your usual good sense has gone astray. But I know duty’s your guiding
-star, and I’m happy to think duty changes its shape from time to time,
-like most other human contrivances.”
-
-“I’ll always try to do it, my dear man, however it looks.”
-
-“You will—that’s why I’m keeping so quiet now, instead of breaking out
-and making a noise and lowering myself in your opinion. The beauty of
-a woman like you is that you’re steadfast—a slave, if not a martyr to
-what you think right. That being so, I take your word for the minute,
-and leave the rest to Providence.”
-
-She was puzzled, but very glad he could be so gentle with her.
-
-“You’ve took it like the wise man you are,” she said. “I might have
-known you would; but I was afraid you wouldn’t.”
-
-“I haven’t took it,” he answered. “There are some things you don’t
-take, and this is one of them. I’ve a great trust in the future, Lydia
-Trivett. The future, though it plays many people false, have always
-treated me in a very sportsmanlike and trustworthy manner so far.”
-
-“That’s because you make your future just the same as you make your
-paper, and leave nothing to chance.”
-
-“You never spoke a truer word,” he answered. “I’m not going to brag
-before the event; but if ever I was properly interested in a bit of my
-future, it’s now; and if I can get the pattern right, and stamp my will
-and purpose upon it, I dare say you’ll be a good bit surprised yet.”
-
-She became uneasy.
-
-“Don’t you meddle with fate, however. That’s not our work,” she said.
-
-“And what would you be inclined to call ‘fate’?” he asked.
-
-“Well,” she answered, “in a manner of speaking, you might call ‘fate’
-my dear brother, Tom, and his wife. And I’ll ask you not to touch them,
-Philander.”
-
-“I promise that. That wouldn’t be playing the game,” he admitted. “I’d
-be very sorry if they had anything to do with my future, Lydia. You
-might as well try to carve butter, or a turnip, into an enduring thing.
-I shall treat your brother and his wife the same as I’ve always treated
-them. For the present, we’ll just go on as we’re going, please—good
-friends, and nothing more. I’ve a right to ask that.”
-
-“I wish you’d take ‘no’ for an answer, however.”
-
-“There’s nothing final about anything in this world except death, my
-dear. While she’s alive it’s never too late for a woman to change her
-mind. And if you did, it would be very unfortunate if I was in such a
-position I couldn’t listen to you. You may ask me to marry you, yet,
-Lydia—if Providence so wills it—though not leap year, I believe.”
-
-She laughed, and such was his amiability that he saw her all the way
-home.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-A TEST FOR JORDAN KELLOCK
-
-
-Philander Knox combined with his level temper and tolerant philosophy
-an element of shrewdness which those with whom his lot was now cast
-failed to appreciate. He was no intriguer for choice, nor might he
-be called inquisitive; but if the occasion demanded it and his own
-interests were involved, Philander found himself quite prepared to
-employ his latent gifts. He was cunning, with that peculiar sort of
-craft that often belongs to expansive and genial natures; he could,
-in fact, be exceedingly sly and even unscrupulous within certain
-limits. Now the need for active operations on his own behalf began to
-be obvious to Mr. Knox. Finding that she cared for him, he had not
-the smallest intention of losing Lydia. He felt her argument against
-matrimony beneath serious consideration; but he knew that to her the
-reasons for his rejection were grave and sufficient, and he did not
-propose any counter-attack on the front of his reverse.
-
-He preferred a more circuitous response. He devoted a great deal of
-time to the subject and then took an occasion to see Medora. That he
-might do so, he would spend his leisure by the river and smoke his pipe
-there out of working hours. For some time he failed; but then came a
-day when he saw her returning to “The Waterman’s Arms” from the village
-and greeted her.
-
-Always glad to hear a kindly voice and aware that Knox had become
-a friend of her family, Medora smiled upon the vatman. He appeared
-gloomy, however, and their conversation began by his confessing his
-private tribulations.
-
-“You’ve got a heart,” he said, “and you are one of the brave sort that
-stand up to life and go through with a thing like a good plucked one,
-even though you know you’ve made a mistake. Well, such show sympathy
-for their neighbours, Medora, so I’m sure you’ll be sorry to hear I’ve
-had a great disappointment.”
-
-The other guessed what it was.
-
-“Mother won’t marry you!”
-
-“So she says; but on a very poor excuse in my opinion. Such a sensible
-woman might have found a better reason for turning me down. In fact
-she would—if there’d been a better reason; but the truth is there’s
-no reason at all. Therefore, though she thinks I’m rejected, I don’t
-regard myself as in that position—not yet.”
-
-A love so venerable in her eyes did not interest Medora, but she mildly
-wondered at him.
-
-“I’m sure I can’t think how you old people can run after each other and
-drive each other miserable, when you see what a beastly mess we young
-people make of love,” she said.
-
-“Ah! You speak with a good deal of feeling. But we old people—as you
-call us, rather thoughtlessly, Medora—we old people don’t take you
-children for a model. We’ve been through those stages, and what we
-understand by love ain’t what you understand by it. We’ve forgotten
-more than you know. I should have thought now that Kellock—a man so
-much older than his years—might have given you a glimpse of the beauty
-and steadfastness of what we’ll call middling to middle-aged love,
-Medora?”
-
-“Perhaps he has.”
-
-“Don’t his ideas appeal to you as a bit lofty and high class—as
-compared with your first’s notion of it for instance?”
-
-She looked sharply at Mr. Knox, but did not answer. He put the question
-moodily and appeared not interested in an answer. Indeed he proceeded
-without waiting for her to speak.
-
-“There’s two sorts of women, and you can divide them like this—the
-sort of women men go to when they want to grumble about their wives,
-and the other sort. A man knows by instinct whether he’ll get a tender
-hearing, or whether he won’t.”
-
-“I didn’t know decent men did grumble about their wives,” said Medora.
-
-“Didn’t you? Oh, yes, they do—even the best, sometimes. If decent
-women can grumble about their husbands—you, for example—why shouldn’t
-decent men?”
-
-“I haven’t got a husband at present,” said Medora sharply, “so you
-needn’t drag me in.”
-
-“The sensible way you look facts in the face is very much to be
-admired,” he answered. “There’s a lot of girls, if they’d done what
-you’ve done, would bury their heads in the sand, like the ostrich,
-and think it was all right. But you don’t let the truth escape you. I
-admire you for that. In a way, it’s true you haven’t got a husband at
-present, but on the other hand, you have.”
-
-“I won’t pretend; I never will pretend,” she answered, pleased at his
-praise. “I do look things in the face, as you say, though nobody gives
-me credit for it, and I’m not going to call Mr. Kellock my husband till
-he is.”
-
-“I wasn’t thinking so much about him as Mr. Dingle. You’re that
-fearless that you won’t be afraid of the fact that under the law he’s
-your husband still, monstrous though it may sound.”
-
-Medora nodded. She did not resent the statement, but asked a curious
-question.
-
-“How does he find himself?” she inquired, and it was Mr. Knox’s turn to
-be surprised. But he showed no astonishment.
-
-“To be plain, he’s suffered a lot. I’ve got the pleasure of being
-his friend, because he knows I’m a man who keeps himself to himself,
-and doesn’t push in where angels fear to tread. He’s given me
-his confidence, and I find this has been a very cruel facer for
-Dingle—knocked him out altogether. He’ll get over it some day, as a
-brave man should. But he’s got a warm heart, and he’ll never be quite
-the same again—naturally.”
-
-“If he’s suffered, so have I,” said Medora, “and if you’re in his
-confidence, I may tell you that I want all my pluck and a bit over
-sometimes. I knew more or less what I was going to face; but I didn’t
-know all.”
-
-“No woman ever does know all when she takes over a man. It cuts both
-ways, however. Kellock didn’t know all when he ran away with you.”
-
-“Know all! No, he don’t know all. He don’t know half what I thought he
-knew, and what I’d a right to think he knew.”
-
-“Dear me!” said Mr. Knox. “Don’t he, Medora?”
-
-“I’m speaking in confidence, I hope?”
-
-“That be sure of. I’m old enough to be your father, and shall
-faithfully respect your secrets, just as I respect Mr. Kellock’s, or
-Ned’s, or anybody’s.”
-
-“Sometimes I think my life’s going to turn into one long Sunday now,”
-she said.
-
-“That’s a good sign, because it shows you’re grasping the stern truth;
-and it shows Jordan’s breaking you in. Once you’re broken in, Medora,
-you and him will come together in a real understanding spirit. No doubt
-the first stages are rather painful to a handsome, clever bit like you,
-with dashing ideas, and the memory of what life was with Ned; but only
-give Kellock time, and the past will grow dim, and you’ll get used to
-the everlasting Sunday idea. I greatly admire Kellock, because he never
-changes. He’ll be a bit monotonous at first compared with the past,
-but he’ll wear. You’ll feel you’re always living in cold, bitter clear
-moonlight with Kellock; and I dare say you’ll miss the sunshine a bit
-for ten years or so; but gradually you’ll get chilled down to his way.
-And once you’ve settled to it, you’ll hate the sunshine, and come to be
-just a wise, owl-eyed sort, same as him.”
-
-Medora could not conceal a shiver.
-
-“You’ve voted for moonlight and cold water against sunshine and a glass
-of sparkling now and again—and, no doubt, you’re right, Medora.”
-
-She turned on him passionately.
-
-“Don’t—don’t, for God’s sake!” she cried. “What d’you think I’m made
-of—ice?”
-
-“Not yet. You can’t change your happy nature all in a minute. It’ll
-come over you gradual—like the salt over Lot’s wife. You naturally
-want to know what Ned’s going to do about it, and I’ve been at him
-on that score—because your mother’s asked me to. She don’t like the
-present doubt and delay, and so on. It’s uncomfortable, and makes the
-unrighteous scoff.”
-
-“If he wants us to eat dirt—”
-
-“No, no, nothing like that. Ned’s a gentleman, but these things have
-shaken him. He’ll make up his mind presently, but he wants to act for
-the best—for your sake. Not for Jordan’s, but for yours. There’s a
-lot goes to such a thing as you’ve done, and you want to be a student
-of character before you decide about it. Ned don’t mean to let his
-feelings run away with him. He’s got to think of your future.”
-
-“Then why has he sunk to damages against Mr. Kellock?”
-
-“Don’t believe anything you hear yet. I happen to know that Ned has not
-settled upon that question. He’s very large-minded, as you’ll remember.”
-
-“That would be the last straw, I should think.”
-
-“You can’t fairly quarrel with him, even if he do shake a bit of cash
-out of your husband to be. I’m sure I should have. You may never
-know now all that you were to Ned; but I know, and he knows. He’s
-been wonderful, in my opinion, and, with your great imagination, you
-ought to see how wonderful. If he didn’t kill Kellock, why was it?
-Out of regard for himself? Not a chance! Ned’s fearless, as the male
-should be, and would hang for Kellock to-morrow—especially seeing
-he’s got no particular interest in going on living himself, owing to
-his shattering loss. No, Medora; he didn’t spare your future husband
-because he was frightened of letting daylight into him; he spared him
-because he knew you loved him better than anything on earth. You put
-that in your pipe and smoke it, my dear. And take heart from it also;
-for if Ned wouldn’t sink to Kellock’s life, you may bet your pretty
-shoes he wouldn’t touch his money. Now I must get back.”
-
-“There’s a lot more I’d like to say, however. When you do find a fellow
-creature that understands, which isn’t often, your soul craves to
-speak,” said Medora.
-
-“Another time, perhaps. But mind this. Be fair. You’re so brave, I
-see, that you can afford to be fair to all parties—friends and foes,
-so to call ’em. And you know a fine character when you see it, I’m
-sure,” concluded Philander vaguely; then he sped away, leaving the girl
-anxious both to hear and tell more. She did not comprehend Mr. Knox in
-the least, but perceived he was friendly. There was, moreover, a human
-ring in his voice that heartened her, and she felt the contrast keenly
-when she returned to the level tones and unimpassioned serenity of
-Jordan Kellock.
-
-But for once she did see Kellock taken out of himself, and in a frame
-of mind enthusiastic and excited.
-
-There came that evening a man to visit him from Totnes. He was an
-earnest and serious-minded person, well known to Jordan, and in his
-leisure he did secretarial work for the local branch of the Independent
-Labour Party. Upon that organisation, in the opinion of Kellock, the
-hope and future prosperity of his class now hung. By its activities
-alone salvation might presently be welcomed. And now his friend, acting
-as mouth-piece of the party, invited Kellock to deliver a lecture at
-Totnes, on “Our Aims and Hopes.” It was understood that county men of
-authority in the movement would be present, and Kellock did not need
-his fellow politician to point out that herein their side designed the
-young vatman an opportunity to show what he was good for.
-
-“You’ll jump at it, of course, and do your very best. It may be
-worth a lot to you if you get ’em. Lawson and Jenkins will be there
-from Plymouth, and very likely Sawdye, from Newton. I’ll beat up the
-Totnes crowd. Give ’em an hour of your hottest stuff, and keep the
-shop-stewards to the front. We want to get a move on the unions all
-round. They’re growing a bit mouldy in their ideas; but Labour can’t
-stand still for them.”
-
-“The trades unions were made for Labour, not Labour for trades unions,”
-declared Kellock.
-
-“That’s right; you rub that into them.”
-
-The young man stayed to supper, and he and Kellock soared to heights
-that Medora had not yet imagined. Jordan was full of life, and
-displayed a vivacity that he had never displayed in conversation on his
-private affairs. It was clear that nothing personal would ever light
-such fires. They were reserved for the cause and the cause alone.
-
-When the man from Totnes had departed, Kellock addressed Medora.
-
-“You may say that this is the biggest thing that has ever happened to
-me,” he began. “I didn’t expect it yet, and I must confess I’m a good
-bit gratified.”
-
-“So it seems,” she said.
-
-“Yes; because the people who are running our show in Devon are very
-jealous, naturally, that we shall give a good account of ourselves.
-There’s a feeling in some quarters that nothing much in the way
-of fighting intellect comes from the West Country. Londoners and
-Northerners think it’s a sort of Turkish bath all the time down here—a
-place for holidays and Devonshire cream and playing about. So if I’m to
-be reported, as I shall be, that means a pretty good advertisement and
-a pretty high compliment. It’s come sooner than I expected, and I must
-rise to it, Medora.”
-
-“You ain’t frightened to get up and talk to a crowd of men?”
-
-“Not if I know I’m saying the right thing. I’d be frightened to do it
-if I wasn’t dead sure I was right, and that my ideas—our ideas—will
-rule the world before I’m an old man; but they will. I must prepare my
-speech with my heart and soul. Everything must give way to it.”
-
-“Including me, I suppose?” she said.
-
-“You’re in what they call another category, Medora. You are part of my
-own life—personal to me as I’m personal to you and, of course, our
-private affairs mean a lot to us.”
-
-“I’m glad you think that.”
-
-“But this belongs to the world of ideas—to our souls and our highest
-ambitions—what we’re born for, so to speak. I include you in it,
-Medora.”
-
-“You needn’t then,” she said, “because though it may appear a small
-thing to you, my highest ambition at present is to know when I shall be
-a married woman.”
-
-“Don’t talk in that tone of voice,” he said. “I feel all that, too, and
-you know I do, and I’m not going to sit down under it much longer; but
-that’s in another category, as I tell you. It won’t bring it any nearer
-talking. I’ll see, or write, to Mr. Dingle before much longer, if he
-doesn’t set to work; but in the meantime this affair will call for all
-my thought and attention out of business hours.”
-
-“Perhaps it would be a convenience to you if I went and lived somewhere
-else?”
-
-His forehead wrinkled.
-
-“When you say things like that, I never can be sure if you mean them
-for satire, or not,” he answered. “If you’re meaning it for satire,
-you’re wrong, Medora, and I blame you; but if you really mean it, out
-of consideration to my time, then I can assure you there’s no need for
-you to go. In fact, you’ll type the lecture, I hope. It’s going to be
-quite as much to you as to me, I’m sure.”
-
-“How can it be? You’re so thick-skinned. What’s the good of lectures
-to a person who’s living my life? You don’t care. You’ve got your work
-and your ambitions, and you’ll have the honour and glory, if there is
-any. But where do I come in? Who am I? What am I?”
-
-“My future wife, I should think. You can’t accuse me of anything wrong
-in that category, Medora.”
-
-“I’m not accusing you; I’m past all that. I’ll try to copy you. I’ll be
-patient. If you say you’ll see Mr. Dingle, or write to him—”
-
-“I shall see him. He’s coming back, so I hear, to Ashprington.”
-
-Then he returned to his lecture, and, with the ardour of youth, did not
-sleep that night until he had roughed out a general plan and placed the
-heads of his composition clearly before him.
-
-Long after Medora had gone to bed and the little inn was asleep, Jordan
-scribbled on, and surprised himself at the compass of his thoughts. He
-was amazed to hear the clock strike two, and put away his books and
-papers at once.
-
-He could recollect no previous occasion in his life on which he had
-been awake at two o’clock in the morning. He fell asleep longing to
-read what he had written to Medora, for he felt dimly sometimes that
-he was more outside her life and its interests than he should be;
-and since he could never rejoice her on any material base of trivial
-pleasures, he must make good his claim by force of intellect and a
-future far above that which the average working man could promise.
-
-But he also intended to bend the bow in reason, let life have its say,
-and their home its domestic happiness. He believed that, when they were
-married, they would soon become everything in the world to one another.
-
-He went to sleep in a very happy, exalted frame of mind, and felt that
-life had taken an unexpected stride in the right direction.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE WISDOM OF PHILANDER
-
-
-When Ned Dingle returned home, his future still unsettled, he had the
-privilege of an early visit from Mr. Knox.
-
-They sat in Ned’s small kitchen garden, and Philander advised him to
-plant his peas.
-
-“Damn the peas,” said Ned. “Listen to me. I was as good as booked at
-Ivybridge when I got your letter telling me to hang on. What’s the good
-all the same? I don’t know why for I should have listened to you, but I
-know you’ve got sense, and so I left it for the minute. I can’t go back
-to Trenchard, if that’s what you meant.”
-
-“I meant a lot of things,” answered the elder. “I think so deuced
-highly of you, Dingle, that you’ve got on my mind more than any man
-ever did before, and I’m very wishful, for more reasons than one, to do
-you a turn. For the minute, however, it rests with you.”
-
-“I know it does. I’m fed up with hearing that. Well, I’m going on with
-it. I’m going to get the heaviest damages the law will give me out of
-that swine.”
-
-“Good—so far as it goes. And if things weren’t exactly as they are, I
-should say ditto. But it’s a very peculiar case, quite contrary to my
-experience, and it calls for a pinch of patience yet. Nobody has any
-right to dictate to you, because you’re a man of good judgment, and I
-reckon you’ve done dead right so far, and kept your nerve better than I
-should, or many older men with less intellects; but don’t you spoil the
-ship for a hap’p’oth of tar, Ned. It’s paid you so mighty well to wait
-and hang off, that it may pay you better still to go on waiting.”
-
-“It only hurts her—it don’t hurt him. They’ll say I’m bullying a
-woman, next, and putting him in the right.”
-
-“Only the ignorant would talk like that. But I know your mother-in-law,
-and I also know Medora. The females of that family want very careful
-handling, Ned; and in confidence, I may tell you that Mrs. Trivett is
-being very carefully handled—by me. But Medora is not being carefully
-handled—quite the contrary. Kellock don’t understand the female
-mind—how could he with a face like his?”
-
-“What’s that to me?”
-
-“That’s the question. Not that I want an answer. I’m only wishful to
-put certain facts before you.”
-
-“How did she ever think, in her silliest moments, that man would have
-any lasting use for her?”
-
-“He got on her blind side, I suppose; for even a remarkable woman, like
-Medora, has her blind side. Who hasn’t? But the interesting thing for
-you—and only for you—to consider, is that Medora sees straight again.”
-
-“That’s her mother says that. I don’t believe it. She’s a lot too
-conceited to admit that she made an infernal fool of herself. She’d
-rather go miserable to her grave than give herself away.”
-
-“You naturally think so, having no idea what a power there is in the
-clash of opposite characters. Medora is proud, and has a right to
-be, because she is beautiful and very fine stuff, given the right
-nature to mould her. And she thought—mistaken girl—because you were
-easy and good tempered, and liked to see her happy, that you weren’t
-strong enough. That’s why, in a moment of youthful folly, she went
-over to Kellock, before she knew anything whatever about the man’s
-true character. Now, of course, she finds her mistake. And don’t think
-I’m getting this from Mrs. Trivett. One wouldn’t take her opinion,
-being the girl’s mother. No, I had it from Medora herself. I happened
-by chance to meet her, and gave her ‘good day,’ for I don’t make
-other people’s quarrels mine; and we had a bit of a yarn; and I won’t
-disguise from you, Ned, that I saw the punishment was fitting the crime
-all right. She’s got a good brain, and every day that passes over her
-head is enlarging that brain. She’ll be a valuable wife for somebody
-some day; but not for Kellock. She sees Kellock now in the cold light
-of truth. She don’t run him down, or anything rude like that; but she
-just talks about him and his character like a sister might. My word,
-she’s clever! She said that living with Kellock would be like living
-in moonlight. Did you ever hear a sharper thought? That just describes
-it. And where’s the woman that wants to live in moonlight? You see,
-she knows. She didn’t come to Kellock without experience of the other
-thing. After you, of course, a cold creature like him is like milk
-after treble X. I feel it myself. Not a word against Kellock, mind
-you—he was utterly misled, and came a cropper, too; but he’s got
-the virtues of his failings, and being ice, he behaved as such, and
-has always treated her just the same as he’d have treated his maiden
-aunt—except he’d have kissed his aunt, but not Medora. So I put it
-before you, and leave you to turn over the peculiar circumstances, Ned.
-As I say, the punishment is going on very steady, and your tactics
-couldn’t be beat in my judgment. They deserve to suffer; and she does;
-and if Kellock weren’t so darned busy about what matters to him more,
-he’d be suffering too.”
-
-“He will, when I knock all his savings out of him.”
-
-“No, he won’t—that would only hit her. He’s got no use for money.
-He don’t want more than the clothes he stands up in. But it ain’t my
-business to bother you about what you’re very well equal to manage
-yourself. I really came for quite a different reason, and that’s the
-Mill. Bulstrode is going. He can’t stick Ernest Trood, and Trood can’t
-stick him. It happened yesterday, and in a month from now we must have
-a new beaterman. You might not have heard that. Not that you’ll come
-back, of course; but in your wanderings you may have heard of somebody?”
-
-“No, I haven’t. I must fix myself up now.”
-
-“It’s a thousand pities things are as they are, but if I was you, I’d
-mark time a little longer, if you can afford to do so. And don’t forget
-the peas. They ought to be in. You may not be here to eat them; but, on
-the other hand, you may.”
-
-“As to that, how about you?” asked Dingle.
-
-“There again, I’m not in a position to close for the house yet.”
-
-“If she’s said ‘no,’ she means ‘no,’ Knox. Mrs. Trivett don’t change.”
-
-“More don’t the weather-cock, Ned; but the wind does. It all comes
-back to patience, and, thank God, you and me are both patient and
-far-sighted men—else we shouldn’t stand so firm on our feet as we do.
-Now I’ll bid you good-night. And have a talk with Mr. Trenchard one
-day. There’s wells of good sense in that man. The more I see of him,
-the more I find in him. He’s got more brains in his little finger than
-we can boast of in our whole heads. And a warm heart also.”
-
-Philander withdrew, and went very thoughtfully homeward. He felt sure
-that Dingle would consider his remarks, and hesitated once or twice
-about returning and adding another touch; but he decided that nothing
-more need be said for the present.
-
-On the following day, to her surprise, he sought Mrs. Trivett in the
-dinner hour.
-
-“Fear nothing,” he said, “and go on with your food. I haven’t come to
-spoil it; but you know very well your good’s mine, and it happens that
-I’ve got an idea.”
-
-“You’re very kind,” she answered. “I don’t feel, however, I’ve any
-right to your ideas—not now. But you rise above a little thing like
-that, and you’ll probably live to know I was right.”
-
-“It was the exception that proves the rule,” declared Mr. Knox. “You’re
-nearly always right, though in refusing me you were wrong. But let that
-pass. I’m considering your point of view. What’s in my mind now is not
-you, but your daughter.”
-
-“I’m going to see her this evening. She’s wrote me a letter asking me
-for God’s sake to come and have a cup of tea. There’s no doubt this
-waiting is getting on her nerves. It’s very improper.”
-
-“You’ll be surprised at what I’m going to say; but yesterday I had a
-remarkable conversation with your son-in-law. There’s a lot more in
-that man than he gets credit for.”
-
-“He’s behaved very well, I grant you—amazing well; but it’s more than
-time he went on with it. He didn’t ought to treat them like a cat
-treats a mouse.”
-
-“He’s not that sort. He looks far beyond anything like that. He looks
-all round the subject in a way that surprised me. Have no fear he won’t
-do right.”
-
-“It won’t be right in my opinion to take damages out of Kellock—that’s
-revenge.”
-
-“Well, he’s only human. But what I’m coming to is this. Ned has got a
-very righteous down on Kellock, and feels no need to show mercy there,
-for Kellock showed him none; but he don’t feel the same to Medora.”
-
-“Since when?” asked Mrs. Trivett. “He felt the same to her all right
-last time I saw him.”
-
-“But not now. His mind worked at Ivybridge, and he turned over the
-situation. And, in a word, if Kellock is going to save his skin and
-be let off, he’ll have to thank Medora for it. I’m saying a delicate
-thing, of course, and to anybody less wise than you, I wouldn’t say
-it, because I should be laughed at; but I do believe, if Medora could
-see Dingle while there’s yet time, and afore he’s loosed his lawyer,
-Kellock might escape damages. What do you think? Should you say Medora
-and Ned might speak?”
-
-“Medora would speak to him if she thought she could serve Jordan
-Kellock, I dare say; but whether he’d listen I don’t know.”
-
-“In my opinion, if Medora would speak, he’d listen. It ought, however,
-to be done by stealth. Neither one nor the other must know they’re
-going to meet. Then it would surprise them both, and Medora might get
-round him.”
-
-“There’s no danger in it for Medora, you reckon?”
-
-“None; I’ve heard him on the subject. He may dress her down and tell
-her a bit of the truth about her conduct, and he may use some very
-harsh words to her; but more he would not do, and if she took it in a
-humble spirit, I dare say she’d come out top and get him to drop the
-damages when he divorces her.”
-
-Mrs. Trivett considered.
-
-“I don’t see any harm could come of it, even if no good did,” she
-replied, after a pause. “I’ll sound Medora. She’d be glad to do Kellock
-a turn, naturally.”
-
-“I hope she still feels confident about Kellock. I can’t say she spoke
-with great warmth about the man last time I met her; but that was a
-passing cloud, I expect. He’s going to give a lecture, and set the
-world right, at Totnes, presently, he tells me. I’ve promised to be
-there.”
-
-When some hours later, Mrs. Trivett started to take tea with her
-daughter, Medora met her by the river, and revealed a restless and
-melancholy mood.
-
-Lydia sighed, and walked beside her.
-
-“Well, what’s the best news with you, my dear?” she asked.
-
-“There’s no best,” she answered. “We’re just waiting, and I’m ageing
-and growing into a fright before my time.”
-
-“The typewriter’s come, Jordan tells me.”
-
-“Yes; it’s come. I’m writing out his speech. But the minute I’ve made a
-clean sheet, he alters it all and messes it about. It’s getting on his
-nerves, I believe, and I’ll swear it’s getting on mine. I don’t hear
-anything else, morning, noon, and night.”
-
-“It’s distracting his mind.”
-
-“Yes; he can’t think of more than one thing at a time, Jordan can’t.
-I’m just a machine now, like the typewriter. I told him yesterday I
-didn’t hold with some of his opinions about labour, and he couldn’t
-have been more surprised if the typewriter had spoken to him.”
-
-“I shouldn’t argue about his views if I was you, Medora. They’re his
-life, in a manner of speaking.”
-
-“I shall argue about ’em if I choose. He’d think no better of me if I
-humbly said ditto to all he says. He goes a lot too far, and he’d take
-the shirts off the backs of the rich, if he could. He reads it over
-and over, and I very near stamp sometimes. Nothing will ever make me
-a socialist now. I dare say I might have been if he’d gone about it
-different; but now now. And, anyway, I’m not going to be the echo to
-Jordan, just because he takes it for granted I must be.”
-
-“He’s found a house, he tells me.”
-
-“He has, but he wants to beat down the rent a bit. He’s afraid of his
-life that Dingle’s going to have his savings out of him.”
-
-“That’s as may be. I dare say he’ll do no such thing. It wouldn’t be
-like Ned.”
-
-“Life’s properly dreadful for me—that’s all I know about it.”
-
-“I dare say it is. You’ve got to wait the will of other people now,
-Medora; and it’s a thing you never much liked doing.”
-
-“But I’m not friendless—I’m not friendless,” she said fiercely. “To
-hear Jordan talk, you’d think he’s the only thing that stands between
-me and the streets; and I won’t have it. People don’t hate me—not all
-of them. But you’d imagine that, without Jordan, there’d be no place on
-earth for me now.”
-
-“I thought he was very gentle and proper in his treatment,” said Mrs.
-Trivett.
-
-“I can’t explain. I only mean that he seems to think that if it wasn’t
-for his watchful care, and coming between me and every wind that blows,
-I’d be torn to pieces by my fellow creatures. And what about him? If I
-did wrong, what about him?”
-
-“It’s rather late in the day to talk like that.”
-
-“I want him to see all the same that I’m not a lone, friendless,
-outcast creature, without anyone to care for me. I don’t like to be
-championed by him, as if I was a fallen woman, and he was a saint. I
-won’t have it, I tell you. I’m not a fallen woman any more than he’s a
-fallen man, and I want him to know the world isn’t against me any more
-than it’s against him.”
-
-Lydia was surprised.
-
-“This all seems silly nonsense to me,” she said. “If you had anything
-to do, you’d not waste time worrying over things like that.”
-
-“You can’t understand, mother. It’s like being patronised in a sort
-of way, and Jordan shan’t patronise me. At any rate, I want to come
-to Priory Farm for a bit—just to show him I’m not dependent on him,
-and have got a few good relations in the world. Surely, I might do
-that—just for a week or two—till he has got this blessed lecture off
-his mind? I know all he is, and I love the ground he walks on; but,
-along of one thing and another, he’s not quite taking me in the right
-spirit for the moment, and I do think it would be a very wise thing
-if I was to come to you for a week or so. Please let me. They won’t
-mind there. They’d do anything you wished. It would show Jordan in a
-ladylike way, without any unpleasantness, that I’m somebody still.”
-
-“Surely to God, you don’t want to leave him?” asked Lydia.
-
-“Leave him? No—I’ve had enough of leaving people. He’s everything
-to me, and I’d lay down my life for him, I’m sure; but just for the
-minute, even with him, I feel I’ve got to fight for myself a bit. It
-wouldn’t be a bad thing for him to see what his life is without me. If
-I go, he’ll miss me at every turn, and he’ll think a bit more of me
-when I come back.”
-
-“But you say he thinks too much of you as it is, and fusses more than
-he need.”
-
-“He thinks too much and too little. I can’t explain—there’s no words
-to it. But let it go. I ask to come and spend a bit of time at Priory
-Farm. Surely you’ll let me do that? I’m getting so thin and low that I
-believe I’ll die if I’ve got to worry much longer. A week or two with
-you will set me up, and make me braver. My nerves are all on edge.”
-
-Medora was tearful and agitated. Probably her mother understood
-her better than she pretended. Kellock was not unctuous, but
-utterly humourless, and, in the matter of Medora, he did sometimes
-unconsciously take a line that suggested the stained-glass attitude.
-It was as much her fault as his, for, at an earlier stage in their
-companionship, she had never tired of telling him how she appreciated
-his sacrifices, his noble patience, and chivalric support of herself. A
-man without sense of proportion could not fail to be influenced by such
-assurances from the woman he loved.
-
-“You shall come certainly,” said Lydia, “and there’s no need to take on
-and let things fret you to fiddlestrings. It’ll happen right presently.
-It may be a good thing for you to stop at Cornworthy for a while.”
-
-She remembered Philander’s suggestion that Medora might, with
-advantage, see Ned. It would be possible to arrange such a meeting at
-Cornworthy perhaps; and if Medora prevailed with Mr. Dingle to renounce
-his threat of claiming damages, that must be to the good.
-
-She promised her daughter that she should come, drank tea with her,
-and left her happier than she had been for a long time.
-
-“It’s not so much for myself as for Jordan,” declared Medora. “It’ll
-be good for him and open his eyes a bit to hear I’m going to Uncle and
-Aunt Dolbear on a visit. They forgave him and all that; but I don’t
-think he knows they are friendly enough to have me at Priory Farm, and
-it will be right that he should know it. There’s other reasons, too. If
-I can escape from going to his lecture, it will be a blessing. He’ll
-make a rare fuss; but if I once get to Priory Farm, I can fall ill, or
-something to avoid it.”
-
-Lydia went home in a melancholy mood after this interview, and her
-daughter’s unrest descended upon her.
-
-She could not understand the relations between Kellock and Medora. They
-appeared to be extraordinary, as far as Medora was concerned, and the
-more Mrs. Trivett considered the various reports, the less able was she
-to put a cheerful interpretation upon them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-NED AND MEDORA
-
-
-When Lydia asked that Medora might come to stop at the farm, Mary and
-Tom spoke simultaneously, for each hastened to be the first to accord
-permission.
-
-They had suffered acute anxieties concerning Mrs. Trivett’s possible
-departure, and when she told them that she had determined to remain,
-nothing was good enough for her.
-
-In their joy and relief they grovelled before Lydia, heaped compliments
-upon her, and declared that never for a moment had they entertained the
-least doubt concerning her decision, even while, with every thankful
-word and exultant exclamation, they revealed the depth of their past
-anxiety and height of their vanished fear. She saw through it, and only
-left them uneasy in one particular.
-
-Mr. Knox, so Lydia explained, had taken his disappointment in a
-spirit of great self-restraint, and behaved with such magnanimity and
-understanding that when he desired the continued friendship of Mrs.
-Trivett, she could not deny it.
-
-“For that matter, I’m proud to have him for a friend,” she said. “He’s
-full of sense, and as he’s prepared to offer friendship to me and mine,
-I’m prepared to accept it, and you mustn’t mind if he comes to tea of a
-Sunday sometimes, and such like.”
-
-“He wouldn’t allude to the past, or anything like that, I hope?” asked
-Mr. Dolbear doubtfully. “Because, in his rage at his loss, he might be
-tempted to give me and my wife the blame; and if he did that, I should
-round on him, and there’d be a scene.”
-
-“Fear nothing of the sort,” replied his sister. “You may take it
-from me it won’t happen. In fact, I went into it, and I’ve got his
-undertaking never to say one word to you or Polly on the subject. And
-he’s a man you may say whose word is his bond.”
-
-“Then let him come,” decided Tom. “If he’s got that bee out of his
-bonnet, I don’t want to quarrel with him. I never doubted his sense,
-save in that fatal matter.”
-
-“He’s got a nice hand with the children, too,” said Mary. “I will say
-that for him; and where a child of mine takes, you may generally trust
-the party.”
-
-In the matter of Medora, there was no difficulty; nor did Jordan make
-any. Medora, in fact, felt a shadow of disappointment that he agreed so
-willingly. It was only a lesser grievance than refusal had been.
-
-She made a great business of her petition, but he made no business
-whatever of granting it.
-
-“You’ve got the lecture through now,” he said, “and there won’t be no
-need for another copy yet, if at all, and you’ve heard me deliver it so
-often that I’ll be glad for you to go and get a rest. Then you’ll come
-back all the fresher to it, and to the actual night, when I give it at
-Totnes a fortnight hence. Go, by all means, and I’ll come over to tea
-on Sunday.”
-
-So Medora, who would have wearied Heaven with her griefs, had he
-questioned the plan, now flushed that he approved it.
-
-“One would think you was glad to get rid of me,” she said.
-
-“Who’d think so?” he asked. “It’s a good idea, and will give you a bit
-of a rest.”
-
-“And you, too, perhaps?”
-
-“I don’t want a rest; but life’s been getting on your nerves above a
-bit lately, and the calm of the farm and the fun of the children, and
-being with your mother, and so on—it’s to the good, Medora. And soon,
-I hope, we’ll know something definite, so that this suspense can end.
-It’s bad for you, and I should think the man was enough of a man to
-know he’s doing a mean and cowardly thing to hang it up like this any
-longer. So you go, and rest quietly; and as I told you, if he doesn’t
-proceed soon, I shall approach him again with an ultimatum.”
-
-“It’s him that will have the ultimatum, I should think.”
-
-So Medora went to Priory Farm, and since she knew very well how to
-please her aunt, made a point of doing so. Indeed, Mrs. Dolbear
-considered she was much improved.
-
-“I never thought she would rise to children,” said Mary to her
-sister-in-law, “but of late, I may say, there’s hope in that direction.
-She’s more patient and quicker to see danger threatening a child. There
-was a time I wouldn’t have trusted her too far with Milly or Bobby,
-let alone Jenny; but all that’s altered. She may even be a good mother
-herself yet in fulness of time.”
-
-Indeed, Medora shone at the farm, and displayed consideration for other
-people that might hardly have been predicted even by the sanguine. Mary
-Dolbear was one who gave everybody ample opportunities to be unselfish,
-and Medora not only perceived these opportunities, but took them. She
-had changed, and none realised how much better than Lydia. But still
-the wisdom of any meeting between her daughter and Ned seemed doubtful.
-She hesitated to bring it about, and was still hesitating when chance
-accomplished it.
-
-Medora had been at Cornworthy for ten days and once Jordan came to tea
-during that time. He was full of some alterations in his lecture, but
-brought no news of interest to his future wife.
-
-Then she went for a walk by the ponds above the Mill, where emerald
-reflections of alder and willow and birch were washed over the silver
-surface of the little mere, and a great wealth of green leapt again
-above the mats and tussocks of the sedge and rush. Golden kingcups
-flashed along the shallows, and bluebells wove their light into the
-banks above the water.
-
-Medora was actually engaged in the innocent business of picking flowers
-when she came plump upon Ned. They met at a narrow beach running into
-the lake under a limestone crag; and he, too, was there on pleasure,
-for he was fishing. Strangely enough, each was possessed with the same
-idea, and seemed to think it necessary to explain to the other the
-situation in which they stood revealed.
-
-Ned scowled and started; Medora blushed. While he stared, she spoke,
-without any preliminaries and as though no terrific events separated
-them. It seemed as if the trivial accident of being there picking
-flowers demanded first consideration.
-
-“You mustn’t think I’m here for pleasure,” she said. “I’m only killing
-time. We’ve got to wait your will, and I’ve got to go on living as best
-as I can. We’re at your mercy.”
-
-He, too, fastened on the moment.
-
-“As to that, same here. It’s true I’m fishing, but only to kill time,
-same as you. I’m not in any mood for pleasure, I can tell you, woman.”
-
-“I dare say not,” she answered. “People often fall back on little
-things when big things are hanging over them. I know how you feel,
-because I feel the same.”
-
-“You don’t know how I feel,” he answered. “And don’t you dare to say
-you do, please. What do you know about feeling? You’re the senseless
-rubbish that can hurt others, but you’re not built to suffer yourself
-more than a stinging nettle.”
-
-She felt no pang of anger at his rough challenge. After Kellock’s
-steadfast voice, the ferocious accents of Ned were rather agreeable
-than not. His tone for once was deep, as an angry bull. She liked it,
-and thought he looked exceedingly well.
-
-“As long as he don’t throw me in the water, I’ll speak to him,” thought
-Medora.
-
-Ned expected a stinging reply to his preliminary challenge, but she
-did not answer it. Instead, she spoke of an utter triviality.
-
-“What d’you think’s in my mind—to show how little things get hold
-on you? The first thing that come in it when I saw you so close was
-pleasure, because I was wearing a pink sunbonnet—that being your
-favourite colour for me. But Mr. Kellock don’t know what I wear.”
-
-He started with genuine astonishment.
-
-“What in thunder be women made of? You can babble like that and pick
-flowers, and be a hen devil all the time?”
-
-“If I am a hen devil, then I’m in the proper place for devils, and
-that’s hell,” she said. “D’you think a woman can’t pick flowers and
-wear pink and yet be broken to pieces heart and soul?”
-
-“So you ought to be. You was always playing at being a martyr, and now
-you damned well can be one. And I hope you are. The trouble with you
-was that I spoiled you and fooled you to the top of your bent, and let
-you bully-rag me, and never turned round and gave you a bit of the
-naked truth yourself.”
-
-“I know it,” she said. “You were a great deal too fond of me for my
-good, Ned, and if you hadn’t loved me so well, I dare say you’d have
-been a better husband.”
-
-“I couldn’t have been a better husband,” he answered, “and if you’d
-been made of decent stuff, you’d have known it. Not that I didn’t see
-the ugly truth about you—I did; but I hoped and hoped that with time
-you’d get more sense, and so I held my tongue and held on.”
-
-“How I wish you’d told me my faults, Ned.”
-
-“You oughtn’t to want telling. If you’d got any conscience, which you
-never had, you’d have seen your faults and suffered from ’em, as you
-ought. For one thing, you were greedy as the grave, and that envious
-that you didn’t like anybody else to have anything you lacked. If you
-saw a worm on the ground, you wished you was a bird. ’Twas always so.
-Everybody else was better off than you, and had got nicer cats and
-gardens and husbands and everything. A filthy jealousy it was that made
-you miserable, when you ought to have been happy, and tempted you off
-to try your luck with this thing, that’s only a machine, not a man.
-Some chaps would have took you two and smashed your heads together
-like egg-shells, as you deserved; but I’m above anything like that.
-You thought I was a fool; but I wasn’t such a fool as to do that. You
-wrecked me, but I wasn’t going to wreck you.”
-
-“I’ve wrecked myself, more likely,” said Medora.
-
-“I don’t know nothing about that. Whatever you get won’t be half what
-you deserve.”
-
-Ned appeared to have changed for the better in Medora’s eyes. The
-harsher were his words, the better she liked them. Here was real
-martyrdom. The emotion of this suffering became a luxury. She wept, but
-was not in the least unhappy.
-
-“I’ve ruined two very fine men—that’s what I’ve done,” said Medora.
-She flung down her kingcups and bluebells, and sat on a stone and
-covered her face with her pocket-handkerchief.
-
-He looked at her fiercely, and rated her from a savage heart.
-
-“Crocodile tears! You never even cried like a decent woman, from your
-heart, because you haven’t got a heart.”
-
-“Don’t say that,” she said. “Your heart can’t break if you haven’t got
-one, and mine’s broken all right now. With all my dreadful faults, I’m
-human—only too much so. I know what I’ve done, and what I’ve lost.”
-
-“And what you’ve won, too—a lunatic, that will very likely end on the
-gallows as a traitor to the country, or some such thing.”
-
-“No, he won’t,” she replied. “He’s too dull for that.”
-
-“You can call him dull, can you?”
-
-“You’ve no right to make me talk about him,” answered she; “all the
-same, honesty’s no crime, and I say he’s a dull man, because anybody
-with only one idea is dull.”
-
-“Yes, no doubt; if you’re not his one idea yourself, you find him dull.
-And when you were my only idea, you still wanted more—always wanted
-more—more than you had of everything but trouble; and now you’ve
-brewed that for yourself. And what d’you mean, when you say you’ve
-ruined his life as well as mine?”
-
-Medora enjoyed the lash of his scornful voice.
-
-“You’ll kill me if you speak so harsh,” she said. “I meant—I meant—I
-don’t know what I meant. Only it’s clear to me that I shan’t make him
-the wife he thinks I shall.”
-
-“That’s true for once. You’re no wife for any man. And as for him, he
-don’t want a flesh and blood woman for his partner, and if you hadn’t
-thrown yourself at his head, like a street-walker, he’d never have
-taken you. The shamelessness—the plotting—the lies. When you grasp
-hold of what you’ve done, you ought to want to drown yourself.”
-
-“I may do it sooner than you think for,” she answered. “Rub it in—I
-deserve it; but don’t fancy I’m not being paid worse coin than any word
-of yours. I’m only a woman—not much more than a girl, you may say; and
-I’ve done you bitter wrong, but there’s always two sides to everything,
-and justice will be done to me—in fact, it’s begun. You say Kellock
-never wanted a flesh and blood woman, and that’s true—truer than
-you know. So you can see what my future’s going to be. Once you’re
-free, you can find a better and prettier and wiser creature than me
-to-morrow; but I’m done for to the end of my life. He’s much too good
-for me—I know that—so were you—far too good; but there it is. I’m
-done for—down and out, as you would say. He’ll go and live in a town
-presently. Think of me in a town!”
-
-“Sorry for yourself always—and never for nobody else.”
-
-“I’m sorry for everybody that ever I was born. I don’t want to bring
-any more trouble on people; and very like, I may find the best way is
-to drop into the water some night, and let the river carry my poor dust
-out to sea.”
-
-“You haven’t the pluck to do that,” he said. “Anyway, you belong to him
-now, and have got to play the game and stick to him.”
-
-They argued for some time, the man minatory and harsh, the woman
-resigned. But once he amused her. Then Ned harked back to her threat.
-
-“You talk of being down on your luck, and suicide, and all that
-twaddle. But you never looked better in your life. You’re bursting with
-health.”
-
-“I’m not,” she cried indignantly. “You’ve no right to say it. And if I
-am, what about you? You’re a lot fatter and handsomer than ever you was
-in my time.”
-
-“That’s a lie,” he said, “and you needn’t think I’m made of stone,
-though you are.”
-
-“If I’m a stone, ’tis a rolling one,” she answered, “and that sort
-don’t gather no moss. I’m glad I’ve met you, Ned, because I’m very
-wishful for you to know, for your peace of mind, I’m not happy—far,
-far from it. You deserve to know that. You made me laugh just now, I
-grant, and that’s the first time I’ve laughed since I left you—God
-judge me, if it isn’t. The very first time, and the sound was so
-strange that it made me jump.”
-
-“Laugh? You haven’t got much to laugh at I should say.”
-
-“That’s true. I’ll never laugh no more. I wouldn’t laugh when I
-might—now it’s too late.”
-
-“It’s never too late for anything for one of your sort. And when you
-say you’re a rolling stone, I reckon you tell the truth for once. And
-things that roll go down hill, remember that. Hell knows where you’ll
-roll to before you finish.”
-
-“It won’t be your fault, Ned. You’ve got nothing to blame yourself
-with,” she answered humbly, and he judged wrongly of what was in her
-mind.
-
-“You’d better send Kellock along to me,” he said. “The business is in
-hand, and I may tell you, I meant to hit him as hard as I knew how.
-But there’s two sides to that, and in the long run what kept me from
-getting a gallows out of him is the same that’s going to keep me from
-getting damages. And that’s you.”
-
-“I’m not worthy to black your boots, Ned,” declared Medora.
-
-“No, and more’s he—more’s he; mind that. You thought he was the
-clever, strong man—the sort of man would be a tower of strength to
-any woman, and all the rest of it; and now you know, or you jolly
-soon will know, that he’s only a tower of strength for himself—not
-for you. A man like him wants a woman to match him, and if you ask
-yourself if you match him, and answer yourself honest, if you can, then
-you’ll answer that you don’t and never will. You can send him to me at
-my convenience. He can call o’ Monday at half-after eight—then I’ll
-decide about it.”
-
-“Thank you, Ned. It’s more than we deserve, I dare say. I don’t care
-much what happens now if you can forgive me. I suppose you can’t, but
-it would mean a lot to me if you could.”
-
-“You think I’ve got something to forgive, then? That’s surprising. I
-thought ’twas all the other way.”
-
-“So did I,” she answered, “but I know better now. I shouldn’t be
-suffering like I am if I’d done right.”
-
-“You can do right and still suffer,” he answered, “and now be off, and
-send the man to me.”
-
-Medora, again weeping freely, and leaving her bunch of flowers on
-the ground at his feet, departed without any more words. For once,
-her tears were real and her sorrows genuine. They were genuine, yet
-contained a measure of sweetness, and comforted her by their reality.
-This was an order of grief that she had not known. She persisted in
-it for a long time, after she had gone out of his sight, and found a
-sunny spot among the bluebells. There she sat and heaped reproaches
-on her head; and self-blame was a sensation so novel that it soothed
-instead of crushed her. But this phase passed in contemplation of Ned.
-He had changed in some mysterious way. He was formidable, masculine—a
-thing infinitely superior to herself. Could she dare to say that Ned
-was now superior to Kellock? She fled from that thought as from chaos;
-but it pursued her; it made to itself feet and wings, and clung to her
-mind. She resisted, but it stuck like a burr. Ned was surely translated
-into something fine and admirable; while Kellock, now about to be a
-conqueror, had waned almost to a second-rate being in Medora’s vision.
-
-A sensation of physical sickness overtook her before this horrible
-discovery; for what could such a conclusion do but wreck her future
-utterly and hopelessly? If Kellock were to fall from his pedestal, who
-was left?
-
-And a hundred yards off, still buried in the thoughts sprung from this
-remarkable conversation, Ned set up his rod, cast out ground bait, and
-began to fish for dace and perch. His mind, however, was far from his
-float, and presently his eyes followed Medora, as she moved pensively
-along the road on the other side of the pond. She would tell Kellock to
-come and see him, and then Ned would—he did not know what he would do.
-
-His thoughts turned to Philander Knox and their last interview. Medora
-had said nothing to contradict the vatman’s assurances. Indeed, she
-had implicitly supported them. And she was obviously changed. She had
-apparently enough proper feeling to be miserable; but whether that
-misery was pretended, or sprang from her conscience, or arose from
-her futile conjunction with Kellock under the present unsupportable
-conditions, Ned could not determine. He examined his own emotions
-respecting Medora, and found that she had slightly modified them. He
-despised her, and began even to pity her, since, on her own showing,
-she was having a bad time. But was she ever built to have a good time?
-Dingle doubted it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THE EXPLANATION
-
-
-After the medley of emotions awakened by her meeting with her husband,
-no solid foundation remained to Medora’s mind. Indeed, everything solid
-seemed to crumble before the apparition of Ned so close; before all the
-little familiar marks of him, his mannerisms, his vibrant voice, his
-virility, the flushing colour on his cheeks, the masculine sound and
-sight of him. Against that vision, which haunted her pillow at Priory
-Farm, arose the spectacle of Kellock—the difference between a stout,
-shadow-casting man and one himself a shadow. Kellock was a great hero
-still (she clave to that), but none the less he had become something
-spectral for her. Ned she knew—her recent meeting reminded her how
-well; but Kellock she did not know, and from that long night of thought
-there emerged one steadfast emotion: she began to cease to want to
-know. Perception of this startling indifference frightened Medora. It
-was half-past four o’clock in the morning, and an early thrush already
-sang when she made this discovery. She shivered at such a sentiment,
-set it down to hunger, and so arose and descended to the larder. She
-ate and slept, and in the morning told her mother of the talk with
-Dingle.
-
-They walked together to Dene, and before Lydia went to the rag house,
-she had heard disquieting things. It was not the facts that concerned
-her, for they were to the good. That Ned wished to see Kellock and
-had determined not to claim damages, comforted Mrs. Trivett, for that
-argued an intention on Ned’s part to be done with the matter, and
-take such steps as should enable her daughter to marry at the earliest
-opportunity permitted by law; but it was Medora’s attitude to Dingle
-that surprised her, and as she reached the Mill, she voiced her
-astonishment.
-
-“You’ll keep me ’mazed to my dying day, I reckon,” she said. “My own
-daughter, and yet never, never do you do, or say, or look at things how
-I should expect.”
-
-“What’s the matter now then?”
-
-“It’s right you should feel obliged to your late husband—I’m not
-wondering at that. But now—just because you talked to him, and he
-behaved like the man he is, and spoke sense and didn’t break your neck,
-as some men might—just because of that, you seem to have turned round
-and—and—well, to hear you this morning one would think you and Ned—”
-
-Medora quite understood.
-
-“Funny you should say that. I know just what you mean. It came over me
-in the night. I got looking back a lot, and I couldn’t help feeling,
-when he stood there talking to me in the old way—I couldn’t help
-feeling that he’d got his side after all. I dare say I didn’t quite
-understand his point of view, or how I looked from it. You’ve got to
-be fair, mother. It was as if all that fearful time, when we drifted
-apart, had been ruled out for the minute, and we were back at the
-starting place. I took all he said in a very proper and patient spirit;
-and if you ask him, he’ll tell you I did. And he didn’t mince words
-either. And I very much wish for you to see him as soon as you can, and
-tell him that I greatly value his advice, and that my eyes were opened
-for the first time to my fatal conduct. And, being a fair woman, I’ve
-got to admit that I used him badly, along of some weakness in myself
-I never knew was there; and I think he was more kind about it than I
-deserved. Please see he hears that.”
-
-“And what price, Jordan?” asked Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“This has nothing to do with Jordan. I’m going to see him now and
-explain that he must visit Ned at once; and I hope he’ll feel properly
-grateful to Ned for his goodness to me. He ought.”
-
-Lydia’s head swam.
-
-“Don’t you see, mother, that Ned is—?”
-
-“I don’t see nothing,” answered Mrs. Trivett. “This is all beyond me.
-You’re right to be obliged to him—well you may be; but, for God’s
-sake, don’t go blowing Ned’s trumpet to your future husband, else—”
-
-“I’m not going to be narrow-minded about Ned,” answered Medora calmly.
-“You can leave it to me. I shall certainly tell Jordan the way I was
-treated.”
-
-As a matter of fact, Medora had quite forgotten the way she had been
-treated. For reasons far beyond her power to explain—since it was her
-quality to avoid directness at any cost—she ignored and put out of her
-mind the very harsh things Mr. Dingle had said. She banished them, and
-chose rather to dwell on what she regarded as the spirit and general
-essence created by their meeting. Detail might be dismissed, and it was
-very characteristic of Medora that when, presently, she met Jordan in
-the dinner hour, and took him up the valley, and rested her eyes on the
-spot beside the lake where she had listened to Mr. Dingle, she created
-a suggestion of that interview for the benefit of Kellock amazingly
-unlike the real thing.
-
-The vatman ate his bread and cheese as he walked beside her and saw her
-on the way homeward to her own meal.
-
-“When are you coming back?” he asked. “I’ve got the lecture dead right
-now, and I’d like to run it over once more. I’ve learned the typewriter
-myself too, and can give you a start and a beating at it.”
-
-“It’s wonderful to me how you can fasten on a thing like that, while
-all my future hangs in the balance,” she said. “I’ve got a bit of
-startling news, Jordan. I ran on top of Mr. Dingle yesterday. I was
-just picking a bunch of flowers and wondering when something would
-happen when—there he was.”
-
-“D’you mean he stopped you?”
-
-“He did. I was shrinking past the man; but that wouldn’t do. He spoke,
-and I couldn’t believe my ears, for I’d got to think he was my black
-angel, naturally enough. But instead of anything like that, he let the
-dead past bury the past in a very gentlemanly manner.”
-
-“Did he?”
-
-“Yes, and I stood in a dream to hear his familiar voice, just friendly
-and kind.”
-
-“‘Friendly and kind!’” exclaimed Kellock. “When was he ever friendly
-and kind to you?”
-
-“Before—before we fell out. It was like going back to the old, old
-days, before he turned on me and drove me to you.”
-
-“He’s learned his lesson then. That’s to the good. But what had he to
-say to you? It’s for us to talk to him now. And it’s for him to act,
-not to talk.”
-
-“He knows all that. Anything like the reasonableness of the man you
-never heard. I couldn’t believe my ears. He’s not going to do anything
-wrong—far from it. He wants to see you on Monday evening at half-past
-eight, please.”
-
-“Does he?”
-
-“Yes. He’s turned it all over in his mind, and seen his mistakes and
-regrets the sad past.”
-
-“How do you know he does?”
-
-“He said so, and, with all his faults, he’s quite as truthful as you
-are, Jordan. And to show it, he’s not going to do anything about
-damages. He feels that wouldn’t be right. He’s a very just man. He
-didn’t only say things I was glad to hear either. He told me some
-bitter truths. He said that I’d never be the right wife for you,
-Jordan.”
-
-“And you let him?”
-
-“No, I didn’t. I wasn’t going to hear that, of course. But he’s got
-a brain—more than we thought—and he said that to a man of your
-disposition—but if I’m going to vex you, I’ll leave that alone. Only
-don’t think he spoke unkindly. And when you consider what it meant to
-him my leaving him—”
-
-“What did he say about my disposition?” interrupted Kellock. “I’ve a
-right to know that before I see him, Medora.”
-
-“He said that you’ve got a mind far above women—that a wife to you
-would be less than what a wife is to an ordinary man. Because you’re
-all intellect and great thoughts for the welfare of everybody, so that
-the welfare of one, even your own wife, would be a small thing by
-comparison.”
-
-“How little he knows!”
-
-“So I told him.”
-
-She proceeded and surprised Kellock further.
-
-“D’you mean,” he asked presently, “that he could stop you in the open
-road and talk like this and say all these wise things, as if he was
-your brother? It’s contrary to nature, and I don’t understand it.”
-
-“More did I,” she answered. “I felt in a dream about it. He might have
-been a brother. That’s the very word. And last night, as I lay and
-thought, it came into my head in a very curious way that between you
-and him as things are, I’ve got two brothers and no husband at all. And
-God knows, Jordan, if it wouldn’t be better to leave it at that, and
-let me go free. For if I could win the respect of two such men as you
-and him by stopping as I am and being wife of neither, it might turn
-out a lot better for all three of us.”
-
-He stared in deep amazement. He flung away the remains of his meal and
-stood still with his mouth open.
-
-“Are all women like you?” he said. “Upon my soul, I wonder
-sometimes—but this—it’s all so unlike what goes on in a man’s
-mind—where are we? Where are we? You always seem to leave me
-guessing.”
-
-“I don’t suppose I can make you see, dear Jordan. I’ve had hours and
-hours to think about it. You come to it fresh. Of course, it sounds
-strange to you for the minute. You must allow for the surprise. I’m
-only a woman, and, what with one thing and another, I’ve been that
-driven and harried lately that my mind is all in a whirl. It’ll come
-right no doubt. He’s not going to claim damages. That’s one certainty,
-and that ought to comfort you. And I think when you see him, at his
-orders—”
-
-“‘His orders’?”
-
-“Well, my dear man, do be reasonable. You jump down my throat so! It’s
-no good questioning every word I say. It makes me despair. I haven’t
-got your flow of language, and if I can’t pick my words, you needn’t
-quarrel about them.”
-
-“I’m not picking a quarrel, Medora; I’m only saying there’s no question
-of his orders. I’ll see him certainly.”
-
-“And thank him, I should hope. I dare say he’d have had a lot of money
-out of you.”
-
-“As to thanking him—however, it’s no good arguing. Leave that for the
-present. You can trust me to take the right line with Mr. Dingle. When
-are you coming back? They’re going to meet me about the house if I can
-take it for three years.”
-
-“Three years is a long time, Jordan. You might want to go to London
-before that. I dare say your lecture will get you into notice.”
-
-His eye brightened. Here at last was solid ground.
-
-“You’ll be back at the inn before then. There’s a pretty good lot
-coming. I rather want to rehearse it to you and a man or two from the
-Mill one evening.”
-
-“I’ll come back, of course, the minute I can; but—I want to tell you,
-Jordan, I’m not coming to the lecture. I’ve got my reasons.”
-
-Again he was left without foothold.
-
-“Not coming to my lecture, Medora?”
-
-“No. You always said we must help and not hinder each other, and that
-marriage is a co-operation, or nothing. And I’m sure it’s better, where
-we don’t think alike, to respect each other’s opinions and go our own
-way.”
-
-“What d’you mean? You’ve said you see eye to eye with me in everything.
-You’ve never questioned the substance of the lecture.”
-
-“It wasn’t for me to question it. But I don’t agree with a lot of it.”
-
-“Since when?”
-
-“Since first I heard it. I wasn’t brought up to feel everybody’s equal,
-and I don’t believe they are.”
-
-“I don’t say they are. What I say is—”
-
-“I know what you say, Jordan. It’s no good arguing. You’d hate me if I
-was false and pretended anything.”
-
-“Where do you disagree then?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t believe in fighting and taking their money from people.
-I want peace. If you could see what my life is in this storm of doubt
-and uncertainty, if you could sympathise with a woman in my position
-who has given up so much, then you’d surely understand that I’ve got no
-heart for all these theories and ideas at present.”
-
-“You’re getting away from the point,” he said. “I can’t argue with
-you because you won’t stick to the subject. I do sympathise—all the
-time—every minute; but my lecture doesn’t belong to our private
-affairs. It doesn’t alter them, or delay them. I’m going on with that
-as quick as Dingle will let me. But I want you to come to the lecture.
-I ask it, and I expect it.”
-
-“You haven’t any right to do that. I don’t ask you to come to church,
-so you oughtn’t to ask me to come to your lecture. We must be
-ourselves, and where we don’t agree, we mustn’t be afraid to say so.”
-
-“This is their work at the farm,” he declared. “Your uncle’s a
-benighted, ignorant man, and my ideas terrify him, and so he’s tried to
-influence you. And I’m sorry to find he has succeeded.”
-
-“Not at all. Uncle Tom would influence nobody; and if you think he’d
-influence me, that shows you don’t respect me as you ought, or give me
-credit for my brains—though you’ve praised them often enough.”
-
-“I give you credit for everything. You’re half my life, and the best
-half, I should hope. And I trust you to change your mind about this,
-Medora. It’s the biggest thing that’s ever happened to me, and I think
-if you turn it over, you’ll see you ought to be there.”
-
-“I thought I was the biggest thing that had ever happened to you.
-However—”
-
-“Leave it—don’t decide yet. I’m proud. I wouldn’t have you come,
-of course, if it’s not going to interest you. Whether you agree, or
-whether you don’t, I should have thought my first public appearance
-would mean a lot to you—me being what I am to you.”
-
-“It does mean a lot—so much that I’d be so cruel nervous that—”
-
-“But you said the reason—”
-
-“Oh dear,” she said, “if you knew how you’re making my head ache,
-Jordan. Leave it alone, for God’s sake. I’ll come, of course, if you’re
-going to make it a personal thing.”
-
-“Not if you don’t feel it a personal thing. Come back to me soon, and
-we’ll have a good long talk about it. There mustn’t be any difference
-between us. We’re too much to each other for anything like that. And
-don’t see Mr. Dingle again, please, Medora, till I have.”
-
-“I’m not likely to see him again.”
-
-They had walked round to the top of the “Corkscrew” by this time, and
-now the bell sounded below that told the dinner hour was ended.
-
-“I must be gone,” he said. “Fix your day for coming back, Medora, and
-Mrs. Trivett will tell me to-morrow. The sooner the better.”
-
-“I want to come as quickly as they’ll let me,” she answered.
-
-Doubt and care were in the young man’s eyes. A rare emotion touched
-him, and there was something yearning in his voice as he stood and held
-her hands.
-
-“Don’t let any shadow rise between us,” he begged.
-
-“Of course not; why should it?”
-
-He put his arms round her, and to her surprise kissed her.
-
-“Good-bye—take care of yourself and come back quickly. I won’t bother
-you about the lecture any more,” he promised.
-
-Then he ran down the hill, and Medora watched him go. She was
-regretting the kiss. When she had hungered for kisses, they did not
-come. Such a thing now was insipid—fruit over-ripe, doubtful as a
-delicacy past its season. She believed that she had frightened him into
-this display of emotion. His promise not to trouble her again about the
-lecture was also a sign of weakness. She thawed, and felt almost sorry
-for him. Jordan was growing fainter, it seemed to her. His outlines
-began to blur even after a few days’ absence from him. An overpowering
-desire to see Ned again oppressed her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE STROKE
-
-
-Medora’s native instinct, to fight for her own hand at the expense
-of the community, now held some strife with her appreciation of
-what Kellock had done and suffered on her account. At first a sense
-of justice strove to remind her of their relations and of Jordan’s
-views with respect to her and her future. She was, in fact, as he had
-declared, his paramount thought and first object in life. And this
-he felt without any diminution of his personal ambitions. But he had
-supposed, and she had given him every reason to suppose, that his
-ambitions and hers were one; that she desired nothing better than to
-help him in his propagandist work. During the earliest days of their
-association in London, this had been her purpose and assurance; but it
-was so no longer. The artificial existence with Kellock had knocked
-all the poetry out of their relation, and his aspirations now found
-her averse. Because Kellock could not understand what made life worth
-living to her, Medora’s interest and loyalty alike were withered.
-
-Yet now she put up a struggle for him and it lasted longer than might
-have been expected. Indeed, it endured for twenty-four hours, until the
-morning following upon a sleepless night. Then her chivalry and general
-vague sense of her obligations went down before what she believed,
-perhaps rightly, was her common sense. She began to see, with a dazzle
-of conviction, that Kellock was not at all the husband for her; but
-her woman’s wit put it differently: she assured her soul that she was
-not the wife for Kellock. This step once taken, those that followed
-were exceedingly swift, and they appeared first in a conversation, not
-with the man she desired to meet, but with another. For the present she
-concealed her new impressions from her family, but on the following
-Sunday, Mr. Knox came to tea, and was pleasant and agreeable, according
-to his custom. Tom and Mary Dolbear, gratified to observe the large
-philosophy with which he had taken his defeat, welcomed him and forgot
-the hard things they had said and thought about him.
-
-Then, as the hour came for the visitor to return home, Medora made an
-excuse to accompany him. She was going into Dene to see Daisy Finch and
-have supper with her and her mother—so she said; and together they
-went their way.
-
-She wasted no time with Mr. Knox, and having told him what she hungered
-to tell, changed her mind about Daisy Finch, and went home again. Upon
-the whole, Mr. Knox disappointed her at this meeting, yet looking back
-over their conversation, she felt not sorry it had taken place, though
-her face burned a little when she considered the full weight of some
-of the vatman’s remarks. He did not spare her; but she began to get
-accustomed to hard words now, and her sagacity told Medora that where
-there was blame, there was hope. To be past censure is to be past
-forgiveness.
-
-She began at once to Mr. Knox upon the subject of her husband, and her
-second sentence indicated the vast strides that her ambition had made.
-The whole picture of Medora’s future in her own eyes was now changed.
-The new vision looked wild indeed, and made even Medora wince a little
-to hear it in her own tongue; yet it did not astonish Philander as much
-as she imagined, though she had reached it sooner than he expected her
-to do so.
-
-“You see Mr. Dingle sometimes, don’t you, Mr. Knox?” began Medora.
-
-“I do, my dear, and you mustn’t object if I say I think very well of
-him. Curiously enough I think a lot of Mr. Kellock, too. Each have
-got very good points in his way, and you can learn from them as well
-as teach them. Of course, it’s a ticklish business being friends with
-both, but so I am, and hope to continue.”
-
-“For God’s sake, then, implore of Ned not to divorce me! Oh, Mr.
-Knox, you’re wise and old, but you may still remember what it was to
-be young. Everything’s gone if he divorces me—everything. I’ve been
-pixy-led, fooled—yes, I have. And I’ve ruined two good men, through
-no fault of theirs, or mine. It wasn’t Kellock’s fault, nor yet Ned’s;
-and I’ll swear on my knees it wasn’t mine—not altogether, because
-something not myself drove me and blinded me and dazed me.”
-
-“That’s moonshine, Medora. You’re not going to make anybody believe
-that; and don’t you try—else there’ll be the devil to pay. It was your
-fault—the fault of your character—because a woman and her character
-must be one. But I grant this; if we can’t go outside our characters,
-and our characters are us and control all we do and think, then, being
-yourself from no fault of your own, you’re not to blame in a sense.
-Then, again, that won’t wash either, because if nobody can do anything
-outside their characters, then nobody’s ever to blame in themselves for
-anything they do, and there’s no such thing as wickedness in the world.
-Which is nonsense and moonshine again, because we very well know the
-world’s full of wickedness. So it’s no good saying, or fooling yourself
-to think, that you’ve not been very wicked indeed, because you have.
-However, like a lot of bigger people than you, you’ve got less, so far,
-than you deserve, because the punishment never does fit the evil deed,
-any more than the reward fits the good one, except in fairy tales. In
-other words, Kellock, being what he is—a man of the highest possible
-conduct, with a frosty nature to help it—has saved your bacon so
-far. You know what I mean. Therefore, there’s a ray of hope—not very
-bright, in my opinion, still, a ray.”
-
-“Thank Heaven you think so,” said Medora.
-
-“It’s only my opinion, mind, and I may very likely be wrong; but I’m a
-man that sees hope very often where another cannot. A wonderful eye for
-hope I’ve got. And if your husband knew all the facts and heard—not
-that you’d been pixy-led, but that you was properly ashamed of your
-infamous, hard-hearted, senseless, worthless way of going on, and meant
-to do better for evermore—luck offering, and the Lord helping—if he
-heard that, it’s just on the cards he might give it a second thought.
-I don’t say he would. I wouldn’t in his case—not for a moment; but
-he’s himself—an amazingly large-minded man. So, out of regard for your
-mother, Medora, I’ll venture to touch the subject.”
-
-“I’ll bless your name for evermore if you do.”
-
-“Allow yourself no hope, however. You’ve got to think of Jordan
-Kellock, and I tell you frankly I wouldn’t move in this matter if I
-didn’t reckon he was utterly mistaken in his opinion of you.”
-
-“He is, he is, Mr. Knox! I’m far ways less than what he fancied.”
-
-“You are; but don’t waste your time eating dirt to me, though you ought
-to do it all round, no doubt, and heap ashes on your head.”
-
-“I know I ought; and Jordan’s going to see Ned on Monday evening, so if
-you, in your great wisdom, could talk to my husband first—”
-
-“I will do so,” promised Mr. Knox, and he kept his word. It happened,
-therefore, that when the hour arrived for the meeting of Kellock and
-Dingle, much had fallen out beyond the former’s knowledge.
-
-Jordan had, of course, been left with plenty to think about by Medora,
-but since the future was accomplished in his judgment, and its details
-only a matter of time, he was concerned with far larger questions
-than agitated her mind. His thoughts ran on to the day when they
-would be married and their lives mingle happily, to run henceforth
-in a single channel. He had never felt fear of that day after once
-winning her; and he had, until this moment, enjoyed full confidence
-that they were one in thought and ambition already, only waiting for
-the completion and crowning of marriage to establish their unity in
-the face of the world. But Medora had shaken the ingredients of this
-conviction at their last meeting, and Jordan felt uneasy. If she could
-speak so strongly on the subject of his lecture, what might she not
-presently say on the subject of his life? A disloyal thought once
-crossed his mind; something whispered that her objection to hearing
-the lecture was humbug. The voice hinted that from no conviction did
-Medora hold back, since she had already explicitly accepted his fixed
-principles, and avowed herself their supporter. The voice furthermore
-ventured to suggest that fixed principles and the lady were never
-to be mentioned in one breath by any rational observer. But Kellock
-protested against such insinuations, and continued to seek a reason for
-her refusal. He could find none, and was forced to accept her own. He
-was constrained to believe that she actually had changed her opinions,
-and the reflection that she must never be expected to support him with
-unqualified enthusiasm cast Jordan down. He did not despair of Medora,
-but felt that he would be called to do all over again what he had hoped
-was already done. He must convince her that he was right and weary not
-until she had come over to his views. After marriage, her mind would
-gradually take its colour from him, if the operation were conducted
-painlessly. He satisfied himself that this would happen, and had
-thought himself into a contented spirit when he went to see Dingle.
-
-Ned said little, and the interview was extraordinary. It did not take
-long, yet sent Kellock reeling out into the night bewildered, shocked,
-with the whole scheme of his future existence threatened, and no
-immediate possibility to retrieve the position.
-
-“You’ve come, then,” began Mr. Dingle. “Well, a good bit has happened
-since I saw you last, and, things being what they are here, it looks
-rather as if I might return to the Mill.”
-
-“I hadn’t heard nothing of that,” answered Jordan.
-
-“You needn’t mention it; but Mr. Trenchard is quite willing if I see no
-objection—so Ernest Trood tells me—and I imagine you’d have nothing
-to say against it.”
-
-“As to that, your plans are not my business. Of course, that might
-alter my own plans.”
-
-“Well, your plans are not my business. In fact, we needn’t trouble much
-about each other in any case.”
-
-Jordan reflected.
-
-“No, it wouldn’t be natural, though I bear no malice, and I hope you
-don’t,” he said.
-
-“Have I shown malice?” asked the beaterman. “Have I taken this outrage
-in a malicious spirit?”
-
-“You have not.”
-
-“I’ve taken it lying down, and you know it; and I dare say, at the
-bottom of your heart, you’ve been more than a bit surprised sometimes
-to see how I held in.”
-
-“You’re a thinking, reasonable being.”
-
-“Were you? You’re not surprised at the line I took, because I did
-pretty much what you would have done if the positions had been
-reversed, and I had run away with your wife. But I should have thought
-you had wit to marvel a bit how a man like me took it so tame. If I
-could knock you into the water for advising me to be kinder to her,
-didn’t it ever strike you I might have done even a bit more when you
-stole the woman?”
-
-“As to that, I’ve understood up to the present you meant to do a bit
-more. It was made clear to me you were going for damages along with the
-divorce.”
-
-“I thought of it, and I could have got them, no doubt; but what held my
-hand off you when this happened, holds it still. I’m not going to claim
-damages.”
-
-Kellock was silent for some moments, arguing with himself whether he
-ought to thank Ned for this concession, or not. He decided against so
-doing; but felt it right to explain.
-
-“You might think I ought to thank you for that. But I don’t, because,
-if I did, it would be admitting you had waived what was your right.
-But I deny you had any right to do such a thing as to try and take
-my money. Your wife left you of her own free will, and on her own
-judgment, and came to me, and though the law—”
-
-“We needn’t worry about nonsense like that,” interrupted Ned. “I’ve
-got a bigger thing than that to say. You’re so great upon defying the
-law, and getting everything your own way, and you know so much better
-than everyone else, the law included, how life should be run, and how
-we should all behave, that you’ve rather defeated your own object,
-Kellock. I dare say some people would think it funny what I’m going to
-say; but you won’t. In fact, you’ve been hoist with your own bomb, as
-the saying is, and the reason I didn’t go to quod for you is just your
-own defiance of law. You saved yourself some ugly punishment at the
-time; but only to get worse at the finish. So what happened was you
-disobeyed the law, not me.”
-
-“This is all a foreign language to me,” answered Jordan.
-
-“Is it? Well, you’ll see the English of it in half a minute. The good
-of three people hangs to this, and when I tell you that in my opinion
-all three will be the losers by your marrying Medora, perhaps you’ll
-begin to see where I’m getting.”
-
-“As to that, you’ll do well to mind your own business. I can brook no
-interference from you between me and Medora.”
-
-“It isn’t so much what you can brook, as what is going to happen.
-You’ve taken a very high-minded line about Medora, Kellock—so
-wonderful high-minded, in fact, that you’ve got left altogether. You
-deserve to have a halo and a pair of wings for what you’ve done—so
-Philander Knox said, and I quite agree. But you don’t deserve to
-have Medora. And you’re not going to have Medora. You said, ‘I’ll
-treat this woman with all proper respect, and all that, till I can
-marry her’; and that showed you to be a very decent man according to
-your own lights; and when I heard about it, I spared you; but there’s
-another side. I can’t divorce Medora now, because I’ve got nothing to
-divorce her for—see? You might think I ought to help you to hoodwink
-the law in the matter, for the sake of honour and decency—things for
-which the law has got no use. And I would willingly enough for some
-people, but not for you. Because what you’ve done shows a lot of other
-things—chief being that Medora and you never would get on, really—not
-as husband and wife. Even as brother and sister, there’s been a lot
-of friction lately, so I hear; and what would it be if you were
-married? So, you see, when I say you don’t deserve Medora, Kellock,
-I’m not saying anything particular unkind. In fact, the truth is that
-a man with your nice and superior opinions can’t marry another man’s
-wife—not according to law. You ought to have thought of that.”
-
-“It’s not too late.”
-
-“Oh, yes, it is—much too late. You can’t go wrong now, even if you
-thought of such a thing; which you never could. You’re damned well out
-of it in fact; and the longer you live, the better you’ll be pleased
-with yourself, I dare say. The divorce laws may be beneath contempt
-and only fit for gorillas; but, while they are the laws, you’ve got to
-abide by ’em.”
-
-Jordan Kellock stared with round, horrified eyes. Even in his dismay
-and grief he could wonder how the simple Ned had reached this high
-present standpoint, and was able to address him like a father lecturing
-a child. He began to recognise the hand of Mr. Knox.
-
-Now he pulled himself together, rose, and prepared to be gone.
-
-“I can only imagine that others have helped you to this extraordinary
-decision, Dingle.”
-
-“I don’t deny it. I never was one to think I could run my own show, or
-play a lone hand. A pity you didn’t feel the same. A lone hand always
-comes to grief. You talk to Philander Knox about this. He’s a great
-admirer of yours. But he’s looked at it from the outside, as a student
-of character. He’s got no axe to grind about it.”
-
-“And Medora?”
-
-“I don’t care a cuss about her. As to her line, you’d better inquire at
-headquarters. I haven’t seen her again, and don’t much want to.”
-
-“This flings her on to the mercy of society, Dingle.”
-
-“Well, society won’t eat her. Society’s pretty merciful, so far
-as I can see. You talk it over with her, and get her views of the
-situation—whatever they may be.”
-
-“I’ll only ask one question. Does she know that you don’t intend to
-divorce her?”
-
-“She does not. I only decided myself half an hour before you called.”
-
-“Is it possible for me to prevail with you to change your mind, Mr.
-Dingle?”
-
-“No; because with your views of what’s straight and honourable, you
-won’t try. You know I can’t divorce her. Why? Because you was too good
-and clean a man to make it possible. So long. Just you think over all
-I’ve said. You don’t know your luck yet, but you will.”
-
-Jordan Kellock went out into the darkness, and he staggered like a man
-in drink. He tottered down the hill from Ashprington, and intended to
-start then and there for Cornworthy and Medora; but he found himself
-physically unequal to any such pilgrimage. His knees shook and his
-muscles were turned to wool. He walked to the inn, ascended to bed,
-and lay phantom-ridden through the hours of an interminable night.
-The shock of what he had heard was so great that his mind was too
-stunned to measure it. A situation, that demanded deepest reflection
-by its own horror, robbed him of the power to reflect. He lay and
-panted like a wounded animal. He could not think by reason of the
-force of his feelings. He could only lick his smarting wounds. Then he
-fell into genuine grief for Medora’s plight. Actual physical symptoms
-intruded. He found his eyes affected and strange movements in his
-heart and stomach. His hands shook in the morning, and he cut himself
-shaving—a thing that he had not done for years. He could not eat, yet
-suffered from a sensation of emptiness. Daylight by no means modified
-his sense of loss and chaos. It found him before all things desirous
-to see Medora; but, by the time he was up and dressed, this purpose
-failed him for a season, and his thoughts were occupied with Knox.
-Then he turned again to Medora, and felt that life must be suspended
-until he could see her and break to her what had happened. It was now
-too late to visit Cornworthy until the day’s work should be done, and
-remembering how often work had saved a situation, solved a problem and
-helped him through difficult hours, Kellock proceeded to the Mill, and
-was thankful to be there. He felt that labour would calm his nerves,
-restore his balance, and assist him, before the evening came, to
-survey his situation in the light of this convulsion. He found himself
-entirely interested in what Medora would do; and he believed that he
-knew. His heart bled for her.
-
-Thus absorbed, he reached the vat. He was engaged upon the largest
-sheets of drawing-paper at the time—work calling for more than average
-lifting power and muscular energy—and he was glad that now, for a
-while, work must take the first demand upon mind and body alike.
-
-The vats were full, and the machinery hummed overhead; coucher and
-layer stood at their places, and Jordan, slipping his deckle upon the
-mould, grasped it with thumb on edge, and sank it into the pulp.
-
-Elsewhere Knox, Robert Life and others had taken up their positions at
-the breast of the vats with their assistants about them, and the work
-of paper-making went on its immemorial way.
-
-Then that happened that was long remembered—an incident of interest
-and concern for the many, a tragedy for the one. Kellock brought up his
-mould, and instead of proceeding with the rhythmic actions to right
-and left—those delicate operations of exquisite complexity where
-brain telegraphed to muscle, and motor and sensory nerves both played
-their part in the completion of the “stroke”—instead of the usual
-beautiful and harmonious gestures that drained the mould and laid a
-sweet, even face of paper upon it, he found forces invisible at his
-elbows and an enemy still more terrible within. His brain hung fire; a
-wave of horrible doubt and irresolution swept over him. It ran through
-the physical parts engaged—his arms and breast muscles and the small
-of his back. He stared at the mould, turned and washed off the faulty
-sheet he had created, and made an attempt at a jest to Harold Spry, who
-was watching, all eyes.
-
-“Where are my wits, Harold?” he said. Then he took a deep breath, and
-dipped the mould again.
-
-Spry and the layer watched sympathetically. To their eyes there seemed
-no failure as Kellock drew up his load; but he knew. A condition of
-tremendous tension raised his heart-beat to a gallop, and his eyes grew
-misty. He gasped like a drowning man, and felt the sweat beading on his
-forehead.
-
-“I’ll—I’ll just get a breath of air and come back,” he said, dropped
-the mould, and went out of the shop. Spry washed the mould, then he
-walked down the line of vats and spoke to Knox. A man came from the
-engine house with a message, and Ernest Trood also entered with some
-information for Robert Life. What he heard made him hasten out of doors
-to find Kellock sitting up on a form at the entrance of the vat house
-with his head in his hands.
-
-“What’s the matter, my son?” asked Trood, kindly enough; but a look at
-Jordan told him all he feared to hear.
-
-The young man’s expression had changed, and there was fear in his
-eyes, as though they had just mirrored some awful thing. The
-resolute, closely-knit Kellock seemed to have fallen to pieces. Every
-limb indicated the nerve storm under which he suffered. Trood was
-experienced, and knew the danger. He believed that Kellock had given in
-too soon.
-
-“Fight—fight like hell!” he said. “Don’t run away from it. Don’t give
-it time to get into you. Come back now, lad—this minute. At your age,
-it’s nothing—just indigestion, or a chill about you. If you let it
-fester, you’ll go from bad to worse, and very like have to knock off
-for six months before you look at a mould again.”
-
-“It’s no good—it’s gone,” said the younger man; but he obeyed, and
-followed Trood into the vat house.
-
-Knox had warned the rest to ignore the sufferer, and no man took any
-notice of Kellock as he returned.
-
-Spry was waiting, and greeted him cheerfully.
-
-“You’re all right again—your eyes are all right,” he said.
-
-Trood turned his back on Kellock, and everybody was at work as usual.
-He made a tremendous effort with himself, called up his utmost
-resolution, smiled and nodded to Spry, who was whistling, gripped his
-deckle to the mould, and then strove to think of something else, pursue
-his business in the usual mechanical fashion, and let his unconscious
-but highly trained energies pursue their road.
-
-But it was not to be. Some link had strained, if not broken, in the
-complexus of brain and nerve and muscle. Perfect obedience was lacking;
-a rebel had crept into the organism. For once, the man’s expressionless
-face was alive with expression; for once his steady and monotonous
-voice vibrated.
-
-“It’s all up,” he said to Harold Spry.
-
-Then he put down the mould.
-
-Trood was beside him in an instant, and Knox came also. Elsewhere those
-who had no love for Kellock talked under their breath together. Others,
-who came and went, took the news.
-
-Trood made the vatman try again; but only once. He saw in a moment that
-the breakdown could not be bluffed; the fault in the machine was too
-deep.
-
-Jordan put on his coat, and Trood arranged to drive him to Totnes
-presently to see a doctor. The young man was calm, but his will power
-appeared suspended. He looked into the faces of his companions for any
-ray of comfort; and the fact that he could do so was testimony to his
-collapse.
-
-He went back to “The Waterman’s Arms” presently; and through the Mill
-like lightning flashed the news that Kellock had lost his stroke.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-THE DOCTOR
-
-
-As soon as Mrs. Trivett heard the bad news she stopped work, explained
-to her second in command the gravity of the situation, and hastened
-home as fast as she could go to Medora. Now or never might her daughter
-show what she was worth, and she felt that her girl’s place should be
-beside the sufferer. Duty and love alike prompted in that direction;
-indeed, Medora herself appeared to view the disaster with her mother’s
-eyes.
-
-“Good Lord! Lost his stroke! Poor man,” she cried. “I must go to him.
-Is he ill? Have you seen him? What was the cause of it? Does he say
-what he’s going to do about it?”
-
-“I haven’t seen him. He’s gone back to the inn, and Mr. Trood takes him
-into Totnes presently to the doctor. And it’s your place to go along
-with them in my opinion.”
-
-Medora’s mind moved swiftly. She knew that Kellock was to have seen Ned
-Dingle on the previous evening, and eagerly she awaited information of
-what had happened at that meeting. Jordan intended to have come over
-to Priory Farm after working hours; but now she could hear even sooner
-than she expected.
-
-“I shan’t leave him if he’s very bad,” said Medora.
-
-“In no case, better or worse, will you leave him,” declared Lydia.
-“This is a fearful thing to overtake a vatman, and you, of all people,
-ought to be at his side to cheer him and encourage him and help him to
-hope. It’s a nervous breakdown along of all this waiting and trouble.”
-
-“More likely the lecture,” suggested Medora. “Small wonder if his
-lecture is got on his mind and upset him. And he was to see Ned
-yesterday. Perhaps Ned said something to do it.”
-
-Lydia sighed.
-
-“Things be come to a climax, seemingly. Mr. Knox whispered to me that
-Ned might have a bit of good news for Kellock. On the other hand,
-perhaps he had not. Any way, your good is Jordan’s good, and his evil
-is your evil now; so you’d best to get to him as quick as you can, and
-stop with him if he wishes you to do so, as he doubtless will.”
-
-In a couple of hours Medora sat at “The Waterman’s Arms.” She expected
-an emotional meeting, and indeed felt emotional. For a time Jordan’s
-sufferings weighed with her, and she found sympathy wakening for him.
-But he appeared much as usual, and while gratified at her swift return,
-held himself well in hand and made no great parade of his misfortune.
-
-“Mother properly scared me to death,” explained Medora. “I do hope to
-God it’s not as bad as she said. How d’you feel, dear? You look pale.”
-
-“I feel all right in myself.”
-
-“It’s that lecture. Why don’t you give it up?”
-
-“No, Medora. It’s nothing to do with the lecture. I can think of the
-lecture calmly enough. I’m very glad you came so quick. It’s a comfort
-to me first, and second, I’ve got a lot to tell you. You must brace
-yourself, for it’s bad news.”
-
-“More?”
-
-“What has lost me my stroke happened last night, Medora. I saw Mr.
-Dingle, and I heard more than enough to put any man off his stroke.”
-
-“You don’t mean to say he’s going to take your money?”
-
-“My money! Good powers, what’s that? He can have my money to the last
-penny if he likes. It’s far worse. I hate to say it—it’s enough to
-kill any pure woman—it’s very nearly killed me, I believe; but
-you’ve got to hear it, Medora, though it sweeps away the firm ground
-from under our feet and leaves us without any foothold. He—he won’t
-divorce you!”
-
-She exhibited ample concern at this intelligence. Indeed, she very
-nearly fainted in earnest, and Kellock, who only observed the physical
-shock, doubted not that it sprang from emotion entirely creditable to
-Medora.
-
-“You can guess what I felt and how I tried to bring him to a better
-frame of mind. But he’s a different man from what he used to be. I
-couldn’t believe I was listening to Dingle. Changed into something
-outside his real character. It shows how weak natures can be
-influenced. Others have been getting at him—enemies to us for certain.
-It’s a cruel, wicked thing, and it knocked me out, as you see. But I’m
-not concerned with myself. I’ve got to think of you, Medora, and the
-future—our future. Of course, what really hurts the soul of man or
-woman is what they inflict upon themselves; but all the same—there it
-is—if he don’t divorce you, where are we?”
-
-“Where we were,” she said, and strove to make her voice sufficiently
-mournful. But she guessed that it would be difficult to discuss this
-tremendous information without sooner or later revealing her true
-sentiments.
-
-“Don’t let’s talk about it for the present,” she continued. “The future
-will take care of itself—it always does. For the minute, I’m only
-troubled about your health and happiness, Jordan. Whatever comes of
-this, we’ve been through a great experience, and the end of it all is
-this shock to your nerves.”
-
-“‘The end of it all,’ Medora?”
-
-“I mean, so far as we’ve got. You are the only one to think about for
-the minute—not me and not Dingle. The first thing is your health and
-strength, and I’m not going to leave you again, Jordan, till you’re set
-up, and find yourself as clever as ever you were.”
-
-“If you come to the lecture, that would go a long way to quieting my
-nerves.”
-
-“Of course I’ll come. I always meant to come. It was only a bit of
-temper saying I wouldn’t—I never thought not to come. But will you be
-well enough to give it?”
-
-“Oh, yes. This flurry arose from causes outside the lecture, and quite
-outside _the_ Cause. You understand?”
-
-“Yes,” she answered. “I do understand, and I’m thankful for it, Jordan;
-because I know very well it means much more to you than your own trade.
-And our little lives are as nothing to the big things in your mind.”
-
-“If I never made paper again,” he assured her, “it would be less—far
-less—of a grief and disaster to me than if I was shut off from taking
-my part in the great struggle for Labour.”
-
-“You’ll do both; you’ll do both. It’s only a passing shock. You’ll
-forget all about it, I hope, and be at work again as well as ever in a
-few days.”
-
-“I don’t think so, Medora. As far as that goes, I believe it’s serious.
-I haven’t had time to collect my thoughts yet, and it’s no good
-worrying till I’ve seen the doctor; but I’m none too hopeful. If the
-stroke once goes, it wants a lot of careful nursing to get it back, and
-often enough it’s gone for good.”
-
-“Only with men who drink, and that kind of thing. Such a one as you—a
-saint—and strong in body and mind, and healthy every way—of course it
-will come back.”
-
-“We must be frank with ourselves,” he said. “We must tell the doctor
-the truth. My stroke was shocked away. And sometimes what’s shocked
-away can only be shocked back.”
-
-“That’s an idea,” said Medora.
-
-She was always quick to fasten on ideas and his words made her
-thoughtful for a moment. She registered his statement for future
-consideration, then flowed on again. She was cheerful, sympathetic,
-and full of consolation. Indeed, presently, as Kellock grew grateful,
-she began to think she might be overdoing the part. For it was, if not
-wholly, at least in large measure an impersonation now. She was acting
-again, and she played with a purpose and exceeding concern to touch the
-right note, but avoid overemphasis upon it. Kellock appeared to be in
-two minds, and he looked at her and held her hand.
-
-“I want to say something,” he declared presently; “but I won’t. I’ll
-keep it off, because I’m not very strong for the moment, and the spoken
-word once spoken remains. This is a great crisis all round. I hope good
-will come out of trouble, as it often does. We’ve had enough to shake
-us cruelly to-day—both of us—and I won’t add to it. And what’s in my
-thoughts may look different to-morrow, so I’ll keep it there.”
-
-“Don’t think any more about anything,” she begged him. “Just let your
-mind rest, or talk about the lecture. And don’t you think, whatever
-happens, and whatever is in store for me, that it is going to lessen
-your great future. Perhaps it was the strangeness of your ideas that
-made me shrink from them.”
-
-He began to discuss his ruling passion. She kept him easily to that.
-
-Presently they ate together, and when Ernest Trood drove up in a
-dog-cart, lent by Mr. Trenchard, he found Kellock calm and contented.
-Medora sat behind, and joined in the conversation as they trotted
-through the green lanes to Totnes.
-
-The master had sent cheering messages to Jordan, and hoped to see him
-on the following day.
-
-“He’s not a bit troubled,” said Trood. “He reckons that with a man of
-your fine physique and constitution—a man that lives the life you
-lead—this is a flea-bite—just a shake-up along of some trifle. And if
-you’ve got to chuck it and go away for six weeks even, he’s not going
-to trouble about it.”
-
-“Like him,” said Kellock. “But it won’t be any question of six weeks,
-or six days, Ernest. I’ve got a feeling about this that I shall be
-right in twenty-four hours, or not at all. I’m not letting it get on my
-nerves, you understand. If it’s gone, it’s gone. There’s plenty of work
-for me in the world, whether at the vat, or somewhere else.”
-
-“Never heard better sense,” answered the foreman. “All the same, don’t
-you throw up the sponge—that would be weak. You must remember you’re a
-great paper maker, Jordan, and there are not any too many of ’em left
-in England now-a-days. So it’s up to every man that’s proud of his
-business to stick to it.”
-
-“You take that to heart, Jordan,” advised Medora. “Not that there isn’t
-greater work in the world than paper-making—we all know that.”
-
-“No, we don’t know anything of the sort,” answered Trood. “Don’t you
-talk nonsense, Medora, because I won’t hear it. Paper stands for
-civilisation, and the better the paper, the higher the civilisation.
-You’d soon see that if anything happened to spoil paper and raise the
-price of rag. If the quality of paper goes down, that’s a sure sign the
-quality of civilisation’s doing the same. By its paper you can judge a
-nation, and English paper, being the best in the world, helps to show
-we’re first in the world. And if a man like Kellock was to hide his
-light under a bushel, his conscience would very soon tell him about it.”
-
-Jordan smiled at Mr. Trood’s enthusiasm.
-
-“I love my work,” he said, “and should never give it up, unless it gave
-me up, Ernest, but for one reason—that I could do something better.”
-
-“That you never would, if they made you king of England,” replied
-the foreman. “You’d never be so good at anything else as you are at
-paper-making, because you’ve got the natural genius for the job. That’s
-your gift—and you may lecture or you may stand on your head, or do any
-other mortal thing, but you won’t do it as well as you do your work at
-the vat.”
-
-The doctor found not much amiss with Jordan. He heard all particulars,
-and made a searching examination of the patient’s fine frame.
-
-“Never saw a healthier, or more perfect man,” he declared. “You’re a
-long way above the average, and as healthy as a ten year old. Muscles
-hypertrophied a bit—you’d be muscle-bound in fact for any other work
-but your own; but your organs are as sound as a bell; there’s nothing
-whatever to show why you’ve broken down. It would be cruelty to animals
-to give you physic. What d’you drink and smoke?”
-
-“I drink water, doctor. I don’t smoke.”
-
-“Might have known it. Well, go away for a fortnight. Run up to
-Dartmoor, and walk ten miles a day, or twenty, if you like. Then you’ll
-be all right. This breakdown must have been mental, seeing it was
-nothing else. Have you got anything on your mind?”
-
-“Yes, I have.”
-
-“Get it off then, and you’ll be all right.”
-
-Kellock nodded.
-
-“Thank you very much. I shall soon see a way, I hope.”
-
-“Let a way come then; don’t worry to find it. Don’t worry about
-anything. Go up to Dartmoor—Dartmoor’s a very good doctor—though his
-fees get higher every year, they tell me. I seem to know your name, by
-the way. Where did I see it?”
-
-“Posted up perhaps, doctor. I’m going to give a lecture here next week.”
-
-“Ah—so it was. Socialism—eh? Is the lecture getting on your nerves?”
-
-“No, not at all. But I hope it’ll get on other people’s. I look forward
-to it.”
-
-“Well, get to Dartmoor, and if your stroke doesn’t come back when you
-return, see me again.”
-
-Kellock repeated his interview exactly, and Mr. Trood was much
-gratified. They went home in the best of spirits, and that evening
-Medora devoted to Jordan. He became more and more distracted and
-pre-occupied, however. She avoided personal subjects, and wanted him to
-read the lecture aloud; but this he would not do.
-
-“Now that you are going to hear it,” he said, “I’ll let you off till
-then.”
-
-He declared himself tired and went to his bed before ten o’clock. But
-he did not sleep. He had much thinking to do, and many hours elapsed
-before he arrived at any conclusion. His mind was entirely occupied
-with Medora, and her future caused him to pass through deep anxieties
-and fruitless regrets. Her loyal attitude that day had moved him much,
-for he supposed that Dingle’s decision must have come upon her with
-force at least as crushing as it had fallen on himself. Yet how bravely
-she had borne it, how unselfishly she had put it away from her, and
-devoted herself to him and his tribulations! Doubtless now, alone, she
-too considered the gravity of the situation, and lay awake in distress.
-
-He had a human impulse to go and comfort her, to declare that nothing
-mattered while they shared their great love, to explain that since
-Dingle would not legally release her, they must take the law into their
-own hands. But another, and far more characteristic line of thought
-developed, and in the dominating and directing forces awakened by it,
-he followed his natural bent, and at last arrived at a decision. He
-perceived his duty towards Medora, albeit action appeared impossible
-until he had spoken with her. Yet, to put the matter before Medora
-might defeat his object, for there could be no doubt that Medora was
-his, heart and soul. He felt, therefore, that he must, after all, act
-without her knowledge, for he believed that if she knew his purpose,
-she would strive to prevent it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-THE CONFESSION
-
-
-In the evening of Kellock’s catastrophe, Philander Knox saw Ned Dingle,
-who was working in his garden at the time.
-
-“Heard the latest?” he asked.
-
-“The latest for me is that Mr. Trenchard will take me back if I like to
-come.”
-
-“No, the latest for you is that Jordan Kellock’s lost his stroke.”
-
-Ned dropped a packet of seeds.
-
-“Has he, by God! That’s the best news I’ve heard for a good bit.”
-
-“You’re glad, but you won’t be glad if you think over it.”
-
-Knox explained the circumstances, and told the tale of Jordan’s failure.
-
-“Poor devil,” said Ned. “I can’t say I’m sorry all the same. It won’t
-last. He’ll get it back, no doubt, and perhaps he’ll see now he can’t
-go playing fast and loose with people, same as he did, and not get a
-facer himself sometimes. I told him I wasn’t going to divorce my wife,
-and no doubt that’s bowled him over.”
-
-“You’ve done very well so far, in my opinion,” declared Mr. Knox.
-“You’ve conducted the affair in a high-class way, and you and me know
-where we stand; but he don’t, and more does she.”
-
-“I’m in your hands,” answered Ned. “I begin to find better every day
-you’re right, Knox. And what did she do when she heard he was down and
-out?”
-
-“Took a very proper line,” answered Philander. “Some, feeling what
-she feels and knowing that she’d done with him, for evermore, whatever
-happened, would have left him to stew in his own juice; but Medora,
-having a very fine pride, would have despised herself for any such
-littleness as that. I see as clear as day what was in her mind. She
-said to herself, ‘I’ve been a silly fool, and so has he. We were lost
-to sense and reality, and acted in a mad and improper manner. In
-fact, we’ve been everything we could be, except wicked, and silliness
-is often punished worse than wickedness. But, though Kellock richly
-deserved to lose his stroke, it’s as much my fault as his own that he
-has done so, and I’m too sporting to turn my back on him at such a
-moment. If he’s ruined, then it’s my hard duty to share his trouble,
-and I won’t be a rat and quit a sinking ship. That’s not the sort of
-woman Ned Dingle married.’ So Medora argued, no doubt—not knowing, of
-course, what you’ve said to Kellock. So she went to him, and they’ve
-gone to Totnes this evening along with Ernest Trood to see a doctor.
-Thus you see, for her proper and womanly behaviour, Medora will be
-rewarded—as we sometimes are if we do rightly—sooner or later.”
-
-“How rewarded?” asked Ned.
-
-“Why, by hearing presently from the man that you’re not going to
-divorce her. She plays her part to him and cheers him up and takes
-a hopeful view of the disaster, and so on; and then she hears what
-brought it all about—your strong line. Of course, to her ear—she
-being now a contrite creature with the scales fallen from her eyes—the
-fact that you wouldn’t set her free to marry him was the best music she
-could hear. She’ll know with you taking that line, she’ll be free of
-Kellock for evermore, and able to set about her own salvation in fear
-and trembling. And that, no doubt, is what she’ll do, for having paid
-for girlish faults, she’ll now cultivate her womanly virtues and become
-as fine a creature in mind as she is in body, and rise to be worthy of
-our admiration again.”
-
-Ned listened to this long speech while he sowed carrots.
-
-“These things don’t happen by chance,” concluded Knox. “A man like you
-bends fate to his own purpose; and fate, being a female, does a lot
-more for them that drive her than them that spoil her. You stand in a
-very strong position now, and the lucky thing is that the strong can be
-merciful to the weak without losing their self-respect.”
-
-“I’ll see Kellock,” promised Ned. “I’ll see him to-morrow and hear what
-he’s got to say about it.”
-
-“A very good thought, but let your mind dwell on Medora a bit before
-you do. You think so clear and see so straight that you won’t make
-any mistake in that quarter. You’ve got to remember how it looks to
-Kellock so far, and whether it looks right to him, or whether it do
-not. Now Kellock only knows as yet that you don’t put away Medora; and
-that means he can’t marry her, so this brother and sister racket must
-end. As for Mrs. Dingle, she’s done with the masculine gender, and, of
-course, she may have told Kellock so—I can’t say as to that. But you
-see him by all means.”
-
-They talked till dusk fell, then Mr. Knox departed and Ned considered
-all he had said, with the imputations proper to Philander’s words.
-He had trusted largely to the vatman of late, and found himself in
-agreement with his sentiments on all occasions, for Knox was treating
-Ned with rare diplomacy.
-
-Next morning, Jordan himself anticipated his visitor, and as Ned set
-out to see him, he appeared at Ashprington. He wore holiday attire,
-looked pale, and was somewhat nervous.
-
-They met at the gate of Dingle’s house, and Ned spoke.
-
-“Come in the house, and you can speak first—no, I will.”
-
-They entered the little parlour and sat down opposite each other.
-
-“I hear you’ve lost your stroke. I suppose to find what I meant to do
-was a bit too shattering. No doubt you’ll get it back. I’ve no wish to
-come between you and your livelihood; but when you and my wife hatched
-this bit of wickedness, you didn’t stop to think whether it would play
-hell with my nerves; and if you’d known it would, that wouldn’t have
-changed you.”
-
-“That’s quite true,” admitted Kellock, “and, I may tell you, it’s come
-home to me pretty sharp before you said it. As for me, I may get my
-stroke again, or I may not; and if I don’t, I shall never blame you—I
-shall blame myself. Those that think they stand, often get a fall, and
-I’m not too proud to confess to you that that’s what has happened to
-me.”
-
-“Serve you right.”
-
-“I don’t matter any more. What matters is Medora, and I shall be
-greatly obliged if you’ll allow me to speak a few words on that
-subject.”
-
-“The fewer the better.”
-
-“I come from myself, understand. She knows nothing about it. I didn’t
-ask her, because if she’d said ‘no,’ I couldn’t have come. And she
-might have forbid.”
-
-“Well, get on with it.”
-
-“It’s very difficult, and I beg you’ll make allowances for a man who
-has done wrong and done you wrong, too. You’ll probably say that I’m
-only changed since you told me you weren’t going to divorce Medora.
-That’s true in a way, but not all true. I’ve learned a great deal I
-didn’t know from Medora, but I’ve only come now to talk about her. The
-question is how you feel about her.”
-
-“That’s my business, not yours.”
-
-“I don’t know that, because as you feel, so I must do. I recognise my
-obligations sharp enough, and she is the first of them if you ordain
-she is to be. I’ve thought a lot about it you may be sure, and I’ve
-recognised one thing fairly clearly—I did before you struck this blow.
-I’m not a marrying man, Mr. Dingle.”
-
-“Nobody ever thought you were but that fool.”
-
-“It wasn’t her fault. We were both wrong—that’s all. And I want to say
-this. I wouldn’t marry Medora now if I could, because I’ve been brought
-to see I shouldn’t make her happy. A brother I’m prepared to be; but
-for her own sake, and for her future, I wouldn’t marry her if I could
-now, because I should be doing her a wrong. Of course, you’ll say I’m
-putting this on because you won’t let me marry her; but I swear to you
-that I’d begun to feel it before.”
-
-“That lets you out then—with your tail between your legs. And what
-price her?”
-
-“That’s why I’ve called this morning. I can’t say anything to Medora
-until I’ve spoken to you, because it’s clear that what I must do
-depends upon you. If you’ve done with her, then I shall support her and
-be as good a brother as I know how to be.”
-
-“Have you ever seen the man who would take a woman back after these
-games? Would you, if you was me?”
-
-“I’d think a lot before I refused, if I was you. Knox tells me that
-it’s a very uncommon case, but quite in keeping with my character. You
-understand, I’ve said nothing to Medora. Of course, she knows what the
-price is she’s got to pay. The appearance of evil is as bad in this
-case as evil itself; so she’s doomed if you doom her, but saved if you
-save her. Would it be asking too much to ask you to see her?”
-
-“I have seen her.”
-
-“Not since she knew the situation. We often learn a lesson when it’s
-too late to profit by the knowledge, and it’s for you to judge if that
-will be the case with Medora. I’m only raising the question, and I
-don’t want to fill her head with false hopes. She’s been too much of a
-lady to say anything out; but she’s shown her feelings on the subject
-in a good many ways.”
-
-“She’s fed up with you, in fact?”
-
-“Yes; I believe that is so. In a way, to use a homely sort of
-illustration, what we did was to keep company—no more than that; and
-that showed her very clear I’m not the right company; and it’s shown
-me, as I say, I’m not a marrying man. So there it is. I can promise you
-your wife will want for nothing, and I shall regard her destiny as in
-my hands in future, if you’re off her for good. And if you change your
-mind and divorce her, I’ll swear it won’t be me that marries her. That
-you can take on oath. I’ll tell her so to-day.”
-
-Kellock rose to go, and Ned remained silent and seated.
-
-“Remember, if you do see her, you’ll see a wiser and sadder woman,” the
-vatman ventured to add.
-
-“No doubt. You’d make anybody sadder and wiser. When are you going to
-try for your stroke again?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“Nobody will pity you when they hear how you lost it.”
-
-“You’ll find Mrs. Dingle along with her people at Priory Farm if you
-want her. She means to come to my lecture next week; but not if you’ve
-any objection, of course. And I beg you to understand that I’m heartily
-sorry for what I’ve done, and I’m punished a lot worse than you could
-punish me. To lose my stroke is nought; to lose my self-respect is
-everything.”
-
-“You’ll get ’em both back—such an amazing creature as you,” said
-Dingle dourly.
-
-Then Kellock went away, and the man who had listened to him little
-guessed at his soreness of spirit. Jordan indeed had the satisfaction
-of clearing his soul and confessing his weakness and failure; but he
-suffered ample degradation and discomfort under his right-doing. Nor
-did he believe that his end was likely to be gained. Doubting, he had
-taken his proposal to Ashprington; still doubting, he returned. Indeed,
-he felt sure from Ned’s attitude, both to him and Medora, that the girl
-would remain on his hands. A subtler man had felt every reason to hope
-from Dingle’s blunt comments, but he read nothing behind them. He only
-believed that he had eaten dirt for nought; yet he did not regret his
-confession of wrong; for his bent of mind was such that he knew he
-must have made it sooner or later.
-
-The future looked dark and sad enough. He was confused, downcast. Even
-the thought of the lecture had no present power to cheer him. But he
-told himself that he had done his duty to Medora, and suspected that,
-had she heard his appeal to her husband, she might have thanked him.
-
-And elsewhere Dingle pondered the problem. Curiously enough, only a
-point, which had seemed unimportant to anybody else, held his mind.
-Kellock had said Medora was changed, and such is human inconsistency,
-that whereas Ned had told himself for six months he was well rid of
-a bad woman, now the thought that he might receive back into his
-house a reformed character annoyed him. If he wanted anybody, it was
-the old Medora—not the plague, who left him for Kellock, but the
-laughter-loving, illusive help-mate he had married. He did not desire
-a humbled and repentant creature, ready to lick his boots. He was very
-doubtful if he really wanted anybody. Once the mistress of any man,
-he would never have thought of her again except to curse her; but she
-never had been that. She had doubtless shared Jordan’s exalted ideals.
-That was to her credit, and showed she honoured her first husband and
-the stock she sprang from.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-THE BARGAIN
-
-
-Through bright moonlight, that made the young leaves diaphanous and
-melted on the grass lands in grey mist, men and women were walking home
-to Ashprington from Totnes. Not less than five-and-twenty had gone from
-the Mill to hear Jordan Kellock’s lecture on socialism; and as they
-trudged homeward they discussed it.
-
-He had surprised all his listeners and many were full of enthusiasm
-before the future he indicated; but some were angry; some went in
-doubt. The younger men were with him and the older could not deny that
-there was reason and pitiless justice behind his demands. The women who
-heard him wondered at the ease with which he had spoken and held his
-audience. They were impressed with the applause that had greeted his
-sentiments and judged that he must have right on his side to have won a
-reception so enthusiastic.
-
-Henry Barefoot, the boilerman, walked by Ernest Trood, while Harold
-Spry and Daisy Finch listened to them.
-
-“It’s got to come,” declared Barefoot. “We used to talk of these
-problems in the merchant marine twenty-five years ago, and we knew then
-that things weren’t right; but our generation was dumb, because our
-brains weren’t educated to pull together. We ate our mouldy biscuits
-and rancid salt pork and shivered in a gale of wind, because we knew
-the ship’s bottom was rotten; and we cussed the owners out of their
-snug beds ashore to hell; but we was driven cattle, you may say—had to
-go on with it—because there was nothing else for sailor men to do. But
-our children have gone to school. That’s the difference.”
-
-“And the rich men sent ’em there, Henry,” said Mr. Trood.
-
-“They did, because they hadn’t any choice, Ernest. If they’d known what
-would come of it, they’d have kept ’em out of school and left the poor
-man’s children to fill the rich men’s pockets, instead of giving them
-their birthright of education. ’Twasn’t squire and parson sent ’em to
-school, but those who had a fairer sense of justice; and long-headed
-chaps like Kellock are the result.”
-
-“He’s got a lot to learn, however. There’s no such things as equality
-and never can be. Because men ain’t born equal, Henry.”
-
-“He don’t argue that, Mr. Trood,” explained Spry. “He argues that we
-are handicapped out of the hunt from the start. He says, ‘let all start
-fair’; he don’t say all can win.”
-
-“Yes, he does,” returned Trood. “He says all should win. He tells us
-that a man’s intellect is an accident, and that, in justice, them
-with big brains should give their superfluity to the fools, so as all
-should share and share alike. And that’s not human nature. Am I, that
-have worked like a slave to win my position and put all my heart and
-soul into paper-making from my youth up, to go and seek that lazy dog
-I sacked last week and say: ‘You’re a damned, worthless waster, but
-here’s half my wages’?”
-
-“I grant he was out there,” admitted Barefoot. “‘The race is to the
-strong,’ but socialism don’t seem to see that. Given a fair start for
-all and food and clothes and education, then the good boy gets his
-chance; but even if that was so, as things are he’d never be allowed to
-compete with the gentleman’s son.”
-
-“Yes, he would,” answered Trood. “There’s nothing in the world, even as
-it’s run now, to stop brains. There’s boys who were charity school boys
-thirty years ago that the world listens to very respectfully to-day.
-But Kellock’s let a lot of class hatred come into his talk, and hatred
-breeds hatred. Never a man wanted power more than him, but his sort
-go the wrong way to work with their bluster and threats. They don’t
-help: they’re out for blood. We’re a very fair country at heart and
-under our constitution we’ve grown to be the finest people on earth.
-So, naturally, as a whole, the nation don’t want the Constitution swept
-away till we can get a better. The socialists have no traditions, and
-don’t agree among themselves yet, and I for one wouldn’t trust people
-that scoff at tradition and want to be a law to themselves. They would
-be a great danger, Henry, and if we got all to pieces like that and in
-sight of civil wars and revolution, we should throw ourselves open to
-attack from our enemies. Then, while we were wrangling how to govern
-ourselves, we’d damn soon find England was going to be governed by
-somebody else.”
-
-“There’s plenty of hungry eyes on the British Empire no doubt,” allowed
-Mr. Barefoot.
-
-“Plenty; and if our army and navy got bitten with this stuff, it would
-be good-bye to everything. And that wouldn’t suit Kellock’s friends.”
-
-“And be it as it will,” said Daisy Finch, “a paper mill isn’t a
-charity. Those that run the Mill have got to live, I suppose.”
-
-“Yes, Daisy,” admitted Trood; “but we must be fair to this Kellock,
-though I’m far from supporting what he says. The ills are as he
-stated them; the remedies are not as he stated ’em. He argues that
-the workman’s work should no more be his whole life than work is his
-master’s whole life. Because Capital buys a man’s working hours, it
-doesn’t buy his life and liberties. Outside his work, he’s as much
-right to enjoy being alive as his employer. A machine looks very
-different from the owner’s point of view and the worker’s. The owner’s
-the master of the machine; the worker is its slave; and it’s on the
-worker the machine puts the strain, not on the owner. So we have got
-to consider our working hours in relation to our lives as a whole,
-and balance work against life, and consider how our labour affects our
-existence. A six hour day at a machine may be a far greater tax on a
-man or woman than an eight hour day at the desk, or the plough. You’ve
-got to think of the nervous energy, which ain’t unlimited.”
-
-“That’s so,” admitted Barefoot. “Life’s the only adventure we can
-hope for, and I grant you there ought to be more to it. ’Tis all this
-here speeding up, I mistrust. The masters see the result of ‘speeding
-up,’ and think it’s all to the good according; but it’s we feel the
-result, and I can tell you I’m never more cranky and bad-tempered and
-foul-mouthed than after one of them rushes. The strain is only pounds,
-shillings and pence to the masters; but it’s flesh and blood and nerves
-to us; because it’s us have got to fight the machines, not them.”
-
-“A very true word, Henry. Kellock’s out for security, and whether
-you’re a socialist or whether you’re not, you can’t deny security is
-the due of every human creature. Until the highest and lowest alike are
-born into security, there’s something wrong with the order of things.”
-
-“Yet the greater number of the nation have no more security than a
-bird in a bush. Let us but lose our health, and where are we?” asked
-Barefoot.
-
-“And if a machine is going to make us lose our health,” argued Spry,
-“then to hell with the machine.”
-
-“We want shorter hours and better money,” explained Ernest Trood, “and
-that can only be won if the masters also get better money. And for such
-a result we must look to machines.”
-
-Then Daisy Finch asked a question.
-
-“Who were those stern-looking men in black ties listening to the
-lecture?” she inquired.
-
-“From Plymouth, I believe,” answered her sweetheart. “They meant
-business, and they applauded Kellock at the finish.”
-
-“They see a likely tool to help their plots,” said Mr. Trood. “I hope
-he’ll get his stroke back and drop this Jack-o’-lantern job. There’s
-quite enough at it without him.”
-
-“He don’t think so,” answered Barefoot. “He wants to be in the
-movement, and may rise to be a leader some day. They socialists are as
-ambitious as anybody at heart.”
-
-Harold and Miss Finch, weary of the subject, slowed their gait, fell
-back, and presently turned to their own affairs. Then a trap passed,
-driven by Mr. Tom Dolbear, from Priory Farm. He had brought his sister
-and Medora to the lecture, and was now taking them home again. With
-them travelled Mr. Knox.
-
-The farmer alone found no good word for the things they had listened to.
-
-“Just the gift of the gab,” he said. “If you can talk easy, you’re
-tempted to do so, at the expense of work.”
-
-“Talking is working when you’re out for a cause,” explained Knox.
-“Kellock’s not a talker in the way we are. In fact, a very silent man,
-and thinks a great deal more than he talks; but with practice and a
-bit of exercise to strengthen his voice, he’d be as good as any of the
-talking brigade; and though you may not agree with him, you can’t deny
-he’s got the faith to move mountains. He’s preaching a gospel that
-Labour’s perfectly ready and willing to hear, and he’ll be an easy
-winner presently, because it’s half the battle won to tell people the
-things they’ll welcome. Everybody was with him from the start, and the
-harder he hit, the better they liked it.”
-
-“I didn’t think Totnes had gone so radical now-a-days,” said Mrs.
-Trivett.
-
-“More it has,” declared Mr. Dolbear. “That wasn’t Totnes. ’Twas no more
-than a handful of discontented people, who don’t know what they want.”
-
-“Make no mistake as to that,” answered Knox. “The brains of Totnes
-was there—the thinking ones that ain’t satisfied; and they do know
-what they want very well indeed; and Kellock’s talk only said what
-the others feel. He’s got a gift in my opinion, and I’m with him more
-than half the way. If you allow for ignorance and impatience of youth,
-and so on—if you grant all that, there’s still enough left to make a
-reputation. He’ll never be a happy man, but he’ll make his mark and
-have the satisfaction of being somebody in the labour world. He’s got
-the touch.”
-
-Medora considered curiously with herself under the night. Her own
-changed attitude surprised her most. She had heard the applause and
-riot that greeted Jordan’s speech. She had seen him stand there,
-self-contained and strong and successful, before three hundred people.
-She had marked his power to impress them, and awaken enthusiasm. She
-had seen older men than himself lifted to excitement by his speech. She
-had noted how many men and women pressed forward to shake hands with
-him when he had finished. She remembered the chairman’s praise. All
-these things had actually filled her dreams of old. She had prophesied
-to him that such events would some day happen, and that his power
-must become known, given the opportunity. And now, far sooner than
-either had expected such a thing, it had come and justified Medora’s
-prophecies. She wondered whether Kellock was remembering all she had
-foretold. As for herself, she looked at him now as at a picture that
-hung in somebody else’s parlour. She witnessed the sunrise of his first
-triumph, but found herself perfectly indifferent and not desirous of
-one ray of reflected light. Her mind had passed from Kellock to other
-interests, and if she were ever to be a contented woman, it would not
-be Kellock who achieved that consummation.
-
-“Jordan was to attend a meeting of his branch after the lecture,” she
-said to Knox. “I expect after such a success as that, they’ll want him
-to give the lecture somewhere else.”
-
-“I’m thinking of the effect on his nature,” answered Knox. “And I
-believe all that applause will be a better tonic than Dartmoor, and
-make the man well.”
-
-“You think it will fetch his stroke back again?” asked Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“That’s just what I do think, Lydia. He’ll be walking on air after such
-a triumph as that. He’ll fear nothing when he comes back to the vat,
-and all will go right.”
-
-Then, Mr. Knox, for private ends, and suspecting he had praised Kellock
-enough, turned on the lecture, and began to display its fallacies and
-errors. For Medora’s benefit he examined the young man, and declared
-that his address revealed the defects of his qualities. But he need not
-have been at the trouble to occupy himself thus; Medora knew a great
-deal more about the real Jordan than it was possible for Mr. Knox to
-know.
-
-She listened, but took no more part in the conversation. They proceeded
-down the steep lane into Ashprington presently, and at Ned Dingle’s
-home, Knox, to their surprise, bade Mr. Dolbear draw up.
-
-“I’m going in here,” he said. “So I’ll wish you all ‘good night.’”
-
-Dingle, who knew the party was to pass, stood at his outer gate
-smoking. Only Lydia addressed him.
-
-“Good night, Ned,” she said, and he answered:
-
-“Good night, mother.”
-
-Then the trap proceeded and Mr. Dolbear permitted himself to speak
-rather spitefully of Philander Knox.
-
-“He ain’t sound, that man,” he declared. “He wants to run with the hare
-and hunt with the hounds. You don’t know where to have him in argument,
-the truth being he ain’t much in earnest about anything in my opinion.”
-
-But Tom Dolbear modified this view before many days were passed.
-Indeed, had he listened to the conversation then proceeding between
-Philander and Mr. Dingle, he must have found himself confronted sharply
-and painfully with mistaken judgment; and Mr. Knox himself did not
-guess at the important events destined to fall out before he slept
-that night. That certain things were presently to happen; that he would
-pluck his own occasions out of them and win a reward worthy of all his
-pains, he believed; but he did not know how near these things might
-be. Nor did he imagine how swiftly his own particular problems were
-destined to be solved. Now Medora’s husband played into his hand with
-unexpected perception.
-
-They spoke first concerning the lecture, and Ned heard without
-enthusiasm of its success.
-
-“No doubt the only thing that concerns you is why your wife went,” said
-Knox, “and I may tell you she went because she’d promised to go. It
-bored her stiff, same as it did Mrs. Trivett. They’ve got no use for
-the new paths, and Medora’s just as much of a Tory at heart as you or
-her mother, though she wouldn’t own to it. That’s all over, any way.
-They’ve parted in a dignified fashion, and I’ve done the best day’s
-work I ever have done in helping you to see the peculiar circumstances
-and putting the truth before you. Not that even my great efforts would
-have saved the situation if you hadn’t believed me; but that was your
-stronghold: you knew I was telling truth. In fact, it’s one of those
-cases where knowledge of the truth has helped the parties through the
-storm, and I’ll be thankful to my dying day you was large-minded enough
-to receive and accept it. It was a great compliment to me that you
-could trust me, and a great advertisement to your brain power.”
-
-“It’s all your work and I don’t deny you the praise,” answered Ned.
-“Of course, if things had been otherwise from what they are, nothing
-would have come of it; but as the facts are what we understand, then
-I’m half in a mind to take Medora back. I dare say the people will
-think I’m a silly, knock-kneed fool to do so; but those who know the
-truth would not. There’s only one thing will prevent me, and that’s the
-woman herself. I’ll see her presently, and if she comes out of it in a
-decent spirit, then what I say may happen. But if there’s a shadow of
-doubt about it in her mind, then we’ll stop as we are. It pretty much
-depends upon her now.”
-
-“In that case I congratulate you, because her spirit is contrite to the
-dust, and never, if she lives to be a hundred, will she fail of her
-duty again. She’ll be a pattern to every married woman on earth for the
-rest of her life, no doubt. The highest and best she prays for is to be
-forgiven by you; but she don’t dare to hope even that; and if she found
-she was more than forgiven, then her gratitude would rise to amazing
-heights, no doubt.”
-
-“Well it might,” declared Dingle, and the other spoke again.
-
-“Yes; and none better pleased than me; but though I hadn’t thought
-we’d got nearly so far as this yet awhile, now I see that we have, I
-must speak a word more, Ned. What I’m going to say now is a terrible
-delicate thing; and yet, late though the hour is, this is the appointed
-time. Give me a spot of whiskey and switch off from yourself to me for
-five minutes.”
-
-“I was coming to you. I’m not blind, and I see very clearly what I owe
-you in this matter. You’ve took a deal of trouble, and I’m grateful,
-Knox, and so will everybody else be when they understand.”
-
-“I’m very glad you feel it so,” answered Philander, “because it’s true.
-I have took a lot of trouble, Ned, and I’ve spared no pains to bring
-this about, because well I knew from my experience of life that it
-was the best that could possibly happen for all concerned. And once
-convinced them two were innocent as babes, I set myself to save the
-situation, as they say. And I’ve helped you to do so; and it ain’t a
-figure of speech to say I’m well paid by results. But that’s not all
-there is to it. There was something up my sleeve too. I had another
-iron in the fire for myself. In a word, you can pay me handsome for all
-my trouble if you’ll recognise that and lend me a hand in a certain
-quarter. Need I say what quarter? As you know, Mrs. Trivett’s very much
-addicted to me, and she’d marry me to-morrow if a mistaken call of
-duty didn’t keep her in that breeding pen known as Priory Farm. Well, I
-put it to you whether you won’t help me same as I helped you. One good
-turn deserves another—eh?”
-
-“I’d go to the end of the world to help you, Knox. But what can I do?”
-
-“You don’t see? I’ll tell you then. It sounds a bit strong, but it’s
-safe enough and it’ll do the trick. Above all you needn’t feel a speck
-of fear, because your mother-in-law has a very fine affection for me,
-and to marry me will really be a great delight to her—that I assure
-you.”
-
-“What must I do then?”
-
-“Merely tell Medora you don’t look at her again unless Mrs. Trivett
-changes her name to Mrs. Knox. I’m not asking a difficult or
-troublesome thing. In fact, you needn’t lift a finger in the matter.
-You can safely leave it to Medora. She’ll praise God on her knees for a
-month of Sundays when she hears the grand ideas in your mind, and when
-you state the condition—there you are: she’ll be on to her mother like
-a flame of fire, and Lydia will mighty soon see her duty.”
-
-Ned Dingle laughed.
-
-“Lord, you’re a deep one!” he said.
-
-“Not me. Far from it. Just ordinary common sense, and a great natural
-regard for Medora’s mother. Mind, I wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t a dead
-cert.”
-
-“It shall be done,” answered the younger man. “You’re a double chap,
-Knox, though you do claim to be so simple, and I’d rather have you for
-a friend than an enemy.”
-
-“I’ll be your friend as long as I live, I promise you—and your wife
-also. A very good father-in-law you’ll find me.”
-
-They went to the door together and as Knox was about to depart, there
-came a swift foot down the lane. It was Jordan Kellock on his homeward
-way.
-
-He stopped, seeing the men at the gate.
-
-“I was going to call first thing to-morrow, Mr. Dingle,” he said, “but
-since you’re here I can speak now.”
-
-“And give me an arm afterwards,” declared Knox. For the moon had set
-and it was very dark.
-
-“Only this: the leaders liked what I said to-night, and they liked
-how I said it. In a word they have offered me propaganda work. I’m to
-travel about and have my headquarters in London. My life’s begun in
-fact. I tell you this, because now you’re free to go back to the Mill,
-for I shall not.”
-
-“Giving up paper-making?” asked Philander.
-
-“Yes, Knox. I shall never touch a mould again.”
-
-“Then you’ll never know if you’ve lost your stroke, or get it back.”
-
-“All’s one now. There’s only Mrs. Dingle to consider. Have you been
-able to make up your mind in that matter yet, Mr. Dingle?”
-
-“I have,” said Ned; “but she don’t know it and I’ll thank you not to
-tell her. That’s my job.”
-
-“Thank God,” said Kellock.
-
-“And Knox,” added Ned. “But for him there’s no shadow of doubt things
-would have happened differently. But as luck would have it you confided
-in him, and so did I; and being what he is, he puts his intellects into
-the thing and saved us.”
-
-“I shan’t forget it,” said Kellock.
-
-“And we shan’t forget you,” declared Knox. “You’re all three mighty
-well out of this, and though you’ve been an amazing ass, yet there was
-a fine quality in your foolishness that saved the situation. You’ve all
-got peace with honour in fact; and may you profit by your lesson and
-your luck.”
-
-Then Knox and Kellock set off down the hill together.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-FIRE BEACON HILL
-
-
-Free horizons stretched about the grassy summit of Fire Beacon, a
-culminating ridge above Dart.
-
-It ascended from a glorious ambit of hill and valley, moor and sea;
-and on this silvery noon of early summer, light rained out of the
-zenith and echoed in the scattered cloud argosies that sailed from
-the north to seaward. Under them spread a mosaic of multicoloured
-fields netted with hedges and knotted with copses or spinneys, grey
-hamlets and little thorpes. The million breasts of Artemis Devonia
-undulated beneath the shining patchwork and faded into distance over
-many leagues of sunkissed weald and wold, until they rippled dimly
-to the foothills and forest edges of Dartmoor, where the high lands
-were flung hugely out from east to west. To-day the Moor shone full of
-delicate colour under the sun. It rose and fell in a lustrous opaline
-sky line of gentle salients; it melted at the magic of the universal
-light and seemed no more than a delicate veil of grey and azure
-imposed transparently upon the brighter blue above it. From Hey Tor to
-Rippon it rolled, to Buckland and Holne Moor, with shadowy glimpses of
-Hameldon and remote Cosdon; to Dean Moor and Harford, by Eastern Beacon
-and Western Beacon, Lee Moor and Shell Top and far border heights that
-brooded through the milky hazes of the west.
-
-Beneath Fire Beacon lay the clustered dwellings of East Cornworthy,
-and beyond them, deep in the heart of the land, shone Dart where there
-bent away Bow Creek above Stoke Gabriel. The river wound argent through
-a dimple of the bending hills, while easterly, by broad passages of
-woodland and fallow, opened the ways to the sea. Tor Bay stretched
-there with white Torquay glittering pearly under her triple hills;
-and far beyond them, touched through the haze by a falling sunshaft,
-glimmered the headlands eastward, cliff beyond cliff, where the red
-sandstone of Devon gave to the golden oolites of Dorset. Then ranged
-the sea-line and rolled wide waters soaked with light, whereon the
-clouds not only flung down their shadows, but poured their reflections
-also, so that the sea was radiant as the land.
-
-Fire Beacon bore hay, and as the wind rippled the distant waters, so
-here, through ripening grass, over sparkling white daisies and russet
-sorrel, it ran and swept and sent a lustre, that danced upon the hill
-and stroked the herbage with fitful waves of light. A cuckoo called
-from an elm top and overhead wheeled the gulls to link earth and sea
-together.
-
-Hither climbed a party of four holiday makers, of whom two were
-middle-aged and two were young. The more youthful pair walked some
-hundred yards ahead and bore between them a hamper; their elders
-breasted the great hill more leisurely and stopped sometimes upon the
-way. Once, where a grassy dip in the hedge bank invited them to do so,
-they sat down to rest for a while.
-
-Ned and Medora reached the crown of Fire Beacon and sought a place for
-their picnic under the nearest hedge. They found it presently, but
-waited until Lydia and Philander should arrive and approve.
-
-Perfect understanding appeared to obtain between the husband and wife.
-Medora was attired in a pre-Kellock gown, which Mr. Dingle had always
-admired. Indeed she had given the garments that came from London
-to Daisy Finch. She had been highly ingenious in returning to the
-old régime at every minute particular, and in banishing to the void
-any evidence of the inter-regnum. She came back to Ned sufficiently
-contrite and sufficiently grateful and thankful. Her tact had been
-sharpened by tribulation, and remembering very well what was good
-to her husband, she wasted not much time on tears of repentance or
-promises of future well doing. She let her luck take the form of
-joyousness—which suited Dingle best. Her gratitude assumed the most
-agreeable shape from his point of view, for she exhibited such delight
-in her home and such radiant happiness in his company that he found
-himself content. Nor, for once, was there any simulation on Medora’s
-part. She felt the satisfaction she expressed. She appreciated the
-extent of her remarkable good fortune and desired nothing more than a
-return to the life she had under-valued. They were for the moment not
-talking of themselves, but Medora’s mother.
-
-“Poor dear! You may say that Aunt Mary and Uncle Tom pretty well
-cast her out,” said Mrs. Dingle. “A proper shame I call it, and a
-proper lesson not to work your fingers to the bone for other people’s
-children. You’d think mother was a traitor to ’em, instead of the best
-friend they ever had, or will have—selfish creatures.”
-
-“Well, you’ve done her a very good turn by getting her out of that
-house. Knox will know how to value such a fine woman, though it’s
-contrary to nature that two old blades like them should feel all
-younger people feel, I suppose.”
-
-“He feels enough not to let mother work in the Mill any more,” said
-Medora.
-
-“And you know you need not, if you don’t want.”
-
-“I do, you dear. But I’m only too jolly thankful to be back there
-and that’s the truth. I’d sooner be there than anywhere, because I’m
-nearer to you all day, and we can eat our dinner together. But mother’s
-different and Mr. Knox has very dignified ideas how she should live at
-her age.”
-
-“You say ‘at her age,’ but be blessed if this racket hasn’t knocked
-years off her,” said Ned. “I can quite imagine a man of half a century
-old might think her good-looking.”
-
-By a curious coincidence Philander was stating the same opinion half
-a mile down the hill. Indeed Lydia’s face seemed a palimpsest to Mr.
-Knox, and through more recent writings, to her countenance there
-would still come a twinkle from the past and a flash and flush, that
-penetrated thirty years of Time’s caligraphy and seemed to recreate her
-features, even to a little curl at the corner of her under-lip, that
-belonged to youth and had been delicious then.
-
-Mr. Knox perceived these things.
-
-“Dammy, you’re growing younger under my very eyes, Lydia,” he said.
-
-She laughed.
-
-“Tom didn’t think so,” she answered. “He said that for an aged woman—”
-
-“Get him out of your mind,” said Mr. Knox. “The forties are often very
-unmerciful to the fifties—a trick of human nature I can’t explain.”
-
-“I know I’m younger; and it’s largely along of you, Philander, but not
-all. You can understand how the thought of them two up there have made
-me younger. I never dreamed they could come together again—not in my
-most hopeful moments.”
-
-“That’s because you didn’t know how short a distance they’d really
-fallen apart.”
-
-“’Tis too good to be true. I’m frightened of it.”
-
-“Not you,” he said. “You never was frightened of anything and never
-will be.”
-
-“For that matter there is a dark side,” explained Lydia, “and I’m
-almost glad there is in a way, because if there wasn’t, the whole story
-would be contrary to nature and would tumble down like a pack of cards.”
-
-“There’s no dark side, and I won’t have you say there is, Lyddy. Why
-shouldn’t the Lord hatch a piece of happiness for four humans once in
-a way, if He’s got a mind to do it?”
-
-“It ain’t the Almighty; it’s my people at Priory Farm. I heard some
-bitter things there I do assure you.”
-
-“I’ll bet you did,” said Mr. Knox. “I can see ’em at you. And I can
-also very well guess what they said about me.”
-
-“Especially Mary. I never heard her use such language, and I never
-saw her so properly awake before. But I was glad after, because when
-she called you a crafty old limb of the Dowl, that got my fighting
-spirit up and they heard a home truth or two. I thought they were very
-different stuff.”
-
-“If you take people as you find ’em, you’ll make friends,” answered
-Mr. Knox; “but if you take people as you fancy ’em, you will not. No
-doubt folk are very flattered at first to find our opinion of ’em is as
-high as their opinion of themselves. But that don’t last. We can’t for
-long think of any fellow creature as highly as he thinks of himself.
-The strain’s too great, and so, presently, we come down to the truth
-about our friend; and he sees we know it and can’t forgive us. So the
-friendship fades out, because it was built on fancy and not on reality.
-That’s what happens to most friendships in the long run.”
-
-“I suppose I never got quite a true picture of my brother’s wife,”
-admitted Lydia.
-
-“You did not. And what’s hurting her so sharp for the minute and making
-her so beastly rude is—not so much your going, as your knowing the
-truth about her. But don’t you fret. They’ll cringe presently. I dare
-say they’ll be at our wedding yet.”
-
-“I wish I could think so,” she answered. “But it ought to come right,
-for, after all, I’m a mother too, and what choice had I when Ned got me
-in a corner like that?”
-
-“Not an earthly,” declared Mr. Knox.
-
-They joined Ned and Medora presently. The view was nothing to any
-of them, but the elders welcomed the breeze at hill top. Their talk
-concerned the wedding.
-
-“A very Christian spirit in the air,” Philander asserted. “Even
-Nicholas Pinhey has forgiven me, thanks to your mother, Medora. He
-dropped in on Saturday, and he said, ‘You called me a caterpillar, not
-so very many weeks ago, Mr. Knox,’ and I answered, ‘I’m afraid you’re
-right.’ And he said, ‘Yes; and when you done so, I thought it was a
-case of “Father, forgive him, for he knows not what he sayeth.”— And I
-wish you to understand that I forgive it and forget it also, out of
-respect for Mrs. Trivett. The man that Mrs. Trivett thinks good enough
-to marry must have some virtues hidden from common eyes,’ said Nicholas
-to me.”
-
-“And Mercy Life’s forgiven me,” said Medora. “I wouldn’t let her have
-any peace till she did. And Alice Barefoot passes the time of day even!
-That’s thanks to mother of course.”
-
-“They’re getting up a fine wedding present for mother in the rag
-house,” announced Ned. “It’s a secret, but Henry Barefoot told me. It’s
-going to take the shape of a tea service, I believe.”
-
-“I can’t see myself away from the rag house,” murmured Mrs. Trivett.
-
-“You couldn’t see yourself away from Priory Farm, mother,” said Medora.
-
-“’Tis a want of imagination in you, Lydia,” declared Mr. Knox. “You’ll
-say you can’t see yourself married to me next. But that you certainly
-will see inside a month from Sunday.”
-
-They spoke of various matters that interested them; then Mr. Knox
-mentioned Kellock.
-
-“Strange that a man born and bred under the apple trees of Ashprington
-should show these gifts. A great paper maker; and as if that was not
-enough, a power of talk and a talent for politics. Not that he’ll ever
-be half as good in his new line as he was in his old. A man can’t rise
-to be first class at two crafts.”
-
-“The Labour Party will swallow him up, and we shan’t hear no more about
-him, I expect,” said Lydia.
-
-“That’s it. He hadn’t the very highest gifts to deal with his fellow
-men—not the touch of genius—too deadly serious and narrow. You feel
-about that sort a very proper respect; but you’d a long sight sooner
-live with their statues than themselves. ’Tis always uncomfortable
-living with heroes—even little tin ones—but when time has took ’em
-and just kneaded what good they’ve done into the common wealth of human
-progress—then we can feel kindly to their memories.”
-
-“Ope the hamper, Ned,” said Lydia.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
- Text in italics is surrounded by underscores: _italics_
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been retained.
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Storm in a Teacup, by Eden Phillpotts
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORM IN A TEACUP ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55468-0.txt or 55468-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/4/6/55468/
-
-Produced by MWS, David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/55468-0.zip b/old/55468-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 7d95d61..0000000
--- a/old/55468-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55468-h.zip b/old/55468-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 3d99ad1..0000000
--- a/old/55468-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55468-h/55468-h.htm b/old/55468-h/55468-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 2f4b577..0000000
--- a/old/55468-h/55468-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13775 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of Storm in a Teacup, by Eden Phillpotts.
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2
-{ text-align: center; clear: both;
-}
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-h1.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-
-.gap-20 {width:100%; height:20px;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-}
-
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA; text-align: center;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;}
-
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Storm in a Teacup, by Eden Phillpotts
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Storm in a Teacup
-
-Author: Eden Phillpotts
-
-Release Date: August 31, 2017 [EBook #55468]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORM IN A TEACUP ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<div class="transnote">TRANSCRIBER&rsquo;S NOTES:<br />
-<br />
-The cover image has been created by the Transcriber and is placed in the public domain.<br />
-Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been retained.<br />
-Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><strong>STORM IN A TEACUP</strong></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_002.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center">
-THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO DALLAS<br />
-ATLANTA SAN FRANCISCO<br />
-<br />
-MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span><br />
-LONDON BOMBAY CALCUTTA<br />
-MELBOURNE<br />
-<br />
-THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span><br />
-TORONTO<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak">STORM IN A TEACUP</h1></div>
-
-<p class="center">BY<br />
-EDEN PHILLPOTTS<br />
-<br />
-Author of<br />
-&ldquo;Old Delabole,&rdquo; &ldquo;Brunel&rsquo;s Tower,&rdquo; etc.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-New York<br />
-THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-1919<br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1919</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">By</span> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Set up and electrotyped. Published October, 1919.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="4" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">I</td><td><span class="smcap">Bow Creek</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">II</td><td><span class="smcap">Magic Pictures</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">III</td><td><span class="smcap">Priory Farm</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">IV</td><td><span class="smcap">A New Vatman</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">V</td><td><span class="smcap">The Rag House</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VI</td><td><span class="smcap">The Martyr</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VII</td><td><span class="smcap">The Blue Mark</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VIII</td><td><span class="smcap">Assault and Battery</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">IX</td><td><span class="smcap">The Old Priory</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">X</td><td><span class="smcap">The Letter</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XI</td><td><span class="smcap">Lydia&rsquo;s Day</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XII</td><td><span class="smcap">Medora&rsquo;s Night</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XIII</td><td><span class="smcap">In London</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XIV</td><td><span class="smcap">The Drying Lofts</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XV</td><td><span class="smcap">Going up Corkscrew Hill</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XVI</td><td><span class="smcap">At &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s Arms&rdquo;</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XVII</td><td><span class="smcap">Tragedy in the Sizing Room</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XVIII</td><td><span class="smcap">Ned Hears Mr. Knox</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XIX</td><td><span class="smcap">Emotions of Medora</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XX</td><td><span class="smcap">Philander&rsquo;s Fate</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXI</td><td><span class="smcap">The Protest</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXII</td><td><span class="smcap">A Test for Jordan Kellock</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXIII</td><td><span class="smcap">The Wisdom of Philander</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXIV</td><td><span class="smcap">Ned and Medora</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXV</td><td><span class="smcap">The Explanation</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXVI</td><td><span class="smcap">The Stroke</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXVII</td><td><span class="smcap">The Doctor</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXVIII</td><td><span class="smcap">The Confession</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXIX</td><td><span class="smcap">The Bargain</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XXX</td><td><span class="smcap">Fire Beacon Hill</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><strong>STORM IN A TEACUP</strong></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<small>BOW CREEK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>How musical are the place names on the tidal water of
-Dart. Tuckenhay and Greenway, Stoke Gabriel and Dittisham,
-Sharpham and Duncannon&mdash;a chime of bells to
-the native ear that knows them.</p>
-
-<p>To-day autumn rainbows burnt low on the ferny hills
-and set their russet flashing. Then hailstorms churned
-the river into a flurry and swept seaward under a grey
-cowl. They came with a rush of wind, that brought
-scarlet leaves from the wild cherry and gold dust from
-the larch; but soon the air cleared and the sun returned,
-while the silver fret of the river&rsquo;s face grew calm again
-to mirror far-off things. Easterly the red earth arched
-low on the blue sky; west spread cobweb-grey orchards,
-their leaves fallen, their last of apples still twinkling&mdash;topaz
-and ruby&mdash;among the lichens of their ancient
-boughs. Then broad, oaken hangers met the beech scrub
-and the pale oak foliage was as a flame dancing above
-the red-hot fire of the beeches. Their conflagrations
-blazed along the tideway and their reflected colour poured
-down over the woods into the water.</p>
-
-<p>Then elm trees rolled out along the river, and above
-them, in billows mightier than they, sailed the light-laden
-clouds, that seemed to lift another forest, bossed and
-rounded as the elm trees, and carry up their image into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
-the sky. But the cloud glory was pale, its sun touched
-summits faint against the ardour of the earthborn elms.</p>
-
-<p>At water&rsquo;s brink, above Stoke Gabriel&rsquo;s little pier and
-gleam of white and rose-washed cots, black swine were
-rooting for acorns; while westerly an arm of Dart extended
-up Bow Creek through such sunlight as made the
-eyes throb and turn to the cool shadows. Another silver
-loop and Duncannon cuddled in an elbow of the river;
-then, higher yet, the hills heaved along Sharpham&rsquo;s hanging
-woods turned from the sun. The immense curtain of
-trees faced north in tapestry of temperate tones painted
-with purple and grey and the twilight colours of autumn
-foliage seen through shadows. The ash was already naked&mdash;a
-clean skeleton against the dun mass of dying foliage&mdash;and
-other trees were casting down their garments; but
-the firs and spruce made rich contrast of blue and green
-upon the sere.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Sharpham, long river flats rolled out, where
-plover and gulls sat on tussocks of reed, or rush, and curlew
-wheeled and mewed overhead. Then opened a point,
-where, robbed of colour, all mist-laden, amid gentle passages
-of receding banks and trees, there lifted the church
-tower of Totnes, with Dartmoor flung in a dim arc beyond.</p>
-
-<p>So Dart came, beside old, fern-clad wharves, through
-sedge-beds and reed ronds to the end of her estuary under
-the glittering apron of a weir. Then the pulse of the
-sea ceased to beat; the tide bade farewell, and the salmon
-leapt from salt to fresh.</p>
-
-<p>Worthy of worship in all her times and seasons; by her
-subtleties and sleights, her sun and shadow; by her laughter
-and coy approaches; by her curves and colours; her
-green hills and delight of woods and valleys; by her many
-voices; her changing moods and little lovelinesses, Dart
-is all Devon and so incomparably England.</p>
-
-<p>A boat moved on Bow Creek, and in it there sat two
-men and a young woman. One man rowed while his wife<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
-and the other man watched him. He pulled a long, powerful
-stroke, and the little vessel slipped up the estuary on a
-tide that was at flood, pondering a moment before the turn.
-The banks were a blaze of autumn colour, beneath which
-shelving planes of stone sank down to the water. The
-woman twirled an umbrella to dry it from the recent storm.
-She was cold and shivered a little, for though the sun shone
-again, the north wind blew.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m fearing we oughtn&rsquo;t to have come, Medora,&rdquo; said
-the man who sat beside her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take my coat,&rdquo; advised Medora&rsquo;s husband. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-dry enough inside.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He stopped rowing, took off his coat and handed it to
-his wife, who slipped it over her white blouse, but did not
-thank him.</p>
-
-<p>Medora Dingle was a dark-faced girl, with black hair
-and a pair of deep, brown eyes&mdash;lovely, but restless&mdash;under
-clean, arched eye-brows. Her mouth was red and
-small, her face fresh and rosy. She seemed self-conscious,
-and shivered a little more than was natural; for she was
-strong and hearty enough in body, tall and lithe, one
-who laboured six days a week and had never known sickness.
-Two of her fingers were tied up in cotton rags,
-and one of the wounds was on her ring finger so that her
-wedding ring was not visible.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Edward Dingle put down the oars.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now you can take it on, old chap,&rdquo; he said, and then
-changed places with his companion. The men were very
-unlike, but each comely after his fashion. Dingle was
-the bigger&mdash;a broad-shouldered, loose-limbed youth of
-five-and-twenty, with a head rather small for his bulk,
-and a pleasant laughter-loving expression. He was fair
-and pretty rather than handsome. His features were
-regular, his eyes blue, his hair straw-coloured and curly.
-A small moustache did not conceal his good-humoured
-mouth. His voice was high-pitched, and he chattered a
-great deal of nothing. He was a type of the slight, kindly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
-man taken for granted&mdash;a man whose worth is under-valued
-by reason of his unimportance to himself. He
-had a boundless good nature combined with a modest
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan Kellock stood an inch or two shorter than Dingle
-and was a year or two older. He shaved clean, and
-brushed his dark, lustreless hair off his high forehead without
-parting it. Of a somewhat sallow complexion, with
-grey, deliberate eyes and a clean-cut, thin-lipped mouth,
-his brow suggested idealism and enthusiasm; there was
-a light in his solemn eyes and a touch of the sensitive
-about his nose. He spoke slowly, with a level, monotonous
-accent, and in this also offered an abrupt contrast to his
-companion.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that he felt the reality of life and was pervious
-to impressions. He rowed with less mannerism, and a
-slower stroke than his friend; but the boat moved faster
-than it had with Dingle at the oars, for Kellock was a
-very strong man, and his daily work had developed his
-breast and arms abnormally.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A pity now,&rdquo; said Ned, &ldquo;that you didn&rsquo;t let me fetch
-your thick coat, Medora, like I wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to have fetched it,&rdquo; she answered impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I offered, and you said you didn&rsquo;t want it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s like you. Throw the blame on me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no blame to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to have just brought the thing and not
-bothered me about it,&rdquo; she declared.</p>
-
-<p>Then her husband laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I ought,&rdquo; he admitted; &ldquo;but it takes a man such
-a hell of a time to know just what he ought to do where
-a woman&rsquo;s concerned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not where his wife&rsquo;s concerned, I should think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hardest of all, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, because a wife&rsquo;s truthful most times,&rdquo; replied
-Medora. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s no good her pretending&mdash;there&rsquo;s nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-to gain by it. Other women often pretend that a man&rsquo;s
-pleasing them, when he&rsquo;s not&mdash;just for politeness to the
-stupid things; but a man&rsquo;s wife&rsquo;s a fool to waste time like
-that. The sooner she trains her husband up to the truth
-of her, the better for him and the better for her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They wrangled a little, then Ned laughed again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now Jordan will let on you and me are quarrelling,&rdquo;
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>Thus challenged, the rower answered, but he was quite
-serious in his reply.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Last thing I should be likely to do&mdash;even if it was
-true. A man and his wife can argue a point without any
-feeling, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So they can,&rdquo; declared Medora. &ldquo;And a proud
-woman don&rsquo;t let even a friend see her troubles. Not that
-I&rsquo;ve got any troubles, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And never will have, I hope,&rdquo; answered Kellock
-gravely.</p>
-
-<p>The creek began to close, and ahead loomed a wharf and
-a building standing upon it. The hills grew higher round
-about, and the boat needed steering as her channel became
-narrower.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tide&rsquo;s turning,&rdquo; said Ned, and for answer, the rower
-quickened his stroke.</p>
-
-<p>They passed the wharf, where a trout stream from a
-coomb ran into the estuary, then, ascending to the head
-of the boatable waters, reached their destination. Already
-the tide was falling and revealing weedy rocks and
-a high-water mark on either bank of the creek. To the
-right a little boathouse opened its dark mouth over the
-water, and now they slipped into it and came ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Medora thanked Jordan Kellock warmly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think I didn&rsquo;t enjoy it because I got a bit
-chilly after the hailstorm,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I did enjoy it ever
-so much, and it was very kind of you to ask me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The last time we&rsquo;ll go boating this year,&rdquo; he answered,
-&ldquo;and it was a good day, though cold along of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-north wind. But the autumn woods were very fine,
-I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Properly lovely&mdash;poetry alive you might call them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I thought,&rdquo; he answered as he turned down his
-sleeves and presently put on his coat and tie again. The
-coat was black and the tie a subdued green.</p>
-
-<p>Ned made the boat ship-shape and turned to his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A good smart walk up the hill will warm you,&rdquo; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated and whispered to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you ask Jordan to tea?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, certainly,&rdquo; he answered aloud. &ldquo;Medora&rsquo;s
-wishful for you to come to tea, old man. So I hope you
-will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should have liked to do it,&rdquo; replied Kellock; &ldquo;but
-I&rsquo;ve promised to see Mr. Trenchard. It&rsquo;s about the
-moulds for the advertisements.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Right. He&rsquo;ll want me, too, I reckon over that job.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He will without a doubt. In fact it&rsquo;s more up to you
-than me. Everything depends on the pulp.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So it does with all paper,&rdquo; declared Ned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True enough. The beaterman&rsquo;s master. For these
-fancy pictures for exhibition you&rsquo;ve got to mix stuff as
-fine as clear soup&mdash;just the contrary of what you may
-call real paper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you coming, Ned?&rdquo; asked Medora. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to
-get over to mother to-morrow and I don&rsquo;t want to go with
-a cold.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Coming, coming,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So long, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good-bye till Monday,&rdquo; answered the other. Then
-he stood still and watched the young couple tramp off together.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed thoughtfully and when they disappeared up
-a steep woodland path, he shook his head. They were
-gone to Ashprington village, where they dwelt; but Mr.
-Kellock lived at Dene where the trout stream descended
-from the hills to the river. He crossed from the boat-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>house
-by a row of stepping-stones set athwart the creek;
-then he turned to the left and soon found himself at the
-cottage where he lodged.</p>
-
-<p>This man and Dingle had both loved Medora Trivett,
-and for some time she had hesitated between them. But
-Ned won her and the loser, taking his defeat in a large
-and patient spirit, continued to remain good friends with
-both.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kellock knew, what everybody guessed, that after
-a year of marriage, the pair were not happy together,
-though why this should be so none could at present determine.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<small>MAGIC PICTURES</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Stopping only to wash his hands and brush his hair, Kellock
-left his rooms and hastened up the coomb, where
-towered immense congeries of buildings under the slope of
-the hills. Evening sunshine fell over the western height
-which crowned the valley, and still caught the upper windows
-of the factory; but the huge shadow quickly climbed
-upward as the sun set.</p>
-
-<p>A small house stood at the main gate of Dene Paper
-Mill, and at the door sat a man reading a paper and smoking
-his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>It was Mr. Trood, foreman of the works.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Guvnor&rsquo;s asking for you, Kellock,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Five
-o&rsquo;clock was the time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan hurried on to the deserted mills, for the day was
-Saturday and work had ceased at noon. Threading the
-silent shops he presently reached a door on an upper floor,
-marked &ldquo;Office,&rdquo; knocked and was told to enter.</p>
-
-<p>On the left of the chamber sat a broad-shouldered man
-writing at a roll-top desk; under the windows of the room,
-which faced north, extended a long table heaped with paper
-of all descriptions and colours.</p>
-
-<p>The master twisted round on his office chair, then rose
-and lighted a cigarette. He was clean-shaved with iron-grey
-hair and a searching but genial expression. His
-face shone with intelligence and humour. It was strong
-and accurately declared the man, for indomitable perseverance
-and courage belonged to Matthew Trenchard.</p>
-
-<p>His own success he attributed to love of sport and love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-of fun. These pursuits made him sympathetic and understanding.
-He recognised his responsibilities and his rule
-of conduct in his relations with the hundred men and
-women he employed was to keep in closest possible touch
-with them. He held it good for them and vital for himself
-that he should know what was passing in their minds;
-for only thus could he discover the beginning of grievances
-and destroy them in the egg. He believed that the longer
-a trouble grew, the more difficult it was to dissipate, and
-by establishing intimate relations with his staff and impressing
-upon them his own situation, his successes and
-his failures, he succeeded in fixing unusual bonds.</p>
-
-<p>For the most part his people felt that Trenchard&rsquo;s good
-was their own&mdash;not because he said so, but because he
-made it so; and save for certain inevitable spirits, who
-objected on principle to all existing conditions between
-capital and labour, the workers trusted him and spoke
-well of him.</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was first vatman at Dene, and one of the best
-paper makers in England. Both knew their worth and
-each was satisfied with the other.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard from that South American Republic, Kellock,&rdquo;
-said Mr. Trenchard. &ldquo;They like the new currency
-paper and the colour suits them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a very fine paper, Mr. Trenchard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just the exact opposite of what I&rsquo;m after for these
-advertisements. The public, Kellock, must be appealed
-to by the methods of Cheap Jack at the fair. They love
-a conjuring trick, and if you can stop them long enough
-to ask &lsquo;how&rsquo;s it done?&rsquo; you often interest them and win
-them. Now samples of our great papers mean nothing
-to anybody but the dealers. The public doesn&rsquo;t know
-hand-made paper from machine-made. What we&rsquo;ve got
-to do is to show them&mdash;not tip-top paper, but a bit of
-magic; and such a fool is the public that when he sees
-these pictures in water-mark, he&rsquo;ll think the paper that
-produces them must be out of the common good. We know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-that it&rsquo;s not &lsquo;paper&rsquo; at all in our sense, and that it&rsquo;s
-a special brew for this special purpose; but the public,
-amazed by the pictures, buys our paper and doesn&rsquo;t know
-that the better the paper, the more impossible such sleight
-of hand would be upon it. We show them one thing which
-awakes their highest admiration and causes them to buy
-another!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>All this Jordan Kellock very well understood, and his
-master knew that he did; but Trenchard liked to talk and
-excelled in lucid exposition.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right,&rdquo; said the vatman; &ldquo;they think that the
-paper that can take such pictures must be good for anything;
-though the truth is that it&rsquo;s good for nothing&mdash;but
-the pictures. If there was any quality to the pulp,
-it could never run into such moulds as these were made in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He began to pick up the impressions of a series of large,
-exhibition water-marks, and hold them to the windows,
-that their transparent wonders might be seen.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Real works of art,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;with high lights and deep
-shadows and rare half tones and colour, too, all on stuff
-like tissue. The beaterman must give me pulp as fine as
-flour to get such impressions.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Finer than flour, my lad. The new moulds are even
-more wonderful. It is no good doing what your father
-did over again. My father beat my grandfather; so it&rsquo;s
-my duty to beat him&mdash;see?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These are wonderful enough in all conscience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And for the Exhibition I mean to turn out something
-more wonderful still. Something more than craft&mdash;real
-art, my friend. I want the artists. I want them to see
-what our art paper for water-colour work is. They don&rsquo;t
-know yet&mdash;at least only a handful of them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But this is different. The pulp to do this sort of
-thing must be as thin as water,&rdquo; said Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fibre is the first consideration for paper that&rsquo;s going
-to be as everlasting as parchment; but these water-mark
-masterpieces are <i>tours de force</i>&mdash;conjuring tricks as I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
-call them. And I want to give the public a conjuring
-trick more wonderful than they&rsquo;ve ever seen in paper before;
-and I&rsquo;m going to do it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No paper maker ever beat these, Mr. Trenchard,&rdquo; declared
-Kellock. He held up large sheets of the size known
-as &ldquo;elephant.&rdquo; They appeared to be white until illuminated;
-then they revealed shades of delicate duck-green,
-sunrise yellow, dark blue, light blue and umber.</p>
-
-<p>A portrait by Romney of Lady Hamilton shone through
-the first, and the solidity of the dark masses, the rendering
-of the fabric and the luminous quality of the flesh were
-wonderfully translated by the daylight filtering through.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There can be no painted pictures like these,&rdquo; said
-Matthew Trenchard stoutly. &ldquo;And why? Because the
-painter uses paint; I use pure daylight, and the sweetest
-paint that ever was isn&rsquo;t a patch on the light of day.
-Such things as these are more beautiful than pictures,
-just because the living light from the sky is more beautiful
-than any pigment made by man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was too cautious to agree with these revolutionary
-theories.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly these things would be very fine to decorate
-our windows, if we didn&rsquo;t want to look out of them,&rdquo; he
-admitted.</p>
-
-<p>Then he held up a portrait of Her Majesty, Queen Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pure ultramarine blue, you see,&rdquo; commented the master,
-&ldquo;and the light brings out its richness, though if you
-looked at the paper, you&rsquo;d be puzzled to find any blue in it.
-That&rsquo;s because the infinitely fine atoms of the colour would
-want a microscope to see their separate particles. Yet
-where the pulp sank to the depths of the mould, they collected
-in millions to give you those deep shadows.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock delayed at the copy of a statue: the Venus
-Victrix from Naples&mdash;a work which certainly reproduced
-the majesty of the original in a rounded, lustrous fashion
-that no reproduction on the flat could echo.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t beat that, though it is fifty years old,&rdquo; declared
-Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to, however; and another statue is my
-idea. Marble comes out grandly as you see. I&rsquo;m out for
-black and white, not colour. I&rsquo;ve an idea we can get something
-as fine as the old masters of engraving, and finer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The vatman is nought for this work,&rdquo; confessed Kellock.
-&ldquo;He makes paper in his mould and that&rsquo;s all there
-is to it&mdash;whether for printing, or writing, or painting.
-The man who matters is him who makes the mould.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But we can help him; we can experiment at the vat and
-in the beating engine. We can go one better in the pulp;
-and the stroke counts at the vat. I reckon your stroke
-will be invaluable to work the pulp into every cranny of
-such moulds as I&rsquo;m thinking about.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do my best; so will Dingle; but how many men in
-England are there who could make such moulds as these to-day?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Three,&rdquo; replied Trenchard. &ldquo;But I want better
-moulds. I&rsquo;m hopeful that Michael Thorn of London will
-rise to it. I go to see him next week, and we put in a
-morning at the British Museum to find a statue worthy
-of the occasion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can see a wonderful thing in my mind&rsquo;s eye already,&rdquo;
-declared Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Can you? Well, I never can see anything in my
-mind&rsquo;s eye and rest content for an hour, till I set about the
-way to see it with my body&rsquo;s eye.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We all know that, Mr. Trenchard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my favourite,&rdquo; declared the other, holding up
-a massive head of Abraham Lincoln. &ldquo;Now that&rsquo;s a
-great work in my judgment and if we beat that in quality,
-we shall produce a water-mark picture worth talking
-about.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to show all these too,&rdquo; said Jordan Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall&mdash;if I beat them; not if they beat me,&rdquo; replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-the other. &ldquo;I wanted you to see what my father and
-grandfather could do, so that you may judge what we&rsquo;re
-up against. But they&rsquo;re going to be beaten at Dene, or
-else I&rsquo;ll know the reason why.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s good to see such things and worth while trying
-to beat them,&rdquo; answered the vatman.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To improve upon the past is the business of every
-honest man in my opinion,&rdquo; declared Trenchard.
-&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;re here for; and that&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;ve done,
-I believe, thanks to a lot of clever people here who have
-helped me to do it and share what credit there may be.
-But I don&rsquo;t claim credit, Ned. It&rsquo;s common duty for
-every man with brains in his head to help push the craft
-along.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And keep its head above water,&rdquo; added the listener.</p>
-
-<p>Matthew Trenchard eyed him doubtfully and lighted
-another cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he admitted rather reluctantly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-right. Hand-made paper&rsquo;s battling for its life in one
-sense&mdash;like a good many other hand-made things. But
-the machine hasn&rsquo;t caught us yet and it will be a devil
-of a long time before it does, I hope.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s for us not to let it,&rdquo; said Jordan&mdash;a sentiment
-the paper master approved.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m fair,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m not going to pretend
-the machine isn&rsquo;t turning out some properly wonderful
-papers; and I&rsquo;m not going to say it isn&rsquo;t doing far better
-things than ever I thought it would do. I don&rsquo;t laugh
-at it as my grandfather did, or shake my head at it as
-my father used. I recognise our craft is going down
-hill. But we ain&rsquo;t at the bottom by a long way; and
-when we get there, we&rsquo;ll go game and die like gentlemen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked awhile longer; then the dusk came down,
-Kellock departed and Trenchard, turning on an electric
-light, resumed his writing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<small>PRIORY FARM</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>From Dene a mighty hill climbs southward to Cornworthy
-village. &ldquo;The Corkscrew&rdquo; it is called, and men merciful
-to their beasts choose a longer and more gradual ascent.
-But not a few of the workers engaged at the paper mill
-tramped this zig-zag steep six days out of every seven,
-and among these Lydia Trivett, the mother of Medora,
-could boast twenty years of regular perambulation. Only
-on rare occasions, when &ldquo;Corkscrew&rdquo; was coated with
-ice, did she take the long detour by the little lake above
-the works.</p>
-
-<p>She had lived at Ashprington until her husband died;
-then she and her daughter came to live with her brother,
-Thomas Dolbear, of Priory Farm. He was a bachelor
-then; but at forty he wedded; and now Medora had her
-own home, while her mother still dwelt with Mr. Dolbear,
-his wife, Mary, and their increasing family.</p>
-
-<p>Lydia was a little brisk woman of fifty&mdash;the mistress
-of the rag house at the mills. She was still comely and
-trim, for hard work agreed with her. A very feminine air
-marked her, and Medora had won her good looks from her
-mother, though not her affectation, for Mrs. Trivett was
-a straightforward and unassuming soul. She had much
-to pride herself upon, but never claimed credit in any
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>Priory Farm stood under a great slope of orchard and
-meadow, upon the crown of which the priory ruins ascended.
-The farm was at the bottom of a hill, and immediately
-opposite climbed the solitary street of Cornworthy
-village capped by the church. The church and the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-Cistercean ruin looked across the dip in the land at each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>Now, on Sunday afternoon, Lydia, at the garden gate
-of her brother&rsquo;s house, started off six children to Sunday
-school. Five were girls and one was a boy. They ranged
-from twelve years old to three; while at home a two year
-old baby&mdash;another girl&mdash;remained with her mother.
-Mary Dolbear expected her tenth child during the coming
-spring. Two had died in infancy. She was an inert,
-genial mass of a woman, who lived only for her children
-and the business of maternity. Her husband worshipped
-her and they increased and multiplied proudly. Their
-house, but for Lydia&rsquo;s sleepless ministrations, would have
-been a pigstye. They were indifferent to dirt and chose
-to make all things subservient to the demands of their children.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The cradle rules the world, so enough said,&rdquo; was Tom
-Dolbear&rsquo;s argument when people protested at the chaos
-in which he lived. He was a stout man with a fat, boyish
-face, scanty, sandy hair and a narrow forehead, always
-wrinkled by reason of the weakness of his eyes. He had
-a smile like a baby and was indeed a very childish man;
-but he knew his business and made his farm suffice for
-his family needs.</p>
-
-<p>In this house Lydia&rsquo;s own room was an oasis in a wilderness.
-There one found calm, order, cleanliness, distinction.
-She trusted nobody in it but herself and always
-locked the door when she left for work.</p>
-
-<p>It was regarded as a sacred room, for both Mary and
-her husband reverenced Lydia and blessed the Providence
-that had sent her to them. They treated her with the
-greatest respect, always gave way to her and recognised
-very acutely the vital force she represented in the inert
-and sprawling domesticity of their establishment. Once,
-when an idea was whispered that Tom&rsquo;s sister might leave
-him, Mary fell absolutely ill and refused to eat and drink
-until she changed her mind and promised to stay.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>To do them justice they never took Lydia for granted.
-Their gratitude flowed in a steady stream. They gave her
-all credit and all admiration, and went their philoprogenitive
-way with light hearts.</p>
-
-<p>Now Mrs. Trivett watched her nieces and nephew march
-together in their Sunday best along the way to Sunday
-school. Then she was about to shut the wicket and return
-up the garden path, when a man appeared on the high
-road and a fellow worker at the Mill accosted her.</p>
-
-<p>Nicholas Pinhey was a finisher; that is to say the paper
-passed through his hands last before it left the works.
-With the multifarious processes of its creation he had
-nothing to do; but every finished sheet and stack of sheets
-touched his fingers before it entered the world, and he was
-well skilled in the exacting duties of his own department.</p>
-
-<p>He was a thin, prim bachelor of sixty&mdash;a man of nice
-habits and finicking mind. There was much of the old
-maid in him, too, and he gossiped inordinately, but never
-unkindly. He knew the life history, family interests and
-private ambitions of everybody in the Mill. He smelt
-mystery where none existed and much feared the modern
-movements and threats of labour. Especially was he
-doubtful of Jordan Kellock and regarded him as a dangerous
-and too progressive spirit.</p>
-
-<p>His interest in other people&rsquo;s affairs now appeared; for
-he had come to see Lydia; he had climbed &ldquo;The Corkscrew&rdquo;
-on Sunday from most altruistic motives.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The better the day the better the deed,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve walked over for a cup of tea and a talk, because a
-little bird&rsquo;s told me something I don&rsquo;t much like, Mrs.
-Trivett, and it concerns you in a manner of speaking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You always keep to the point, Mr. Pinhey; and I dare
-say I know what the point is for that matter. Come in.
-We can talk very well, because we shall be alone in a
-minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Nicholas followed her into the parlour, a room of good
-size on the left hand side of the entrance. They surprised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-Mrs. Dolbear nodding beside the fire. She liked Mr. Pinhey,
-but she was glad of the excuse to leave them and
-retire to her own room.</p>
-
-<p>She shook hands with the visitor, who hoped she found
-herself as well as could be expected.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I take these things from whence
-they come. I feel no fear except in one particular.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t believe it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got the
-courage to fight lions and the faith to move mountains.
-We all know that. If the women in general would come
-to the business of the next generation with your fearless
-nature, we might hear less about the decrease of the population.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not my part I trouble about; it&rsquo;s the Lord&rsquo;s,&rdquo;
-explained Mrs. Dolbear. &ldquo;If I have another girl, it&rsquo;ll
-break Tom&rsquo;s heart. Six maids and one boy is the record
-so far, though of the two we&rsquo;ve buried, one was a boy.
-And such is my perfect trust in myself, if I could choose
-what I want from the Almighty at this moment, it would
-be two men children.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Magnificent!&rdquo; said Mr. Pinhey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I take Lydia to witness I speak no more than the
-truth,&rdquo; replied the matron. &ldquo;But these things are out of
-our keeping, though Tom read in a paper some time since
-a remarkable verdict, that if a woman with child ate
-enough green stuff, she might count on a boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a painful subject,&rdquo; said Lydia, &ldquo;and you&rsquo;d
-better not talk about it, Polly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was painful at the time,&rdquo; admitted Mrs. Dolbear,
-&ldquo;because Tom&rsquo;s one of they hopeful men, who will always
-jump at a new thing like a trout jumps at a fly. And
-what was the result? From the moment he hit on that
-cussed paper, he fed me more like a cow than a creature
-with a soul. &rsquo;Twas green stuff morning, noon and night&mdash;lettuce
-and spinach&mdash;which I hate any time&mdash;and
-broccoli and turnip tops and spring onions and cauliflower
-and Lord knows what mess till I rebelled and defied the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-man. I didn&rsquo;t lose my temper; but I said, calm and slow,
-&lsquo;Tom,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;if you don&rsquo;t want me to be brought to a
-bed of cabbage next September, stop it. God&rsquo;s my judge,&rsquo;
-I said, &lsquo;I won&rsquo;t let down another herb of the field. I
-want red meat,&rsquo; I told him, &lsquo;or else I won&rsquo;t be responsible.&rsquo;
-He argued for it, but I had my way and Lydia
-upheld me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what was the result in the family line if I may
-venture to ask?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Pinhey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The result in the family line was Jane Ethel,&rdquo; answered
-Mrs. Dolbear; &ldquo;and where is Jane Ethel now,
-Lydia?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In her little grave,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>Her sister-in-law immediately began to weep.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you cry, my dear, it wasn&rsquo;t your fault. The
-poor baby was born with death in her eyes, as I always
-said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dolbear sighed and moved ponderously across the
-room. She was short and broad with a touzled head of
-golden hair and a colourless face. But her smile was
-beautiful and her teeth perfect.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say you&rsquo;ll want to talk before tea,&rdquo; she suggested;
-&ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll go and have a bit of a sleep. I always
-say, &lsquo;where there&rsquo;s sleep, there&rsquo;s hope.&rsquo; And I want more
-than most people, and I can take it any time in the twenty-four
-hours of the clock.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She waddled away and Mrs. Trivett explained.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Polly&rsquo;s a proper wonder for sleep. It&rsquo;s grown into a
-habit. She&rsquo;ll call out for a nap at the most unseasonable
-moments. She&rsquo;ll curl up anywhere and go off. We shan&rsquo;t
-see her again till supper I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder. Sit you down
-and tell me what you come for.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The work you must do in this house!&rdquo; said Mr. Pinhey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I like work and this is my home.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A home I suppose, but not what I should call an abiding
-place,&rdquo; hazarded the man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want no abiding place, because we know, if
-we&rsquo;re Christians, that there&rsquo;s no abiding place this side
-of the grave.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You take it in your usual high spirit. And now&mdash;you&rsquo;ll
-forgive me if I&rsquo;m personal, Mrs. Trivett. You
-know the man that speaks.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You want to better something I&rsquo;m sure, else you
-wouldn&rsquo;t be here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is just as you say: I want to better something.
-We bachelors look out on life from our lonely towers, so
-to say, and we get a bird&rsquo;s eye view of the people; and
-if we see a thing not all it might be, &rsquo;tis our duty in my
-opinion to try and set it right. And to be quite frank
-and in all friendship, I&rsquo;m very much afraid your Medora
-and her husband ain&rsquo;t heart and soul together as they
-should be. If I&rsquo;m wrong, then thank God and enough
-said. But am I wrong?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett considered some moments before answering.
-Then she replied:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Nicholas Pinhey, you&rsquo;re not wrong, and I wish I
-could say you were. You have seen what&rsquo;s true; but I
-wouldn&rsquo;t say the mischief was deep yet. It may be in our
-power to nip it in the bud.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You grant it&rsquo;s true, and that excuses me for touching
-it. I know my manners I hope, and to anybody else
-I wouldn&rsquo;t have come; but you&rsquo;re different, and if I can
-prevail upon you to handle Medora, I shall feel I have
-done all I can do, or have a right to do. In these delicate
-cases, the thing is to know where the fault lies. And
-most times it&rsquo;s with the man, no doubt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that. It isn&rsquo;t this time anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey was astonished.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you mean to say you see your own daughter
-unfavourable?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must know the right of a thing if you want to do
-any good,&rdquo; declared Lydia. &ldquo;Half the failure to right
-wrong so far as I can see, is owing to a muddled view of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-what the wrong is. I&rsquo;ve hung back about this till I could
-see it clear, and I won&rsquo;t say I do see it clear yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I speak as a bachelor,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Pinhey, &ldquo;and
-therefore with reserve and caution. And if you&mdash;the
-mother of one of the parties&mdash;don&rsquo;t feel you can safely
-take a hand, it certainly isn&rsquo;t for anybody else to try.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a matter of fact, I was going to do something this
-very day. My daughter&rsquo;s coming to tea and I mean to
-ask her what the matter is. She&rsquo;s not prone to be exactly
-straight, is Medora, but seeing I want nothing but
-her good, I hope she&rsquo;ll be frank with me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man felt mildly surprised to hear a mother criticise
-her daughter so frankly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought a child could do no wrong in its parents&rsquo;
-eyes,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Depends on the parent, Mr. Pinhey. If you want to
-help your child, &rsquo;tis no use beginning by taking that line.
-If we can do wrong, as God knows we can, so can our
-children, and it&rsquo;s a vain sort of love to suppose they&rsquo;re
-perfect. Medora&rsquo;s got a great many good qualities, but,
-like other pretty girls, she&rsquo;s handicapped here and there.
-A right down pretty girl don&rsquo;t know she&rsquo;s born most times,
-because everybody in trousers bows down before her and
-helps to shut reality out of her life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the same with money,&rdquo; surmised Nicholas. &ldquo;Let
-a young person have money and they look at the world
-through tinted glasses. The truth&rsquo;s hidden from them,
-and some such go to their graves and never know truth,
-while others, owing to chance, lose the stuff that stands
-between them and reality and have a very painful wakening.
-But as to beauty&mdash;you was a woman to the full
-as fair as your girl&mdash;yet look how you weathered the
-storm.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Lydia, &ldquo;I never had Medora&rsquo;s looks.
-In her case life&rsquo;s been too smooth and easy if anything.
-She had a comfortable home with Tom here after her
-father died; and then came along a choice of two good men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-to wed her and the admiration of a dozen others. She was
-in two minds between Kellock and Dingle for a while; but
-her luck held and she took the right one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure of that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;for Medora. That&rsquo;s not to say that Jordan
-Kellock isn&rsquo;t a cleverer chap than my son-in-law. Of
-course he is. He&rsquo;s got more mind and more sight. He
-has ideas about labour and a great gift of determination;
-and he&rsquo;s ambitious. He&rsquo;ll go a long way further than
-Ned. But against that you can set Ned&rsquo;s unshakable
-good temper and light heart. It&rsquo;s grander for a man
-to have a heavy heart than a light, when he looks out at
-the world; but they heavy-hearted, earnest men, who want
-to help to set life right, call for a different fashion of wife
-from Medora. If such men wed, they should seek women
-in their own pattern&mdash;the earnest&mdash;deadly earnest sort&mdash;who
-don&rsquo;t think of themselves, or their clothes, or their
-looks, or their comforts. They should find their helpmates
-in a kind of female that&rsquo;s rare still, though they
-grow commoner. And Medora ain&rsquo;t that sort, and if
-she&rsquo;d took Kellock she&rsquo;d have been no great use to him
-and he&rsquo;d have been no lasting use to her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; murmured Mr. Pinhey, &ldquo;how you look into
-things.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ned&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; continued Mrs. Trivett. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s all
-right, for Medora; and she ought to be all right for him.
-He loves her with all his heart and, in a word, she doesn&rsquo;t
-know her luck. That&rsquo;s what I must try and show her if
-I can. It&rsquo;s just a sort of general discontent about nothing
-in particular. You can&rsquo;t have it both ways. Ned&rsquo;s
-easy and likes a bit of fun. He&rsquo;s a good workman&mdash;in
-fact above the average, or he wouldn&rsquo;t be where he is.
-As a beaterman you won&rsquo;t find his better in any paper
-mill; but it ends there. He does his work and he&rsquo;s reached
-his limit. And away from work, he&rsquo;s just a schoolboy
-from his task. He&rsquo;s light hearted and ought to be happy;
-and if she is not, he&rsquo;ll worry a great deal. But he won&rsquo;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-know what&rsquo;s the matter, any more than Medora herself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey&rsquo;s conventional mind proceeded in its natural
-groove.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To say it delicately, perhaps if a child was to come
-along it would smooth out the crumpled rose-leaves,&rdquo; he
-suggested.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You might think so; but it isn&rsquo;t that. They both
-agree there. They don&rsquo;t like children and don&rsquo;t want
-them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I should be the last to blame them, I&rsquo;m sure.
-It may not be true to nature, but it&rsquo;s true to truth, that
-the young married couples ain&rsquo;t so keen about families
-as they used to be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nature&rsquo;s at odds with a good deal we do,&rdquo; answered
-Lydia. &ldquo;Time was when a quiver full of young ones
-seemed good to the people. But education has changed all
-that. There&rsquo;s selfishness in shirking a family no doubt;
-but there&rsquo;s also sense. And the better the education
-grows, the shorter the families will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked on until Medora herself arrived and the
-children came back from Sunday school. Then Mrs.
-Trivett and a maid prepared the tea and Mr. Pinhey,
-against his inclination, shared the meal. He noticed that
-Medora was kind to the little ones, but not enthusiastic
-about them. His own instincts made him shrink before
-so much happy and hungry youth feeding heartily. The
-children scattered crumbs and seemed to create an atmosphere
-of jam and a general stickiness around them.
-They also made a great deal of noise.</p>
-
-<p>Their mother did not appear and when Nicholas asked
-for their father, the eldest daughter told him that Mr. Dolbear
-was gone out for the day with his dogs and a ferret.</p>
-
-<p>He whispered under his breath, &ldquo;Ferreting on the Sabbath!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>After tea he took leave and returned home. Then Medora
-and her mother went into the orchard with the chil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>dren,
-and Mrs. Trivett, wasting no words, asked her
-daughter what was vexing her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say as much or as little as you please, my dear&mdash;nothing
-if I can&rsquo;t help you. But perhaps I can. It looks
-as though everybody but Ned sees there&rsquo;s something on
-your mind. Can&rsquo;t you tell me what it is&mdash;or better still,
-tell him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora flushed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing the matter that can be helped,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;Ned can&rsquo;t help being himself, I suppose, and if
-anybody&rsquo;s talking, they ought to be ashamed. It&rsquo;s a
-cowardly, mean thing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not cowardly, or mean to want to put a wrong
-right and make people better content. But nobody wants
-to interfere between husband and wife, and the people are
-very fond of you both as you well know. You say &lsquo;Ned
-can&rsquo;t help being himself.&rsquo; Begin there, then. You&rsquo;ve
-been married a year now and you didn&rsquo;t marry in haste
-either. He was what he is before you took him. He
-hasn&rsquo;t changed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think he was such a fool, if you must know,&rdquo;
-said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;you mean by a fool?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Simple&mdash;like a dog. There&rsquo;s nothing to Ned.
-Other men have character and secrets and a bit up their
-sleeve. They count, and people know they ain&rsquo;t seeing
-the inside of them. Ned&rsquo;s got no inside. He&rsquo;s a boy. I
-thought I&rsquo;d married a man and I&rsquo;ve married a great boy.
-I&rsquo;m only telling you this, mind. I&rsquo;m a good wife enough;
-but I&rsquo;m not a brainless one and I can&rsquo;t help comparing my
-husband to other men.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You always compare everything you&rsquo;ve got to what
-others have got,&rdquo; answered Lydia. &ldquo;When you was a
-tiny child, you&rsquo;d love your toys till you saw the toys of
-other children. Then you&rsquo;d grow discontent. At school,
-if you took a prize, it was poisoned, because some other
-girl had got a prettier book than you; and everybody<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-else&rsquo;s garden was nicer than ours; and everybody else had
-better furniture in their houses and better pictures on
-their walls and better clothes on their backs. And now
-it&rsquo;s your husband that isn&rsquo;t in it with other people&rsquo;s husbands.
-Perhaps you&rsquo;ll tell me, Medora, what husbands
-round about can beat Ned for sense and cheerfulness and
-an easy mind and the other things that go to make a
-home comfortable.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Everybody isn&rsquo;t married,&rdquo; answered Medora. &ldquo;I
-don&rsquo;t look round and compare Ned to other husbands.
-I&rsquo;ve got something better to do. But I can&rsquo;t help seeing
-with all his good nature and the rest of it that he&rsquo;s a slight
-man&mdash;not a sort for woman to repose upon as something
-with quicker wits&mdash;stronger, more masterful than herself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like who?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;I&rsquo;m only speaking to you, mother&mdash;take
-yesterday. Jordan Kellock asked us to go for a row in
-the gamekeeper&rsquo;s boat and see the river&mdash;me and Ned.
-And we went; and how could I help seeing that Jordan had
-the brains? Nothing he said, for he&rsquo;s a good friend and
-above smallness; but while Ned chattered and laughed and
-made a noise, there was Jordan, pleasant and all that;
-but you felt behind was strength of character and a mind
-working and thinking more than it said; while my husband
-was saying more than he thinks. And I hate to hear him
-chatter and then, when he&rsquo;s challenged, climb down and
-say he sees he was wrong.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to take the rough with the smooth in human
-nature, Medora. And it&rsquo;s a bit staggering to hear
-you mention Kellock, of all men, seeing the circumstances.
-If you feel like that, why didn&rsquo;t you take Kellock when
-you could?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora&rsquo;s reply caused her mother consternation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows why I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>The elder gave a little gasp and did not answer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s wrong when you have to correct your husband<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-in front of another man,&rdquo; continued Medora; &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ve
-got my self respect I believe&mdash;so far&mdash;and I won&rsquo;t let
-Ned say foolish things before people and let others think
-I&rsquo;m agreeing with him. And if I&rsquo;ve spoken sharp when
-men or women at the works heard me, Ned&rsquo;s got himself
-to thank for it. Anyway Jordan knows I&rsquo;m not without
-brains, and I&rsquo;m not going to pretend I am. I laughed at
-Ned in the boat yesterday, and he said after that he didn&rsquo;t
-mind my laughing at him, but he wouldn&rsquo;t have it before
-people.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett left the main issue as a subject too big for
-the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ought not to laugh at him before Mr. Kellock,&rdquo;
-she said; &ldquo;because he&rsquo;s one of them serious-minded men
-who don&rsquo;t understand laughter. I&rsquo;ve seen a man say
-things in a light mood that had no sting in them really,
-yet one of the humourless sort, listening, didn&rsquo;t see it was
-said for fun, and reported it after and made trouble.
-Kellock&rsquo;s a solemn man and would misread it if you scored
-off Ned, or said some flashy thing that meant nought in
-truth. You know what I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They had strolled to the top of the orchard now, where
-the children were playing in the Priory ruin. And here
-at dusk they parted.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll leave it till we can have another talk,&rdquo; said
-Lydia; &ldquo;seemingly there&rsquo;s more to talk about than I
-thought. Be patient as well as proud, Medora. And
-don&rsquo;t feel so troubled about Ned that you haven&rsquo;t got no
-spare time to look into your own heart and see if you&rsquo;re
-satisfied with yourself. Because very often in my experience,
-when we&rsquo;re seeing misfortune and blaming other
-people, if we look at home, we&rsquo;ll find the source of the
-trouble lies with ourselves and not them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<small>A NEW VATMAN</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>A man stood on the crown of a limestone quarry, where it
-bit into the slope of a green hill. Perched here, three
-hundred feet above the valley bottom, a varied scene spread
-round about, but he was only concerned with the other
-side of the coomb and the great pile of Dene Paper Mill
-that stood over against him.</p>
-
-<p>On his left opened the creek heavily fringed with trees.
-Mud banks oozed out upon it and the river channel twinkled
-in the midst of them. The beholder saw that the sea
-ascended to this rural scene, bringing its weeds and shells
-to the little beaches and its birds to the air. From this
-inlet, the great valley broke and pointed west. It expanded
-and widened among such rolling green steeps as
-that upon which the stranger stood, and the heights were
-capped at the skyline, here by clumps of Scotch fir; here,
-by spinneys of oak and elm; here, by arable or pasture.
-Rows of small houses lay among the orchards in the bottom,
-where a stream wound, and the methodical ordering
-of those tenements marked a sharp contrast with the irregular
-and older cottages round them. They were the
-homes of busy people drawn hither for one purpose, and
-above them towered the great hive wherein they worked.
-The Mill spread under a knoll of trees on the hillside and
-shone out grey and blue against the autumn colour of
-the hanging woods behind it.</p>
-
-<p>Wide roofs glittered with glass and the northern face
-rose finely with tier on tier of windows outlined in red
-brick. Lesser buildings supported the mass to right and
-left and a clock-tower and weather-vane surmounted the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-whole. The architectural form, piled without design
-through the accretion of years, had yet taken a dignified
-and significant completeness. It was stern and plain, but
-not ugly and meaningless. Its shape, with outstretched
-wings and uplifted turret, like a head, suggested a sentient
-organism that could well fight for itself and protect its
-interests. It seemed not aggressive, but watchful; no
-tyrant to destroy, but a potent, receptive and benevolent
-over-lord of the green valley, which it had indeed modified
-and awakened, but not robbed of its distinction and
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>The building must have been imposing on a plain, but
-the hills rolling round about tended to dwarf its size by
-their immense contours. Under some lights indeed the
-Mill bulked greater than the surrounding scene and to the
-meditative mind far transcended the inert matter heaved
-and heaped around it; but to-day Nature was clad in glory
-and no building built with hands could compete against her
-splendour of blue sky, emerald green grass lands and autumn
-groves of beech and oak. Seen in this brilliant setting
-Dene Mill was an impression of restrained grey and
-silver. Broad lights and shadows brooded over it and
-sunshine found the roofs but not the face of the buildings.
-Yet no sobriety marked the mass. It never brooded or
-sulked, unless the sky lowered and dropped darkness upon
-it. There was joy in the feathers of steam that leapt,
-and laughter in the broad golden weather-vane above the
-clock-tower. Labour pursued in this rural valley seemed
-to offer some hope of lessened asperity. Eyes weary with
-work might lift to the windows and mirror green and gracious
-things&mdash;meadows climbing and orchards and
-thatched roofs; or shorn stubbles spreading like cloth
-of gold upon the shoulders of the eastern hills.</p>
-
-<p>The beholder marked the people moving about the many
-mouths of the great hive beneath him, and being a man apt
-to link impressions, he guessed that the Mill had been built
-of the stone from the quarry that gaped at his feet. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-rift in the hill extended to a road at the valley bottom,
-then sprang trees to fill the space between, so that the
-works beyond seemed bowered in foliage on all sides and
-framed in thinning boughs.</p>
-
-<p>A bell rang and the people streamed away&mdash;men and
-women&mdash;in a little thin trickle, like beads irregularly
-scattered on a thread. Here and there the line was brightened
-by a flash of colour from a bright sun bonnet, or
-gown. The watcher descended now, gained the road below,
-then climbed the other side to the Mill.</p>
-
-<p>He was a middle-aged, good-looking man, with a round
-face, hair turning grey, and black, rather shifty eyes.
-Humour homed on his countenance and merriment and
-cunning shared his expression. He carried a large, brown
-paper bundle and wore a new, homespun suit, a paper collar,
-a sky-blue tie and a cloth cap.</p>
-
-<p>As he passed Mr. Trood&rsquo;s house at the entrance of the
-works and proceeded towards them, looking round about
-him, there emerged the master, and the new-comer guessed
-that he was so.</p>
-
-<p>He touched his hat therefore and said:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be the boss, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Right&mdash;and what do you want?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Work, Mr. Matthew Trenchard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was not strange to see a wandering paper maker.
-The body of these men is small; they know their own
-value and, being always precious, can count upon making
-a change with safety. They are sought and a first rate
-workman need be in no fear of not winning a welcome
-where hand paper continues to be manufactured.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What department?&rdquo; asked Trenchard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A vatman, if so be you&rsquo;re wanting a good one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m always wanting a good vatman. We&rsquo;ve got three
-of the best in England here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take me and you&rsquo;ll have four,&rdquo; said the man.</p>
-
-<p>Trenchard laughed and looked at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why are you changing?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>&ldquo;Tired of a town. I come from the midlands; but I
-want to be in the country, and knowing about Dene Works,
-I thought I&rsquo;d come down and offer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They were standing opposite Mr. Trood&rsquo;s house at the
-main gate and the master turned and knocked at the door.
-Trood himself appeared.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A vatman,&rdquo; said Trenchard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By name, Philander Knox,&rdquo; explained the stranger.
-&ldquo;I must tell you,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;that I&rsquo;ve got rather a queer
-stroke at the vat. People laugh to see me with a mould;
-but they don&rsquo;t laugh when they see the paper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We shan&rsquo;t quarrel with your stroke if we don&rsquo;t with
-your sheet,&rdquo; said Trood. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m for a nice, easy stroke
-myself, because it goes farther and faster; but we all
-know no two men have the same stroke. We&rsquo;ve got a man
-now with a stroke like a cow with a musket; but his paper&rsquo;s
-all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can come for a week on trial,&rdquo; declared Trenchard.
-&ldquo;Begin to-morrow if you&rsquo;re agreeable to terms.
-We&rsquo;re very busy. This is Mr. Trood, our foreman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He went homewards and left the others together, while
-Mr. Knox produced his credentials.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<small>THE RAG HOUSE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>The place where Lydia Trivett worked and controlled the
-activities of twenty other women was a lofty, raftered hall
-lighted from the north by a row of windows under which
-the sorters sat. In the midst of the chamber the material
-was piled in huge, square bales covered with sacking.
-The parcels came from all parts of Europe, where linen
-and cotton rag could be obtained; and before they were
-handled, the contents entered a thresher for preliminary
-dusting. The thresher throbbed and thundered within a
-compartment boarded off from the workshop. Here in
-a great wooden case, a roller with iron-shod teeth revolved,
-while above this lower, moving wheel, fixed prongs stood
-similarly armed, so that their teeth passed between each
-other at every turn. Here spun the rags and whirled and
-tossed, while the dust of France, Belgium, England, Ireland,
-Scotland was sucked away from them. Every rag
-that entered Dene Mill was subjected to this rough initial
-embrace, where Alice Barefoot, a tall, strong woman,
-attended the thresher. She was herself of the colour of
-dust, with a high complexion and lion-coloured hair, tied
-up in a yellow kerchief. She prided herself on doing man&rsquo;s
-work and, indeed, accomplished her heavy labours very
-completely. The dusted rag she piled in tall baskets,
-stopped the thresher, then opened the door of the chamber
-and bore the rag out to the sorters. They sat each before
-her lattice with the material heaped at her left. The
-practised workers dealt very swiftly with the stuff, running
-it between their hands and knowing its composition
-by touch. Wool or silk sometimes intruded, but was flung<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-aside, for only cotton passed to the empty baskets at each
-woman&rsquo;s right. The workers were clad in white overalls
-and their heads were covered with white caps and bonnets.
-Wonderful cleanliness marked them and the atmosphere of
-the brightly lighted shop was clear despite the flocculent
-material that passed through it.</p>
-
-<p>For purity of air and water, chemicals and working
-hands is a vital matter to the paper maker. Every operation
-must needs be as cleanly as sleepless precaution can
-make it.</p>
-
-<p>From the mountain of rags on her left the sorter plucked
-material and picked it over the lattice, an open wire-work
-sieve spread before her. Standing beside it was a short
-upright knife used to cut the rags and sever from them
-the buttons, hooks and eyes, whalebones and other extraneous
-additions that had belonged to their earlier incarnations.
-These knives were made from old steel scythes
-worn too thin for husbandry, but here answering a final
-purpose of value. The hones hummed from time to time,
-for the busy knives needed constant sharpening. Their
-cutting edge turned away from the workwoman and to it
-she brought the material&mdash;fragments of every garment
-ever manufactured from spun cotton.</p>
-
-<p>The history of many a single rag had been a feminine
-epic, from its plucking in a far off cotton field to its
-creation, use, adventures, triumphs, tragedies and final
-dissolution. Here they were from the dust heaps of a
-continent, from the embracing of bodies noble and simple,
-high and low, young and old, sweet and foul.</p>
-
-<p>Their tags and buttons were swiftly cut away and each
-grille exhibited a strange assortment of trophies&mdash;pearl
-and glass, metal and foil, whalebone and indiarubber.
-Even so many foreign substances escaped the sorters, to
-be captured at a later period in the purification of the rag.</p>
-
-<p>The women sat back to back and there was little speech
-among them. Their hands twinkled in a sort of rhythmic
-measure from right to left and left to right. Then, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-their baskets were filled, came Alice Barefoot to carry
-them away and pile fresh accumulations from the thresher.</p>
-
-<p>To-day the work was old rag; but sometimes a consignment
-of fragments and overplus from the collar and
-shirt factories arrived clean and white. Out of them
-had garments been cut and the remnants needed nothing
-but shortening and dismemberment upon the knives and
-picking over for coloured threads, or rubbish that hang
-about them.</p>
-
-<p>Here reigned Lydia and herself worked at a lattice with
-the rest. She had only come to the Mill when her husband
-died; but her skill proved great and her influence greater.
-Blind-folded she could have done her sorting and separated
-by touch the cotton, or linen, from any other textile fabric.
-She was clad in a big white garment and had wrapped her
-head and neck in a pale blue handkerchief so that her face
-only appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Next to her sat a girl, and sometimes they spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Daisy Finch was a big blonde maiden, a friend of Medora&rsquo;s;
-and concerning Medora the pair kept up a fitful
-conversation. But Lydia&rsquo;s eyes were about her while her
-hands swiftly ran through the rags. She marked all that
-was going on from her place at the end of the row, and
-sometimes cried out a direction, or word of admonition.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She don&rsquo;t tell me nothing,&rdquo; said Daisy. &ldquo;She just
-leaves you with a sort of general feeling she ain&rsquo;t happy,
-then she&rsquo;ll turn it off and say, &lsquo;talk of something else,&rsquo;
-though all the time we haven&rsquo;t been talking of anything
-in particular. Of course it ain&rsquo;t anybody&rsquo;s business.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody&rsquo;s and everybody&rsquo;s,&rdquo; declared Lydia; &ldquo;but
-nobody&rsquo;s in the sense that you can meddle directly in it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They was made for each other you might say&mdash;such
-a laughing thing as Medora used to be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You never know who&rsquo;s made for each other till they
-come to be fit together. And then life wears down the
-edges with married people most times, like it do with a
-new set of false teeth. Keep her good luck before Me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>dora.
-Remind her, when you get a chance, how fortunate
-she is. Life&rsquo;s gone so easy with her that she takes for
-granted a lot she ought to take with gratitude.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s just a passing worry I dare say,&rdquo; suggested
-Daisy. &ldquo;When she forgets herself, she&rsquo;ll often laugh
-and chatter in the old way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, she&rsquo;s fonder of you than most, so you help her
-to forget herself as often as you can.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Daisy promised to do so and the elder thanked her.</p>
-
-<p>When the bell rang, they stopped work, and while some,
-Lydia among them, went to their baskets for dinner, most
-flung off their overalls, donned hats and jackets and hurried
-home.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mrs. Trivett, she stopped in the shop, ate her
-meal, then produced a newspaper and read while others
-talked.</p>
-
-<p>The day was fine and warm and many groups took their
-food together in the sun round about the Mill.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the vat house were Jordan Kellock and Robert
-Life, another vatman, while the new-comer, Philander
-Knox, ate his dinner beside them. On a bench at hand,
-Medora and Ned shared the contents of their basket, and
-the talk ran up and down.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox had won permanent employment without difficulty.
-Indeed he proved a paper maker of the first rank,
-and while Mr. Trood deprecated Knox&rsquo;s very unusual
-stroke, he admitted that the result was as good as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Of this matter they were now speaking.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ernest Trood is a great formalist,&rdquo; said Kellock.
-&ldquo;He believes in what you may call tradition and a sort
-of stroke that you&rsquo;d say was the perfection of the craft.
-But you can&rsquo;t make a man to a model. You can show
-him another man who works on a good pattern&mdash;no
-more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The stroke comes just like every other stroke,
-whether it&rsquo;s cricket, or billiards, or shooting, I reckon,&rdquo;
-said Ned Dingle. &ldquo;It comes, or else it don&rsquo;t come. Take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-me: I&rsquo;ve tried a score of times to make paper; but I
-can&rsquo;t do it. I can&rsquo;t get the stroke. But you might have
-an apprentice new to it and find, after a month or two,
-he&rsquo;d prove himself in the way to be a paper maker.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox, who had already won a friendly greeting
-from his new associates, in virtue of an amiable character
-and humorous disposition, admitted that the vatman was
-born, not made.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you may very near say as much for the beaterman,&rdquo;
-he added. &ldquo;I never want to see better pulp than
-you send down to the vat room, Ned Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the life and soul of the paper to have such pulp
-as yours, Ned,&rdquo; confirmed Kellock, and the beater was
-pleased. Praise always excited Ned and made him chatter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what there is to it&mdash;just thoroughness
-no doubt and a keen eye and no scamping of the tests.
-I take a lot more tests than most beaters I reckon,&rdquo; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>They discussed their craft and Ned told how for the
-purposes of the new water-mark pictures destined for a
-forthcoming exhibition, extraordinary pulp would be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Soft as milk it will have to be,&rdquo; he declared.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen the like,&rdquo; said Knox. &ldquo;Stuff you&rsquo;d think
-couldn&rsquo;t hold together. It&rsquo;s got to find every tiny crevice
-of the mould; but such pulp takes the dyes exceeding
-well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Our dyes are Trenchard&rsquo;s secret,&rdquo; answered Dingle.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a great chemist, as a paper master needs to be.
-I&rsquo;d give a lot to look in the laboratory; but only Trood
-goes there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very understanding foreman is Ernest Trood,&rdquo;
-admitted Mr. Knox; then he turned to Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How&rsquo;s they fingers?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You knock your fingers about
-rattling them against the crib.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>&ldquo;The fingers always suffer,&rdquo; he admitted. &ldquo;For my
-part I shake when there&rsquo;s a spell of very hot pulp for the
-thick papers. I&rsquo;m feared of my life the skin will go
-somewhere and put me out of action for a bit. If some
-man could invent a possible glove, many a tender-skinned
-vatman would bless him. But a glove would kill the
-stroke no doubt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle pressed more food from their basket on Medora
-and the well meant action apparently annoyed her. What
-passed between them was not heard, save the last words.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a fool,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t I have my own
-way even in that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; replied Ned. &ldquo;Have it as you will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But she grew angry; her face lowered and she pressed
-her lips together.</p>
-
-<p>The others joked and Mr. Knox offered Medora a piece
-of pie.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hard hearted devil, you are, Dingle,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
-&ldquo;To eat the cheese and offer your poor girl the bread.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora jumped up and at the same moment Daisy
-Finch came along to seek her. They departed together
-and strolled from the works up the valley.</p>
-
-<p>But Ned Dingle was evidently disturbed. His face had
-fallen and he lit his pipe and went slowly after the women.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take my tip and leave her alone,&rdquo; shouted Knox;
-then he caught sight of Kellock&rsquo;s perturbed countenance
-and turned to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t they good friends?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course they are&mdash;none better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sometimes a bit of chaff makes a breeze end in laughter,&rdquo;
-said the elder; &ldquo;and sometimes it don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Chaff&rsquo;s a ticklish thing,&rdquo; answered Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To you it might be, because you&rsquo;re one of the serious
-sort, that never see much to laugh at in anything,&rdquo; retorted
-Philander; &ldquo;but that&rsquo;s your loss. Alice Barefoot
-in the rag house is the same. Can&rsquo;t see a joke and mistook
-my fun yesterday for rudeness. I might have known by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-her eye she weren&rsquo;t a laughter-loving creature. But Mrs.
-Dingle can laugh.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She laughs when there&rsquo;s anything to laugh at,&rdquo; said
-Kellock drily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The art is to find something to laugh at in everything,&rdquo;
-explained Philander Knox. &ldquo;And married people
-ought to practice that for their own salvation more
-than any.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How is it you ain&rsquo;t married?&rdquo; asked Robert Life.
-He was a man of few words and his wife worked in the
-glazing house with Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For the very good reason that my wife&rsquo;s dead,&rdquo; replied
-Mr. Knox. She&rsquo;s left me for a better place and
-better company&mdash;a very excellent wife according to her
-lights, and I missed her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say you&rsquo;ll find another here,&rdquo; suggested a man
-who had come along a minute before. It was Henry
-Barefoot, Alice&rsquo;s brother, the boilerman&mdash;an old sailor,
-who had drifted into the Mill when his service days were
-done.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I do, Henry, it won&rsquo;t be your sister, so don&rsquo;t throw
-out no hopes,&rdquo; answered Knox.</p>
-
-<p>Henry laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No man ever offered for her and no man ever will,&rdquo;
-he declared. &ldquo;Her pride is to do man&rsquo;s work and she
-never will do woman&rsquo;s&mdash;not if all the men in Devon went
-on their knees to her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve known others the same,&rdquo; declared Philander.
-&ldquo;They&rsquo;re neuter bees, to say it kindly, and they hum so
-terrible sorrowful over their toil that the male give &rsquo;em a
-wide berth. Duty&rsquo;s their watchword; and they do it in a
-way to make us common people hate the word.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Alice. You know the sort seemingly,&rdquo; said
-Henry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve met with &rsquo;em. They are scattered about. I used
-to pity &rsquo;em till I found there wasn&rsquo;t no need. They&rsquo;re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-quite satisfied with themselves for the most part, but seldom
-satisfied with other people.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alice is a withering woman, though a very good housekeeper
-and looks after me very well,&rdquo; said Mr. Barefoot.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As housekeepers they can&rsquo;t be beaten,&rdquo; admitted the
-other. &ldquo;But Mrs. Dingle is a very different pattern&mdash;a
-pretty creature&mdash;prettiest I&rsquo;ve seen for a month of
-Sundays. They pretty women are exacting in marriage,
-because nine times out of ten they&rsquo;ve been spoiled before.
-She looks to me as though she wanted something she ain&rsquo;t
-got.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dingle don&rsquo;t know what she wants, for in a minute
-of temper he told me so,&rdquo; said Mr. Life.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t he? Then you tell him to be quick and find
-out,&rdquo; advised Philander, &ldquo;because with a rare piece like
-that, if he don&rsquo;t, some other young fellow very likely
-will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Kellock spoke, for this sentiment seemed outrageous
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How can you say such an indecent thing!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
-&ldquo;A man of your age ought to know better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A man of your age perhaps don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; answered Mr.
-Knox. &ldquo;And yet you&rsquo;re old enough to know the meaning
-of a pretty girl. But I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;re one of those
-chaps that&rsquo;s had some useful things left out of him, Kellock.
-You ain&rsquo;t called &lsquo;Jordan&rsquo; for nothing I expect.
-No doubt you wouldn&rsquo;t wish to comfort Mrs. Dingle; but
-then you&rsquo;re not everybody, and other young men might
-feel called to cheer her up&mdash;no more than that of course.
-And why you should flush so red and use the word &lsquo;indecent&rsquo;
-to such a decent man as me, I can&rsquo;t guess.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You would if you knew more about it, however,&rdquo; said
-Henry Barefoot. &ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t up in our history yet, else
-you&rsquo;d understand that Kellock here was one of the &lsquo;also
-ran&rsquo; lot after Medora Dingle. No offence, Jordan&mdash;of
-course such things can&rsquo;t be hid.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>&ldquo;You oughtn&rsquo;t to talk about such private matters,
-Barefoot,&rdquo; answered Kellock calmly, &ldquo;and a conversation
-like this is improper, and for my part I don&rsquo;t wish to hear
-any more of it. No self-respecting man would pry into
-such a delicate subject.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s prying?&rdquo; asked Philander. &ldquo;I merely say,
-from my knowledge of human beings in general, that if a
-pretty young woman&rsquo;s not happy and her husband hasn&rsquo;t
-got the trick to make her so, &rsquo;tis almost any odds some
-other chap will come along and have a try. That&rsquo;s what
-would happen in most Christian countries anyway&mdash;whether
-Devonshire&rsquo;s different I don&rsquo;t know, being a
-stranger to these parts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We men mind our own business in Devonshire,&rdquo; said
-Kellock, and Knox answered promptly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;m right,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;because a pretty girl down
-on her luck is every man&rsquo;s business.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll get a fright I dare say,&rdquo; prophesied Robert
-Life. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve known more than one young married woman,
-restless like, who ran a bit of risk; but as a rule their
-eyes are opened in time and the husband makes good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock, heartily loathing this conversation, left the
-others, and when he was gone, Life explained to Mr. Knox
-the situation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Another man might be dangerous,&rdquo; said Henry Barefoot,
-&ldquo;for by all accounts Medora liked him very well and
-was in two minds to the last which she&rsquo;d take. But Kellock&rsquo;s
-a good and sober creature and a great respecter
-of law and order. You can trust him not to break out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You speak as a bachelor and your sister&rsquo;s brother,
-Henry,&rdquo; answered Philander. &ldquo;Where there&rsquo;s a woman
-and a man that once loved her, you can no more trust
-either of &rsquo;em not to break out than you can trust a spring
-in autumn. Kellock&rsquo;s clearly a virtuous soul, and he certainly
-won&rsquo;t break out if he can help it. You can see by
-his eyes he&rsquo;s not a lady&rsquo;s man, and never will be in any
-large and generous sense. But so much the more danger,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
-for where that sort dines they sleeps when love&rsquo;s the trouble.
-Let them love once and they&rsquo;ll love for ever, no
-matter what happens; and if she was fool enough to go
-playing about with him, she might overthrow him to his
-own loss in the long run.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>These forebodings were cut short by the work bell and
-Mr. Knox, expressing a hope that he might be mistaken,
-shook out his pipe and followed Robert back into the vat
-room.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<small>THE MARTYR</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>On a Saturday afternoon full of sunshine was presented
-the rich but simple picture of Ashprington village under
-conditions of autumn. The hamlet lay on a slope under
-a hillcrest and through it fell steep paths by meadow
-and orchard past the cottages to Bow Bridge far distant
-in the vale.</p>
-
-<p>Crowning Ashprington rose the church-tower of uniform
-grey, battlemented, with a great poplar standing
-on its right, and a yew tree throwing shadow upon the
-western porch. Then fell the land abruptly, and the whole
-foreground was filled with an apple orchard, that rippled
-to the churchyard walls and spread a rich cloth of scarlet
-and gold around them.</p>
-
-<p>At this hour the tree-foundered village seemed oppressed
-and smothered with falling leaves. Its over-abundant timber
-mastered the place and flung down foliage in such
-immense masses that the roads and alleys, drinking fountain,
-little gardens subtending the street and the roofs of
-the cottages were all choked with them.</p>
-
-<p>But it was a dry and joyous hour, the latter rains had
-yet to fall and submerge Ashprington in mud and decay.
-Virginian creeper flamed on the house fronts and dahlias,
-michaelmas daisies and chrysanthemums still flaunted in
-the gardens.</p>
-
-<p>Through this cheerful scene came Miss Finch and Medora
-Dingle with their baskets to pick blackberries. Medora&rsquo;s
-home was a stone&rsquo;s throw from the church and
-they now crossed the churchyard to enter certain fields
-beyond it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>The well-kept sward spread level with the arms of the
-apple trees over the wall, for the ground fell sharply from
-the graveyard to the orchard below; and now, at the
-limits of the burial place, cider apples fell on the graves
-and spattered their mounds and flat surfaces with gold.</p>
-
-<p>Daisy stopped at a tomb and removed a windfall of
-fruit from the broken marble chips that covered it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s old Mr. Kellock,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He wouldn&rsquo;t
-like them there, would he&mdash;such a thrifty old man as
-he was.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And such a tidy one,&rdquo; added Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He was Mr. Jordan&rsquo;s grandfather and left him all his
-money I believe,&rdquo; continued Daisy; but her friend knew
-more about that matter than she did.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He hadn&rsquo;t anything to leave over and above his cottage.
-That was left to Jordan Kellock and he sold it,
-not wanting to be troubled with house property. It wasn&rsquo;t
-worth much.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They passed through the shining fruit trees and stopped
-to admire them; then Medora, since Mr. Kellock had been
-mentioned, felt she might return to that subject.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I often wonder what he&rsquo;ll do,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You feel
-that he won&rsquo;t be content to stop at Dene all his life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Daisy. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s got proper good
-money and is a big man here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;d be a big man anywhere,&rdquo; answered Medora.
-&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t only a matter of wages with him,&rdquo; she added.
-&ldquo;Of course we know as a vatman he&rsquo;s one of the best in
-England, and makes as good paper as there is in the world,
-I suppose. But he&rsquo;s got more to him than that, Daisy.
-He&rsquo;s not content with being prosperous and well-thought
-of. He thinks great thoughts and has great ambitions.
-I dare say the people here don&rsquo;t see that, for he&rsquo;s a cut
-above the most of them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He is,&rdquo; admitted Daisy. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s something, I don&rsquo;t
-know what about him; but it makes me uncomfortable
-with him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just his greatness acting on you,&rdquo; explained
-Medora. &ldquo;I felt like that once too, but he did me the
-kindness to explain himself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We all know he would have given all he&rsquo;d got to marry
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t speak about that. At any rate I understand
-him better than any other woman&mdash;or man for that matter.
-And though it wasn&rsquo;t to be, I understand him still;
-and I know he&rsquo;s out for big things sooner or later. He&rsquo;ll
-make a mark in the world of labour some day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Daisy looked with admiration at Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I shouldn&rsquo;t know what to answer if he talked
-to me about such deep subjects,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But then
-you&rsquo;re married, and you&rsquo;ve always got a man in the house
-to help your brain power.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora, secretly nettled at the preposterous suggestion
-of Ned enlarging her mental outlook, turned to the blackberries
-and felt a helpless disappointment that even her
-friend should guess so little of her difficulties and troubles.
-For now she began day by day to weave round herself and
-her married life a hollow and false tissue of imaginary
-tribulations and trials supposed to be sprung from her
-union with Edward Dingle. Medora set about a sort of
-histrionics inspired by nothing but her own vague unrest
-and her own amazing ignorance of reality. Even to herself
-she could not explain this futile experiment in emotions,
-yet she persisted and presently, finding certain of
-her circle were deceived, and even hearing words of pity
-on a woman&rsquo;s lips, she deluded herself as to the truth of
-her gathering misfortunes and assured her conscience that
-the disaster came from without and not within. For at
-first, in the perpetration of this stupid pose, conscience
-pricked before Ned&rsquo;s puzzled eyes; but presently, when a
-silly woman told Medora that she was a martyr, this nonsense
-of her own brewing seemed indeed the bitter drink
-life had set to her lips. She echoed and amplified the
-notion of martyrdom. It was just what she wanted to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-excuse her own folly to herself. From accepting the idea,
-she soon began to credit it. To win the full flavour of the
-make-believe this was necessary. Then developed the spectacle
-of a masquerading woman, herself creating the atmosphere
-in which she desired her world to see her suffer
-and shine.</p>
-
-<p>As all who acquire a taste for martyrdom, Medora
-proved amazingly ingenious in plaiting the scourges and
-selecting the members of the inquisition from her own
-household. She had reached a preliminary stage in this
-weak-minded pastime and enjoyed it exceedingly. Ned
-was much mystified; but the attitude of Ned mattered
-little. Her real object and the goal of the game lay far
-beyond Ned. Whereunto all this would lead, Medora did
-not know; and she told herself that she did not care.</p>
-
-<p>The day was to add a considerable scene to her unfolding
-drama, though Mrs. Dingle did not guess it when she
-set out. She had no premonition of the interesting adventure
-that awaited her when presently she drifted, by
-hedgerows and lanes, somewhat westward of Ashprington,
-upon the high road to Totnes.</p>
-
-<p>They were filling their baskets, and for a time Medora
-had forgotten all about herself and was taking a healthy
-interest in Daisy&rsquo;s suspicions concerning a young man
-who worked at Dene Mill, when a bicycle bell warned them
-and there flashed along upon his way home, Jordan Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>He stopped and they showed him their blackberries and
-invited him to help himself. Then, together they walked
-homeward and Medora became concerned to part from
-Daisy if possible. An opportunity occurred ere long and
-when the elder pointed out that Miss Finch would gain
-half a mile by a short cut, her friend took the hint.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My basket&rsquo;s heavy and you&rsquo;ve got company, so I&rsquo;ll
-go this way home,&rdquo; said Daisy with great tact. Then she
-bade them good-bye and descended a steep lane to Bow
-Bridge.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>Immediately she had gone, Medora&rsquo;s manner changed
-from cheerfulness to a more pensive mien.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sometimes it&rsquo;s so hard to pretend you&rsquo;re happy,&rdquo; she
-explained.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry you&rsquo;ve got to pretend,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
-
-<p>He had fought awhile against any sort of secret understanding
-with Medora, but something of the kind now
-existed, though Jordan could not have explained how it
-had come about. It seemed not unnatural, however, because
-he knew the woman so well and felt so supremely
-interested in her happiness. He believed, in his youthful
-inexperience, that he might be able to help both Ned and
-Medora by virtue of his brains and good sense; and he
-imagined that his championship of Medora, so to call it,
-emanated entirely from his own will to right and justice.
-Had anybody hinted to him that Medora was amusing herself
-with this very delicate material, he must have refused
-to believe it. He believed in her good faith as he believed
-in the stars, and he trusted himself completely for a man
-above the power of temptation. Indeed, as yet he had felt
-none.</p>
-
-<p>To-day, however, the young woman went further than
-she had ventured to go.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can talk to you, Jordan, and I often thank God I
-can,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;because there&rsquo;s nobody else on earth&mdash;not
-one who understands me like you do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Not in the ear of him who really understands her does a
-woman ever confess to be understood; but the listener quite
-agreed with Medora and believed the truth of what she
-asserted.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If thought and true friendship could make me understand,
-then I do,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Ned&rsquo;s such a real good
-chap at heart that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not,&rdquo; she said positively. &ldquo;To my bitter grief
-I know he&rsquo;s not. Like you, I thought so, and I made myself
-go on thinking so, for loyalty; but it&rsquo;s no good pretending
-that any more. He&rsquo;s deceived you as he has me.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-He&rsquo;s not good hearted, for all his laughter and noise, else
-he wouldn&rsquo;t persecute me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going into details,&rdquo; declared Medora, quite
-aware that there were no details to go into; &ldquo;but he&rsquo;s that
-rough and harsh. Loses his temper if you look at him.
-He wasn&rsquo;t like you, and showed me everything about himself
-when we were courting. He hid the things that matter,
-and if I&rsquo;d known then half, or a quarter, of what I
-know now, I wouldn&rsquo;t have taken him, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that,&rdquo; he begged again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to say it. And I&rsquo;ll say more. It&rsquo;s a relief to
-speak where your honesty is known, and no false meaning
-is put to your words. I&rsquo;ll say this, that I made a dreadful
-mistake, and every year that goes over my head will show it
-clearer. I can bear it, of course. We women are built to
-suffer and keep our mouths shut. It&rsquo;s only men that run
-about with their troubles. Yes, I can bear it, Jordan, and
-I shall bear it to my grave; but it&rsquo;s hard for a girl of my
-age to look ahead through all the years of her life and see
-nothing but dust and ashes. And though I&rsquo;m brave
-enough to face it, I&rsquo;m too frank and open-natured to hide
-it, and the bitter thing is that people guess that I&rsquo;m not
-happy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t put it as strongly as that, Medora. Don&rsquo;t actually
-say you&rsquo;re an unhappy woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re either happy, or else you&rsquo;re not&mdash;at any rate,
-when you&rsquo;re young,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I see the old get into a
-sort of frozen condition sooner or later, when they&rsquo;re
-neither one nor the other, being sunk to a kind of state like
-a turnip in ground; but the young are different. They
-feel. Why, Daisy, only a few minutes ago, saw my mind
-was troubled, though I tried ever so to hide it. You know
-people know it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t deny that. Everybody&rsquo;s more or less sorry.
-But between husband and wife, of course, no wise man or
-woman ventures to come.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>&ldquo;Yes, they do,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;My own mother for
-one. Kindness made alive to everybody else no doubt, but
-not to me. She doesn&rsquo;t blame my husband anyway, so she
-must blame me, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t say that. It may be no matter for blame&mdash;just
-the point of view. The great thing is to get at a
-person&rsquo;s point of view, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t I try? Don&rsquo;t I interest myself in Ned?
-I&rsquo;ve got a brain, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know that very well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And I can&rsquo;t help seeing only too bitter clear, that my
-husband&rsquo;s not interested in anything that wants brains to
-it. He&rsquo;s all for sport and talk and pleasure. I like to
-think about interesting subjects&mdash;human nature and
-progress, and the future of labour, and so on. And if I
-try to talk about anything that really matters, he just
-yawns and starts on shooting birds and football. For the
-less brains a person has got, the more they want to be
-chattering. I&rsquo;ve married a boy in fact, when I thought
-I&rsquo;d married a man; and my charge against Ned is that he
-hid the truth of himself from me, and made me think he was
-interested in what interested me, when he was not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She had mentioned the subjects which she knew attracted
-Jordan. It was indeed his wearisome insistence on
-such things that had made her turn of old to the less intelligent
-and more ingenuous Dingle. In reality she had no
-mind for abstractions or social problems.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As we grow older, we naturally go for the subjects that
-matter,&rdquo; said Kellock. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve always wanted to leave the
-world better than I found it, you know, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And so you will&mdash;you&rsquo;re built to do it,&rdquo; declared she.
-&ldquo;And I shall watch you do it, Jordan. And though I&rsquo;ve
-lost it all, I shall see some other woman at your right hand
-helping you to make a name in the world. And I shall
-envy her&mdash;yes, I shall. I can say that to you, because I
-can trust you never to repeat it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You shake me up to the roots of my being when you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-talk like this,&rdquo; he assured her. &ldquo;Oh, my God, Medora, it
-seems a cruel sort of thing that just at the critical time,
-and before it was too late, you couldn&rsquo;t have seen and felt
-what you see and feel now. It was bad enough then.
-You&rsquo;ll never know or guess what I felt when you had to
-say &lsquo;no&rsquo; to me. But I had one thing to keep me going
-then&mdash;the certainty you were too clever to make a mistake.
-I said to myself a million times: &lsquo;She knows best;
-she knows that Dingle will make her a happier woman than
-I could.&rsquo; But now&mdash;now&mdash;when you say what you&rsquo;ve
-said. Where am I now?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked in this emotional strain for ten minutes, and
-she wove with native art a web of which both warp and
-woof were absurdly unreal. Her nature was such that in
-a task of this sort she succeeded consummately. By a
-thousand little touches&mdash;sighs, looks, and shakes or
-droops of the head&mdash;she contributed to her comedy.
-She abounded in suggestions. Her eyes fell, her sentences
-were left unfinished. Then came heroic touches, and a
-brave straight glance with resolution to take up the staggering
-weight of her cross and bear it worthily to the end.</p>
-
-<p>Medora was charming, and in her subconscious soul she
-knew that her performance carried conviction in every
-word and gesture. She revelled in her acting, and rejoiced
-in the effect it occasioned on the listener. Long ago, Kellock
-had set her, as she guessed, as a lovely fly in amber,
-never to change, though now for ever out of his reach.
-He had accepted his loss, but he continued to regard her as
-his perfect woman, and she cherished the fact as a great
-possession. Perhaps, had it been otherwise, she had not
-entered upon her present perilous adventure; but she knew
-that Jordan Kellock was a knight of weak causes, and one
-who always fought for the oppressed, when in his power to
-do so; and now she had created a phantom of oppression,
-which his bent of mind and attitude to herself prevented
-him from recognising as largely unreal.</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was young; he had loved Medora in the full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-measure of a reserved nature, and to-day she deluded him
-to the limit of his possibilities. Her complete triumph indeed
-almost frightened her. For a few moments he became
-as earnestly concerned as on the great occasion when he
-had asked her to marry him. Then she calmed the man
-down, and told him that he must not waste his time on her
-troubles.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s selfish of me to tell you these things&mdash;perhaps it&rsquo;s
-wrong,&rdquo; she said, truly enough; but he would not grant
-that. His emotion was intense; his pain genuine. Her
-intuition told her that here was a man who might err&mdash;if
-ever he erred&mdash;in just such a situation as she was creating.
-She was surprised to find the ease with which it was
-possible to rouse him, and felt this discovery enough for
-that day. She grew elated, but uneasy at the unexpected
-power she possessed. Her sense of humour even spoke in a
-still, small voice, for humour she had.</p>
-
-<p>Chance helped her to end the scene, and, a hundred yards
-from home, Ned himself appeared with his gun over his
-shoulder and a hare in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Dingle was in cheerful spirits.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A proper afternoon I&rsquo;ve had,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ernest
-Trood asked me to go out shooting along with him and
-some friends, and we&rsquo;ve enjoyed sport, I promise you. A
-rare mixed bag. We began in the bottom above the Mill,
-and got a woodcock first go off, and then we worked up and
-had a brace and a half of partridges, a brace of pheasants,
-and a hare, and eight rabbits. I knew what you&rsquo;d like,
-Medora, and I took a partridge, and the hare for my
-lot. I shot them, and four rabbits and one of the
-pheasants.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What a chap for killing you are,&rdquo; said Jordan, while
-Ned dragged a partridge from his pocket and handed it to
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody loved nice things better than she, but she took
-the bird pensively and stroked its grey and russet feathers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Poor little bird, your troubles are ended,&rdquo; she said.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-Then she assumed a cheerful air, which struck Jordan as
-unspeakably pathetic.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been busy, too. Look at my blackberries.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned praised the blackberries, and in his usual impulsive
-fashion offered Kellock the hare; but Jordan declined it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thrown away upon me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come and help us to eat it one night then,&rdquo; suggested
-Dingle, and Medora echoed his wish.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;re very kind. I&rsquo;ll come up to supper
-any evening, if you mean it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then he mounted his bicycle and rode off down the hill.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He came along from Totnes, while Daisy and I were
-picking blackberries, and he stopped and would carry my
-basket for me,&rdquo; she explained.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He looked a bit down in the mouth, didn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He was. He&rsquo;s such a man to feel other people&rsquo;s
-troubles.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Whose? Not yours, I should hope?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good powers, no! I&rsquo;m not one to tell my troubles&mdash;you
-know that, or ought to. I&rsquo;m a proud woman, whatever
-you may be. It isn&rsquo;t personal things, but general
-questions that bother him. Poverty and want and injustice,
-and all that. I cheered him up, and tried to make him
-forget.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll do better to leave such subjects alone,&rdquo; said Dingle.
-&ldquo;The woes of the world in general ain&rsquo;t his job; and
-if he tries to make them his job, he may find it won&rsquo;t pay
-him to do so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s your pettifogging opinion; but if every man in
-good employment was as selfish as you, the poor might
-remain poor for ever,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, don&rsquo;t you be a fool, anyway, there&rsquo;s a dear.
-You&rsquo;ve got to look after me, not the poor in general. And
-nobody can look after me better than you, when you please.
-It&rsquo;s a choice between beer and tea this minute, so choose
-which I&rsquo;m to have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>&ldquo;Tea,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;If you can be patient for a little.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They went in together, and he was pleased to find Medora
-amiable and willing, though ignorant that her good
-temper sprang not from his inspiration.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<small>THE BLUE MARK</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>From the rag house, through trap doors, the rag descended
-from Lydia and her fellow workers to a huge object like a
-mowing machine. The rags came to this monster and
-passed through its whirling knives. Then, having been
-clipped pretty small, they were carried on an endless ribbon
-up again to the magnet. Two great magnetized rollers
-revolved, and, in a dingy niagara, every fraction of
-the old rag tumbled over them, to run an electric gauntlet
-and receive a challenge. The bossy rollers were even
-quicker than the women&rsquo;s fingers, and a fraction of metal,
-however small, responded to their attraction instantly.
-There was a click and instead of falling with its neighbours,
-the offending rag found itself arrested and pilloried on a
-boss. It clung to the roller, and, as the cylinder turned,
-became de-magnetized again and fell in a place apart.
-The danger to future processes was thus lessened materially
-and but little foreign matter in shape of metal escaped
-to be a nuisance later on.</p>
-
-<p>To the duster then came the harassed rag and in open
-wire barrels amid revolving wooden prongs it was whirled
-round and round and further cleansed.</p>
-
-<p>Then to Henry Barefoot it went, and Henry always declared
-that in his hands the material received first serious
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The rag don&rsquo;t know it&rsquo;s born till it gets to the boilerman,&rdquo;
-he was wont to say.</p>
-
-<p>The boiler-house lay under an arched roof of corrugated
-iron. It was a damp place, full of hot air and the heavy
-scent of washing. The steam thinned and feathered away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-through holes in the roof. In the floor were deep square
-hollows and here the boilers revolved, with a solemnity
-proper to their size. They were huge metal receptacles
-capable of holding a ton each; and when the rag was
-packed, with water and alkalies to cleanse it, the loaded
-giant turned ponderously over and over, churning the mass
-for three or four hours. Then the seething clouts were
-dragged forth, their pollutions drained away and further
-stages of lustration entered upon.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far the rag had come under rough control and
-reign of law. By air and water and chastening of many
-blows it was reduced to a limp and sodden condition, amenable
-to discipline, more or less prepared for the tremendous
-processes between its final disintegration as rag and its
-apotheosis as paper.</p>
-
-<p>A paper man will tell you he turns &ldquo;old shirts into new
-sheets&rdquo;: and that indeed is what he does; but a long and
-toilsome journey lies between the old shirt and its apotheosis.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Barefoot was a placid man, as long as the rag
-came to him exactly when he wanted it. Under ordinary
-circumstances he accomplished his part in the great machine
-as obscurely as any invisible wheel, or steam pipe.
-But if the women delayed, or he was &ldquo;hung up,&rdquo; as he put
-it, then his chivalry broke down and he swore long and
-loud at those who interfered with his activities. At such
-times he became tragic and exceedingly profane. He expanded
-and broke into uncouth gestures and simian scowls.
-He appealed to Heaven in these great moments and asked
-of the sky why women had been created. Sometimes his
-sister, Alice, was sent for from the thresher to pacify him,
-and when she failed, Lydia Trivett, at the sound of
-Henry&rsquo;s roaring in the boiler-house, would slip from her
-lattice and strive to calm his fury.</p>
-
-<p>The women had fled before him at one of these explosions
-and Alice having also failed, approached Mrs. Trivett and
-begged her to intervene.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>She went, to find Mr. Barefoot standing with steam
-about him and his hand lifted to the corrugated iron roof
-above his grey head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, my God, my God!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What have I done
-to be the prey of a lot of worthless females&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your rag&rsquo;s waiting, Henry,&rdquo; interrupted Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;His rag&rsquo;s out, I should think,&rdquo; said a woman from
-behind Lydia. &ldquo;An evil-speaking toad&mdash;always blasting
-us. And how can we help it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know very well, Henry, there must be a hitch
-sometimes with such a lot of dirty rag,&rdquo; explained Lydia.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve all got to keep going, and it&rsquo;s no more good or
-sense cussing us than it is for them in the engine house to
-cuss you. And men wouldn&rsquo;t do this work half as well as
-women, as you&rsquo;d very soon find if we were gone. And it&rsquo;s
-a very ill-convenient thing for you to lose your temper,
-and nobody will be sorrier than you in an hour&rsquo;s time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As the rag now awaited him, Henry subsided.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a plot against me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ve no quarrel
-with you, Lydia. It ain&rsquo;t your department. It&rsquo;s they
-baggering women at the magnet, and they want for me to
-get the sack as I very well know. But they&rsquo;ll get fired
-themselves&mdash;every trollop of &rsquo;em&mdash;afore I shall.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t want you to get fired. Why should they?
-What have you done to them? Why, you haven&rsquo;t even
-asked one of &rsquo;em to marry you,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;they needn&rsquo;t hope that,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-seen too much of woman since I came here ever to want
-one for my own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So the breeze subsided and Henry filled his empty boiler,
-growling himself back to his usual calm the while. It was
-characteristic of him that between these dynamic discharges,
-he preserved an amiable attitude to those among
-whom he worked, and when a storm had passed, he instantly
-resumed friendly relations.</p>
-
-<p>Within an hour of this scene, when dinner time came, he
-descended to the ground floor and cautioned two girls who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-were skipping off down a flight of steps that led from the
-rag house to the ground below.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you go so fast,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;When slate steps
-are wet with rain, they&rsquo;re beastly slippery, and some day
-one of you maidens will fall and break yourselves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett put on her old black bonnet, for she was
-going out to dinner with another woman; but as she prepared
-to depart, her son-in-law met her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s important,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I want half an hour with
-you, mother, and I dare say Mrs. Ford won&rsquo;t mind if you
-go along with her to-morrow instead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Ford made no difficulty and Lydia returned to the
-rag house with Ned, who brought his meal with him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a tid-bit for you here,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;A bit
-of jugged hare which you&rsquo;ll like. And I wouldn&rsquo;t trouble
-you but for a very good reason.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They sat in a corner among some rag bales, beyond earshot
-of others who were eating their meal in the rag house.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Medora?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s having dinner in the glazing room to-day. So I
-took the opportunity. It&rsquo;s about her I want to talk. But
-eat first. I don&rsquo;t want to spoil the jugged hare.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He brought out a small pudding basin containing the
-delicacy and his mother-in-law ate heartily and declared
-the dish very good.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Medora can cook, whatever she can&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing she can&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but
-there&rsquo;s a damned lot of things she won&rsquo;t do. And that&rsquo;s
-the trouble to me. Time was when we saw alike every way
-and never had a word or a difference of opinion; but that
-time&rsquo;s past seemingly, and I want to know why; and if you
-know, I wish you&rsquo;d tell me. It&rsquo;s all in a nutshell so far as
-I can see. What am I doing to vex her? God&rsquo;s my judge
-I don&rsquo;t know. I&rsquo;m the same as I always have been. A
-chap like me don&rsquo;t change. I only want to be patient and
-cheerful and go on with my life as I&rsquo;m going. It&rsquo;s her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-that&rsquo;s changed. She used to love a bit of fun and laughter
-and be friendly and easy-going and jolly and kind.
-That&rsquo;s what she was when I married her anyway. But
-she&rsquo;s changed and I&rsquo;m getting fairly fed up, because I don&rsquo;t
-know of any fault in myself to explain it. If I&rsquo;d pretended
-to be different from what I am before we were married and
-deceived her in anything, then she&rsquo;d have a case against me.
-But nobody can say I did. She knew just what I was, and
-I thought I knew just what she was.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You did, Ned,&rdquo; said Mrs. Trivett earnestly. &ldquo;You
-take my word that you did know just what she was. And
-what she was, she is still under her skin. She can&rsquo;t change
-really, any more than you can, or anybody else. She took
-you because you suited her and she knew she&rsquo;d be happy
-with you. And what&rsquo;s happening to her just now is a
-passing thing calling for patience. Women have their
-funny moods and whims&mdash;Medora like the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I grant that, but how long is it going to last? I
-know they get queer in their heads sometimes, but she&rsquo;s
-down in the mouth always now. I can&rsquo;t pleasure her, do
-what I may, and the things that always delighted her a
-year ago bore her now. Damn it! She looks at me sometimes
-as if she was a schoolmistress and I was a wicked
-boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like this with her; and it&rsquo;s the same with lots of
-people who have had nothing but a good time all their
-lives. Instead of knowing their luck, they take their luck
-to be just the usual state of things, and they don&rsquo;t look
-round and see the scores of people without their good fortune:
-they only fancy that other people are more fortunate
-than them. They get so bored with the good that they
-begin to picture something better. Everybody wants better
-bread than is made of wheat sometimes, and especially
-them that have never tasted worse. We, that have had to
-eat barley bread, know our luck&mdash;t&rsquo;others don&rsquo;t. The
-thing for you is to be patient. You&rsquo;re all right and you&rsquo;re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-going on all right so far as I can tell. I&rsquo;ll take your word
-of that and I very well understand your difficulties. But
-you&rsquo;re a man and you&rsquo;ve got the brains.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She says not,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s one of the nice
-things I&rsquo;m called to hear now. She didn&rsquo;t quarrel with
-my sense or my nonsense a year ago. Now she says right
-out that she wishes I had more intellects. Not a very nice
-thing to hear. I might be a stone-breaker, or a hedge-tacker
-with no sense at all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Be patient with her. It&rsquo;s a whim, and what&rsquo;s responsible
-for it I don&rsquo;t know more than you. But it will pass.
-She can&rsquo;t go on pretending she&rsquo;s an unhappy woman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, and she shan&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m only a human
-man myself, and it&rsquo;s a proper outrage for her to make out
-she&rsquo;s being bullied and evil treated by a chap that worshipped
-the ground under her feet and would again. She&rsquo;s
-mean, mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Ned, she&rsquo;s foolish; she ain&rsquo;t mean.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She is mean. List to this. Two night ago Kellock
-came to supper with us&mdash;to help eat that jugged hare&mdash;and
-the talk was serious to death, as it always is with
-him&mdash;him being such a serious man. And presently,
-among a lot of other soaring notions, Medora wondered
-what was the height of bliss. And she said the height of
-bliss was to feel she was doing good, noble work in the
-world and helping to make people happier.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett sniffed, but did not respond.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Ned, &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t say nothing to that,
-though it sounded a bit thin to me; but Kellock declared it
-was a very grand thought, and for his part the height of
-bliss was to feel you&rsquo;d got a move on, and was leaving a
-mark and doing solid spade work, that would lift the next
-generation to more happiness. And, of course, Medora
-purred over that. And then she asked me what my height
-of bliss was&mdash;in a pitying tone of voice, as though she
-and Jordan belonged to another world. Well, I said my
-height of bliss was lying in my new bath-room of a Satur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>day
-night, with the hot water up to my chin, thinking of
-my savings in the bank.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t, Ned!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I did&mdash;just to give &rsquo;em a shake up. And just to remind
-Medora I built that bath-room on to my house&mdash;not
-because I wanted it, but because she did. Well, I knew
-Kellock wouldn&rsquo;t see the joke, because he ain&rsquo;t built to;
-but, damn it&mdash;I did think Medora would. I expected
-she&rsquo;d laugh and lighten up the talk a bit. But not her.
-She pulled a long face, and said I ought to be ashamed to
-confess such ideas. And that was mean&mdash;you can&rsquo;t deny
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was,&rdquo; admitted Medora&rsquo;s mother. &ldquo;Her sense of
-fun&rsquo;s deserted her; or else she&rsquo;s hiding it of a purpose.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Another thing,&rdquo; grumbled Mr. Dingle, &ldquo;that same
-night when Kellock was gone, I got a bit angered with her,
-God forgive me, and I took her rough by the arm, and it
-left a bit of a blue mark on her skin. I very nearly went
-on my knees for sorrow after, and she forgave me, and
-made it up. Well, you&rsquo;d think a decent woman would
-have kept her sleeve down for a day or two till the mark
-was gone; but I went to speak to her in the glazing room
-yesterday, and there was her forearm bare for all the
-women to see, and the chaps at the presses. And when
-they asked her how she came by it, as they did, she made
-a business of not telling them&mdash;which, of course, did tell
-them. And that was mean, too.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett looked anxious, and put her hand on his
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you knock her about, Ned. I know how aggravating
-a woman can be; but don&rsquo;t you do that. I&rsquo;m not
-standing up for her, and I&rsquo;ll talk to her again and try to
-show her what she&rsquo;s doing; but don&rsquo;t you give her a shadow
-of excuse for this silliness, because, in her present mood,
-she&rsquo;ll be very quick to take advantage of it. I know you
-very well, and I was properly glad when Medora took you
-and not the other, because I knew her, too, and felt she&rsquo;d<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-be happier with you in the long run. But I only say
-again, be patient until seventy times seven, there&rsquo;s a good
-man, for that&rsquo;s all you can do about it at present.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I will then,&rdquo; he promised, &ldquo;and we&rsquo;ll leave it at
-that. And if you&rsquo;ll take your chance to talk sense to her,
-I&rsquo;ll be a good bit obliged.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The rain had ceased, and Lydia went out for a breath of
-air, while Ned lighted his pipe and accompanied her. A
-good few of the workers were at hand, and Mr. Knox, seeing
-Mrs. Trivett and her son-in-law, joined them. Kellock
-passed, but did not stop, and Philander Knox praised
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now, there&rsquo;s a chap that&rsquo;ll go far&mdash;either here or
-somewhere else,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Most of you Devon people
-I&rsquo;ve yet met with are pretty easy-going, like myself; but
-that man is not. He&rsquo;s more than a paper maker. Dingle
-here, and Life, and old Pinhey, the finisher, and Trood are
-content to go on their way, and leave other people to do
-the same. Kellock is not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s got ideas,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He has. I&rsquo;ve took a room in the same house where he
-lodges, and I&rsquo;ve heard him air his notions. They&rsquo;re commonplace
-talk where I come from, but a bit ahead of the
-times in the West Country. We middle-aged folk ain&rsquo;t
-interested in &rsquo;em, but the rising generation is. He told
-me straight out that we ought to have shop stewards in the
-Mill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said Dingle. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t want nothing of
-that here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A burning mind for the rights of labour,&rdquo; continued
-Knox, &ldquo;and though you may think we don&rsquo;t want shop
-stewards, and I may think so, and the boss may think so,
-shop stewards are a sign of the times, and they&rsquo;ll come
-everywhere before long.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope not,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And shop stewardesses,&rdquo; added Philander; &ldquo;and if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-that happened, you&rsquo;d have to rise to it, Mrs. Trivett, for
-the good of the young women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They might be wanted in some places&mdash;not here,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;We all work very comfortably and steady, and
-there&rsquo;s none discontented in my department, that I know
-about.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just because you&rsquo;re the head of it and are a very
-clever and human sort of woman,&rdquo; answered Mr. Knox.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got the touch, and you understand the nature of
-the female and how to keep her in a good temper, and how
-to get a fair day&rsquo;s work for a good day&rsquo;s wages.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned left them at this juncture, and Mr. Knox proceeded.
-Much to her surprise he praised Mrs. Trivett in
-good set terms.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, well!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t often I hear my
-virtues mentioned, and I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;ve named a good few
-I can&rsquo;t lay claim to. Women&rsquo;s only a greater puzzle than
-men, in my experience, and I don&rsquo;t pretend that I know
-half that goes to either sort.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Character is a great mystery,&rdquo; he added.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So it is then, and I don&rsquo;t want to look farther than at
-home to know it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett was speaking to herself rather than Philander
-in this speech; she did not design any confession, but he
-appeared to guess what was in her mind. Indeed, he did,
-for he had seen her in company with Dingle, which was an
-unusual incident at the Mill, and he heard much of the
-rumour that Ned and his wife were out. He had also
-heard of the blue mark on Medora&rsquo;s arm, from Mr. Pinhey,
-whose operations as finisher took place in the glazing
-room.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And if there&rsquo;s a blue mark on her arm, who knows what
-marks there may be hidden elsewhere?&rdquo; murmured Mr.
-Pinhey, with horrified eyes, behind his spectacles.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a man once married, though without a family, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-can understand that,&rdquo; answered Knox to Lydia. &ldquo;And if
-I may say so, I venture respectfully to sympathise with
-what&rsquo;s in your mind. I&rsquo;ve heard about Mrs. Dingle, and
-nothing but kindness, for I&rsquo;m sure everybody likes her,
-though not as well as they like you. And if it&rsquo;s not pushing
-in, which is the last thing I would do, I should be
-interested to know if, between Kellock and her husband,
-she took the right one in your opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett felt some concern that a newcomer should
-have learned so much of the family history. But he spoke
-with such propriety that she could not be annoyed. She
-liked Mr. Knox, and found him, as everybody else did, a
-good-natured and amiable person. It was true that Mr.
-Trood had said that Knox was &ldquo;downy,&rdquo; but his downiness
-had not yet appeared to simpler eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She parried his question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know them both&mdash;what do you think?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know them, but I can&rsquo;t say I know her,&rdquo; he answered.
-&ldquo;However, I know her mother, if I may say so,
-without offence, and if Mrs. Dingle favours you, then I&rsquo;d
-say without hesitation that she chose the right party.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s like me and not like me,&rdquo; explained Lydia. &ldquo;I
-was pretty near what she is at her age.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better looking, I expect,&rdquo; he interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, nothing like so fine&mdash;just a little go-by-the-ground
-woman, same as I am now. But in character, not
-unlike her. And if I&rsquo;d had so good a time as she has had,
-no doubt I should have made the same mistakes and not
-known reality better than her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can have too much reality,&rdquo; declared Philander.
-&ldquo;Most of us poor people have such a deuce of a lot of
-reality that we get tired of it. There&rsquo;s thousands for that
-matter that never have anything else; and reality ain&rsquo;t
-fattening if you belong to the labouring classes. But if
-she&rsquo;d took Jordan Kellock, then she&rsquo;d have known what
-reality was, and very likely gone down under it, like a mole
-under a cart wheel. He&rsquo;s a wonderful good, earnest man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>&mdash;worth
-all the rest of us put together, I dare say; but as
-a husband for a young, pretty, laughter-loving woman&mdash;no.
-He ain&rsquo;t built that way, and if your Medora finds
-that Dingle isn&rsquo;t all she dreamed&mdash;as what man is after
-the gilt&rsquo;s off the gingerbread?&mdash;then let her be sure she&rsquo;d
-have done still worse along with Kellock.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett was moved, and nodded vigorously.
-&ldquo;Very good sense, and you echo me,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-thought much the same. You&rsquo;re an understanding man,
-and kind-hearted seemingly, and have been married yourself,
-so you see things in a large spirit. I think my girl
-took the right one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then she did, for you&rsquo;d make no mistake,&rdquo; declared
-Knox. &ldquo;And if the right one, then we can trust time to
-prove it. I&rsquo;m a great believer in the marriage state myself.
-It&rsquo;s a power for good most times, and so I hope you
-found it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Trivett was not prepared for any further
-confidences on this occasion. She did not answer his question,
-though she expressed herself a believer in marriage.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<small>ASSAULT AND BATTERY</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>In the engine house a small, hump-backed man sat picking
-over the masses of wet rag brought to him by Henry Barefoot
-from the boilers. For, despite the sorters and the
-magnet, enemies to paper still lurked in the sodden rag,
-and the little man ran the sloppy stuff through his fingers,
-extracting from time to time fragments of rubber, whalebone,
-pearl, and other substances.</p>
-
-<p>The engine house was a lofty chamber on two floors,
-with windows that faced the west. Here, Ned Dingle
-reigned, and half a dozen men worked under him. Much
-happened to the rag before it came to Ned, for after its
-final picking, it was washed again, and broken before the
-beater turned it into pulp. When the little hump-backed
-man had passed it, the rag was set revolving with water
-in oval, lead-lined breakers. On one side the washer, like
-a steamer&rsquo;s paddle-wheel, churned in a bladed barrel, so
-that the rag was not only cleaned again, but also torn to
-the smallest fragments; on the other side a drum of brass
-wire sucked away the dirty water, while from the upper
-end clean water was perpetually spurting in. Round and
-round the rag revolved for three hours, by which time its
-character had changed entirely. It was, in fact, rag no
-more, but a substance like curds: &ldquo;half stuff,&rdquo; or rag
-transformed and half-way to its final stages.</p>
-
-<p>From the breakers the pulpy mass left the engine house
-for a time, and sojourned in the bleaching tanks beneath.
-It flowed down through pipes to a subterranean chamber,
-where the air was sharp with the smell of chemicals, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-twelve great, gaping wells ranged round a narrow passage
-way. Here came the &ldquo;half stuff&rdquo; to repose on beds of
-Delabole slate, and endure the operations of the bleach for
-half a day or more. Then the liquid was drained off, the
-snow-white, solid masses forked out on to little trolleys,
-and so returned to Ned Dingle in the engine house. Again
-it revolved until the bleach was thoroughly washed out of
-it, for it is a principle of great paper making that the
-less chemicals, the better the pulp; and now perfected,
-washed, broken and bleached, the material came to the
-beater for final dissection.</p>
-
-<p>The beaters&rsquo; engines were oval in form and resembled
-the breakers. They stood upon the lower floor of the
-engine house, and each communicated directly with the
-breaker above it, and the vat room far beneath. From
-final washing, the pulp flowed directly to Mr. Dingle, and,
-as before, revolved, and was churned by a paddle-wheel set
-with fine knives. Ned controlled it, and on his judgment
-depended the quality of the pulp that would presently flow
-down to Kellock, Knox, and the other vatmen.</p>
-
-<p>He was explaining the process to a young man, who had
-just been promoted to his assistant from the breakers
-above.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s got to meet every test that experience can bring
-against it, Jacob,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And if it did not, I should
-mighty soon hear of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He regulated the churning wheel with a footplate, and
-presently, satisfied that the mass, which was now like fine
-cream after revolving in the beating tank for many hours,
-had reached perfection, Ned took a test to satisfy himself.</p>
-
-<p>Two hand-bowls, or dippers, he lifted, scooped up a few
-ounces of the pulp, then mixed it with pure water, and
-flung the liquid backwards from one dipper to the other,
-pouring off and adding fresh water until what was left in
-his bowl resembled water barely stained with soap. The
-pulp was now so diluted that it needed sharp eyes to see
-anything in the water at all; but Dingle, taking it to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-window, set it slowly dribbling away over the edge of the
-bowl, and as it flowed, the liquid revealed tiny fragments
-and filaments all separate, and as fine as spider&rsquo;s thread.
-The spectacle of these attenuated fibres of cotton told the
-beaterman that his engine was ready and the pulp sufficiently
-fine. The masses of rag, once linen and lace, and
-every sort of textile fabric woven of cotton, had become
-reduced to its limit of tenuity, and was now far finer stuff
-than in the cotton pod of its creation. It had been beaten
-into countless millions of fibrils, long and short, and all so
-fine as to need sharpest scrutiny of human eye to distinguish
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob&mdash;a future beaterman&mdash;followed Ned&rsquo;s operations
-closely; then he made a test himself and watched the
-cotton gossamer flow over the edge of his bowl.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And next week,&rdquo; declared Ned, &ldquo;something finer still
-has got to be made&mdash;so fine that I shall have to borrow
-a pair of spectacles to see it&mdash;good as my eyes are. And
-that&rsquo;s the pulp for the Exhibition moulds. It&rsquo;s to be a
-record&mdash;such paper as never before was made in the
-world. But this is just ordinary, first class rag pulp&mdash;stuff
-that will last till doomsday if properly handled.
-Now it&rsquo;s going down to Knox&rsquo;s vat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He sent a boy to the vat room to warn Philander that a
-re-inforcement was about to descend. Then he sought a
-square shaft in the corner of the engine house, took off the
-lid and revealed an empty, lead-lined box, having six holes
-at the bottom. Each was securely stopped and all communicated
-with the great chests that held the pulp for the
-paper makers below.</p>
-
-<p>He opened one hole, drew a valve from the beating engine
-and allowed it slowly to empty into the box. The
-white mass sank away out of it; there was a gurgle and a
-splash of air from the valve as the engine emptied; while
-with a wooden rake Ned scraped the last of the pulp to
-the aperture, whence it ran to the box above the chests in
-the vat room.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>&ldquo;No. 4 chest is being filled, so it&rsquo;s No. 4 hole I&rsquo;ve opened
-in the box,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;Now it&rsquo;s all run down very
-quick you see, and my beater is empty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then the breaker above disgorged another load of &ldquo;half
-stuff&rdquo; into the beater, and after he had used a beating
-roll, he set the paddle-wheel going again and the new consignment
-revolved on its way.</p>
-
-<p>Ned took a keen interest in his work and though he
-might be casual and easy-going in all other affairs of life,
-it was clear that he could be serious enough over the operations
-of the beater. He was very thorough and never left
-anything to chance. Opportunity for initiative did not
-enter into his labours; but the hard and fast lines of perfection
-he followed with keen application, and it was his
-fair boast that he had never sent bad pulp to the vatmen.
-Though a mechanical calling, Ned did not approach it in
-a mechanical spirit. It was his particular gift and privilege
-to feel a measure of enthusiasm in the craft, and he
-prided himself upon his skill.</p>
-
-<p>Novelty now awaited him, for the pulp presently to be
-made would differ in quality from the familiar material.
-The beating it to an impalpable fineness would be his work.
-The pulp was also to be dyed with new tinctures, not used
-until now.</p>
-
-<p>For not only snowwhite material descended to the vat
-room. The dyeing was a part of Mr. Dingle&rsquo;s operation
-in many cases, and the various colours of foreign currency
-papers went into the stuff during its sojourn in the beaters.</p>
-
-<p>Dingle, satisfied with his pupil, put on his coat when the
-dinner bell rang, the steam pulses of the works subsided
-and the power stopped. He took his basket and descended
-a long flight of steps to the vat room, where Kellock, Life
-and the other paper makers had just knocked off work.
-Others joined them, for the vast and airy vat room was a
-favourite place for dinner; but Medora did not come.
-For several weeks now she had ceased to meet Ned at the
-hour of the mid-day meal. The fact was, of course, noted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
-and debated behind Dingle&rsquo;s back; but none spoke of it in
-front of him.</p>
-
-<p>The change in Medora at this stage of her existence was
-obvious enough to all; while that which marked her husband
-did not appear so clearly. The reason had been easy
-to see, though few knew enough about them to see it. Medora,
-while really disingenuous, revealed her tribulation,
-because she desired everybody to perceive it; while Ned,
-naturally an open and simple creature, endeavoured with
-the instinct of a decent male to hide his worries from the
-public eye. He failed, however, because he was not built
-to play a part, while Medora succeeded to perfection.
-Thus she created an impression of secret woes that did not
-really exist, while Ned attempted to conceal anxieties which
-were real enough. His temper suffered under a strain that
-he was not created to endure, for his wife&rsquo;s attitude, having
-first puzzled him, began to anger him. He lost his
-temper with her on certain occasions and her sublime patience
-under his rough tongue by no means turned his
-wrath from her. For nothing is more maddening, if you
-are the smiter, than to have the other cheek turned to you
-by a sufferer, who displays obvious gusto at your chastisement.
-Ned soon saw that Medora liked him to be violent
-and brutal. It was meat and drink to her to see him in a
-rage. He guessed, and not wrongly, that if he had beaten
-her, she must have relished the pain&mdash;not for itself, but
-for the exquisite pleasure of relating her sufferings to other
-people afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>She was changed, as any woman is who for pleasure or
-profit plays a part. Indeed many persist in such histrionics
-when profit has long ceased, for simple artistic delight
-at the impersonation. It is natural to prefer a rle
-which we can perform to perfection, before others wherein
-we are not so effective.</p>
-
-<p>The suffering and wronged and ill-treated heroine
-proved an impersonation that suited Medora&rsquo;s temperament
-exactly, and having once assumed it, she promised to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-persist in it beyond the limits of her husband&rsquo;s patience.
-She would doubtless tire sooner or later, since it is the
-instinct of every actor to desire new parts and new successes;
-but she was not going to tire of it while she made
-such a hit, won so much attention and created such a dramatic
-and exciting atmosphere about her. In fact Medora
-now felt herself to be the centre of her own little stage,
-and the experience so much delighted her that it was difficult
-sometimes to retain the air of crushed, Christian
-resignation proper to the character.</p>
-
-<p>But the situation she had created out of nothing real,
-now developed and began to take unto itself dangerous elements
-of reality. Such theatricals do not stand still, and
-instead of subsiding, as Lydia hoped it would, Mrs. Dingle&rsquo;s
-objections and grievances, woven of gossamer at first,
-began to grow tougher. She guessed that she would catch
-more than herself in these elaborate reticulations, and she
-persisted until she found another was becoming entangled
-also.</p>
-
-<p>At first, to do her justice, Medora hesitated here. But
-she could not pour her woes into Kellock&rsquo;s ears without a
-reaction from him, and his attitude towards her confession
-naturally influenced her. For, while some of her elders
-suspected, according to the measure of their wits, that Medora
-was acting, one man saw no shadow of deception.
-Every word rang true on his ear, for circumstances combined
-hopelessly to hoodwink him. His own serious nature,
-from which any powers of illusion or sleight were excluded,
-read nothing but the face value into Medora&rsquo;s woeful
-countenance and the word value into her hopeless
-speeches. Not for him to answer mock heroics with banter,
-or reply to burlesque with irony. Had he been made
-of different stuff, he might have saved Medora from herself
-at this season; but being himself, the admirable man was
-terribly perturbed and indeed found himself beset with sore
-questions and problems from which both his character and
-personal attitude to the girl precluded escape. For he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-loved her, and the fact that she was an unhappy woman did
-not lessen his love; while, beyond that, his altruistic instincts
-must have brought him into a delicate complication
-in any case when once invited to participate. And now he
-did enter, with motives that could not honestly be considered
-mixed, for he was thus far influenced only by a conviction
-that it might be possible to help both sufferers to a
-better understanding. He knew that he enjoyed a far
-larger measure of intellect than Ned, and he felt that to
-shirk an effort for Medora&rsquo;s sake would be cowardly. He
-had indeed convinced himself that it was his duty to act.</p>
-
-<p>He proceeded to tackle Ned, but he approached the task
-without the attitude of mind vital to success. For success
-in such a ticklish matter demanded in Kellock a standpoint
-of absolute impartiality. He must, if he were to do
-any good whatever, come to Dingle with a mind as open
-and unprejudiced as possible; whereas, though he knew it
-not, Jordan&rsquo;s mind by no means stood in that relation to
-the pair. Had it done so, he had probably not interfered;
-for in truth it could not be altruism alone that prompted
-him to the step he was now about to take, but a very active
-and sincere sympathy for Medora in her alleged griefs.
-He believed her with all his heart and he had a great deal
-more concern for Mrs. Dingle&rsquo;s point of view, which he accepted,
-than for her husband&rsquo;s, which he had neither heard
-nor considered.</p>
-
-<p>The men had eaten their dinner, and Ned, out of a cheerful
-demeanour, which he brought from his work, presently
-sank into taciturnity. From no will to do so, but powerlessness
-to prevent it, he showed those about him that his
-thoughts were not pleasant. Indeed the most casual had
-noticed that he was of late only himself in the engine house,
-and that nothing but work sufficed to take him out of himself.
-Away from it, he brooded and did not chatter and
-jest as of old.</p>
-
-<p>To-day he was more than usually abstracted and Kellock
-seized the opportunity. Ned&rsquo;s meal was finished in ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-minutes and when he began to stuff his pipe, the other
-asked him to come for a stroll up the valley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go up to the ponds and see if there are any birds
-about, Ned,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>A little surprised, since the bird that interested Kellock
-was unknown, Ned nevertheless agreed to take a walk.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Me and Trood flushed a
-woodcock there yesterday, and I dare say on Saturday
-Trood will bring him down. He&rsquo;s a mark on a woodcock&mdash;never
-misses &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They strolled together up the valley where it fell gently
-to the Mill.</p>
-
-<p>A quarter of a mile above the works the coomb narrowed
-to a bottle-neck, through which a water-fall came down.
-The road wound through this gap and on one side of it
-rose old, blue limestone quarries, their jagged scarps and
-ridges fledged with gorse and oak scrub; while on the other
-side of the water a limestone bluff ascended, weathered to
-fine colour, and above it towered Scotch firs and ivy-clad
-beeches that followed the foot of the hill and flung their
-arms around a little mere, lying in the hollow of the undulating
-land.</p>
-
-<p>In spring this cup shone emerald green; but now the
-place was grey and silver. Alders and sallows towered
-black against the bright water; sedges and reed mace had
-huddled into tangle of russet and amber. They brightened
-where the sun touched them and burned over the
-placid lake, while the highest colour note was a spindle
-tree, whereon hung its harvest of pink and orange fruit,
-though all the leaves were fled. The flame of it cast a brilliant
-reflection into the face of the mirror below; and as
-Ned and Jordan approached by a winding way, that
-skirted the mere, coot and moorhen scuttled off leaving
-double trains behind them, widening out upon the waters.</p>
-
-<p>Here it was that Kellock broached the great matter at
-his heart; and because it was at his heart, whereas he
-imagined it solely in his head, he found within the space<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-of two minutes that he had made a very grievous mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the lake spoke Jordan, while Ned had his eyes in
-the sedges and distant mud flats for a woodcock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s about your wife I wanted to say a word, and I
-know we&rsquo;re too good friends for you to object. You see,
-Ned, when you look at the past&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To hell with the past,&rdquo; answered Dingle shortly.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the future I look at. You take my tip and keep
-out of this&mdash;specially seeing you wanted her yourself
-once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must speak,&rdquo; answered the vatman mildly, &ldquo;and
-just for that reason, Ned. When she took you, you&rsquo;ll remember
-I followed a very self-respecting line about it.
-But at your wish&mdash;at your wish, Ned&mdash;I kept my friendship
-for Medora and you; and it&rsquo;s out of that friendship
-I want to say I think things might be bettered.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s been washing our dirty linen for your pleasure
-then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all. But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God damn it!&rdquo; burst out the other. &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t there to
-be any peace left in the world? You get out of this and
-keep out of it, or&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be silly, Ned,&mdash;listen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To you? Not much. There&rsquo;s some hooken-snivey
-going on here by the looks of it. Blast you&mdash;there&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-my answer to you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle, in a white-hot passion, swung his arm, hit Kellock
-on the side of his head with a tremendous blow and
-knocked him down. They were on the edge of the lake and
-Medora&rsquo;s champion rolled over and fell into water ten
-feet deep. He was stunned and sank, then came to the
-surface again.</p>
-
-<p>Ned&rsquo;s rage vanished with the blow, for now he saw in a
-moment the gravity of the situation. Kellock appeared
-to be unconscious and would certainly drown if left in the
-water.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>The man on the bank flung himself upon his stomach,
-leant over, gripped his victim by the collar and dragged
-him breast high under the bank. In this position Kellock
-came at once to his senses.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry&mdash;I&rsquo;m cruel sorry,&rdquo; said Dingle. &ldquo;Lift
-up your hands and put &rsquo;em round my neck&mdash;then I&rsquo;ll
-heave you out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock opened his eyes and panted, but did nothing for
-a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake make an effort&mdash;I can&rsquo;t help you else.
-Get your arms round my neck, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The other obeyed and in a few moments he was safe.
-Ned fished his cap out of the water, wrung it and handed
-it to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m bitter sorry&mdash;my cursed temper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock sat down for a moment and pressed the water
-out of his clothes. He was quite calm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say it was natural,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;d
-but listened&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t listen to things if you&rsquo;re in hell. Take my
-arm. No good biding here. I&rsquo;ll see you to your house.
-You can have the law of me. I deserve it. I&rsquo;m no bloody
-good to anybody in the world now-a-days. Better I was
-locked up, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk rot. We&rsquo;re all learners. You&rsquo;ve learned
-me something anyway. See me home. I&rsquo;m dazed, but I
-shall be all right in a minute. And don&rsquo;t let on about
-this. I shall say I slipped on the edge of the water and
-fell in and bruised my head&mdash;just an accident and my
-fault. And so it was my fault.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t have that. You rub it in. I&rsquo;ve earned it. I
-shall tell the people what I am, if you don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That won&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;Think of me
-as well as yourself in that matter. You&rsquo;re popular; I&rsquo;m
-not; and if they hear you&rsquo;ve knocked me into the water,
-they&rsquo;ll say there was a reason for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle did not answer, but he knew this to be true.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>&ldquo;Least said soonest mended then.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For your wife&rsquo;s sake, Ned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave her out, please. I&rsquo;m in your debt and I shan&rsquo;t
-forget it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They met some women returning to the works and lied
-to them. All expressed great concern. Then Ned
-brought Kellock to his rooms and begged him to drink
-some spirits which he refused to do.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mind we tell the same tale about this,&rdquo; said Jordan.
-&ldquo;I fell in and you grabbed me from the bank and brought
-me ashore. After all it&rsquo;s the truth, so far as it goes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle agreed and then returned to his work; while the
-injured man, though in considerable pain, only waited to
-change his clothes and then hastened back to the Mill, to
-explain his accident and be chaffed for his carelessness.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>THE OLD PRIORY</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>There was none to drag up the melancholy blossoms of
-Medora&rsquo;s woe and display the fact that they had no roots;
-but she kept them alive nevertheless; and since she was
-tickled to persist in folly by the increasing interest created
-from her alleged sufferings, she woke up to find those sufferings
-real at last. She had now earned a great deal of
-pity and won a reputation for patience and endurance.
-She had also awakened a certain measure of feeling against
-Ned, which was inevitable, and now conditions which she
-had implied, knowing at the bottom of her heart they did
-not exist, began to develop in reality. The man was not
-built to watch Medora&rsquo;s histrionics in patience for ever,
-and she found him growing harsh and rough.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was no more play-acting for Medora. Outraged
-in every instinct, her sense of humour dead and her
-self-consciousness morbidly hypertrophied, she began to
-hate the man she had married. The cause of his changed
-attitude she forgot; and the bad usage for which she had
-deliberately played, when it came she resented with all her
-soul. Now she ceased to be a wife to him and daily threatened
-to leave him.</p>
-
-<p>A series of incidents more or less painful led to the
-threshold of complete estrangement and Medora was always
-ahead of her husband and always a good stage farther
-advanced to the final rupture than was he. Indeed
-he never knew until the climax burst upon him that it was
-so near. He did wrong things at this season, was hard
-when he should have been gentle, and allowed himself brutalities
-of speech and action. But again and again after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-such ebullitions, he was contrite, abased himself and implored
-Medora to help him to a better comradeship and
-understanding.</p>
-
-<p>Each sought to confide, and Ned confided in Medora
-herself, while she went elsewhere. Her interest was rapidly
-shifting and her husband&rsquo;s efforts at reconciliation
-meant nothing now. For the time being she heartily
-loathed him, and the sound of his voice in the house, and
-the fall of his foot. Yet between his furies he had struggled
-hard to restore their friendship. He had confessed
-the incident with Kellock and described to Medora how, in
-his passion that anybody should presume to come between
-them, even with good advice, he had turned on the vatman,
-knocked him into the water and then pulled him out again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He meant well; but it shows what a state I&rsquo;m in that I
-could do it. He forgave me quickly enough, but I couldn&rsquo;t
-forgive myself. And I only tell you, Medora, to show
-what a perilous and unnatural frame of mind I&rsquo;ve got to.
-It&rsquo;s all so properly cruel&mdash;as if some unseen devil had
-poked his claws into our affairs and was trying to tear &rsquo;em
-apart. And God knows I&rsquo;ll do any mortal thing that man
-can do to right it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She was, however, much more interested in the disaster
-to Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say that made you try to murder him?&rdquo;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t try to murder him&mdash;I only shut his mouth.
-So I don&rsquo;t know what he was going to say. He admitted
-I was right anyway, and that it was not his place to interfere.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody&rsquo;s got the right to talk sense to you seemingly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not telling you this for you to begin on me again,&rdquo;
-he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m telling you to show you what you&rsquo;re doing
-and what you&rsquo;ve done to my temper. If anybody had told
-me a year ago I&rsquo;d forget myself and knock a man down
-for trying to do me a good turn, I&rsquo;d never have believed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-it. Yet such is my state that I did so. And since then
-I&rsquo;ve asked Jordan to speak about the thing and give me
-any advice he could; but he&rsquo;s told me frankly the time has
-passed for that. He won&rsquo;t speak now. He forgave me
-for knocking him into the water; but I can see with half an
-eye he don&rsquo;t want any more to do with me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora, well knowing why this was, yet pretended not
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must ask yourself for a reason then and no doubt
-your conscience will find it, Ned. We must cut a loss before
-long&mdash;you and me&mdash;for I don&rsquo;t want to die under
-this. I can&rsquo;t stand very much more and I dare say you
-feel the same.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;you mean by &lsquo;cut a loss&rsquo;?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>But after any pregnant remark of this description, Medora
-temporised for a time and preferred to be indefinite.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what I mean,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
-times when I wish I was out of it, young as I am. I can
-suffer and suffer of course. I&rsquo;m strong and there&rsquo;s no
-limit to my endurance. But I&rsquo;m beginning to ask myself
-&lsquo;why?&rsquo; And for that matter there are one or two others
-asking me the same question.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The woman&rsquo;s always right if
-her face is pretty enough. You&rsquo;ve got the art always to
-be in the right, and there&rsquo;s only one on God&rsquo;s earth, and
-that&rsquo;s me, who knows you&rsquo;re wickedly in the wrong quite
-as often as I am. It&rsquo;s your wrongs in other people&rsquo;s
-mouths that made me do wrong; and when you saw me setting
-out with all my heart to be patient and win you back
-again, you set yourself wickedly to work to break down
-my patience and egg me on. Again and again you&rsquo;ve kept
-at me till I&rsquo;ve gone too far and done evil; and then you&rsquo;ve
-run about everywhere and let everybody know what a
-coward and brute I am.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the way you talk,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and I can only
-listen with my heart broken. You say these things for no
-reason but to make me angry, and as to patience, even you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-will grant, if there&rsquo;s any justice left in you, that my patience
-has never broke down from the first. And when
-the people have talked, I&rsquo;ve laughed it off and put a bright
-face on it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know that bright face&mdash;as though you were
-saying, &lsquo;you see I&rsquo;m an angel already and only want the
-wings.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, your tongue!&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;To think that
-ever you could scourge a good wife with such bitter, biting
-words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then she wept and he cursed and went out. It was a
-scene typical of others; but from the moment that Medora
-heard of Kellock&rsquo;s immersion she could not rest until she
-had let him know she knew it. They were meeting now unknown
-to Dingle, for though Jordan at first protested
-against any private conference, Medora quickly over-ruled
-him. For a month she had made it clear that only the
-wisdom of Mr. Kellock was keeping her sane; and he believed
-it. Nor was this altogether untrue, for Medora,
-now genuinely miserable, began to seek increasing sustenance
-and support from her old lover.</p>
-
-<p>As in the case of all her other schemes for entertainment
-and exaltation, she crept to this and let it develop slowly.
-As the rift between her and Ned grew wider, the gap narrowed
-between her and Jordan Kellock. At each meeting
-she decreased the distance between them, yet never by definite
-word or deed appeared to be doing so. Kellock himself
-did not realise it. He knew the fact and taxed his own
-conscience with it at first; but then for a time his conscience
-left him in doubt as to his duty, until in the light
-of Medora&rsquo;s increasing sufferings, it spoke more distinctly
-and chimed dangerously with his inclination.</p>
-
-<p>His whole life was dominated by this great matter. It
-had become personal and he wrestled with his difficulties by
-day and night. Medora was one of those women who have
-a marvellous power of influencing other judgments. She
-had a fatal gift to waken dislike and distrust of another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-person in the mind of a third. She had already created
-aversion for Ned in the minds of several women; now Jordan,
-despite his own reason, felt himself beginning to hate
-Dingle as heartily as Medora appeared to do. He fought
-this emotion for a time; but found it impossible any longer
-to maintain an impartial attitude. He told himself that
-it was only false sentiment to pretend farther impartiality.
-Justice demanded antagonism to Ned in the future&mdash;not
-because Medora had once been Jordan&rsquo;s whole hope
-and desire and was now herself unhappy and friendless;
-but because, as an honest man, Kellock could not longer
-be impartial.</p>
-
-<p>His views of life were changing; his orderly mind was
-beginning to suspect that strong action might be necessary.
-Justice was the word most often on his lips; and yet
-knowing that he loved Medora, he was intelligent enough
-to perceive that inclination might be deluding him and
-making apparently simple what, in reality, was complex.
-For a time he hesitated; then came a day when he met
-Medora by appointment and felt it impossible to stand
-outside her life any longer. She, indeed, forced his hand
-and made it clear that she was going to take definite steps
-for her own salvation.</p>
-
-<p>Medora, on her way to Priory Farm one Sunday afternoon,
-had arranged to meet Kellock at the ruins of the
-building that gave the farm its name. Here they would be
-safe from any interruption.</p>
-
-<p>The fragment of masonry crowned Mr. Dolbear&rsquo;s orchard
-on the summit of the hill that fell into Cornworthy.
-Here, heaved up against the sky in its ivy mantle, stood
-the meagre remains of an old priory, one of the smaller
-houses of the Austin nuns, founded by the Norman lords of
-Totnes.</p>
-
-<p>It consisted of a great gateway with a roof vaulted,
-ribbed and bossed, and a lesser entrance that stood to the
-north of the first. They pierced the mass and bore above
-them a chamber, of which only the floor and ruined walls<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-remained. It was reached by a stair, where stone steps
-wound in the thickness of the wall and opened on to the
-crown of the ruin fifty feet above. The space aloft was
-hung with polypody and spleenwort in the chinks of its
-crumbling mortar, and ivy knots seemed to hold the mass
-together. A whitethorn had found foothold and rose
-above the central block of stone. Through a ruined aperture
-facing east, one might see the orchard sloping to the
-valley bottom and Cornworthy&rsquo;s scattered dwellings, ascending
-on the farther hill. The picture, set in the grey
-granite frame of the priory window, revealed thatched
-houses grouped closely, with land sweeping upwards on
-either side, so that the hamlet lay in a dingle between the
-breasts of the red earth. The land climbed on beyond the
-village and threw a hogged back across the sky. Here
-were broad fallows and hedgerows where the leafless elms
-broke the line with their grey skeletons. To this exalted
-but secret place, Medora and Kellock were come. He had
-indeed been there some time when she arrived.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you sit here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re out of the wind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re safe now,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;And &rsquo;twas like you
-to put yourself about and tramp all this way. But I&rsquo;ve
-got to be terrible careful, Jordan, for if my husband
-thought I&rsquo;d any friends working for me and thinking for
-me, I don&rsquo;t know what awful thing he&rsquo;d do against me.
-Nuns used to live here in past ages,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;Oh,
-my God! I wish I&rsquo;d been one of them. Then I should have
-spent my days in peace and be at rest now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sit down and let&rsquo;s use our time as best we can,&rdquo; he
-advised.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Time&mdash;time&mdash;I want for time to end. For two pins
-I&rsquo;d jump out of that window and end all time so far as I&rsquo;m
-concerned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t talk or think like that, or else I shall fear
-I can&rsquo;t be any use. I tell you, before God, that my life&rsquo;s
-all centred in you and your troubles now. I shan&rsquo;t have
-no peace till you have peace.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll live for you then; and that&rsquo;s about all I want to
-live for any longer,&rdquo; declared Medora. She felt in a theatrical
-mood and Ned&rsquo;s recent confession enabled her to
-speak with a great oncoming of warmth and emotion.
-Her perception had fastened upon it from the first and
-measured its value.</p>
-
-<p>And now in the Priory ruin, she made the most of the
-matter. She had worked it up and found it a tower of
-strength.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know what happened,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You hid it, Jordan,
-like the man you are; but he told me how he knocked
-you into the water&mdash;cruel devil.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry he told you.&mdash;I asked him not to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He wanted me to see what he could do, and would do
-again, and will do again. He properly hates me now, and
-I shall soon be going in fear of my life&mdash;I know that well
-enough. Not that I care much for my life; but it&rsquo;s awful
-to live with a tiger.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean that, Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do then. He&rsquo;s far ways different from what he
-was, or what anybody thinks. He may pretend in the
-works; but he&rsquo;s got the temper of a devil; and sometimes
-I wish he&rsquo;d strike and finish me; and sometimes&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-young and I don&rsquo;t like to think of dying&mdash;sometimes I
-say to myself I&rsquo;ll make a bolt for it and go out into the
-world and chance it. The world would be kinder than him
-and anyway it couldn&rsquo;t be crueller.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is fearful&mdash;fearful,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t
-stand you saying these things, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t if they weren&rsquo;t true. It can&rsquo;t go on. I
-hate to distress you, but there&rsquo;s not a soul in the world
-cares a button what becomes of me but you. I&rsquo;m punished
-for the past I suppose. I deserve it. I took that cruel
-tyrant when I might have took you&mdash;there, don&rsquo;t listen
-to me. I&rsquo;m mad to-day.&rdquo; She worked herself into tears
-and wept convulsively, while he stared helplessly out at the
-world. His mind moved. He could not stand her con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>tinued
-suffering, and the confession and assurance of danger
-inspired him to thoughts of action. Something must
-be done. She was in evident peril now. Any day might
-bring the awful news of a disaster beyond repair. Such
-things were in every newspaper. Not for an instant did
-he doubt the critical nature of the situation. He hated to
-think Medora must presently return home to sleep under
-the same roof as her husband. To his order of mind the
-situation appealed with the uttermost gravity, for not an
-inkling of the true Medora tinctured his impression and he
-was as ignorant of the true Ned. He trusted the woman
-absolutely and he loved her. He steadfastly believed now
-that the most precious life in the world to him was in torment
-and in danger. She had, under dreadful stress of
-emotion as it appeared, more than once expressed her regret
-at the fatal step in the past. She had mourned
-frankly and explicitly at taking Dingle, when she might
-have married Kellock himself.</p>
-
-<p>Here then was the tremendous problem for him; and so
-pressing and immediate did it appear, that the young man
-was driven out of his usual level attitude of mind and customary
-deliberation before the demands of life. For the
-moment his future ambitions and purposes were lost: he
-was only urged by the instant necessity to decide what
-might best be done for Medora&rsquo;s sake. Immense prospects
-opened before him&mdash;knightly deeds, and unconventional
-achievements calling for great efforts and an indifference
-to all commonplace, social standards.</p>
-
-<p>He was prepared at a future time to make war upon
-society for the sake of his class, if the occasion demanded
-it. He fully intended presently to stand forth with the
-protagonists of labour and fight for socialism. He anticipated
-that battle and was educating and priming himself
-for it. As yet the great revolt belonged to the future and
-there his ultimate ambition lay; but now an immediate personal
-appeal confronted him&mdash;a matter in which he himself
-and his own happiness were deeply involved. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-more than himself, for he felt that Medora&rsquo;s future now
-hung in the balance. Her destiny waited on him.</p>
-
-<p>But he did not tell Medora the result of his reflections.
-For the moment he bade her be of good cheer and trust him.</p>
-
-<p>While she sobbed, he considered and then, feeling it was
-time to speak, comforted her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;ve told me all this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It shows
-you know where you can put your faith. And since you
-come to me with it, Medora, I&rsquo;ll make it my business. I&rsquo;m
-only a human man and I loved you with all my heart, and
-I do love you with all my heart still, and now the case is
-altered. I should never have thought of you again&mdash;not
-in that way&mdash;if your married life had turned out all
-right; but as it&rsquo;s turned out all wrong, then it&rsquo;s up to me
-to come into your life again. May I do so?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the only thing in my life,&rdquo; she said, drying her
-eyes. &ldquo;Everything else makes me want to end it&mdash;yes,
-I&rsquo;ve thought often of that, Jordan. But I&rsquo;ll thankfully
-put myself in your hands and be patient a bit longer if you
-tell me to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t a case for waiting,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a case for
-doing. I don&rsquo;t know what fear is myself, and more did
-you till he made you. It looks very much to me as if you&rsquo;d
-have to come to me, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, my God&mdash;could you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I could, and I will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Think of yourself&mdash;it&rsquo;s like your bravery to put me
-first and I&rsquo;d be your slave and live for you and thank
-Heaven for its blessings; but I don&rsquo;t want to ruin your life,
-you good, brave man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody can ruin your life but yourself,&rdquo; he answered,
-&ldquo;and if I save your life, it won&rsquo;t be to ruin my own. Say
-you&rsquo;d like it to be so and leave the rest to me. I mean it,
-Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A dream that had often filled the girl&rsquo;s waking thoughts
-suddenly promised to come true and for a moment she was
-frightened. But only for a moment. She hardly hesi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>tated.
-Here was romance, fame, the centre of the stage&mdash;everything.
-She knew very well that she could trust him,
-and if ever she loved and adored the impassive vatman it
-was at this moment.</p>
-
-<p>She took his hand and pressed her lips to it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like it!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It would be heaven on earth&mdash;heaven
-on earth. And God&rsquo;s my judge you shan&rsquo;t repent
-it. I&rsquo;ll live for you and die for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So be it, Medora. It&rsquo;s done.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He put his arms round her and kissed her. Then both
-felt a secret desire to be alone and consider the magnitude
-of the decision. He voiced this wish.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll part now,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You go down to your
-mother and I&rsquo;ll go home. Be quite easy in your mind and
-cheerful and content. Leave the rest to me. I&rsquo;ll write to
-you to-night after I&rsquo;ve gone all through it. It ain&rsquo;t so
-difficult as it sounds if we back each other up properly.
-I&rsquo;ll see you get the letter to-morrow out of sight of everybody
-at the works. Be round by the vat house half after
-eleven. You&rsquo;ve got a man to deal with&mdash;remember that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God bless you,&rdquo; she answered very earnestly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-yours now, and never, never shall you repent of it, Jordan.
-You can trust me same as I trust you in everything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They descended the winding stair of the ruin and then
-parted. Medora went down through the orchard to her
-mother&rsquo;s home at Priory Farm, while Kellock, climbing
-through the hedge, presently set his face to Dene and
-strolled down the Corkscrew Lane with his mind full of the
-future. He found that thought persisted in drifting away
-from Medora to her husband. He had just told her that
-she had a man to deal with; and now it was impressed on
-Kellock that he, also, had to deal with a man.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime Ned&rsquo;s wife reached the farm, and before she
-did so, she bathed her eyes at a little stream under the
-orchard hedge.</p>
-
-<p>She appeared in an unusually contented frame of mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-and Lydia was glad to see her so. Another guest had arrived,
-for Philander Knox, at Mrs. Trivett&rsquo;s invitation,
-visited Priory Farm. A friendship had sprung up between
-him and the widow, for modest though Lydia might be, she
-could not fail to perceive her company was agreeable to
-Mr. Knox. He would listen to her opinions in a flattering
-manner and often expressed surprise to mark how her
-sense chimed with his experience. His own philosophy
-and general outlook on life were approved by Mrs. Trivett
-and on this occasion she had invited him to drink tea at
-Priory Farm and meet her brother and his family.</p>
-
-<p>He had come and, as all who first penetrated into the
-life of the farm, found himself bewildered by its complications.
-The children, the mother, and the helpless father
-appeared to revolve as a system of greater and lesser
-planets around the steadfast sun of Lydia. She moved in
-the chaos as though it were her proper environment&mdash;&ldquo;like
-a ship in a storm,&rdquo; as Mr. Knox afterwards told her.</p>
-
-<p>Philander had designed to enliven the tea with humorous
-chatter. He wished to impress Mr. Dolbear and his wife
-favourably, for he was a sociable person and anxious to
-increase the number of friends in his new home; but he
-found a meal at Priory Farm no occasion for much intercourse
-or advancement of amenities. It proved a strenuous
-and rather exasperating affair. The children dominated
-the tea and the tea table. They chattered until they
-had eaten all they could and departed; then, when the
-visitor hoped that his opportunity had come, he found,
-instead, that their mother took up the conversation and
-discussed the vanished youngsters one by one. She lingered
-over each as a gardener over his treasures, or a connoisseur
-over his collection. They were an incomparable
-group of children, it appeared; and what puzzled Philander
-was to find that Lydia enjoyed the subject as much as
-Mary herself. She also knew the children by heart and
-was evidently devoted to each and all of them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>Tom Dolbear said very little, but enjoyed listening.
-His brood rejoiced him and he lived now in hope of another
-boy.</p>
-
-<p>It was Medora who strove to change the subject and
-allow Bobby and Milly and Clara and Jenny and the rest
-to drop out of the conversation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Knox will be sick to death of your babies, Aunt
-Polly,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Far from it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;A finer, hopefuller family
-I never wish to see.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dolbear then invited Philander to come into the
-garden and smoke, but finding the ladies were not prepared
-to accompany them, he declined.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If it&rsquo;s all the same to you, I&rsquo;ll rest here until I must
-get going,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not used to your hills yet
-and they weary my legs a lot. Never a great walker&mdash;after
-the way of town birds that have lived all their lives
-by a tram line.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So he sat and smoked, while Lydia cleared the tea things
-and Medora helped her.</p>
-
-<p>With Mrs. Trivett there were few opportunities for
-speech. She came and went and worked. Then the dusk
-fell and the younger Dolbears were brought in to go to
-bed. Medora nursed the baby for a time and her mother
-noticed that she was more than usually cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>Knox then declared that he must be going home and
-offered to escort Medora. She agreed and having thanked
-Tom for his hospitality and hoped that he might be privileged
-to accept it again at some future time, he took his
-leave. On the way home he spoke to his companion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your mother&rsquo;s a wonderful woman, Mrs. Dingle,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;I see these things from the outside and I&rsquo;m properly
-astonished at her cleverness.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So she is,&rdquo; admitted Medora. &ldquo;But I wish she
-wouldn&rsquo;t work so hard all the same. She does her day at
-the Mill and then comes back home and instead of getting
-her proper rest&mdash;well, you see what it is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s like the mainspring of a watch,&rdquo; declared Philander.
-&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a most delicate contrivance, yet all depends
-upon it; and if I may say so, as an outsider, you can see
-with half an eye that her relations depend upon her for
-everything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They do&mdash;they do. If anything happened to
-mother, I don&rsquo;t know what would become of Aunt and
-Uncle&mdash;let alone all the children.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They don&rsquo;t know their luck,&rdquo; he said, and Medora
-agreed with him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you see it. I&rsquo;ve often thought that&mdash;so
-have other people. My mother at Priory Farm is like a
-cheese-cake in a pigstye.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strong, but not too strong. She must have great
-affection for them to stand it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Once a man offered for mother,&rdquo; said Medora; &ldquo;and,
-at the first whisper of it, Uncle Tom and Aunt Polly pretty
-well went on their knees to her not to leave them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can well believe it. It didn&rsquo;t come to anything,
-however?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no&mdash;mother&rsquo;s not for another husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If anything might make her think upon such a change,
-it would be that household surely.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Medora. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s just that helpless
-household that would make her sacrifice herself. Duty&rsquo;s
-her God. She&rsquo;s mother to all those children&mdash;more their
-mother than Aunt Polly in a way&mdash;for my aunt is so
-busy bringing them into the world, that she&rsquo;s got to leave
-all the rest of the work to other people.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s contrary to nature that such a fine woman as Mrs.
-Trivett should hide her light under that bushel,&rdquo; he asserted.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a very selfish thing to let her slave and
-wear her fingers to the bone like that; but it often happens
-so. A husband and wife with a long family always seem
-to fasten on some good-natured, kindly creature and drag
-her in their house to be a slave to their children. There&rsquo;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-no selfishness like the selfishness of a pair with a long quiver.
-They&rsquo;ll fairly batter the life out of anybody who&rsquo;s fool
-enough to lend a hand; and the more such a person does
-for the other woman&rsquo;s children, the more she may do. But
-I should hope your mother was too proud to let herself be
-used as a nursemaid to her own nieces.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s never proud where children are concerned,&rdquo; answered
-Medora. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll stop there till she&rsquo;s worn out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very gloomy picture and I hope you&rsquo;re wrong, Mrs.
-Dingle,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<small>THE LETTER</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>In the vat house there took place the transformation from
-liquid to solid, from pulp to paper, from a gruel-like,
-tenuous compound to a substance strong enough to stand
-strain of many pounds and last for centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Here was the largest building in the Mill&mdash;a very lofty,
-brightly lighted, airy hall, from whose open roof descended
-electric lights hanging above each vat. A steady whirr
-and throb of noisy engines made a din here, but the vatmen
-and their couchers were used to it and could hear
-themselves speak through the familiar riot.</p>
-
-<p>To the right, elevated under the roof, stood the range
-of chests&mdash;huge, round vessels, like little gasometers,
-into which the pulp descended from Ned Dingle when he
-had perfected it. There were eight of these fat monsters
-ranged in a row, and from them flowed the material to the
-vats as it was needed. The vats stood on the floor of the
-chamber&mdash;large, wide-mouthed troughs heated by steam
-from within. For the pulp is warm for the vatman, and
-some of the finest and most enduring papers demand such
-a high temperature that an operative&rsquo;s hands are blistered
-and boiled at his work. Beside each vat is a hand-box of
-cold water, to dip and refresh the vatman&rsquo;s fingers when
-the need arises.</p>
-
-<p>Within the vat revolves the &ldquo;hog,&rdquo; a toothed roller,
-which keeps the heavy pulp mixed and moving, and prevents
-any settlement of the fibre.</p>
-
-<p>On stages before the breasts of the vats stood the paper
-makers, and the wooden bands against which they leaned
-were polished with the friction of their aprons. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-tools were two&mdash;the mould&mdash;a flat, rectangular tray, or
-sieve, of copper wire as fine as gauze, with the water-mark
-let in upon it to tell the story of the future paper, and
-the deckle&mdash;a light wood and metal frame of four sides
-which fitted exactly over the mould and lifted an edge all
-round it to hold the pulp. The moulds varied from the
-size of two open sheets of notepaper, to great squares of
-&ldquo;double elephant,&rdquo; the noblest stuff the Mill produced.
-Moulds for these immense pieces once immersed in the
-pulp, called for great physical power to draw them cleanly
-and steadily back from the clinging fluid with their weight
-of material spread upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was making &ldquo;double elephant&rdquo; in a mighty
-mould. With his thumbs firmly set on the deckle edge,
-he lowered the tray into the snow-white pulp, sloping it
-towards him as he did so. He put it in, sank it flat under
-the pulp and drew it out again with one beautiful,
-rhythmic movement.</p>
-
-<p>The pulp sucked hard at the great mould, to drag it to
-the depths, but the man&rsquo;s strength brought it steadily
-forth; and then he made his &ldquo;stroke&rdquo;&mdash;a complicated
-gesture, which levelled and settled the pulp on the mould
-and let the liquid escape through the gauze. Kellock gave
-a little jog to the right and to the left and ended with an
-indescribable, subtle, quivering movement which completed
-the task. It was the work of two seconds, and in his
-case a beautiful accomplishment full of grace and charm.
-He stood easily and firmly while every muscle of breast
-and arm, back and loins played its appointed part in the
-&ldquo;stroke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Trood often stood and watched Jordan for the
-pleasure of the sight. It was the most perfect style he
-had ever seen. He was a theorist and calculated that
-Kellock produced the very greatest amount of physical
-power for the least possible expenditure of muscular loss;
-while others, who made as good paper as he, squandered
-thousands of pounds of dynamical energy by a stroke full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
-of superfluous gesture. But the stroke is never the same
-in any two vatmen. It develops, with each artificer&rsquo;s
-knowledge of the craft, to produce that highly co-ordinated
-effort embraced in the operation of making a sheet of
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox operated at the next vat and offered an object
-lesson. He did the same things that Kellock did; dipped
-his mould, drew it to him, brought it squarely out, jogged
-to right and left and gave that subtle, complex touch of
-completion; yet in his achievement a wholly different display
-met the observer. It seemed that he performed a
-piece of elaborate ritual before the altar of the vat.</p>
-
-<p>He bowed his head to right and left; he moved his
-tongue and his knees; he jerked his elbows and bent his
-back over the trough as a priest consecrating the elements
-of some sacramental mass. Then he bowed and
-nodded once more and the created sheet emerged from
-his mould. The effect was grotesque, and seen at a little
-distance a stranger had supposed that Mr. Knox was
-simply playing the fool for the amusement of his coucher
-and layer; but in reality he was working hard and making
-as fine and perfect paper as Kellock himself. His
-muscles were tuned to his task; he had lifted his sheer
-weight of forty tons or more by the end of the day and
-was none the worse for it. Nor could he have omitted
-one gesture from his elaborate style without upsetting
-everything and losing his stroke.</p>
-
-<p>So the transformation became accomplished and the
-millions of linen and cotton fibres scooped on to the mould
-ran into a thin mat or wad, which was a piece of paper.
-Why all these fragile and microscopic atoms should become
-so inter-twisted and mingled that they produce an
-integral fabric, it is difficult to understand; but this was
-the result of the former processes; and those to come
-would change the slab of wet, newly created stuff&mdash;now
-no more than a piece of soaked blotting-paper&mdash;to the
-perfected sheet.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>His stroke accomplished and the sediment levelled on
-the mould, Kellock brought his mould to the &ldquo;stay&rdquo;&mdash;a
-brass-bound ledge on his left hand. He lifted the deckle
-from it as he did so and the full mould was drawn up the
-stay to the &ldquo;asp,&rdquo; where his coucher stood. Then Kellock
-clasped the deckle on to his second mould, now returned
-from the coucher, and dipped again, while his assistant,
-taking the full mould from the asp, turned it over on to
-the accumulating pile of sheets rising on his plank. Then
-he ran the empty mould back along the bridge to Kellock&rsquo;s
-hand and drew to himself the next full mould now waiting
-for him on the stay.</p>
-
-<p>So the process was endlessly repeated, and when the
-coucher&rsquo;s pile of paper, with woollen welts between each
-new sheet, had grown large enough, it was removed, drawn
-away on a little trolley, which ran upon rails down the
-centre of the vat house, and taken to a press. Here the
-mass under a steady strain showed that the new sheets
-were still half water, for a fountain poured and spurted
-away on every side as the lever was turned.</p>
-
-<p>From this initial pressing each pile came back to the
-place of its creation and the layer, the third worker in the
-trinity at each vat, separated the paper from the woollens
-between the sheets and handed the felts back to the coucher
-as he needed them for his own task. The three men
-worked together like a machine with rhythmic action and
-wonderful swiftness. Then came the interval; the din of
-the machinery ceased for a while and the vatmen washed
-their hands.</p>
-
-<p>Each manual craft leaves its own marks, by which one
-skilled may tell a worker&rsquo;s business, and the paper maker&rsquo;s
-hands are deeply corned and calloused along the palms
-and joints. They are his stock in trade and he takes the
-utmost care of them, for a bleeding corn, or cut, or any
-wound instantly disables him and he cannot tend the vat
-until they are sound again.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Robert Life was out of action, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-sore on his thumb, and employed for the time at other
-labour; but he joined the men in the dinner hour and
-shared a discussion concerning the supreme disaster which
-may fall to the vatman&rsquo;s lot.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever lose your stroke?&rdquo; asked Life of Mr.
-Knox. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of men that did&mdash;and never got it
-back no more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May it never happen to you, Robert,&rdquo; answered the
-elder, &ldquo;for anything more dreadful and shattering you
-can&rsquo;t imagine. Yes, I lost my stroke eight years ago;
-and I can remember every item of the tragedy as if it was
-yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Along of illness?&rdquo; asked Life, &ldquo;or your own fault?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As I&rsquo;m among friends,&rdquo; replied Philander, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll confess
-that it was my own fault. I tell you these things as
-a warning to you younger men. It was whiskey. I&rsquo;d
-go on the burst sometimes, though never what you&rsquo;d call
-a drinker. But I held an opinion it was better to have
-a fair wallow in it now and again with teetotal intervals,
-than to be always drinking, you see; and once I overdid
-it and lost my stroke. I came to the vat and dipped,
-but the touch was gone. I tried and failed and washed
-off again and again; but I couldn&rsquo;t make paper. They
-came round me and said hopeful things, and I stood like
-a stuck pig among &rsquo;em and the sweat poured down my
-face. Then I dropped the mould and sneaked away and
-felt as if the end of the world had come. For I knew
-bitter well that often and often the stroke once lost is
-never got back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You got yours back, however?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In my terror I signed the pledge and promised the
-Almighty a lot of very fine things if He&rsquo;d be merciful and
-let me regain my skill. My self-respect was gone and I&rsquo;d
-have grovelled to God, or anybody who could help me.
-My foreman was a very good chap and understood the
-nature of the disaster. He cheered me and felt so positive
-sure I should get it back, that I began to think I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-should myself. For in such case half the battle is to
-have cheerful, hopeful people about you, who&rsquo;ll make light
-of the tragedy and say it&rsquo;s going to be all right. The
-moral effect of that helps you to hope against hope and
-recover your nerve, when you come to try again. It&rsquo;s
-all nerve really, and if you can get back your nerve, then
-you&rsquo;ll probably get back your stroke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;At the third trial I got mine back anyway, and &rsquo;twas
-a very fine example of the best in human nature to see
-how my coucher and layer shook hands with me when I
-made my first sheet and how glad my fellow vatmen were
-about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And did you keep all your good promises?&rdquo; asked
-Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For practical purposes, yes,&rdquo; answered Philander.
-&ldquo;I improved a good bit after that adventure and never
-went on the burst again. The pledge, however, I did not
-keep, because by experiment I found I could work better
-on beer than water; but spirits are a thing of the past.
-I don&rsquo;t drink more than a whiskey or two a week now-a-days.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock, at one stage in his secret thoughts at this season,
-had found his heart faint somewhat, for by temperament
-thus far he had been a thinker rather than a doer.
-His work ended, his leisure had been largely devoted to
-the welfare of his class, and he doubted not that he would
-turn a great part of his energies to labour questions
-and even abandon paper-making for a political career
-some day. Such was his dream; but for the present that
-had been swept aside.</p>
-
-<p>Thoughts of his own future gave him no lasting uneasiness.
-Whether he stopped at Dene, or went elsewhere,
-after running away with Mrs. Dingle, mattered nothing
-to him. His skill commanded a ready market and he
-could get work for the asking. He guessed, indeed, that
-Medora must desire to live as far from the haunts of her
-tragedy as possible; but he also knew that Matthew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-Trenchard would wish to keep him if he could. A more
-pressing problem concerned the future of Medora&rsquo;s husband.
-Kellock&rsquo;s orderly mind above all things would have
-liked to go to Ned, state the case clearly, prove to him
-that he was never destined to make his wife a happy
-woman and frankly suggest a change of partners for
-Medora. He was actually tempted to do this, and even
-went so far as to suggest it to Mrs. Dingle; but she, hiding
-a secret amazement at any enterprise so unromantic,
-assured him that such an action could only serve greatly
-to complicate their future if it did not actually ruin their
-plans altogether.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he was like you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and could listen to
-sense it might work; but you don&rsquo;t want to get your head
-broken, Jordan, and that&rsquo;s all that would happen. The
-more he knows he&rsquo;s wrong and being wicked to me, the
-more he&rsquo;d fight to keep me. He&rsquo;s got into a horrible way
-of torturing me now. He properly feeds on my sufferings
-I believe. It&rsquo;s now or never, for he&rsquo;s breaking me
-down and I shan&rsquo;t be company for any man much longer.
-Don&rsquo;t think I want to make a scene, or add difficulties to
-your life. God knows I only want to be your right hand,
-and help you, and work as best I can for all the noble
-things you mean to do. But before that happens, you&rsquo;ve
-got to play the hero a bit I&rsquo;m afraid, and meet his brute
-force with your bravery and courage.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In fact Medora would not have missed the necessary
-theatricals for the world, and a peaceful interchange of
-husbands did not at all appeal to her. She had no desire
-to forego the excitement or the fame. She had
-thought a thousand times of the hum at the Mill when
-her place knew her no more, and there came the news that
-she had left her husband for a better and greater man.
-Probably she loved Kellock after a fashion; certainly she
-believed she did. In the unreal atmosphere that she now
-breathed, it seemed to her that Kellock was about to play
-Perseus to her Andromeda; but she had no wish that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
-matter should be settled amicably with the dragon. Jordan
-must do his part; otherwise her rle would be lessened
-and reduced below the dignity proper to it.</p>
-
-<p>Since Ned was to blame for everything, reason demanded
-that retribution fall upon him. Only so could
-justice&mdash;poetical or otherwise&mdash;be done. If her departure
-were not to inflict adequate punishment upon him,
-then the salt was out of the situation. To Kellock this
-sounded vindictive, but he could not deny that it was human
-and natural. He remembered that Medora must not
-be expected to consider Ned&rsquo;s feelings; though secretly he
-wished that she had been able to do so.</p>
-
-<p>But Medora was out for blood and her carnivorous instincts
-extended even to Kellock himself. He too must
-suffer, that she might complete her performance with
-due triumph. She pictured Jordan ostracised and turning
-to her for comfort and support. She saw herself
-doubted, misunderstood, but presently triumphing over
-everybody. She imagined Kellock lifted to heights unattainable
-without her steadfast aid. She felt a boundless
-confidence in her own intelligence and inspiration to
-help him. But he must certainly run away with her as
-a preliminary. He must outrage convention, focus all
-eyes and appear in the lurid light that beats on people
-who have the courage to do such things. She told him
-so and assisted at the simple preliminaries.</p>
-
-<p>He was about to take a fortnight&rsquo;s holiday and it was
-decided that a day after he left Dene, Medora would join
-him at Newton Abbot and proceed to London with him.</p>
-
-<p>He agreed to this arrangement as the most seemly, and
-together they concocted the letter which Mr. Dingle would
-receive by post on the morning of Medora&rsquo;s disappearance.
-She invited Jordan to assist her in this composition, but
-was sorry afterwards that she had done so, for her lover
-differed from her on certain particulars and deprecated
-the writing of several things that she desired to write.</p>
-
-<p>They planned the communication in the secrecy of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-Priory ruin on a Sunday afternoon, and it was some time
-before the man had produced a clean draft for Medora to
-take away and copy. She wished to insert a demand,
-couched somewhat insolently, that Mr. Dingle would divorce
-his wife as swiftly as possible; but Kellock forbade
-this, because he felt that advice to Ned under such circumstances
-was undignified and altogether improper.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t do that,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You must be reasonable
-and take it in a high-minded way. It&rsquo;s for you to
-tell him what you&rsquo;re going to do and the reason; but it
-ain&rsquo;t for you to tell him what he&rsquo;s got to do. You can
-safely leave that to him. You see in these cases, when
-they get in the papers, that a man and woman always go
-to an hotel together; and when that&rsquo;s proved, the other
-man divorces her as a matter of course. That&rsquo;s all there
-is to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At other points also he declined to support Medora&rsquo;s
-wishes. She had designed some rather flagrant sentiments
-for this letter and felt that her action needed them. It
-was to be the letter of her life and, as she said, it had
-become her first wish to make Dingle feel what he had
-made her feel. But Kellock was calm and collected upon
-the subject, and finding composition of the letter awakened
-very considerably passion in Medora, he begged her
-to let him draft it and accept his idea of what such a
-document should be.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It may be read in open Court some day,&rdquo; he said&mdash;a
-possibility that cheered her.</p>
-
-<p>She agreed therefore and hid her disappointment at
-what she regarded as a very colourless indictment. Jordan&rsquo;s
-idea was something as lifeless as a lawyer&rsquo;s letter,
-but equally crushing in its cold and remorseless statement
-of fact. Not a shadow of emotion marked it. There
-was nothing but the statement that finding she failed to
-please or satisfy her husband, and knowing their continued
-union could only destroy their happiness and self-control
-and self-respect, therefore&mdash;for both their sakes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>&mdash;Medora
-had decided to leave Ned and cast in her lot
-with Jordan Kellock, who was willing and anxious to make
-her his wife. Neither anger nor sorrow appeared in this
-communication as it left Kellock&rsquo;s hands.</p>
-
-<p>She took the letter and thanked him gratefully for helping
-her. Then they tore up into very tiny fragments the
-various attempts before the finished article and so parted&mdash;not
-to meet again until they met for ever.</p>
-
-<p>And Medora, when alone, read his letter again and liked
-it less than before. That night her husband was out and
-she began her transcription, but when it came actually to
-copying Kellock&rsquo;s sentences, their icy restraint began to
-annoy her. She stopped once or twice to ask herself how
-it was possible for any human being to write in a manner
-so detached. First she praised him for such amazing
-power and such remarkable reserve; then she reminded herself
-that this was to be her letter to her husband, not
-Jordan&rsquo;s. Jordan proposed to write himself from London.
-She wondered a great deal what Jordan&rsquo;s letter
-would be like. If the letter he had written for her made
-her shiver, surely the letter he wrote for himself would
-be a freezing matter. She told herself that Kellock was
-a saint. She felt uneasily proud of him already. She
-kept his heroism in her mind, and felt proud of herself,
-too, that such a man was willing to let her share his future,
-brilliant as it must certainly be.</p>
-
-<p>But the letter&mdash;her letter&mdash;stuck. She began arguing
-with herself about it. She told herself that it was not
-her style and Ned would know it. Obviously Ned must
-not suppose that Kellock had written the letter. She
-noted down a few sentences of the sort of letter she would
-have written without anybody&rsquo;s assistance&mdash;the letter
-she had dreamed of writing&mdash;and it pleased her much.
-She found such a flow of words as seemed proper to the
-tremendous occasion. They glittered and flashed like
-knives. Invective and self-justification shared the burning
-pages. She surprised herself at the force and vigour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-of the phrases. Turning again to Kellock&rsquo;s composition,
-she now found it hopelessly inadequate as compared with
-her own. It was true that she had promised Jordan to
-post it; but she changed her mind and determined to
-despatch her own production, as better suited to the
-parting, far more forcible, far more dramatic and far
-more the sort of letter she pictured Ned as showing to
-other people, after the blow had fallen.</p>
-
-<p>She paltered with the situation to the extent of writing
-another letter embodying a part of Kellock&rsquo;s. And
-then she copied this, and copied it again. She destroyed
-the debris, including Kellock&rsquo;s original draft, and left
-one letter perfect in every way&mdash;an exceedingly outrageous
-production.</p>
-
-<p>She sealed it up and next morning assured herself that,
-for all practical purposes, it was the letter Kellock had
-designed. From a decision to tell him that she had added
-a phrase or two, she doubted whether it was worth while.
-Finally she determined not to tell him that she had altered
-the letter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no good making needless complications,&rdquo; she
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>She was very happy and excited. She lived in a dream
-for a week, and the reality of the things she had decided
-to do lay altogether outside her calculations and anticipations.</p>
-
-<p>Probably her greatest joy at this juncture centred, not
-so much in the happiness she had planned for herself and
-Jordan, as the thought of what people would say at Dene
-about their flight. She felt that to be invisible among her
-acquaintances on the morning of her departure, would have
-been even a greater delight than the first day in London
-with her future husband.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<small>LYDIA&rsquo;S DAY</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Lydia Trivett always remembered the seventeenth day of
-March as the most remarkable anniversary in her career.
-For upon that day she experienced such a succession of
-extraordinary and unexpected shocks and strains, that,
-looking back afterwards, she marvelled how any human
-mind was strong enough to endure them and not break
-down under such massive and accumulated provocation.</p>
-
-<p>Enough adventures overtook Lydia on the seventeenth
-of March to suffice a well balanced woman for ten years.</p>
-
-<p>The day was Sunday and opened without incident; but
-hardly had Mrs. Trivett got her brother&rsquo;s children off to
-church, when Tom Dolbear descended from his wife with
-the news that he was going for the doctor and calling for
-the nurse.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To-day makes or mars me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If &rsquo;tis another
-girl, Lydia, I don&rsquo;t know how I&rsquo;ll bear up against
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Be hopeful,&rdquo; she urged. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a law called the
-law of averages, so Mr. Knox tells me, and according to
-that, a boy&rsquo;s very nearly certain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Dolbear did not understand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell the man he&rsquo;s a fool then,&rdquo; he answered as he laced
-up his boots. &ldquo;Children can&rsquo;t be regulated by law, though
-it&rsquo;s just like the cussed conceit of lawyers to think they
-can. And God help us if they could ordain these things,
-for they&rsquo;d drive tidy hard bargains I&rsquo;ll warrant.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a law of nature, not of lawyers,&rdquo; explained his
-sister. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know nothing about it myself, but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-common sense is that after such a lot of girls, you&rsquo;ve a
-right to expect a boy, and no doubt so it will be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He departed and Lydia went to Mary. She was in no
-way concerned for her, because Mrs. Dolbear managed
-these matters very successfully and with the least possible
-trouble to herself. Nature invariably smiled upon her
-and her present anxiety merely echoed her husband&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God send it&rsquo;s a man-child, or else I shan&rsquo;t hear the
-last of it,&rdquo; she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>All was ready to welcome the new-comer and in half an
-hour Mrs. Dolbear&rsquo;s ally, Mrs. Damerell from the village,
-joined her. The children came home from church and
-Lydia gave them their dinner and told them that a new
-brother or sister was about to arrive. They shared the
-family ambition and prayed Aunt Lydia to let it be a
-brother.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I think it will be,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but that&rsquo;s for God to
-decide.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody don&rsquo;t want no more girls,&rdquo; declared the eldest
-daughter, and her aunt told her not to speak so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tisn&rsquo;t what we want; &rsquo;tis what our Father in Heaven
-wants, Milly. And if He sends father and mother a little
-girl, we must welcome it just so hearty as you and your
-sisters were welcomed in your turn.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dolbear was restless, but he ate as good a dinner
-as usual and then, having heard that all was going well,
-went into the orchard with his pipe. The children were
-despatched to Sunday school and presently an old doctor
-arrived, visited Mary and then joined the farmer under
-the apple trees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A matter of form,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I come as a matter of
-form, Tom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dolbear enquired as to the law of averages, and
-the medical man advised him to set no faith upon it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When you&rsquo;re dealing with the statistics and the population
-as a whole, such things work out pretty regular, I
-grant you,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;but when you&rsquo;re dealing with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-one woman, who has got into a habit, then it&rsquo;s not wise
-to indulge in general principles. Habit is stronger than
-anything but death, Tom; and though you may fairly
-hope for a son, I may say in sporting language that the
-betting is a shade against.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You think &rsquo;twill be a girl, doctor?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do&mdash;not long odds, but about two to one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Within doors Lydia was standing reading a letter with
-shaking hands, while silent, strained, staring, humped up
-in the chair opposite her, sat Ned Dingle. He had come
-from Ashprington, burst in upon her while she was helping
-a maiden to wash up, ordered her to follow him to the
-parlour and then broken the fatal news.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s gone&mdash;run away&mdash;Medora,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;She
-rose afore I was awake this morning, and when I came
-down house, I got this to breakfast. The post-man
-brought it, just as I was wondering what the mischief
-had become of her. Read it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He handed Lydia Medora&rsquo;s epistle and sat and watched
-her while she read it. He did not interrupt but kept his
-eyes on her face and gnawed his knuckles as she read.</p>
-
-<p>When she had finished, she let the fatal sheet fall on the
-ground and took off her glasses. Then she bent down and
-picked up the letter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A cheerful, damned sort of thing for a husband to
-get,&rdquo; said Ned. &ldquo;Going to marry Kellock, you see.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, she&rsquo;ll marry Kellock when you please and
-not before,&rdquo; answered Lydia quietly. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know
-what to say to you, Ned. This is beyond anything. I
-never guessed for a moment she&rsquo;d sink to such wickedness.
-God&rsquo;s my judge I didn&rsquo;t know she was having any truck
-with that man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The nurse looked in.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s doctor?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In the orchard with Mr. Dolbear,&rdquo; answered Lydia.
-Mrs. Damerell departed and she turned again to Ned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s an insulting letter. I&rsquo;m terribly shocked. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
-don&rsquo;t pretend to understand the rising generation, my
-dear. After they grow out of childhood, they get too
-deep for me. But I couldn&rsquo;t have thought any daughter
-of mine and my husband&rsquo;s would ever have done this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all very plain to understand now,&rdquo; he answered.
-&ldquo;She wanted that man and she couldn&rsquo;t chuck me without
-some sort of excuse, so she worked up this idea, that
-I was a brute and tormenting her to death and so on.
-Then she made Kellock believe it; and though he kept
-perfectly straight, so far as I know, while he thought Medora
-was happily married to me, as soon as she began
-about me being a cruel devil that made her life hell and
-all that, then Kellock no doubt believed her. Why, he
-went so far as to lecture me a while back along, and I
-knocked him in the water for doing so. I&rsquo;ll swear he
-had no thought to run away with her then&mdash;unless he&rsquo;s
-the biggest traitor that ever walked the earth. But he
-ain&rsquo;t that sort. I simply can&rsquo;t see that man doing this
-job.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you can keep so cool and sensible, Ned.
-Nothing&rsquo;s gained by getting angered, though I&rsquo;m angered
-I promise you, and anger&rsquo;s a righteous thing sometimes.
-I&rsquo;m struck to the heart over this; and if I&rsquo;d thought for
-an instant &rsquo;twas in her wicked mind even as a shadow,
-I&rsquo;d have given you due notice. But I never dreamed it.
-I&rsquo;ve talked to her again and again and tried to show her
-sense; but she&rsquo;s doomed herself by her own nature.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The mischief is I couldn&rsquo;t read her,&rdquo; answered Mr.
-Dingle. &ldquo;Not that I didn&rsquo;t at first. She married me
-for love&mdash;no other reason&mdash;and for the first six months&mdash;nay
-ten&mdash;of our life together, I read her like a book.
-But after that she changed. And she got stranger and
-stranger, as we went on, till be damned if I didn&rsquo;t find myself
-living with a different woman! And, mind this, I was
-never rough nor harsh to her, till she&rsquo;d egged me on to
-being so. I put up with a devil of a lot and kept my
-temper in a manner that surprised myself if not her; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-she was out to make me lose it, because, till I did so, the
-things she wanted to happen couldn&rsquo;t. And after a bit
-I did lose it. Who wouldn&rsquo;t? Yet God&rsquo;s my judge I
-was never very much enraged with her, because I always
-felt she was play-acting and making believe half the time;
-and that had a funny side; and sometimes it amused me
-more than it angered me. And above that was the sure
-knowledge that any open quarrel would be an unmanly
-thing and might lead to lasting trouble; and above that,
-again, was the fact that I loved Medora well. I never
-ceased to love her in her maddest tantrums.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then comes this letter, and I can assure you it&rsquo;s a
-bolt from the blue. And yet it&rsquo;s all unreal somehow&mdash;I
-can&rsquo;t grasp it home to me. I can&rsquo;t believe it. I could
-almost laugh and say to myself it&rsquo;s a dream and I shall
-wake up alongside Medora any minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His face was full of pain, as yet he showed more stunned
-surprise than anger.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I knew her so well&mdash;think of it,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;She
-must have her bit of fun and her bit of flattery; and she
-got both with me. But him&mdash;good God Almighty&mdash;she
-turned him down once for all eighteen months ago, and
-she told me why in very good plain words. And now she&rsquo;s
-gone to him. Yet he&rsquo;s not changed. He can&rsquo;t change.
-There&rsquo;s men I can see her with perhaps&mdash;though none as
-easy as I can see her with me&mdash;but him&mdash;Kellock&mdash;he&rsquo;ll
-never satisfy her. It&rsquo;s impossible.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right there,&rdquo; said Lydia. &ldquo;My daughter&rsquo;s
-not the sort to be content to shine with her husband&rsquo;s reflected
-light. The little fool wants to be somebody herself.
-It&rsquo;s vanity quite as much as wickedness has made her do
-this. But she won&rsquo;t shine with Kellock anyway; and
-after doing such a hateful, wicked thing, he won&rsquo;t shine
-either. His light&rsquo;s out now in the eyes of all self-respecting,
-honourable people.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, it isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;It will make a deuce of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-a lot of difference to Medora, but not to him, because
-he&rsquo;s the sort that don&rsquo;t let any outward thing alter their
-inward disposition. He&rsquo;s thought it all out. He knows
-there&rsquo;s not half a dozen men in the kingdom can make
-paper like him, and so he&rsquo;s safe and beyond any punishment
-whatever he does. He&rsquo;s done nothing the law can
-touch him for. And when I touch him, the law will be on
-his side against me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned was still amazingly calm. Indeed his self-control
-astonished her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So far I don&rsquo;t know what&rsquo;s happening,&rdquo; he proceeded.
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know where they are, or what they have planned.
-I&rsquo;m keeping an open mind. I shall see him presently. I
-may swing for him yet; or I may find&mdash;Lord knows what
-I may find. It&rsquo;s all hidden so far.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I feel as if I was twenty years older for this news&mdash;older
-and broken too,&rdquo; said Lydia. &ldquo;If there was time,
-I&rsquo;d weep a river for this, and I shall yet; but not now.
-There&rsquo;s a baby coming upstairs, and you can&rsquo;t think of
-two things to once and do &rsquo;em both justice. I&rsquo;ll see you
-to-morrow in the dinner hour. Perhaps you&rsquo;ll hear more
-by then. Kellock was a man very nice on speech, as well
-as manners. He&rsquo;ll feel it&rsquo;s up to him to&mdash;there, what
-am I saying?&mdash;the strangeness! Well may you say as
-though you was in a dream. So I feel; and I won&rsquo;t
-throw up hope either. God often waits till the very last
-minute afore He throws the light of truth into a mind.
-He may prevail with Medora, and so I wouldn&rsquo;t say nothing
-yet&mdash;nothing to nobody.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m dazed,&rdquo; he told her. &ldquo;I scarce know what I&rsquo;ve
-been doing since breakfast. Here&rsquo;s your children coming
-back from Sunday school. I&rsquo;ll be gone. It&rsquo;s a bad job&mdash;an
-ugly, cruel job; but grasp hold of this tight, and
-whether you tell or whether you do not tell, remember the
-fault weren&rsquo;t mine. I never treated her bad, not yet bullied
-her, nor played tyrant upon her; and if she said I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-did, she was a liar; and if ever I handled her rough, I was
-sorry after; and the worst ever I did weren&rsquo;t a twentieth
-part of what she deserved.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know all that,&rdquo; said Lydia; then the children clattered
-down the passage with shrill questions: &ldquo;Be the
-baby come?&rdquo; &ldquo;Be it a boy?&rdquo; &ldquo;Oh, say &rsquo;tis a boy,
-Aunt Lydia!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned went off through the orchards, while his mother-in-law,
-scarce knowing what she did, gave the children
-their tea.</p>
-
-<p>Under the trees Mr. Dolbear padded up and down.
-He was in no fear for Mary, but suffering the extremity
-of anxiety as to the sex of the coming child.</p>
-
-<p>Ned told him the news.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My wife&rsquo;s run away from me, Tom,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have she? Fancy! The Lord gives and the Lord
-takes away. Blessed be the Name. I never did like Medora,
-and you&rsquo;ll bear me out. Where&rsquo;s she run then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. She&rsquo;s gone with Jordan Kellock, the
-vatman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God&rsquo;ll see to it&mdash;trust Him, and don&rsquo;t take the law
-in your own hands.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked for ten minutes; then a child appeared at
-the gate by the house. It was Milly, Mr. Dolbear&rsquo;s favourite.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The news be come,&rdquo; cried Tom, and ignoring Dingle,
-he hastened to his daughter, while Ned departed. The
-first shock was over and his deep disgrace and bitter wrong
-began to grind into him. So far he had kept amazingly
-temperate. But he was to experience many moods before
-he slept that night.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime Milly in tears broke bad news to the farmer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s another beastly little girl come,&rdquo; she piped,
-and her father gazed tragically at her and turned silently
-to his home. Lydia met him at the door.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did Ned tell you of this awful misfortune?&rdquo; she
-asked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Milly told me, and I say here
-and now that it&rsquo;s an outrage and undeserved.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking of Medora, Tom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Dolbear had no room in his mind for Medora. The
-children were all cast down and some wept.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must go and comfort the woman,&rdquo; said Mary&rsquo;s husband.
-&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll feel this only less than I do. And I should
-like to hear parson justify it&mdash;not that he could. Just
-a piece of saucy cruelty against them who&rsquo;ve done nought
-to deserve it. That&rsquo;s what it is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you go souring her mind against the baby,&rdquo;
-urged Lydia. &ldquo;That wouldn&rsquo;t be kind after all her trouble
-and patience. Say you&rsquo;re pleased, Tom, and cheer
-her up.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twould only be a lie if I did and nobody would know
-it better than her. I&rsquo;ll go up and forget myself and comfort
-her as best I can&mdash;and God&rsquo;s my judge, Lydia, I
-won&rsquo;t have no more children.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you say what you&rsquo;ll be sorry for.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I mean it. Them that plant the seed have a right to
-call the crops in my opinion; and there did ought to be
-fair give and take between the creature and his Creator.
-There weren&rsquo;t no rhyme nor reason in planting another
-girl on me, and I ain&rsquo;t going to be the plaything of the
-Almighty no more&mdash;and more shan&rsquo;t Mary. We&rsquo;ve done&mdash;through
-no fault of our own neither.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He ascended to a weary and apologetic partner who
-shared his view of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the living daps of the last,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;A nice
-little, heavy girl; but I can&rsquo;t do no more, Tom; I can&rsquo;t
-fight against Providence.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No you can&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he declared, &ldquo;and what&rsquo;s more, you
-shan&rsquo;t. You&rsquo;ve broke the law of averages by all accounts;
-and that&rsquo;s about the limit. And Somebody shall see that
-two can play at that game in the future. Providence have
-shut down on the boys; and I&rsquo;ll shut down on the girls.
-It ain&rsquo;t going to be all one way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>Mrs. Dolbear shed tears, but she shared his indignation
-and did not blame his attitude to the baby.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Damerell was shocked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t open my mouth so wide if I was you,
-farmer,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Who are you to dictate what
-you want? Here&rsquo;s a fine female child come into the world,
-to be your right hand and the joy of your life for all you
-know to the contrary. I&rsquo;m sure I never yet saw a pair
-receive a child in such a way, since the day that Honor
-Michelmore got one with no thumbs and cussed God.
-But in your case, Nature have always done her part to
-the full, and you&rsquo;re saying things you didn&rsquo;t ought, Mr.
-Dolbear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;re so pleased with it, you&rsquo;d better take it home
-with you,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;It never can be no favourite
-of mine now, and I won&rsquo;t pretend different.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Beneath Lydia was seeking to allay the disappointment
-of the family.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder if she was the nicest little sister
-any of you ever had, my dears. A proper little fairy very
-likely, and the one you&rsquo;ll all like best.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They vowed it never could be and Milly said: &ldquo;Father
-hates her a&rsquo;ready, so I be going to do the same.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Mrs. Trivett preached very seriously against this
-inhuman spirit and was still preaching when there came
-Philander Knox.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought the better the day the better the deed,&rdquo; he
-explained, &ldquo;and I hoped your young people would be going
-to church after their tea, so I might have a yarn with
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very kind of you, I&rsquo;m sure. Perhaps you&rsquo;ll be able
-to distract my brother&rsquo;s mind a thought. He&rsquo;s very much
-under the weather. And I dare say it would be a good
-thing if a few of you was to go to church.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Milly, who loved church, but did not often attend evening
-service, was pleased at this plan and she took her
-younger sisters with her. Tom came down, smoked a pipe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
-and grew calmer in the company of Mr. Knox; Lydia put
-the other children to bed&mdash;for the present the penultimate
-baby was in her room&mdash;and then Philander&rsquo;s opportunity
-arrived, and after Mr. Dolbear had gone up the
-village, he enjoyed Lydia&rsquo;s society for half an hour before
-interruption came.</p>
-
-<p>She told him what had happened to Medora and he
-wondered, while he discussed the tragedy, whether it might
-not, after all, help rather than hinder his own designs.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;At first sight,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the human instinct is always
-to say that anything out of the common must be wrong;
-but that&rsquo;s only our natural cowardice and love of letting
-life alone. And I, for one, am not going to say that because
-a woman changes husbands, or a man changes wives,
-it follows they are doing the wrong thing. Often a pinch
-of pluck will break a partnership to the advantage of both
-parties, and it&rsquo;s a darned sight better than shaking their
-chains and making a nuisance of themselves in the face
-of the people. An unhappy marriage is a bad advertisement
-for the institution, and a man like me, who believes
-heart and soul in marriage, is always sorry to see an unhappy
-marriage go on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But if every young pair who quarrelled before their
-first child came was to part like this, the world couldn&rsquo;t
-go on. Those that God have joined let no man put
-asunder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No man can,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t worry
-about that. If God joins up a man and woman, man can&rsquo;t
-put &rsquo;em asunder, nor yet anything else. They&rsquo;re one
-body and soul till death parts &rsquo;em. But because a pair
-marry, it don&rsquo;t follow that God have had anything to do
-with it. There&rsquo;s a lot of other institutions besides God.
-We make mistakes in all walks of life and in none oftener
-than in marriage. And in my opinion it&rsquo;s one of the
-things, like any other partnership, that God don&rsquo;t specially
-take under His protection. Love is a trick of nature,
-and Nature says to herself, &lsquo;if at first you don&rsquo;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-succeed, try again.&rsquo; Nature&rsquo;s trying again with your
-daughter, Mrs. Trivett.&rdquo; </p>
-
-<p>She sighed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish to Heaven as Nature had left her alone then,
-for she was married to a good man, and whatever she feels
-about him, there&rsquo;s no doubt he was ready and willing
-enough to love her to the end of his life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It often happens,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and of course that
-sort of parting&rsquo;s the saddest, where one party don&rsquo;t want
-to part and t&rsquo;other does. When both are fed up, then
-they can break loose with self-respect and mutual applause;
-but if one&rsquo;s got to run away from the other, then
-the case is altered. But no doubt Ned Dingle will rise
-to it. He&rsquo;s clever enough to know that it&rsquo;s useless keeping
-a wife if she&rsquo;s breaking her heart to escape. The fact
-that Medora has done this venturesome act and gone to
-another man, will show your son-in-law the game&rsquo;s up.
-If she&rsquo;d just gone off on her own, he might have hunted
-after her and won her back perhaps&mdash;if he wanted her
-back; but since she&rsquo;s gone with somebody else and is ready
-to face all that means&mdash;well, that leaves her husband in
-no doubt of her meaning, don&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;None whatever,&rdquo; admitted Lydia. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got a
-brain, Mr. Knox, so perhaps you&rsquo;ll tell me what you think
-of Kellock. She was divided between &rsquo;em in the past and
-decided for Ned&mdash;wisely as I thought, because it always
-seemed to me that Jordan Kellock was too wrapped up in
-reading and learning and high views about labour to
-make a young woman happy. If you&rsquo;d asked me, I should
-have said it weren&rsquo;t in him to run away with another man&rsquo;s
-wife. I should have thought he was such a well-drilled
-man in his mind that he&rsquo;d have stopped loving Medora the
-moment he heard she was going to marry Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Kellock,&rdquo; answered Philander Knox, &ldquo;is all you say;
-but he&rsquo;s young and he&rsquo;s got a romantical turn, though it
-takes the practical shape of wanting to better the world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-at large. That&rsquo;s all true, but he&rsquo;s short of thirty still,
-and, under thirty, you never can say with certainty a
-man is complete in his make-up. He loved her, and if
-he thought she&rsquo;d took a fatal mistake and married the
-wrong one, and if she told him so, as no doubt she did,
-then it&rsquo;s not out of his character to find himself loving her
-again. And the instinct to fight the cause of the weak,
-which is a part of the man, wouldn&rsquo;t be any less strong
-because he happened to love the weak party for herself.
-So it all fits in very natural so far, and your daughter
-may trust Kellock to champion her and be very tender and
-jealous and all that. He&rsquo;ll treat her well without a
-doubt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what sort of a husband will he make for my
-girl?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That I can&rsquo;t say,&rdquo; answered Knox. &ldquo;For the reason
-that I don&rsquo;t know what your girl wants. If Ned didn&rsquo;t
-suit her, then as Kellock&rsquo;s just the opposite of him in
-every way, perhaps he will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ned did suit her&mdash;that&rsquo;s the shocking thing,&rdquo; declared
-Lydia. &ldquo;He suited her so perfectly that he suited
-her too well, if you can understand that. There was all
-sunshine and no shade, and Medora, so far as I can see,
-instead of blessing her good luck got sick of so much uneventful
-happiness, like a child gets sick of too much
-barley-sugar. Then she turned by a sort of restless instinct
-to find a bit of change. Of course she&rsquo;s said for
-months that she was miserable; but she invented most of
-her misery in my opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very interesting, and no doubt you know. But we
-middle-aged people can always see the young looking for
-trouble. &rsquo;Tis part of their natural curiosity and daring.
-They don&rsquo;t know they&rsquo;re born in fact, and that&rsquo;s a
-thing you can&rsquo;t teach a person. Each has got to learn
-it themselves. And some never do. We&rsquo;ll watch and
-pray, Mrs. Trivett. That&rsquo;s about all we can do for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-the young. And now I&rsquo;ll tell you what I came about.
-And I&rsquo;ll also promise that, so far as it lies in my power,
-I&rsquo;ll befriend Medora if she comes back here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She can&rsquo;t come back&mdash;she can&rsquo;t do that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave her&mdash;you never know what the young can do,
-and what they can&rsquo;t do. I&rsquo;m here about you, not her.
-We&rsquo;ve not known each other above six months, but knowledge
-of our fellow creatures ain&rsquo;t a matter of time. &rsquo;Tis
-understanding of character and like to like and so on.
-Another, finding you in trouble to-day, would hold off
-no doubt. But, just because you are in trouble, I&rsquo;m
-going to hold on and say what I came to say. I respect
-and admire you very much out of the common, Mrs. Trivett,
-and I feel that it&rsquo;s a crying shame to see you in this
-rabbit hutch, living the life of a maid-of-all-work for other
-people, when you ought to be the mistress of your own
-home. I say you ought to have a man to work for you,
-and look after you, and not let you toil and wear your
-fingers to the bone, either here, over your brother&rsquo;s children,
-or in the rag shop. Your sense of justice must cry
-out against it, and so it ought and I feel it very much to
-heart. You drew me, from the first minutes I set eyes
-on you, for I saw all that you were and found, as I knew
-you better, you were even better than I thought. And,
-in a word, if you&rsquo;ll throw over these Dolbears and come
-to me, I can promise a very faithful and friendly husband
-and one who will make it his first business and pleasure
-in life to give you a good time. &rsquo;Tis thought silly of a
-man over fifty-two to speak of love; but rest assured that
-such a man knows a darned sight more about it than green
-youth. You&rsquo;ve had a good husband and I&rsquo;ve had a good
-wife, according to her lights; then what&rsquo;s to prevent us
-joining forces if you think half so well of me as I do of
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia was inconsequent.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If anybody had told me when I opened my eyes this
-morning what the day was going to bring forth,&rdquo; she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-said, &ldquo;God&rsquo;s my judge I shouldn&rsquo;t have had the heart,
-or courage to put on my clothes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you would,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the sort to
-meet all that comes steadfast and patient, with the pluck
-of an army. You&rsquo;d have rose up as usual. And what
-about it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing on earth is farther from my thoughts at present
-than a second,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I regard myself as
-an old woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only because you live among all these messy children.
-You&rsquo;re not old: you&rsquo;re in your prime, and if you
-was to rest your flesh a bit, instead of wearing it out
-morning, noon and night, you&rsquo;d very soon be surprised
-to find what a comely creature you&rsquo;d find yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all past. Duty is duty and God&rsquo;s found the
-work to do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God&rsquo;s also found me,&rdquo; answered Mr. Knox, &ldquo;and you
-must weigh me along with everything else. And if, as I
-see in your face, your inclination is to say &lsquo;no,&rsquo; then I beg
-you&rsquo;ll not say it&mdash;at any rate not this evening. You&rsquo;re
-far too nice to decide the future career of a fellow creature,
-let alone your own, without turning it over fairly
-in your mind. I didn&rsquo;t ask you to say &lsquo;yes,&rsquo; all of a
-minute, because this is sprung upon you&mdash;you expected
-no such thing; but though I didn&rsquo;t count on &lsquo;yes,&rsquo; Lydia,
-I&rsquo;m equally determined not to hear &lsquo;no.&rsquo; So you can
-think all round it, and I wish you&rsquo;d got more time to do
-so. However you&rsquo;re a fair woman&mdash;fair and just to
-all but yourself&mdash;so I very well leave it at that for the
-present.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To think a good-looking, clever man like you should
-have looked at a little every-day woman like me!&rdquo; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t be every day no more if you&rsquo;re Mrs. Knox,&rdquo;
-he promised. &ldquo;Far from it. You should go in a carriage
-and pair if it could be done, and though I can&rsquo;t
-promise that, I can promise a nice house, and a bit of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-garden, and a professed cook to look after the kitchen
-and do your bidding. Think upon it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t hope, however; &rsquo;tis a very unlikely thing that
-I should change my state with so many calls.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come to your own conclusions anyway,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
-know what human nature is very well and I know what you
-are in this house. But don&rsquo;t let selfishness on the part of
-other people decide you against me. That would be very
-unfair to me, and you can&rsquo;t be unfair to a man that thinks
-of you as I do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do nothing unfair to you, Mr. Knox. In fact I&rsquo;ll
-do nothing at all for the present. My sister-in-law
-mustn&rsquo;t hear a word in her weak state, or the consequences
-might be bad; and my brother&rsquo;s cast down also,
-and so am I. In fact trouble&rsquo;s everywhere.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Regard me as the silver lining to the cloud then. I
-quite see it was a bit of a staggerer this coming to-day
-of all days; but at any rate you know now you&rsquo;ve got a
-valuable friend. And such I shall remain, whatever happens.
-Now, no doubt, you&rsquo;re itching to get supper for
-all them brats, so I&rsquo;ll go my way. And I pray God&rsquo;s
-blessing on your thoughts, Lydia&mdash;I do indeed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Yes, you go now. I
-can&rsquo;t stand no more, else I shall break down&mdash;a thing
-I&rsquo;m never known to do. I dare say I&rsquo;ll see you at the
-works to-morrow. And don&rsquo;t say nothing about Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Trust me,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;My one hope will be to
-help you in that quarter if I can. Don&rsquo;t you despair.
-It may straighten out yet, though where two men and a
-woman&rsquo;s the matter, there&rsquo;s seldom more than one chance
-in fifty that things will come right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<small>MEDORA&rsquo;S NIGHT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>In a rowan-red gown and her best hat, Medora had left
-Ashprington while it was yet twilight of morning. She
-carried only a light travelling basket made of cane, for
-she took little more than the clothes on her back. She
-proposed to begin the new life in new clothes, which would
-be bought in London. Even her wedding ring was left
-behind and she told herself that she would not wear such
-a thing again until Jordan Kellock set it on her finger.</p>
-
-<p>She met him as they had arranged, at Newton Abbot,
-and together they proceeded to London. He was serious
-on the journey and extraordinarily solicitous for Medora&rsquo;s
-mental and physical comfort. She told him all that she
-had done and he explained his own purposes. At Bristol
-he got her a cup of tea and a piece of cake. They had
-enjoyed privacy so far; but now others entered the carriage
-and they could talk no more. So Mrs. Dingle fell
-back on her thoughts and pictured the sequence of events
-at home, while Kellock read a newspaper. Her heart beat
-high when London was reached and the train plunged into
-Paddington.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid we must practice a little guile, Medora,&rdquo;
-he said as they walked down Praed Street, Jordan carrying
-their luggage; &ldquo;but as little as possible.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They proceeded to Edgeware Road, where the man knew
-a small hotel.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Keep on your gloves for the moment,&rdquo; he advised.
-&ldquo;The first thing I shall do to-morrow will be to buy you
-a wedding ring.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>&ldquo;We are married,&rdquo; declared Medora. &ldquo;Already I feel
-as properly married to you as I can be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But he soared to no such imaginative heights.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Marriage is marriage,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;We must
-possess our souls in patience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He spoke as though he were not going to find this difficult.
-Indeed he was nervous and anxious to have certain
-preliminaries completed. At the &ldquo;Edgeware Arms&rdquo; Kellock
-asked for two bedrooms with a firm voice and registered
-their names as &ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Jordan Kellock, from
-Totnes, Devonshire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They went upstairs together, led by a boy who carried
-Medora&rsquo;s travelling basket and the man&rsquo;s leather portmanteau.
-The bedrooms adjoined and Kellock invited
-Medora to choose her room. He then left her luggage
-there and went into the other himself.</p>
-
-<p>She unpacked with some emotion and wondered when he
-would come in to see her; but he did not come. She put on
-a pair of shoes and a white blouse. She washed and did
-her hair again, for it was untidy. Then she sat down to
-wait. Presently he knocked at the outer door.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you coming to supper?&rdquo; he asked, and she rose
-and joined him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you rested? I&rsquo;m afraid you must be sinking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m quite all right. Is your room nice?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very comfortable. You don&rsquo;t mind them adjoining?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why should I?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s certainly no reason,&rdquo; he admitted.</p>
-
-<p>They supped together cheerfully and he made her drink
-hot soup. He was a teetotaller but Medora asked for
-some beer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say I&rsquo;ll get used to giving it up soon,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;In fact I mean to. Where I can be like you, Jordan, I
-shall be. But I&rsquo;m used to a glass for supper and I&rsquo;m
-extra tired to-day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He ordered a small bottle of Bass and under the stimu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>lant
-she grew happy and confidential. She talked a great
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think I should have been able to eat a bit,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;but I never enjoyed a meal more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nor me,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;When you&rsquo;ve done, we&rsquo;ll go
-and sit in the writing room. That&rsquo;ll be empty, and we
-can chat. But I know you&rsquo;re dog-tired, so I shan&rsquo;t let
-you stop up long.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The smoking room looked more attractive to Medora.
-There was a haze in the air and a tang of cigar about
-the portal. A chink of glass and sound of laughter might
-be heard there. She would have liked to be seen sitting
-by Mr. Kellock in some comfortable corner, while he too
-smoked a cigar and drank some whiskey and soda perhaps,
-or one of the bright drinks in very little glasses.
-But she blamed herself for the wish. There must be no
-small fancies of this sort. Her triumph would never be
-displayed in public smoking rooms. She must realise
-that from the first. As though to mark the austere
-heights on which henceforth she would move, Jordan led
-the way to an empty writing room silent and dark. A
-decayed fire was perishing in the grate. He fumbled for
-an electric light and turned it on. Then he shut the door
-and drew an arm chair to the remains of the fire for her.
-He took a light chair and placed it opposite her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here we can talk in private,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at a sofa, but he failed to perceive her
-glance.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; he told her, &ldquo;I begin the day by writing
-to Mr. Trenchard and your husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake don&rsquo;t call him that any more. You&rsquo;ll
-be telling me I&rsquo;m Mrs. Dingle in a minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a matter of fact you are, Medora. We mustn&rsquo;t
-dream beautiful dreams yet. We&rsquo;ve got to face reality
-till we alter reality.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My life&rsquo;s not been reality so far&mdash;only a nightmare.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>&ldquo;Reality is nothing more than a question of time now.
-In fact you may say it&rsquo;s begun, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, indeed, Jordan dear. You can&rsquo;t guess what
-heaven it is to me to know I&rsquo;m in your strong hands. I&rsquo;ve
-come to rest after being tossed by cruel storms&mdash;to rest
-in your arms.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope I&rsquo;ll prove all you think me. I want to have
-the future clear and the past off our minds; and then
-we&rsquo;ll just enjoy ourselves and have a bit of good fun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She wondered what his idea of good fun would be. But
-she was not yet feeling much like fun. While the evening
-wore on and the fire went out and Kellock&rsquo;s level voice
-proceeded to indicate the future as he hoped and desired
-it to be, she began to feel cold and depressed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall inform Mr. Trenchard that I will return, or
-leave as he prefers. It really doesn&rsquo;t matter to me; because,
-thank God, my ability makes me independent. Of
-course if you don&rsquo;t want to go back, I shouldn&rsquo;t think of
-doing so; but you do want to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I want to. I like the country.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That will mean that your&mdash;that Mr. Dingle leaves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So he should; but he&rsquo;s just the man not to see it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Obviously he must leave, or I must. I bear him a
-very bitter grudge for his cruelty to you, and I&rsquo;m not
-going to pretend that I care about his future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should hope not, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Far from it. Wrong done to you was wrong done to
-me. At least that is what it amounts to now. My feeling
-to Dingle will be the feeling of the strong to the weak,
-Medora. He must go if you wish to stop. Of course
-I&rsquo;ve got very different ideas from him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should hope you had.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For instance, I wouldn&rsquo;t let my wife work as he let
-you work.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She yawned presently and he exclaimed that he must
-not keep her up any longer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You put everything out of your mind and go to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-bed,&rdquo; he advised. &ldquo;Would you like a cup of tea or anything
-before you go?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not if you wouldn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>But he explained that he never took anything after
-his supper, and that the lighter his last meal, the better
-he slept.</p>
-
-<p>So she left him. He clasped her right hand in both his
-and shook it affectionately for some seconds; but he did
-not kiss her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall turn in pretty soon myself,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But
-it&rsquo;s not above ten o&rsquo;clock yet. I&rsquo;ll stop here and draft
-out those letters&mdash;that&rsquo;ll save time to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She went upstairs and presently, for curiosity, tried the
-door between her room and his. It was open and she went
-in. Through a Venetian blind slants of electric light from
-the street illuminated the chamber; but that did not
-show enough, so Medora turned on the light and looked for
-evidence of Jordan. They were starkly simple: a brush
-and comb on the dressing table, a shaving brush and a
-tooth brush and a nail brush and sponge on the washing-stand.
-Upon his bed lay a night shirt and against the
-door hung his overcoat and black squash hat and dark
-blue silk neckerchief. A few newspapers and books on
-economic and industrial subjects he had also brought.
-In a drawer of a chest of drawers were some collars and
-socks and two blue flannel shirts.</p>
-
-<p>What Medora expected to see she did not know, but
-what she did see depressed her. She put out the light
-and went back to her own room. Then all manners of
-doubts and wonders occupied her mind and her first purpose
-was to undress and get into bed as fast as possible
-before the man came upstairs. She hesitated about locking
-the door between them and decided to do so. His
-importunities would be rather delightful and human. For
-she felt that the humanity of Jordan was what she hungered
-and thirsted for. She adored his chivalry and wonderful
-tenderness and forethought; she perceived what a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-white knight he was&mdash;all these manifestations were duly
-recorded and valued. But now&mdash;surely it was her turn
-to reward a spirit so rare and worthy of reward?</p>
-
-<p>She was soon in bed with her light out; and presently
-she heard him arrive and saw a streak of illumination beneath
-the intervening door. She listened and heard him
-take off his boots and put them outside his door. But at
-last he flicked off his light and pulled up the Venetian
-blind. She remembered that he had told her he always
-slept with his blind up.</p>
-
-<p>Her heart beat hard now and her ears strained for the
-next sound. It was not, however, the door-handle that
-creaked, but Kellock&rsquo;s bed. There was a squeak and jolt
-followed by silence.</p>
-
-<p>The unwonted noise of the streets kept Medora awake
-and she became the prey of thoughts that grew more and
-more unpleasant. A brief peace sank over London, but
-bells beating the hour would not let her sleep. During
-the small hours and with vitality at low ebb, her mind
-sank into a region of nervous gloom. For the moment
-her triumph became divested of all its brilliance and there
-was thrust upon her very forcibly the other aspect of such
-action as she had taken. She considered her mother and
-Ned. For some reason, and not a little to her annoyance,
-thought took the bit in its teeth respecting Ned and absolutely
-refused to dwell on the black side of him. As a
-matter of fact Medora proved too weary to pretend any
-longer. She was now disarmed; the sleight of her own
-creation, which had risen as a sort of shield between her
-and reality, for the present fell; and she found that her
-reflections obstinately refused to follow the line she had
-of late persisted in. The mind that she had drilled to
-think as she wished, for once in a way threw off allegiance
-and refused to be loyal to Medora&rsquo;s impersonation. Instead
-it stumbled painfully but with determination along
-the way of truth and reduced her to despair by persistently
-bringing before her vision pictures of good days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
-with Ned and memories from the past wherein he figured
-to advantage.</p>
-
-<p>She tossed and turned, grew very sorry for herself and
-finally centred her thoughts on Kellock. She considered
-his chaste attitude to the present situation rather absurd.
-Then she fell to wondering whether this delicate matter
-did not more properly belong to her. He was so high-minded
-where she was concerned&mdash;a miracle of tender
-refinement. For a long time she resisted an inclination to
-go to him, but presently persuaded herself that it would
-be the truest kindness to do so. Her own nature prompted
-her strongly to seek comfort from him, for she was exceedingly
-miserable now and awake with a hateful alertness.
-She thought it was more than probable that he lay
-on the other side of the wall similarly enduring. Surely
-if she went to him, an everlasting bond would be established
-between them and their union sealed gloriously by her
-initiative. He was just that subtle man to appreciate
-such an evidence of her perfect trust. Still some voice
-in her argued contrariwise and not until a clock chimed
-three did Medora decide. Then she made a dash for
-him.</p>
-
-<p>She unlocked the door between their rooms, opened it
-gently and found Kellock lying peacefully asleep with the
-wan light from his bared window irradiating the chamber.
-The window was open and the room felt exceedingly cold.
-She had not wakened him and for a moment she hesitated
-and even went so far as to creep half-way back to the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>He looked very pale and very handsome asleep. He
-slumbered easily with a pleasant, happy expression upon
-his face. She fastened upon it and told herself that he
-was glad to have won her and more than strong enough
-to keep her for ever. She longed to be close to him and
-feel his arms round her. A man so strong and physically
-splendid could not lack for fire. It only awaited Medora&rsquo;s
-awakening, and she was in a mood to wake it. If she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-to sleep at all that night, she must sleep with him, she
-told herself.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps even now a whisper warned her; but she was
-beyond warning. She wanted him and bent down and
-kissed him on the mouth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My darling dear, I can&rsquo;t sleep alone,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you come to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He started up instantly, and she saw him break from
-sleep to waking and stare with half-seeing eyes as round
-as an owl&rsquo;s. He grew exceedingly white and his jaw fell.
-From an expression of content and peace, his countenance
-became miserable and rather idiotic. It is not too much
-to say that as soon as he found himself awake with Medora
-in her nightdress beside him, he grew frightened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good God&mdash;what&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; he asked in a hollow
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m the matter,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t be martyred
-all night. I want to come and sleep beside you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then his face grew suddenly red with a wave of blood
-and he was as wide awake as Medora herself.</p>
-
-<p>He did not mince his words.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go back to bed, Medora, at once! You don&rsquo;t know
-what you&rsquo;re doing. You&rsquo;re dreaming&mdash;sleep-walking&mdash;surely.
-You mean it innocently. I&rsquo;ll explain in the morning.
-Please, please go&mdash;instantly, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She stared at him, stood upright and did not immediately
-obey his command to depart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t want to look back at this great thing we
-have done and feel any shadow upon it,&rdquo; he declared.
-&ldquo;We want to be able to look into each other&rsquo;s faces and
-know that we have nothing whatever, before God or man,
-to reproach ourselves with. We&rsquo;ve started on the highest
-plane and we&rsquo;ll keep on the highest plane. You understand
-me. Indeed the beautiful thing has always been
-that we do understand each other so perfectly. So&mdash;please,
-Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer, but obeyed. Burning and shaking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-to her very bones she vanished and slammed the door
-behind her; then she leapt into her bed and huddled under
-the clothes in a fury. But she did not hate herself long;
-she hated Kellock. It took Medora till five o&rsquo;clock in the
-morning to cool down. An incident contributed to return
-of calm, because, after she had left him, the man turned
-on his electric light&mdash;she saw it under the door. And
-apparently he kept it on. She could also hear him walking
-about. It was clear therefore that she had disturbed
-him a good deal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wonder he didn&rsquo;t turn over and go to sleep again,&rdquo;
-she reflected bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>It was long before she forgave him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Even if he didn&rsquo;t want me, he oughtn&rsquo;t to have said
-so,&rdquo; reflected Medora. &ldquo;He ought to have pretended
-he was glad. To send me away like a naughty school
-child after all I&rsquo;ve done for him!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She determined that he must be punished and decided
-that she would not get up at all next day, but stop in her
-room and pretend to be ill. And in a thousand other ways
-she would punish him also. He should see that she could
-be as frosty as he. Indeed he had frozen her effectually
-now. And she told herself that it would be a very long
-time before she thawed again.</p>
-
-<p>She slept heavily at last, and when she was called, found
-that her will to hit back had weakened. By daylight she
-perceived that nothing was to be gained in quarrelling
-with Jordan. He had said that he would explain in the
-morning and she felt it would be better to hear him. She
-smouldered still and resented her experience extremely;
-but she was ready when he knocked at her door and they
-went down to breakfast together.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<small>IN LONDON</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Jordan Kellock made no allusion whatever to Medora&rsquo;s
-nocturnal aberration as they ate together, but directed her
-as to his taste in tea and was very anxious to know her own
-likes and dislikes in matters of food.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll write final copies of my letters,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;then
-we&rsquo;ll go out and get the ring.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Could it be possible, she wondered, that a ring made
-any difference to his mind? It seemed too childish; yet
-even the cleverest men retained a streak of the boy. It
-was from the eternal boy, as exemplified in Ned, that she
-had escaped. Was Kellock going to be boyish also? He
-had never shown any sign of it.</p>
-
-<p>She need not have feared.</p>
-
-<p>He did not ask Medora to read the letters to Mr.
-Trenchard and Ned Dingle; but he had finished them and
-posted them by ten o&rsquo;clock and then they set out.</p>
-
-<p>He knew London and took Medora to the British
-Museum first. She had waited for him to speak about the
-previous night, while he, apparently, expected her to do
-so. She had changed her views as to his punishment and
-believed that she had quite forgiven him. But this was
-not the case and before the end of the day he found it out.</p>
-
-<p>At the Museum he surprised her by the extent of his
-knowledge. She had heard enough by the time they went
-to lunch and better liked the Park, where they sat for a
-while in the afternoon. Medora saw wealth and beauty
-and power pass by while Kellock commented.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the sort of thing we&rsquo;re out to alter,&rdquo; he said.
-But she was not feeling in a socialistic mood.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; she asked. &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t there be beautiful
-horses and beautiful clothes in the world?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t the horses and clothes. It&rsquo;s where they come
-from, Medora. The horses are bred for money, and the
-clothes are spun and made for money. But who makes
-the money? Do the people that ride the horses and wear
-the clothes make it? No&mdash;you and I make it. The
-workers make it. You and I have just as much right to
-ride in a carriage as the Queen of England.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The wealth of the world is exploited,&rdquo; he explained,
-&ldquo;and the result is poverty and superfluity. The world
-could get on perfectly well without those horses and those
-clothes&mdash;yes, and those people; but it couldn&rsquo;t get on
-without us. We&rsquo;re carrying on the work of civilisation,
-not those dolls and puppets toying together. Poverty and
-wealth are the result of the same vicious factor in our
-social system. They are interdependent and spring from
-the same rotten roots. Banish poverty and you do away
-with hunger and ignorance and misery and immorality and
-other ills, all of which spring from it. And there&rsquo;s only
-one way to banish poverty, and that&rsquo;s to banish wealth.
-Then you get a self-respecting order of humanity instead
-of the present arrangement. If the nation&rsquo;s rich, the people
-are rich. It all comes back to brain power, and the moment
-labour is strong enough in brain power, the rest follows.
-The Trade Unions are only a first little instalment. In fact
-they&rsquo;re almost past their work now. We&rsquo;ve gone beyond
-them. Syndicalism says good-bye to the poor and good-bye
-to the rich. Then we shall get face to face with reality.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what becomes of all these handsome, dashing,
-prosperous people then?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing worse than what becomes of us. They will
-be left with a great deal more than they deserve, because
-they&rsquo;ve never lifted their fingers to help the real good of
-the world. The revolution in this country, when it comes,
-will be bloodless&mdash;merely a readjustment in conformity
-with reason and justice. We&rsquo;re out against the system,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-not against the individual which battens on it. When we
-make war on rats and sparrows and wood pigeons, we&rsquo;re
-not quarrelling with the individual rat or sparrow, but
-against the class. They&rsquo;ve got to go, because they&rsquo;re unsocial
-and harm the community and take for themselves
-what was grown and garnered for their betters. And
-that&rsquo;s what the classes are doing. They take for themselves
-what was earned by their betters.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why are we their betters?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because we justify our existence and they do not.
-Our lives are a round of work; their lives are a round of
-luxury and pleasure. We earn the money and they spend
-it. We save and they waste. Do they spend it on the
-community? No. They spend it on themselves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re taxed and all that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So are we. And taxing is a wrong system anyway.
-All sources of wealth ought to pour straight into the State
-and return to everybody in the shape of dignified conditions
-of life. Money is the source of all evil to people and
-it ought not to be handled by people, but by the State. If
-you once knock the idea of money out of the human mind
-and teach it to think in different values and occupy itself,
-not with mean necessities and still meaner luxuries and possessions,
-but the things of the soul&mdash;then you get on a
-higher plane at once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But she was more interested in things as they were. A
-man or two obviously admired her, and the fact that she
-sat beside Kellock did not seem to prevent their open admiration.
-This cheered her and put her into good spirits.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How cheeky the gentlemen are,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;They
-don&rsquo;t seem to have any manners at all. They look at you
-that bold, as if they&rsquo;d known you all their lives.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because they&rsquo;re rich and know that money is power.
-These silk-hatted brutes have got nothing better to do
-than to make eyes at every pretty woman they pass.
-Many of them have never done a stroke of honest work in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-their lives, and never intend to. They are lower than the
-tom cats and yet&mdash;that&rsquo;s the amazing thing&mdash;satisfied
-with themselves&mdash;pleased with themselves&mdash;and treated
-as decent members of society by the trash like them. I&rsquo;d
-have them breaking stones if I could, instead of insulting
-women with their goggling eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say some of them are dukes and earls, if we only
-knew it,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very likely indeed,&rdquo; he admitted; &ldquo;they&rsquo;re pretty
-much what you&rsquo;d expect dukes and earls to be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But even Medora felt this was crude.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s plenty of good men among the Upper Ten,&rdquo;
-she assured him. &ldquo;You think if a chap isn&rsquo;t born in the
-gutter, he can&rsquo;t be any good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This was the first of a succession of little snubs; though
-Jordan hardly felt them at the time. But looking back
-afterwards, he realised that Medora had her opinions and
-that, apparently, they did not always echo his own.</p>
-
-<p>He invited her to end the day where she pleased, and she
-chose a music hall.</p>
-
-<p>Here he was obviously and painfully ill at ease; and he
-was also surprised to see the extent of Medora&rsquo;s enjoyment.
-He felt absolute astonishment to hear her laugh so
-heartily at comic songs on the old familiar lines, and still
-more amazed that sentimental ditties of the most puling
-description should have power to move her. She, for her
-part, could not fail to see that the entertainment cast him
-down. Not an item of the programme appealed to him
-and the smoke made him cough.</p>
-
-<p>As they came out, he hoped she had enjoyed it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How could I with you so glum?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t glum. That sort of thing rather misses me&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-all. I&rsquo;ve not got the bent of mind for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re so clever, you never see anything to make you
-wonder, and so wise, you never see anything to make you
-laugh,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>His eyes grew rather round, but Medora was smiling
-and had not meant the speech to be acerb.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see plenty to make me wonder in London. Who
-doesn&rsquo;t? And I like a good joke; but these stage people
-didn&rsquo;t seem funny to me. And honestly, the longer I live,
-the less I see to laugh at in the world, for a thinking man
-with high resolves to better things. People laugh for two
-reasons, I believe: to throw their neighbours off the scent
-of the truth; or else because they are rattle-pated, light-minded
-fools, with no more in them than an empty pot.
-The &lsquo;empties&rsquo; make the most noise, don&rsquo;t they? All the
-same, I like to hear you laugh, because you laugh honest
-and it means you&rsquo;re happy. And God knows if there&rsquo;s one
-thing I want to make happy before everybody on earth,
-it&rsquo;s you, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She relented before this speech and took his arm. He
-was gallant and very jealous for her. He was also very
-tender and gentle. She acknowledged his consideration as
-they sat at supper; but he spoiled all by explaining the
-very special reason for his care and attention.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The position is a most delicate one,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
-naturally I must do nothing to make it more so. You&rsquo;re
-at the mercy of the world now, in a manner of speaking,
-Medora&mdash;a defenceless creature&mdash;not maid, wife or
-widow, as they say. And so it&rsquo;s up to me to be extra
-awake and very quick to champion you in every way I can
-think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora felt that if this were indeed the case, Jordan and
-not she might be said to stand in the limelight. She, in
-fact, must remain as much in the shade as possible. But
-he proceeded and explained his future course of action.
-It surprised her exceedingly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Talking of that and all I owe you for coming to me,
-you may be sure I shall pay the debt in a proper manner,
-Medora. I honour you far too much to treat you with
-anything but the greatest respect and delicacy, I hope;
-and I certainly would demean myself, or you, to live with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-you as a husband till we&rsquo;re married. But let the world
-think as it pleases&mdash;which is mostly evil&mdash;we shall know
-what we really are, and we&rsquo;ll always be&mdash;a self-respecting,
-high-minded pair. It&rsquo;s easy enough to be better
-than the world thinks you, because it judges others by itself
-and the mass of people have a very base standard.
-The law itself is disgusting and bestial in this matter. It
-sticks to the old, shameful conditions and demands adultery
-before divorce. So there must be evidence of that&mdash;we&rsquo;re
-ordered to sink to furnishing evidence of it; but we&rsquo;re
-made of much too fine stuff to sink to the heathen reality.
-We&rsquo;re a cut above the dirty law&mdash;you and me. We want
-to live our future lives on a plane of mutual respect and
-admiration. We don&rsquo;t mean all the future to be spoiled
-by the memory of human weakness.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He made no other allusion to the previous night and
-Medora&rsquo;s wonderful eyes bent upon him with apparent
-adoration, while her wonderful heart grew a little hard.
-She remembered that she had been married and he never
-had.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a saint,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no&mdash;only a clean-minded, honourable man, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She fell asleep gently hating him that night; but after
-many hours of dreamless slumber, she awoke in better
-spirits and found herself loving Kellock again. He was a
-hero and somewhat abnormal, as heroes must be; but, after
-all, she was a heroine, and should therefore find no supreme
-difficulty in rising to the heights on which he moved. She
-saw indeed that this would be necessary if she wished to be
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>She met him radiantly next morning and he found her
-mood easy and humble. He knew a man at Doulton&rsquo;s Pottery,
-and when he suggested going to see the famous works,
-she agreed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We shall be among our own sort there,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It
-will be good for us. I don&rsquo;t think sitting in Hyde Park<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-watching the rich was good for us. I may have said a bit
-more than I meant about them. They&rsquo;re not all worthless
-wasters, of course, and it&rsquo;s quite true what you said, that
-there may be a bit of class prejudice in me.&rdquo; </p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, there isn&rsquo;t&mdash;not a scrap,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;And
-if there is, they deserve it. Nobody looks all round things
-like you do. You&rsquo;ll live to see it all altered no doubt, and
-do your bit to help alter it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I had my way, them that don&rsquo;t work shouldn&rsquo;t eat,&rdquo;
-he declared. &ldquo;Work&rsquo;s the saving of mankind, and you
-can&rsquo;t be healthy-minded if you sit and look on at life, any
-more than you can be healthy-bodied if you take no exercise.
-We all owe a lot to every one else, and them that
-won&rsquo;t pay that debt and want to take all and give nought,
-are wicked enemies to the State.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>At Doulton&rsquo;s Medora was genuinely interested, and best
-she liked the painting rooms.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s beautiful work,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;If I&rsquo;d been
-brought up to that, I&rsquo;d have joyed in it, because there&rsquo;s
-something to show for it, and you&rsquo;d know the flowers and
-ribbons you painted was brightening up other people&rsquo;s
-homes. But my work&mdash;just shifting paper and putting
-the zinc between the sheets for the glazing rollers&mdash;there&rsquo;s
-nothing to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you say that. All necessary work is fine if it&rsquo;s
-done well, same as you did it. But there&rsquo;ll be no more of
-that sort of work for you. Your place will be at home;
-and I shouldn&rsquo;t be content for you just to do housewife&rsquo;s
-work neither, Medora. You&rsquo;re going to be my right hand
-and look after my papers and help me with the big things
-I hope to do&mdash;not in the Mill, but out of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never shall be clever enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, you will. You&rsquo;ll come to it when you get a grasp
-of all the questions we&rsquo;re out to solve. You&rsquo;ll begin at the
-beginning, where I did, and master the theory of socialism&mdash;the
-theories I should say, because it&rsquo;s a science
-that&rsquo;s in the making and clever men are still working out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
-the details. There&rsquo;s a lot of difference of opinion, and so
-far as I can see, our leaders&mdash;the &lsquo;intellectuals,&rsquo; as they
-are called&mdash;don&rsquo;t see eye to eye by any means yet.
-They&rsquo;re all for universal democracy, of course, and the
-government of the people by the people and the redistribution
-of wealth and the uplift of the worker and so on; but
-they differ as to how it&rsquo;s to be done and how the mass is
-to be brought out of slavery to the promised land. In
-fact no two of &rsquo;em think the same, strange to say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a big subject,&rdquo; said Medora blankly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the only subject.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I lay you&rsquo;ve thought it all out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got my ideas, and in our evenings I shall put &rsquo;em
-before you and read you a lot I&rsquo;ve written about it. We&rsquo;ll
-go over it together, and you&rsquo;ll bring your own wits to
-work on it when you&rsquo;ve mastered all the different opinions.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I was half as clever as you think,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know what you can do till you try. The
-first thing is to get interested in it and let it soak into
-you. Once you feel like I do, that it is the only thing
-that really matters for the race, then you&rsquo;ll properly live
-for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I expect I shall,&rdquo; replied Medora, with a fainting soul.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s noble women giving up their lives to it, and I
-hope you&rsquo;ll be one of them some day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She began to experience the discomfort of the mountain
-climber, who ascends into more rarefied air than he is accustomed
-to breathe. It was not until she had enjoyed a good
-lunch and a bottle of lemonade that Medora felt lighter-hearted.</p>
-
-<p>They went to no more music halls, but Jordan took her
-to a play of Shakespeare and a concert. They also visited
-the Mint, the Tower of London and the Zoological Gardens.
-At the last she was interested and happy. He improved
-every occasion. On one afternoon they went to a
-meeting of the Labour Party and heard great lights discuss
-the Internationale. Kellock flamed with enthusiasm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-afterwards and talked ceaselessly till bed time. She had
-never seen him so excited. She retired with a headache,
-bewildered and bored to tears.</p>
-
-<p>Of personal matters the only interest centred in a communication
-from Mr. Trenchard. As for Dingle, he did
-not answer Jordan&rsquo;s letter. Nor did he come to see Jordan,
-as Medora half hoped he might. She trusted that
-some emotional scenes were to occur in the future; but if
-drama lay in store for her, it would doubtless be at Dene,
-not in London.</p>
-
-<p>She wrote to her mother justifying her conduct; but
-Lydia did not reply.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lost mother,&rdquo; said Medora, after three days&rsquo; silence.
-&ldquo;She&rsquo;s not going to answer that nice letter I
-showed you. In fact I&rsquo;ve lost everybody but you. And
-I&rsquo;d lose them all a hundred times over for you, Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We must be patient,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We know we&rsquo;re right,
-and those that know they&rsquo;re right can afford to be patient.
-The rest will be brought to see it in process of time. They
-must be educated to the truth. Everything depends on
-education, Medora. It works through everything&mdash;in
-private affairs and public affairs alike. Ignorance makes
-all the trouble in the world; and once the spread of education
-brings the light, then we get a move on and see our
-way clear. It is for you and me to show the people that we
-are sure of ourselves and set them the example of how to
-behave.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll live it down,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No; we&rsquo;ve got nothing to live down,&rdquo; he declared.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s for them to live down their ignorance of the case.
-And it is for us to help them to do it and show them, day
-by day, that we were right and they were wrong. But you
-can&rsquo;t do big things without suffering big things. I warn
-you there will be a lot at first who will side against us&mdash;the
-sort that judge by the outside, as most do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say we&rsquo;ll be sent to Coventry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They may cabal against us like that. But the harder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-the opposition, the greater the triumph when we show them
-what we are. We must look to each other for our comfort
-and support and to our own hearts and good conscience.
-I&rsquo;m not afraid for myself. A man can weather anything
-if he knows he is right. But for a tender creature like
-you, all full of nerves and that, it will be harder. But you
-may trust me to be pretty wide awake on your behalf,
-Medora. I&rsquo;ll be sleepless to shield you and come between
-you and every hard word. I&rsquo;ll fight for you, I promise
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The pinch will be before
-we&rsquo;re married. Afterwards they&rsquo;ll soon calm down.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her affection and trust were unbounded. She believed
-that he would fight for her, and she looked forward not a
-little to seeing him do so.</p>
-
-<p>Through the atmosphere of the Metropolis, the people
-at Dene shrank a little. She was prepared to return with
-a mind enlarged and a perspective widened. No doubt she
-and Jordan would come to London themselves some day,
-when he took his place among the leaders. But in the
-meantime she would not for anything have missed the return
-to her native village. Her new clothes alone must
-have sufficed to dictate this step. He, too, at her wish,
-had bought some new clothes, and though he hesitated at
-her choice, which led to rather more radiant colours than
-Kellock was wont to wear, yet he told himself, very truly,
-that in such a matter no principle was involved. He also
-felt that it became him to fall in with his future wife&rsquo;s
-wishes when and where it was possible and reasonable to
-do so.</p>
-
-<p>They visited the Arts and Crafts Exhibition, where the
-new Dene water-mark pictures created daily admiration,
-completed their holiday and so returned; and their homecoming
-was anticipated in various ways, showing, though
-ignorance is the root of all evil, as Jordan never wearied
-of declaring, that even ignorant hearts may soar to heights
-of distinguished humanism.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<small>THE DRYING LOFTS</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>A dozen great piles of &ldquo;water leaf&rdquo; had come up from
-the vat room to the hand presses, and here the paper,
-from which tons of crystal water had already been expressed
-below, under new and tremendous pressure yielded
-still more. Indeed, with half a dozen men bearing on the
-levers of the presses, the &ldquo;water leaf,&rdquo; that had appeared
-so dry, beaded and glittered and then exuded further rivulets
-of moisture. For the last turn of the screw a great
-beam was thrust into the press and as many men as could
-get purchase upon it lent their united strength. Ernest
-Trood, passing through the pressing room, gave a hand,
-and a stack of newly made paper was subjected to such
-strain that one had thought it must disintegrate beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>Here, under this tremendous impost, the grain mark, or
-pattern imparted to each sheet by the felts at the first
-pressing in the vat room, was removed.</p>
-
-<p>For the drying lofts the paper was next destined and
-hither Ernest Trood now found himself summoned by a
-messenger. Mr. Trenchard desired to speak with him.</p>
-
-<p>The drying lofts were enormous airy chambers that
-ascended to an unceiled roof. Through the twilight gloom
-of these apartments, the sheets of paper, large and small,
-glimmered, hanging aloft in multi-coloured reams like fairy
-washing; pink and blue, yellow and snow-white. The
-paper seemed to make dim rainbows aloft, where it ascended
-tier on tier in many thousands of separate pieces.
-Every sheet was suspended over ropes, strung across
-transverse beams on light scaffolding, that filled the lofts
-and ascended into the dark dome of the roof. Above them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-spun drying fans, to expel the exhausted air and suck away
-the moisture exuding from the masses of paper; while on
-the floors beneath there wound and twisted an elaborate
-system of hot-air pipes, which raised the temperature at
-will.</p>
-
-<p>Drying is a process that demands watchfulness and
-judgment, for wet paper suspended here on the tackle does
-not respond in all its parts simultaneously. From the
-deckle edge it dries inward and the last spot to dry is the
-centre of each sheet. The dry workers, with a hand-tool
-like a T square, hang their sheets over the russet, cow-hair
-ropes; then when the rope is loaded, pull it aloft; but the
-art of drying lies in the regulation of heat and air. The
-heat is great, yet regular; every operation is ordered for
-cleanliness and purity, so that not a speck of dust may
-fall to mar a sheet.</p>
-
-<p>Here came Matthew Trenchard upon a question of temperature.
-The talk concerned technical details of ventilation
-and did not take long, since Trood and his master
-seldom differed. But there was a more doubtful human
-problem upon which Trenchard desired to learn Trood&rsquo;s
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard from Kellock,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and before I answer
-him, I want to hear you speak&mdash;also Pinhey.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not likely that Nicholas Pinhey and me would say
-the same,&rdquo; answered Ernest. &ldquo;We differ where we can
-on most subjects, and shall on this, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t influence me&mdash;more will you,&rdquo; answered
-Trenchard. &ldquo;You and I will probably think alike, as
-we&rsquo;re used to do. What I want from Nicholas has to do
-with Mrs. Dingle, who works in the glazing house&mdash;or
-did. Let&rsquo;s go into the flat room and I&rsquo;ll send for him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The flat room was another chamber for paper drying.
-Hither came the great sheets of &ldquo;double elephant&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;imperial&rdquo;&mdash;precious and wonderful papers for the
-artist and draughtsman, that could not be hung over a
-rope or creased. They rested upon beds of webbing, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-were lifted one above the other and offered free access to
-the warm air that plied through them. Here dried noble
-sheets of a quality that rejoiced the painter who touched
-their surface, and felt their solid texture.</p>
-
-<p>Nicholas Pinhey, spotless and trim, with shining spectacles
-and a white apron, appeared and Mr. Trenchard
-briefly stated the situation. He was carrying a &ldquo;cross,&rdquo;
-the little tool used to hang the paper on the lines, and he
-tapped his points against the wall of the flat room as he
-uttered them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It seems Kellock, who is on holiday, has run away with
-Mrs. Dingle. I&rsquo;ve just heard from him stating the facts
-as far as they may be supposed to concern me. He doesn&rsquo;t
-seem to think it is anybody&rsquo;s business but his own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A man may be ill and not know it,&rdquo; said Mr. Pinhey,
-&ldquo;and he may be suffering from the sickness of sin and not
-know it. But we know it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a sin-doctor&mdash;I&rsquo;m a paper maker, Nicholas.
-And the sole question for me is whether Kellock comes
-back, or does not. He writes very decently, says he is
-prepared to justify his conduct if I feel it is any concern
-of mine, and adds that he will be well pleased to return
-if I want him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let him slip, for the Lord&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; begged Ernest
-Trood. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll wait a month of Sundays before you&rsquo;ll
-get another vatman in the same street as him. Vatmen
-will be as rare as curates very soon. He&rsquo;s a most orderly
-chap and a rare worker, which the clever ones often are
-not, and a great believer in discipline. You may be sure,
-according to his lights, that he&rsquo;s done the best for all
-parties in this matter of Medora Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How can you, Trood?&rdquo; asked Mr. Pinhey indignantly.
-&ldquo;And you call yourself a Christian man, for I&rsquo;ve heard you
-do it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The mistake you make, Nicholas, is to drag religion
-into a lot of things where it don&rsquo;t belong,&rdquo; answered Trood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing where religion don&rsquo;t belong,&rdquo; declared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-the finisher, &ldquo;and if that was understood and religion applied
-to every problem of living and working and dying,
-this world would be different from what it is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The question is, of course, Ned Dingle,&rdquo; explained
-Trenchard. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to back up one man against
-the other or interfere in any way over their domestic affairs.
-I&rsquo;m not here to probe and pry, but to make paper
-along with the rest of you. Both Ned and Jordan are
-very good fellows; but it&rsquo;s quite clear they won&rsquo;t see alike
-in this matter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be too sure,&rdquo; advised Mr. Trood. &ldquo;Least said
-soonest mended, and for all anybody can swear to the contrary
-it may be a put-up thing. Of course Ned would
-have to pretend a lot of temper in that case&mdash;to blind
-the public eye; because if it got out that Kellock had
-agreed to take over his wife for the better happiness and
-understanding of all parties, the Law would step in very
-quick and queer their pitch. If these things were settled
-by common sense, the Law would lose money&mdash;the last
-thing it ever loses. But it may be like that&mdash;Kellock
-being such a shrewd and long-sighted man. So I should
-just keep Jordan and let Dingle say what he&rsquo;s going to
-do. Ned&rsquo;s not showing more feeling, so far, than the case
-demands. He may be thanking God in secret and be quite
-as religious-minded as Nicholas could wish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s generally known of course,&rdquo; said Trenchard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Such things can&rsquo;t be hid and didn&rsquo;t ought to be,&rdquo; replied
-Mr. Pinhey. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re a very high-toned lot here
-for the most part, and me and Trood have something to
-do with that I believe; and I should be very sorry if he
-was to pander to evil.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody&rsquo;s pandering to evil, Nicholas,&rdquo; explained Matthew
-Trenchard. &ldquo;But business is business and will continue
-to be so. I don&rsquo;t lose Kellock if I can help it; but
-Dingle&rsquo;s a very good man, too, and I wish to consider
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dingle&rsquo;s nothing to Kellock,&rdquo; asserted Trood; &ldquo;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-I shouldn&rsquo;t for an instant say Kellock was all wrong and
-Dingle all right. Women don&rsquo;t run away from their husbands
-for nothing. I believe Ned&rsquo;s been knocking her
-about, and she was divided between them in the past, and
-now, finding she backed the wrong one, she&rsquo;s gone over to
-the other. It seems to be a private affair in my opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sin&rsquo;s never a private affair. It&rsquo;s everybody&rsquo;s affair
-and ought to be everybody&rsquo;s enemy,&rdquo; said Pinhey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then let nature take its course,&rdquo; suggested Ernest
-Trood. &ldquo;Let Dingle divorce her in a respectable way,
-and let us spare their feelings all we can.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Obviously they can&rsquo;t both stop here after this,&rdquo; observed
-Trenchard, &ldquo;and if Kellock comes back, Dingle will
-go.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be putting a premium on vice if you agree to
-that, Mr. Trenchard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no vice in it, Nicholas,&rdquo; answered Trood.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like an old woman to talk that way. You know very
-well indeed that Jordan Kellock&rsquo;s not a vicious person.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know very well he is, then. And them as don&rsquo;t go
-to church, or chapel, like him, have nothing to stand between
-them and temptation. And this is the result.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Trenchard laughed at Pinhey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where the shoe pinches&mdash;eh, Nicholas? But
-we mustn&rsquo;t be narrow-minded because we live in a narrow
-valley. That&rsquo;s what I tell others besides you. Kellock
-is a man of high feelings and great ideals. I don&rsquo;t agree
-with much that he dreams; but I know this: that the
-dreamer who makes his dreams come true is the salt of
-the earth. He&rsquo;s very young and he&rsquo;s got a mighty lot
-to learn&mdash;and he&rsquo;ll learn it. Whether he has the brains
-to go far I can&rsquo;t say, but at present he&rsquo;s very valuable
-to me and as he&rsquo;s willing to come back, I take him back.
-As for Ned, I shall see him to-day and hear all that he
-cares to tell me. I&rsquo;m heartily sorry for his troubles; but
-he&rsquo;s a sane sort of chap, too, and no doubt has come to
-some conclusion about the future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>&ldquo;That only leaves the woman then,&rdquo; said Trood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll go in any case,&rdquo; declared the master.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t answer for the glazing room if she don&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
-promised Mr. Pinhey. &ldquo;In a manner of speaking, after
-five-and-twenty years there, I may be said to set the tone
-of the glazing room, Mr. Trenchard, and if she were to
-come into it again and take her place at the crib, the other
-women, if I know &rsquo;em, would rise up and depart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not them, Nicholas. You don&rsquo;t know women if you
-think that. Women don&rsquo;t cut off their noses to spite their
-faces in my experience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t touch pitch and not be defiled, Ernest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who wants to touch pitch? The girl ain&rsquo;t pitch; and
-if she were, she&rsquo;s not the sort to influence anybody. Just
-a silly, everyday, selfish creature, vain of her good looks
-and with no more sense than, please God, she should have.
-The mystery is that Lydia Trivett, who&rsquo;s made of sense,
-should have put none into her child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll go as a matter of course,&rdquo; repeated Matthew
-Trenchard. &ldquo;Her own feeling would decide that question.
-I hate interfering with anybody here, Pinhey, and
-because a great many of you pay me the compliment to
-consult me about your private affairs, that&rsquo;s no reason
-why I should ever go into them on my own account.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But when those that work under you do wrong, then,
-as their employer and leader, I submit in all civility it&rsquo;s
-up to you to learn them right,&rdquo; argued Nicholas. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-putting a bonus on sin if Kellock stops here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Trood snorted and called Pinhey a fool; but Trenchard
-spoke gently to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I admire your clean and resolute religious views of
-life, if I don&rsquo;t always share them,&rdquo; he answered; &ldquo;but
-we mustn&rsquo;t be self-righteous, Nick, and we mustn&rsquo;t think
-our own standard of conduct covers all the ground. You
-wait till we know more about it. Sin&rsquo;s like conscience, a
-matter of education, Nicholas, and what&rsquo;s sin in one man
-is no sin at all in another. We mustn&rsquo;t fling the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-stone too readily, because few of us have got the judicial
-mind, or the impartial and unprejudiced outlook, or the
-knowledge of the facts that belong, or ought to belong,
-to the judgment seat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We can all read the Scriptures,&rdquo; answered Mr. Pinhey
-firmly, &ldquo;and if our judgment is founded on the Word, Mr.
-Trenchard, it is founded on the Rock of Ages, with Whom
-is no shadow of turning. And I don&rsquo;t say I&rsquo;ll stop under
-the same roof as an adulterer, I don&rsquo;t indeed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do your duty, Nicholas; I&rsquo;m sure of that,&rdquo; answered
-the other, and Pinhey, sighing profoundly, went
-his way.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no fool like a pious fool,&rdquo; said Trood scornfully,
-&ldquo;and I hope to Heaven you&rsquo;ll let Kellock stop.
-Beatermen, like Dingle, are got again, but such vatmen
-as Jordan Kellock are not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know that mighty well, Ernest, and just for that
-reason we must look sharp into it and not let self-interest
-bend us into anything wrong. With some men I&rsquo;d fire
-them on a job like this and have no more words about
-it; but Kellock&rsquo;s different. He&rsquo;s honourable, so far as
-my experience goes, and scrupulous in small things&mdash;a
-straight man every way. He has himself well in hand
-and he&rsquo;s got ambitions. He would hardly have done such
-a grave thing as this on foolish impulse. But I don&rsquo;t want
-to be prejudiced for him any more than against him. I&rsquo;ll
-leave it till I&rsquo;ve heard Ned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t you let Dingle turn you from him,&rdquo; begged
-Ernest. &ldquo;It stands to reason that Dingle won&rsquo;t have
-much good to say of him. Whatever he feels in secret,
-he must curse Kellock openly. In my opinion you ought
-to hear Kellock also on his own defence, before you sack
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I ought; and perhaps I will,&rdquo; answered the
-other. &ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t lose Kellock if it&rsquo;s in right and reason to
-keep him. Send Ned to me after dinner at one o&rsquo;clock.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<small>GOING UP CORKSCREW HILL</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Below Bow Bridge a row of narrow-headed stepping-stones
-are regularly placed across the river with their
-noses pointing up stream. The current sets thin lines of
-light trickling away, where the stones break its surface.
-Above the crossing, trees overhang the water and throw
-shadows to break the white sheen of stickles and the flash
-of foam; beneath the stepping-stones the channel widens
-and flows forward to the estuary. A dead tree had fallen
-here and upon one bough, overhanging a still pool, sat a
-kingfisher, like a spark of blue fire against the grey and
-umber colours spread round him. Beyond, where the
-stream bent eastward, there rose a fir-clad hill, and at
-water&rsquo;s brink stood cottages with irregular thatched roofs.
-Their white-washed faces represented the highest light of
-the scene and were a centre and focus for that rural picture.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the stepping-stones Ned Dingle sat and smoked
-his pipe. The water at his feet had run fine after a spell
-of dry weather, and there was only the motion of the lazy
-stream, broken now and then by a small fish. White ducks
-paddled close by in a shallow, where the afternoon sunshine
-turned the water to liquid amber and made the birds
-golden bright.</p>
-
-<p>Ned thought of an autumn day, when he had landed not
-far off with Kellock and Medora at the boathouse; and he
-retraced all the months between. He was in melancholy
-mood and as yet had not determined on his future actions;
-but he had seen Matthew Trenchard, given notice and left
-the Mill.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>The master was sympathetic and friendly. He accepted
-the situation and on this Saturday, as Dingle
-awaited others at the stepping-stones, the beaterman reflected
-that his activities at Dene were ended. He was
-now about to seek work elsewhere. On Monday, Kellock
-would return, and Mrs. Trivett reported that Jordan had
-already taken rooms for the present at &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s
-Arms,&rdquo; a little inn standing up the valley between Dene
-and Ashprington, at Bow Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Dingle still failed to grasp the extent of the disaster
-that had overtaken him. His moods alternated between
-wrath and grief and bewilderment at his loss. Mrs. Trivett
-supported him frankly and she introduced an element
-of mystery into the scandal, for she continued to declare
-it was not in Kellock&rsquo;s character to do this thing. Even
-the fact that he had done it was powerless to alter her
-reiterated assertion. She never greatly blamed Kellock,
-even when others pointed out that men do not run away
-with other men&rsquo;s wives on compulsion; and one fact she
-never ceased to dwell upon, which comforted Dingle in a
-negative sort of fashion.</p>
-
-<p>She repeated her assurance this evening; for now there
-came to Dingle, Lydia and the girl, Daisy Finch, Medora&rsquo;s
-friend. They were at leisure, since the day was Saturday,
-and they had joined him by appointment to fulfil a certain
-task. Mrs. Trivett, unaware of Medora&rsquo;s sentiments on
-the subject, had suggested that her daughter&rsquo;s things
-should be moved from Ned&rsquo;s house and taken to &ldquo;The
-Waterman&rsquo;s Arms,&rdquo; there to await her, and Ned agreed.
-His purpose was to leave no trace of Medora in his house;
-and soon there would be no trace of him either, for he was
-about to seek work elsewhere and doubted not to find it.</p>
-
-<p>As they ascended the hill to Ashprington, Lydia repeated
-her assurance. She had good private reasons for
-uttering more ferocious sentiments than perhaps she felt.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be that he&rsquo;ll ever make her happy,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s out of that man&rsquo;s power to do it. And not only I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-say so, for Philander Knox, who is very understanding,
-said so, last week without any promptings from me. He
-said so from his knowledge of Kellock, while I say so from
-my knowledge of my child. And so I tell you, Ned, as
-I&rsquo;ve told you before, that you&rsquo;ll be very properly revenged,
-without lifting your hand to anybody.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall do what I shall do,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and I don&rsquo;t
-know more than you what I shall do. I may take forty
-shillings or a month out of the man yet. Some days I
-feel like that; other days I do not. For all she&rsquo;s done I
-know this: I understand your blasted daughter better
-than ever Kellock will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Knox says they&rsquo;ll both get their punishment and
-he hopes you&rsquo;ll let &rsquo;em be. And if you did, that would
-be the worst punishment. In Philander&rsquo;s opinion there&rsquo;s
-no call for anybody to interfere, because let &rsquo;em alone and
-they&rsquo;ll punish each other to their dying day. That&rsquo;s the
-terrible picture he paints of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never understand,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never know
-what choked her off me. There must have been secret
-enemies at work lying against me I reckon. But she could
-never put a case against me worth its weight in words,
-and to the last I didn&rsquo;t dream what she was up to. A base,
-treacherous bit of play-acting I call it. And to crown all
-by that beastly letter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you could believe in such things, I&rsquo;d say Medora
-had the evil eye put upon her and was ill-wished into this,&rdquo;
-said Daisy. &ldquo;Such a girl as she was&mdash;so happy, and
-so fond of an outing, and so fond of cheerful company;
-and used to be so fond of Ned, I&rsquo;m sure, for when you was
-first married, she was always telling me how she cared for
-you. Then the change came over her like bad weather.
-What did Jordan Kellock say, Ned, if I may ask?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no secrets. The letter&rsquo;s like the man&mdash;cut
-and dried. Nobody else on God&rsquo;s earth could have written
-it I should think. He feels that Medora made a mistake,
-but that it needn&rsquo;t be fatal to all three of us; and that,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-as we all respect ourselves, and are responsible members
-of society, we can put the mistake right in a reasonable
-and dignified sort of way. Never a word of shame. He
-seems to think he&rsquo;s only got to state the facts, as he sees
-them, for me to fall in with them. He says, of course,
-my first thought will be consideration for Medora, so that
-her sensitive and delicate nature may be spared as much
-as possible. He feels quite sure that he can leave the
-subject in my hands, and assures me that he will do everything
-possible to assist me. That&rsquo;s the divorce of course.
-Medora wasn&rsquo;t so nice in her letter. She ordered me to
-divorce her sharp. But even so, I&rsquo;d sooner have her insults
-than his civility. Civility by God! From him.
-She&rsquo;d worked herself up to a pitch of temper when she
-wrote that trash, and let out the poison he&rsquo;s put into her
-mind. She&rsquo;s a damned silly woman and that&rsquo;s all there
-is to her; but faithless, worthless wretch that she is, I
-can forgive her easier than him. I don&rsquo;t feel as if I wanted
-to shoot her, or cut her throat, or anything like that. My
-feeling to her is beyond my power to put into words at
-present, though no doubt it will clear itself. But I see
-him clear enough for a foul hypocrite&mdash;smug and sly
-and heartless. He&rsquo;s played for his own hand for a year
-and slowly worked her up to the outrage she&rsquo;s put on
-me. In fact I don&rsquo;t see how I can very well help breaking
-his neck, when it comes to the point.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t for me to stand up for him against you,&rdquo; admitted
-Lydia. &ldquo;All the same, my instinct tells me to pray
-you not to be rough, Ned. You&rsquo;ve got right on your side,
-and it&rsquo;s easier in some ways to suffer wrong than commit
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Depends what you call wrong,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;If
-Kellock thought it no wrong to kindiddle my wife away
-from me, why should I think it wrong to get back a bit of
-my own? Men have killed men for less than this, and a
-jury of husbands have said they wasn&rsquo;t guilty. I may not
-be the sort to kill anybody; but I&rsquo;ll let him that bleats<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
-such a lot about self-respect see I&rsquo;ve got my self-respect
-as well as he has, and mean to act according. It&rsquo;s all in
-the air&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know what I shall do. I&rsquo;ve got to make
-him eat his self-respect somehow and show him what he is;
-and that&rsquo;s a long way different from what he thinks he is.
-I&rsquo;ll make &rsquo;em look a pair of fools sooner or later&mdash;if
-no worse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you will then; and take it in a high spirit and do
-nought to make yourself look a fool,&rdquo; urged Lydia; but he
-declared that it was too late for that.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I look a fool all right,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not such a
-sand-blind sort of man that I don&rsquo;t know very well what
-I look like. People always laugh at a chap in my fix.
-Let &rsquo;em. Perhaps I shall laugh too presently. The difference
-between me and that man is that I can stand a bit
-of laughter; but he couldn&rsquo;t. Laughter would kill him.
-He&rsquo;d stand up to blame and hard words and curses. He
-likes &rsquo;em&mdash;he told me so&mdash;because it shows his ideas go
-deep and fret people&rsquo;s accepted opinions. Every reformer
-must make enemies, or he&rsquo;s not doing his job right&mdash;so
-he said to Knox one day, and I heard him. But laughter
-and scorn and contempt&mdash;that&rsquo;s different.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They reached Ned&rsquo;s house and, for his sake, set about
-their painful task with resolution.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s like as if we was going through a dead woman&rsquo;s
-things,&rdquo; whispered Daisy to Mrs. Trivett and the elder
-agreed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She is dead as far as poor Ned&rsquo;s concerned,&rdquo; she answered.
-&ldquo;And if anything on earth could shame her to
-death, surely it will be to see all her clothes and everything
-she&rsquo;s got in the world waiting for her when she
-arrives.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Daisy, however, argued for her friend while they collected
-her garments and tied them in brown paper parcels.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to say a word against Mr. Dingle, but
-all the same no such dreadful thing could have happened
-if he&rsquo;d been the right one. There&rsquo;s always two sides to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-every trouble and there must be excuses that we don&rsquo;t
-know about.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett admitted this.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s always excuses for everybody that we don&rsquo;t
-know about, Daisy. We all do things we can&rsquo;t explain&mdash;good
-as well as bad; and if we can&rsquo;t explain ourselves to
-ourselves, then it&rsquo;s right and reasonable as we shouldn&rsquo;t
-be too sure we can explain other people.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They made parcels of everything that belonged to Medora,
-then Ned brought to them a work-box, two pictures
-in frames and a sewing-machine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These have all got to go also,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And this
-lot you&rsquo;d better give her when you see her. It&rsquo;s her trinkrums
-and brooches and such like.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He gave Mrs. Trivett a little box which she put in her
-pocket without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>Another woman joined them. She was Ned&rsquo;s old aunt,
-who had come to him to keep his house as long as he
-should remain in it. She talked venomously of Medora.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they carried the parcels down the lane to the
-foot of the hill and left them at &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s Arms,&rdquo;
-in a little parlour on one side of the entrance. Then Ned
-went home and Daisy Finch and Mrs. Trivett returned to
-Dene. There the girl left Lydia, and the latter, after a
-cup of tea with a neighbour, prepared to climb the Corkscrew
-Hill and return to Cornworthy.</p>
-
-<p>Then it was that she found a man waiting for her and
-Philander Knox appeared.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I knew your movements,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I knew that
-you&rsquo;d be setting out for the farm just about now, so I
-thought as I&rsquo;d keep you company up the hill. For I always
-find, going up the Corkscrew, that it&rsquo;s easier travelled
-in company.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She was gratified.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a kind soul and I&rsquo;m very glad, if you&rsquo;ve got
-nothing better to do. My thoughts ain&rsquo;t pleasant companions
-to-night, Mr. Knox.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>&ldquo;They should be,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;for your thoughts
-can&rsquo;t bully you, nor yet accuse you of things left undone,
-or done ill, like most of us have got to suffer from them.
-You can face your thoughts same as you can face your
-deeds, with a good conscience all the time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who can? I can&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;m cruel vexed now. That slip
-of a child, Daisy Finch, have been showing me that I may
-have been too hard on my own daughter. And yet&mdash;how
-can one feel too hard? &rsquo;Tisn&rsquo;t as if I didn&rsquo;t know Ned
-Dingle. But I do. He&rsquo;s took this in a very Christian
-spirit&mdash;so far. I&rsquo;d never have thought for a moment
-he&rsquo;d have held in so well, or been such a gentleman over
-it. Some people might almost think he didn&rsquo;t care and
-didn&rsquo;t feel it; but he does&mdash;with all his heart he does.
-He couldn&rsquo;t speak when I left him just now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true&mdash;he certainly does feel it properly. But
-it&rsquo;s a very peculiar case, along of Kellock being the man
-he is. I haven&rsquo;t got to the bottom of the thing yet. As
-a rule I&rsquo;m not great on other people&rsquo;s business, as you
-know, but in this case, along of my hopes where you&rsquo;re
-concerned, Lydia, I take this to be a part of my business;
-and I&rsquo;m going to get to the bottom of it by strategy and
-find out what made him take her away from Ned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It don&rsquo;t much matter now. The past is past and it
-won&rsquo;t help us to know more than we know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t say that. You can read the future in the
-past if you&rsquo;ve got understanding eyes. And I haven&rsquo;t hid
-from you I&rsquo;m far from hopeful about the future, because
-I can&rsquo;t see them two suiting each other through a lifetime.
-They won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They stood to rest at a bend in the tremendous hill.
-Mr. Knox dabbed his brow with a red cotton handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This blessed mountain brings the beads to the forehead
-every time I come up to it,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-a wonder; you hop up like a bird.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Devonshire&mdash;born to hills.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t have valleys without &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true. We&rsquo;ve all got to take the rough with the
-smooth, and the steep with the level.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To take the rough smoothly is the whole art of living,&rdquo;
-declared Philander, &ldquo;and I thought I was pretty
-clever at it till I met you. But you can give us all a start
-and a beating. Well, this may or may not be a likely moment
-to come back to the all important question; but impulse
-guides right as often as wrong, and if I&rsquo;m wrong
-there&rsquo;s no harm done I hope. Have you had time to turn
-it over, or have you been too busy?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I owed it to you to turn it over,&rdquo; she answered after
-a short pause. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got as much right to go on with
-your life as I have to go on with mine. Time don&rsquo;t stand
-still because men and women are in two minds.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;re in two minds&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t say that; yet I don&rsquo;t deny it. I have thought
-about you. You&rsquo;re a good chap and very restful to the
-nerves; and your sense, coming on the foolishness of some
-people, shows up in a bright light.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve hardly seen a twinkle of it yet, Lydia. I don&rsquo;t
-want to blow my own trumpet, or nothing like that; but
-with all my faults, you&rsquo;d find the sense was here, and the
-patience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a marrying sort of man, no doubt, and you&rsquo;ve
-got all the makings of a good, restful husband&mdash;I see
-that too. But I reckon you haven&rsquo;t looked round far
-enough yet. There&rsquo;s a lot against me. I ain&rsquo;t a free
-woman by any manner of means, and you don&rsquo;t want to
-be saddled with my troubles. That&rsquo;s the worse of marriage
-in my opinion. A man says, &lsquo;I take the woman and
-not her family,&rsquo; and the woman says the same; but things
-don&rsquo;t fall out like that in life. There&rsquo;s always the families,
-and nobody can escape from &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True, but we can be very good friends with our relations
-without doing nursemaid&rsquo;s work for &rsquo;em as well as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
-our own work. &rsquo;Tis time you stopped working altogether
-in my opinion, and had a bit of rest and comfort to your
-life&mdash;such a dignified creature as you are by nature.
-The farm gets stuffier and stuffier and you can&rsquo;t deny it.
-It will tell on your health and break you down. So why
-not do as I beg of you and come to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you ever thought of that nice woman, Alice
-Barefoot?&rdquo; asked Lydia suddenly, and Mr. Knox stopped
-dead, stared at her through the gloaming and mopped his
-head and neck again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good God! What d&rsquo;you mean?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A woman without a care or encumbrance and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s not a worthy remark, and
-I&rsquo;ll start to forget and forgive it, if you please, this moment.
-If you just think all that goes to such a speech
-as that, you&rsquo;ll be sorry you made it. A man tells you he
-loves you, and you say &lsquo;Try next door.&rsquo; That&rsquo;s bad
-enough in itself; but there&rsquo;s more to it and worse even
-than that. For it means either you don&rsquo;t know Alice,
-or you don&rsquo;t know me. You ought to understand perfectly
-well that a woman like her is no more use to me
-than a Red Indian. And you do know it; and if you&rsquo;d
-thought half a minute, you&rsquo;d never have let yourself say
-such a wild and unkind and silly thing as that. It shows
-a very great lack of interest in me&mdash;far less interest
-than I thought you felt in fact. I&rsquo;m shook, Lydia; I
-thought we understood each other better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s a fine and a good woman,&rdquo; said Mrs. Trivett
-feebly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good she may be, in a bleak sort of way; fine she is
-not and you know it. Besides, surely at my time of life a
-man wants a mind, if he&rsquo;s got one himself. No doubt you
-think the world of Alice Barefoot; but even you ain&rsquo;t
-going to argue she&rsquo;s got more mind than would go on a
-three-penny piece and leave a margin.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry&mdash;I was quite wrong,&rdquo; confessed Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You were, and since you&rsquo;re sorry, enough said. I&rsquo;ll<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-resume another time. Here&rsquo;s the top and I won&rsquo;t go no
-farther to-night. You ain&rsquo;t yourself, I&rsquo;m afraid.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do please come and have a glass of cider. Tom thinks
-the world of you, Philander.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s better. If you say &lsquo;come,&rsquo; then of course I&rsquo;ll
-come. But don&rsquo;t let there be any false pretences about
-it. We&rsquo;ve all got to pretend a lot in this world; but I
-ain&rsquo;t going to pretend nothing about Tom Dolbear. I
-don&rsquo;t visit at Priory Farm for his company, but for yours;
-and, if God wills, I&rsquo;ll get you out of it sooner or later,
-Lydia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He don&rsquo;t suspect nothing like that,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He does not&mdash;that&rsquo;s certain, else he wouldn&rsquo;t offer
-me his cider or anything else. But a time is at hand when
-he&rsquo;ll have to face it&mdash;and his wife also. Most women
-would have seen through it by now; but she&rsquo;s always asleep,
-or half asleep, while you do her work.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Poor Mary,&rdquo; said Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Her doom is coming near I hope and trust,&rdquo; he answered.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not doing right at all in standing between
-that woman and her duty. You come to me, and
-then she&rsquo;ll find that she&rsquo;s only got time to sleep eight
-hours in the twenty-four; and she&rsquo;ll also find the meaning
-of a family.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They proceeded together and Knox presently smoked
-a pipe with Tom; but he seemed not as amiable as usual
-and contradicted the farmer&rsquo;s opinion flatly on more than
-one occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dolbear, however, thought very highly of the vatman
-and doubted not that Mr. Knox was right.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I learn from you,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<small>AT &ldquo;THE WATERMAN&rsquo;S ARMS&rdquo;</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>A measure of argument arose between Abel Hayman and
-his wife, master and mistress of &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s Arms.&rdquo;
-He had held that to receive Medora and Kellock was quite
-impossible, while she took a contrary opinion, and her
-word was law.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Morals is morals, and business is business,&rdquo; said Mrs.
-Hayman, &ldquo;and I know Jordan Kellock by reputation, and
-his reputation is all it should be. Dingle will get a bill of
-divorcement and they&rsquo;ll be married according to law; and
-if they don&rsquo;t come to us, they&rsquo;ll go to the &lsquo;Ring of Bells,&rsquo;
-so enough said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hayman relented at sound of &ldquo;The Ring of Bells,&rdquo;
-and was ready to welcome the guests when they arrived.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed strange to Medora, who had passed the little
-inn by the bridge so many times, to enter the door and find
-it her home for a season. It was a cool and restful spot,
-and the private rooms, facing the stream, were removed
-some way from the bar. A yellow rose straggled over
-the face of the building and in the garden were old world
-flowers, now pushing up to renewed life&mdash;columbines and
-bleeding hearts, orange lilies and larkspurs.</p>
-
-<p>Medora arrived weary, and Kellock, to his own surprise,
-proved nervous and found himself wishing very heartily
-that his first day at work was ended. He knew not what
-might be in store for him, and Medora, who was not in a
-happy mood, had, in the train, deplored the fact that they
-were returning. Nothing would have disappointed her
-more than not to do so; yet she meant it at the moment
-when she said it, for who does not often contradict his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
-own deep-seated desire and side, as it were, against himself
-at some passing whim from within, or inspiration
-from without?</p>
-
-<p>When she found all her clothes and possessions waiting
-for her, Medora fell very silent, and Jordan puzzled to
-know how they should have come there.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I told my mother where we were going to stop,&rdquo; she
-explained, &ldquo;but, of course, I never said nothing about my
-clothes. I didn&rsquo;t regard them as mine no more&mdash;nor yet
-the ornaments.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They meant well. You needn&rsquo;t wear them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Their supper was laid in a little parlour on one side of
-the private entrance, and when Medora descended, she
-found Mrs. Hayman turning up the lamp.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be tired, my dear, I expect,&rdquo; said the elder,
-&ldquo;and Mr. Kellock also. Shall I send in bottled beer or
-draught?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We shan&rsquo;t want nothing in that way. Yes, I will too&mdash;I&rsquo;ll
-have a Bass, Mrs. Hayman; but he won&rsquo;t&mdash;he&rsquo;s
-teetotal. Was it my mother brought my things?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She did&mdash;her and Daisy Finch. And your mother&rsquo;s
-coming over to see you to-morrow morning. I was to be
-sure and tell you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose it have made a bit of stir, Mrs. Hayman?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What have, my dear?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Me, running away with Mr. Kellock.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not that I have heard of. There&rsquo;s such a lot of running
-away now-a-days. Though, as a man said in the
-bar a few nights ago, there ain&rsquo;t much need for most women
-to run. They can go their own pace, so long as it takes
-&rsquo;em away from their lawfuls. Take my own niece. She
-married a wheelwright, and ran away with a carpenter six
-months after. And when she did, far the happiest of
-them three people was the wheelwright. Yet the guilty
-pair, so to call &rsquo;em, thought he&rsquo;d do dreadful things; they
-didn&rsquo;t draw a breath in comfort till they&rsquo;d got to Canada,
-and put the ocean between. Marriage, in fact, ain&rsquo;t what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
-it was. In my opinion it won&rsquo;t stand the strain much
-longer. It was never built to endure against such facilities
-for getting about and seeing new faces as the people
-have now&mdash;let alone the education. These here life-long
-partnerships&mdash;however, no doubt you know all about it.
-I&rsquo;m a very broad-minded woman myself, and never throw
-a stone, though I don&rsquo;t live in a glass house, for me and
-my husband are two of the lucky ones. I&rsquo;ve never wished
-for no change, and God help him if he&rsquo;d shown any feeling
-of that sort.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora little liked the assumption that her achievement
-was an affair of every day.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Few have got the courage and self-respect to do it,&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tain&rsquo;t that. It&rsquo;s selfishness in some cases, and just
-common sense in others. We small people are much freer
-to act than the upper sort. And as divorce costs a mint
-of money, there&rsquo;s thousands and thousands fling up all
-hope of an orderly release, and part, and go their own
-way, and live respectable lives that make the Church properly
-yelp and wring its hands. But the Church is powerless
-against the Law, so my husband says; and the Law
-takes very good care to keep the whip-hand and make
-divorce a great source of income for lawyers. However,
-Dingle is a prosperous man, and no doubt he&rsquo;ll run to it
-and do the needful. The trouble in these cases is the
-children, and lucky that don&rsquo;t arise this time. &rsquo;Tis a very
-great thing in my view that a woman should have her
-children by the man she prefers.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who wants children?&rdquo; asked Medora. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
-nothing but a curse and a nuisance most times. Me and
-Mr. Kellock want to do important things in the world,
-Mrs. Hayman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you can think of anything more important than
-getting a brace of good healthy children, I&rsquo;d be glad to
-know what it is,&rdquo; answered the landlady. &ldquo;I speak without
-prejudice in that matter, never having had none my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>self.
-But that&rsquo;s no fault of ours&mdash;merely the will of
-Providence, and nothing more puzzling or outrageous ever
-happened, for I was one of seven and Abel one of ten; and
-yet God willed me barren&mdash;a good mother blasted in the
-bud, you might say. I sometimes wish the Almighty would
-let Nature take its course a bit oftener.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora was glad that Kellock arrived at this moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to have a glass of beer, Jordan,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m properly tired to-night, and I shan&rsquo;t sleep if I
-don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He answered nothing, for she had promised to give up
-stimulant. Then Mrs. Hayman went to fetch their supper.</p>
-
-<p>Medora enjoyed familiar Devon food, ate well, and slept
-well enough presently in a comfortable feather bed, with
-the murmur of Bow River for a lullaby.</p>
-
-<p>The next day was Sunday, and Mrs. Trivett duly arrived,
-to be received in the little parlour. Medora kissed
-her, and Kellock offered to shake hands; but he found that
-Lydia was far from cordial. She kissed Medora coldly,
-and ignored the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I felt it my duty to see you, Medora,&rdquo; she began,
-&ldquo;because I don&rsquo;t want for you, nor yet Mr. Kellock, to
-be under any doubt about my feelings. I think you&rsquo;ve
-done a very evil and ill-convenient thing, and I&rsquo;d like to
-know what would become of the world if everybody was
-to break their oaths and make hay of their marriage lines,
-same as you have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora quoted from Mrs. Hayman, and Kellock ventured
-to think that each case ought to be judged on its
-own merits.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I quite understand I&rsquo;m in a very delicate position so
-far as you&rsquo;re concerned. I don&rsquo;t expect you to take my
-side in the matter, though I&rsquo;m quite confident that in a
-year&rsquo;s time, Mrs. Trivett, you&rsquo;ll see this is a blessing in
-disguise. And I tell you that Medora&rsquo;s husband that
-was, abused his rights, so that it was up to me, who loved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-and respected Medora, to rescue her from him. Because,
-if she&rsquo;d stopped under his cruel tyranny much longer,
-she&rsquo;d have lost everything that makes life worth living
-for man or woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And where did you get this news from? Where did
-you hear Ned Dingle was a cruel tyrant, and all the rest
-of it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On the best possible authority surely. I had it from
-Medora herself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause, then Lydia proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yesterday, at Ned&rsquo;s wish&mdash;at his wish, mind&mdash;me
-and Daisy Finch went to his house and packed up every
-stitch belonging to my daughter&mdash;every tiniest thing
-that was hers&mdash;and brought &rsquo;em here for her comfort.
-You wouldn&rsquo;t call that a cruel thing, would you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You might have saved yourself the trouble, because
-Mr. Kellock wouldn&rsquo;t let me wear them even if I wanted
-to,&rdquo; said Medora. &ldquo;It shows his nice feeling against my
-late husband&rsquo;s coarse feeling&mdash;as if any proper thinking
-man could suppose I wanted anything about me to remind
-me of the bitter past. I&rsquo;ve got everything new from London.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A pity you couldn&rsquo;t have got a new&mdash;however, I&rsquo;m
-not here to lecture you. I&rsquo;m your mother. I&rsquo;ve only a
-few things to say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How&rsquo;s Mr. Dingle took it?&rdquo; asked Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like a Christian, so far, and will, I hope, to the end.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Will he see me?&rdquo; enquired Kellock. &ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t answer
-my letter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell as to that. Like the rest of us, he was a
-lot surprised that you could come back here after a thing
-like this. And Mr. Knox said your point of view was
-beyond his experience. He wondered if you expected to
-see a triumphal arch put up. But Ned feels more like
-an ordinary, decent person, I reckon. He&rsquo;s going. He&rsquo;s
-left the Mill, and he&rsquo;s going to put up his house for sale.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;s took it like a Christian, as you say, perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
-he&rsquo;ll go farther still,&rdquo; suggested Kellock. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s only
-one house in these parts that&rsquo;s like to suit Medora and
-myself; but perhaps Dingle&rsquo;s house&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His dry mind saw nothing impossible about the idea,
-but Lydia stared at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What on earth are you made of?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It sounds unreasonable to you? But, if you think of
-it, there&rsquo;s nothing unreasonable really. If we&rsquo;re all going
-to carry this through in a high-minded way, there&rsquo;s no
-more reason why I shouldn&rsquo;t buy, or rent, Dingle&rsquo;s house
-than anybody else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Except me,&rdquo; said Medora. &ldquo;And mother&rsquo;s right
-there. I wonder at you thinking of such a thing, and
-putting me in such a false position&mdash;seeing his ghost
-at every corner, and hearing him whistling at every turn.
-You haven&rsquo;t got no imagination, Jordan. I wouldn&rsquo;t go
-back to that house or cross the threshold, not if it was
-built of gold with diamond windows.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I stand corrected,&rdquo; answered Kellock mildly. &ldquo;As
-for imagination, Medora, you mustn&rsquo;t think I lack for
-that. I&rsquo;ve got my vision, else I shouldn&rsquo;t have done what
-I have done, or be going to do what I hope to do; but I
-grant that while the house is only bricks and mortar to
-me, like another, it means more to you&mdash;a prison and a
-place of torment.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tom-foolery!&rdquo; said Lydia. &ldquo;Nobody ever tormented
-Medora but her own silly self, and if you&rsquo;d got
-half the sense you think you&rsquo;ve got, Jordan Kellock, you&rsquo;d
-have found that out long ago. However, you will find it
-out; and I say it before her, for I&rsquo;d never say a word behind
-her back that I&rsquo;d fear to say to her face. You&rsquo;ve
-took her at her own valuation.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no,&rdquo; he replied, flushing. &ldquo;I take her at a
-much higher valuation than her own. I want to put her
-in a place worthy of her, where she can expand, and be
-herself, and reveal what she really is. I want for Medora
-to show the world all that&rsquo;s hid in her. She doesn&rsquo;t know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
-herself yet; but I know her, and I&rsquo;m going to help her to
-let the world see what she is. And I hope as you&rsquo;re not
-for us, at any rate, you won&rsquo;t be against us, Mrs. Trivett.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If anybody had told me you&rsquo;d ever do a thing like
-this, I wouldn&rsquo;t have believed them,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-not going to pretend to you, or Medora either, that I&rsquo;m
-on your side. I think you&rsquo;ve done a very wicked thing,
-and what beats me, and will always beat me, is how such a
-man as you could have done it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;ve done a wicked thing, Mrs. Trivett.
-I only ask you not to judge. It&rsquo;s no good talking
-or explaining all the thousand and one points that decided
-me. I only ask you to give me credit on the strength of
-my past, and to understand I&rsquo;m no headstrong, silly creature
-who dashes at a thing on impulse, regardless of the
-consequences to the community at large. Nobody can say
-of me I haven&rsquo;t got a proper respect for the community.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s her husband you ought to have respected I should
-think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t ask that. When I remember the way he
-treated Medora, I can&rsquo;t respect Mr. Dingle. Otherwise
-these things wouldn&rsquo;t have happened. I admit I love Medora
-and always did do; but I can honestly say that if
-Medora had been nothing to me, I should none the less
-have tried to save her from such a fate, for common good
-feeling to humanity at large. Being as she was and finding,
-as she did, that she could love me, of course that simplified
-it and made it possible for me to put her in the
-strong and unassailable position of my future wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stuff and nonsense,&rdquo; answered Lydia. &ldquo;You think
-all this, and I suppose you really believe all this; but
-you&rsquo;re blinded by being in love with my daughter. However
-the mischief&rsquo;s done now. Only I want you both to
-understand that you&rsquo;ll get no sympathy from me&mdash;or
-anybody else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t want no sympathy,&rdquo; declared Medora.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got each other and we don&rsquo;t expect a little country
-place like this to understand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan dwelt upon a word that Mrs. Trivett had
-spoken.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You say &lsquo;the mischief is done,&rsquo; but I can&rsquo;t allow that.
-No mischief is done at all&mdash;far from it. The mischief
-would have been if Medora and her husband had been
-bound to stop together&mdash;chained together against all
-their proper feelings and against all decency. But for
-them to separate like responsible beings was no mischief.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And it&rsquo;s up to him to get on with it,&rdquo; added Medora.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve done our share and took the law in our hands,
-because we were fearless and knew we were right; and more
-we can&rsquo;t do until he acts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Has he moved in the matter, Mrs. Trivett?&rdquo; enquired
-Kellock. &ldquo;I can supply his lawyer with the necessary
-data.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia flushed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No; he&rsquo;s done nothing to my knowledge. He&rsquo;s got
-to think of himself and his future work.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be reasonable I&rsquo;m sure. The world being what
-it is&mdash;a very critical place&mdash;I&rsquo;m exceedingly jealous
-for Medora&rsquo;s good name.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In common decency and duty I should think he ought
-to feel the same,&rdquo; said Medora. &ldquo;He can&rsquo;t martyr me no
-more and the least he can do is to set me free the first
-moment possible. He&rsquo;s took ten years off my life and
-my looks; and that&rsquo;s about enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, he hasn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; returned her mother. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re looking
-a lot better than you deserve to look, and as to decency
-and duty, there&rsquo;s nobody here will come to you to learn
-about either. You&rsquo;re no more a martyr than anybody
-else. Ned&rsquo;s the martyr, and it ill becomes you to talk of
-him in that hateful tone of voice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was much pained and Medora began to cry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do implore you&mdash;I do implore you, Mrs. Trivett,
-to think about this subject on a lofty plane. God&rsquo;s my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
-judge I have taken as high a line about this as I knew
-how to take. We&rsquo;ve looked at it in a religious spirit and
-had every respect for our own characters and every respect
-for Mr. Dingle. That&rsquo;s the truth about it. I don&rsquo;t
-want to preach or explain how we saw our duty, because
-in your present biased frame of mind, you wouldn&rsquo;t believe
-me; but I may say that Medora is a sacred object in my
-eyes&mdash;just as sacred as anybody else&rsquo;s property is sacred&mdash;and
-I&rsquo;d no more treat her with less reverence and honour
-than I always did before and after she married, than
-I&rsquo;d treat any other woman. I&rsquo;m not going to do anything
-on which I could look back with a sigh, or her with
-a blush. We&rsquo;re not that sort by any means.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should hope not,&rdquo; murmured Medora. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re a
-lot too proud to explain ourselves to such people as live
-here; we move on a higher walk of conscience than what
-they do, but all I know is that Jordan&rsquo;s a saint and they&rsquo;re
-not worthy to black his boots or tie the laces.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Through tears she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m not a saint; but I&rsquo;m a reasonable man and
-know what&rsquo;s due to my reputation and my peace of
-mind,&rdquo; declared Mr. Kellock, &ldquo;and knowing that, I abide
-by it and don&rsquo;t risk losing the only thing that matters,
-and don&rsquo;t put myself in such a position that Medora shall
-ever think less of me than she does now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I think more of you&mdash;more of you every minute of
-my life!&rdquo; sobbed Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So there it is, Mrs. Trivett,&rdquo; summed up the man.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you called and I wish it was in my power to
-make you see the light in this matter. But we shall appeal
-to the future and we&rsquo;re not in the least afraid of the
-verdict of posterity. There&rsquo;s no support like the consciousness
-of right. In fact for my part I&rsquo;d never take
-on anything, big or little, if I didn&rsquo;t feel to the bed-rock
-of my conscience it was right. And one thing you can
-be quite sure about, and that is that your daughter is as
-safe in my hands as it is humanly possible for her to be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>Mrs. Trivett looked at him helplessly and then at her
-weeping child.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re one too many for me, Jordan Kellock,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve thrown over every law and gone the limit
-so far as I can see; and yet you talk about your honour
-and Medora&rsquo;s as the only thing you really care about.
-You&rsquo;re beyond me, both of you, and I think I&rsquo;ll wish you
-good evening.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I feel perfectly sure that light will come into your
-mind as the future unfolds itself, Mrs. Trivett.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;but your idea of light and
-mine ain&rsquo;t the same and never will be&mdash;unless you change.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no shadow of changing with me,&rdquo; he answered.
-&ldquo;Medora&rsquo;s the first thing in my life henceforth and,
-though you don&rsquo;t agree with us, I hope you&rsquo;ll reach a frame
-of mind when you&rsquo;ll respect us as we respect ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You might stop to tea, mother,&rdquo; suggested Medora,
-but Mrs. Trivett declined.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to talk no more,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;so I&rsquo;ll go;
-and you needn&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m an enemy or anything of that.
-I&rsquo;m your mother, Medora, and I&rsquo;m about the most puzzled
-mother living this minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia went away deeply mystified and disliking Kellock
-more than when she had come. Yet she told herself it
-was folly to dislike him. He was no hypocrite, and though
-his sentiments had seemed ridiculous in any other mouth,
-they were really proper to his.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<small>TRAGEDY IN THE SIZING ROOM</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Jordan Kellock accepted the attitude of the Mill to his
-achievement with as little emotion as possible. He concealed
-his own feelings, and since he did not attach great
-importance to the opinions of his fellow workers, their
-jests or silence were alike indifferent to him. He was
-conscious of well-doing and felt no doubt that the future
-would serve amply to justify his action.</p>
-
-<p>He worked as usual and presently discovered that
-neither Ernest Trood, the foreman, nor Matthew Trenchard
-himself proposed to discuss his private affairs with
-him. The master never mentioned it, and when he met
-Kellock, shook hands with his usual large friendliness and
-trusted the vatman had enjoyed his holiday.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You went to the Exhibition I hope?&rdquo; he asked. And
-Jordan replied that he had done so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Our pictures made a proper sensation,&rdquo; he declared.
-&ldquo;I stood by and watched the public for an hour, and the
-people were more astonished at our water-mark pictures
-than anything in the show.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You shall see what the press said,&rdquo; replied Trenchard.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve had very good notices about it and far beyond
-the trade too. Art papers have taken up water-marks
-and pointed out what I told you long ago, that the craft
-ought to have a great future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Of Medora nothing was said, but Trood mentioned her
-briefly a few days later. He took Kellock aside.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s official, and no more,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;But I suppose
-you stand for Mrs. Dingle now, and are going to
-marry her as soon as it can be done?&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>&ldquo;That is so, Trood.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, she went away without warning, and forfeits her
-money accordingly. You know the law on that subject.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; said Kellock. &ldquo;She didn&rsquo;t mean
-nothing uncivil or improper, but the circumstances required
-her to act as she did.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Trood nodded and left him. In common with most of
-the other responsible men in the Mill, he never addressed
-Kellock on the subject of Medora. Jordan noticed this,
-and felt that though people abstained from comment, his
-action had created a body of opinion that was to some
-extent unfriendly. None hesitated to regret the departure
-of Ned Dingle, and none attempted to conceal that regret
-in the presence of Kellock. A few men refused to recognise
-him farther, and when he saluted them as usual, cut
-him. Robert Life was one of these, and he found that
-those who came immediately under the influence of Nicholas
-Pinhey&mdash;the men at the glazing rollers&mdash;had been
-imbued with particular animosity. There Medora herself
-had worked.</p>
-
-<p>As for her, she lived through a familiar experience, and
-discovered that anticipation is greater than reality, both
-for good and evil. She had built up a very elaborate picture
-of her return to Dene, and of the attitude of her
-circle. It was a vision wherein she occupied the centre,
-as a being mysterious and arresting, a figure to challenge
-hatred, or enthusiasm, a compelling heroine, who might
-provoke furious enemies, or win loyal friends, but could
-by no possibility leave anyone indifferent. She had pictured
-herself as the protagonist, the cynosure, the paramount
-object of interest. When she walked abroad in
-her London clothes, all eyes would be upon her, and she
-would move among them, gentle, indifferent, inscrutable,
-her secrets hidden, herself doubtless a subject of ceaseless
-and heated discussion.</p>
-
-<p>But she missed the least consciousness of creating a
-sensation; she even missed the unpleasantness which she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-had designed to endure so finely, that Jordan might see
-the superb stuff of which she was really made. The limelight
-of public attention was wanting, and her return fell
-almost as flat as when she had come home from her honeymoon
-with Ned Dingle. So far as Medora could see, nobody
-really cared a button about her. She met with the
-same experiences as Jordan, but took them differently.
-He returned to his occupation and, in the full tide of work,
-was able to keep his mind free of his private affairs, and
-find other interests among his fellow craftsmen. But
-Medora had no distraction during this period. She possessed
-not even a house to look after, until Kellock found
-a house. Following on the first clash with her fellow creatures,
-and the discovery that some were amiable as usual,
-and some unprepared to recognise her, or have anything
-more to do with her, Medora began to be unspeakably
-bored with life and this flat anticlimax. The spring days
-dragged, and she knew not how to fill them. But her
-partner, perceiving this, set her a variety of tasks, and
-she found herself making notes for him from books, and
-copying extracts out of speeches delivered by the leaders
-of labour&rsquo;s cause. At first she performed her tasks with
-energy, and Kellock praised her devotion; but he blamed
-her handwriting, which was very indifferent.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some day I&rsquo;ll run to a typewriter,&rdquo; he had promised.</p>
-
-<p>The matter upon which he occupied her quite failed to
-interest Medora. It was dreary in itself and depressing
-in all that it implied, because their future, so far as she
-could see, held mighty little promise of much comfort or
-prosperity, if Jordan proposed to devote his life to these
-thorny and controversial subjects. It was magnificent,
-and might mean fame for him after he was dead; but
-promised remarkably little fun for Mrs. Kellock in the
-meantime.</p>
-
-<p>Daisy Finch proved faithful and often came to see
-Medora at &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s Arms.&rdquo; She believed that
-the opposition need not be taken seriously.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only a nine days&rsquo; wonder,&rdquo; declared Daisy.
-&ldquo;When you&rsquo;re married to Mr. Kellock, everybody will
-come round.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Miss Finch plunged into her own affairs. She
-was betrothed to Kellock&rsquo;s coucher at the Mill, one Harold
-Spry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And your mother thinks he&rsquo;s a very sensible man, and
-we&rsquo;re going into Paignton on Saturday, by the motor bus
-for him to buy me a proper engagement ring.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a very good coucher, for I&rsquo;ve heard Jordan say
-so; and I know he&rsquo;s very nice looking, and I&rsquo;m very glad
-about it, Daisy. It&rsquo;s good news, for certain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never encouraged him, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; declared Miss
-Finch, &ldquo;but I always felt greatly addicted to him in a
-manner of speaking, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;ll be happy, but don&rsquo;t hurry it; get to
-know each other&rsquo;s natures well, and all that. And if you
-find you can&rsquo;t agree about anything that&rsquo;s vital to happiness,
-then part before it&rsquo;s too late,&rdquo; said her friend. &ldquo;It
-isn&rsquo;t given to every girl to do what I did, Daisy. You
-want a rare lot of courage, and the power to rise superior
-to the world against you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He agrees with me in everything,&rdquo; said Daisy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They always begin like that. But I feel you&rsquo;re going
-to be one of the happy ones.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you, too, I hope soon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are greater things than happiness, I find,&rdquo; confessed
-Medora, &ldquo;though like all young creatures, I used
-to put happiness first and last. But if you&rsquo;ve got much
-in the way of brains, you can&rsquo;t be happy for long. Jordan
-very soon learned me that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Surely to God he&rsquo;s going to make you happy?&rdquo; asked
-Daisy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, but it&rsquo;s the happiness of people at large he&rsquo;s
-out for. He&rsquo;s got a great mind and thinks in numbers,
-not in individuals, even though one of them&rsquo;s his wife.
-That may sound sad to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>&ldquo;It do,&rdquo; said Daisy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But it isn&rsquo;t really. It makes you forget yourself&mdash;in
-time. I shall rise to it as I age, and I&rsquo;m ageing fast.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to forget myself,&rdquo; said Daisy, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m
-sure Mr. Spry wouldn&rsquo;t let me if I did. He&rsquo;s death on
-spoiling me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Be happy while you can,&rdquo; advised Medora. &ldquo;And
-bring your young man to supper one night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked of the works, for despite the larger interests
-of Kellock, Medora still found the politics of the
-Mill her chief subject.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think they&rsquo;d be nasty if I was to go in one
-day on some pretence and see &rsquo;em?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>Daisy considered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d be welcome for your mother&rsquo;s sake in the rag
-house,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;but I wouldn&rsquo;t go in your own
-shop, if I was you. I dare say it&rsquo;s jealousy, but the
-women in the glazing shop&mdash;it&rsquo;s old Pinhey&rsquo;s fault
-largely, I believe. He&rsquo;s a religious old devil.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For some things I&rsquo;d almost like to be back again,&rdquo;
-declared Medora. &ldquo;Just for the minute, till we&rsquo;ve got
-a house and so on, I&rsquo;m at a loose end. I do a lot of writing
-for Jordan, and he finds me very useful, and is going
-to get me a typewriter. But just for the minute&mdash;it
-would distract my mind. There&rsquo;s nothing small about
-Mr. Trenchard&mdash;he&rsquo;d let me come back, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Daisy did not venture an opinion, and the talk returned
-to Harold Spry. But from that day, Medora&rsquo;s determination
-to go into the works increased. She did not tell
-Jordan, suspecting that he would have forbidden such an
-experiment, nor did she mention the matter to her mother;
-but she decided that she would stroll in some day.</p>
-
-<p>Ned Dingle had not yet left Dene, and once she passed
-him returning home from Totnes. He took no notice of
-her, and she hesitated whether to speak, but perceived
-that he desired no such thing, for he hurried past. She
-stole one glance under her eyelids at him, and thought he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
-looked much as usual. He stared straight in front of
-him, and blushed as he passed her.</p>
-
-<p>She mentioned the incident to Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t seen him yet,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t got
-work to his liking, so Knox tells me. I&rsquo;m waiting to hear
-from him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Two days later, Medora took her courage in her hands,
-and went up to the Mill at eleven o&rsquo;clock, while work was
-in full swing. She had considered where to go, and decided
-that she would drop into the vat room and speak
-to Jordan about some trivial matter. She took an addition
-to his dinner in the shape of an orange. But having
-actually arrived, an inspiration led her to the sizing room.
-Thither came the paper from the drying lofts, and the
-simple work was done by little girls. No sharp word
-or unpleasant attitude of mind was likely to reach her
-there.</p>
-
-<p>She entered unseen, and passed through the dim and
-odorous chambers where the sizerman, old Amos Toft,
-mixed the medium. Here, in two steaming vats, Amos
-melted his gelatine, made of buffalo hide, and added to
-the strong-smelling concoction those ingredients proper
-to the paper to be sized. Trade secrets controlled the
-mixture, but alum contributed an important factor, for
-without it, the animal compound had quickly decayed.</p>
-
-<p>In the sizing room a narrow passage ran between long
-troughs. The place steamed to its lofty, sunny roof, and
-was soaked with the odour of the size. Through the
-great baths of amber-coloured liquid there wound an endless
-wool blanket, and at one end of each great bath sat
-two little girls with stacks of dry paper beside them.
-They disposed the sheets regularly two together on the
-sizing felt, and the paper was drawn into the vats and
-plunged beneath the surface. For nearly three minutes
-it pursued its invisible way, and presently, emerging at
-the other end, was lifted off by other young workers and
-returned to the drying lofts again.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>Little Mercy Life, the vatman&rsquo;s daughter, was sizing
-some pretty, rose-coloured sheets, and Medora admired
-them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Mercy, how are you?&rdquo; she asked, and the child
-smiled and said she was very well.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What lovely paper! And how are you, Nelly?
-How&rsquo;s your sister?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To home still,&rdquo; said Mercy&rsquo;s companion, &ldquo;but the
-doctor says she&rsquo;ll get well some day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>An impulse brought the orange out of Medora&rsquo;s pocket.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s something for you,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You can share
-it between you presently.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They thanked her, and chatted happily enough about
-their work and play. Medora told them that she had been
-in London, and interested them with what she saw at the
-Zoological Gardens.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My! To think!&rdquo; said Mercy. &ldquo;I thought squirrels
-was always red.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A few adults passed through the sizing house, among
-them Mr. Trood. He hesitated, seemed surprised to see
-her, but said &ldquo;good morning,&rdquo; not unpleasantly, and
-hoped she was all right.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say you half wish you were back again, Medora?&rdquo;
-he asked, and she jumped at the suggestion and
-told him that she often did.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just peeped in for the pleasure of seeing friends,&rdquo; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He went his way and Medora was about to leave the
-children and seek Kellock, when an adventure very painful
-befell her.</p>
-
-<p>For old Amos Toft belonged to the tribe of Mr. Pinhey.
-He was inflamed with indignation at the spectacle
-of Medora contaminating youth, and departed presently
-that he might tell Mrs. Life, in the glazing shop, what was
-happening. Whereupon, Mercy Life, the elder, leapt from
-her stool at the crib, and much incensed, hastened to her
-child&rsquo;s protection.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>Medora greeted her with a smile, but it vanished before
-the other&rsquo;s sharp challenge.</p>
-
-<p>They were talking of primroses at the time, for Nelly
-and Mercy had plucked a great bunch on Sunday and
-promised to bring some to Medora. They were to come
-to tea with her when they could.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here&mdash;I&rsquo;ll thank you to get out of this, Mrs.&mdash;whatever
-you call yourself!&rdquo; began the angry woman.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter with you?&rdquo; asked Medora, &ldquo;and
-who are you to tell me what I&rsquo;m to do? Where&rsquo;s your
-manners?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The other snorted scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You brazen-faced thing,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Yes, a front
-of brass to come here, or show your face among honest
-women I should think. But you can&rsquo;t have it both ways.
-You can&rsquo;t be a friend for children and give &rsquo;em oranges&mdash;give
-it back, Mercy&mdash;and be a scarlet woman both.
-And I won&rsquo;t have you talking to my child anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora adopted a superior tone. She took the orange
-from the girl and addressed her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry you&rsquo;ve got such a fool for a mother, Mercy.
-And I hope when you grow up, you&rsquo;ll have more sense than
-she has.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then she addressed Mrs. Life.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How little you understand,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry for
-you being such a narrow-minded creature. I always
-thought you was one of the sensible sort. And you
-needn&rsquo;t fear for your little girl. I was only asking her
-to come to tea and bring me some primroses.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She marched out, regardless of Mrs. Life&rsquo;s reply, and
-went to seek Jordan who was at his vat making big paper.
-He handled a heavy mould and passed over snow-white
-sheets to his coucher, who turned them on to the felt with
-extreme care. Jordan became very nervous at sight of
-Medora, but she felt quite at ease among the men and
-none in the vat room quarrelled with her. She congratulated
-Harold Spry on his engagement and told him that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
-Daisy was a treasure. Then she gave Kellock the orange
-and watched him.</p>
-
-<p>But Medora was only hiding herself. Her heart flamed
-and her indignation at the recent affront burned fiercely
-within her. Her sole purpose at that moment was to get
-level and more than level with Mrs. Life, whose husband
-worked at the vat next to Jordan&rsquo;s, and she now turned
-on him unwisely and addressed him. He was employed
-with brilliant, orange-coloured pulp and making currency
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You tell your wife to be broader-minded, Robert Life,&rdquo;
-she said suddenly, and he stared at her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s broad-minded enough for me and all God-fearing
-creatures I believe,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;If you want to keep
-on the narrow path, you&rsquo;ve got to be narrow-minded about
-some things, young woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This was too much for Kellock. His pale face flushed.
-He set down his mould, dried his hands and beckoned to
-Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want to speak to you for five minutes,&rdquo; he said and
-they moved together into the open space outside the vat
-house. But she gave him no time to speak. She poured
-out her wrongs in a flood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s up to you now,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t going on.
-I&rsquo;m not going to have my life made a burden by every
-beastly, cross-grained cat in Dene for you, or anybody.
-An ignorant creature like her to call me a bad woman!
-That&rsquo;s the limit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must be patient,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t have
-come, Medora. It was a very doubtful thing to do. You
-must allow for people. We&rsquo;ve talked all this out before.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If we&rsquo;ve done right, we&rsquo;ve done right,&rdquo; she answered;
-&ldquo;and if we&rsquo;ve done right, it isn&rsquo;t for me to sit down under
-insult, or for you to let me be insulted. I was born a
-fighter and you say you was; and if so, you&rsquo;d best to begin
-with fighting your future wife&rsquo;s enemies.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; he admitted. &ldquo;But I ask you to be
-reasonable. It wasn&rsquo;t reasonable to come here and face
-the women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t face the women then. I didn&rsquo;t go near &rsquo;em.
-I was only asking a child or two to come into tea. Then
-that sour slattern, Mercy Life, flew at me as if I&rsquo;d come
-to poison her little girl. And I want to know what you&rsquo;re
-going to do about it; and I&rsquo;ve a right to know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Keep calm, keep calm and go home, Medora. Go back
-to the &lsquo;Arms.&rsquo; We&rsquo;ll talk about it to-night. It&rsquo;s hard
-waiting, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t wait. I&rsquo;ve no right to be asked to wait.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, as to that, we&rsquo;ve got to wait. You say it&rsquo;s up
-to me. But you know different.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll drown myself if there&rsquo;s much more of it&mdash;God&rsquo;s
-my judge,&rdquo; vowed Medora, then she went her way as the
-bell rang the dinner hour.</p>
-
-<p>Kellock felt deeply perturbed, and was glad of the interval,
-for he could not have resumed his work just then.
-He ate his meal alone and then wandered up the valley with
-painful thoughts for companions. That Medora could
-have done so foolish and inconsiderate a thing surprised
-him harshly. It was part of his illusion concerning her
-that she was a girl of unusual reasoning powers and excellent
-mental endowments. Once or twice, indeed, she had
-said and done what cast a shadow on this conviction; but
-never had she indicated the possibility of such a futile act
-as this. That she should have come to the Mill at her own
-inclination appeared flagrantly foolish.</p>
-
-<p>But that evening, in face of her tears and hysterical
-emotion, he undertook to anticipate the position and hasten
-the solution if possible. Not, indeed, until he promised
-to seek out Ned Dingle and demand action from him, did
-Medora recover. Then she was herself again, humble and
-grateful and penitent and full of admiration for Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re so large-minded and look at things with a male
-grasp and a male&rsquo;s power of waiting,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
-you can&rsquo;t expect that from me. You must make allowances,
-Jordan. I suffer a lot more than you do, because
-I&rsquo;ve got such a power of feeling and I&rsquo;m cruel proud.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m properly jealous for you,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and
-I&rsquo;d come between every breath of scandal and you if I
-could. But we must allow for human nature and prejudice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And jealousy,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We must allow for the outlook of every-day people
-and give &rsquo;em as little chance to scoff as possible. I&rsquo;ll put
-it to Mr. Dingle the first minute I can; and you must do
-your part, Medora, and lie low till I&rsquo;ve seen him and
-shown him his duty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<small>NED HEARS MR. KNOX</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Kellock thought twice about going to see Ned Dingle, for
-instinct told him that what might seem a reasonable course
-to such a reasonable being as himself, would possibly appear
-in another light to Medora&rsquo;s husband. But he reflected
-that, as the more intelligent and better educated
-man, it was his place to act. Even should Dingle use violence,
-that much he must be prepared to face, if by so
-doing he could advance the situation between them.</p>
-
-<p>Ned was still at his house, and, on an evening in early
-April, when the trees of Ashprington were washed with
-green again and the white blossoms of the pears opened
-ghostly to the embrace of the east wind, Jordan called.</p>
-
-<p>Ned himself opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What the hell do you want? I&rsquo;ve
-kept off you&mdash;God knows how. Are you asking for it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want to do what&rsquo;s right, Mr. Dingle. I haven&rsquo;t
-come for any less reason. I beg you&rsquo;ll let me speak to
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned breathed through his nostrils and did not reply
-immediately. At last he answered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To do what&rsquo;s right! You&rsquo;ll never do what&rsquo;s right,
-because you&rsquo;re a hypocrite, and all your talk about helping
-labour and the rest of it is humbug and lies coming
-from a thing like you. You&rsquo;re the worst sort of man&mdash;the
-sort that does his dirty work behind a lot of cant and
-pretended virtue and honesty. The gutter&rsquo;s too good for
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can see your point of view; but after her letter, you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
-ought to think different. I say nothing about mine; but
-hers was all it ought to be under the circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You dare to say that? All it ought to be? Did you
-read it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I did.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And thought it right for her to say I was &lsquo;a godless
-beast&rsquo; where she was concerned?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She never said nothing like that, Mr. Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come in then,&rdquo; said the other shortly. &ldquo;You come
-in and sit down and read what she said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They went into the kitchen, and Ned lighted a candle.
-Then he took out his pocket book, produced Medora&rsquo;s letter,
-and flung it on the table.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Read that, please.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock obeyed, and his face grew long. It was clear
-that Medora had not sent the letter they concocted
-so carefully together in the Priory ruin. He put it
-down.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Was that the only letter you got from her, if I may
-ask?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never heard nothing about this letter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re lying I expect when you say that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed, I am not. I never lie. This letter was evidently
-the result of temper. She never meant it. It&rsquo;s
-a sort of play-acting&mdash;all females indulge in it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She meant every word. But you&rsquo;re right, there&rsquo;s a
-lot of play-acting about the whole business. She&rsquo;s been
-play-acting ever since she was born, and now she&rsquo;ll damned
-soon find that&rsquo;s ended. Life with you won&rsquo;t be play-acting.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It will not,&rdquo; answered Kellock. &ldquo;I promise her that.
-But she&rsquo;s no dreamer. If you&rsquo;ll be so patient as to listen
-to me, I&rsquo;d like to speak a few words for her and myself.
-That letter is not Medora&mdash;not what she is now. She
-shall say she&rsquo;s sorry, and write in her present frame of
-mind, which is very different.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll be sorry all right. That won&rsquo;t be a lie anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I venture to ask you to look ahead, Mr. Dingle.
-There&rsquo;s no doubt, owing to one thing and another, you
-and her wouldn&rsquo;t have settled down into a happy husband
-and wife. That&rsquo;s not to cast any reflection on you, or
-her either. You wasn&rsquo;t made for each other as we all
-thought, myself included, when she took you. But owing
-to differences of character and such like, she fretted you
-by her nature, which she couldn&rsquo;t alter, and you treated
-her harsh according to your nature, which you couldn&rsquo;t
-change. There it was, and her spirit told her you and
-her must part. She meant to go I solemnly assure you.
-She&rsquo;d made up her mind to do that; and finding it was
-so&mdash;that&rsquo;s where I came in. I thought she was right,
-for her self-respect and yours, to leave you, and knowing
-that she would then be free in every real sense, I, who had
-loved her in the past, felt it was no wrong to you under
-the circumstances, to love her again. But I&rsquo;ll say this,
-and I hope you&rsquo;ll believe it: if I had thought Medora was
-wrong, I wouldn&rsquo;t have taken her part. You&rsquo;ll remember
-I spoke to you as an outsider, and only for your good,
-when you knocked me in the water. I&rsquo;d no thought of
-having Medora for my wife till after that happened. But
-when she made me see clearly she was a martyred creature,
-then I took a different line. And that&rsquo;s how we stand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Play-acting still,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all
-play-acting, and a wicked, heartless piece of work; and
-you know it. And a brainless piece of work too, for all
-you think you&rsquo;re such a smart pair. You see I&rsquo;m calm.
-I&rsquo;m not taking you by the scruff of your neck and battering
-your head against that wall, as I well might do. I
-may yet; but I&rsquo;ll answer you first. You knew Medora,
-and knew she was a mass of airs and graces, and humbug;
-and you knew me, and therefore you ought to have known,
-when she said I was a tyrant and a brute, that she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-lying. But you fooled yourself and took her word and
-made yourself believe her, because you wanted her. You
-lusted after another man&rsquo;s wife, and all your fine opinions
-went to hell under the temptation, when you found you
-could get her so easy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that; I beg you not to put it in that way.
-I&rsquo;m not that sort of man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I judge of a man by what he does, not by what he
-says. That&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ve done, and that&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ll
-pay for sooner or late.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A time will come when you&rsquo;ll withdraw that, Mr.
-Dingle. It&rsquo;s a cruel libel on my character and you&rsquo;ll live
-to know it. At present I&rsquo;m only wishful to do things
-decently and in order, and I&rsquo;ll ask you again to look forward.
-I should be very glad to know, please, when you&rsquo;re
-going to go on with this? I venture to think you ought to
-move in the matter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You beat anything I&rsquo;ve ever heard of,&rdquo; said Dingle.
-&ldquo;What are you made of&mdash;flesh and blood, or stone? To
-tell me my duty!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why not, if you don&rsquo;t see it? I&rsquo;m not thinking of
-myself&mdash;only the situation as it affects her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m thinking of it as it affects me. I&rsquo;ve been
-pretty badly damaged in this racket&mdash;the lawyer&rsquo;s made
-that clear to me. I shall get it out of you somehow&mdash;how
-I don&rsquo;t know at present. You can clear now, and I
-shan&rsquo;t come to you to decide what I&rsquo;m going to do about
-it&mdash;or to that wicked, little fool either. Yes, a wicked,
-little fool&mdash;that&rsquo;s what she is&mdash;and she&rsquo;ll look at home
-presently, when you&rsquo;ve knocked the life out of her, and
-find it out for herself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock rose and prepared to depart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry I called if it was only to anger you,&rdquo; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; and you&rsquo;ll be sorry for lots of things presently
-I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder. You&rsquo;re a fool too, come to think of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-it&mdash;that&rsquo;s part of my revenge I reckon&mdash;to know you,
-who thought yourself so wonderful, are only a young fool
-after all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So the interview ended and Kellock went his way outwardly
-unruffled but inwardly perturbed. He had never
-considered the possibility of Dingle doing anything in the
-way of damages. He had, in fact, thought far too little
-about Dingle. Ned was a man of no force of character
-and he had assumed that he would proceed upon the conventional
-lines proper to such cases. But Ned&rsquo;s very
-weakness now grew into a danger, because he was evidently
-in the hands of a lawyer and might be easily influenced by
-a stronger will than his own. The law would probably
-not learn the real human facts of the situation as between
-Ned and Medora. The law never did go into these subtleties
-of character upon which such things depended. Superficially
-the law might hold him, what he&mdash;Kellock&mdash;was
-so far from being, and perhaps actually punish him in
-his pocket&mdash;an event that had not entered his calculations.
-Did Dingle make any such claim, it would certainly
-be his place to plead against it, or get a lawyer
-to do so for him. He felt anxious, for he feared the law
-and knew it to be a terribly costly matter to defend the
-most righteous cause.</p>
-
-<p>And meantime Ned received another caller, who knew
-Kellock better than he did, and left him with some curious
-information to consider. Indeed it was not Jordan&rsquo;s own
-visit that threw any new light on Jordan, but that of an
-older man. Philander Knox now arrived to see Dingle
-on private business.</p>
-
-<p>Philander, true to his philosophic and tolerant attitude,
-had not evinced any unfriendly feelings towards
-Kellock on his return to the vat house, and the paper
-makers, who were all junior to Mr. Knox, followed his
-lead with the exception of Robert Life, who took his wife&rsquo;s
-view of the situation. Thus it came about that finding
-Knox to be impartial and knowing him for a large-minded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
-man, only puzzling when he displayed humour, which Kellock
-did not understand, Jordan had to some extent confided
-in him and revealed various facts concerning his
-opinions and his relations with Medora. These, while imparted
-in confidence, possessed none the less very considerable
-significance and Philander was now tempted to use
-his information.</p>
-
-<p>It depended on the trend of his conversation with Dingle
-whether he would do so, for he called upon his own affairs
-and had no intention, when he arrived, to touch those of
-other people.</p>
-
-<p>He came by appointment on the subject of Dingle&rsquo;s
-house.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like it very well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;d close to-night
-if I was in a position to do so; but though hopeful as my
-custom is, for hope costs nothing, I&rsquo;m not able yet to
-close definitely.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s one or two after it, I must tell you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know. But I&rsquo;ll make a bargain. To let the house
-is, of course, a certainty. Houses are so few in these
-parts that a fine quality of house like this don&rsquo;t go begging
-very long; but if you&rsquo;ll stand by and give me first
-refusal for a clear month, I&rsquo;ll pay you two quid down on
-the nail for the privilege.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle considered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a bargain. There&rsquo;s
-nothing settled and I&rsquo;d be very well pleased for you to
-have the house. But what are you waiting for?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s private,&rdquo; answered Philander bringing out his
-purse and depositing two sovereigns. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m waiting for
-another party to come to a decision on a certain subject.
-If it goes right, I&rsquo;ll take your house; if it don&rsquo;t, then I
-shan&rsquo;t have no use for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I guess your meaning,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;As for me, I&rsquo;m
-marking time, though I can&rsquo;t much longer. I must go on
-with my work and I&rsquo;ve got a very good offer for Liverpool;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
-but I don&rsquo;t see myself in a town somehow. And there&rsquo;s
-people at Ivybridge could do with me; but the money&rsquo;s
-less. I&rsquo;m all over the shop, to be honest. Of course it
-won&rsquo;t go no farther. But I can trust you. I keep a stiff
-upper-lip, being a man; but this have knocked the stuffing
-out of me. I don&rsquo;t care what becomes of me really, though
-of course I pretend I&rsquo;m all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Knox nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve took a very proper line in the opinion of me
-and Mrs. Trivett,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Mrs. Trivett shares your
-feelings about it. As for me, I&rsquo;m properly sorry, because
-one can&rsquo;t do nothing to help. She&rsquo;s done for herself now,
-and she&rsquo;ll smart long after you&rsquo;ve done smarting, if that&rsquo;s
-any consolation.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know; but I don&rsquo;t want her to smart particular,&rdquo;
-said Ned. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s been sinned against&mdash;took at her own
-ridiculous valuation. She had to be herself, poor wretch;
-but the more I think of it&mdash;I ain&rsquo;t sure now if it wouldn&rsquo;t
-be best to break that man&rsquo;s neck, Knox. Yes, I reckon
-I&rsquo;ll go to Liverpool. I don&rsquo;t want to bide here within a
-few miles of her. A clean break&rsquo;s the best. How&rsquo;s the
-new beaterman going on?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;None too well. Trenchard don&rsquo;t like him and Trood
-hates him. He told Trood to mind his own business last
-week; and coming from Bulstrode&mdash;Bulstrode&rsquo;s his name&mdash;to
-the foreman, that was a startler. In fact Trood
-won&rsquo;t be himself till Bulstrode&rsquo;s gone now. He&rsquo;s a doomed
-man you may say. Then there was a little affair with
-Trenchard too. He wants some more of the advertisements
-made&mdash;the pictures&mdash;and he explained the pulp
-to Bulstrode, and Bulstrode, good though he is at everyday
-work, have a rigid mind and said he was there to make
-paper pulp, not do conjuring tricks. An unyielding sort
-of man in fact; and though of course he&rsquo;s doing what
-he&rsquo;s told as well as he can, he don&rsquo;t like it, and no doubt
-he&rsquo;ll soon be gone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He was here a bit ago&mdash;Kellock, I mean,&rdquo; said Ned.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
-&ldquo;I often wonder how I keep my hands off the man that&rsquo;s
-ruined my home; but so far I have. There&rsquo;s something
-uncanny to him. He ain&rsquo;t human, Knox. He&rsquo;s got a
-something else in him that puts him outside the run of
-humans. A bit of fish or frog. I ain&rsquo;t frightened of
-smiting him; I may come to it; but I can&rsquo;t explain. He&rsquo;s
-not like other people. I always feel he&rsquo;s an image&mdash;a
-machine made to look and talk like a man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I understand that. If another chap had done this, I
-should have expected you to go for him; but I quite see the
-case is altered with Kellock. Because you feel he&rsquo;s not
-stuffed with the same stuffing as most of us. Stop me if
-I&rsquo;m on dangerous ground; but such a man has the qualities
-of his failings. He&rsquo;s got a properly absurd side&mdash;like all
-such owl-like people, who never laugh. He&rsquo;s a crank and
-amazingly ignorant in some directions. If he don&rsquo;t approve
-of the law, he won&rsquo;t obey it. He puts religion and
-morals higher than law; but he brews his own religion and
-don&rsquo;t know in his innocence that religion in this country
-always does what the State tells it. You&rsquo;d think religion
-might up and speak to the law, in the name of its Master
-sometimes. Kellock pointed that out. He would do
-things and talk to the law if he had the power, because he&rsquo;s
-fearless and doesn&rsquo;t waste his energy, but concentrates.
-He said, speaking of natural children, that under our laws
-they were treated with wicked injustice. He said to me
-about it, &lsquo;If the Archbishop of Canterbury got up in the
-House of Lords and said that it was a black, damnable disgrace
-to England to have such a law blotting the Statute
-Book and leaving us behind Scotland and Germany and
-America&mdash;if he did that, all men and women of good will
-would support him and the State would have to end the
-loathsome scandal.&rsquo; But I told him to hope nothing either
-from bishops or lawyers. &lsquo;The man who alters that infamous
-law will be somebody bigger than either one or
-t&rsquo;other,&rsquo; I told Kellock. &lsquo;He&rsquo;ll be a brave man, ashamed
-to face both ways and sit on the fence for his own safety;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
-and he&rsquo;ll be a man who knows that mankind wasn&rsquo;t made
-for the lawyers, but the lawyers for mankind.&rsquo; There are
-such men still, thank God.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Kellock ain&rsquo;t human, so how should he care for the
-ways of the world? It&rsquo;s a blind to his villainy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had a good deal of speech with him of late and
-heard his opinions. He&rsquo;s dead sure he&rsquo;s right. It&rsquo;s all in
-a nutshell. He had to rescue your wife from you, and now
-he&rsquo;s as jealous for her as a hen with one chick. It&rsquo;s
-damned hard to look at the situation from his point of
-view, Dingle&mdash;hard for me or anybody&mdash;and impossible
-for you; but he sees it in a certain way and no doubt she&rsquo;s
-helped him to do so. And now he won&rsquo;t have a breath on
-her name and feels he&rsquo;s got to stand between her and the
-rest of the world. He smarts worse than she does when
-hard things are said. He&rsquo;s a lot more high strung than
-your wife herself. In fact he&rsquo;s so delicate about her that
-he&rsquo;d rather die than leave her in a false position. It&rsquo;s an
-attitude that would be cant in most chaps, but coming from
-him you&rsquo;re bound to believe it. It may be part fish or
-frog, as you say; but so it is. Of course nobody who
-didn&rsquo;t know him would believe it; but I do believe it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Believe what?&rdquo; asked Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Believe she&rsquo;s not married to him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s certain while she&rsquo;s married to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean that. I mean Kellock&rsquo;s not all a man, as
-I&rsquo;ve just said. You may say he&rsquo;s a bit of a saint, or you
-may say he&rsquo;s only half baked; but say what you like, the
-fact remains he&rsquo;s different from other men and his opinions
-guide his conduct, which is a lot more than opinions always
-do. He&rsquo;s told me that she&rsquo;s not his wife in any sort of
-way&mdash;far too much respect for her and himself. That&rsquo;s
-gospel you may be sure, for he&rsquo;d rather die than lie.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll soon get fed up with that,&rdquo; said Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sooner than him I dare say; but so it is, and I&rsquo;m glad
-to let you know it. I shook him by telling him he was a
-child in these things and that the law would refuse to let<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
-you divorce Mrs. Dingle, if it knew he was not fulfilling its
-requirements. But he&rsquo;s got a feeling of contempt for the
-divorce laws which, of course, every decent man must share&mdash;a
-feeling of contempt which extends to the lawyers who
-live by them, and the parsons who like &rsquo;em. I give him all
-credit there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And how do these fine ideas strike my wife that was?&rdquo;
-asked Ned. &ldquo;Because if I knew anything about her in her
-palmy days, she was built of quite different mud from
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How it strikes her I can&rsquo;t tell you, because her opinions
-are hid from me. Perhaps Mrs. Trivett&rsquo;s heard her
-views upon the subject. She may not agree with Kellock;
-but more likely he&rsquo;s made her do so&mdash;especially seeing it
-won&rsquo;t pay her to have any other opinions than his in
-future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll never break her in, Knox.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He will, give him time. There&rsquo;s something about him
-that makes weaker wills go down sooner or late. He&rsquo;s like
-the tide. He will come on. He&rsquo;ll settle her all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She deserves what she&rsquo;ll get anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If she do, she&rsquo;s one in a thousand,&rdquo; answered Knox,
-&ldquo;for in my experience we always get more or less than we
-deserve, never a fair, honest deal. You can&rsquo;t tell what
-she&rsquo;s going to get, but you can bet your boots it won&rsquo;t be
-what she deserves. Be it as it will, you&rsquo;re in the position of
-Providence to both of them; because whatever she may
-think about it, we know what he does. He&rsquo;s in your hand&mdash;to
-make, or mar, so far as Medora&rsquo;s concerned. I tell
-you for friendship, and to a man like myself, who loves a
-joke, these things are funny in a manner of speaking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The question is if they&rsquo;re true.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re true as sure as Kellock is true. Make no
-mistake about that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not the sort to stab in the dark, though
-that&rsquo;s how they served me. But I don&rsquo;t feel no particular
-call to put myself out of the way for either of &rsquo;em. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
-can&rsquo;t get this job through for nothing, and I&rsquo;ve got no
-spare cash for the minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They chose their own time to run; they must await
-yours for the rest,&rdquo; admitted Mr. Knox.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<small>EMOTIONS OF MEDORA</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>When Jordan returned to Medora, by a quality of our
-common nature which he would have been the first to deprecate,
-he was not entirely sorry to bring her unpleasant
-news. To himself he said that a trial of her patience
-would be good for her character, and so explained his own
-frame of mind; but the truth was different. He had heard
-something concerning Medora which annoyed him and
-made him anxious; and the result of his annoyance was that
-he imparted painful facts without any very great regret.
-It was true that they affected him as well as his future wife,
-but his nature was qualified to bear them far better than
-was hers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am a great deal hurt,&rdquo; he began, as they sat together
-in their little parlour at the inn.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You were bound to be,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;And you
-might have been hurt in body as well as in mind. It&rsquo;s
-something if he&rsquo;s enough broken in to treat you properly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, he did. I&rsquo;ll come to him. But what&rsquo;s hurt
-me, Medora, a long way worse than anything Mr. Dingle
-had to say has got to do with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;ve been believing his lies&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t so much his lies as yours. I&rsquo;m not one to use
-hard words as a rule. But it&rsquo;s your letter to him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what about it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve read it&mdash;that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She realised the significance of this and blushed hotly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you send the letter I helped you to write?&rdquo;
-he asked.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>&ldquo;Because&mdash;because when you&rsquo;re boiling with injustice
-and wicked injury&mdash;when I read it, I saw it was you and
-not me. He&rsquo;d have known you wrote it, yet it was to be
-my letter; so I made it mine and told him the ugly truth
-about himself, which you&rsquo;d been careful not to do. According
-to your letter, there was no reason why I should
-leave him at all that I could see. It was that nice and
-cool. But I was going to do things that you don&rsquo;t do
-when you&rsquo;re nice and cool, so I told him the truth straight
-out, as he deserved to hear it. It&rsquo;s no good mincing your
-meaning with a man like him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You told me you&rsquo;d sent our letter, however.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t when I came to read it. It was a silly
-letter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not one to go back to the past, because it&rsquo;s
-generally a waste of time, Medora. It would have been
-honester if you&rsquo;d told me the truth. Your letter was
-pretty hot, certainly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope he found it so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He did, and unfortunately he&rsquo;s kept it. If he&rsquo;d been
-wiser than he is, he&rsquo;d have burned it; instead of that he&rsquo;s
-letting it burn him, if you understand me. From the look
-of the letter, I should say he&rsquo;d read it a great many times
-and the result is that he&rsquo;s still in a very bad frame of
-mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What frame of mind did you think he&rsquo;d be in? We
-can&rsquo;t all keep a hand on ourselves, like you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hoped that time enough had passed over him to
-steady him. But I can&rsquo;t honestly say it has. He made
-some curious remarks. I thought once he was going to
-let himself go and fly at me. But I kept my eye on him
-and never raised my voice. There&rsquo;s plenty of good qualities
-in him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re so pleased with him,&rdquo; she said, growing
-hot again. &ldquo;Naturally you think well of a man who&rsquo;s
-used me so kindly!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m not much pleased with him. In fact, quite the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
-reverse, Medora. There&rsquo;s good in everybody&mdash;that&rsquo;s all
-I mean. But he&rsquo;s got no good will to us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank God for that then!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t thank God in too much of a hurry. In a
-word, he&rsquo;s going to take his own time about this business.
-He&rsquo;s done nothing so far.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Done nothing!&rdquo; gasped Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing whatever.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my letter&mdash;the coward.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t have said so to you; but I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re
-clever enough to see it, Medora. Yes, your letter no
-doubt. You can&rsquo;t have anything for nothing in this world,
-and as you gave yourself the pleasure of telling him what
-you thought of him, he&rsquo;ll give himself the pleasure apparently
-of making us pay for your fun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Fun&rsquo;! A lot you know about fun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You wrote what you thought would hurt; and I expect
-it did hurt; and the result, so far as I can see, is a very
-nasty and obstinate frame of mind in Mr. Dingle. I won&rsquo;t
-tell you all he said, though he was more respectful to you
-than me. But he hasn&rsquo;t done with it by a lot and he&rsquo;ll
-very likely ask for heavy damages.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What does that mean?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My money, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Could he sink to that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t be sinking from his point of view. It ain&rsquo;t
-regarded as sinking by the law. The idea certainly hadn&rsquo;t
-struck me till I heard him on the subject; but I dare say it
-will happen. It&rsquo;s within his power.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t that show I said nothing in my letter he didn&rsquo;t
-deserve? A man who&rsquo;d do that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora felt a shadow of dislike towards Jordan. It
-was not the first time that any suspicion of such an alarming
-sensation had coloured her thoughts before his temperate
-statements and unimpassioned speeches. Was he never
-to let himself go? But she fled from her impatience as
-from a supreme danger. Kellock must be her hero, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
-nothing. She must continue to see in him her salvation
-and her tower of strength; she must let him feel and understand
-the reverence, the adoration in which she held him
-and his superb sacrifice on the altar of the conventions.
-For such a man the things that he had done were greater
-far than they had been in the case of others. He had his
-future to think of as well as Medora&rsquo;s. He must not be
-allowed off his pedestal in her regard for an instant. She
-realised that, and perceived how her own peace of mind depended
-entirely on keeping him there. Her histrionic gifts
-were again to be called to her assistance.</p>
-
-<p>Watchfully she would guard her own mind against any
-doubt of Jordan&rsquo;s essential qualities. His virtue and
-valour culminated, of course, in the heroism that had run
-away with her and rescued her from her dragon. The only
-weak and unintelligent action impartial judges might have
-brought against Kellock must be to Medora his supreme
-expression of masterful will and manly humanity. Even
-granting his love, indifferent spectators had criticised Kellock
-most for believing Medora at all, or allowing the
-assurances of such a volatile person to influence him upon
-such a crucial matter. His real heroism and distinction of
-mind was lost upon Medora; the achievements she valued
-in him belonged to his weakness of imagination and a lack
-of humour destined to keep him a second class man. He
-belonged to the order of whom it may be said that they
-are &ldquo;great and good,&rdquo; not that they are &ldquo;great.&rdquo; But
-the good qualifies&mdash;even discounts&mdash;the great.</p>
-
-<p>While Jordan had to be supported on his pillar at any
-cost if Medora&rsquo;s position was to be endurable, conversely
-it was necessary to preserve her acute sense of Ned Dingle&rsquo;s
-evil doing. There must be no slackening of her detestation
-there; and that it now became necessary to practise a
-large patience with Jordan and take no farther steps to
-impress upon him her scorn of one so mean and base as
-Ned, quite distracted Medora. Herein Kellock&rsquo;s composure
-at first mystified her until he made clear the need for it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>&ldquo;To reasonable minds like yours and mine,&rdquo; he said,
-&ldquo;no doubt it does appear rather improper that we should
-have to be worldly wise about Mr. Dingle. But, though
-the wisdom of the world is foolishness in the mind of most
-clean thinking and honourable men, Medora, especially in
-a case like this, yet I don&rsquo;t see that we can do anything.
-We must just bend to the law and mark time, I suppose.
-I don&rsquo;t go so far as to say we should demean ourselves to
-cultivate Mr. Dingle and be humble to him, or anything
-like that; but it&rsquo;s no good going out of the way to vex him
-more than we are bound to do; because, the law, being
-what it is&mdash;all on his side seemingly, we&rsquo;re more or less
-powerless and quite in his hands. It&rsquo;s abominably wrong
-it should be; but we&rsquo;ve got to recognise the world as it is,
-and pay it the hypocrisy that virtue owes to vice sometimes.
-In fact we&rsquo;ve got to keep our nerve and lie low and
-wait for him. And being what he is&mdash;hard and up
-against us and still smarting under what happened&mdash;he
-may not be moved to do right all in a minute.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s making fools of us in fact&mdash;that&rsquo;s his low revenge,&rdquo;
-said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He may think so in his ignorance, but he&rsquo;s wrong.
-Only two people can make fools of us,&rdquo; answered Jordan,
-&ldquo;and that&rsquo;s we ourselves. We&rsquo;ve took the high line and
-we&rsquo;re safe accordingly. All he&rsquo;ll get out of delay is the
-pangs of conscience; and what&rsquo;s more he&rsquo;ll put himself
-wrong with the rest of the world.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s some comfort,&rdquo; said Medora. &ldquo;They smart
-most who smart last, I reckon. All the same it&rsquo;s a blackguard
-thing on his part.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The law moves a lot slower than human passion,&rdquo; he
-explained, &ldquo;and though we say hard speeches against it,
-there is some advantage in a machine that can&rsquo;t be got to
-gallop as fast as man&rsquo;s hate. It may happen that, as time
-goes on, he&rsquo;ll come to see that it&rsquo;s a very unmanly thing to
-talk about damages, because when it comes to that, what
-price the damage he inflicted on your heart and nature?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
-Many a woman would have gone down under the persecution,
-and it was only your own fine spirit and bed-rock
-pluck and courage that kept you from doing so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora approved these opinions, for praise was her
-favourite food, and had Kellock understood the powers of
-flattery, he had always succeeded in calming her tempests
-and exacting patience and obedience. But he loved her
-and his love saw her in roseal light as a rule. He forgave
-her little turpitudes and bitternesses and ebullitions, for
-was it not natural that one who had so cruelly suffered
-should sometimes betray those human weaknesses from
-which none is free?</p>
-
-<p>And for her, if the man had only been a husband to her,
-nothing on earth would have shaken her resolution, or
-weakened her will power. But that he was not, and her
-state of widowhood proved exceedingly painful to one of
-Medora&rsquo;s sanguine temperament, though this was the last
-thing in her heart she could confess to Kellock. She
-panted in fact for a lover sometimes; yet the consciousness
-that Jordan never panted for anything of the sort made
-it impossible to hint at such a human weakness.</p>
-
-<p>She found the line of least resistance was humble surrender
-to Kellock&rsquo;s high qualities. She abased her spirit
-at thought of his sacrifice and really saw aright in the
-question of his love for her. About that she could not
-make any mistake, for she had a mind quick enough in
-sundry particulars and sufficiently realised that she had
-won a man who would never fail her&mdash;a tower of strength&mdash;even
-though the tower threw rather a heavy shadow.
-Her own nature was subdued to what it had to work in;
-she wandered far from herself under these excitations.
-She was, indeed, so little herself that she did not want to
-be herself any more. But that ambition could not last.
-She felt herself moving sometimes&mdash;the love of laughter
-and pleasure, the need for stimulus, the cry for something
-to anticipate with joy. There was no room for these
-delights, at any rate at present, in the purview of Kellock.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
-He continued solemn and staid, patient and wise, sometimes
-quite inscrutable. He was magnificent, but not life&mdash;as
-Medora saw life. Living with Jordan almost suggested
-living in church; and church never had been Medora&rsquo;s
-life, but rather an occasional interlude, depending
-for its charm on the clothes she was wearing at the time.
-She became a good deal depressed at this season and wept
-many secret tears.</p>
-
-<p>Then a little relaxation offered of the mildest. Mrs.
-Trivett was able to report that Mary Dolbear and her
-husband had forgiven Medora, and she and Kellock were
-invited to tea at Priory Farm.</p>
-
-<p>He agreed to go and assured her that here promised the
-beginning of better times.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The people are coming to see the light of truth,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;You can always count on the natural good feeling
-of your fellow creatures, Medora, if you&rsquo;ll only be patient
-with them and give them time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They arrived upon a Sunday afternoon in Spring and
-Jordan improved the occasion as they walked through the
-green lanes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Spring teaches us that nothing is an end to itself,
-but everything a beginning to something else,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;You realise that more in the Spring than the Summer, or
-Winter, and yet it&rsquo;s just as true all the year round.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure it is,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And so with our present situation. It&rsquo;s not complete
-in itself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord, no; I hope not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But just a becoming.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s becoming unbearable if you ask me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No; we can stand it, because our position is impregnable.
-We can afford to be patient; that&rsquo;s the fine thing
-about rectitude: it can always be patient. Wrong-doing
-can&rsquo;t. Perhaps he&rsquo;s spoken to your mother on the subject.
-If he has not, then I shall feel it will soon be my
-duty to see him again, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>She was silent and presently, as they topped the hill and
-reached the Priory ruins in Tom Dolbear&rsquo;s orchard, Jordan
-spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That crowing cock reminds me of something I thought
-on in the night,&rdquo; he said; and Medora, glad that the ruin
-had not put him in recollection of the last time they were
-there, expressed interest.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You think a lot at night, I know,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was a bird in the inn yard crowing, and I thought
-how wise men are like the cock and crow in the night of
-ignorance to waken up humanity. But nobody likes to be
-woke up, and so they only get a frosty greeting and we
-tell them to be quiet, so that we may sleep again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very true thought, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; she answered, smothering
-a yawn. Then, as they entered the orchard by a
-side gate, a child or two ran to meet Medora. At tea Mrs.
-Dolbear expressed tolerant opinions.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I judge nobody,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;More does my husband.
-I only hope you&rsquo;ll soon put it right, so as not to give evil-disposed
-people the power to scoff. However, of course,
-that&rsquo;s not in your power. Ned Dingle will suit his own
-convenience no doubt, and you must try and bear it best
-way you can.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no difficulty as to that,&rdquo; declared Medora,
-&ldquo;knowing we&rsquo;re in the right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You bluffed it through very well by all accounts,&rdquo; said
-Tom Dolbear; &ldquo;but you can&rsquo;t defy the laws of marriage
-and expect the people as a whole to feel the same to you.
-However, you&rsquo;ll live it down no doubt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora asked her mother whether Ned had taken further
-steps and Lydia did not know.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not to my knowledge,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s not one to
-do anything he&rsquo;ll regret. He&rsquo;s thinking of damages
-against Mr. Kellock, and I believe his lawyer&rsquo;s of the same
-mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is he going to leave here?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When he&rsquo;s suited. Not sooner, I think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>&ldquo;Knox is after his house, I hear, and has got the first
-refusal for it,&rdquo; said Tom Dolbear. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a man in a
-hundred&mdash;Knox, I mean. That&rsquo;s what I call a philosopher
-sort of man&mdash;looks ahead and sees the future&rsquo;s only
-an echo of the past. So nothing he hears surprises him.
-We are very much alike in our opinions. What he wants
-with a house I don&rsquo;t know, however. He may think to
-marry again, which would account for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should hope Mr. Dingle would be gone pretty soon,&rdquo;
-said Kellock. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a bit callous him stopping, I think,
-things being as they are. It would be better for all parties
-if he went off in a dignified way, before the decree is pronounced.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say he thought it was a bit callous when you
-bolted with his wife,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Dolbear. &ldquo;Least
-said soonest mended, if you ask me, young man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon Medora, who was nursing the new baby,
-hated it suddenly and handed it back to its mother.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you&rsquo;re going to talk like that, Aunt Polly,&rdquo; she said,
-&ldquo;it wasn&rsquo;t much good us coming.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it was,&rdquo; returned Mrs. Dolbear, &ldquo;if only to hear
-sense. You must be large-minded, or else you&rsquo;re lost, and
-instead of quarrelling with everybody who thinks you&rsquo;ve
-done wrong, which will take you all your time, Medora,
-better be sensible and sing small and tread on nobody&rsquo;s
-corns more than you can help. We&rsquo;ve forgiven you for
-your dear mother&rsquo;s sake, and when you&rsquo;re married to Mr.
-Kellock, you will be welcome here and treated without any
-thought of the past. And so will he; and if that isn&rsquo;t
-Christianity made alive, I should like to know what is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dolbear was so pleased with her own charity that
-neither Medora nor Jordan had the heart to argue about
-it. Indeed argument would have been wasted on Mary&rsquo;s
-intelligence. She made Medora nurse the new baby again,
-and consideration of the infant occupied her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;After your mother she has been called,&rdquo; said Mrs.
-Dolbear, &ldquo;and her name&rsquo;s the brightest thing about her so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
-far. She&rsquo;s healthy and seems to have a live and let live
-sort of nature.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s got lovely blue eyes,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll fade, however,&rdquo; explained her aunt. &ldquo;Most
-of my children have blue eyes to start with, but it ain&rsquo;t a
-fast colour and can&rsquo;t stand the light. If you look at my
-husband&rsquo;s eyes, you&rsquo;ll see they be a very pale, washed-out
-blue; and the children mostly take after him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia, her daughter and Mr. Kellock presently went for
-a walk before supper. As a treat, Billy, Milly, Clara and
-Jenny Dolbear accompanied them, and Tom himself started
-with the party. But he disappeared at the &ldquo;Man and
-Gun,&rdquo; and they proceeded alone to the churchyard, that
-Lydia might put some flowers on a new-made grave.</p>
-
-<p>The evening light brought out detail in the great grey
-tower above them. Seed of fern had found the ledges and
-run little lines of dim green along them. Over the battlements
-a white image of a cock hung for weather-vane.
-The churchyard extended so that the evening sun flung the
-shadows of the gravestones upon neighbour mounds, and
-Mrs. Trivett pointed this out.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All his life long Noah Peeke darkened his daughter&rsquo;s
-life,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and now you see his slate flings a shadow
-on her grave, poor woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She put her nosegay on the raw-grass-clods built up
-over the sleeping place of Miss Peeke, and removed some
-dead flowers. Then they climbed the hill and extended
-their ramble with the children running on before.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My friend, Nancy Peeke, was father-ridden,&rdquo; explained
-Lydia. &ldquo;She sacrificed herself to her widowed
-father, and though a good few offered for her, she never
-left him. He reigned over her like a proper tyrant, but
-he never saw what he was doing and wasn&rsquo;t grateful to the
-day she closed her eyes. By that time it was too late to
-do much herself; and he ruled from the grave you may say,
-because up to her last illness, what her father would have
-done was always the ruling passion in her. It worked un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>consciously;
-but it worked. He ruined her life so far as
-we can say it. However, she&rsquo;s at peace now. Death&rsquo;s
-only a King of Terrors to the living. He can&rsquo;t fright her
-no more&mdash;nor her father can&rsquo;t neither.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take care people don&rsquo;t say the same of you,&rdquo; warned
-Medora. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re Aunt Polly&rsquo;s drudge at present, and
-many people know it quite well and think it a shameful
-thing at your age&mdash;nobody more than Mr. Knox; and
-when Jordan understands about it, he&rsquo;ll protest as much
-as I do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Trivett never allowed conversation personal to
-herself if she could prevent it.</p>
-
-<p>Now she challenged Kellock, who had been very silent,
-and made him talk.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-<small>PHILANDER&rsquo;S FATE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Medora&rsquo;s mother found increasing matter for agitation in
-the attitude of Ned Dingle. She had seen him twice and
-urged the need of action. She had even offered to give
-him all her small savings towards the legal cost of the
-operation. And then he had startled and shocked her a
-good deal by two statements, neither of which Lydia had
-expected.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All in good time,&rdquo; he had said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t feel any
-particular call to hurry myself on their account. Plenty
-of time when I&rsquo;ve settled my new job. As to the cost, it
-would be particular hard if you, of all people, was called
-to part on such a subject, and I wouldn&rsquo;t allow it for a
-moment. But when I do start on to it, my lawyer thinks
-I can bring a pretty hot case against Kellock for damages;
-so I dare say I shall knock expenses out of him, and a bit
-over. And the harder his savings are hit, the better every
-right thinking person will be pleased.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So he had spoken, and two days later had disappeared
-from Ashprington, and left no direction behind him.
-Where he was gone and whether he would return, none
-knew. Kellock deplored the delay and Medora bitterly
-resented it. She was very unhappy and her troubles now
-occupied her mother&rsquo;s mind. Mrs. Trivett felt chiefly concerned
-to approach Ned Dingle again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;s down Ivybridge way, at the paper mills there,
-I might go and see him,&rdquo; she said to Philander Knox in the
-luncheon hour; but Mr. Knox either could not or would not
-assist Lydia to find her son-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know where he&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
-shouldn&rsquo;t worry in that matter, because you can&rsquo;t alter it,
-or turn Ned Dingle from his plans, whatever they may be.
-On the whole, I should back him to do the fair thing in his
-own time. You can&rsquo;t expect him to go out of his way for
-them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He wants to punish them seemingly,&rdquo; said Lydia.
-&ldquo;He told me the harder Kellock was hit, the better people
-would be pleased. In fact he&rsquo;s getting a bit of his own
-back, I suppose, or thinks he is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In this case, it&rsquo;s all or none,&rdquo; answered Mr. Knox.
-&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t get a bit of his own back, and he can&rsquo;t call it
-his own if it&rsquo;s ceased to be his own. The subject&rsquo;s wrapped
-in mystery, Lydia Trivett, and only time will hatch what&rsquo;s
-really in Ned&rsquo;s mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He oughtn&rsquo;t to keep them on tenterhooks like this,&rdquo;
-she said; but Philander felt no call to criticise Mr. Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll suit himself, and why not? I&rsquo;ve given him a bit
-of useful advice. Whether he&rsquo;ll take it or not I can&rsquo;t of
-course, say; but don&rsquo;t you fret, that&rsquo;s all. Medora&rsquo;s broke
-up a bit, I fancy. She&rsquo;s just beginning to see in a dim
-sort of way she&rsquo;s not everybody. Being your daughter,
-I&rsquo;m willing to offer friendship; but if she&rsquo;s going to thrust
-me out of your thoughts, then she&rsquo;ll have one more enemy
-than she&rsquo;s got at present, I warn you of that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t talk so, my dear man, if you please,&rdquo; said
-Mrs. Trivett. &ldquo;My daughter&rsquo;s affairs and your affairs
-are two different things, and you needn&rsquo;t fear I&rsquo;m forgetting
-all you&rsquo;ve told me. You must let me have the full
-fortnight I bargained for last week. But you&rsquo;re on my
-mind too&mdash;working underground like a mole&mdash;and
-though I may not exactly see you at it, there&rsquo;s the marks
-of you. In fact I do think of you a lot, and if it&rsquo;s any
-comfort to you, I&rsquo;ve dreamed of you once or twice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In a friendly way, I hope?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quite friendly. We was shopping in a great shop,
-and I was carrying a lot of parcels.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe in dreams,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Give me real<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>ity,
-and make up your mind. Above all things don&rsquo;t be
-influenced against me by&mdash;well, you know. That&rsquo;s where
-the danger lies, in my opinion, and you&rsquo;ll be going under
-your character if you let sentiment and silliness and a
-barrow-load of other people&rsquo;s children come between you
-and your duty to yourself&mdash;not to mention me. Because
-I warn you, Lydia, that the grand mistake you make is
-that you forget your duty to yourself. A lot of good
-Christians do that; though your duty to yourself is quite
-as much a part of righteousness as your duty to your
-neighbour. We&rsquo;re told to love our neighbour as ourselves,
-I believe, not better. And there&rsquo;s another side; by doing
-that woman&rsquo;s work, and coming between her and the lawful
-consequences of that litter of children, you&rsquo;re not doing
-her any good, but harm. You&rsquo;re ruining her character,
-and helping her to live a lazy life. You&rsquo;ve taught her and
-your brother to take you as an every-day creature, and all
-as much in the course of nature as their daily bread,
-whereas the truth is that you are that rare thing, an angel
-in the house, and your qualities are clean hidden from their
-stupid eyes. It&rsquo;s making a couple naturally selfish, ten
-times more so; and that&rsquo;s what you unselfish people bring
-about so often as not. You toil and moil and work your
-fingers to the bone doing your duty, as you think, when
-half the time you&rsquo;re only doing somebody else&rsquo;s duty.
-And what&rsquo;s the result? You&rsquo;re not even respected for it.
-You&rsquo;re taken for granted&mdash;that&rsquo;s all the reward you get&mdash;you&rsquo;re
-taken for granted&mdash;never a nice thing at best.
-And I tell you that you&rsquo;re up against justice to me and
-yourself, Lydia. For though we&rsquo;ve not known each other
-a year yet, there&rsquo;s that in our natures that belongs to each
-other. It would be a very proper thing to happen, and
-we should be teaching your brother&rsquo;s family a very simple
-but valuable lesson, which is that to have anything for
-nothing in this world is robbery.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All as true as true,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I never find myself
-questioning your sense, and I quite admit there&rsquo;s often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-nobody so properly selfish as your unselfish sort. I&rsquo;ve
-seen them play the mischief with other people&rsquo;s lives, and
-create a very mistaken state of security in other people&rsquo;s
-houses.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Once grasp that, and I shall live in hope,&rdquo; said Philander.
-&ldquo;Let each man do his own work is a very good
-rule, because if you&rsquo;re always helping others, there&rsquo;s a tidy
-chance your own job&rsquo;s not being properly done; and
-though you might argue that your own work here isn&rsquo;t
-hurt by what you do at Priory Farm, it&rsquo;s quite possible
-that other work is hurt. I mean the time for thought and
-self-improvement, and&mdash;in fact, me. For I&rsquo;ve a fair call
-upon your time under the present conditions, and though
-it&rsquo;s all right for Mrs. Dolbear to know you&rsquo;re putting
-years on to your life before you&rsquo;ve lived them, it isn&rsquo;t all
-right for your true friends to hear about; and it isn&rsquo;t all
-right for your Maker, Who certainly never intended you
-for a nurse-maid at fifty odd years of age&mdash;or for a rag-sorter,
-either. You&rsquo;re ripe for higher things, and there&rsquo;s
-independence and peace waiting for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to think of it,&rdquo; said Lydia. &ldquo;For many
-reasons I&rsquo;d like it, Philander Knox. You suit me very
-well, because you&rsquo;ve got sense and character, and we seem
-to think alike in a lot that matters. You&rsquo;ve made me fond
-of you, and I trust you. In fact, there&rsquo;s such a lot that
-looks promising about it, that, for that reason, one can&rsquo;t
-help mistrusting it. Life teaches anybody to doubt the
-bright side of a thing till you&rsquo;ve weighed it fairly against
-the dark side.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This hasn&rsquo;t got no dark side,&rdquo; he declared; &ldquo;and if
-you&rsquo;re honest, the longer you look at it, the brighter it
-will shine. So be fair to us both. Trust your own brain-power;
-I can&rsquo;t give you better advice than that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She promised, and that evening, though she had hardly
-meant to be so prompt, Lydia raised the question among
-her relations. Accident led to this, and threw so forcible
-a commentary on the conversation with Mr. Knox, that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-matter sprang to her lips unsummoned, and surprised herself.
-Yet voiced in the kitchen of Priory Farm, from behind
-a pile of the children&rsquo;s mending, Lydia&rsquo;s tremendous
-statement struck even herself as almost impossibly shocking
-and heartless.</p>
-
-<p>Jenny had just suffered from an attack of croup and
-Lydia, of course, took the sick child into her own room,
-as Tom Dolbear would not let Mary do so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must have my night&rsquo;s rest, or else I can&rsquo;t do my day&rsquo;s
-work,&rdquo; he said, and his wife agreed with him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know Lydia will take Jenny, won&rsquo;t you, dear Lydia?
-Jenny&rsquo;s that fond of you, too. And there&rsquo;s no peace for
-me and Tom like the peace when the childer are along with
-you. Because then we know they&rsquo;re put first.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>This evening Jenny would not go to sleep and Lydia had
-run up and down stairs once or twice. Then she went into
-a room where Milly and Clara slept&mdash;to find them also
-awake and clamouring for biscuits. Having fed and silenced
-them, she returned to the pile of mending.</p>
-
-<p>It was a rough, wet night and Mr. Dolbear sat and
-smoked by the fire, while his wife drowsed on the other side
-of the hearth. The last baby was asleep in its cradle near
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Tom told of a successful stroke at Totnes market and
-was pleased with himself.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The year&rsquo;s begun well,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t one to count
-my chickens before they&rsquo;re hatched, but I never had such
-lambs in my life and the quality&rsquo;s as high as the numbers.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And no more than you deserve,&rdquo; said his wife; &ldquo;rewards
-come where they are due, and such a man as you did
-ought to be looked after. Oh, dear&mdash;there&rsquo;s Jenny again,
-I&rsquo;m afraid, Lydia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett departed a third time and presently returned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A little bit of temper, I&rsquo;m afraid. She&rsquo;s crying out
-for an orange to suck, and that&rsquo;s the last thing she can
-have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t call it temper,&rdquo; argued Jenny&rsquo;s mother.
-&ldquo;No child of mine have got what you&rsquo;d call temper,
-Lydia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where we don&rsquo;t agree then,&rdquo; answered her
-sister-in-law. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m fond of Jenny, as you well know; but
-what she&rsquo;s got to fight against is temper, in my opinion.
-We mustn&rsquo;t spoil her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If that happens, it won&rsquo;t be me, nor yet her father
-that does the harm,&rdquo; declared Mary placidly. &ldquo;Where
-children come, you&rsquo;ll generally find that wisdom is sent to
-manage them, and I do think that Tom and me know something
-about how to manage our own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s so long ago since you had your daughter to bring
-up, that very like you&rsquo;ve forgotten the early stages,
-Lydia,&rdquo; suggested Tom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And in any case, though God knows I&rsquo;d never have
-whispered it to you if you hadn&rsquo;t said Jenny suffered from
-temper&mdash;in any case, when you look at Medora, you can&rsquo;t
-be none too sure your way of upbringing was the best,&rdquo;
-murmured Mrs. Dolbear.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett smiled to herself and threaded another
-needle. She knew Mary very well and was not in the least
-concerned for this little flash. It meant nothing whatever.
-Mary was a worm who only wriggled if one of her progeny
-was trodden on. There was another shout from Jenny
-and Lydia took no notice, while both Tom and Mary looked
-at her inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>Then she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never like to trouble you people about my own
-affairs, because, naturally, you&rsquo;ve got no time to think
-about a humble person like me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that, Lydia,&rdquo; said her brother. &ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t you
-one of us and ain&rsquo;t our good your good?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; but it&rsquo;s borne in on me, Tom, we can&rsquo;t live for
-other people. I&rsquo;ve got my own life to live too. I&rsquo;ve got
-my work, and I earn my living just as much as you
-do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>&ldquo;Meanwhile that sick child&rsquo;s yowling her head off,&rdquo; said
-Mary sadly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She said she hated me last time I went up, so I can&rsquo;t
-go up again,&rdquo; declared Mrs. Trivett, &ldquo;not till she&rsquo;s
-asleep.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A child&rsquo;s a child,&rdquo; replied the mother, &ldquo;and if you&rsquo;re
-going to take that line about &rsquo;em&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She rose ponderously and lumbered from the room.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve hurt her feelings,&rdquo; grumbled Tom. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s
-the matter with you this evening, Lydia? If anybody&rsquo;s
-vexed you, best to have it out and not sulk over it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Funny I should be in hot water with you and Polly to-night,&rdquo;
-answered Mrs. Trivett. &ldquo;But you ought to
-choose your words cleverer, Tom. I don&rsquo;t sulk, my dear,
-whatever my faults.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I stand corrected,&rdquo; answered Mr. Dolbear instantly.
-&ldquo;God knows I&rsquo;ve no wish to quarrel with you, Lydia&mdash;no,
-nor would Polly. We&rsquo;ve got a great respect for you. As
-for our children&mdash;but you know what you are to them.
-And we feel that nothing&rsquo;s too good for you; and if I
-could afford to let you live here without paying your
-seven and six-pence a week, I&rsquo;d thankfully let you&mdash;thankfully.
-But with such a family as mine&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For some things, however, if you had a paid woman to
-look after the children, it might suit their mother better.
-She&rsquo;d feel freer to speak her mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t want no
-hirelings about the children&mdash;not while we&rsquo;ve got you.
-We couldn&rsquo;t trust anybody like we trust you; and Polly
-would never be the same woman, or get her needful share
-of rest and peace with a lesser than you. And some day,
-I hope to make you free of everything, and not let any
-money question arise between us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not worrying about my keep, Tom. Whatever
-else he may be, Jordan Kellock has got a very good respect
-of me, and though I shall never like him as well as Ned,
-yet he&rsquo;s an honourable, upright man according to his lights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
-and I can trust him. Indeed he&rsquo;s gone so far as to say
-he&rsquo;d like me to lead a different life; for he&rsquo;s the same as
-Dingle there: he doesn&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s a very wise thing for an
-elderly woman to be quite so busy as I am.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like his damned impertinence! And what does he
-mean by that, Priory Farm, or the Mill?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dolbear returned at this moment; she was fretful.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know whatever you&rsquo;ve done to Jenny. A
-proper tantarra the poor maid&rsquo;s in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I told her she couldn&rsquo;t have another orange to-night,
-that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen to this!&rdquo; burst out Tom. &ldquo;That blasted Kellock
-has been saying Lydia&rsquo;s over-worked!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who by?&rdquo; asked his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just what I want to know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he means the Mill, he&rsquo;s right, I believe,&rdquo; continued
-Mary. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve often wished she&rsquo;d see her way to give up
-that troublesome work in the rag house and stop here with
-us, in comfort and ease, with our little ones to play with
-her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or I might marry again and have a home of my own,&rdquo;
-suggested Lydia. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m the independent sort, Mary, and
-I often think it would be wiser to do that than stop along
-with you as a lodger.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment of silence, then Mr. Dolbear flung
-his clay pipe upon the hearth with such fury that it splintered
-into a thousand fragments.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What in hell&rsquo;s happened to-day?&rdquo; he almost shouted.
-&ldquo;Here I come home with good news&mdash;great news, you
-may say&mdash;and instead of sharing our pleasure and being
-glad, for the children&rsquo;s sake if not for ours, that I&rsquo;ve had
-a stroke of luck, you do every damned thing you can think
-of to pour cold water on it!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Tom, don&rsquo;t be a fool,&rdquo; answered Lydia
-calmly. &ldquo;You and Polly are getting so wrapped up in
-number one, that you can&rsquo;t imagine anybody having any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
-interest or thought outside this house and the welfare of
-you and your children. But the world goes on outside
-Priory Farm, and I say again, it&rsquo;s come to be a question
-with me whether I&rsquo;m doing the best I can do in the world
-by stopping here. A question of duty, mind. I may tell
-you both that some very straight things have been spoke
-to me of late, and I can&rsquo;t pretend they haven&rsquo;t got a lot of
-truth in &rsquo;em&mdash;perhaps more than the man who spoke them
-thought. For looking back, as I have a good bit since this
-business of Medora, I see only too bitter clear that it&rsquo;s
-possible to be too unselfish and to spoil young folk and
-unfit them for the battle of life by coming between them
-and their duty. That&rsquo;s what I did with Medora, as you
-reminded me just now, Polly, and that&rsquo;s my inclination
-with your little ones; and I&rsquo;m growing very doubtful if I&rsquo;m
-not thinking of my own inclinations, or personal desires,
-more than what&rsquo;s right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Either you&rsquo;re mad, Lydia, or you&rsquo;ve been talking to
-somebody that&rsquo;s mad,&rdquo; declared Tom furiously. &ldquo;This
-is about the most shattering speech I&rsquo;ve ever heard from
-you, and for cruelty and unreason I never heard the like.
-Look at my wife&mdash;ain&rsquo;t that enough? If she&rsquo;d seen a
-spectrum, she couldn&rsquo;t have gone whiter in the gills&mdash;and
-her chin&rsquo;s dropped and all her teeth showing. And if
-such a shock ain&rsquo;t enough to turn her milk sour and poison
-that baby, then I&rsquo;m a fool.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Indeed Mrs. Dolbear had changed colour and did look
-extremely frightened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know what you&rsquo;re hinting at, Lydia,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and
-I can only tell you if you was to do such a thing as to leave
-your brother at a time like this, after you&rsquo;d practically
-promised to help me with his family&mdash;if you were to go
-on some selfish pretext and marry some creature and lose
-your comfortable home and your fame for sense&mdash;if you
-did that, you&rsquo;d never have another peaceful moment from
-your conscience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;d never deserve to have one,&rdquo; added Tom.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
-&ldquo;Looked at on high grounds, Lydia, it don&rsquo;t bear thinking
-on for a second, and well you know it. Bring your
-religion to bear on it, woman, and you&rsquo;ll feel a good pinch
-of shame, I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m doing, if you could see it,&rdquo; answered
-Lydia. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s only a matter for religion, so far, and the
-welfare of the young folk. I&rsquo;m thinking for them and
-their characters. It would be a poor come-along-of-it,
-Tom, if years hence you and Polly was to turn round and
-say that I had marred your children&rsquo;s natures.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re the best judge of that,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;And if
-we&rsquo;re satisfied with your way of handling the children,
-whose business is it to put all these wicked ideas in your
-head? God&rsquo;s truth! I never heard of such impudence.
-And you, at your age&mdash;as if you didn&rsquo;t know what was
-duty and what was not. Perhaps &rsquo;tis thought you spoil us
-as well as our children, and give everything and get nothing
-in exchange?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He snorted with indignation when Lydia admitted that
-this was actually the case.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some do think so for that matter,&rdquo; she confessed.</p>
-
-<p>Her brother honestly felt this to be an undeserved blow.
-He had built up a very different picture of Lydia&rsquo;s existence
-and believed that her privileges at Priory Farm at
-least balanced any advantages that accrued from her presence.
-This, however, was what Mary understood very
-much better than Tom. She dwelt under no delusion on
-the subject and fully appreciated the significance of her
-sister-in-law in the cosmic scheme.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If that&rsquo;s the sort of thing outsiders say and you believe,
-then the sooner you&rsquo;re gone from my roof, the better
-pleased I shall be,&rdquo; shouted Mr. Dolbear. &ldquo;I was under
-the impression that after your husband died, Lydia, you
-turned to me for comfort and put me first henceforth, and
-felt that this was a blessed haven for your middle age.
-But, of course, if I&rsquo;m wrong and you&rsquo;re only a slave and
-I&rsquo;m only a slave-driver, then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>He stopped, for Mary did an uncommon thing and suddenly
-burst into an explosion of noisy tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; said Mr. Dolbear tragically, &ldquo;look at your
-work!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t Lydia,&rdquo; wept the other, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s you. I never
-was so cut to the heart in all my life, and I can&rsquo;t stand
-much more of it. Lydia&rsquo;s as much a part of this house as
-the door handles, and dearer to me, next to my children and
-you, than anything on God&rsquo;s earth; and when you talk of
-her going away from us, you might as well talk of cutting
-off my leg. We&rsquo;re three in one and one in three, you and
-Lydia and me, and the man or woman who came between
-us would be doing the devil&rsquo;s work and ought to be treated
-according.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a heart!&rdquo; said Mr. Dolbear. &ldquo;If that ain&rsquo;t
-offering the other cheek, Lydia&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; continued Mary, drying her eyes, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s some
-sorrows I could face, if it was the will of God, but the
-sorrow of living my life without Lydia&rsquo;s wisdom and help,
-and the light of her countenance&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t do it. I
-wouldn&rsquo;t be responsible. I know all she is in this house,
-and though you in your manly way&mdash;which is to be
-annoyed when you get a surprise you don&rsquo;t like&mdash;though
-you, Tom, may foolishly think Priory Farm could go on
-without Lydia, that only shows the gulf there&rsquo;s fixed between
-the male and female mind. I know Lydia&rsquo;s the lynch
-pin to our cart, and so do my girls, down to that innocent
-infant in the cradle, if she could talk; and so do Lydia
-herself, for though modest as a violet, she&rsquo;s far too witty
-to misunderstand a thing like that. And if I thought
-any evil influence was upon Lydia to make her restless, I&rsquo;d
-go on my knees to God to touch her heart and keep it in
-the old pattern; and I&rsquo;d stop on &rsquo;em till He had.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Here Mary wept again and Tom, impressed by so much
-emotion, moderated his warmth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I said anything over and above, I&rsquo;m sorry,&rdquo; he
-declared. &ldquo;But when I get a shock, it nearly always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
-loosens my tongue; and to think that evil disposed persons
-have been poisoning Lydia&rsquo;s mind against her own is a bit
-beyond reason and justice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If we&rsquo;re falling short in our duty and undervaluing
-you, Lydia, you must tell us,&rdquo; added Mary, &ldquo;for we&rsquo;re not
-the sort to fail in gratitude I should hope. We may not
-voice our thanks; but God knows if they&rsquo;re in our prayers
-or not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Lydia spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s nothing like that. It&rsquo;s only a natural difference
-of opinion. There&rsquo;s a man wants to marry me, and he
-can&rsquo;t be blamed, looking at me from his romantical point
-of view, for thinking he&rsquo;d like to see me in my own home.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Heavy silence followed, and only a cricket behind the
-oven broke it.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Dolbear&rsquo;s heart sank. She was prepared to go to
-any possible extremes of conduct rather than lose Lydia.
-Without Mrs. Trivett, her own life must inevitably become
-a far more complicated and strenuous matter than she
-desired.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not for us to advise you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but I hope
-the Almighty will help you out of temptation, Lydia, for
-anything more dreadful and unbecoming than that couldn&rsquo;t
-happen to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say you&rsquo;re right, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t tell you this for selfishness, nor yet because
-you&rsquo;d leave a house of mourners and break a lot of young,
-innocent hearts, if you was to go. I tell you this, because
-I do believe your high nature wouldn&rsquo;t brook another man,
-or return into the wedded state with comfort after all
-these widowed years of freedom. I can&rsquo;t see you happy
-so; and I can&rsquo;t see any nice man wishing to take you out
-of this house.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia rose to retire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, Polly, it&rsquo;s all the point of view. Nobody
-can fairly quarrel with the man. He&rsquo;s all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I hope you don&rsquo;t think of it all the same,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-after hearing my wife, Lydia,&rdquo; murmured Tom, now subdued.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must think of it. I owe it to him. I&rsquo;m sorry you
-can&rsquo;t trust a woman of my age to behave sensibly; but I
-dare say that&rsquo;s natural. Only be sure I&rsquo;ve no wish to give
-either of you a pang. You know what I think of you and
-the children, and how happy I&rsquo;ve been to see them come
-into the world so full of promise and hope. And if you
-look back, Polly, you&rsquo;ll see I&rsquo;ve always tried to be on the
-side of discipline and sense, and never lost a chance to
-strengthen your hand and win all proper obedience for
-you and Tom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We know all that,&rdquo; answered her brother. &ldquo;You
-mustn&rsquo;t think because I&rsquo;m a man of slow speech that my
-heart&rsquo;s slow likewise. Far from it. I like for everything
-to go smooth and peaceful; I hate change; and if changes
-are coming, all I can say is I haven&rsquo;t deserved &rsquo;em and
-more&rsquo;s my poor wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good night, Lydia. God bless you,&rdquo; said Mary, mopping
-her eyes. Then Mrs. Trivett left them and retired
-to the peace of her own sanctum. It was true that Jenny
-at present shared this ark, but Jenny had at last gone to
-sleep and Lydia meditated without interruption about her
-future.</p>
-
-<p>She came to a preliminary conclusion that, for once,
-duty was not directly involved. It seemed at a first glance
-that her own inclination might reasonably be considered,
-and that no choice between right and wrong awaited her.
-To marry was a very reasonable step, whatever Mary
-might say, for she was not old, and Mr. Knox could be
-trusted to make a worthy spouse and treat her with all
-due respect and consideration. She liked him and felt it
-quite possible to share his life and devote herself to his
-comfort and welfare. But to refuse him would be no more
-difficult than to accept him. Her present life, that looked
-so grey seen from the outside, was agreeable enough to her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-She loved work and she loved children, especially her
-brother&rsquo;s children. She had been largely responsible for
-their up-bringing and they owed much to her. Moreover
-they loved her quite as much as their mother. Indeed she
-was the sun to their mother&rsquo;s moon, and she very well
-knew what a disaster her departure must be in the eyes of
-Milly and Bobby, Jenny and Clara.</p>
-
-<p>Nor could she well see her own life separated from theirs.
-She had not decided when she went to sleep, but there was
-little doubt in her subconscious mind as to how she would
-decide. Mary&rsquo;s attitude had also influenced her. The
-real terror in Mary&rsquo;s eyes, when the threat of departure
-broke upon her, Lydia could not easily forget. She dwelt
-on these things and did not allow her sister-in-law&rsquo;s craft,
-or her brother&rsquo;s anger and selfishness to influence her.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mr. and Mrs. Dolbear, they lay awake till dawn,
-racking their brains to devise means by which Lydia might
-be preserved alive to them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One thing&rsquo;s certain in my mind,&rdquo; said Tom. &ldquo;We
-know the man; and that ought to be a tower of strength.
-There&rsquo;s no doubt it&rsquo;s Philander Knox, and all his sucking
-up to us and pretended friendship is now explained.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We must get at him&mdash;for Lydia&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; declared
-Mary. &ldquo;She shan&rsquo;t be trapped to her doom by an unknown
-creature like that if I can prevent it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s surely something beastly to the man,&rdquo; asserted
-Tom, &ldquo;otherwise, after he&rsquo;d once seen what my sister was
-in this house, he&rsquo;d have understood it was a vain and selfish
-plot to try and get her out of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s always talking about the greatest good to the
-greatest number,&rdquo; added Mary, &ldquo;and now &rsquo;tis for her to
-practise what she preaches. Here there&rsquo;s ten want her;
-and is one doubtful male, come from Lord knows where, to
-count against all her nearest and dearest? God forbid!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I hope she&rsquo;ll see it like that; and if she don&rsquo;t, we
-must make it our business to queer that man&rsquo;s pitch. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
-you and me, working heart and soul for our children and
-the family in general, can&rsquo;t get this foreigner on the run,
-we&rsquo;re not what I think we are.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<div class="gap-20"></div>
-
-<p>Next morning Mary was far too indisposed to rise, and
-before she went to work, Lydia took her up a cup of tea
-and three slices of toast and butter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve decided, Mary,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and if it&rsquo;s any comfort
-to you to know it, I may tell you that I shall stop here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon Mary wept again, held Mrs. Trivett&rsquo;s hand
-and kissed it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Blessed be your name,&rdquo; she gurgled, &ldquo;and may God&rsquo;s
-reward meet the case, Lydia. I&rsquo;d give you all the kingdoms
-of earth if they was mine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-<small>THE PROTEST</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>At one end of the glazing house&mdash;a lofty and bright
-workroom at the top story of the Mill&mdash;stood the dry
-press, to which the choice papers demanding extra finish
-came after glazing. Here they were piled between heavy
-slabs of hot metal and subject to great pressure; but the
-primal business of glazing had already been done between
-metal rollers. A range of these presented the principal
-object in this workshop.</p>
-
-<p>Girls prepared the paper for the rollers, and Medora
-had once been of this cheerful and busy throng. Hither
-came the paper from its final drying after the size bath, and
-the workers stood with a heap of sheets on one side of them
-and a little stack of polished zinc plates on the other.
-With her left hand each girl snatched a sheet of paper,
-with her right a plate of zinc; and then she inter-leaved the
-paper with the metal until a good wad rose in her crib.
-The paper was now ready for the glazing rollers, and men,
-who tended these massive machines, ran the sheets and
-zinc wads between the steel rollers, backward and forward
-twice and thrice under tremendous strain. Then what was
-dim and lustreless reappeared with a bright and shining
-surface, and the sheets returned again to the girls, who
-separated zinc and paper once more.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey had often preached on this text&mdash;indeed his
-simile was worn threadbare, though he repeated it to every
-new-comer in the glazing house and rolling room.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;With paper as with humans,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;nothing
-like a sharp pinch to bring out the polish; that is if a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
-man&rsquo;s built of stuff good enough to take a polish. Of
-course some are not; we know that only too well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The distinctive sounds in this great shop were three and
-did he hear them, a paper maker with his eyes shut would
-know exactly where he was. First, the steady thud of the
-plates on the side of the wooden cribs; next, the ceaseless
-rustle and hiss of the paper flying between the girl&rsquo;s hands
-as it is laid upon the zinc or snatched off it; and lastly
-the rumble of the rolling machines sounding a bass as they
-grip the piles of paper and metal and squeeze them up and
-down.</p>
-
-<p>The very precious papers went to the dry press; but
-the mass of them passed directly to the sorters, who graded
-all stock into three qualities&mdash;perfect, less perfect, and
-inferior. No inferior paper ever left Dene Mill. It was
-pulped again; but could not aspire to the highest standard
-having once sunk beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>And lastly it came to Mr. Pinhey&mdash;the finisher&mdash;who
-seemed a figure conceived and planned for this lofty purpose.
-Spick and span in his snowy apron, with delicate
-hands and quick eyes behind their shining glasses, he moved
-spotless through the mountains and masses of the finished
-article; he passed amid the ordered blocks magisterially&mdash;a
-very spirit of purity who reigned over the reams and
-called them by their names. Wove and laid Imperial,
-Super-royal, Medium, Demy, Foolscap and Double Foolscap
-were all included. Here towered orange and old rose
-sections; here azure and ultramarine; here sea green, here
-opaline pink and every delicate shade of buff and cream, to
-the snowy whiteness of the great papers and mightiest
-sheets. From fairy note to &ldquo;double elephant&rdquo; ranged
-Mr. Pinhey&rsquo;s activity. He worked among the papers,
-great and small, and put the last touch of perfection and
-completeness before they passed away into the larger
-world.</p>
-
-<p>But to-day Nicholas was concerned with a little affair
-outside the province of the finisher. On a sheet of palest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
-pink, a sheet that seemed actually itself to blush at the
-delicacy of its task, Mr. Pinhey had written a few sentences
-in his happiest manner and was handing it round the
-shop, that men and women might set their names thereto.
-He told everybody that he much disliked such an appeal
-and protest, but that his sense of propriety made it necessary,
-for conscience sake, to proceed. He was honest in
-this assurance and did not deceive himself. Some of his
-co-workers, who declined to sign, thought that Mr. Pinhey
-was conducting his cathartic mission from private motives,
-not of the highest, and frankly told him so; but they
-were wrong. The man steadfastly believed that religion
-demanded his action. He had debated the problem for
-many weeks and at last come to the conclusion that a
-strong step must be taken.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that Jordan Kellock should continue to earn
-his living at Dene Mill, while he lived in sin out of it, had
-become a mental possession with Mr. Pinhey. He believed
-that such a situation must be an active challenge to
-Providence, a perpetual blister to the Everlasting Intelligence
-on Whose watchful keeping that human hive depended.
-It seemed to Nicholas that this negation of right
-could not go on for ever, and he presently convinced himself
-that what appeared to be nobody&rsquo;s business, was in
-reality everybody&rsquo;s business. He suspected that many of
-the more sober and God-fearing agreed with him, and he
-knew that, so far as the glazing house was concerned, the
-majority always agreed as a matter of course with his
-views. Only the irreligious or low-minded ever questioned
-him, and when they had committed that error, he did not
-rest until he had got them out of his department.</p>
-
-<p>And now he had drafted an appeal to Mr. Trenchard
-and was procuring all possible signatures for it.</p>
-
-<p>It began &ldquo;We the undersigned,&rdquo; and it expressed a
-pious conviction that the presence of Jordan Kellock in
-the vat house was a source of danger to the prosperity of
-the Mill, and a threat to the spiritual stability of younger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-people, who would see in his support and encouragement
-an indication that morals counted for less than professional
-ability and that skill and craft were rated higher
-than a right way of living and scrupulous obedience to
-Divine precept.</p>
-
-<p>He was pleased with the composition, but took no credit
-to himself. He felt that his hand had been guided when
-he wrote it, and believed that every word was in the right
-place by a direct act of inspiration. And now he desired
-the largest number of signatures possible&mdash;from the
-heads of departments for choice. Unhappily there were
-strong forces opposed to Nicholas and he knew that not
-only would the foreman, Ernest Trood, refuse to sign, but
-he might influence others against so doing. Neither could
-Medora&rsquo;s mother be easily approached, though she had
-always represented a force for good. He decided, however,
-to invite Lydia&rsquo;s opinion. She could at least see the
-other side, and Mr. Pinhey felt that she would not misunderstand
-a man of his repute if he discussed the painful
-subject on the plane where he habitually moved. For he,
-too, very constantly spoke of &ldquo;moving on a plane,&rdquo; even
-as the unregenerate Kellock was used to do. Indeed, they
-had no little in common&mdash;a fact that came to Mr. Pinhey&rsquo;s
-shocked ear on this identical day.</p>
-
-<p>During the dinner hour, fountain-pen in hand, Nicholas
-proceeded upon his task, nerved thereto by most exalted
-sentiments. The certainties all signed with gusto; but
-among the doubtful attestors, Mr. Pinhey was disappointed
-to find few prepared to support him. Lydia he
-approached, where she sat reading a newspaper in her
-workroom. Indeed her thoughts were far from the printed
-page, but she opened it from force of habit until the work
-bell rang again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll thank you to read this, Mrs. Trivett,&rdquo; said Nicholas,
-as he presented his blushing manifesto. &ldquo;You may
-for a moment doubt whether I ought to ask you, of all
-people, to sign it. I&rsquo;ve been advised not. But we&rsquo;re old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
-friends, I believe, and I know you&rsquo;ll never quarrel with the
-man who does his duty, even if you don&rsquo;t see his duty with
-the same eyes as him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Duty&rsquo;s often a doubtful matter,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and we
-mistake inclination for duty sometimes. You can easily
-hoodwink yourself about duty, Nicholas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She read the protest and gave it back to him and shook
-her head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do as you think right,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t ask me
-to sign that. You&rsquo;ll guess without being told what a sad
-thing this is for a mother; but I&rsquo;m not going to take sides
-this time of day. I&rsquo;ve told them what I think about it and
-how I&rsquo;ve suffered over it, and I&rsquo;ve told other people also;
-but there&rsquo;s nothing gained that I can see by this. There&rsquo;s
-more in it than meets the eye, and Jordan Kellock is the
-sort of man to feel the punishment of his own conscience
-much sharper than the voice, or vote, of his fellow men.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Conscience!&rsquo;&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Pinhey. &ldquo;How can
-you say that the man who does a thing like that have got
-a conscience, Mrs. Trivett?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because I know he has&mdash;so do you if you&rsquo;ll think.
-There&rsquo;s very few so fussy and nice about life and its duties
-and bearings as Jordan Kellock. We all know what he is;
-and until this happened, nobody respected him more than
-you. And now he&rsquo;s done a thing that your conscience and
-mine don&rsquo;t approve. But remember this, he&rsquo;d never have
-done it if his own conscience hadn&rsquo;t supported him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was the devil getting the better of his conscience,&rdquo;
-argued Nicholas. &ldquo;He was always weak, because he was
-self-righteous, though Lord knows, seeing his foggy religious
-opinions, none had less reason to be. He had got
-his own theory of morals seemingly, and since it didn&rsquo;t
-come out of the Word, it was worthless as you&rsquo;d expect.
-So when the trial came and your daughter&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave it, there&rsquo;s a good man. I&rsquo;m not going to argue
-upon it. I hope they&rsquo;ll soon be properly married and this
-sad business allowed to pass by and be forgot. For the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-minute it&rsquo;s up to Ned Dingle, and I&rsquo;ve been bitter sorry
-for him, and he knows all I think about it; but there&rsquo;s no
-more can be done to right the wrong and ease people who
-feel like you, till Ned does it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your heart is speaking against your morals, Lydia, if
-I may say so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You may say what you like, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t rise to the thought that it is painful for
-some of us to earn our living under the same roof as that
-man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never met the man or woman so
-bad that I couldn&rsquo;t work under the same roof with them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s doubtfully Christian to be so large-minded in my
-opinion,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Do the other women up here think
-the same?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alice Barefoot will sign; but her brother, Henry, will
-not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Being an old sailor, no doubt he won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Mr. Pinhey.
-He won Miss Barefoot&rsquo;s support, however, and then
-skirmished in the neighbourhood of the vat house. Jordan
-was not there, and after Mr. Life had appended his signature
-and Harold Spry, Kellock&rsquo;s coucher, had declined to
-do so, Nicholas approached Philander Knox.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know your exact opinions,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I
-should be glad if you can feel on this subject with most of
-us serious people. You know the facts and feel it oughtn&rsquo;t
-to go on, I expect&mdash;that is if you take life seriously, as
-no doubt you do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The thing is to take other people&rsquo;s lives seriously and
-your own pretty light,&rdquo; said Knox. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the best
-way, because it keeps your sense of proportion about fair,
-Pinhey.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Nicholas liked these problems, but was doubtful here.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you mean as a matter of morals?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;as a matter of business,&rdquo; replied Philander.
-&ldquo;Because if you put yourself first always, your fellow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
-creatures will be mighty quick to put you second, or third,
-or out of the running altogether. Nobody bores people
-worse than the man who is always thinking about himself.
-But if you show a proper interest in others and their hopes
-and fears and likes and dislikes, then the better sort will
-gladly give as well as take. If you want anything for
-nothing in this world, you won&rsquo;t get it; but the more you
-give, the more you&rsquo;ll receive, in my experience. In the
-matter of giving don&rsquo;t stint and don&rsquo;t squander; and don&rsquo;t
-give where you&rsquo;ll get nothing back of course&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-foolish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Worldly wise, not heavenly wise,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Be
-so good as to read this document, Knox, and let me have
-the pleasure of seeing you sign it. It&rsquo;s the elder people
-I want to do so. In fact I&rsquo;m not showing it to the young
-ones. Better such things should not enter their innocent
-minds.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox read Kellock&rsquo;s indictment and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What do you know of sin, you old caterpillar?&rdquo; he
-asked very rudely. &ldquo;Good powers, my man, d&rsquo;you see
-what you&rsquo;re doing? You&rsquo;re shaving with a blunt razor
-over another chap&rsquo;s wounds. Blow out reason&rsquo;s candle if
-you like to walk without light; but don&rsquo;t from your darkness
-presume to show other people their road. That&rsquo;s
-damned impertinent and only makes the other sort cuss.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey shrank resentfully.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you make reason your guide,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;God help
-you, Philander Knox. And&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tear it up&mdash;tear it up and save Trenchard the
-trouble, Pinhey. Be guided by a man who&rsquo;s moved in a
-larger world than yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A larger and a wickeder world, if you can talk like that
-about sin,&rdquo; answered Nicholas, who had grown pinker than
-his paper.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not talking about sin. I&rsquo;d as soon talk about sin
-to a bluebottle as you. You&rsquo;re one of the born good sort,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
-you are, and the funny thing is that you&rsquo;ve worked in the
-same business with Kellock all these years and years and
-don&rsquo;t know he&rsquo;s the same order of creation as yourself.
-Why, my dear man, he might be your son!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is too much and I won&rsquo;t stand it,&rdquo; answered Mr.
-Pinhey. &ldquo;I ask you to recall that, Knox; or I won&rsquo;t know
-you from this hour forward.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be fussy. We&rsquo;re both well past our half century
-and can air our opinions without getting cross. I
-mean that Kellock is a serious-minded chap with a strong
-character and steadfast opinions. He&rsquo;s just as anxious to
-leave the world better than he found it as you are. And
-he means to do so; and very likely, if he&rsquo;s not too deadly
-in earnest and too narrow in his virtues, he may. You
-must grant him his good character, Pinhey, and then ask
-yourself whether a man with his past would have done this
-without what seemed good and high reasons. I&rsquo;m not saying
-he was right for a minute; but I&rsquo;m saying he weighed
-it in all its bearings and from his mistaken and inexperienced
-point of view made this big error.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And aren&rsquo;t we here to show him his error?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, we can&rsquo;t show it to him. You wouldn&rsquo;t convince
-him if you talked for a month from your point of view.
-Sit tight&mdash;that&rsquo;s all you&rsquo;ve got to do. I believe he&rsquo;s
-made a big mistake and I believe he&rsquo;ll see it for himself
-before he&rsquo;s six months older. But let his own nature work
-and don&rsquo;t say more till you know more. What looks like
-wickedness to one man&rsquo;s eye may seem goodness to another
-man&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pinhey had now grown calm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then I won&rsquo;t waste more of your time,&rdquo; he answered.
-&ldquo;You speak, I suppose, what you believe according to
-reason; but I wouldn&rsquo;t say you were a very good advertisement
-even for reason, Knox. I know your eyes will be
-opened about that man sooner or later. I can only trust
-that he&rsquo;s one by himself. I stand on the old paths and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
-believe most of us here do the same. But if we&rsquo;re going to
-set up Kellock and his ways as a model, then I don&rsquo;t see
-myself what&rsquo;s to become of civilisation, or religion either.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He departed, completed his rounds and confessed to disappointment
-at the result. Still he had mustered a respectable
-following and the document he left at Matthew
-Trenchard&rsquo;s private house that evening was signed by
-twenty-eight men and women in more or less responsible
-positions.</p>
-
-<p>To his everlasting surprise and indignation, Mr. Pinhey
-never heard of the protest again. He might as well have
-dropped it into the Dart, or posted it on the west wind.</p>
-
-<p>A week passed and nothing happened. Nicholas had
-met the master frequently and found him just as usual&mdash;cheery,
-practical, busy. He fumed in secret. He told
-Robert Life and old Mr. Amos Toft, who mixed the size,
-that were it not for the fact that he only wanted a year to
-qualify for his pension, he would resign.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett and Philander Knox discussed the matter
-on an occasion when they met at close of work. It was
-the day on which Lydia had to announce her decision with
-respect to her admirer, and they both knew the time had
-come.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll give the Corkscrew a miss and go round the
-pond,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t talk climbing that Jacob&rsquo;s
-ladder of a hill&mdash;at least I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her heart sank, for she had desired to make the painful
-interview as brief as possible. But the event proved that
-Lydia need not have feared, for Mr. Knox took her black
-news in an unexpected spirit.</p>
-
-<p>They spoke first, however, of Medora and Jordan
-Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never heard the like,&rdquo; said Lydia. &ldquo;It shows the
-danger of doing such things and not counting the cost.
-They was so wrapped up in their own affairs that they
-never saw it takes three people to make a divorce, and now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
-that injured man is opening their eyes. It&rsquo;s all as wrong
-as wrong can be, yet where are you going to put the
-blame?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going to put the blame anywhere,&rdquo; answered
-Mr. Knox. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a lot too much meddling, in my
-opinion, and if they&rsquo;re only left alone, those three people
-may work out their own salvation in their own way. I&rsquo;m
-fed up with &rsquo;em: one would think the welfare of Dene hung
-on their capers. To hear old Pinhey, you&rsquo;d say it depended
-on our opinion about &rsquo;em whether we&rsquo;d ever get to
-heaven ourselves. Where you can&rsquo;t help, don&rsquo;t worrit.
-They&rsquo;re all right; but what about me? This is the appointed
-time, Lydia, and I hope I may add that this is the
-day of salvation.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She jumped at the suggestion to lighten her refusal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I expect you may; and you&rsquo;ll look back at this evening
-and feel you are better a free man. Yes, you must regard
-yourself as free, please&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t do it&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t
-take another. I&rsquo;m fond of you, if that is anything, and
-I&rsquo;m proud you could have a fancy for me; for a reminder
-that I&rsquo;m a woman, coming from such a man as you, naturally
-makes me a bit above myself. But my life&rsquo;s run into
-a mould, you see. It&rsquo;s found its channel, like a river does;
-and it&rsquo;s made its bed. I say again I like you&mdash;I even
-love you, if the word ain&rsquo;t nonsense at fifty; but I&rsquo;ve seen
-my duty clear since we spoke about it. I couldn&rsquo;t fairly
-leave my sister-in-law and brother. &rsquo;Twould be like taking
-a screw out of a machine. The screw ain&rsquo;t much in itself
-but a lot depends upon it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t marry me, you mean?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t ain&rsquo;t the word. I&rsquo;d be very pleased to be your
-wife if I was a free party, but in a sense I&rsquo;m not free.
-You can&rsquo;t be in two places at once, like a flash of lightning,
-and I can&rsquo;t keep house for you and look after Mary&rsquo;s family
-and do my bit at Priory Farm. And it amounts to
-this&mdash;my brother, when he heard what was afoot, made it
-very clear that Priory Farm simply couldn&rsquo;t get on with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>out
-me. That may seem a vain thing to you; but it&rsquo;s the
-truth&mdash;absurd, I dare say; but they&rsquo;re built like that.
-You, on the contrary, would get on without me well
-enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak for yourself, but not for me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and not
-for your brother, Tom, and his mate. Rabbits in a hutch
-have got to be looked after, I grant, but you mustn&rsquo;t believe
-everything you hear&mdash;even from Tom Dolbear.
-Answer this: if you died to-morrow, what would happen
-at Priory Farm? Why, my dear woman, in six weeks
-they&rsquo;d have somebody in your place who looked after the
-children all her time; and they&rsquo;d wonder why they never
-thought of that before. We won&rsquo;t argue about it, however.
-When you say &lsquo;duty,&rsquo; I&rsquo;m dumb, of course. But
-tell me this before we drop the subject: would you marry
-me if things were otherwise and your sense of duty didn&rsquo;t
-come between?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett was immensely relieved to find how quietly
-he had taken his reverse.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I would,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re one of the
-best, and if it hadn&rsquo;t been that I&rsquo;d got to work out my life
-same as I&rsquo;m doing, I&rsquo;d have been glad enough to come to
-you. People at our time of day have got judgment, if
-ever they&rsquo;re going to have it, and in my opinion we should
-have made a well-matched pair enough. But such good
-things are not for me. I&rsquo;ve been happily married once,
-and can&rsquo;t expect it again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He continued to be quite restrained.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I venture to think you&rsquo;re about as wrong as you can
-be, Lydia, and your usual good sense has gone astray.
-But I know duty&rsquo;s your guiding star, and I&rsquo;m happy to
-think duty changes its shape from time to time, like most
-other human contrivances.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll always try to do it, my dear man, however it
-looks.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You will&mdash;that&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;m keeping so quiet now, instead
-of breaking out and making a noise and lowering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-myself in your opinion. The beauty of a woman like you
-is that you&rsquo;re steadfast&mdash;a slave, if not a martyr to
-what you think right. That being so, I take your word
-for the minute, and leave the rest to Providence.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She was puzzled, but very glad he could be so gentle
-with her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve took it like the wise man you are,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;I might have known you would; but I was afraid you
-wouldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t took it,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;There are some
-things you don&rsquo;t take, and this is one of them. I&rsquo;ve a
-great trust in the future, Lydia Trivett. The future,
-though it plays many people false, have always treated
-me in a very sportsmanlike and trustworthy manner so
-far.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s because you make your future just the same
-as you make your paper, and leave nothing to chance.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You never spoke a truer word,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-not going to brag before the event; but if ever I was properly
-interested in a bit of my future, it&rsquo;s now; and if I can
-get the pattern right, and stamp my will and purpose
-upon it, I dare say you&rsquo;ll be a good bit surprised yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She became uneasy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you meddle with fate, however. That&rsquo;s not our
-work,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what would you be inclined to call &lsquo;fate&rsquo;?&rdquo; he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;in a manner of speaking, you
-might call &lsquo;fate&rsquo; my dear brother, Tom, and his wife.
-And I&rsquo;ll ask you not to touch them, Philander.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I promise that. That wouldn&rsquo;t be playing the game,&rdquo;
-he admitted. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d be very sorry if they had anything
-to do with my future, Lydia. You might as well try to
-carve butter, or a turnip, into an enduring thing. I shall
-treat your brother and his wife the same as I&rsquo;ve always
-treated them. For the present, we&rsquo;ll just go on as we&rsquo;re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
-going, please&mdash;good friends, and nothing more. I&rsquo;ve
-a right to ask that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you&rsquo;d take &lsquo;no&rsquo; for an answer, however.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing final about anything in this world except
-death, my dear. While she&rsquo;s alive it&rsquo;s never too late
-for a woman to change her mind. And if you did, it
-would be very unfortunate if I was in such a position I
-couldn&rsquo;t listen to you. You may ask me to marry you,
-yet, Lydia&mdash;if Providence so wills it&mdash;though not leap
-year, I believe.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She laughed, and such was his amiability that he saw
-her all the way home.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-<small>A TEST FOR JORDAN KELLOCK</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Philander Knox combined with his level temper and tolerant
-philosophy an element of shrewdness which those with
-whom his lot was now cast failed to appreciate. He was
-no intriguer for choice, nor might he be called inquisitive;
-but if the occasion demanded it and his own interests were
-involved, Philander found himself quite prepared to employ
-his latent gifts. He was cunning, with that peculiar sort
-of craft that often belongs to expansive and genial natures;
-he could, in fact, be exceedingly sly and even unscrupulous
-within certain limits. Now the need for active
-operations on his own behalf began to be obvious to Mr.
-Knox. Finding that she cared for him, he had not the
-smallest intention of losing Lydia. He felt her argument
-against matrimony beneath serious consideration; but he
-knew that to her the reasons for his rejection were grave
-and sufficient, and he did not propose any counter-attack
-on the front of his reverse.</p>
-
-<p>He preferred a more circuitous response. He devoted
-a great deal of time to the subject and then took an occasion
-to see Medora. That he might do so, he would spend
-his leisure by the river and smoke his pipe there out of
-working hours. For some time he failed; but then came
-a day when he saw her returning to &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s
-Arms&rdquo; from the village and greeted her.</p>
-
-<p>Always glad to hear a kindly voice and aware that Knox
-had become a friend of her family, Medora smiled upon the
-vatman. He appeared gloomy, however, and their conversation
-began by his confessing his private tribulations.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got a heart,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you are one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
-brave sort that stand up to life and go through with a
-thing like a good plucked one, even though you know
-you&rsquo;ve made a mistake. Well, such show sympathy for
-their neighbours, Medora, so I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ll be sorry to
-hear I&rsquo;ve had a great disappointment.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The other guessed what it was.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother won&rsquo;t marry you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So she says; but on a very poor excuse in my opinion.
-Such a sensible woman might have found a better reason
-for turning me down. In fact she would&mdash;if there&rsquo;d been
-a better reason; but the truth is there&rsquo;s no reason at all.
-Therefore, though she thinks I&rsquo;m rejected, I don&rsquo;t regard
-myself as in that position&mdash;not yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A love so venerable in her eyes did not interest Medora,
-but she mildly wondered at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I can&rsquo;t think how you old people can run
-after each other and drive each other miserable, when you
-see what a beastly mess we young people make of love,&rdquo;
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah! You speak with a good deal of feeling. But we
-old people&mdash;as you call us, rather thoughtlessly, Medora&mdash;we
-old people don&rsquo;t take you children for a model.
-We&rsquo;ve been through those stages, and what we understand
-by love ain&rsquo;t what you understand by it. We&rsquo;ve forgotten
-more than you know. I should have thought now that
-Kellock&mdash;a man so much older than his years&mdash;might
-have given you a glimpse of the beauty and steadfastness
-of what we&rsquo;ll call middling to middle-aged love, Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps he has.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t his ideas appeal to you as a bit lofty and high
-class&mdash;as compared with your first&rsquo;s notion of it for
-instance?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She looked sharply at Mr. Knox, but did not answer.
-He put the question moodily and appeared not interested
-in an answer. Indeed he proceeded without waiting for
-her to speak.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s two sorts of women, and you can divide them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-like this&mdash;the sort of women men go to when they want
-to grumble about their wives, and the other sort. A man
-knows by instinct whether he&rsquo;ll get a tender hearing, or
-whether he won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know decent men did grumble about their
-wives,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you? Oh, yes, they do&mdash;even the best, sometimes.
-If decent women can grumble about their husbands&mdash;you,
-for example&mdash;why shouldn&rsquo;t decent men?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t got a husband at present,&rdquo; said Medora
-sharply, &ldquo;so you needn&rsquo;t drag me in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The sensible way you look facts in the face is very
-much to be admired,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a lot of
-girls, if they&rsquo;d done what you&rsquo;ve done, would bury their
-heads in the sand, like the ostrich, and think it was all
-right. But you don&rsquo;t let the truth escape you. I admire
-you for that. In a way, it&rsquo;s true you haven&rsquo;t got a
-husband at present, but on the other hand, you have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t pretend; I never will pretend,&rdquo; she answered,
-pleased at his praise. &ldquo;I do look things in the face, as
-you say, though nobody gives me credit for it, and I&rsquo;m
-not going to call Mr. Kellock my husband till he is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t thinking so much about him as Mr. Dingle.
-You&rsquo;re that fearless that you won&rsquo;t be afraid of the fact
-that under the law he&rsquo;s your husband still, monstrous
-though it may sound.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora nodded. She did not resent the statement,
-but asked a curious question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How does he find himself?&rdquo; she inquired, and it was
-Mr. Knox&rsquo;s turn to be surprised. But he showed no
-astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To be plain, he&rsquo;s suffered a lot. I&rsquo;ve got the pleasure
-of being his friend, because he knows I&rsquo;m a man who
-keeps himself to himself, and doesn&rsquo;t push in where angels
-fear to tread. He&rsquo;s given me his confidence, and I find
-this has been a very cruel facer for Dingle&mdash;knocked him
-out altogether. He&rsquo;ll get over it some day, as a brave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
-man should. But he&rsquo;s got a warm heart, and he&rsquo;ll never
-be quite the same again&mdash;naturally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;s suffered, so have I,&rdquo; said Medora, &ldquo;and if
-you&rsquo;re in his confidence, I may tell you that I want all my
-pluck and a bit over sometimes. I knew more or less what
-I was going to face; but I didn&rsquo;t know all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No woman ever does know all when she takes over a
-man. It cuts both ways, however. Kellock didn&rsquo;t know
-all when he ran away with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Know all! No, he don&rsquo;t know all. He don&rsquo;t know
-half what I thought he knew, and what I&rsquo;d a right to think
-he knew.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; said Mr. Knox. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t he, Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m speaking in confidence, I hope?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That be sure of. I&rsquo;m old enough to be your father,
-and shall faithfully respect your secrets, just as I respect
-Mr. Kellock&rsquo;s, or Ned&rsquo;s, or anybody&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sometimes I think my life&rsquo;s going to turn into one
-long Sunday now,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good sign, because it shows you&rsquo;re grasping
-the stern truth; and it shows Jordan&rsquo;s breaking you in.
-Once you&rsquo;re broken in, Medora, you and him will come
-together in a real understanding spirit. No doubt the
-first stages are rather painful to a handsome, clever bit
-like you, with dashing ideas, and the memory of what life
-was with Ned; but only give Kellock time, and the past
-will grow dim, and you&rsquo;ll get used to the everlasting Sunday
-idea. I greatly admire Kellock, because he never
-changes. He&rsquo;ll be a bit monotonous at first compared
-with the past, but he&rsquo;ll wear. You&rsquo;ll feel you&rsquo;re always
-living in cold, bitter clear moonlight with Kellock; and I
-dare say you&rsquo;ll miss the sunshine a bit for ten years
-or so; but gradually you&rsquo;ll get chilled down to his way.
-And once you&rsquo;ve settled to it, you&rsquo;ll hate the sunshine,
-and come to be just a wise, owl-eyed sort, same
-as him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora could not conceal a shiver.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve voted for moonlight and cold water against
-sunshine and a glass of sparkling now and again&mdash;and,
-no doubt, you&rsquo;re right, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him passionately.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t&mdash;don&rsquo;t, for God&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What
-d&rsquo;you think I&rsquo;m made of&mdash;ice?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not yet. You can&rsquo;t change your happy nature all in
-a minute. It&rsquo;ll come over you gradual&mdash;like the salt
-over Lot&rsquo;s wife. You naturally want to know what Ned&rsquo;s
-going to do about it, and I&rsquo;ve been at him on that score&mdash;because
-your mother&rsquo;s asked me to. She don&rsquo;t like the
-present doubt and delay, and so on. It&rsquo;s uncomfortable,
-and makes the unrighteous scoff.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he wants us to eat dirt&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, nothing like that. Ned&rsquo;s a gentleman, but
-these things have shaken him. He&rsquo;ll make up his mind
-presently, but he wants to act for the best&mdash;for your
-sake. Not for Jordan&rsquo;s, but for yours. There&rsquo;s a lot
-goes to such a thing as you&rsquo;ve done, and you want to be
-a student of character before you decide about it. Ned
-don&rsquo;t mean to let his feelings run away with him. He&rsquo;s
-got to think of your future.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then why has he sunk to damages against Mr. Kellock?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t believe anything you hear yet. I happen to
-know that Ned has not settled upon that question. He&rsquo;s
-very large-minded, as you&rsquo;ll remember.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That would be the last straw, I should think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t fairly quarrel with him, even if he do shake
-a bit of cash out of your husband to be. I&rsquo;m sure I should
-have. You may never know now all that you were to
-Ned; but I know, and he knows. He&rsquo;s been wonderful,
-in my opinion, and, with your great imagination, you
-ought to see how wonderful. If he didn&rsquo;t kill Kellock,
-why was it? Out of regard for himself? Not a chance!
-Ned&rsquo;s fearless, as the male should be, and would hang for
-Kellock to-morrow&mdash;especially seeing he&rsquo;s got no particular
-interest in going on living himself, owing to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
-shattering loss. No, Medora; he didn&rsquo;t spare your future
-husband because he was frightened of letting daylight
-into him; he spared him because he knew you loved him
-better than anything on earth. You put that in your
-pipe and smoke it, my dear. And take heart from it
-also; for if Ned wouldn&rsquo;t sink to Kellock&rsquo;s life, you may
-bet your pretty shoes he wouldn&rsquo;t touch his money. Now
-I must get back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a lot more I&rsquo;d like to say, however. When
-you do find a fellow creature that understands, which isn&rsquo;t
-often, your soul craves to speak,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Another time, perhaps. But mind this. Be fair.
-You&rsquo;re so brave, I see, that you can afford to be fair to
-all parties&mdash;friends and foes, so to call &rsquo;em. And you
-know a fine character when you see it, I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; concluded
-Philander vaguely; then he sped away, leaving the
-girl anxious both to hear and tell more. She did not comprehend
-Mr. Knox in the least, but perceived he was
-friendly. There was, moreover, a human ring in his voice
-that heartened her, and she felt the contrast keenly when
-she returned to the level tones and unimpassioned serenity
-of Jordan Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>But for once she did see Kellock taken out of himself,
-and in a frame of mind enthusiastic and excited.</p>
-
-<p>There came that evening a man to visit him from
-Totnes. He was an earnest and serious-minded person,
-well known to Jordan, and in his leisure he did secretarial
-work for the local branch of the Independent Labour
-Party. Upon that organisation, in the opinion of Kellock,
-the hope and future prosperity of his class now hung.
-By its activities alone salvation might presently be welcomed.
-And now his friend, acting as mouth-piece of
-the party, invited Kellock to deliver a lecture at Totnes,
-on &ldquo;Our Aims and Hopes.&rdquo; It was understood that
-county men of authority in the movement would be present,
-and Kellock did not need his fellow politician to point
-out that herein their side designed the young vatman an
-opportunity to show what he was good for.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll jump at it, of course, and do your very best.
-It may be worth a lot to you if you get &rsquo;em. Lawson and
-Jenkins will be there from Plymouth, and very likely
-Sawdye, from Newton. I&rsquo;ll beat up the Totnes crowd.
-Give &rsquo;em an hour of your hottest stuff, and keep the shop-stewards
-to the front. We want to get a move on the
-unions all round. They&rsquo;re growing a bit mouldy in their
-ideas; but Labour can&rsquo;t stand still for them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The trades unions were made for Labour, not Labour
-for trades unions,&rdquo; declared Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right; you rub that into them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The young man stayed to supper, and he and Kellock
-soared to heights that Medora had not yet imagined.
-Jordan was full of life, and displayed a vivacity that he
-had never displayed in conversation on his private affairs.
-It was clear that nothing personal would ever light such
-fires. They were reserved for the cause and the cause
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>When the man from Totnes had departed, Kellock addressed
-Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You may say that this is the biggest thing that has
-ever happened to me,&rdquo; he began. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t expect it yet,
-and I must confess I&rsquo;m a good bit gratified.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So it seems,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; because the people who are running our show in
-Devon are very jealous, naturally, that we shall give a
-good account of ourselves. There&rsquo;s a feeling in some
-quarters that nothing much in the way of fighting intellect
-comes from the West Country. Londoners and Northerners
-think it&rsquo;s a sort of Turkish bath all the time down
-here&mdash;a place for holidays and Devonshire cream and
-playing about. So if I&rsquo;m to be reported, as I shall be,
-that means a pretty good advertisement and a pretty high
-compliment. It&rsquo;s come sooner than I expected, and I must
-rise to it, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t frightened to get up and talk to a crowd of
-men?&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>&ldquo;Not if I know I&rsquo;m saying the right thing. I&rsquo;d be
-frightened to do it if I wasn&rsquo;t dead sure I was right, and
-that my ideas&mdash;our ideas&mdash;will rule the world before
-I&rsquo;m an old man; but they will. I must prepare my speech
-with my heart and soul. Everything must give way
-to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Including me, I suppose?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re in what they call another category, Medora.
-You are part of my own life&mdash;personal to me as I&rsquo;m
-personal to you and, of course, our private affairs mean
-a lot to us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad you think that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But this belongs to the world of ideas&mdash;to our souls
-and our highest ambitions&mdash;what we&rsquo;re born for, so to
-speak. I include you in it, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t then,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;because though it may
-appear a small thing to you, my highest ambition at present
-is to know when I shall be a married woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk in that tone of voice,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I feel
-all that, too, and you know I do, and I&rsquo;m not going to sit
-down under it much longer; but that&rsquo;s in another category,
-as I tell you. It won&rsquo;t bring it any nearer talking. I&rsquo;ll
-see, or write, to Mr. Dingle before much longer, if he
-doesn&rsquo;t set to work; but in the meantime this affair will
-call for all my thought and attention out of business
-hours.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps it would be a convenience to you if I went
-and lived somewhere else?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His forehead wrinkled.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When you say things like that, I never can be sure if
-you mean them for satire, or not,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;If
-you&rsquo;re meaning it for satire, you&rsquo;re wrong, Medora, and
-I blame you; but if you really mean it, out of consideration
-to my time, then I can assure you there&rsquo;s no need
-for you to go. In fact, you&rsquo;ll type the lecture, I hope.
-It&rsquo;s going to be quite as much to you as to me, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How can it be? You&rsquo;re so thick-skinned. What&rsquo;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-the good of lectures to a person who&rsquo;s living my life?
-You don&rsquo;t care. You&rsquo;ve got your work and your ambitions,
-and you&rsquo;ll have the honour and glory, if there is
-any. But where do I come in? Who am I? What am
-I?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My future wife, I should think. You can&rsquo;t accuse me
-of anything wrong in that category, Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not accusing you; I&rsquo;m past all that. I&rsquo;ll try to
-copy you. I&rsquo;ll be patient. If you say you&rsquo;ll see Mr.
-Dingle, or write to him&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall see him. He&rsquo;s coming back, so I hear, to Ashprington.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then he returned to his lecture, and, with the ardour
-of youth, did not sleep that night until he had roughed out
-a general plan and placed the heads of his composition
-clearly before him.</p>
-
-<p>Long after Medora had gone to bed and the little inn
-was asleep, Jordan scribbled on, and surprised himself at
-the compass of his thoughts. He was amazed to hear the
-clock strike two, and put away his books and papers at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>He could recollect no previous occasion in his life on
-which he had been awake at two o&rsquo;clock in the morning.
-He fell asleep longing to read what he had written to Medora,
-for he felt dimly sometimes that he was more outside
-her life and its interests than he should be; and since
-he could never rejoice her on any material base of trivial
-pleasures, he must make good his claim by force of intellect
-and a future far above that which the average
-working man could promise.</p>
-
-<p>But he also intended to bend the bow in reason, let life
-have its say, and their home its domestic happiness. He
-believed that, when they were married, they would soon
-become everything in the world to one another.</p>
-
-<p>He went to sleep in a very happy, exalted frame of
-mind, and felt that life had taken an unexpected stride
-in the right direction.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-<small>THE WISDOM OF PHILANDER</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>When Ned Dingle returned home, his future still unsettled,
-he had the privilege of an early visit from Mr. Knox.</p>
-
-<p>They sat in Ned&rsquo;s small kitchen garden, and Philander
-advised him to plant his peas.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Damn the peas,&rdquo; said Ned. &ldquo;Listen to me. I was
-as good as booked at Ivybridge when I got your letter
-telling me to hang on. What&rsquo;s the good all the same?
-I don&rsquo;t know why for I should have listened to you, but
-I know you&rsquo;ve got sense, and so I left it for the minute.
-I can&rsquo;t go back to Trenchard, if that&rsquo;s what you meant.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I meant a lot of things,&rdquo; answered the elder. &ldquo;I
-think so deuced highly of you, Dingle, that you&rsquo;ve got
-on my mind more than any man ever did before, and I&rsquo;m
-very wishful, for more reasons than one, to do you a
-turn. For the minute, however, it rests with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know it does. I&rsquo;m fed up with hearing that. Well,
-I&rsquo;m going on with it. I&rsquo;m going to get the heaviest damages
-the law will give me out of that swine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good&mdash;so far as it goes. And if things weren&rsquo;t exactly
-as they are, I should say ditto. But it&rsquo;s a very
-peculiar case, quite contrary to my experience, and it calls
-for a pinch of patience yet. Nobody has any right to
-dictate to you, because you&rsquo;re a man of good judgment,
-and I reckon you&rsquo;ve done dead right so far, and kept your
-nerve better than I should, or many older men with less
-intellects; but don&rsquo;t you spoil the ship for a hap&rsquo;p&rsquo;oth of
-tar, Ned. It&rsquo;s paid you so mighty well to wait and hang
-off, that it may pay you better still to go on waiting.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>&ldquo;It only hurts her&mdash;it don&rsquo;t hurt him. They&rsquo;ll say
-I&rsquo;m bullying a woman, next, and putting him in the right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only the ignorant would talk like that. But I know
-your mother-in-law, and I also know Medora. The females
-of that family want very careful handling, Ned;
-and in confidence, I may tell you that Mrs. Trivett is being
-very carefully handled&mdash;by me. But Medora is not being
-carefully handled&mdash;quite the contrary. Kellock
-don&rsquo;t understand the female mind&mdash;how could he with
-a face like his?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the question. Not that I want an answer.
-I&rsquo;m only wishful to put certain facts before you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How did she ever think, in her silliest moments, that
-man would have any lasting use for her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He got on her blind side, I suppose; for even a remarkable
-woman, like Medora, has her blind side. Who
-hasn&rsquo;t? But the interesting thing for you&mdash;and only
-for you&mdash;to consider, is that Medora sees straight
-again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s her mother says that. I don&rsquo;t believe it.
-She&rsquo;s a lot too conceited to admit that she made an infernal
-fool of herself. She&rsquo;d rather go miserable to her
-grave than give herself away.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You naturally think so, having no idea what a power
-there is in the clash of opposite characters. Medora is
-proud, and has a right to be, because she is beautiful and
-very fine stuff, given the right nature to mould her. And
-she thought&mdash;mistaken girl&mdash;because you were easy and
-good tempered, and liked to see her happy, that you
-weren&rsquo;t strong enough. That&rsquo;s why, in a moment of
-youthful folly, she went over to Kellock, before she knew
-anything whatever about the man&rsquo;s true character. Now,
-of course, she finds her mistake. And don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m
-getting this from Mrs. Trivett. One wouldn&rsquo;t take her
-opinion, being the girl&rsquo;s mother. No, I had it from Medora
-herself. I happened by chance to meet her, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-gave her &lsquo;good day,&rsquo; for I don&rsquo;t make other people&rsquo;s
-quarrels mine; and we had a bit of a yarn; and I won&rsquo;t
-disguise from you, Ned, that I saw the punishment was
-fitting the crime all right. She&rsquo;s got a good brain, and
-every day that passes over her head is enlarging that
-brain. She&rsquo;ll be a valuable wife for somebody some day;
-but not for Kellock. She sees Kellock now in the cold
-light of truth. She don&rsquo;t run him down, or anything
-rude like that; but she just talks about him and his
-character like a sister might. My word, she&rsquo;s clever!
-She said that living with Kellock would be like living in
-moonlight. Did you ever hear a sharper thought? That
-just describes it. And where&rsquo;s the woman that wants to
-live in moonlight? You see, she knows. She didn&rsquo;t come
-to Kellock without experience of the other thing. After
-you, of course, a cold creature like him is like milk after
-treble X. I feel it myself. Not a word against Kellock,
-mind you&mdash;he was utterly misled, and came a cropper,
-too; but he&rsquo;s got the virtues of his failings, and being ice,
-he behaved as such, and has always treated her just the
-same as he&rsquo;d have treated his maiden aunt&mdash;except he&rsquo;d
-have kissed his aunt, but not Medora. So I put it before
-you, and leave you to turn over the peculiar circumstances,
-Ned. As I say, the punishment is going on
-very steady, and your tactics couldn&rsquo;t be beat in my judgment.
-They deserve to suffer; and she does; and if Kellock
-weren&rsquo;t so darned busy about what matters to him
-more, he&rsquo;d be suffering too.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He will, when I knock all his savings out of him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, he won&rsquo;t&mdash;that would only hit her. He&rsquo;s got
-no use for money. He don&rsquo;t want more than the clothes
-he stands up in. But it ain&rsquo;t my business to bother you
-about what you&rsquo;re very well equal to manage yourself.
-I really came for quite a different reason, and that&rsquo;s the
-Mill. Bulstrode is going. He can&rsquo;t stick Ernest Trood,
-and Trood can&rsquo;t stick him. It happened yesterday, and
-in a month from now we must have a new beaterman.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
-You might not have heard that. Not that you&rsquo;ll come
-back, of course; but in your wanderings you may have
-heard of somebody?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I haven&rsquo;t. I must fix myself up now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a thousand pities things are as they are, but if
-I was you, I&rsquo;d mark time a little longer, if you can afford
-to do so. And don&rsquo;t forget the peas. They ought to
-be in. You may not be here to eat them; but, on the other
-hand, you may.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, how about you?&rdquo; asked Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There again, I&rsquo;m not in a position to close for the
-house yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If she&rsquo;s said &lsquo;no,&rsquo; she means &lsquo;no,&rsquo; Knox. Mrs. Trivett
-don&rsquo;t change.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More don&rsquo;t the weather-cock, Ned; but the wind does.
-It all comes back to patience, and, thank God, you and
-me are both patient and far-sighted men&mdash;else we
-shouldn&rsquo;t stand so firm on our feet as we do. Now I&rsquo;ll
-bid you good-night. And have a talk with Mr. Trenchard
-one day. There&rsquo;s wells of good sense in that man.
-The more I see of him, the more I find in him. He&rsquo;s got
-more brains in his little finger than we can boast of in
-our whole heads. And a warm heart also.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Philander withdrew, and went very thoughtfully homeward.
-He felt sure that Dingle would consider his remarks,
-and hesitated once or twice about returning and
-adding another touch; but he decided that nothing more
-need be said for the present.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, to her surprise, he sought Mrs.
-Trivett in the dinner hour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fear nothing,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and go on with your food.
-I haven&rsquo;t come to spoil it; but you know very well your
-good&rsquo;s mine, and it happens that I&rsquo;ve got an idea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re very kind,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t feel,
-however, I&rsquo;ve any right to your ideas&mdash;not now. But
-you rise above a little thing like that, and you&rsquo;ll probably
-live to know I was right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>&ldquo;It was the exception that proves the rule,&rdquo; declared
-Mr. Knox. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re nearly always right, though in refusing
-me you were wrong. But let that pass. I&rsquo;m considering
-your point of view. What&rsquo;s in my mind now
-is not you, but your daughter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to see her this evening. She&rsquo;s wrote me a
-letter asking me for God&rsquo;s sake to come and have a cup
-of tea. There&rsquo;s no doubt this waiting is getting on her
-nerves. It&rsquo;s very improper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be surprised at what I&rsquo;m going to say; but
-yesterday I had a remarkable conversation with your son-in-law.
-There&rsquo;s a lot more in that man than he gets credit
-for.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s behaved very well, I grant you&mdash;amazing well;
-but it&rsquo;s more than time he went on with it. He didn&rsquo;t
-ought to treat them like a cat treats a mouse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not that sort. He looks far beyond anything
-like that. He looks all round the subject in a way that
-surprised me. Have no fear he won&rsquo;t do right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t be right in my opinion to take damages out
-of Kellock&mdash;that&rsquo;s revenge.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s only human. But what I&rsquo;m coming to is
-this. Ned has got a very righteous down on Kellock, and
-feels no need to show mercy there, for Kellock showed him
-none; but he don&rsquo;t feel the same to Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Since when?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Trivett. &ldquo;He felt the same
-to her all right last time I saw him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But not now. His mind worked at Ivybridge, and he
-turned over the situation. And, in a word, if Kellock is
-going to save his skin and be let off, he&rsquo;ll have to thank
-Medora for it. I&rsquo;m saying a delicate thing, of course,
-and to anybody less wise than you, I wouldn&rsquo;t say it, because
-I should be laughed at; but I do believe, if Medora
-could see Dingle while there&rsquo;s yet time, and afore he&rsquo;s
-loosed his lawyer, Kellock might escape damages. What
-do you think? Should you say Medora and Ned might
-speak?&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>&ldquo;Medora would speak to him if she thought she could
-serve Jordan Kellock, I dare say; but whether he&rsquo;d listen
-I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In my opinion, if Medora would speak, he&rsquo;d listen.
-It ought, however, to be done by stealth. Neither one
-nor the other must know they&rsquo;re going to meet. Then
-it would surprise them both, and Medora might get round
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no danger in it for Medora, you reckon?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;None; I&rsquo;ve heard him on the subject. He may dress
-her down and tell her a bit of the truth about her conduct,
-and he may use some very harsh words to her; but
-more he would not do, and if she took it in a humble
-spirit, I dare say she&rsquo;d come out top and get him to drop
-the damages when he divorces her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Trivett considered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see any harm could come of it, even if no good
-did,&rdquo; she replied, after a pause. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll sound Medora.
-She&rsquo;d be glad to do Kellock a turn, naturally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hope she still feels confident about Kellock. I can&rsquo;t
-say she spoke with great warmth about the man last time
-I met her; but that was a passing cloud, I expect. He&rsquo;s
-going to give a lecture, and set the world right, at Totnes,
-presently, he tells me. I&rsquo;ve promised to be there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>When some hours later, Mrs. Trivett started to take
-tea with her daughter, Medora met her by the river, and
-revealed a restless and melancholy mood.</p>
-
-<p>Lydia sighed, and walked beside her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, what&rsquo;s the best news with you, my dear?&rdquo; she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no best,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re just waiting,
-and I&rsquo;m ageing and growing into a fright before my
-time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The typewriter&rsquo;s come, Jordan tells me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; it&rsquo;s come. I&rsquo;m writing out his speech. But the
-minute I&rsquo;ve made a clean sheet, he alters it all and messes
-it about. It&rsquo;s getting on his nerves, I believe, and I&rsquo;ll<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
-swear it&rsquo;s getting on mine. I don&rsquo;t hear anything else,
-morning, noon, and night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s distracting his mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; he can&rsquo;t think of more than one thing at a
-time, Jordan can&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;m just a machine now, like the
-typewriter. I told him yesterday I didn&rsquo;t hold with
-some of his opinions about labour, and he couldn&rsquo;t have
-been more surprised if the typewriter had spoken to
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t argue about his views if I was you, Medora.
-They&rsquo;re his life, in a manner of speaking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall argue about &rsquo;em if I choose. He&rsquo;d think no
-better of me if I humbly said ditto to all he says. He goes
-a lot too far, and he&rsquo;d take the shirts off the backs of
-the rich, if he could. He reads it over and over, and I
-very near stamp sometimes. Nothing will ever make me a
-socialist now. I dare say I might have been if he&rsquo;d gone
-about it different; but now now. And, anyway, I&rsquo;m not
-going to be the echo to Jordan, just because he takes it for
-granted I must be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s found a house, he tells me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He has, but he wants to beat down the rent a bit.
-He&rsquo;s afraid of his life that Dingle&rsquo;s going to have his savings
-out of him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s as may be. I dare say he&rsquo;ll do no such thing.
-It wouldn&rsquo;t be like Ned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Life&rsquo;s properly dreadful for me&mdash;that&rsquo;s all I know
-about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say it is. You&rsquo;ve got to wait the will of other
-people now, Medora; and it&rsquo;s a thing you never much liked
-doing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;m not friendless&mdash;I&rsquo;m not friendless,&rdquo; she said
-fiercely. &ldquo;To hear Jordan talk, you&rsquo;d think he&rsquo;s the
-only thing that stands between me and the streets; and I
-won&rsquo;t have it. People don&rsquo;t hate me&mdash;not all of them.
-But you&rsquo;d imagine that, without Jordan, there&rsquo;d be no
-place on earth for me now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>&ldquo;I thought he was very gentle and proper in his treatment,&rdquo;
-said Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t explain. I only mean that he seems to think
-that if it wasn&rsquo;t for his watchful care, and coming between
-me and every wind that blows, I&rsquo;d be torn to pieces
-by my fellow creatures. And what about him? If I
-did wrong, what about him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s rather late in the day to talk like that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want him to see all the same that I&rsquo;m not a lone,
-friendless, outcast creature, without anyone to care for
-me. I don&rsquo;t like to be championed by him, as if I was a
-fallen woman, and he was a saint. I won&rsquo;t have it, I tell
-you. I&rsquo;m not a fallen woman any more than he&rsquo;s a fallen
-man, and I want him to know the world isn&rsquo;t against me
-any more than it&rsquo;s against him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia was surprised.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This all seems silly nonsense to me,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;If
-you had anything to do, you&rsquo;d not waste time worrying
-over things like that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t understand, mother. It&rsquo;s like being patronised
-in a sort of way, and Jordan shan&rsquo;t patronise me.
-At any rate, I want to come to Priory Farm for a bit&mdash;just
-to show him I&rsquo;m not dependent on him, and have got
-a few good relations in the world. Surely, I might do
-that&mdash;just for a week or two&mdash;till he has got this blessed
-lecture off his mind? I know all he is, and I love the
-ground he walks on; but, along of one thing and another,
-he&rsquo;s not quite taking me in the right spirit for the moment,
-and I do think it would be a very wise thing if I
-was to come to you for a week or so. Please let me.
-They won&rsquo;t mind there. They&rsquo;d do anything you wished.
-It would show Jordan in a ladylike way, without any unpleasantness,
-that I&rsquo;m somebody still.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Surely to God, you don&rsquo;t want to leave him?&rdquo; asked
-Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave him? No&mdash;I&rsquo;ve had enough of leaving people.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
-He&rsquo;s everything to me, and I&rsquo;d lay down my life for him,
-I&rsquo;m sure; but just for the minute, even with him, I feel
-I&rsquo;ve got to fight for myself a bit. It wouldn&rsquo;t be a bad
-thing for him to see what his life is without me. If I go,
-he&rsquo;ll miss me at every turn, and he&rsquo;ll think a bit more of
-me when I come back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you say he thinks too much of you as it is, and
-fusses more than he need.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He thinks too much and too little. I can&rsquo;t explain&mdash;there&rsquo;s
-no words to it. But let it go. I ask to come and
-spend a bit of time at Priory Farm. Surely you&rsquo;ll let
-me do that? I&rsquo;m getting so thin and low that I believe
-I&rsquo;ll die if I&rsquo;ve got to worry much longer. A week or two
-with you will set me up, and make me braver. My nerves
-are all on edge.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora was tearful and agitated. Probably her mother
-understood her better than she pretended. Kellock was
-not unctuous, but utterly humourless, and, in the matter
-of Medora, he did sometimes unconsciously take a line
-that suggested the stained-glass attitude. It was as
-much her fault as his, for, at an earlier stage in their
-companionship, she had never tired of telling him how she
-appreciated his sacrifices, his noble patience, and chivalric
-support of herself. A man without sense of proportion
-could not fail to be influenced by such assurances from
-the woman he loved.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You shall come certainly,&rdquo; said Lydia, &ldquo;and there&rsquo;s
-no need to take on and let things fret you to fiddlestrings.
-It&rsquo;ll happen right presently. It may be a good thing for
-you to stop at Cornworthy for a while.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She remembered Philander&rsquo;s suggestion that Medora
-might, with advantage, see Ned. It would be possible to
-arrange such a meeting at Cornworthy perhaps; and if
-Medora prevailed with Mr. Dingle to renounce his threat
-of claiming damages, that must be to the good.</p>
-
-<p>She promised her daughter that she should come, drank<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
-tea with her, and left her happier than she had been for
-a long time.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not so much for myself as for Jordan,&rdquo; declared
-Medora. &ldquo;It&rsquo;ll be good for him and open his eyes a bit
-to hear I&rsquo;m going to Uncle and Aunt Dolbear on a visit.
-They forgave him and all that; but I don&rsquo;t think he
-knows they are friendly enough to have me at Priory
-Farm, and it will be right that he should know it. There&rsquo;s
-other reasons, too. If I can escape from going to his
-lecture, it will be a blessing. He&rsquo;ll make a rare fuss;
-but if I once get to Priory Farm, I can fall ill, or something
-to avoid it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia went home in a melancholy mood after this interview,
-and her daughter&rsquo;s unrest descended upon her.</p>
-
-<p>She could not understand the relations between Kellock
-and Medora. They appeared to be extraordinary, as far
-as Medora was concerned, and the more Mrs. Trivett considered
-the various reports, the less able was she to put a
-cheerful interpretation upon them.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-<small>NED AND MEDORA</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>When Lydia asked that Medora might come to stop at
-the farm, Mary and Tom spoke simultaneously, for each
-hastened to be the first to accord permission.</p>
-
-<p>They had suffered acute anxieties concerning Mrs. Trivett&rsquo;s
-possible departure, and when she told them that she
-had determined to remain, nothing was good enough for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>In their joy and relief they grovelled before Lydia,
-heaped compliments upon her, and declared that never
-for a moment had they entertained the least doubt concerning
-her decision, even while, with every thankful word
-and exultant exclamation, they revealed the depth of their
-past anxiety and height of their vanished fear. She saw
-through it, and only left them uneasy in one particular.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox, so Lydia explained, had taken his disappointment
-in a spirit of great self-restraint, and behaved
-with such magnanimity and understanding that when he
-desired the continued friendship of Mrs. Trivett, she could
-not deny it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For that matter, I&rsquo;m proud to have him for a friend,&rdquo;
-she said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s full of sense, and as he&rsquo;s prepared to
-offer friendship to me and mine, I&rsquo;m prepared to accept it,
-and you mustn&rsquo;t mind if he comes to tea of a Sunday sometimes,
-and such like.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He wouldn&rsquo;t allude to the past, or anything like that,
-I hope?&rdquo; asked Mr. Dolbear doubtfully. &ldquo;Because, in
-his rage at his loss, he might be tempted to give me
-and my wife the blame; and if he did that, I should round
-on him, and there&rsquo;d be a scene.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>&ldquo;Fear nothing of the sort,&rdquo; replied his sister. &ldquo;You
-may take it from me it won&rsquo;t happen. In fact, I went
-into it, and I&rsquo;ve got his undertaking never to say one
-word to you or Polly on the subject. And he&rsquo;s a man
-you may say whose word is his bond.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then let him come,&rdquo; decided Tom. &ldquo;If he&rsquo;s got that
-bee out of his bonnet, I don&rsquo;t want to quarrel with him.
-I never doubted his sense, save in that fatal matter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s got a nice hand with the children, too,&rdquo; said
-Mary. &ldquo;I will say that for him; and where a child of
-mine takes, you may generally trust the party.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In the matter of Medora, there was no difficulty; nor
-did Jordan make any. Medora, in fact, felt a shadow
-of disappointment that he agreed so willingly. It was
-only a lesser grievance than refusal had been.</p>
-
-<p>She made a great business of her petition, but he made
-no business whatever of granting it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got the lecture through now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and
-there won&rsquo;t be no need for another copy yet, if at all,
-and you&rsquo;ve heard me deliver it so often that I&rsquo;ll be glad
-for you to go and get a rest. Then you&rsquo;ll come back all
-the fresher to it, and to the actual night, when I give it
-at Totnes a fortnight hence. Go, by all means, and I&rsquo;ll
-come over to tea on Sunday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So Medora, who would have wearied Heaven with her
-griefs, had he questioned the plan, now flushed that he
-approved it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One would think you was glad to get rid of me,&rdquo; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;d think so?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good idea, and
-will give you a bit of a rest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you, too, perhaps?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want a rest; but life&rsquo;s been getting on your
-nerves above a bit lately, and the calm of the farm and
-the fun of the children, and being with your mother, and
-so on&mdash;it&rsquo;s to the good, Medora. And soon, I hope,
-we&rsquo;ll know something definite, so that this suspense can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
-end. It&rsquo;s bad for you, and I should think the man was
-enough of a man to know he&rsquo;s doing a mean and cowardly
-thing to hang it up like this any longer. So you go, and
-rest quietly; and as I told you, if he doesn&rsquo;t proceed soon,
-I shall approach him again with an ultimatum.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s him that will have the ultimatum, I should think.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>So Medora went to Priory Farm, and since she knew
-very well how to please her aunt, made a point of doing so.
-Indeed, Mrs. Dolbear considered she was much improved.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never thought she would rise to children,&rdquo; said
-Mary to her sister-in-law, &ldquo;but of late, I may say, there&rsquo;s
-hope in that direction. She&rsquo;s more patient and quicker
-to see danger threatening a child. There was a time I
-wouldn&rsquo;t have trusted her too far with Milly or Bobby,
-let alone Jenny; but all that&rsquo;s altered. She may even be
-a good mother herself yet in fulness of time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, Medora shone at the farm, and displayed consideration
-for other people that might hardly have been
-predicted even by the sanguine. Mary Dolbear was one
-who gave everybody ample opportunities to be unselfish,
-and Medora not only perceived these opportunities, but
-took them. She had changed, and none realised how much
-better than Lydia. But still the wisdom of any meeting
-between her daughter and Ned seemed doubtful. She hesitated
-to bring it about, and was still hesitating when
-chance accomplished it.</p>
-
-<p>Medora had been at Cornworthy for ten days and once
-Jordan came to tea during that time. He was full of
-some alterations in his lecture, but brought no news of interest
-to his future wife.</p>
-
-<p>Then she went for a walk by the ponds above the Mill,
-where emerald reflections of alder and willow and birch
-were washed over the silver surface of the little mere, and
-a great wealth of green leapt again above the mats and
-tussocks of the sedge and rush. Golden kingcups flashed
-along the shallows, and bluebells wove their light into the
-banks above the water.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>Medora was actually engaged in the innocent business
-of picking flowers when she came plump upon Ned. They
-met at a narrow beach running into the lake under a limestone
-crag; and he, too, was there on pleasure, for he
-was fishing. Strangely enough, each was possessed with
-the same idea, and seemed to think it necessary to explain
-to the other the situation in which they stood revealed.</p>
-
-<p>Ned scowled and started; Medora blushed. While he
-stared, she spoke, without any preliminaries and as though
-no terrific events separated them. It seemed as if the
-trivial accident of being there picking flowers demanded
-first consideration.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m here for pleasure,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m only killing time. We&rsquo;ve got to wait your will, and
-I&rsquo;ve got to go on living as best as I can. We&rsquo;re at your
-mercy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He, too, fastened on the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, same here. It&rsquo;s true I&rsquo;m fishing, but only
-to kill time, same as you. I&rsquo;m not in any mood for pleasure,
-I can tell you, woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I dare say not,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;People often fall
-back on little things when big things are hanging over
-them. I know how you feel, because I feel the same.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know how I feel,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;And
-don&rsquo;t you dare to say you do, please. What do you know
-about feeling? You&rsquo;re the senseless rubbish that can hurt
-others, but you&rsquo;re not built to suffer yourself more than a
-stinging nettle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She felt no pang of anger at his rough challenge. After
-Kellock&rsquo;s steadfast voice, the ferocious accents of Ned
-were rather agreeable than not. His tone for once was
-deep, as an angry bull. She liked it, and thought he
-looked exceedingly well.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As long as he don&rsquo;t throw me in the water, I&rsquo;ll speak
-to him,&rdquo; thought Medora.</p>
-
-<p>Ned expected a stinging reply to his preliminary chal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>lenge,
-but she did not answer it. Instead, she spoke of an
-utter triviality.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;you think&rsquo;s in my mind&mdash;to show how little
-things get hold on you? The first thing that come in it
-when I saw you so close was pleasure, because I was wearing
-a pink sunbonnet&mdash;that being your favourite colour
-for me. But Mr. Kellock don&rsquo;t know what I wear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He started with genuine astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What in thunder be women made of? You can babble
-like that and pick flowers, and be a hen devil all the
-time?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I am a hen devil, then I&rsquo;m in the proper place for
-devils, and that&rsquo;s hell,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;D&rsquo;you think a woman
-can&rsquo;t pick flowers and wear pink and yet be broken to
-pieces heart and soul?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you ought to be. You was always playing at being
-a martyr, and now you damned well can be one. And
-I hope you are. The trouble with you was that I spoiled
-you and fooled you to the top of your bent, and let you
-bully-rag me, and never turned round and gave you a bit
-of the naked truth yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You were a great deal too
-fond of me for my good, Ned, and if you hadn&rsquo;t loved me
-so well, I dare say you&rsquo;d have been a better husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t have been a better husband,&rdquo; he answered,
-&ldquo;and if you&rsquo;d been made of decent stuff, you&rsquo;d have
-known it. Not that I didn&rsquo;t see the ugly truth about you&mdash;I
-did; but I hoped and hoped that with time you&rsquo;d get
-more sense, and so I held my tongue and held on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How I wish you&rsquo;d told me my faults, Ned.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You oughtn&rsquo;t to want telling. If you&rsquo;d got any conscience,
-which you never had, you&rsquo;d have seen your faults
-and suffered from &rsquo;em, as you ought. For one thing, you
-were greedy as the grave, and that envious that you didn&rsquo;t
-like anybody else to have anything you lacked. If you
-saw a worm on the ground, you wished you was a bird.
-&rsquo;Twas always so. Everybody else was better off than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
-you, and had got nicer cats and gardens and husbands
-and everything. A filthy jealousy it was that made you
-miserable, when you ought to have been happy, and
-tempted you off to try your luck with this thing, that&rsquo;s
-only a machine, not a man. Some chaps would have took
-you two and smashed your heads together like egg-shells,
-as you deserved; but I&rsquo;m above anything like that. You
-thought I was a fool; but I wasn&rsquo;t such a fool as to do
-that. You wrecked me, but I wasn&rsquo;t going to wreck you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve wrecked myself, more likely,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know nothing about that. Whatever you get
-won&rsquo;t be half what you deserve.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned appeared to have changed for the better in Medora&rsquo;s
-eyes. The harsher were his words, the better she
-liked them. Here was real martyrdom. The emotion of
-this suffering became a luxury. She wept, but was not in
-the least unhappy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve ruined two very fine men&mdash;that&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;ve
-done,&rdquo; said Medora. She flung down her kingcups and
-bluebells, and sat on a stone and covered her face with
-her pocket-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her fiercely, and rated her from a savage
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Crocodile tears! You never even cried like a decent
-woman, from your heart, because you haven&rsquo;t got a heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say that,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Your heart can&rsquo;t break
-if you haven&rsquo;t got one, and mine&rsquo;s broken all right now.
-With all my dreadful faults, I&rsquo;m human&mdash;only too much
-so. I know what I&rsquo;ve done, and what I&rsquo;ve lost.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what you&rsquo;ve won, too&mdash;a lunatic, that will very
-likely end on the gallows as a traitor to the country, or
-some such thing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, he won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s too dull for that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can call him dull, can you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve no right to make me talk about him,&rdquo; answered
-she; &ldquo;all the same, honesty&rsquo;s no crime, and I say he&rsquo;s a
-dull man, because anybody with only one idea is dull.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>&ldquo;Yes, no doubt; if you&rsquo;re not his one idea yourself,
-you find him dull. And when you were my only idea,
-you still wanted more&mdash;always wanted more&mdash;more than
-you had of everything but trouble; and now you&rsquo;ve brewed
-that for yourself. And what d&rsquo;you mean, when you say
-you&rsquo;ve ruined his life as well as mine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora enjoyed the lash of his scornful voice.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll kill me if you speak so harsh,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I
-meant&mdash;I meant&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know what I meant. Only it&rsquo;s
-clear to me that I shan&rsquo;t make him the wife he thinks I
-shall.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true for once. You&rsquo;re no wife for any man.
-And as for him, he don&rsquo;t want a flesh and blood woman
-for his partner, and if you hadn&rsquo;t thrown yourself at his
-head, like a street-walker, he&rsquo;d never have taken you.
-The shamelessness&mdash;the plotting&mdash;the lies. When you
-grasp hold of what you&rsquo;ve done, you ought to want to
-drown yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I may do it sooner than you think for,&rdquo; she answered.
-&ldquo;Rub it in&mdash;I deserve it; but don&rsquo;t fancy I&rsquo;m not being
-paid worse coin than any word of yours. I&rsquo;m only a
-woman&mdash;not much more than a girl, you may say; and
-I&rsquo;ve done you bitter wrong, but there&rsquo;s always two sides
-to everything, and justice will be done to me&mdash;in fact,
-it&rsquo;s begun. You say Kellock never wanted a flesh and
-blood woman, and that&rsquo;s true&mdash;truer than you know.
-So you can see what my future&rsquo;s going to be. Once you&rsquo;re
-free, you can find a better and prettier and wiser creature
-than me to-morrow; but I&rsquo;m done for to the end of my
-life. He&rsquo;s much too good for me&mdash;I know that&mdash;so
-were you&mdash;far too good; but there it is. I&rsquo;m done for&mdash;down
-and out, as you would say. He&rsquo;ll go and live in a
-town presently. Think of me in a town!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sorry for yourself always&mdash;and never for nobody
-else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry for everybody that ever I was born. I
-don&rsquo;t want to bring any more trouble on people; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
-very like, I may find the best way is to drop into the water
-some night, and let the river carry my poor dust out to
-sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t the pluck to do that,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Anyway,
-you belong to him now, and have got to play the
-game and stick to him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They argued for some time, the man minatory and
-harsh, the woman resigned. But once he amused her.
-Then Ned harked back to her threat.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You talk of being down on your luck, and suicide, and
-all that twaddle. But you never looked better in your
-life. You&rsquo;re bursting with health.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not,&rdquo; she cried indignantly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve no right
-to say it. And if I am, what about you? You&rsquo;re a lot
-fatter and handsomer than ever you was in my time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a lie,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you needn&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m
-made of stone, though you are.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I&rsquo;m a stone, &rsquo;tis a rolling one,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;and
-that sort don&rsquo;t gather no moss. I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;ve met you,
-Ned, because I&rsquo;m very wishful for you to know, for your
-peace of mind, I&rsquo;m not happy&mdash;far, far from it. You
-deserve to know that. You made me laugh just now, I
-grant, and that&rsquo;s the first time I&rsquo;ve laughed since I left
-you&mdash;God judge me, if it isn&rsquo;t. The very first time,
-and the sound was so strange that it made me jump.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Laugh? You haven&rsquo;t got much to laugh at I should
-say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true. I&rsquo;ll never laugh no more. I wouldn&rsquo;t
-laugh when I might&mdash;now it&rsquo;s too late.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s never too late for anything for one of your sort.
-And when you say you&rsquo;re a rolling stone, I reckon you tell
-the truth for once. And things that roll go down hill,
-remember that. Hell knows where you&rsquo;ll roll to before
-you finish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t be your fault, Ned. You&rsquo;ve got nothing to
-blame yourself with,&rdquo; she answered humbly, and he judged
-wrongly of what was in her mind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better send Kellock along to me,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;The business is in hand, and I may tell you, I meant to
-hit him as hard as I knew how. But there&rsquo;s two sides to
-that, and in the long run what kept me from getting a
-gallows out of him is the same that&rsquo;s going to keep me
-from getting damages. And that&rsquo;s you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not worthy to black your boots, Ned,&rdquo; declared
-Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, and more&rsquo;s he&mdash;more&rsquo;s he; mind that. You
-thought he was the clever, strong man&mdash;the sort of man
-would be a tower of strength to any woman, and all the
-rest of it; and now you know, or you jolly soon will know,
-that he&rsquo;s only a tower of strength for himself&mdash;not for
-you. A man like him wants a woman to match him, and
-if you ask yourself if you match him, and answer yourself
-honest, if you can, then you&rsquo;ll answer that you don&rsquo;t and
-never will. You can send him to me at my convenience.
-He can call o&rsquo; Monday at half-after eight&mdash;then I&rsquo;ll decide
-about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Ned. It&rsquo;s more than we deserve, I dare
-say. I don&rsquo;t care much what happens now if you can
-forgive me. I suppose you can&rsquo;t, but it would mean a
-lot to me if you could.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You think I&rsquo;ve got something to forgive, then?
-That&rsquo;s surprising. I thought &rsquo;twas all the other way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So did I,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;but I know better now. I
-shouldn&rsquo;t be suffering like I am if I&rsquo;d done right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can do right and still suffer,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and
-now be off, and send the man to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora, again weeping freely, and leaving her bunch of
-flowers on the ground at his feet, departed without any
-more words. For once, her tears were real and her sorrows
-genuine. They were genuine, yet contained a measure
-of sweetness, and comforted her by their reality.
-This was an order of grief that she had not known. She
-persisted in it for a long time, after she had gone out of
-his sight, and found a sunny spot among the bluebells.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
-There she sat and heaped reproaches on her head; and
-self-blame was a sensation so novel that it soothed instead
-of crushed her. But this phase passed in contemplation
-of Ned. He had changed in some mysterious way. He
-was formidable, masculine&mdash;a thing infinitely superior to
-herself. Could she dare to say that Ned was now superior
-to Kellock? She fled from that thought as from chaos;
-but it pursued her; it made to itself feet and wings, and
-clung to her mind. She resisted, but it stuck like a burr.
-Ned was surely translated into something fine and admirable;
-while Kellock, now about to be a conqueror, had
-waned almost to a second-rate being in Medora&rsquo;s vision.</p>
-
-<p>A sensation of physical sickness overtook her before
-this horrible discovery; for what could such a conclusion
-do but wreck her future utterly and hopelessly? If
-Kellock were to fall from his pedestal, who was left?</p>
-
-<p>And a hundred yards off, still buried in the thoughts
-sprung from this remarkable conversation, Ned set up
-his rod, cast out ground bait, and began to fish for dace
-and perch. His mind, however, was far from his float,
-and presently his eyes followed Medora, as she moved
-pensively along the road on the other side of the pond.
-She would tell Kellock to come and see him, and then
-Ned would&mdash;he did not know what he would do.</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts turned to Philander Knox and their last
-interview. Medora had said nothing to contradict the
-vatman&rsquo;s assurances. Indeed, she had implicitly supported
-them. And she was obviously changed. She had
-apparently enough proper feeling to be miserable; but
-whether that misery was pretended, or sprang from her
-conscience, or arose from her futile conjunction with Kellock
-under the present unsupportable conditions, Ned could
-not determine. He examined his own emotions respecting
-Medora, and found that she had slightly modified them.
-He despised her, and began even to pity her, since, on her
-own showing, she was having a bad time. But was she
-ever built to have a good time? Dingle doubted it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-<small>THE EXPLANATION</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>After the medley of emotions awakened by her meeting
-with her husband, no solid foundation remained to Medora&rsquo;s
-mind. Indeed, everything solid seemed to crumble
-before the apparition of Ned so close; before all the
-little familiar marks of him, his mannerisms, his vibrant
-voice, his virility, the flushing colour on his cheeks, the
-masculine sound and sight of him. Against that vision,
-which haunted her pillow at Priory Farm, arose the spectacle
-of Kellock&mdash;the difference between a stout, shadow-casting
-man and one himself a shadow. Kellock was a
-great hero still (she clave to that), but none the less he
-had become something spectral for her. Ned she knew&mdash;her
-recent meeting reminded her how well; but Kellock
-she did not know, and from that long night of thought
-there emerged one steadfast emotion: she began to cease
-to want to know. Perception of this startling indifference
-frightened Medora. It was half-past four o&rsquo;clock in
-the morning, and an early thrush already sang when she
-made this discovery. She shivered at such a sentiment,
-set it down to hunger, and so arose and descended to the
-larder. She ate and slept, and in the morning told her
-mother of the talk with Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>They walked together to Dene, and before Lydia went
-to the rag house, she had heard disquieting things. It
-was not the facts that concerned her, for they were to
-the good. That Ned wished to see Kellock and had determined
-not to claim damages, comforted Mrs. Trivett,
-for that argued an intention on Ned&rsquo;s part to be done<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
-with the matter, and take such steps as should enable her
-daughter to marry at the earliest opportunity permitted
-by law; but it was Medora&rsquo;s attitude to Dingle that surprised
-her, and as she reached the Mill, she voiced her
-astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll keep me &rsquo;mazed to my dying day, I reckon,&rdquo;
-she said. &ldquo;My own daughter, and yet never, never do
-you do, or say, or look at things how I should expect.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter now then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s right you should feel obliged to your late husband&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-not wondering at that. But now&mdash;just
-because you talked to him, and he behaved like the man
-he is, and spoke sense and didn&rsquo;t break your neck, as some
-men might&mdash;just because of that, you seem to have
-turned round and&mdash;and&mdash;well, to hear you this morning
-one would think you and Ned&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora quite understood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Funny you should say that. I know just what you
-mean. It came over me in the night. I got looking back
-a lot, and I couldn&rsquo;t help feeling, when he stood there talking
-to me in the old way&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t help feeling that
-he&rsquo;d got his side after all. I dare say I didn&rsquo;t quite understand
-his point of view, or how I looked from it.
-You&rsquo;ve got to be fair, mother. It was as if all that
-fearful time, when we drifted apart, had been ruled out
-for the minute, and we were back at the starting place.
-I took all he said in a very proper and patient spirit;
-and if you ask him, he&rsquo;ll tell you I did. And he didn&rsquo;t
-mince words either. And I very much wish for you to see
-him as soon as you can, and tell him that I greatly value
-his advice, and that my eyes were opened for the first time
-to my fatal conduct. And, being a fair woman, I&rsquo;ve got
-to admit that I used him badly, along of some weakness in
-myself I never knew was there; and I think he was more
-kind about it than I deserved. Please see he hears that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what price, Jordan?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This has nothing to do with Jordan. I&rsquo;m going to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
-see him now and explain that he must visit Ned at once;
-and I hope he&rsquo;ll feel properly grateful to Ned for his
-goodness to me. He ought.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia&rsquo;s head swam.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see, mother, that Ned is&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see nothing,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Trivett. &ldquo;This
-is all beyond me. You&rsquo;re right to be obliged to him&mdash;well
-you may be; but, for God&rsquo;s sake, don&rsquo;t go blowing
-Ned&rsquo;s trumpet to your future husband, else&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going to be narrow-minded about Ned,&rdquo; answered
-Medora calmly. &ldquo;You can leave it to me. I
-shall certainly tell Jordan the way I was treated.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, Medora had quite forgotten the
-way she had been treated. For reasons far beyond her
-power to explain&mdash;since it was her quality to avoid directness
-at any cost&mdash;she ignored and put out of her
-mind the very harsh things Mr. Dingle had said. She
-banished them, and chose rather to dwell on what she
-regarded as the spirit and general essence created by their
-meeting. Detail might be dismissed, and it was very
-characteristic of Medora that when, presently, she met
-Jordan in the dinner hour, and took him up the valley,
-and rested her eyes on the spot beside the lake where she
-had listened to Mr. Dingle, she created a suggestion of
-that interview for the benefit of Kellock amazingly unlike
-the real thing.</p>
-
-<p>The vatman ate his bread and cheese as he walked beside
-her and saw her on the way homeward to her own
-meal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When are you coming back?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got
-the lecture dead right now, and I&rsquo;d like to run it over once
-more. I&rsquo;ve learned the typewriter myself too, and can
-give you a start and a beating at it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s wonderful to me how you can fasten on a thing
-like that, while all my future hangs in the balance,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a bit of startling news, Jordan. I ran
-on top of Mr. Dingle yesterday. I was just picking a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
-bunch of flowers and wondering when something would
-happen when&mdash;there he was.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;you mean he stopped you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He did. I was shrinking past the man; but that
-wouldn&rsquo;t do. He spoke, and I couldn&rsquo;t believe my ears,
-for I&rsquo;d got to think he was my black angel, naturally
-enough. But instead of anything like that, he let the
-dead past bury the past in a very gentlemanly manner.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, and I stood in a dream to hear his familiar voice,
-just friendly and kind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Friendly and kind!&rsquo;&rdquo; exclaimed Kellock. &ldquo;When
-was he ever friendly and kind to you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Before&mdash;before we fell out. It was like going back
-to the old, old days, before he turned on me and drove
-me to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s learned his lesson then. That&rsquo;s to the good.
-But what had he to say to you? It&rsquo;s for us to talk to him
-now. And it&rsquo;s for him to act, not to talk.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He knows all that. Anything like the reasonableness
-of the man you never heard. I couldn&rsquo;t believe my ears.
-He&rsquo;s not going to do anything wrong&mdash;far from it. He
-wants to see you on Monday evening at half-past eight,
-please.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Does he?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. He&rsquo;s turned it all over in his mind, and seen
-his mistakes and regrets the sad past.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How do you know he does?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He said so, and, with all his faults, he&rsquo;s quite as truthful
-as you are, Jordan. And to show it, he&rsquo;s not going
-to do anything about damages. He feels that wouldn&rsquo;t
-be right. He&rsquo;s a very just man. He didn&rsquo;t only say
-things I was glad to hear either. He told me some bitter
-truths. He said that I&rsquo;d never be the right wife for you,
-Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you let him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, I didn&rsquo;t. I wasn&rsquo;t going to hear that, of course.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
-But he&rsquo;s got a brain&mdash;more than we thought&mdash;and he
-said that to a man of your disposition&mdash;but if I&rsquo;m going
-to vex you, I&rsquo;ll leave that alone. Only don&rsquo;t think he
-spoke unkindly. And when you consider what it meant
-to him my leaving him&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What did he say about my disposition?&rdquo; interrupted
-Kellock. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve a right to know that before I see him,
-Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He said that you&rsquo;ve got a mind far above women&mdash;that
-a wife to you would be less than what a wife is to an
-ordinary man. Because you&rsquo;re all intellect and great
-thoughts for the welfare of everybody, so that the welfare
-of one, even your own wife, would be a small thing by comparison.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How little he knows!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I told him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She proceeded and surprised Kellock further.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;you mean,&rdquo; he asked presently, &ldquo;that he could stop
-you in the open road and talk like this and say all these
-wise things, as if he was your brother? It&rsquo;s contrary to
-nature, and I don&rsquo;t understand it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More did I,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I felt in a dream about
-it. He might have been a brother. That&rsquo;s the very word.
-And last night, as I lay and thought, it came into my
-head in a very curious way that between you and him as
-things are, I&rsquo;ve got two brothers and no husband at all.
-And God knows, Jordan, if it wouldn&rsquo;t be better to leave
-it at that, and let me go free. For if I could win the
-respect of two such men as you and him by stopping as
-I am and being wife of neither, it might turn out a lot
-better for all three of us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He stared in deep amazement. He flung away the remains
-of his meal and stood still with his mouth open.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are all women like you?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Upon my soul,
-I wonder sometimes&mdash;but this&mdash;it&rsquo;s all so unlike what
-goes on in a man&rsquo;s mind&mdash;where are we? Where are we?
-You always seem to leave me guessing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t suppose I can make you see, dear Jordan.
-I&rsquo;ve had hours and hours to think about it. You come
-to it fresh. Of course, it sounds strange to you for the
-minute. You must allow for the surprise. I&rsquo;m only a
-woman, and, what with one thing and another, I&rsquo;ve been
-that driven and harried lately that my mind is all in a
-whirl. It&rsquo;ll come right no doubt. He&rsquo;s not going to claim
-damages. That&rsquo;s one certainty, and that ought to comfort
-you. And I think when you see him, at his orders&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;His orders&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, my dear man, do be reasonable. You jump
-down my throat so! It&rsquo;s no good questioning every word
-I say. It makes me despair. I haven&rsquo;t got your flow
-of language, and if I can&rsquo;t pick my words, you needn&rsquo;t
-quarrel about them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not picking a quarrel, Medora; I&rsquo;m only saying
-there&rsquo;s no question of his orders. I&rsquo;ll see him certainly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And thank him, I should hope. I dare say he&rsquo;d have
-had a lot of money out of you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to thanking him&mdash;however, it&rsquo;s no good arguing.
-Leave that for the present. You can trust me to take
-the right line with Mr. Dingle. When are you coming
-back? They&rsquo;re going to meet me about the house if I
-can take it for three years.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Three years is a long time, Jordan. You might
-want to go to London before that. I dare say your lecture
-will get you into notice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His eye brightened. Here at last was solid ground.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be back at the inn before then. There&rsquo;s a
-pretty good lot coming. I rather want to rehearse it to
-you and a man or two from the Mill one evening.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come back, of course, the minute I can; but&mdash;I
-want to tell you, Jordan, I&rsquo;m not coming to the lecture.
-I&rsquo;ve got my reasons.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Again he was left without foothold.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not coming to my lecture, Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>&ldquo;No. You always said we must help and not hinder
-each other, and that marriage is a co-operation, or nothing.
-And I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;s better, where we don&rsquo;t think alike,
-to respect each other&rsquo;s opinions and go our own way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;you mean? You&rsquo;ve said you see eye to eye
-with me in everything. You&rsquo;ve never questioned the substance
-of the lecture.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t for me to question it. But I don&rsquo;t agree
-with a lot of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Since when?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Since first I heard it. I wasn&rsquo;t brought up to feel
-everybody&rsquo;s equal, and I don&rsquo;t believe they are.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t say they are. What I say is&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know what you say, Jordan. It&rsquo;s no good arguing.
-You&rsquo;d hate me if I was false and pretended anything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where do you disagree then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t believe in fighting and taking their money
-from people. I want peace. If you could see what my
-life is in this storm of doubt and uncertainty, if you could
-sympathise with a woman in my position who has given up
-so much, then you&rsquo;d surely understand that I&rsquo;ve got no
-heart for all these theories and ideas at present.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re getting away from the point,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
-can&rsquo;t argue with you because you won&rsquo;t stick to the subject.
-I do sympathise&mdash;all the time&mdash;every minute;
-but my lecture doesn&rsquo;t belong to our private affairs. It
-doesn&rsquo;t alter them, or delay them. I&rsquo;m going on with that
-as quick as Dingle will let me. But I want you to come
-to the lecture. I ask it, and I expect it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t any right to do that. I don&rsquo;t ask you
-to come to church, so you oughtn&rsquo;t to ask me to come to
-your lecture. We must be ourselves, and where we don&rsquo;t
-agree, we mustn&rsquo;t be afraid to say so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is their work at the farm,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;Your
-uncle&rsquo;s a benighted, ignorant man, and my ideas terrify
-him, and so he&rsquo;s tried to influence you. And I&rsquo;m sorry
-to find he has succeeded.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>&ldquo;Not at all. Uncle Tom would influence nobody; and
-if you think he&rsquo;d influence me, that shows you don&rsquo;t respect
-me as you ought, or give me credit for my brains&mdash;though
-you&rsquo;ve praised them often enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I give you credit for everything. You&rsquo;re half my life,
-and the best half, I should hope. And I trust you to
-change your mind about this, Medora. It&rsquo;s the biggest
-thing that&rsquo;s ever happened to me, and I think if you turn
-it over, you&rsquo;ll see you ought to be there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought I was the biggest thing that had ever happened
-to you. However&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave it&mdash;don&rsquo;t decide yet. I&rsquo;m proud. I wouldn&rsquo;t
-have you come, of course, if it&rsquo;s not going to interest you.
-Whether you agree, or whether you don&rsquo;t, I should have
-thought my first public appearance would mean a lot to
-you&mdash;me being what I am to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It does mean a lot&mdash;so much that I&rsquo;d be so cruel
-nervous that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you said the reason&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh dear,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if you knew how you&rsquo;re making
-my head ache, Jordan. Leave it alone, for God&rsquo;s sake.
-I&rsquo;ll come, of course, if you&rsquo;re going to make it a personal
-thing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not if you don&rsquo;t feel it a personal thing. Come back
-to me soon, and we&rsquo;ll have a good long talk about it.
-There mustn&rsquo;t be any difference between us. We&rsquo;re too
-much to each other for anything like that. And don&rsquo;t
-see Mr. Dingle again, please, Medora, till I have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not likely to see him again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They had walked round to the top of the &ldquo;Corkscrew&rdquo;
-by this time, and now the bell sounded below that told
-the dinner hour was ended.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must be gone,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Fix your day for coming
-back, Medora, and Mrs. Trivett will tell me to-morrow.
-The sooner the better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want to come as quickly as they&rsquo;ll let me,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>Doubt and care were in the young man&rsquo;s eyes. A rare
-emotion touched him, and there was something yearning
-in his voice as he stood and held her hands.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let any shadow rise between us,&rdquo; he begged.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course not; why should it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He put his arms round her, and to her surprise kissed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good-bye&mdash;take care of yourself and come back
-quickly. I won&rsquo;t bother you about the lecture any more,&rdquo;
-he promised.</p>
-
-<p>Then he ran down the hill, and Medora watched him go.
-She was regretting the kiss. When she had hungered for
-kisses, they did not come. Such a thing now was insipid&mdash;fruit
-over-ripe, doubtful as a delicacy past its season.
-She believed that she had frightened him into this display
-of emotion. His promise not to trouble her again about
-the lecture was also a sign of weakness. She thawed, and
-felt almost sorry for him. Jordan was growing fainter,
-it seemed to her. His outlines began to blur even after a
-few days&rsquo; absence from him. An overpowering desire to
-see Ned again oppressed her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-<small>THE STROKE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Medora&rsquo;s native instinct, to fight for her own hand at the
-expense of the community, now held some strife with her
-appreciation of what Kellock had done and suffered on
-her account. At first a sense of justice strove to remind
-her of their relations and of Jordan&rsquo;s views with respect to
-her and her future. She was, in fact, as he had declared,
-his paramount thought and first object in life. And this
-he felt without any diminution of his personal ambitions.
-But he had supposed, and she had given him every reason
-to suppose, that his ambitions and hers were one; that she
-desired nothing better than to help him in his propagandist
-work. During the earliest days of their association in
-London, this had been her purpose and assurance; but it
-was so no longer. The artificial existence with Kellock
-had knocked all the poetry out of their relation, and his
-aspirations now found her averse. Because Kellock could
-not understand what made life worth living to her, Medora&rsquo;s
-interest and loyalty alike were withered.</p>
-
-<p>Yet now she put up a struggle for him and it lasted
-longer than might have been expected. Indeed, it endured
-for twenty-four hours, until the morning following upon a
-sleepless night. Then her chivalry and general vague
-sense of her obligations went down before what she believed,
-perhaps rightly, was her common sense. She began to see,
-with a dazzle of conviction, that Kellock was not at all the
-husband for her; but her woman&rsquo;s wit put it differently:
-she assured her soul that she was not the wife for Kellock.
-This step once taken, those that followed were exceedingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
-swift, and they appeared first in a conversation, not with
-the man she desired to meet, but with another. For the
-present she concealed her new impressions from her family,
-but on the following Sunday, Mr. Knox came to tea, and
-was pleasant and agreeable, according to his custom. Tom
-and Mary Dolbear, gratified to observe the large philosophy
-with which he had taken his defeat, welcomed him and
-forgot the hard things they had said and thought about
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as the hour came for the visitor to return home,
-Medora made an excuse to accompany him. She was going
-into Dene to see Daisy Finch and have supper with her
-and her mother&mdash;so she said; and together they went
-their way.</p>
-
-<p>She wasted no time with Mr. Knox, and having told him
-what she hungered to tell, changed her mind about Daisy
-Finch, and went home again. Upon the whole, Mr. Knox
-disappointed her at this meeting, yet looking back over
-their conversation, she felt not sorry it had taken place,
-though her face burned a little when she considered the full
-weight of some of the vatman&rsquo;s remarks. He did not spare
-her; but she began to get accustomed to hard words now,
-and her sagacity told Medora that where there was blame,
-there was hope. To be past censure is to be past forgiveness.</p>
-
-<p>She began at once to Mr. Knox upon the subject of her
-husband, and her second sentence indicated the vast strides
-that her ambition had made. The whole picture of Medora&rsquo;s
-future in her own eyes was now changed. The new
-vision looked wild indeed, and made even Medora wince a
-little to hear it in her own tongue; yet it did not astonish
-Philander as much as she imagined, though she had reached
-it sooner than he expected her to do so.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You see Mr. Dingle sometimes, don&rsquo;t you, Mr. Knox?&rdquo;
-began Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do, my dear, and you mustn&rsquo;t object if I say I think
-very well of him. Curiously enough I think a lot of Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
-Kellock, too. Each have got very good points in his way,
-and you can learn from them as well as teach them. Of
-course, it&rsquo;s a ticklish business being friends with both, but
-so I am, and hope to continue.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, then, implore of Ned not to divorce
-me! Oh, Mr. Knox, you&rsquo;re wise and old, but you may still
-remember what it was to be young. Everything&rsquo;s gone if
-he divorces me&mdash;everything. I&rsquo;ve been pixy-led, fooled&mdash;yes,
-I have. And I&rsquo;ve ruined two good men, through no
-fault of theirs, or mine. It wasn&rsquo;t Kellock&rsquo;s fault, nor yet
-Ned&rsquo;s; and I&rsquo;ll swear on my knees it wasn&rsquo;t mine&mdash;not
-altogether, because something not myself drove me and
-blinded me and dazed me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s moonshine, Medora. You&rsquo;re not going to
-make anybody believe that; and don&rsquo;t you try&mdash;else
-there&rsquo;ll be the devil to pay. It was your fault&mdash;the fault
-of your character&mdash;because a woman and her character
-must be one. But I grant this; if we can&rsquo;t go outside our
-characters, and our characters are us and control all we
-do and think, then, being yourself from no fault of your
-own, you&rsquo;re not to blame in a sense. Then, again, that
-won&rsquo;t wash either, because if nobody can do anything outside
-their characters, then nobody&rsquo;s ever to blame in themselves
-for anything they do, and there&rsquo;s no such thing as
-wickedness in the world. Which is nonsense and moonshine
-again, because we very well know the world&rsquo;s full of
-wickedness. So it&rsquo;s no good saying, or fooling yourself to
-think, that you&rsquo;ve not been very wicked indeed, because you
-have. However, like a lot of bigger people than you,
-you&rsquo;ve got less, so far, than you deserve, because the punishment
-never does fit the evil deed, any more than the
-reward fits the good one, except in fairy tales. In other
-words, Kellock, being what he is&mdash;a man of the highest
-possible conduct, with a frosty nature to help it&mdash;has
-saved your bacon so far. You know what I mean. Therefore,
-there&rsquo;s a ray of hope&mdash;not very bright, in my opinion,
-still, a ray.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>&ldquo;Thank Heaven you think so,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s only my opinion, mind, and I may very likely be
-wrong; but I&rsquo;m a man that sees hope very often where another
-cannot. A wonderful eye for hope I&rsquo;ve got. And if
-your husband knew all the facts and heard&mdash;not that
-you&rsquo;d been pixy-led, but that you was properly ashamed of
-your infamous, hard-hearted, senseless, worthless way of
-going on, and meant to do better for evermore&mdash;luck
-offering, and the Lord helping&mdash;if he heard that, it&rsquo;s just
-on the cards he might give it a second thought. I don&rsquo;t
-say he would. I wouldn&rsquo;t in his case&mdash;not for a moment;
-but he&rsquo;s himself&mdash;an amazingly large-minded man.
-So, out of regard for your mother, Medora, I&rsquo;ll venture to
-touch the subject.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bless your name for evermore if you do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Allow yourself no hope, however. You&rsquo;ve got to think
-of Jordan Kellock, and I tell you frankly I wouldn&rsquo;t move
-in this matter if I didn&rsquo;t reckon he was utterly mistaken in
-his opinion of you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He is, he is, Mr. Knox! I&rsquo;m far ways less than what
-he fancied.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are; but don&rsquo;t waste your time eating dirt to me,
-though you ought to do it all round, no doubt, and heap
-ashes on your head.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know I ought; and Jordan&rsquo;s going to see Ned on
-Monday evening, so if you, in your great wisdom, could
-talk to my husband first&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will do so,&rdquo; promised Mr. Knox, and he kept his word.
-It happened, therefore, that when the hour arrived for the
-meeting of Kellock and Dingle, much had fallen out beyond
-the former&rsquo;s knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan had, of course, been left with plenty to think
-about by Medora, but since the future was accomplished in
-his judgment, and its details only a matter of time, he was
-concerned with far larger questions than agitated her
-mind. His thoughts ran on to the day when they would
-be married and their lives mingle happily, to run henceforth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
-in a single channel. He had never felt fear of that day
-after once winning her; and he had, until this moment,
-enjoyed full confidence that they were one in thought and
-ambition already, only waiting for the completion and
-crowning of marriage to establish their unity in the face of
-the world. But Medora had shaken the ingredients of
-this conviction at their last meeting, and Jordan felt uneasy.
-If she could speak so strongly on the subject of his
-lecture, what might she not presently say on the subject of
-his life? A disloyal thought once crossed his mind; something
-whispered that her objection to hearing the lecture
-was humbug. The voice hinted that from no conviction
-did Medora hold back, since she had already explicitly accepted
-his fixed principles, and avowed herself their supporter.
-The voice furthermore ventured to suggest that
-fixed principles and the lady were never to be mentioned
-in one breath by any rational observer. But Kellock protested
-against such insinuations, and continued to seek a
-reason for her refusal. He could find none, and was forced
-to accept her own. He was constrained to believe that
-she actually had changed her opinions, and the reflection
-that she must never be expected to support him with unqualified
-enthusiasm cast Jordan down. He did not despair
-of Medora, but felt that he would be called to do all
-over again what he had hoped was already done. He
-must convince her that he was right and weary not until she
-had come over to his views. After marriage, her mind
-would gradually take its colour from him, if the operation
-were conducted painlessly. He satisfied himself that this
-would happen, and had thought himself into a contented
-spirit when he went to see Dingle.</p>
-
-<p>Ned said little, and the interview was extraordinary. It
-did not take long, yet sent Kellock reeling out into the
-night bewildered, shocked, with the whole scheme of his
-future existence threatened, and no immediate possibility
-to retrieve the position.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come, then,&rdquo; began Mr. Dingle. &ldquo;Well, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
-good bit has happened since I saw you last, and, things
-being what they are here, it looks rather as if I might
-return to the Mill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t heard nothing of that,&rdquo; answered Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t mention it; but Mr. Trenchard is quite
-willing if I see no objection&mdash;so Ernest Trood tells me&mdash;and
-I imagine you&rsquo;d have nothing to say against it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, your plans are not my business. Of
-course, that might alter my own plans.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, your plans are not my business. In fact, we
-needn&rsquo;t trouble much about each other in any case.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan reflected.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, it wouldn&rsquo;t be natural, though I bear no malice,
-and I hope you don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have I shown malice?&rdquo; asked the beaterman. &ldquo;Have
-I taken this outrage in a malicious spirit?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve taken it lying down, and you know it; and I dare
-say, at the bottom of your heart, you&rsquo;ve been more than a
-bit surprised sometimes to see how I held in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a thinking, reasonable being.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Were you? You&rsquo;re not surprised at the line I took,
-because I did pretty much what you would have done if
-the positions had been reversed, and I had run away with
-your wife. But I should have thought you had wit to
-marvel a bit how a man like me took it so tame. If I
-could knock you into the water for advising me to be kinder
-to her, didn&rsquo;t it ever strike you I might have done even a
-bit more when you stole the woman?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, I&rsquo;ve understood up to the present you
-meant to do a bit more. It was made clear to me you were
-going for damages along with the divorce.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought of it, and I could have got them, no doubt;
-but what held my hand off you when this happened, holds
-it still. I&rsquo;m not going to claim damages.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock was silent for some moments, arguing with himself
-whether he ought to thank Ned for this concession, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
-not. He decided against so doing; but felt it right to explain.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You might think I ought to thank you for that. But
-I don&rsquo;t, because, if I did, it would be admitting you had
-waived what was your right. But I deny you had any
-right to do such a thing as to try and take my money.
-Your wife left you of her own free will, and on her own
-judgment, and came to me, and though the law&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We needn&rsquo;t worry about nonsense like that,&rdquo; interrupted
-Ned. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a bigger thing than that to say.
-You&rsquo;re so great upon defying the law, and getting everything
-your own way, and you know so much better than
-everyone else, the law included, how life should be run, and
-how we should all behave, that you&rsquo;ve rather defeated your
-own object, Kellock. I dare say some people would think
-it funny what I&rsquo;m going to say; but you won&rsquo;t. In fact,
-you&rsquo;ve been hoist with your own bomb, as the saying is,
-and the reason I didn&rsquo;t go to quod for you is just your
-own defiance of law. You saved yourself some ugly punishment
-at the time; but only to get worse at the finish.
-So what happened was you disobeyed the law, not me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is all a foreign language to me,&rdquo; answered
-Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it? Well, you&rsquo;ll see the English of it in half a
-minute. The good of three people hangs to this, and
-when I tell you that in my opinion all three will be the
-losers by your marrying Medora, perhaps you&rsquo;ll begin to
-see where I&rsquo;m getting.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As to that, you&rsquo;ll do well to mind your own business.
-I can brook no interference from you between me and
-Medora.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t so much what you can brook, as what is going
-to happen. You&rsquo;ve taken a very high-minded line about
-Medora, Kellock&mdash;so wonderful high-minded, in fact, that
-you&rsquo;ve got left altogether. You deserve to have a halo and
-a pair of wings for what you&rsquo;ve done&mdash;so Philander Knox
-said, and I quite agree. But you don&rsquo;t deserve to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
-Medora. And you&rsquo;re not going to have Medora. You
-said, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll treat this woman with all proper respect, and
-all that, till I can marry her&rsquo;; and that showed you to be
-a very decent man according to your own lights; and when
-I heard about it, I spared you; but there&rsquo;s another side.
-I can&rsquo;t divorce Medora now, because I&rsquo;ve got nothing to
-divorce her for&mdash;see? You might think I ought to help
-you to hoodwink the law in the matter, for the sake of
-honour and decency&mdash;things for which the law has got
-no use. And I would willingly enough for some people,
-but not for you. Because what you&rsquo;ve done shows a lot of
-other things&mdash;chief being that Medora and you never
-would get on, really&mdash;not as husband and wife. Even
-as brother and sister, there&rsquo;s been a lot of friction lately,
-so I hear; and what would it be if you were married? So,
-you see, when I say you don&rsquo;t deserve Medora, Kellock,
-I&rsquo;m not saying anything particular unkind. In fact, the
-truth is that a man with your nice and superior opinions
-can&rsquo;t marry another man&rsquo;s wife&mdash;not according to law.
-You ought to have thought of that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not too late.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, it is&mdash;much too late. You can&rsquo;t go wrong
-now, even if you thought of such a thing; which you never
-could. You&rsquo;re damned well out of it in fact; and the
-longer you live, the better you&rsquo;ll be pleased with yourself,
-I dare say. The divorce laws may be beneath contempt
-and only fit for gorillas; but, while they are the laws,
-you&rsquo;ve got to abide by &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan Kellock stared with round, horrified eyes. Even
-in his dismay and grief he could wonder how the simple
-Ned had reached this high present standpoint, and was
-able to address him like a father lecturing a child. He
-began to recognise the hand of Mr. Knox.</p>
-
-<p>Now he pulled himself together, rose, and prepared to
-be gone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can only imagine that others have helped you to this
-extraordinary decision, Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t deny it. I never was one to think I could run
-my own show, or play a lone hand. A pity you didn&rsquo;t
-feel the same. A lone hand always comes to grief. You
-talk to Philander Knox about this. He&rsquo;s a great admirer
-of yours. But he&rsquo;s looked at it from the outside, as a
-student of character. He&rsquo;s got no axe to grind about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care a cuss about her. As to her line, you&rsquo;d
-better inquire at headquarters. I haven&rsquo;t seen her again,
-and don&rsquo;t much want to.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This flings her on to the mercy of society, Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, society won&rsquo;t eat her. Society&rsquo;s pretty merciful,
-so far as I can see. You talk it over with her, and get
-her views of the situation&mdash;whatever they may be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll only ask one question. Does she know that you
-don&rsquo;t intend to divorce her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She does not. I only decided myself half an hour
-before you called.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it possible for me to prevail with you to change your
-mind, Mr. Dingle?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No; because with your views of what&rsquo;s straight and
-honourable, you won&rsquo;t try. You know I can&rsquo;t divorce her.
-Why? Because you was too good and clean a man to
-make it possible. So long. Just you think over all I&rsquo;ve
-said. You don&rsquo;t know your luck yet, but you will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan Kellock went out into the darkness, and he staggered
-like a man in drink. He tottered down the hill from
-Ashprington, and intended to start then and there for
-Cornworthy and Medora; but he found himself physically
-unequal to any such pilgrimage. His knees shook and his
-muscles were turned to wool. He walked to the inn, ascended
-to bed, and lay phantom-ridden through the hours
-of an interminable night. The shock of what he had
-heard was so great that his mind was too stunned to
-measure it. A situation, that demanded deepest reflection
-by its own horror, robbed him of the power to reflect. He
-lay and panted like a wounded animal. He could not think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
-by reason of the force of his feelings. He could only lick
-his smarting wounds. Then he fell into genuine grief for
-Medora&rsquo;s plight. Actual physical symptoms intruded.
-He found his eyes affected and strange movements in his
-heart and stomach. His hands shook in the morning, and
-he cut himself shaving&mdash;a thing that he had not done for
-years. He could not eat, yet suffered from a sensation of
-emptiness. Daylight by no means modified his sense of
-loss and chaos. It found him before all things desirous to
-see Medora; but, by the time he was up and dressed, this
-purpose failed him for a season, and his thoughts were occupied
-with Knox. Then he turned again to Medora, and
-felt that life must be suspended until he could see her and
-break to her what had happened. It was now too late to
-visit Cornworthy until the day&rsquo;s work should be done, and
-remembering how often work had saved a situation, solved
-a problem and helped him through difficult hours, Kellock
-proceeded to the Mill, and was thankful to be there. He
-felt that labour would calm his nerves, restore his balance,
-and assist him, before the evening came, to survey his situation
-in the light of this convulsion. He found himself
-entirely interested in what Medora would do; and he believed
-that he knew. His heart bled for her.</p>
-
-<p>Thus absorbed, he reached the vat. He was engaged
-upon the largest sheets of drawing-paper at the time&mdash;work
-calling for more than average lifting power and muscular
-energy&mdash;and he was glad that now, for a while,
-work must take the first demand upon mind and body alike.</p>
-
-<p>The vats were full, and the machinery hummed overhead;
-coucher and layer stood at their places, and Jordan, slipping
-his deckle upon the mould, grasped it with thumb on
-edge, and sank it into the pulp.</p>
-
-<p>Elsewhere Knox, Robert Life and others had taken up
-their positions at the breast of the vats with their assistants
-about them, and the work of paper-making went on
-its immemorial way.</p>
-
-<p>Then that happened that was long remembered&mdash;an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
-incident of interest and concern for the many, a tragedy
-for the one. Kellock brought up his mould, and instead
-of proceeding with the rhythmic actions to right and left&mdash;those
-delicate operations of exquisite complexity where
-brain telegraphed to muscle, and motor and sensory nerves
-both played their part in the completion of the &ldquo;stroke&rdquo;&mdash;instead
-of the usual beautiful and harmonious gestures
-that drained the mould and laid a sweet, even face of
-paper upon it, he found forces invisible at his elbows and
-an enemy still more terrible within. His brain hung fire;
-a wave of horrible doubt and irresolution swept over him.
-It ran through the physical parts engaged&mdash;his arms and
-breast muscles and the small of his back. He stared at
-the mould, turned and washed off the faulty sheet he had
-created, and made an attempt at a jest to Harold Spry,
-who was watching, all eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where are my wits, Harold?&rdquo; he said. Then he took
-a deep breath, and dipped the mould again.</p>
-
-<p>Spry and the layer watched sympathetically. To their
-eyes there seemed no failure as Kellock drew up his load;
-but he knew. A condition of tremendous tension raised his
-heart-beat to a gallop, and his eyes grew misty. He
-gasped like a drowning man, and felt the sweat beading
-on his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll&mdash;I&rsquo;ll just get a breath of air and come back,&rdquo; he
-said, dropped the mould, and went out of the shop. Spry
-washed the mould, then he walked down the line of vats
-and spoke to Knox. A man came from the engine house
-with a message, and Ernest Trood also entered with some
-information for Robert Life. What he heard made him
-hasten out of doors to find Kellock sitting up on a form
-at the entrance of the vat house with his head in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, my son?&rdquo; asked Trood, kindly
-enough; but a look at Jordan told him all he feared to
-hear.</p>
-
-<p>The young man&rsquo;s expression had changed, and there was
-fear in his eyes, as though they had just mirrored some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
-awful thing. The resolute, closely-knit Kellock seemed to
-have fallen to pieces. Every limb indicated the nerve
-storm under which he suffered. Trood was experienced,
-and knew the danger. He believed that Kellock had given
-in too soon.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fight&mdash;fight like hell!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t run away
-from it. Don&rsquo;t give it time to get into you. Come back
-now, lad&mdash;this minute. At your age, it&rsquo;s nothing&mdash;just
-indigestion, or a chill about you. If you let it fester, you&rsquo;ll
-go from bad to worse, and very like have to knock off for
-six months before you look at a mould again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no good&mdash;it&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; said the younger man; but
-he obeyed, and followed Trood into the vat house.</p>
-
-<p>Knox had warned the rest to ignore the sufferer, and no
-man took any notice of Kellock as he returned.</p>
-
-<p>Spry was waiting, and greeted him cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re all right again&mdash;your eyes are all right,&rdquo; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Trood turned his back on Kellock, and everybody was
-at work as usual. He made a tremendous effort with himself,
-called up his utmost resolution, smiled and nodded to
-Spry, who was whistling, gripped his deckle to the mould,
-and then strove to think of something else, pursue his business
-in the usual mechanical fashion, and let his unconscious
-but highly trained energies pursue their road.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not to be. Some link had strained, if not
-broken, in the complexus of brain and nerve and muscle.
-Perfect obedience was lacking; a rebel had crept into the
-organism. For once, the man&rsquo;s expressionless face was
-alive with expression; for once his steady and monotonous
-voice vibrated.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all up,&rdquo; he said to Harold Spry.</p>
-
-<p>Then he put down the mould.</p>
-
-<p>Trood was beside him in an instant, and Knox came also.
-Elsewhere those who had no love for Kellock talked under
-their breath together. Others, who came and went, took
-the news.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>Trood made the vatman try again; but only once. He
-saw in a moment that the breakdown could not be bluffed;
-the fault in the machine was too deep.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan put on his coat, and Trood arranged to drive
-him to Totnes presently to see a doctor. The young man
-was calm, but his will power appeared suspended. He
-looked into the faces of his companions for any ray of
-comfort; and the fact that he could do so was testimony
-to his collapse.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s Arms&rdquo; presently;
-and through the Mill like lightning flashed the news that
-Kellock had lost his stroke.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-<small>THE DOCTOR</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>As soon as Mrs. Trivett heard the bad news she stopped
-work, explained to her second in command the gravity of
-the situation, and hastened home as fast as she could go to
-Medora. Now or never might her daughter show what she
-was worth, and she felt that her girl&rsquo;s place should be
-beside the sufferer. Duty and love alike prompted in that
-direction; indeed, Medora herself appeared to view the
-disaster with her mother&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord! Lost his stroke! Poor man,&rdquo; she cried.
-&ldquo;I must go to him. Is he ill? Have you seen him?
-What was the cause of it? Does he say what he&rsquo;s going
-to do about it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t seen him. He&rsquo;s gone back to the inn, and
-Mr. Trood takes him into Totnes presently to the doctor.
-And it&rsquo;s your place to go along with them in my opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora&rsquo;s mind moved swiftly. She knew that Kellock
-was to have seen Ned Dingle on the previous evening, and
-eagerly she awaited information of what had happened at
-that meeting. Jordan intended to have come over to
-Priory Farm after working hours; but now she could hear
-even sooner than she expected.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t leave him if he&rsquo;s very bad,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In no case, better or worse, will you leave him,&rdquo; declared
-Lydia. &ldquo;This is a fearful thing to overtake a vatman,
-and you, of all people, ought to be at his side to cheer
-him and encourage him and help him to hope. It&rsquo;s a nervous
-breakdown along of all this waiting and trouble.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More likely the lecture,&rdquo; suggested Medora. &ldquo;Small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
-wonder if his lecture is got on his mind and upset him.
-And he was to see Ned yesterday. Perhaps Ned said
-something to do it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lydia sighed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Things be come to a climax, seemingly. Mr. Knox
-whispered to me that Ned might have a bit of good news
-for Kellock. On the other hand, perhaps he had not.
-Any way, your good is Jordan&rsquo;s good, and his evil is your
-evil now; so you&rsquo;d best to get to him as quick as you can,
-and stop with him if he wishes you to do so, as he doubtless
-will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In a couple of hours Medora sat at &ldquo;The Waterman&rsquo;s
-Arms.&rdquo; She expected an emotional meeting, and indeed
-felt emotional. For a time Jordan&rsquo;s sufferings weighed
-with her, and she found sympathy wakening for him. But
-he appeared much as usual, and while gratified at her swift
-return, held himself well in hand and made no great parade
-of his misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother properly scared me to death,&rdquo; explained Medora.
-&ldquo;I do hope to God it&rsquo;s not as bad as she said.
-How d&rsquo;you feel, dear? You look pale.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I feel all right in myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s that lecture. Why don&rsquo;t you give it up?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, Medora. It&rsquo;s nothing to do with the lecture. I
-can think of the lecture calmly enough. I&rsquo;m very glad
-you came so quick. It&rsquo;s a comfort to me first, and second,
-I&rsquo;ve got a lot to tell you. You must brace yourself,
-for it&rsquo;s bad news.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What has lost me my stroke happened last night, Medora.
-I saw Mr. Dingle, and I heard more than enough
-to put any man off his stroke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to say he&rsquo;s going to take your
-money?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My money! Good powers, what&rsquo;s that? He can have
-my money to the last penny if he likes. It&rsquo;s far worse.
-I hate to say it&mdash;it&rsquo;s enough to kill any pure woman&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>it&rsquo;s
-very nearly killed me, I believe; but you&rsquo;ve got to hear
-it, Medora, though it sweeps away the firm ground from
-under our feet and leaves us without any foothold. He&mdash;he
-won&rsquo;t divorce you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She exhibited ample concern at this intelligence. Indeed,
-she very nearly fainted in earnest, and Kellock, who
-only observed the physical shock, doubted not that it
-sprang from emotion entirely creditable to Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can guess what I felt and how I tried to bring
-him to a better frame of mind. But he&rsquo;s a different man
-from what he used to be. I couldn&rsquo;t believe I was listening
-to Dingle. Changed into something outside his real character.
-It shows how weak natures can be influenced.
-Others have been getting at him&mdash;enemies to us for certain.
-It&rsquo;s a cruel, wicked thing, and it knocked me out,
-as you see. But I&rsquo;m not concerned with myself. I&rsquo;ve got
-to think of you, Medora, and the future&mdash;our future.
-Of course, what really hurts the soul of man or woman is
-what they inflict upon themselves; but all the same&mdash;there
-it is&mdash;if he don&rsquo;t divorce you, where are we?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where we were,&rdquo; she said, and strove to make her
-voice sufficiently mournful. But she guessed that it would
-be difficult to discuss this tremendous information without
-sooner or later revealing her true sentiments.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let&rsquo;s talk about it for the present,&rdquo; she continued.
-&ldquo;The future will take care of itself&mdash;it always
-does. For the minute, I&rsquo;m only troubled about your
-health and happiness, Jordan. Whatever comes of this,
-we&rsquo;ve been through a great experience, and the end of it
-all is this shock to your nerves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The end of it all,&rsquo; Medora?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I mean, so far as we&rsquo;ve got. You are the only one to
-think about for the minute&mdash;not me and not Dingle. The
-first thing is your health and strength, and I&rsquo;m not going
-to leave you again, Jordan, till you&rsquo;re set up, and find
-yourself as clever as ever you were.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>&ldquo;If you come to the lecture, that would go a long way
-to quieting my nerves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I&rsquo;ll come. I always meant to come. It was
-only a bit of temper saying I wouldn&rsquo;t&mdash;I never thought
-not to come. But will you be well enough to give it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes. This flurry arose from causes outside the
-lecture, and quite outside <i>the</i> Cause. You understand?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;I do understand, and I&rsquo;m
-thankful for it, Jordan; because I know very well it means
-much more to you than your own trade. And our little
-lives are as nothing to the big things in your mind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I never made paper again,&rdquo; he assured her, &ldquo;it
-would be less&mdash;far less&mdash;of a grief and disaster to me
-than if I was shut off from taking my part in the great
-struggle for Labour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do both; you&rsquo;ll do both. It&rsquo;s only a passing
-shock. You&rsquo;ll forget all about it, I hope, and be at work
-again as well as ever in a few days.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so, Medora. As far as that goes, I believe
-it&rsquo;s serious. I haven&rsquo;t had time to collect my
-thoughts yet, and it&rsquo;s no good worrying till I&rsquo;ve seen the
-doctor; but I&rsquo;m none too hopeful. If the stroke once
-goes, it wants a lot of careful nursing to get it back, and
-often enough it&rsquo;s gone for good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only with men who drink, and that kind of thing.
-Such a one as you&mdash;a saint&mdash;and strong in body and
-mind, and healthy every way&mdash;of course it will come
-back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We must be frank with ourselves,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We
-must tell the doctor the truth. My stroke was shocked
-away. And sometimes what&rsquo;s shocked away can only be
-shocked back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s an idea,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>She was always quick to fasten on ideas and his words
-made her thoughtful for a moment. She registered his
-statement for future consideration, then flowed on again.
-She was cheerful, sympathetic, and full of consolation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
-Indeed, presently, as Kellock grew grateful, she began to
-think she might be overdoing the part. For it was, if not
-wholly, at least in large measure an impersonation now.
-She was acting again, and she played with a purpose and
-exceeding concern to touch the right note, but avoid overemphasis
-upon it. Kellock appeared to be in two minds,
-and he looked at her and held her hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I want to say something,&rdquo; he declared presently;
-&ldquo;but I won&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;ll keep it off, because I&rsquo;m not very strong
-for the moment, and the spoken word once spoken remains.
-This is a great crisis all round. I hope good will come out
-of trouble, as it often does. We&rsquo;ve had enough to shake
-us cruelly to-day&mdash;both of us&mdash;and I won&rsquo;t add to it.
-And what&rsquo;s in my thoughts may look different to-morrow,
-so I&rsquo;ll keep it there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think any more about anything,&rdquo; she begged
-him. &ldquo;Just let your mind rest, or talk about the lecture.
-And don&rsquo;t you think, whatever happens, and whatever is in
-store for me, that it is going to lessen your great future.
-Perhaps it was the strangeness of your ideas that made me
-shrink from them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He began to discuss his ruling passion. She kept him
-easily to that.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they ate together, and when Ernest Trood
-drove up in a dog-cart, lent by Mr. Trenchard, he found
-Kellock calm and contented. Medora sat behind, and
-joined in the conversation as they trotted through the
-green lanes to Totnes.</p>
-
-<p>The master had sent cheering messages to Jordan, and
-hoped to see him on the following day.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not a bit troubled,&rdquo; said Trood. &ldquo;He reckons
-that with a man of your fine physique and constitution&mdash;a
-man that lives the life you lead&mdash;this is a flea-bite&mdash;just
-a shake-up along of some trifle. And if you&rsquo;ve got to
-chuck it and go away for six weeks even, he&rsquo;s not going to
-trouble about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like him,&rdquo; said Kellock. &ldquo;But it won&rsquo;t be any question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
-of six weeks, or six days, Ernest. I&rsquo;ve got a feeling
-about this that I shall be right in twenty-four hours, or not
-at all. I&rsquo;m not letting it get on my nerves, you understand.
-If it&rsquo;s gone, it&rsquo;s gone. There&rsquo;s plenty of work
-for me in the world, whether at the vat, or somewhere else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never heard better sense,&rdquo; answered the foreman.
-&ldquo;All the same, don&rsquo;t you throw up the sponge&mdash;that
-would be weak. You must remember you&rsquo;re a great paper
-maker, Jordan, and there are not any too many of &rsquo;em
-left in England now-a-days. So it&rsquo;s up to every man
-that&rsquo;s proud of his business to stick to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You take that to heart, Jordan,&rdquo; advised Medora.
-&ldquo;Not that there isn&rsquo;t greater work in the world than
-paper-making&mdash;we all know that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, we don&rsquo;t know anything of the sort,&rdquo; answered
-Trood. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you talk nonsense, Medora, because I
-won&rsquo;t hear it. Paper stands for civilisation, and the better
-the paper, the higher the civilisation. You&rsquo;d soon see
-that if anything happened to spoil paper and raise the
-price of rag. If the quality of paper goes down, that&rsquo;s a
-sure sign the quality of civilisation&rsquo;s doing the same. By
-its paper you can judge a nation, and English paper, being
-the best in the world, helps to show we&rsquo;re first in the world.
-And if a man like Kellock was to hide his light under a
-bushel, his conscience would very soon tell him about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jordan smiled at Mr. Trood&rsquo;s enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love my work,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and should never give it
-up, unless it gave me up, Ernest, but for one reason&mdash;that
-I could do something better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That you never would, if they made you king of England,&rdquo;
-replied the foreman. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d never be so good at
-anything else as you are at paper-making, because you&rsquo;ve
-got the natural genius for the job. That&rsquo;s your gift&mdash;and
-you may lecture or you may stand on your head, or
-do any other mortal thing, but you won&rsquo;t do it as well as
-you do your work at the vat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The doctor found not much amiss with Jordan. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
-heard all particulars, and made a searching examination of
-the patient&rsquo;s fine frame.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never saw a healthier, or more perfect man,&rdquo; he declared.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a long way above the average, and as
-healthy as a ten year old. Muscles hypertrophied a bit&mdash;you&rsquo;d
-be muscle-bound in fact for any other work but your
-own; but your organs are as sound as a bell; there&rsquo;s nothing
-whatever to show why you&rsquo;ve broken down. It would
-be cruelty to animals to give you physic. What d&rsquo;you
-drink and smoke?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I drink water, doctor. I don&rsquo;t smoke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Might have known it. Well, go away for a fortnight.
-Run up to Dartmoor, and walk ten miles a day, or twenty,
-if you like. Then you&rsquo;ll be all right. This breakdown
-must have been mental, seeing it was nothing else. Have
-you got anything on your mind?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, I have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Get it off then, and you&rsquo;ll be all right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you very much. I shall soon see a way, I
-hope.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let a way come then; don&rsquo;t worry to find it. Don&rsquo;t
-worry about anything. Go up to Dartmoor&mdash;Dartmoor&rsquo;s
-a very good doctor&mdash;though his fees get higher
-every year, they tell me. I seem to know your name, by
-the way. Where did I see it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Posted up perhaps, doctor. I&rsquo;m going to give a lecture
-here next week.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah&mdash;so it was. Socialism&mdash;eh? Is the lecture getting
-on your nerves?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, not at all. But I hope it&rsquo;ll get on other people&rsquo;s.
-I look forward to it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, get to Dartmoor, and if your stroke doesn&rsquo;t
-come back when you return, see me again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock repeated his interview exactly, and Mr. Trood
-was much gratified. They went home in the best of spirits,
-and that evening Medora devoted to Jordan. He became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
-more and more distracted and pre-occupied, however. She
-avoided personal subjects, and wanted him to read the lecture
-aloud; but this he would not do.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now that you are going to hear it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let
-you off till then.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He declared himself tired and went to his bed before ten
-o&rsquo;clock. But he did not sleep. He had much thinking to
-do, and many hours elapsed before he arrived at any conclusion.
-His mind was entirely occupied with Medora,
-and her future caused him to pass through deep anxieties
-and fruitless regrets. Her loyal attitude that day had
-moved him much, for he supposed that Dingle&rsquo;s decision
-must have come upon her with force at least as crushing
-as it had fallen on himself. Yet how bravely she had
-borne it, how unselfishly she had put it away from her, and
-devoted herself to him and his tribulations! Doubtless
-now, alone, she too considered the gravity of the situation,
-and lay awake in distress.</p>
-
-<p>He had a human impulse to go and comfort her, to declare
-that nothing mattered while they shared their great
-love, to explain that since Dingle would not legally release
-her, they must take the law into their own hands.
-But another, and far more characteristic line of thought
-developed, and in the dominating and directing forces
-awakened by it, he followed his natural bent, and at last
-arrived at a decision. He perceived his duty towards
-Medora, albeit action appeared impossible until he had
-spoken with her. Yet, to put the matter before Medora
-might defeat his object, for there could be no doubt that
-Medora was his, heart and soul. He felt, therefore, that
-he must, after all, act without her knowledge, for he believed
-that if she knew his purpose, she would strive to
-prevent it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-<small>THE CONFESSION</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>In the evening of Kellock&rsquo;s catastrophe, Philander Knox
-saw Ned Dingle, who was working in his garden at the
-time.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heard the latest?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The latest for me is that Mr. Trenchard will take me
-back if I like to come.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, the latest for you is that Jordan Kellock&rsquo;s lost his
-stroke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned dropped a packet of seeds.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Has he, by God! That&rsquo;s the best news I&rsquo;ve heard for
-a good bit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re glad, but you won&rsquo;t be glad if you think
-over it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Knox explained the circumstances, and told the tale of
-Jordan&rsquo;s failure.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Poor devil,&rdquo; said Ned. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say I&rsquo;m sorry all the
-same. It won&rsquo;t last. He&rsquo;ll get it back, no doubt, and
-perhaps he&rsquo;ll see now he can&rsquo;t go playing fast and loose
-with people, same as he did, and not get a facer himself
-sometimes. I told him I wasn&rsquo;t going to divorce my wife,
-and no doubt that&rsquo;s bowled him over.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done very well so far, in my opinion,&rdquo; declared
-Mr. Knox. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve conducted the affair in a
-high-class way, and you and me know where we stand; but
-he don&rsquo;t, and more does she.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m in your hands,&rdquo; answered Ned. &ldquo;I begin to find
-better every day you&rsquo;re right, Knox. And what did she
-do when she heard he was down and out?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Took a very proper line,&rdquo; answered Philander.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
-&ldquo;Some, feeling what she feels and knowing that she&rsquo;d done
-with him, for evermore, whatever happened, would have left
-him to stew in his own juice; but Medora, having a very
-fine pride, would have despised herself for any such littleness
-as that. I see as clear as day what was in her mind.
-She said to herself, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve been a silly fool, and so has he.
-We were lost to sense and reality, and acted in a mad and
-improper manner. In fact, we&rsquo;ve been everything we
-could be, except wicked, and silliness is often punished
-worse than wickedness. But, though Kellock richly deserved
-to lose his stroke, it&rsquo;s as much my fault as his own
-that he has done so, and I&rsquo;m too sporting to turn my back
-on him at such a moment. If he&rsquo;s ruined, then it&rsquo;s my
-hard duty to share his trouble, and I won&rsquo;t be a rat and
-quit a sinking ship. That&rsquo;s not the sort of woman Ned
-Dingle married.&rsquo; So Medora argued, no doubt&mdash;not
-knowing, of course, what you&rsquo;ve said to Kellock. So she
-went to him, and they&rsquo;ve gone to Totnes this evening along
-with Ernest Trood to see a doctor. Thus you see, for
-her proper and womanly behaviour, Medora will be rewarded&mdash;as
-we sometimes are if we do rightly&mdash;sooner
-or later.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How rewarded?&rdquo; asked Ned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, by hearing presently from the man that you&rsquo;re
-not going to divorce her. She plays her part to him and
-cheers him up and takes a hopeful view of the disaster, and
-so on; and then she hears what brought it all about&mdash;your
-strong line. Of course, to her ear&mdash;she being now a contrite
-creature with the scales fallen from her eyes&mdash;the
-fact that you wouldn&rsquo;t set her free to marry him was the
-best music she could hear. She&rsquo;ll know with you taking
-that line, she&rsquo;ll be free of Kellock for evermore, and able
-to set about her own salvation in fear and trembling. And
-that, no doubt, is what she&rsquo;ll do, for having paid for girlish
-faults, she&rsquo;ll now cultivate her womanly virtues and become
-as fine a creature in mind as she is in body, and rise to be
-worthy of our admiration again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>Ned listened to this long speech while he sowed carrots.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These things don&rsquo;t happen by chance,&rdquo; concluded
-Knox. &ldquo;A man like you bends fate to his own purpose;
-and fate, being a female, does a lot more for them that
-drive her than them that spoil her. You stand in a very
-strong position now, and the lucky thing is that the strong
-can be merciful to the weak without losing their self-respect.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see Kellock,&rdquo; promised Ned. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see him to-morrow
-and hear what he&rsquo;s got to say about it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very good thought, but let your mind dwell on Medora
-a bit before you do. You think so clear and see so
-straight that you won&rsquo;t make any mistake in that quarter.
-You&rsquo;ve got to remember how it looks to Kellock so far, and
-whether it looks right to him, or whether it do not. Now
-Kellock only knows as yet that you don&rsquo;t put away Medora;
-and that means he can&rsquo;t marry her, so this brother
-and sister racket must end. As for Mrs. Dingle, she&rsquo;s
-done with the masculine gender, and, of course, she may
-have told Kellock so&mdash;I can&rsquo;t say as to that. But you
-see him by all means.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They talked till dusk fell, then Mr. Knox departed and
-Ned considered all he had said, with the imputations proper
-to Philander&rsquo;s words. He had trusted largely to the vatman
-of late, and found himself in agreement with his sentiments
-on all occasions, for Knox was treating Ned with
-rare diplomacy.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, Jordan himself anticipated his visitor,
-and as Ned set out to see him, he appeared at Ashprington.
-He wore holiday attire, looked pale, and was somewhat
-nervous.</p>
-
-<p>They met at the gate of Dingle&rsquo;s house, and Ned spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come in the house, and you can speak first&mdash;no, I
-will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They entered the little parlour and sat down opposite
-each other.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hear you&rsquo;ve lost your stroke. I suppose to find<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
-what I meant to do was a bit too shattering. No doubt
-you&rsquo;ll get it back. I&rsquo;ve no wish to come between you and
-your livelihood; but when you and my wife hatched this
-bit of wickedness, you didn&rsquo;t stop to think whether it
-would play hell with my nerves; and if you&rsquo;d known it
-would, that wouldn&rsquo;t have changed you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s quite true,&rdquo; admitted Kellock, &ldquo;and, I may
-tell you, it&rsquo;s come home to me pretty sharp before you
-said it. As for me, I may get my stroke again, or I may
-not; and if I don&rsquo;t, I shall never blame you&mdash;I shall blame
-myself. Those that think they stand, often get a fall, and
-I&rsquo;m not too proud to confess to you that that&rsquo;s what has
-happened to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Serve you right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t matter any more. What matters is Medora,
-and I shall be greatly obliged if you&rsquo;ll allow me to speak a
-few words on that subject.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The fewer the better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I come from myself, understand. She knows nothing
-about it. I didn&rsquo;t ask her, because if she&rsquo;d said &lsquo;no,&rsquo; I
-couldn&rsquo;t have come. And she might have forbid.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, get on with it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s very difficult, and I beg you&rsquo;ll make allowances for
-a man who has done wrong and done you wrong, too.
-You&rsquo;ll probably say that I&rsquo;m only changed since you told
-me you weren&rsquo;t going to divorce Medora. That&rsquo;s true in
-a way, but not all true. I&rsquo;ve learned a great deal I didn&rsquo;t
-know from Medora, but I&rsquo;ve only come now to talk about
-her. The question is how you feel about her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my business, not yours.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that, because as you feel, so I must do.
-I recognise my obligations sharp enough, and she is the
-first of them if you ordain she is to be. I&rsquo;ve thought a lot
-about it you may be sure, and I&rsquo;ve recognised one thing
-fairly clearly&mdash;I did before you struck this blow. I&rsquo;m
-not a marrying man, Mr. Dingle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody ever thought you were but that fool.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t her fault. We were both wrong&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-all. And I want to say this. I wouldn&rsquo;t marry Medora
-now if I could, because I&rsquo;ve been brought to see I shouldn&rsquo;t
-make her happy. A brother I&rsquo;m prepared to be; but for
-her own sake, and for her future, I wouldn&rsquo;t marry her if
-I could now, because I should be doing her a wrong. Of
-course, you&rsquo;ll say I&rsquo;m putting this on because you won&rsquo;t
-let me marry her; but I swear to you that I&rsquo;d begun to
-feel it before.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That lets you out then&mdash;with your tail between your
-legs. And what price her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;ve called this morning. I can&rsquo;t say anything
-to Medora until I&rsquo;ve spoken to you, because it&rsquo;s clear
-that what I must do depends upon you. If you&rsquo;ve done
-with her, then I shall support her and be as good a brother
-as I know how to be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you ever seen the man who would take a woman
-back after these games? Would you, if you was me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d think a lot before I refused, if I was you. Knox
-tells me that it&rsquo;s a very uncommon case, but quite in keeping
-with my character. You understand, I&rsquo;ve said nothing
-to Medora. Of course, she knows what the price is
-she&rsquo;s got to pay. The appearance of evil is as bad in this
-case as evil itself; so she&rsquo;s doomed if you doom her, but
-saved if you save her. Would it be asking too much to
-ask you to see her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have seen her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not since she knew the situation. We often learn a
-lesson when it&rsquo;s too late to profit by the knowledge, and it&rsquo;s
-for you to judge if that will be the case with Medora. I&rsquo;m
-only raising the question, and I don&rsquo;t want to fill her head
-with false hopes. She&rsquo;s been too much of a lady to say
-anything out; but she&rsquo;s shown her feelings on the subject
-in a good many ways.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s fed up with you, in fact?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; I believe that is so. In a way, to use a homely
-sort of illustration, what we did was to keep company&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>no
-more than that; and that showed her very clear I&rsquo;m not
-the right company; and it&rsquo;s shown me, as I say, I&rsquo;m not a
-marrying man. So there it is. I can promise you your
-wife will want for nothing, and I shall regard her destiny
-as in my hands in future, if you&rsquo;re off her for good. And
-if you change your mind and divorce her, I&rsquo;ll swear it won&rsquo;t
-be me that marries her. That you can take on oath.
-I&rsquo;ll tell her so to-day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Kellock rose to go, and Ned remained silent and seated.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Remember, if you do see her, you&rsquo;ll see a wiser and
-sadder woman,&rdquo; the vatman ventured to add.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No doubt. You&rsquo;d make anybody sadder and wiser.
-When are you going to try for your stroke again?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody will pity you when they hear how you lost it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll find Mrs. Dingle along with her people at
-Priory Farm if you want her. She means to come to my
-lecture next week; but not if you&rsquo;ve any objection, of
-course. And I beg you to understand that I&rsquo;m heartily
-sorry for what I&rsquo;ve done, and I&rsquo;m punished a lot worse
-than you could punish me. To lose my stroke is nought;
-to lose my self-respect is everything.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll get &rsquo;em both back&mdash;such an amazing creature
-as you,&rdquo; said Dingle dourly.</p>
-
-<p>Then Kellock went away, and the man who had listened
-to him little guessed at his soreness of spirit. Jordan indeed
-had the satisfaction of clearing his soul and confessing
-his weakness and failure; but he suffered ample degradation
-and discomfort under his right-doing. Nor did he
-believe that his end was likely to be gained. Doubting, he
-had taken his proposal to Ashprington; still doubting, he
-returned. Indeed, he felt sure from Ned&rsquo;s attitude, both
-to him and Medora, that the girl would remain on his
-hands. A subtler man had felt every reason to hope from
-Dingle&rsquo;s blunt comments, but he read nothing behind them.
-He only believed that he had eaten dirt for nought; yet he
-did not regret his confession of wrong; for his bent of mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
-was such that he knew he must have made it sooner or
-later.</p>
-
-<p>The future looked dark and sad enough. He was confused,
-downcast. Even the thought of the lecture had no
-present power to cheer him. But he told himself that he
-had done his duty to Medora, and suspected that, had she
-heard his appeal to her husband, she might have thanked
-him.</p>
-
-<p>And elsewhere Dingle pondered the problem. Curiously
-enough, only a point, which had seemed unimportant to
-anybody else, held his mind. Kellock had said Medora
-was changed, and such is human inconsistency, that
-whereas Ned had told himself for six months he was well
-rid of a bad woman, now the thought that he might receive
-back into his house a reformed character annoyed him.
-If he wanted anybody, it was the old Medora&mdash;not the
-plague, who left him for Kellock, but the laughter-loving,
-illusive help-mate he had married. He did not desire a
-humbled and repentant creature, ready to lick his boots.
-He was very doubtful if he really wanted anybody. Once
-the mistress of any man, he would never have thought of
-her again except to curse her; but she never had been that.
-She had doubtless shared Jordan&rsquo;s exalted ideals. That
-was to her credit, and showed she honoured her first husband
-and the stock she sprang from.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-
-<small>THE BARGAIN</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Through bright moonlight, that made the young leaves
-diaphanous and melted on the grass lands in grey mist,
-men and women were walking home to Ashprington from
-Totnes. Not less than five-and-twenty had gone from the
-Mill to hear Jordan Kellock&rsquo;s lecture on socialism; and as
-they trudged homeward they discussed it.</p>
-
-<p>He had surprised all his listeners and many were full of
-enthusiasm before the future he indicated; but some were
-angry; some went in doubt. The younger men were with
-him and the older could not deny that there was reason
-and pitiless justice behind his demands. The women who
-heard him wondered at the ease with which he had spoken
-and held his audience. They were impressed with the applause
-that had greeted his sentiments and judged that he
-must have right on his side to have won a reception so
-enthusiastic.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Barefoot, the boilerman, walked by Ernest
-Trood, while Harold Spry and Daisy Finch listened to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s got to come,&rdquo; declared Barefoot. &ldquo;We used to
-talk of these problems in the merchant marine twenty-five
-years ago, and we knew then that things weren&rsquo;t right; but
-our generation was dumb, because our brains weren&rsquo;t educated
-to pull together. We ate our mouldy biscuits and
-rancid salt pork and shivered in a gale of wind, because we
-knew the ship&rsquo;s bottom was rotten; and we cussed the
-owners out of their snug beds ashore to hell; but we was
-driven cattle, you may say&mdash;had to go on with it&mdash;because
-there was nothing else for sailor men to do. But
-our children have gone to school. That&rsquo;s the difference.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>&ldquo;And the rich men sent &rsquo;em there, Henry,&rdquo; said Mr.
-Trood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They did, because they hadn&rsquo;t any choice, Ernest. If
-they&rsquo;d known what would come of it, they&rsquo;d have kept &rsquo;em
-out of school and left the poor man&rsquo;s children to fill the
-rich men&rsquo;s pockets, instead of giving them their birthright
-of education. &rsquo;Twasn&rsquo;t squire and parson sent &rsquo;em to
-school, but those who had a fairer sense of justice; and
-long-headed chaps like Kellock are the result.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s got a lot to learn, however. There&rsquo;s no such
-things as equality and never can be. Because men ain&rsquo;t
-born equal, Henry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He don&rsquo;t argue that, Mr. Trood,&rdquo; explained Spry.
-&ldquo;He argues that we are handicapped out of the hunt from
-the start. He says, &lsquo;let all start fair&rsquo;; he don&rsquo;t say all
-can win.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he does,&rdquo; returned Trood. &ldquo;He says all should
-win. He tells us that a man&rsquo;s intellect is an accident, and
-that, in justice, them with big brains should give their
-superfluity to the fools, so as all should share and share
-alike. And that&rsquo;s not human nature. Am I, that have
-worked like a slave to win my position and put all my
-heart and soul into paper-making from my youth up, to go
-and seek that lazy dog I sacked last week and say:
-&lsquo;You&rsquo;re a damned, worthless waster, but here&rsquo;s half my
-wages&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I grant he was out there,&rdquo; admitted Barefoot.
-&ldquo;&lsquo;The race is to the strong,&rsquo; but socialism don&rsquo;t seem to
-see that. Given a fair start for all and food and clothes
-and education, then the good boy gets his chance; but even
-if that was so, as things are he&rsquo;d never be allowed to compete
-with the gentleman&rsquo;s son.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he would,&rdquo; answered Trood. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing
-in the world, even as it&rsquo;s run now, to stop brains. There&rsquo;s
-boys who were charity school boys thirty years ago that
-the world listens to very respectfully to-day. But Kellock&rsquo;s
-let a lot of class hatred come into his talk, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
-hatred breeds hatred. Never a man wanted power more
-than him, but his sort go the wrong way to work with
-their bluster and threats. They don&rsquo;t help: they&rsquo;re out
-for blood. We&rsquo;re a very fair country at heart and under
-our constitution we&rsquo;ve grown to be the finest people on
-earth. So, naturally, as a whole, the nation don&rsquo;t want
-the Constitution swept away till we can get a better. The
-socialists have no traditions, and don&rsquo;t agree among themselves
-yet, and I for one wouldn&rsquo;t trust people that scoff
-at tradition and want to be a law to themselves. They
-would be a great danger, Henry, and if we got all to pieces
-like that and in sight of civil wars and revolution, we
-should throw ourselves open to attack from our enemies.
-Then, while we were wrangling how to govern ourselves,
-we&rsquo;d damn soon find England was going to be governed by
-somebody else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s plenty of hungry eyes on the British Empire
-no doubt,&rdquo; allowed Mr. Barefoot.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Plenty; and if our army and navy got bitten with this
-stuff, it would be good-bye to everything. And that
-wouldn&rsquo;t suit Kellock&rsquo;s friends.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And be it as it will,&rdquo; said Daisy Finch, &ldquo;a paper mill
-isn&rsquo;t a charity. Those that run the Mill have got to live,
-I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Daisy,&rdquo; admitted Trood; &ldquo;but we must be fair to
-this Kellock, though I&rsquo;m far from supporting what he says.
-The ills are as he stated them; the remedies are not as he
-stated &rsquo;em. He argues that the workman&rsquo;s work should
-no more be his whole life than work is his master&rsquo;s whole
-life. Because Capital buys a man&rsquo;s working hours, it
-doesn&rsquo;t buy his life and liberties. Outside his work, he&rsquo;s
-as much right to enjoy being alive as his employer. A
-machine looks very different from the owner&rsquo;s point of
-view and the worker&rsquo;s. The owner&rsquo;s the master of the
-machine; the worker is its slave; and it&rsquo;s on the worker the
-machine puts the strain, not on the owner. So we have got
-to consider our working hours in relation to our lives as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
-whole, and balance work against life, and consider how
-our labour affects our existence. A six hour day at a
-machine may be a far greater tax on a man or woman
-than an eight hour day at the desk, or the plough. You&rsquo;ve
-got to think of the nervous energy, which ain&rsquo;t unlimited.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so,&rdquo; admitted Barefoot. &ldquo;Life&rsquo;s the only
-adventure we can hope for, and I grant you there ought
-to be more to it. &rsquo;Tis all this here speeding up, I mistrust.
-The masters see the result of &lsquo;speeding up,&rsquo; and
-think it&rsquo;s all to the good according; but it&rsquo;s we feel the
-result, and I can tell you I&rsquo;m never more cranky and bad-tempered
-and foul-mouthed than after one of them rushes.
-The strain is only pounds, shillings and pence to the masters;
-but it&rsquo;s flesh and blood and nerves to us; because it&rsquo;s
-us have got to fight the machines, not them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very true word, Henry. Kellock&rsquo;s out for security,
-and whether you&rsquo;re a socialist or whether you&rsquo;re not, you
-can&rsquo;t deny security is the due of every human creature.
-Until the highest and lowest alike are born into security,
-there&rsquo;s something wrong with the order of things.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yet the greater number of the nation have no more
-security than a bird in a bush. Let us but lose our health,
-and where are we?&rdquo; asked Barefoot.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And if a machine is going to make us lose our health,&rdquo;
-argued Spry, &ldquo;then to hell with the machine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We want shorter hours and better money,&rdquo; explained
-Ernest Trood, &ldquo;and that can only be won if the masters
-also get better money. And for such a result we must
-look to machines.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Daisy Finch asked a question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who were those stern-looking men in black ties listening
-to the lecture?&rdquo; she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;From Plymouth, I believe,&rdquo; answered her sweetheart.
-&ldquo;They meant business, and they applauded Kellock at the
-finish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They see a likely tool to help their plots,&rdquo; said Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
-Trood. &ldquo;I hope he&rsquo;ll get his stroke back and drop this
-Jack-o&rsquo;-lantern job. There&rsquo;s quite enough at it without
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He don&rsquo;t think so,&rdquo; answered Barefoot. &ldquo;He wants
-to be in the movement, and may rise to be a leader some
-day. They socialists are as ambitious as anybody at
-heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Harold and Miss Finch, weary of the subject, slowed
-their gait, fell back, and presently turned to their own
-affairs. Then a trap passed, driven by Mr. Tom Dolbear,
-from Priory Farm. He had brought his sister and Medora
-to the lecture, and was now taking them home again.
-With them travelled Mr. Knox.</p>
-
-<p>The farmer alone found no good word for the things
-they had listened to.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Just the gift of the gab,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If you can talk
-easy, you&rsquo;re tempted to do so, at the expense of work.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Talking is working when you&rsquo;re out for a cause,&rdquo; explained
-Knox. &ldquo;Kellock&rsquo;s not a talker in the way we are.
-In fact, a very silent man, and thinks a great deal more
-than he talks; but with practice and a bit of exercise to
-strengthen his voice, he&rsquo;d be as good as any of the talking
-brigade; and though you may not agree with him, you
-can&rsquo;t deny he&rsquo;s got the faith to move mountains. He&rsquo;s
-preaching a gospel that Labour&rsquo;s perfectly ready and willing
-to hear, and he&rsquo;ll be an easy winner presently, because
-it&rsquo;s half the battle won to tell people the things they&rsquo;ll
-welcome. Everybody was with him from the start, and
-the harder he hit, the better they liked it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think Totnes had gone so radical now-a-days,&rdquo;
-said Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More it has,&rdquo; declared Mr. Dolbear. &ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t
-Totnes. &rsquo;Twas no more than a handful of discontented
-people, who don&rsquo;t know what they want.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Make no mistake as to that,&rdquo; answered Knox. &ldquo;The
-brains of Totnes was there&mdash;the thinking ones that ain&rsquo;t
-satisfied; and they do know what they want very well in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>deed;
-and Kellock&rsquo;s talk only said what the others feel.
-He&rsquo;s got a gift in my opinion, and I&rsquo;m with him more than
-half the way. If you allow for ignorance and impatience
-of youth, and so on&mdash;if you grant all that, there&rsquo;s still
-enough left to make a reputation. He&rsquo;ll never be a happy
-man, but he&rsquo;ll make his mark and have the satisfaction
-of being somebody in the labour world. He&rsquo;s got the
-touch.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Medora considered curiously with herself under the
-night. Her own changed attitude surprised her most.
-She had heard the applause and riot that greeted Jordan&rsquo;s
-speech. She had seen him stand there, self-contained and
-strong and successful, before three hundred people. She
-had marked his power to impress them, and awaken enthusiasm.
-She had seen older men than himself lifted to excitement
-by his speech. She had noted how many men
-and women pressed forward to shake hands with him when
-he had finished. She remembered the chairman&rsquo;s praise.
-All these things had actually filled her dreams of old. She
-had prophesied to him that such events would some day
-happen, and that his power must become known, given the
-opportunity. And now, far sooner than either had expected
-such a thing, it had come and justified Medora&rsquo;s
-prophecies. She wondered whether Kellock was remembering
-all she had foretold. As for herself, she looked at him
-now as at a picture that hung in somebody else&rsquo;s parlour.
-She witnessed the sunrise of his first triumph, but found
-herself perfectly indifferent and not desirous of one ray
-of reflected light. Her mind had passed from Kellock to
-other interests, and if she were ever to be a contented
-woman, it would not be Kellock who achieved that consummation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Jordan was to attend a meeting of his branch after the
-lecture,&rdquo; she said to Knox. &ldquo;I expect after such a success
-as that, they&rsquo;ll want him to give the lecture somewhere
-else.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m thinking of the effect on his nature,&rdquo; answered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
-Knox. &ldquo;And I believe all that applause will be a better
-tonic than Dartmoor, and make the man well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You think it will fetch his stroke back again?&rdquo; asked
-Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just what I do think, Lydia. He&rsquo;ll be walking
-on air after such a triumph as that. He&rsquo;ll fear nothing
-when he comes back to the vat, and all will go right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then, Mr. Knox, for private ends, and suspecting he
-had praised Kellock enough, turned on the lecture, and
-began to display its fallacies and errors. For Medora&rsquo;s
-benefit he examined the young man, and declared that his
-address revealed the defects of his qualities. But he need
-not have been at the trouble to occupy himself thus; Medora
-knew a great deal more about the real Jordan than
-it was possible for Mr. Knox to know.</p>
-
-<p>She listened, but took no more part in the conversation.
-They proceeded down the steep lane into Ashprington
-presently, and at Ned Dingle&rsquo;s home, Knox, to their
-surprise, bade Mr. Dolbear draw up.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going in here,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So I&rsquo;ll wish you all
-&lsquo;good night.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dingle, who knew the party was to pass, stood at his
-outer gate smoking. Only Lydia addressed him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good night, Ned,&rdquo; she said, and he answered:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good night, mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then the trap proceeded and Mr. Dolbear permitted
-himself to speak rather spitefully of Philander Knox.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He ain&rsquo;t sound, that man,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;He wants
-to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. You don&rsquo;t
-know where to have him in argument, the truth being he
-ain&rsquo;t much in earnest about anything in my opinion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Tom Dolbear modified this view before many days
-were passed. Indeed, had he listened to the conversation
-then proceeding between Philander and Mr. Dingle, he
-must have found himself confronted sharply and painfully
-with mistaken judgment; and Mr. Knox himself did not
-guess at the important events destined to fall out before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
-he slept that night. That certain things were presently
-to happen; that he would pluck his own occasions out of
-them and win a reward worthy of all his pains, he believed;
-but he did not know how near these things might be. Nor
-did he imagine how swiftly his own particular problems
-were destined to be solved. Now Medora&rsquo;s husband played
-into his hand with unexpected perception.</p>
-
-<p>They spoke first concerning the lecture, and Ned heard
-without enthusiasm of its success.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No doubt the only thing that concerns you is why
-your wife went,&rdquo; said Knox, &ldquo;and I may tell you she went
-because she&rsquo;d promised to go. It bored her stiff, same as
-it did Mrs. Trivett. They&rsquo;ve got no use for the new
-paths, and Medora&rsquo;s just as much of a Tory at heart as
-you or her mother, though she wouldn&rsquo;t own to it. That&rsquo;s
-all over, any way. They&rsquo;ve parted in a dignified fashion,
-and I&rsquo;ve done the best day&rsquo;s work I ever have done in helping
-you to see the peculiar circumstances and putting the
-truth before you. Not that even my great efforts would
-have saved the situation if you hadn&rsquo;t believed me; but that
-was your stronghold: you knew I was telling truth. In
-fact, it&rsquo;s one of those cases where knowledge of the truth
-has helped the parties through the storm, and I&rsquo;ll be
-thankful to my dying day you was large-minded enough to
-receive and accept it. It was a great compliment to me
-that you could trust me, and a great advertisement to your
-brain power.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all your work and I don&rsquo;t deny you the praise,&rdquo;
-answered Ned. &ldquo;Of course, if things had been otherwise
-from what they are, nothing would have come of it; but as
-the facts are what we understand, then I&rsquo;m half in a mind
-to take Medora back. I dare say the people will think
-I&rsquo;m a silly, knock-kneed fool to do so; but those who know
-the truth would not. There&rsquo;s only one thing will prevent
-me, and that&rsquo;s the woman herself. I&rsquo;ll see her presently,
-and if she comes out of it in a decent spirit, then what I
-say may happen. But if there&rsquo;s a shadow of doubt about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
-it in her mind, then we&rsquo;ll stop as we are. It pretty much
-depends upon her now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In that case I congratulate you, because her spirit is
-contrite to the dust, and never, if she lives to be a hundred,
-will she fail of her duty again. She&rsquo;ll be a pattern to
-every married woman on earth for the rest of her life, no
-doubt. The highest and best she prays for is to be forgiven
-by you; but she don&rsquo;t dare to hope even that; and if
-she found she was more than forgiven, then her gratitude
-would rise to amazing heights, no doubt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well it might,&rdquo; declared Dingle, and the other spoke
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes; and none better pleased than me; but though I
-hadn&rsquo;t thought we&rsquo;d got nearly so far as this yet awhile,
-now I see that we have, I must speak a word more, Ned.
-What I&rsquo;m going to say now is a terrible delicate thing;
-and yet, late though the hour is, this is the appointed time.
-Give me a spot of whiskey and switch off from yourself to
-me for five minutes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was coming to you. I&rsquo;m not blind, and I see very
-clearly what I owe you in this matter. You&rsquo;ve took a
-deal of trouble, and I&rsquo;m grateful, Knox, and so will everybody
-else be when they understand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very glad you feel it so,&rdquo; answered Philander,
-&ldquo;because it&rsquo;s true. I have took a lot of trouble, Ned,
-and I&rsquo;ve spared no pains to bring this about, because well
-I knew from my experience of life that it was the best that
-could possibly happen for all concerned. And once convinced
-them two were innocent as babes, I set myself to
-save the situation, as they say. And I&rsquo;ve helped you to
-do so; and it ain&rsquo;t a figure of speech to say I&rsquo;m well paid
-by results. But that&rsquo;s not all there is to it. There was
-something up my sleeve too. I had another iron in the
-fire for myself. In a word, you can pay me handsome
-for all my trouble if you&rsquo;ll recognise that and lend me a
-hand in a certain quarter. Need I say what quarter?
-As you know, Mrs. Trivett&rsquo;s very much addicted to me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
-and she&rsquo;d marry me to-morrow if a mistaken call of duty
-didn&rsquo;t keep her in that breeding pen known as Priory
-Farm. Well, I put it to you whether you won&rsquo;t help
-me same as I helped you. One good turn deserves another&mdash;eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d go to the end of the world to help you, Knox.
-But what can I do?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t see? I&rsquo;ll tell you then. It sounds a bit
-strong, but it&rsquo;s safe enough and it&rsquo;ll do the trick. Above
-all you needn&rsquo;t feel a speck of fear, because your mother-in-law
-has a very fine affection for me, and to marry me
-will really be a great delight to her&mdash;that I assure you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What must I do then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merely tell Medora you don&rsquo;t look at her again unless
-Mrs. Trivett changes her name to Mrs. Knox. I&rsquo;m not
-asking a difficult or troublesome thing. In fact, you
-needn&rsquo;t lift a finger in the matter. You can safely leave
-it to Medora. She&rsquo;ll praise God on her knees for a month
-of Sundays when she hears the grand ideas in your mind,
-and when you state the condition&mdash;there you are: she&rsquo;ll
-be on to her mother like a flame of fire, and Lydia will
-mighty soon see her duty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Ned Dingle laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lord, you&rsquo;re a deep one!&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not me. Far from it. Just ordinary common sense,
-and a great natural regard for Medora&rsquo;s mother. Mind,
-I wouldn&rsquo;t ask if it wasn&rsquo;t a dead cert.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It shall be done,&rdquo; answered the younger man.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a double chap, Knox, though you do claim to be
-so simple, and I&rsquo;d rather have you for a friend than an
-enemy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be your friend as long as I live, I promise you&mdash;and
-your wife also. A very good father-in-law you&rsquo;ll
-find me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They went to the door together and as Knox was about
-to depart, there came a swift foot down the lane. It was
-Jordan Kellock on his homeward way.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>He stopped, seeing the men at the gate.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was going to call first thing to-morrow, Mr. Dingle,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;but since you&rsquo;re here I can speak now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And give me an arm afterwards,&rdquo; declared Knox.
-For the moon had set and it was very dark.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only this: the leaders liked what I said to-night, and
-they liked how I said it. In a word they have offered me
-propaganda work. I&rsquo;m to travel about and have my headquarters
-in London. My life&rsquo;s begun in fact. I tell you
-this, because now you&rsquo;re free to go back to the Mill, for I
-shall not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Giving up paper-making?&rdquo; asked Philander.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Knox. I shall never touch a mould again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ll never know if you&rsquo;ve lost your stroke, or
-get it back.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All&rsquo;s one now. There&rsquo;s only Mrs. Dingle to consider.
-Have you been able to make up your mind in that matter
-yet, Mr. Dingle?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said Ned; &ldquo;but she don&rsquo;t know it and I&rsquo;ll
-thank you not to tell her. That&rsquo;s my job.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank God,&rdquo; said Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Knox,&rdquo; added Ned. &ldquo;But for him there&rsquo;s no
-shadow of doubt things would have happened differently.
-But as luck would have it you confided in him, and so
-did I; and being what he is, he puts his intellects into the
-thing and saved us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t forget it,&rdquo; said Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And we shan&rsquo;t forget you,&rdquo; declared Knox. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
-all three mighty well out of this, and though you&rsquo;ve been
-an amazing ass, yet there was a fine quality in your foolishness
-that saved the situation. You&rsquo;ve all got peace
-with honour in fact; and may you profit by your lesson
-and your luck.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Then Knox and Kellock set off down the hill together.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXX<br />
-
-<small>FIRE BEACON HILL</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p>Free horizons stretched about the grassy summit of Fire
-Beacon, a culminating ridge above Dart.</p>
-
-<p>It ascended from a glorious ambit of hill and valley,
-moor and sea; and on this silvery noon of early summer,
-light rained out of the zenith and echoed in the scattered
-cloud argosies that sailed from the north to seaward. Under
-them spread a mosaic of multicoloured fields netted
-with hedges and knotted with copses or spinneys, grey
-hamlets and little thorpes. The million breasts of Artemis
-Devonia undulated beneath the shining patchwork
-and faded into distance over many leagues of sunkissed
-weald and wold, until they rippled dimly to the foothills
-and forest edges of Dartmoor, where the high lands were
-flung hugely out from east to west. To-day the Moor
-shone full of delicate colour under the sun. It rose and
-fell in a lustrous opaline sky line of gentle salients; it
-melted at the magic of the universal light and seemed no
-more than a delicate veil of grey and azure imposed transparently
-upon the brighter blue above it. From Hey
-Tor to Rippon it rolled, to Buckland and Holne Moor,
-with shadowy glimpses of Hameldon and remote Cosdon;
-to Dean Moor and Harford, by Eastern Beacon and
-Western Beacon, Lee Moor and Shell Top and far border
-heights that brooded through the milky hazes of the west.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath Fire Beacon lay the clustered dwellings of East
-Cornworthy, and beyond them, deep in the heart of the
-land, shone Dart where there bent away Bow Creek above
-Stoke Gabriel. The river wound argent through a dimple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
-of the bending hills, while easterly, by broad passages of
-woodland and fallow, opened the ways to the sea. Tor
-Bay stretched there with white Torquay glittering pearly
-under her triple hills; and far beyond them, touched
-through the haze by a falling sunshaft, glimmered the
-headlands eastward, cliff beyond cliff, where the red sandstone
-of Devon gave to the golden oolites of Dorset. Then
-ranged the sea-line and rolled wide waters soaked with
-light, whereon the clouds not only flung down their shadows,
-but poured their reflections also, so that the sea was
-radiant as the land.</p>
-
-<p>Fire Beacon bore hay, and as the wind rippled the distant
-waters, so here, through ripening grass, over sparkling
-white daisies and russet sorrel, it ran and swept
-and sent a lustre, that danced upon the hill and stroked
-the herbage with fitful waves of light. A cuckoo called
-from an elm top and overhead wheeled the gulls to link
-earth and sea together.</p>
-
-<p>Hither climbed a party of four holiday makers, of whom
-two were middle-aged and two were young. The more
-youthful pair walked some hundred yards ahead and bore
-between them a hamper; their elders breasted the great hill
-more leisurely and stopped sometimes upon the way.
-Once, where a grassy dip in the hedge bank invited them
-to do so, they sat down to rest for a while.</p>
-
-<p>Ned and Medora reached the crown of Fire Beacon and
-sought a place for their picnic under the nearest hedge.
-They found it presently, but waited until Lydia and
-Philander should arrive and approve.</p>
-
-<p>Perfect understanding appeared to obtain between the
-husband and wife. Medora was attired in a pre-Kellock
-gown, which Mr. Dingle had always admired. Indeed she
-had given the garments that came from London to Daisy
-Finch. She had been highly ingenious in returning to the
-old rgime at every minute particular, and in banishing to
-the void any evidence of the inter-regnum. She came back
-to Ned sufficiently contrite and sufficiently grateful and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
-thankful. Her tact had been sharpened by tribulation,
-and remembering very well what was good to her husband,
-she wasted not much time on tears of repentance or promises
-of future well doing. She let her luck take the form
-of joyousness&mdash;which suited Dingle best. Her gratitude
-assumed the most agreeable shape from his point of
-view, for she exhibited such delight in her home and such
-radiant happiness in his company that he found himself
-content. Nor, for once, was there any simulation on
-Medora&rsquo;s part. She felt the satisfaction she expressed.
-She appreciated the extent of her remarkable good fortune
-and desired nothing more than a return to the life
-she had under-valued. They were for the moment not
-talking of themselves, but Medora&rsquo;s mother.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Poor dear! You may say that Aunt Mary and Uncle
-Tom pretty well cast her out,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dingle. &ldquo;A
-proper shame I call it, and a proper lesson not to work
-your fingers to the bone for other people&rsquo;s children.
-You&rsquo;d think mother was a traitor to &rsquo;em, instead of the
-best friend they ever had, or will have&mdash;selfish creatures.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;ve done her a very good turn by getting her
-out of that house. Knox will know how to value such a
-fine woman, though it&rsquo;s contrary to nature that two old
-blades like them should feel all younger people feel, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He feels enough not to let mother work in the Mill
-any more,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you know you need not, if you don&rsquo;t want.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do, you dear. But I&rsquo;m only too jolly thankful to
-be back there and that&rsquo;s the truth. I&rsquo;d sooner be there
-than anywhere, because I&rsquo;m nearer to you all day, and we
-can eat our dinner together. But mother&rsquo;s different and
-Mr. Knox has very dignified ideas how she should live at
-her age.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You say &lsquo;at her age,&rsquo; but be blessed if this racket
-hasn&rsquo;t knocked years off her,&rdquo; said Ned. &ldquo;I can quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
-imagine a man of half a century old might think her good-looking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>By a curious coincidence Philander was stating the same
-opinion half a mile down the hill. Indeed Lydia&rsquo;s face
-seemed a palimpsest to Mr. Knox, and through more recent
-writings, to her countenance there would still come
-a twinkle from the past and a flash and flush, that penetrated
-thirty years of Time&rsquo;s caligraphy and seemed to
-recreate her features, even to a little curl at the corner
-of her under-lip, that belonged to youth and had been
-delicious then.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Knox perceived these things.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dammy, you&rsquo;re growing younger under my very eyes,
-Lydia,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>She laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tom didn&rsquo;t think so,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;He said that
-for an aged woman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Get him out of your mind,&rdquo; said Mr. Knox. &ldquo;The
-forties are often very unmerciful to the fifties&mdash;a trick
-of human nature I can&rsquo;t explain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know I&rsquo;m younger; and it&rsquo;s largely along of you,
-Philander, but not all. You can understand how the
-thought of them two up there have made me younger. I
-never dreamed they could come together again&mdash;not in
-my most hopeful moments.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s because you didn&rsquo;t know how short a distance
-they&rsquo;d really fallen apart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis too good to be true. I&rsquo;m frightened of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You never was frightened of
-anything and never will be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For that matter there is a dark side,&rdquo; explained
-Lydia, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m almost glad there is in a way, because
-if there wasn&rsquo;t, the whole story would be contrary to nature
-and would tumble down like a pack of cards.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no dark side, and I won&rsquo;t have you say there
-is, Lyddy. Why shouldn&rsquo;t the Lord hatch a piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
-happiness for four humans once in a way, if He&rsquo;s got a
-mind to do it?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t the Almighty; it&rsquo;s my people at Priory Farm.
-I heard some bitter things there I do assure you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet you did,&rdquo; said Mr. Knox. &ldquo;I can see &rsquo;em at
-you. And I can also very well guess what they said about
-me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Especially Mary. I never heard her use such language,
-and I never saw her so properly awake before.
-But I was glad after, because when she called you a crafty
-old limb of the Dowl, that got my fighting spirit up and
-they heard a home truth or two. I thought they were
-very different stuff.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you take people as you find &rsquo;em, you&rsquo;ll make
-friends,&rdquo; answered Mr. Knox; &ldquo;but if you take people as
-you fancy &rsquo;em, you will not. No doubt folk are very flattered
-at first to find our opinion of &rsquo;em is as high as their
-opinion of themselves. But that don&rsquo;t last. We can&rsquo;t
-for long think of any fellow creature as highly as he thinks
-of himself. The strain&rsquo;s too great, and so, presently,
-we come down to the truth about our friend; and he sees
-we know it and can&rsquo;t forgive us. So the friendship fades
-out, because it was built on fancy and not on reality.
-That&rsquo;s what happens to most friendships in the long run.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose I never got quite a true picture of my brother&rsquo;s
-wife,&rdquo; admitted Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You did not. And what&rsquo;s hurting her so sharp for the
-minute and making her so beastly rude is&mdash;not so much
-your going, as your knowing the truth about her. But
-don&rsquo;t you fret. They&rsquo;ll cringe presently. I dare say
-they&rsquo;ll be at our wedding yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish I could think so,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;But it
-ought to come right, for, after all, I&rsquo;m a mother too, and
-what choice had I when Ned got me in a corner like that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not an earthly,&rdquo; declared Mr. Knox.</p>
-
-<p>They joined Ned and Medora presently. The view was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
-nothing to any of them, but the elders welcomed the breeze
-at hill top. Their talk concerned the wedding.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A very Christian spirit in the air,&rdquo; Philander asserted.
-&ldquo;Even Nicholas Pinhey has forgiven me, thanks to your
-mother, Medora. He dropped in on Saturday, and he
-said, &lsquo;You called me a caterpillar, not so very many weeks
-ago, Mr. Knox,&rsquo; and I answered, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;re right.&rsquo;
-And he said, &lsquo;Yes; and when you done so, I thought it
-was a case of &ldquo;Father, forgive him, for he knows not what
-he sayeth.&rdquo; And I wish you to understand that I forgive
-it and forget it also, out of respect for Mrs. Trivett.
-The man that Mrs. Trivett thinks good enough to marry
-must have some virtues hidden from common eyes,&rsquo; said
-Nicholas to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Mercy Life&rsquo;s forgiven me,&rdquo; said Medora. &ldquo;I
-wouldn&rsquo;t let her have any peace till she did. And Alice
-Barefoot passes the time of day even! That&rsquo;s thanks to
-mother of course.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re getting up a fine wedding present for mother
-in the rag house,&rdquo; announced Ned. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a secret, but
-Henry Barefoot told me. It&rsquo;s going to take the shape of
-a tea service, I believe.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t see myself away from the rag house,&rdquo; murmured
-Mrs. Trivett.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t see yourself away from Priory Farm,
-mother,&rdquo; said Medora.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a want of imagination in you, Lydia,&rdquo; declared
-Mr. Knox. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll say you can&rsquo;t see yourself married
-to me next. But that you certainly will see inside a month
-from Sunday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They spoke of various matters that interested them;
-then Mr. Knox mentioned Kellock.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strange that a man born and bred under the apple
-trees of Ashprington should show these gifts. A great
-paper maker; and as if that was not enough, a power of
-talk and a talent for politics. Not that he&rsquo;ll ever be half<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
-as good in his new line as he was in his old. A man can&rsquo;t
-rise to be first class at two crafts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Labour Party will swallow him up, and we shan&rsquo;t
-hear no more about him, I expect,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it. He hadn&rsquo;t the very highest gifts to deal
-with his fellow men&mdash;not the touch of genius&mdash;too
-deadly serious and narrow. You feel about that sort a
-very proper respect; but you&rsquo;d a long sight sooner live
-with their statues than themselves. &rsquo;Tis always uncomfortable
-living with heroes&mdash;even little tin ones&mdash;but
-when time has took &rsquo;em and just kneaded what good they&rsquo;ve
-done into the common wealth of human progress&mdash;then
-we can feel kindly to their memories.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ope the hamper, Ned,&rdquo; said Lydia.</p>
-<div class="gap-20"></div>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-<div class="gap-20"></div>
-
-<p class="center">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Storm in a Teacup, by Eden Phillpotts
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORM IN A TEACUP ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55468-h.htm or 55468-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/4/6/55468/
-
-Produced by MWS, David E. Brown and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/55468-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/55468-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c68831b..0000000
--- a/old/55468-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55468-h/images/i_002.jpg b/old/55468-h/images/i_002.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 0717cec..0000000
--- a/old/55468-h/images/i_002.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ