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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence
+
+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
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: England, My England
+
+Author: D.H. Lawrence
+
+Release Date: August 24, 2003 [eBook #8914]
+[Most recently updated: September 17, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Distributed Proofreaders
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND ***
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+England, My England
+
+AND OTHER STORIES
+
+by D.H. Lawrence
+
+Contents
+
+ ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+ TICKETS, PLEASE
+ THE BLIND MAN
+ MONKEY NUTS
+ WINTRY PEACOCK
+ YOU TOUCHED ME
+ SAMSON AND DELILAH
+ THE PRIMROSE PATH
+ THE HORSE DEALER’S DAUGHTER
+ FANNY AND ANNIE
+
+
+
+
+ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+
+
+He was working on the edge of the common, beyond the small brook that
+ran in the dip at the bottom of the garden, carrying the garden path in
+continuation from the plank bridge on to the common. He had cut the
+rough turf and bracken, leaving the grey, dryish soil bare. But he was
+worried because he could not get the path straight, there was a pleat
+between his brows. He had set up his sticks, and taken the sights
+between the big pine trees, but for some reason everything seemed
+wrong. He looked again, straining his keen blue eyes, that had a touch
+of the Viking in them, through the shadowy pine trees as through a
+doorway, at the green-grassed garden-path rising from the shadow of
+alders by the log bridge up to the sunlit flowers. Tall white and
+purple columbines, and the butt-end of the old Hampshire cottage that
+crouched near the earth amid flowers, blossoming in the bit of shaggy
+wildness round about.
+
+There was a sound of children’s voices calling and talking: high,
+childish, girlish voices, slightly didactic and tinged with
+domineering: “If you don’t come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to
+where there are snakes.” And nobody had the _sang-froid_ to reply: “Run
+then, little fool.” It was always, “No, darling. Very well, darling. In
+a moment, darling. Darling, you _must_ be patient.”
+
+His heart was hard with disillusion: a continual gnawing and
+resistance. But he worked on. What was there to do but submit!
+
+The sunlight blazed down upon the earth, there was a vividness of flamy
+vegetation, of fierce seclusion amid the savage peace of the commons.
+Strange how the savage England lingers in patches: as here, amid these
+shaggy gorse commons, and marshy, snake infested places near the foot
+of the south downs. The spirit of place lingering on primeval, as when
+the Saxons came, so long ago.
+
+Ah, how he had loved it! The green garden path, the tufts of flowers,
+purple and white columbines, and great oriental red poppies with their
+black chaps and mulleins tall and yellow, this flamy garden which had
+been a garden for a thousand years, scooped out in the little hollow
+among the snake-infested commons. He had made it flame with flowers, in
+a sun cup under its hedges and trees. So old, so old a place! And yet
+he had re-created it.
+
+The timbered cottage with its sloping, cloak-like roof was old and
+forgotten. It belonged to the old England of hamlets and yeomen. Lost
+all alone on the edge of the common, at the end of a wide, grassy,
+briar-entangled lane shaded with oak, it had never known the world of
+today. Not till Egbert came with his bride. And he had come to fill it
+with flowers.
+
+The house was ancient and very uncomfortable. But he did not want to
+alter it. Ah, marvellous to sit there in the wide, black, time-old
+chimney, at night when the wind roared overhead, and the wood which he
+had chopped himself sputtered on the hearth! Himself on one side the
+angle, and Winifred on the other.
+
+Ah, how he had wanted her: Winifred! She was young and beautiful and
+strong with life, like a flame in sunshine. She moved with a slow grace
+of energy like a blossoming, red-flowered bush in motion. She, too,
+seemed to come out of the old England, ruddy, strong, with a certain
+crude, passionate quiescence and a hawthorn robustness. And he, he was
+tall and slim and agile, like an English archer with his long supple
+legs and fine movements. Her hair was nut-brown and all in energic
+curls and tendrils. Her eyes were nut-brown, too, like a robin’s for
+brightness. And he was white-skinned with fine, silky hair that had
+darkened from fair, and a slightly arched nose of an old country
+family. They were a beautiful couple.
+
+The house was Winifred’s. Her father was a man of energy, too. He had
+come from the north poor. Now he was moderately rich. He had bought
+this fair stretch of inexpensive land, down in Hampshire. Not far from
+the tiny church of the almost extinct hamlet stood his own house, a
+commodious old farmhouse standing back from the road across a bare
+grassed yard. On one side of this quadrangle was the long, long barn or
+shed which he had made into a cottage for his youngest daughter
+Priscilla. One saw little blue-and-white check curtains at the long
+windows, and inside, overhead, the grand old timbers of the
+high-pitched shed. This was Prissy’s house. Fifty yards away was the
+pretty little new cottage which he had built for his daughter Magdalen,
+with the vegetable garden stretching away to the oak copse. And then
+away beyond the lawns and rose trees of the house-garden went the track
+across a shaggy, wild grass space, towards the ridge of tall black
+pines that grew on a dyke-bank, through the pines and above the sloping
+little bog, under the wide, desolate oak trees, till there was
+Winifred’s cottage crouching unexpectedly in front, so much alone, and
+so primitive.
+
+It was Winifred’s own house, and the gardens and the bit of common and
+the boggy slope were hers: her tiny domain. She had married just at the
+time when her father had bought the estate, about ten years before the
+war, so she had been able to come to Egbert with this for a marriage
+portion. And who was more delighted, he or she, it would be hard to
+say. She was only twenty at the time, and he was only twenty-one. He
+had about a hundred and fifty pounds a year of his own—and nothing else
+but his very considerable personal attractions. He had no profession:
+he earned nothing. But he talked of literature and music, he had a
+passion for old folk-music, collecting folk-songs and folk-dances,
+studying the Morris-dance and the old customs. Of course in time he
+would make money in these ways.
+
+Meanwhile youth and health and passion and promise. Winifred’s father
+was always generous: but still, he was a man from the north with a hard
+head and a hard skin too, having received a good many knocks. At home
+he kept the hard head out of sight, and played at poetry and romance
+with his literary wife and his sturdy, passionate girls. He was a man
+of courage, not given to complaining, bearing his burdens by himself.
+No, he did not let the world intrude far into his home. He had a
+delicate, sensitive wife whose poetry won some fame in the narrow world
+of letters. He himself, with his tough old barbarian fighting spirit,
+had an almost child-like delight in verse, in sweet poetry, and in the
+delightful game of a cultured home. His blood was strong even to
+coarseness. But that only made the home more vigorous, more robust and
+Christmassy. There was always a touch of Christmas about him, now he
+was well off. If there was poetry after dinner, there were also
+chocolates and nuts, and good little out-of-the-way things to be
+munching.
+
+Well then, into this family came Egbert. He was made of quite a
+different paste. The girls and the father were strong-limbed,
+thick-blooded people, true English, as holly-trees and hawthorn are
+English. Their culture was grafted on to them, as one might perhaps
+graft a common pink rose on to a thornstem. It flowered oddly enough,
+but it did not alter their blood.
+
+And Egbert was a born rose. The age-long breeding had left him with a
+delightful spontaneous passion. He was not clever, nor even “literary”.
+No, but the intonation of his voice, and the movement of his supple,
+handsome body, and the fine texture of his flesh and his hair, the
+slight arch of his nose, the quickness of his blue eyes would easily
+take the place of poetry. Winifred loved him, loved him, this
+southerner, as a higher being. A _higher_ being, mind you. Not a
+deeper. And as for him, he loved her in passion with every fibre of
+him. She was the very warm stuff of life to him.
+
+Wonderful then, those days at Crockham Cottage, the first days, all
+alone save for the woman who came to work in the mornings. Marvellous
+days, when she had all his tall, supple, fine-fleshed youth to herself,
+for herself, and he had her like a ruddy fire into which he could cast
+himself for rejuvenation. Ah, that it might never end, this passion,
+this marriage! The flame of their two bodies burnt again into that old
+cottage, that was haunted already by so much by-gone, physical desire.
+You could not be in the dark room for an hour without the influences
+coming over you. The hot blood-desire of by-gone yeomen, there in this
+old den where they had lusted and bred for so many generations. The
+silent house, dark, with thick, timbered walls and the big black
+chimney-place, and the sense of secrecy. Dark, with low, little
+windows, sunk into the earth. Dark, like a lair where strong beasts had
+lurked and mated, lonely at night and lonely by day, left to themselves
+and their own intensity for so many generations. It seemed to cast a
+spell on the two young people. They became different. There was a
+curious secret glow about them, a certain slumbering flame hard to
+understand, that enveloped them both. They too felt that they did not
+belong to the London world any more. Crockham had changed their blood:
+the sense of the snakes that lived and slept even in their own garden,
+in the sun, so that he, going forward with the spade, would see a
+curious coiled brownish pile on the black soil, which suddenly would
+start up, hiss, and dazzle rapidly away, hissing. One day Winifred
+heard the strangest scream from the flower-bed under the low window of
+the living room: ah, the strangest scream, like the very soul of the
+dark past crying aloud. She ran out, and saw a long brown snake on the
+flower-bed, and in its flat mouth the one hind leg of a frog was
+striving to escape, and screaming its strange, tiny, bellowing scream.
+She looked at the snake, and from its sullen flat head it looked at
+her, obstinately. She gave a cry, and it released the frog and slid
+angrily away.
+
+That was Crockham. The spear of modern invention had not passed through
+it, and it lay there secret, primitive, savage as when the Saxons first
+came. And Egbert and she were caught there, caught out of the world.
+
+He was not idle, nor was she. There were plenty of things to be done,
+the house to be put into final repair after the workmen had gone,
+cushions and curtains to sew, the paths to make, the water to fetch and
+attend to, and then the slope of the deep-soiled, neglected garden to
+level, to terrace with little terraces and paths, and to fill with
+flowers. He worked away, in his shirt-sleeves, worked all day
+intermittently doing this thing and the other. And she, quiet and rich
+in herself, seeing him stooping and labouring away by himself, would
+come to help him, to be near him. He of course was an amateur—a born
+amateur. He worked so hard, and did so little, and nothing he ever did
+would hold together for long. If he terraced the garden, he held up the
+earth with a couple of long narrow planks that soon began to bend with
+the pressure from behind, and would not need many years to rot through
+and break and let the soil slither all down again in a heap towards the
+stream-bed. But there you are. He had not been brought up to come to
+grips with anything, and he thought it would do. Nay, he did not think
+there was anything else except little temporary contrivances possible,
+he who had such a passion for his old enduring cottage, and for the old
+enduring things of the bygone England. Curious that the sense of
+permanency in the past had such a hold over him, whilst in the present
+he was all amateurish and sketchy.
+
+Winifred could not criticize him. Town-bred, everything seemed to her
+splendid, and the very digging and shovelling itself seemed romantic.
+But neither Egbert nor she yet realised the difference between work and
+romance.
+
+Godfrey Marshall, her father, was at first perfectly pleased with the
+ménage down at Crockham Cottage. He thought Egbert was wonderful, the
+many things he accomplished, and he was gratified by the glow of
+physical passion between the two young people. To the man who in London
+still worked hard to keep steady his modest fortune, the thought of
+this young couple digging away and loving one another down at Crockham
+Cottage, buried deep among the commons and marshes, near the
+pale-showing bulk of the downs, was like a chapter of living romance.
+And they drew the sustenance for their fire of passion from him, from
+the old man. It was he who fed their flame. He triumphed secretly in
+the thought. And it was to her father that Winifred still turned, as
+the one source of all surety and life and support. She loved Egbert
+with passion. But behind her was the power of her father. It was the
+power of her father she referred to, whenever she needed to refer. It
+never occurred to her to refer to Egbert, if she were in difficulty or
+doubt. No, in all the _serious_ matters she depended on her father.
+
+For Egbert had no intention of coming to grips with life. He had no
+ambition whatsoever. He came from a decent family, from a pleasant
+country home, from delightful surroundings. He should, of course, have
+had a profession. He should have studied law or entered business in
+some way. But no—that fatal three pounds a week would keep him from
+starving as long as he lived, and he did not want to give himself into
+bondage. It was not that he was idle. He was always doing something, in
+his amateurish way. But he had no desire to give himself to the world,
+and still less had he any desire to fight his way in the world. No, no,
+the world wasn’t worth it. He wanted to ignore it, to go his own way
+apart, like a casual pilgrim down the forsaken sidetracks. He loved his
+wife, his cottage and garden. He would make his life there, as a sort
+of epicurean hermit. He loved the past, the old music and dances and
+customs of old England. He would try and live in the spirit of these,
+not in the spirit of the world of business.
+
+But often Winifred’s father called her to London: for he loved to have
+his children round him. So Egbert and she must have a tiny flat in
+town, and the young couple must transfer themselves from time to time
+from the country to the city. In town Egbert had plenty of friends, of
+the same ineffectual sort as himself, tampering with the arts,
+literature, painting, sculpture, music. He was not bored.
+
+Three pounds a week, however, would not pay for all this. Winifred’s
+father paid. He liked paying. He made her only a very small allowance,
+but he often gave her ten pounds—or gave Egbert ten pounds. So they
+both looked on the old man as the mainstay. Egbert didn’t mind being
+patronized and paid for. Only when he felt the family was a little
+_too_ condescending, on account of money, he began to get huffy.
+
+Then of course children came: a lovely little blonde daughter with a
+head of thistle-down. Everybody adored the child. It was the first
+exquisite blonde thing that had come into the family, a little mite
+with the white, slim, beautiful limbs of its father, and as it grew up
+the dancing, dainty movement of a wild little daisy-spirit. No wonder
+the Marshalls all loved the child: they called her Joyce. They
+themselves had their own grace, but it was slow, rather heavy. They had
+everyone of them strong, heavy limbs and darkish skins, and they were
+short in stature. And now they had for one of their own this light
+little cowslip child. She was like a little poem in herself.
+
+But nevertheless, she brought a new difficulty. Winifred must have a
+nurse for her. Yes, yes, there must be a nurse. It was the family
+decree. Who was to pay for the nurse? The grandfather—seeing the father
+himself earned no money. Yes, the grandfather would pay, as he had paid
+all the lying-in expenses. There came a slight sense of money-strain.
+Egbert was living on his father-in-law.
+
+After the child was born, it was never quite the same between him and
+Winifred. The difference was at first hardly perceptible. But it was
+there. In the first place Winifred had a new centre of interest. She
+was not going to adore her child. But she had what the modern mother so
+often has in the place of spontaneous love: a profound sense of duty
+towards her child. Winifred appreciated her darling little girl, and
+felt a deep sense of duty towards her. Strange, that this sense of duty
+should go deeper than the love for her husband. But so it was. And so
+it often is. The responsibility of motherhood was the prime
+responsibility in Winifred’s heart: the responsibility of wifehood came
+a long way second.
+
+Her child seemed to link her up again in a circuit with her own family.
+Her father and mother, herself, and her child, that was the human
+trinity for her. Her husband—? Yes, she loved him still. But that was
+like play. She had an almost barbaric sense of duty and of family. Till
+she married, her first human duty had been towards her father: he was
+the pillar, the source of life, the everlasting support. Now another
+link was added to the chain of duty: her father, herself, and her
+child.
+
+Egbert was out of it. Without anything happening, he was gradually,
+unconsciously excluded from the circle. His wife still loved him,
+physically. But, but—he was _almost_ the unnecessary party in the
+affair. He could not complain of Winifred. She still did her duty
+towards him. She still had a physical passion for him, that physical
+passion on which he had put all his life and soul. But—but—
+
+It was for a long while an ever-recurring _but_. And then, after the
+second child, another blonde, winsome touching little thing, not so
+proud and flame-like as Joyce; after Annabel came, then Egbert began
+truly to realise how it was. His wife still loved him. But—and now the
+but had grown enormous—her physical love for him was of secondary
+importance to her. It became ever less important. After all, she had
+had it, this physical passion, for two years now. It was not this that
+one lived from. No, no—something sterner, realer.
+
+She began to resent her own passion for Egbert—just a little she began
+to despise it. For after all there he was, he was charming, he was
+lovable, he was terribly desirable. But—but—oh, the awful looming cloud
+of that _but!_—He did not stand firm in the landscape of her life like
+a tower of strength, like a great pillar of significance. No, he was
+like a cat one has about the house, which will one day disappear and
+leave no trace. He was like a flower in the garden, trembling in the
+wind of life, and then gone, leaving nothing to show. As an adjunct, as
+an accessory, he was perfect. Many a woman would have adored to have
+him about her all her life, the most beautiful and desirable of all her
+possessions. But Winifred belonged to another school.
+
+The years went by, and instead of coming more to grips with life, he
+relaxed more. He was of a subtle, sensitive, passionate nature. But he
+simply _would_ not give himself to what Winifred called life, _Work_.
+No, he would not go into the world and work for money. No, he just
+would not. If Winifred liked to live beyond their small income—well, it
+was her look-out.
+
+And Winifred did not really want him to go out into the world to work
+for money. Money became, alas, a word like a firebrand between them,
+setting them both aflame with anger. But that is because we must talk
+in symbols. Winifred did not really care about money. She did not care
+whether he earned or did not earn anything. Only she knew she was
+dependent on her father for three-fourths of the money spent for
+herself and her children, that she let that be the _casus belli_, the
+drawn weapon between herself and Egbert.
+
+What did she want—what did she want? Her mother once said to her, with
+that characteristic touch of irony: “Well, dear, if it is your fate to
+consider the lilies, that toil not, neither do they spin, that is one
+destiny among many others, and perhaps not so unpleasant as most. Why
+do you take it amiss, my child?”
+
+The mother was subtler than her children, they very rarely knew how to
+answer her. So Winifred was only more confused. It was not a question
+of lilies. At least, if it were a question of lilies, then her children
+were the little blossoms. They at least _grew_. Doesn’t Jesus say:
+“Consider the lilies _how they grow_.” Good then, she had her growing
+babies. But as for that other tall, handsome flower of a father of
+theirs, he was full grown already, so she did not want to spend her
+life considering him in the flower of his days.
+
+No, it was not that he didn’t earn money. It was not that he was idle.
+He was _not_ idle. He was always doing something, always working away,
+down at Crockham, doing little jobs. But, oh dear, the little jobs—the
+garden paths—the gorgeous flowers—the chairs to mend, old chairs to
+mend!
+
+It was that he stood for nothing. If he had done something
+unsuccessfully, and _lost_ what money they had! If he had but striven
+with something. Nay, even if he had been wicked, a waster, she would
+have been more free. She would have had something to resist, at least.
+A waster stands for something, really. He says: “No, I will not aid and
+abet society in this business of increase and hanging together, I will
+upset the apple-cart as much as I can, in my small way.” Or else he
+says: “No, I will _not_ bother about others. If I have lusts, they are
+my own, and I prefer them to other people’s virtues.” So, a waster, a
+scamp, takes a sort of stand. He exposes himself to opposition and
+final castigation: at any rate in story-books.
+
+But Egbert! What are you to do with a man like Egbert? He had no vices.
+He was really kind, nay generous. And he was not weak. If he had been
+weak Winifred could have been kind to him. But he did not even give her
+that consolation. He was not weak, and he did not want her consolation
+or her kindness. No, thank you. He was of a fine passionate temper, and
+of a rarer steel than she. He knew it, and she knew it. Hence she was
+only the more baffled and maddened, poor thing. He, the higher, the
+finer, in his way the stronger, played with his garden, and his old
+folk-songs and Morris-dances, just played, and let her support the
+pillars of the future on her own heart.
+
+And he began to get bitter, and a wicked look began to come on his
+face. He did not give in to her; not he. There were seven devils inside
+his long, slim, white body. He was healthy, full of restrained life.
+Yes, even he himself had to lock up his own vivid life inside himself,
+now she would not take it from him. Or rather, now that she only took
+it occasionally. For she had to yield at times. She loved him so, she
+desired him so, he was so exquisite to her, the fine creature that he
+was, finer than herself. Yes, with a groan she had to give in to her
+own unquenched passion for him. And he came to her then—ah, terrible,
+ah, wonderful, sometimes she wondered how either of them could live
+after the terror of the passion that swept between them. It was to her
+as if pure lightning, flash after flash, went through every fibre of
+her, till extinction came.
+
+But it is the fate of human beings to live on. And it is the fate of
+clouds that seem nothing but bits of vapour slowly to pile up, to pile
+up and fill the heavens and blacken the sun entirely.
+
+So it was. The love came back, the lightning of passion flashed
+tremendously between them. And there was blue sky and gorgeousness for
+a little while. And then, as inevitably, as inevitably, slowly the
+clouds began to edge up again above the horizon, slowly, slowly to lurk
+about the heavens, throwing an occasional cold and hateful shadow:
+slowly, slowly to congregate, to fill the empyrean space.
+
+And as the years passed, the lightning cleared the sky more and more
+rarely, less and less the blue showed. Gradually the grey lid sank down
+upon them, as if it would be permanent.
+
+Why didn’t Egbert do something, then? Why didn’t he come to grips with
+life? Why wasn’t he like Winifred’s father, a pillar of society, even
+if a slender, exquisite column? Why didn’t he go into harness of some
+sort? Why didn’t he take _some_ direction?
+
+Well, you can bring an ass to the water, but you cannot make him drink.
+The world was the water and Egbert was the ass. And he wasn’t having
+any. He couldn’t: he just couldn’t. Since necessity did not force him
+to work for his bread and butter, he would not work for work’s sake.
+You can’t make the columbine flowers nod in January, nor make the
+cuckoo sing in England at Christmas. Why? It isn’t his season. He
+doesn’t want to. Nay, he _can’t_ want to.
+
+And there it was with Egbert. He couldn’t link up with the world’s
+work, because the basic desire was absent from him. Nay, at the bottom
+of him he had an even stronger desire: to hold aloof. To hold aloof. To
+do nobody any damage. But to hold aloof. It was not his season.
+
+Perhaps he should not have married and had children. But you can’t stop
+the waters flowing.
+
+Which held true for Winifred, too. She was not made to endure aloof.
+Her family tree was a robust vegetation that had to be stirring and
+believing. In one direction or another her life _had_ to go. In her own
+home she had known nothing of this diffidence which she found in
+Egbert, and which she could not understand, and which threw her into
+such dismay. What was she to do, what was she to do, in face of this
+terrible diffidence?
+
+It was all so different in her own home. Her father may have had his
+own misgivings, but he kept them to himself. Perhaps he had no very
+profound belief in this world of ours, this society which we have
+elaborated with so much effort, only to find ourselves elaborated to
+death at last. But Godfrey Marshall was of tough, rough fibre, not
+without a vein of healthy cunning through it all. It was for him a
+question of winning through, and leaving the rest to heaven. Without
+having many illusions to grace him, he still _did_ believe in heaven.
+In a dark and unquestioning way, he had a sort of faith: an acrid faith
+like the sap of some not-to-be-exterminated tree. Just a blind acrid
+faith as sap is blind and acrid, and yet pushes on in growth and in
+faith. Perhaps he was unscrupulous, but only as a striving tree is
+unscrupulous, pushing its single way in a jungle of others.
+
+In the end, it is only this robust, sap-like faith which keeps man
+going. He may live on for many generations inside the shelter of the
+social establishment which he has erected for himself, as pear-trees
+and currant bushes would go on bearing fruit for many seasons, inside a
+walled garden, even if the race of man were suddenly exterminated. But
+bit by bit the wall-fruit-trees would gradually pull down the very
+walls that sustained them. Bit by bit every establishment collapses,
+unless it is renewed or restored by living hands, all the while.
+
+Egbert could not bring himself to any more of this restoring or
+renewing business. He was not aware of the fact: but awareness doesn’t
+help much, anyhow. He just couldn’t. He had the stoic and epicurean
+quality of his old, fine breeding. His father-in-law, however, though
+he was not one bit more of a fool than Egbert, realised that since we
+are here we may as well live. And so he applied himself to his own tiny
+section of the social work, and to doing the best for his family, and
+to leaving the rest to the ultimate will of heaven. A certain
+robustness of blood made him able to go on. But sometimes even from him
+spurted a sudden gall of bitterness against the world and its make-up.
+And yet—he had his own will-to-succeed, and this carried him through.
+He refused to ask himself what the success would amount to. It amounted
+to the estate down in Hampshire, and his children lacking for nothing,
+and himself of some importance in the world: and _basta!_—Basta! Basta!
+
+Nevertheless do not let us imagine that he was a common pusher. He was
+not. He knew as well as Egbert what disillusion meant. Perhaps in his
+soul he had the same estimation of success. But he had a certain acrid
+courage, and a certain will-to-power. In his own small circle he would
+emanate power, the single power of his own blind self. With all his
+spoiling of his children, he was still the father of the old English
+type. He was too wise to make laws and to domineer in the abstract. But
+he had kept, and all honour to him, a certain primitive dominion over
+the souls of his children, the old, almost magic prestige of paternity.
+There it was, still burning in him, the old smoky torch or paternal
+godhead.
+
+And in the sacred glare of this torch his children had been brought up.
+He had given the girls every liberty, at last. But he had never really
+let them go beyond his power. And they, venturing out into the hard
+white light of our fatherless world, learned to see with the eyes of
+the world. They learned to criticize their father, even, from some
+effulgence of worldly white light, to see him as inferior. But this was
+all very well in the head. The moment they forgot their tricks of
+criticism, the old red glow of his authority came over them again. He
+was not to be quenched.
+
+Let the psychoanalysts talk about father complex. It is just a word
+invented. Here was a man who had kept alive the old red flame of
+fatherhood, fatherhood that had even the right to sacrifice the child
+to God, like Isaac. Fatherhood that had life-and-death authority over
+the children: a great natural power. And till his children could be
+brought under some other great authority as girls; or could arrive at
+manhood and become themselves centres of the same power, continuing the
+same male mystery as men; until such time, willy-nilly, Godfrey
+Marshall would keep his children.
+
+It had seemed as if he might lose Winifred. Winifred had _adored_ her
+husband, and looked up to him as to something wonderful. Perhaps she
+had expected in him another great authority, a male authority greater,
+finer than her father’s. For having once known the glow of male power,
+she would not easily turn to the cold white light of feminine
+independence. She would hunger, hunger all her life for the warmth and
+shelter of true male strength.
+
+And hunger she might, for Egbert’s power lay in the abnegation of
+power. He was himself the living negative of power. Even of
+responsibility. For the negation of power at last means the negation of
+responsibility. As far as these things went, he would confine himself
+to himself. He would try to confine his own _influence_ even to
+himself. He would try, as far as possible, to abstain from influencing
+his children by assuming any responsibility for them. “A little child
+shall lead them—” His child should lead, then. He would try not to make
+it go in any direction whatever. He would abstain from influencing it.
+Liberty!—
+
+Poor Winifred was like a fish out of water in this liberty, gasping for
+the denser element which should contain her. Till her child came. And
+then she knew that she must be responsible for it, that she must have
+authority over it.
+
+But here Egbert silently and negatively stepped in. Silently,
+negatively, but fatally he neutralized her authority over her children.
+
+There was a third little girl born. And after this Winifred wanted no
+more children. Her soul was turning to salt.
+
+So she had charge of the children, they were her responsibility. The
+money for them had come from her father. She would do her very best for
+them, and have command over their life and death. But no! Egbert would
+not take the responsibility. He would not even provide the money. But
+he would not let her have her way. Her dark, silent, passionate
+authority he would not allow. It was a battle between them, the battle
+between liberty and the old blood-power. And of course he won. The
+little girls loved him and adored him. “Daddy! Daddy!” They could do as
+they liked with him. Their mother would have ruled them. She would have
+ruled them passionately, with indulgence, with the old dark magic of
+parental authority, something looming and unquestioned and, after all,
+divine: if we believe in divine authority. The Marshalls did, being
+Catholic.
+
+And Egbert, he turned her old dark, Catholic blood-authority into a
+sort of tyranny. He would not leave her her children. He stole them
+from her, and yet without assuming responsibility for them. He stole
+them from her, in emotion and spirit, and left her only to command
+their behaviour. A thankless lot for a mother. And her children adored
+him, adored him, little knowing the empty bitterness they were
+preparing for themselves when they too grew up to have husbands:
+husbands such as Egbert, adorable and null.
+
+Joyce, the eldest, was still his favourite. She was now a quicksilver
+little thing of six years old. Barbara, the youngest, was a toddler of
+two years. They spent most of their time down at Crockham, because he
+wanted to be there. And even Winifred loved the place really. But now,
+in her frustrated and blinded state, it was full of menace for her
+children. The adders, the poison-berries, the brook, the marsh, the
+water that might not be pure—one thing and another. From mother and
+nurse it was a guerilla gunfire of commands, and blithe, quicksilver
+disobedience from the three blonde, never-still little girls. Behind
+the girls was the father, against mother and nurse. And so it was.
+
+“If you don’t come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where there
+are snakes.”
+
+“Joyce, you _must_ be patient. I’m just changing Annabel.”
+
+There you are. There it was: always the same. Working away on the
+common across the brook he heard it. And he worked on, just the same.
+
+Suddenly he heard a shriek, and he flung the spade from him and started
+for the bridge, looking up like a startled deer. Ah, there was
+Winifred—Joyce had hurt herself. He went on up the garden.
+
+“What is it?”
+
+The child was still screaming—now it was—“Daddy! Daddy! Oh—oh, Daddy!”
+And the mother was saying:
+
+“Don’t be frightened, darling. Let mother look.”
+
+But the child only cried:
+
+“Oh, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!”
+
+She was terrified by the sight of the blood running from her own knee.
+Winifred crouched down, with her child of six in her lap, to examine
+the knee. Egbert bent over also.
+
+“Don’t make such a noise, Joyce,” he said irritably. “How did she do
+it?”
+
+“She fell on that sickle thing which you left lying about after cutting
+the grass,” said Winifred, looking into his face with bitter accusation
+as he bent near.
+
+He had taken his handkerchief and tied it round the knee. Then he
+lifted the still sobbing child in his arms, and carried her into the
+house and upstairs to her bed. In his arms she became quiet. But his
+heart was burning with pain and with guilt. He had left the sickle
+there lying on the edge of the grass, and so his first-born child whom
+he loved so dearly had come to hurt. But then it was an accident—it was
+an accident. Why should he feel guilty? It would probably be nothing,
+better in two or three days. Why take it to heart, why worry? He put it
+aside.
+
+The child lay on the bed in her little summer frock, her face very
+white now after the shock, Nurse had come carrying the youngest child:
+and little Annabel stood holding her skirt. Winifred, terribly serious
+and wooden-seeming, was bending over the knee, from which she had taken
+his blood-soaked handkerchief. Egbert bent forward, too, keeping more
+_sang-froid_ in his face than in his heart. Winifred went all of a lump
+of seriousness, so he had to keep some reserve. The child moaned and
+whimpered.
+
+The knee was still bleeding profusely—it was a deep cut right in the
+joint.
+
+“You’d better go for the doctor, Egbert,” said Winifred bitterly.
+
+“Oh, no! Oh, no!” cried Joyce in a panic.
+
+“Joyce, my darling, don’t cry!” said Winifred, suddenly catching the
+little girl to her breast in a strange tragic anguish, the _Mater
+Dolorata_. Even the child was frightened into silence. Egbert looked at
+the tragic figure of his wife with the child at her breast, and turned
+away. Only Annabel started suddenly to cry: “Joycey, Joycey, don’t have
+your leg bleeding!”
+
+Egbert rode four miles to the village for the doctor. He could not help
+feeling that Winifred was laying it on rather. Surely the knee itself
+wasn’t hurt! Surely not. It was only a surface cut.
+
+The doctor was out. Egbert left the message and came cycling swiftly
+home, his heart pinched with anxiety. He dropped sweating off his
+bicycle and went into the house, looking rather small, like a man who
+is at fault. Winifred was upstairs sitting by Joyce, who was looking
+pale and important in bed, and was eating some tapioca pudding. The
+pale, small, scared face of his child went to Egbert’s heart.
+
+“Doctor Wing was out. He’ll be here about half past two,” said Egbert.
+
+“I don’t want him to come,” whimpered Joyce.
+
+“Joyce, dear, you must be patient and quiet,” said Winifred. “He won’t
+hurt you. But he will tell us what to do to make your knee better
+quickly. That is why he must come.”
+
+Winifred always explained carefully to her little girls: and it always
+took the words off their lips for the moment.
+
+“Does it bleed yet?” said Egbert.
+
+Winifred moved the bedclothes carefully aside.
+
+“I think not,” she said.
+
+Egbert stooped also to look.
+
+“No, it doesn’t,” she said. Then he stood up with a relieved look on
+his face. He turned to the child.
+
+“Eat your pudding, Joyce,” he said. “It won’t be anything. You’ve only
+got to keep still for a few days.”
+
+“You haven’t had your dinner, have you, Daddy?”
+
+“Not yet.”
+
+“Nurse will give it to you,” said Winifred.
+
+“You’ll be all right, Joyce,” he said, smiling to the child and pushing
+the blonde hair off her brow. She smiled back winsomely into his face.
+
+He went downstairs and ate his meal alone. Nurse served him. She liked
+waiting on him. All women liked him and liked to do things for him.
+
+The doctor came—a fat country practitioner, pleasant and kind.
+
+“What, little girl, been tumbling down, have you? There’s a thing to be
+doing, for a smart little lady like you! What! And cutting your knee!
+Tut-tut-tut! That _wasn’t_ clever of you, now was it? Never mind, never
+mind, soon be better. Let us look at it. Won’t hurt you. Not the least
+in life. Bring a bowl with a little warm water, nurse. Soon have it all
+right again, soon have it all right.”
+
+Joyce smiled at him with a pale smile of faint superiority. This was
+_not_ the way in which she was used to being talked to.
+
+He bent down, carefully looking at the little, thin, wounded knee of
+the child. Egbert bent over him.
+
+“Oh, dear, oh, dear! Quite a deep little cut. Nasty little cut. Nasty
+little cut. But, never mind. Never mind, little lady. We’ll soon have
+it better. Soon have it better, little lady. What’s your name?”
+
+“My name is Joyce,” said the child distinctly.
+
+“Oh, really!” he replied. “Oh, really! Well, that’s a fine name too, in
+my opinion. Joyce, eh?—And how old might Miss Joyce be? Can she tell me
+that?”
+
+“I’m six,” said the child, slightly amused and very condescending.
+
+“Six! There now. Add up and count as far as six, can you? Well, that’s
+a clever little girl, a clever little girl. And if she has to drink a
+spoonful of medicine, she won’t make a murmur, I’ll be bound. Not like
+_some_ little girls. What? Eh?”
+
+“I take it if mother wishes me to,” said Joyce.
+
+“Ah, there now! That’s the style! That’s what I like to hear from a
+little lady in bed because she’s cut her knee. That’s the style—”
+
+The comfortable and prolix doctor dressed and bandaged the knee and
+recommended bed and a light diet for the little lady. He thought a week
+or a fortnight would put it right. No bones or ligatures
+damaged—fortunately. Only a flesh cut. He would come again in a day or
+two.
+
+So Joyce was reassured and stayed in bed and had all her toys up. Her
+father often played with her. The doctor came the third day. He was
+fairly pleased with the knee. It was healing. It was healing—yes—yes.
+Let the child continue in bed. He came again after a day or two.
+Winifred was a trifle uneasy. The wound seemed to be healing on the
+top, but it hurt the child too much. It didn’t look quite right. She
+said so to Egbert.
+
+“Egbert, I’m sure Joyce’s knee isn’t healing properly.”
+
+“I think it is,” he said. “I think it’s all right.”
+
+“I’d rather Doctor Wing came again—I don’t feel satisfied.”
+
+“Aren’t you trying to imagine it worse than it really is?”
+
+“You would say so, of course. But I shall write a post-card to Doctor
+Wing now.”
+
+The doctor came next day. He examined the knee. Yes, there was
+inflammation. Yes, there _might_ be a little septic poisoning—there
+might. There might. Was the child feverish?
+
+So a fortnight passed by, and the child _was_ feverish, and the knee
+was more inflamed and grew worse and was painful, painful. She cried in
+the night, and her mother had to sit up with her. Egbert still insisted
+it was nothing, really—it would pass. But in his heart he was anxious.
+
+Winifred wrote again to her father. On Saturday the elderly man
+appeared. And no sooner did Winifred see the thick, rather short figure
+in its grey suit than a great yearning came over her.
+
+“Father, I’m not satisfied with Joyce. I’m not satisfied with Doctor
+Wing.”
+
+“Well, Winnie, dear, if you’re not satisfied we must have further
+advice, that is all.”
+
+The sturdy, powerful, elderly man went upstairs, his voice sounding
+rather grating through the house, as if it cut upon the tense
+atmosphere.
+
+“How are you, Joyce, darling?” he said to the child. “Does your knee
+hurt you? Does it hurt you, dear?”
+
+“It does sometimes.” The child was shy of him, cold towards him.
+
+“Well, dear, I’m sorry for that. I hope you try to bear it, and not
+trouble mother too much.”
+
+There was no answer. He looked at the knee. It was red and stiff.
+
+“Of course,” he said, “I think we must have another doctor’s opinion.
+And if we’re going to have it, we had better have it at once. Egbert,
+do you think you might cycle in to Bingham for Doctor Wayne? I found
+him very satisfactory for Winnie’s mother.”
+
+“I can go if you think it necessary,” said Egbert.
+
+“Certainly I think it necessary. Even if there _is_ nothing, we can
+have peace of mind. Certainly I think it necessary. I should like
+Doctor Wayne to come this evening if possible.”
+
+So Egbert set off on his bicycle through the wind, like a boy sent on
+an errand, leaving his father-in-law a pillar of assurance, with
+Winifred.
+
+Doctor Wayne came, and looked grave. Yes, the knee was certainly taking
+the wrong way. The child might be lame for life.
+
+Up went the fire and fear and anger in every heart. Doctor Wayne came
+again the next day for a proper examination. And, yes, the knee had
+really taken bad ways. It should be X-rayed. It was very important.
+
+Godfrey Marshall walked up and down the lane with the doctor, beside
+the standing motor-car: up and down, up and down in one of those
+consultations of which he had had so many in his life.
+
+As a result he came indoors to Winifred.
+
+“Well, Winnie, dear, the best thing to do is to take Joyce up to
+London, to a nursing home where she can have proper treatment. Of
+course this knee has been allowed to go wrong. And apparently there is
+a risk that the child may even lose her leg. What do you think, dear?
+You agree to our taking her up to town and putting her under the best
+care?”
+
+“Oh, father, you _know_ I would do anything on earth for her.”
+
+“I know you would, Winnie darling. The pity is that there has been this
+unfortunate delay already. I can’t think what Doctor Wing was doing.
+Apparently the child is in danger of losing her leg. Well then, if you
+will have everything ready, we will take her up to town tomorrow. I
+will order the large car from Denley’s to be here at ten. Egbert, will
+you take a telegram at once to Doctor Jackson? It is a small nursing
+home for children and for surgical cases, not far from Baker Street.
+I’m sure Joyce will be all right there.”
+
+“Oh, father, can’t I nurse her myself!”
+
+“Well, darling, if she is to have proper treatment, she had best be in
+a home. The X-ray treatment, and the electric treatment, and whatever
+is necessary.”
+
+“It will cost a great deal—” said Winifred.
+
+“We can’t think of cost, if the child’s leg is in danger—or even her
+life. No use speaking of cost,” said the elder man impatiently.
+
+And so it was. Poor Joyce, stretched out on a bed in the big closed
+motor-car—the mother sitting by her head, the grandfather in his short
+grey beard and a bowler hat, sitting by her feet, thick, and implacable
+in his responsibility—they rolled slowly away from Crockham, and from
+Egbert who stood there bareheaded and a little ignominious, left
+behind. He was to shut up the house and bring the rest of the family
+back to town, by train, the next day.
+
+Followed a dark and bitter time. The poor child. The poor, poor child,
+how she suffered, an agony and a long crucifixion in that nursing home.
+It was a bitter six weeks which changed the soul of Winifred for ever.
+As she sat by the bed of her poor, tortured little child, tortured with
+the agony of the knee, and the still worse agony of these diabolic, but
+perhaps necessary modern treatments, she felt her heart killed and
+going cold in her breast. Her little Joyce, her frail, brave,
+wonderful, little Joyce, frail and small and pale as a white flower!
+Ah, how had she, Winifred, dared to be so wicked, so wicked, so
+careless, so sensual.
+
+“Let my heart die! Let my woman’s heart of flesh die! Saviour, let my
+heart die. And save my child. Let my heart die from the world and from
+the flesh. Oh, destroy my heart that is so wayward. Let my heart of
+pride die. Let my heart die.”
+
+So she prayed beside the bed of her child. And like the Mother with the
+seven swords in her breast, slowly her heart of pride and passion died
+in her breast, bleeding away. Slowly it died, bleeding away, and she
+turned to the Church for comfort, to Jesus, to the Mother of God, but
+most of all, to that great and enduring institution, the Roman Catholic
+Church. She withdrew into the shadow of the Church. She was a mother
+with three children. But in her soul she died, her heart of pride and
+passion and desire bled to death, her soul belonged to her church, her
+body belonged to her duty as a mother.
+
+Her duty as a wife did not enter. As a wife she had no sense of duty:
+only a certain bitterness towards the man with whom she had known such
+sensuality and distraction. She was purely the _Mater Dolorata_. To the
+man she was closed as a tomb.
+
+Egbert came to see his child. But Winifred seemed to be always seated
+there, like the tomb of his manhood and his fatherhood. Poor Winifred:
+she was still young, still strong and ruddy and beautiful like a ruddy
+hard flower of the field. Strange—her ruddy, healthy face, so sombre,
+and her strong, heavy, full-blooded body, so still. She, a nun! Never.
+And yet the gates of her heart and soul had shut in his face with a
+slow, resonant clang, shutting him out for ever. There was no need for
+her to go into a convent. Her will had done it.
+
+And between this young mother and this young father lay the crippled
+child, like a bit of pale silk floss on the pillow, and a little white
+pain-quenched face. He could not bear it. He just could not bear it. He
+turned aside. There was nothing to do but to turn aside. He turned
+aside, and went hither and thither, desultory. He was still attractive
+and desirable. But there was a little frown between his brow as if he
+had been cleft there with a hatchet: cleft right in, for ever, and that
+was the stigma.
+
+The child’s leg was saved: but the knee was locked stiff. The fear now
+was lest the lower leg should wither, or cease to grow. There must be
+long-continued massage and treatment, daily treatment, even when the
+child left the nursing home. And the whole of the expense was borne by
+the grandfather.
+
+Egbert now had no real home. Winifred with the children and nurse was
+tied to the little flat in London. He could not live there: he could
+not contain himself. The cottage was shut-up—or lent to friends. He
+went down sometimes to work in his garden and keep the place in order.
+Then with the empty house around him at night, all the empty rooms, he
+felt his heart go wicked. The sense of frustration and futility, like
+some slow, torpid snake, slowly bit right through his heart. Futility,
+futility: the horrible marsh-poison went through his veins and killed
+him.
+
+As he worked in the garden in the silence of day he would listen for a
+sound. No sound. No sound of Winifred from the dark inside of the
+cottage: no sound of children’s voices from the air, from the common,
+from the near distance. No sound, nothing but the old dark
+marsh-venomous atmosphere of the place. So he worked spasmodically
+through the day, and at night made a fire and cooked some food alone.
+
+He was alone. He himself cleaned the cottage and made his bed. But his
+mending he did not do. His shirts were slit on the shoulders, when he
+had been working, and the white flesh showed through. He would feel the
+air and the spots of rain on his exposed flesh. And he would look again
+across the common, where the dark, tufted gorse was dying to seed, and
+the bits of cat-heather were coming pink in tufts, like a sprinkling of
+sacrificial blood.
+
+His heart went back to the savage old spirit of the place: the desire
+for old gods, old, lost passions, the passion of the cold-blooded,
+darting snakes that hissed and shot away from him, the mystery of
+blood-sacrifices, all the lost, intense sensations of the primeval
+people of the place, whose passions seethed in the air still, from
+those long days before the Romans came. The seethe of a lost, dark
+passion in the air. The presence of unseen snakes.
+
+A queer, baffled, half-wicked look came on his face. He could not stay
+long at the cottage. Suddenly he must swing on to his bicycle and
+go—anywhere. Anywhere, away from the place. He would stay a few days
+with his mother in the old home. His mother adored him and grieved as a
+mother would. But the little, baffled, half-wicked smile curled on his
+face, and he swung away from his mother’s solicitude as from everything
+else.
+
+Always moving on—from place to place, friend to friend: and always
+swinging away from sympathy. As soon as sympathy, like a soft hand, was
+reached out to touch him, away he swerved, instinctively, as a harmless
+snake swerves and swerves and swerves away from an outstretched hand.
+Away he must go. And periodically he went back to Winifred.
+
+He was terrible to her now, like a temptation. She had devoted herself
+to her children and her church. Joyce was once more on her feet; but,
+alas! lame, with iron supports to her leg, and a little crutch. It was
+strange how she had grown into a long, pallid, wild little thing.
+Strange that the pain had not made her soft and docile, but had brought
+out a wild, almost maenad temper in the child. She was seven, and long
+and white and thin, but by no means subdued. Her blonde hair was
+darkening. She still had long sufferings to face, and, in her own
+childish consciousness, the stigma of her lameness to bear.
+
+And she bore it. An almost maenad courage seemed to possess her, as if
+she were a long, thin, young weapon of life. She acknowledged all her
+mother’s care. She would stand by her mother for ever. But some of her
+father’s fine-tempered desperation flashed in her.
+
+When Egbert saw his little girl limping horribly—not only limping but
+lurching horribly in crippled, childish way, his heart again hardened
+with chagrin, like steel that is tempered again. There was a tacit
+understanding between him and his little girl: not what we would call
+love, but a weapon-like kinship. There was a tiny touch of irony in his
+manner towards her, contrasting sharply with Winifred’s heavy,
+unleavened solicitude and care. The child flickered back to him with an
+answering little smile of irony and recklessness: an odd flippancy
+which made Winifred only the more sombre and earnest.
+
+The Marshalls took endless thought and trouble for the child, searching
+out every means to save her limb and her active freedom. They spared no
+effort and no money, they spared no strength of will. With all their
+slow, heavy power of will they willed that Joyce should save her
+liberty of movement, should win back her wild, free grace. Even if it
+took a long time to recover, it should be recovered.
+
+So the situation stood. And Joyce submitted, week after week, month
+after month to the tyranny and pain of the treatment. She acknowledged
+the honourable effort on her behalf. But her flamy reckless spirit was
+her father’s. It was he who had all the glamour for her. He and she
+were like members of some forbidden secret society who know one another
+but may not recognise one another. Knowledge they had in common, the
+same secret of life, the father and the child. But the child stayed in
+the camp of her mother, honourably, and the father wandered outside
+like Ishmael, only coming sometimes to sit in the home for an hour or
+two, an evening or two beside the camp fire, like Ishmael, in a curious
+silence and tension, with the mocking answer of the desert speaking out
+of his silence, and annulling the whole convention of the domestic
+home.
+
+His presence was almost an anguish to Winifred. She prayed against it.
+That little cleft between his brow, that flickering, wicked, little
+smile that seemed to haunt his face, and above all, the triumphant
+loneliness, the Ishmael quality. And then the erectness of his supple
+body, like a symbol. The very way he stood, so quiet, so insidious,
+like an erect, supple symbol of life, the living body, confronting her
+downcast soul, was torture to her. He was like a supple living idol
+moving before her eyes, and she felt if she watched him she was damned.
+
+And he came and made himself at home in her little home. When he was
+there, moving in his own quiet way, she felt as if the whole great law
+of sacrifice, by which she had elected to live, were annulled. He
+annulled by his very presence the laws of her life. And what did he
+substitute? Ah, against that question she hardened herself in recoil.
+
+It was awful to her to have to have him about—moving about in his
+shirt-sleeves, speaking in his tenor, throaty voice to the children.
+Annabel simply adored him, and he teased the little girl. The baby,
+Barbara, was not sure of him. She had been born a stranger to him. But
+even the nurse, when she saw his white shoulder of flesh through the
+slits of his torn shirt, thought it a shame.
+
+Winifred felt it was only another weapon of his against her.
+
+“You have other shirts—why do you wear that old one that is all torn,
+Egbert?” she said.
+
+“I may as well wear it out,” he said subtly.
+
+He knew she would not offer to mend it for him. She _could_ not. And
+no, she would not. Had she not her own gods to honour? And could she
+betray them, submitting to his Baal and Ashtaroth? And it was terrible
+to her, his unsheathed presence, that seemed to annul her and her
+faith, like another revelation. Like a gleaming idol evoked against
+her, a vivid life-idol that might triumph.
+
+He came and he went—and she persisted. And then the great war broke
+out. He was a man who could not go to the dogs. He could not dissipate
+himself. He was pure-bred in his Englishness, and even when he would
+have killed to be vicious, he could not.
+
+So when the war broke out his whole instinct was against it: against
+war. He had not the faintest desire to overcome any foreigners or to
+help in their death. He had no conception of Imperial England, and Rule
+Britannia was just a joke to him. He was a pure-blooded Englishman,
+perfect in his race, and when he was truly himself he could no more
+have been aggressive on the score of his Englishness than a rose can be
+aggressive on the score of its rosiness.
+
+No, he had no desire to defy Germany and to exalt England. The
+distinction between German and English was not for him the distinction
+between good and bad. It was the distinction between blue water-flowers
+and red or white bush-blossoms: just difference. The difference between
+the wild boar and the wild bear. And a man was good or bad according to
+his nature, not according to his nationality.
+
+Egbert was well-bred, and this was part of his natural understanding.
+It was merely unnatural to him to hate a nation _en bloc_. Certain
+individuals he disliked, and others he liked, and the mass he knew
+nothing about. Certain deeds he disliked, certain deeds seemed natural
+to him, and about most deeds he had no particular feeling.
+
+He had, however, the one deepest pure-bred instinct. He recoiled
+inevitably from having his feelings dictated to him by the mass
+feeling. His feelings were his own, his understanding was his own, and
+he would never go back on either, willingly. Shall a man become
+inferior to his own true knowledge and self, just because the mob
+expects it of him?
+
+What Egbert felt subtly and without question, his father-in-law felt
+also in a rough, more combative way. Different as the two men were,
+they were two real Englishmen, and their instincts were almost the
+same.
+
+And Godfrey Marshall had the world to reckon with. There was German
+military aggression, and the English non-military idea of liberty and
+the “conquests of peace”—meaning industrialism. Even if the choice
+between militarism and industrialism were a choice of evils, the
+elderly man asserted his choice of the latter, perforce. He whose soul
+was quick with the instinct of power.
+
+Egbert just refused to reckon with the world. He just refused even to
+decide between German militarism and British industrialism. He chose
+neither. As for atrocities, he despised the people who committed them
+as inferior criminal types. There was nothing national about crime.
+
+And yet, war! War! Just war! Not right or wrong, but just war itself.
+Should he join? Should he give himself over to war? The question was in
+his mind for some weeks. Not because he thought England was right and
+Germany wrong. Probably Germany was wrong, but he refused to make a
+choice. Not because he felt inspired. No. But just—war.
+
+The deterrent was, the giving himself over into the power of other men,
+and into the power of the mob-spirit of a democratic army. Should he
+give himself over? Should he make over his own life and body to the
+control of something which he _knew_ was inferior, in spirit, to his
+own self? Should he commit himself into the power of an inferior
+control? Should he? Should he betray himself?
+
+He was going to put himself into the power of his inferiors, and he
+knew it. He was going to subjugate himself. He was going to be ordered
+about by petty _canaille_ of non-commissioned officers—and even
+commissioned officers. He who was born and bred free. Should he do it?
+
+He went to his wife, to speak to her.
+
+“Shall I join up, Winifred?”
+
+She was silent. Her instinct also was dead against it. And yet a
+certain profound resentment made her answer:
+
+“You have three children dependent on you. I don’t know whether you
+have thought of that.”
+
+It was still only the third month of the war, and the old pre-war ideas
+were still alive.
+
+“Of course. But it won’t make much difference to them. I shall be
+earning a shilling a day, at least.”
+
+“You’d better speak to father, I think,” she replied heavily.
+
+Egbert went to his father-in-law. The elderly man’s heart was full of
+resentment.
+
+“I should say,” he said rather sourly, “it is the best thing you could
+do.”
+
+Egbert went and joined up immediately, as a private soldier. He was
+drafted into the light artillery.
+
+Winifred now had a new duty towards him: the duty of a wife towards a
+husband who is himself performing his duty towards the world. She loved
+him still. She would always love him, as far as earthly love went. But
+it was duty she now lived by. When he came back to her in khaki, a
+soldier, she submitted to him as a wife. It was her duty. But to his
+passion she could never again fully submit. Something prevented her,
+for ever: even her own deepest choice.
+
+He went back again to camp. It did not suit him to be a modern soldier.
+In the thick, gritty, hideous khaki his subtle physique was
+extinguished as if he had been killed. In the ugly intimacy of the camp
+his thoroughbred sensibilities were just degraded. But he had chosen,
+so he accepted. An ugly little look came on to his face, of a man who
+has accepted his own degradation.
+
+In the early spring Winifred went down to Crockham to be there when
+primroses were out, and the tassels hanging on the hazel-bushes. She
+felt something like a reconciliation towards Egbert, now he was a
+prisoner in camp most of his days. Joyce was wild with delight at
+seeing the garden and the common again, after the eight or nine months
+of London and misery. She was still lame. She still had the irons up
+her leg. But she lurched about with a wild, crippled agility.
+
+Egbert came for a week-end, in his gritty, thick, sand-paper khaki and
+puttees and the hideous cap. Nay, he looked terrible. And on his face a
+slightly impure look, a little sore on his lip, as if he had eaten too
+much or drunk too much or let his blood become a little unclean. He was
+almost uglily healthy, with the camp life. It did not suit him.
+
+Winifred waited for him in a little passion of duty and sacrifice,
+willing to serve the soldier, if not the man. It only made him feel a
+little more ugly inside. The week-end was torment to him: the memory of
+the camp, the knowledge of the life he led there; even the sight of his
+own legs in that abhorrent khaki. He felt as if the hideous cloth went
+into his blood and made it gritty and dirty. Then Winifred so ready to
+serve the _soldier_, when she repudiated the man. And this made the
+grit worse between his teeth. And the children running around playing
+and calling in the rather mincing fashion of children who have nurses
+and governesses and literature in the family. And Joyce so lame! It had
+all become unreal to him, after the camp. It only set his soul on edge.
+He left at dawn on the Monday morning, glad to get back to the realness
+and vulgarity of the camp.
+
+Winifred would never meet him again at the cottage—only in London,
+where the world was with them. But sometimes he came alone to Crockham
+perhaps when friends were staying there. And then he would work awhile
+in his garden. This summer still it would flame with blue anchusas and
+big red poppies, the mulleins would sway their soft, downy erections in
+the air: he loved mulleins: and the honeysuckle would stream out scent
+like memory, when the owl was whooing. Then he sat by the fire with the
+friends and with Winifred’s sisters, and they sang the folk-songs. He
+put on thin civilian clothes and his charm and his beauty and the
+supple dominancy of his body glowed out again. But Winifred was not
+there.
+
+At the end of the summer he went to Flanders, into action. He seemed
+already to have gone out of life, beyond the pale of life. He hardly
+remembered his life any more, being like a man who is going to take a
+jump from a height, and is only looking to where he must land.
+
+He was twice slightly wounded, in two months. But not enough to put him
+off duty for more than a day or two. They were retiring again, holding
+the enemy back. He was in the rear—three machine-guns. The country was
+all pleasant, war had not yet trampled it. Only the air seemed
+shattered, and the land awaiting death. It was a small, unimportant
+action in which he was engaged.
+
+The guns were stationed on a little bushy hillock just outside a
+village. But occasionally, it was difficult to say from which
+direction, came the sharp crackle of rifle-fire, and beyond, the
+far-off thud of cannon. The afternoon was wintry and cold.
+
+A lieutenant stood on a little iron platform at the top of the ladders,
+taking the sights and giving the aim, calling in a high, tense,
+mechanical voice. Out of the sky came the sharp cry of the directions,
+then the warning numbers, then “Fire!” The shot went, the piston of the
+gun sprang back, there was a sharp explosion, and a very faint film of
+smoke in the air. Then the other two guns fired, and there was a lull.
+The officer was uncertain of the enemy’s position. The thick clump of
+horse-chestnut trees below was without change. Only in the far distance
+the sound of heavy firing continued, so far off as to give a sense of
+peace.
+
+The gorse bushes on either hand were dark, but a few sparks of flowers
+showed yellow. He noticed them almost unconsciously as he waited, in
+the lull. He was in his shirt-sleeves, and the air came chill on his
+arms. Again his shirt was slit on the shoulders, and the flesh showed
+through. He was dirty and unkempt. But his face was quiet. So many
+things go out of consciousness before we come to the end of
+consciousness.
+
+Before him, below, was the highroad, running between high banks of
+grass and gorse. He saw the whitish muddy tracks and deep scores in the
+road, where the part of the regiment had retired. Now all was still.
+Sounds that came, came from the outside. The place where he stood was
+still silent, chill, serene: the white church among the trees beyond
+seemed like a thought only.
+
+He moved into a lightning-like mechanical response at the sharp cry
+from the officer overhead. Mechanism, the pure mechanical action of
+obedience at the guns. Pure mechanical action at the guns. It left the
+soul unburdened, brooding in dark nakedness. In the end, the soul is
+alone, brooding on the face of the uncreated flux, as a bird on a dark
+sea.
+
+Nothing could be seen but the road, and a crucifix knocked slanting and
+the dark, autumnal fields and woods. There appeared three horsemen on a
+little eminence, very small, on the crest of a ploughed field. They
+were our own men. Of the enemy, nothing.
+
+The lull continued. Then suddenly came sharp orders, and a new
+direction of the guns, and an intense, exciting activity. Yet at the
+centre the soul remained dark and aloof, alone.
+
+But even so, it was the soul that heard the new sound: the new, deep
+“papp!” of a gun that seemed to touch right upon the soul. He kept up
+the rapid activity at the machine-gun, sweating. But in his soul was
+the echo of the new, deep sound, deeper than life.
+
+And in confirmation came the awful faint whistling of a shell,
+advancing almost suddenly into a piercing, tearing shriek that would
+tear through the membrane of life. He heard it in his ears, but he
+heard it also in his soul, in tension. There was relief when the thing
+had swung by and struck, away beyond. He heard the hoarseness of its
+explosion, and the voice of the soldier calling to the horses. But he
+did not turn round to look. He only noticed a twig of holly with red
+berries fall like a gift on to the road below.
+
+Not this time, not this time. Whither thou goest I will go. Did he say
+it to the shell, or to whom? Whither thou goest I will go. Then, the
+faint whistling of another shell dawned, and his blood became small and
+still to receive it. It drew nearer, like some horrible blast of wind;
+his blood lost consciousness. But in the second of suspension he saw
+the heavy shell swoop to earth, into the rocky bushes on the right, and
+earth and stones poured up into the sky. It was as if he heard no
+sound. The earth and stones and fragments of bush fell to earth again,
+and there was the same unchanging peace. The Germans had got the aim.
+
+Would they move now? Would they retire? Yes. The officer was giving the
+last lightning-rapid orders to fire before withdrawing. A shell passed
+unnoticed in the rapidity of action. And then, into the silence, into
+the suspense where the soul brooded, finally crashed a noise and a
+darkness and a moment’s flaming agony and horror. Ah, he had seen the
+dark bird flying towards him, flying home this time. In one instant
+life and eternity went up in a conflagration of agony, then there was a
+weight of darkness.
+
+When faintly something began to struggle in the darkness, a
+consciousness of himself, he was aware of a great load and a clanging
+sound. To have known the moment of death! And to be forced, before
+dying, to review it. So, fate, even in death.
+
+There was a resounding of pain. It seemed to sound from the outside of
+his consciousness: like a loud bell clanging very near. Yet he knew it
+was himself. He must associate himself with it. After a lapse and a new
+effort, he identified a pain in his head, a large pain that clanged and
+resounded. So far he could identify himself with himself. Then there
+was a lapse.
+
+After a time he seemed to wake up again, and waking, to know that he
+was at the front, and that he was killed. He did not open his eyes.
+Light was not yet his. The clanging pain in his head rang out the rest
+of his consciousness. So he lapsed away from consciousness, in
+unutterable sick abandon of life.
+
+Bit by bit, like a doom came the necessity to know. He was hit in the
+head. It was only a vague surmise at first. But in the swinging of the
+pendulum of pain, swinging ever nearer and nearer, to touch him into an
+agony of consciousness and a consciousness of agony, gradually the
+knowledge emerged—he must be hit in the head—hit on the left brow; if
+so, there would be blood—was there blood?—could he feel blood in his
+left eye? Then the clanging seemed to burst the membrane of his brain,
+like death-madness.
+
+Was there blood on his face? Was hot blood flowing? Or was it dry blood
+congealing down his cheek? It took him hours even to ask the question:
+time being no more than an agony in darkness, without measurement.
+
+A long time after he had opened his eyes he realised he was seeing
+something—something, something, but the effort to recall what was too
+great. No, no; no recall!
+
+Were they the stars in the dark sky? Was it possible it was stars in
+the dark sky? Stars? The world? Ah, no, he could not know it! Stars and
+the world were gone for him, he closed his eyes. No stars, no sky, no
+world. No, No! The thick darkness of blood alone. It should be one
+great lapse into the thick darkness of blood in agony.
+
+Death, oh, death! The world all blood, and the blood all writhing with
+death. The soul like the tiniest little light out on a dark sea, the
+sea of blood. And the light guttering, beating, pulsing in a windless
+storm, wishing it could go out, yet unable.
+
+There had been life. There had been Winifred and his children. But the
+frail death-agony effort to catch at straws of memory, straws of life
+from the past, brought on too great a nausea. No, No! No Winifred, no
+children. No world, no people. Better the agony of dissolution ahead
+than the nausea of the effort backwards. Better the terrible work
+should go forward, the dissolving into the black sea of death, in the
+extremity of dissolution, than that there should be any reaching back
+towards life. To forget! To forget! Utterly, utterly to forget, in the
+great forgetting of death. To break the core and the unit of life, and
+to lapse out on the great darkness. Only that. To break the clue, and
+mingle and commingle with the one darkness, without afterwards or
+forwards. Let the black sea of death itself solve the problem of
+futurity. Let the will of man break and give up.
+
+What was that? A light! A terrible light! Was it figures? Was it legs
+of a horse colossal—colossal above him: huge, huge?
+
+The Germans heard a slight noise, and started. Then, in the glare of a
+light-bomb, by the side of the heap of earth thrown up by the shell,
+they saw the dead face.
+
+
+
+
+TICKETS, PLEASE
+
+
+There is in the Midlands a single-line tramway system which boldly
+leaves the county town and plunges off into the black, industrial
+countryside, up hill and down dale, through the long ugly villages of
+workmen’s houses, over canals and railways, past churches perched high
+and nobly over the smoke and shadows, through stark, grimy cold little
+market-places, tilting away in a rush past cinemas and shops down to
+the hollow where the collieries are, then up again, past a little rural
+church, under the ash trees, on in a rush to the terminus, the last
+little ugly place of industry, the cold little town that shivers on the
+edge of the wild, gloomy country beyond. There the green and creamy
+coloured tram-car seems to pause and purr with curious satisfaction.
+But in a few minutes—the clock on the turret of the Co-operative
+Wholesale Society’s Shops gives the time—away it starts once more on
+the adventure. Again there are the reckless swoops downhill, bouncing
+the loops: again the chilly wait in the hill-top market-place: again
+the breathless slithering round the precipitous drop under the church:
+again the patient halts at the loops, waiting for the outcoming car: so
+on and on, for two long hours, till at last the city looms beyond the
+fat gas-works, the narrow factories draw near, we are in the sordid
+streets of the great town, once more we sidle to a standstill at our
+terminus, abashed by the great crimson and cream-coloured city cars,
+but still perky, jaunty, somewhat dare-devil, green as a jaunty sprig
+of parsley out of a black colliery garden.
+
+To ride on these cars is always an adventure. Since we are in war-time,
+the drivers are men unfit for active service: cripples and hunchbacks.
+So they have the spirit of the devil in them. The ride becomes a
+steeple-chase. Hurray! we have leapt in a clear jump over the canal
+bridges—now for the four-lane corner. With a shriek and a trail of
+sparks we are clear again. To be sure, a tram often leaps the rails—but
+what matter! It sits in a ditch till other trams come to haul it out.
+It is quite common for a car, packed with one solid mass of living
+people, to come to a dead halt in the midst of unbroken blackness, the
+heart of nowhere on a dark night, and for the driver and the girl
+conductor to call, “All get off—car’s on fire!” Instead, however, of
+rushing out in a panic, the passengers stolidly reply: “Get on—get on!
+We’re not coming out. We’re stopping where we are. Push on, George.” So
+till flames actually appear.
+
+The reason for this reluctance to dismount is that the nights are
+howlingly cold, black, and windswept, and a car is a haven of refuge.
+From village to village the miners travel, for a change of cinema, of
+girl, of pub. The trams are desperately packed. Who is going to risk
+himself in the black gulf outside, to wait perhaps an hour for another
+tram, then to see the forlorn notice “Depot Only,” because there is
+something wrong! Or to greet a unit of three bright cars all so tight
+with people that they sail past with a howl of derision. Trams that
+pass in the night.
+
+This, the most dangerous tram-service in England, as the authorities
+themselves declare, with pride, is entirely conducted by girls, and
+driven by rash young men, a little crippled, or by delicate young men,
+who creep forward in terror. The girls are fearless young hussies. In
+their ugly blue uniform, skirts up to their knees, shapeless old peaked
+caps on their heads, they have all the _sang-froid_ of an old
+non-commissioned officer. With a tram packed with howling colliers,
+roaring hymns downstairs and a sort of antiphony of obscenities
+upstairs, the lasses are perfectly at their ease. They pounce on the
+youths who try to evade their ticket-machine. They push off the men at
+the end of their distance. They are not going to be done in the eye—not
+they. They fear nobody—and everybody fears them.
+
+“Hello, Annie!”
+
+“Hello, Ted!”
+
+“Oh, mind my corn, Miss Stone. It’s my belief you’ve got a heart of
+stone, for you’ve trod on it again.”
+
+“You should keep it in your pocket,” replies Miss Stone, and she goes
+sturdily upstairs in her high boots.
+
+“Tickets, please.”
+
+She is peremptory, suspicious, and ready to hit first. She can hold her
+own against ten thousand. The step of that tram-car is her Thermopylæ.
+
+Therefore, there is a certain wild romance aboard these cars—and in the
+sturdy bosom of Annie herself. The time for soft romance is in the
+morning, between ten o’clock and one, when things are rather slack:
+that is, except market-day and Saturday. Thus Annie has time to look
+about her. Then she often hops off her car and into a shop where she
+has spied something, while the driver chats in the main road. There is
+very good feeling between the girls and the drivers. Are they not
+companions in peril, shipments aboard this careering vessel of a
+tram-car, for ever rocking on the waves of a stormy land?
+
+Then, also, during the easy hours, the inspectors are most in evidence.
+For some reason, everybody employed in this tram-service is young:
+there are no grey heads. It would not do. Therefore the inspectors are
+of the right age, and one, the chief, is also good-looking. See him
+stand on a wet, gloomy morning, in his long oil-skin, his peaked cap
+well down over his eyes, waiting to board a car. His face is ruddy, his
+small brown moustache is weathered, he has a faint impudent smile.
+Fairly tall and agile, even in his waterproof, he springs aboard a car
+and greets Annie.
+
+“Hello, Annie! Keeping the wet out?”
+
+“Trying to.”
+
+There are only two people in the car. Inspecting is soon over. Then for
+a long and impudent chat on the foot-board, a good, easy, twelve-mile
+chat.
+
+The inspector’s name is John Thomas Raynor—always called John Thomas,
+except sometimes, in malice, Coddy. His face sets in fury when he is
+addressed, from a distance, with this abbreviation. There is
+considerable scandal about John Thomas in half a dozen villages. He
+flirts with the girl conductors in the morning, and walks out with them
+in the dark night, when they leave their tram-car at the depôt. Of
+course, the girls quit the service frequently. Then he flirts and walks
+out with the newcomer: always providing she is sufficiently attractive,
+and that she will consent to walk. It is remarkable, however, that most
+of the girls are quite comely, they are all young, and this roving life
+aboard the car gives them a sailor’s dash and recklessness. What matter
+how they behave when the ship is in port. Tomorrow they will be aboard
+again.
+
+Annie, however, was something of a Tartar, and her sharp tongue had
+kept John Thomas at arm’s length for many months. Perhaps, therefore,
+she liked him all the more: for he always came up smiling, with
+impudence. She watched him vanquish one girl, then another. She could
+tell by the movement of his mouth and eyes, when he flirted with her in
+the morning, that he had been walking out with this lass, or the other,
+the night before. A fine cock-of-the-walk he was. She could sum him up
+pretty well.
+
+In this subtle antagonism they knew each other like old friends, they
+were as shrewd with one another almost as man and wife. But Annie had
+always kept him sufficiently at arm’s length. Besides, she had a boy of
+her own.
+
+The Statutes fair, however, came in November, at Bestwood. It happened
+that Annie had the Monday night off. It was a drizzling ugly night, yet
+she dressed herself up and went to the fair ground. She was alone, but
+she expected soon to find a pal of some sort.
+
+The roundabouts were veering round and grinding out their music, the
+side shows were making as much commotion as possible. In the cocoanut
+shies there were no cocoanuts, but artificial war-time substitutes,
+which the lads declared were fastened into the irons. There was a sad
+decline in brilliance and luxury. None the less, the ground was muddy
+as ever, there was the same crush, the press of faces lighted up by the
+flares and the electric lights, the same smell of naphtha and a few
+fried potatoes, and of electricity.
+
+Who should be the first to greet Miss Annie on the showground but John
+Thomas? He had a black overcoat buttoned up to his chin, and a tweed
+cap pulled down over his brows, his face between was ruddy and smiling
+and handy as ever. She knew so well the way his mouth moved.
+
+She was very glad to have a “boy”. To be at the Statutes without a
+fellow was no fun. Instantly, like the gallant he was, he took her on
+the dragons, grim-toothed, round-about switchbacks. It was not nearly
+so exciting as a tram-car actually. But, then, to be seated in a
+shaking, green dragon, uplifted above the sea of bubble faces,
+careering in a rickety fashion in the lower heavens, whilst John Thomas
+leaned over her, his cigarette in his mouth, was after all the right
+style. She was a plump, quick, alive little creature. So she was quite
+excited and happy.
+
+John Thomas made her stay on for the next round. And therefore she
+could hardly for shame repulse him when he put his arm round her and
+drew her a little nearer to him, in a very warm and cuddly manner.
+Besides, he was fairly discreet, he kept his movement as hidden as
+possible. She looked down, and saw that his red, clean hand was out of
+sight of the crowd. And they knew each other so well. So they warmed up
+to the fair.
+
+After the dragons they went on the horses. John Thomas paid each time,
+so she could but be complaisant. He, of course, sat astride on the
+outer horse—named “Black Bess”—and she sat sideways, towards him, on
+the inner horse—named “Wildfire”. But of course John Thomas was not
+going to sit discreetly on “Black Bess”, holding the brass bar. Round
+they spun and heaved, in the light. And round he swung on his wooden
+steed, flinging one leg across her mount, and perilously tipping up and
+down, across the space, half lying back, laughing at her. He was
+perfectly happy; she was afraid her hat was on one side, but she was
+excited.
+
+He threw quoits on a table, and won for her two large, pale-blue
+hat-pins. And then, hearing the noise of the cinemas, announcing
+another performance, they climbed the boards and went in.
+
+Of course, during these performances pitch darkness falls from time to
+time, when the machine goes wrong. Then there is a wild whooping, and a
+loud smacking of simulated kisses. In these moments John Thomas drew
+Annie towards him. After all, he had a wonderfully warm, cosy way of
+holding a girl with his arm, he seemed to make such a nice fit. And,
+after all, it was pleasant to be so held: so very comforting and cosy
+and nice. He leaned over her and she felt his breath on her hair; she
+knew he wanted to kiss her on the lips. And, after all, he was so warm
+and she fitted in to him so softly. After all, she wanted him to touch
+her lips.
+
+But the light sprang up; she also started electrically, and put her hat
+straight. He left his arm lying nonchalantly behind her. Well, it was
+fun, it was exciting to be at the Statutes with John Thomas.
+
+When the cinema was over they went for a walk across the dark, damp
+fields. He had all the arts of love-making. He was especially good at
+holding a girl, when he sat with her on a stile in the black, drizzling
+darkness. He seemed to be holding her in space, against his own warmth
+and gratification. And his kisses were soft and slow and searching.
+
+So Annie walked out with John Thomas, though she kept her own boy
+dangling in the distance. Some of the tram-girls chose to be huffy. But
+there, you must take things as you find them, in this life.
+
+There was no mistake about it, Annie liked John Thomas a good deal. She
+felt so rich and warm in herself whenever he was near. And John Thomas
+really liked Annie, more than usual. The soft, melting way in which she
+could flow into a fellow, as if she melted into his very bones, was
+something rare and good. He fully appreciated this.
+
+But with a developing acquaintance there began a developing intimacy.
+Annie wanted to consider him a person, a man; she wanted to take an
+intelligent interest in him, and to have an intelligent response. She
+did not want a mere nocturnal presence, which was what he was so far.
+And she prided herself that he could not leave her.
+
+Here she made a mistake. John Thomas intended to remain a nocturnal
+presence; he had no idea of becoming an all-round individual to her.
+When she started to take an intelligent interest in him and his life
+and his character, he sheered off. He hated intelligent interest. And
+he knew that the only way to stop it was to avoid it. The possessive
+female was aroused in Annie. So he left her.
+
+It is no use saying she was not surprised. She was at first startled,
+thrown out of her count. For she had been so _very_ sure of holding
+him. For a while she was staggered, and everything became uncertain to
+her. Then she wept with fury, indignation, desolation, and misery. Then
+she had a spasm of despair. And then, when he came, still impudently,
+on to her car, still familiar, but letting her see by the movement of
+his head that he had gone away to somebody else for the time being, and
+was enjoying pastures new, then she determined to have her own back.
+
+She had a very shrewd idea what girls John Thomas had taken out. She
+went to Nora Purdy. Nora was a tall, rather pale, but well-built girl,
+with beautiful yellow hair. She was rather secretive.
+
+“Hey!” said Annie, accosting her; then softly, “Who’s John Thomas on
+with now?”
+
+“I don’t know,” said Nora.
+
+“Why tha does,” said Annie, ironically lapsing into dialect. “Tha knows
+as well as I do.”
+
+“Well, I do, then,” said Nora. “It isn’t me, so don’t bother.”
+
+“It’s Cissy Meakin, isn’t it?”
+
+“It is, for all I know.”
+
+“Hasn’t he got a face on him!” said Annie. “I don’t half like his
+cheek. I could knock him off the foot-board when he comes round at me.”
+
+“He’ll get dropped-on one of these days,” said Nora.
+
+“Ay, he will, when somebody makes up their mind to drop it on him. I
+should like to see him taken down a peg or two, shouldn’t you?”
+
+“I shouldn’t mind,” said Nora.
+
+“You’ve got quite as much cause to as I have,” said Annie. “But we’ll
+drop on him one of these days, my girl. What? Don’t you want to?”
+
+“I don’t mind,” said Nora.
+
+But as a matter of fact, Nora was much more vindictive than Annie.
+
+One by one Annie went the round of the old flames. It so happened that
+Cissy Meakin left the tramway service in quite a short time. Her mother
+made her leave. Then John Thomas was on the _qui-vive_. He cast his
+eyes over his old flock. And his eyes lighted on Annie. He thought she
+would be safe now. Besides, he liked her.
+
+She arranged to walk home with him on Sunday night. It so happened that
+her car would be in the depôt at half past nine: the last car would
+come in at 10.15. So John Thomas was to wait for her there.
+
+At the depôt the girls had a little waiting-room of their own. It was
+quite rough, but cosy, with a fire and an oven and a mirror, and table
+and wooden chairs. The half dozen girls who knew John Thomas only too
+well had arranged to take service this Sunday afternoon. So, as the
+cars began to come in, early, the girls dropped into the waiting-room.
+And instead of hurrying off home, they sat around the fire and had a
+cup of tea. Outside was the darkness and lawlessness of war-time.
+
+John Thomas came on the car after Annie, at about a quarter to ten. He
+poked his head easily into the girls’ waiting-room.
+
+“Prayer-meeting?” he asked.
+
+“Ay,” said Laura Sharp. “Ladies only.”
+
+“That’s me!” said John Thomas. It was one of his favourite
+exclamations.
+
+“Shut the door, boy,” said Muriel Baggaley.
+
+“On which side of me?” said John Thomas.
+
+“Which tha likes,” said Polly Birkin.
+
+He had come in and closed the door behind him. The girls moved in their
+circle, to make a place for him near the fire. He took off his
+great-coat and pushed back his hat.
+
+“Who handles the teapot?” he said.
+
+Nora Purdy silently poured him out a cup of tea.
+
+“Want a bit o’ my bread and drippin’?” said Muriel Baggaley to him.
+
+“Ay, give us a bit.”
+
+And he began to eat his piece of bread.
+
+“There’s no place like home, girls,” he said.
+
+They all looked at him as he uttered this piece of impudence. He seemed
+to be sunning himself in the presence of so many damsels.
+
+“Especially if you’re not afraid to go home in the dark,” said Laura
+Sharp.
+
+“Me! By myself I am.”
+
+They sat till they heard the last tram come in. In a few minutes Emma
+Houselay entered.
+
+“Come on, my old duck!” cried Polly Birkin.
+
+“It _is_ perishing,” said Emma, holding her fingers to the fire.
+
+“But—I’m afraid to, go home in, the dark,” sang Laura Sharp, the tune
+having got into her mind.
+
+“Who’re you going with tonight, John Thomas?” asked Muriel Baggaley,
+coolly.
+
+“Tonight?” said John Thomas. “Oh, I’m going home by myself tonight—all
+on my lonely-O.”
+
+“That’s me!” said Nora Purdy, using his own ejaculation.
+
+The girls laughed shrilly.
+
+“Me as well, Nora,” said John Thomas.
+
+“Don’t know what you mean,” said Laura.
+
+“Yes, I’m toddling,” said he, rising and reaching for his overcoat.
+
+“Nay,” said Polly. “We’re all here waiting for you.”
+
+“We’ve got to be up in good time in the morning,” he said, in the
+benevolent official manner.
+
+They all laughed.
+
+“Nay,” said Muriel. “Don’t leave us all lonely, John Thomas. Take one!”
+
+“I’ll take the lot, if you like,” he responded gallantly.
+
+“That you won’t either,” said Muriel, “Two’s company; seven’s too much
+of a good thing.”
+
+“Nay—take one,” said Laura. “Fair and square, all above board, and say
+which.”
+
+“Ay,” cried Annie, speaking for the first time. “Pick, John Thomas;
+let’s hear thee.”
+
+“Nay,” he said. “I’m going home quiet tonight. Feeling good, for once.”
+
+“Whereabouts?” said Annie. “Take a good un, then. But tha’s got to take
+one of us!”
+
+“Nay, how can I take one,” he said, laughing uneasily. “I don’t want to
+make enemies.”
+
+“You’d only make _one_,” said Annie.
+
+“The chosen _one_,” added Laura.
+
+“Oh, my! Who said girls!” exclaimed John Thomas, again turning, as if
+to escape. “Well—good-night.”
+
+“Nay, you’ve got to make your pick,” said Muriel. “Turn your face to
+the wall, and say which one touches you. Go on—we shall only just touch
+your back—one of us. Go on—turn your face to the wall, and don’t look,
+and say which one touches you.”
+
+He was uneasy, mistrusting them. Yet he had not the courage to break
+away. They pushed him to a wall and stood him there with his face to
+it. Behind his back they all grimaced, tittering. He looked so comical.
+He looked around uneasily.
+
+“Go on!” he cried.
+
+“You’re looking—you’re looking!” they shouted.
+
+He turned his head away. And suddenly, with a movement like a swift
+cat, Annie went forward and fetched him a box on the side of the head
+that sent his cap flying and himself staggering. He started round.
+
+But at Annie’s signal they all flew at him, slapping him, pinching him,
+pulling his hair, though more in fun than in spite or anger. He,
+however, saw red. His blue eyes flamed with strange fear as well as
+fury, and he butted through the girls to the door. It was locked. He
+wrenched at it. Roused, alert, the girls stood round and looked at him.
+He faced them, at bay. At that moment they were rather horrifying to
+him, as they stood in their short uniforms. He was distinctly afraid.
+
+“Come on, John Thomas! Come on! Choose!” said Annie.
+
+“What are you after? Open the door,” he said.
+
+“We shan’t—not till you’ve chosen!” said Muriel.
+
+“Chosen what?” he said.
+
+“Chosen the one you’re going to marry,” she replied.
+
+He hesitated a moment.
+
+“Open the blasted door,” he said, “and get back to your senses.” He
+spoke with official authority.
+
+“You’ve got to choose!” cried the girls.
+
+“Come on!” cried Annie, looking him in the eye.” Come on! Come on!”
+
+He went forward, rather vaguely. She had taken off her belt, and
+swinging it, she fetched him a sharp blow over the head with the buckle
+end. He sprang and seized her. But immediately the other girls rushed
+upon him, pulling and tearing and beating him. Their blood was now
+thoroughly up. He was their sport now. They were going to have their
+own back, out of him. Strange, wild creatures, they hung on him and
+rushed at him to bear him down. His tunic was torn right up the back,
+Nora had hold at the back of his collar, and was actually strangling
+him. Luckily the button burst. He struggled in a wild frenzy of fury
+and terror, almost mad terror. His tunic was simply torn off his back,
+his shirt-sleeves were torn away, his arms were naked. The girls rushed
+at him, clenched their hands on him and pulled at him: or they rushed
+at him and pushed him, butted him with all their might: or they struck
+him wild blows. He ducked and cringed and struck sideways. They became
+more intense.
+
+At last he was down. They rushed on him, kneeling on him. He had
+neither breath nor strength to move. His face was bleeding with a long
+scratch, his brow was bruised.
+
+Annie knelt on him, the other girls knelt and hung on to him. Their
+faces were flushed, their hair wild, their eyes were all glittering
+strangely. He lay at last quite still, with face averted, as an animal
+lies when it is defeated and at the mercy of the captor. Sometimes his
+eye glanced back at the wild faces of the girls. His breast rose
+heavily, his wrists were torn.
+
+“Now, then, my fellow!” gasped Annie at length. “Now then—now—”
+
+At the sound of her terrifying, cold triumph, he suddenly started to
+struggle as an animal might, but the girls threw themselves upon him
+with unnatural strength and power, forcing him down.
+
+“Yes—now, then!” gasped Annie at length.
+
+And there was a dead silence, in which the thud of heart-beating was to
+be heard. It was a suspense of pure silence in every soul.
+
+“Now you know where you are,” said Annie.
+
+The sight of his white, bare arm maddened the girls. He lay in a kind
+of trance of fear and antagonism. They felt themselves filled with
+supernatural strength.
+
+Suddenly Polly started to laugh—to giggle wildly—helplessly—and Emma
+and Muriel joined in. But Annie and Nora and Laura remained the same,
+tense, watchful, with gleaming eyes. He winced away from these eyes.
+
+“Yes,” said Annie, in a curious low tone, secret and deadly. “Yes!
+You’ve got it now! You know what you’ve done, don’t you? You know what
+you’ve done.”
+
+He made no sound nor sign, but lay with bright, averted eyes, and
+averted, bleeding face.
+
+“You ought to be _killed_, that’s what you ought,” said Annie, tensely.
+“You ought to be _killed_.” And there was a terrifying lust in her
+voice.
+
+Polly was ceasing to laugh, and giving long-drawn Oh-h-hs and sighs as
+she came to herself.
+
+“He’s got to choose,” she said vaguely.
+
+“Oh, yes, he has,” said Laura, with vindictive decision.
+
+“Do you hear—do you hear?” said Annie. And with a sharp movement, that
+made him wince, she turned his face to her.
+
+“Do you hear?” she repeated, shaking him.
+
+But he was quite dumb. She fetched him a sharp slap on the face. He
+started, and his eyes widened. Then his face darkened with defiance,
+after all.
+
+“Do you hear?” she repeated.
+
+He only looked at her with hostile eyes.
+
+“Speak!” she said, putting her face devilishly near his.
+
+“What?” he said, almost overcome.
+
+“You’ve got to _choose!_” she cried, as if it were some terrible
+menace, and as if it hurt her that she could not exact more.
+
+“What?” he said, in fear.
+
+“Choose your girl, Coddy. You’ve got to choose her now. And you’ll get
+your neck broken if you play any more of your tricks, my boy. You’re
+settled now.”
+
+There was a pause. Again he averted his face. He was cunning in his
+overthrow. He did not give in to them really—no, not if they tore him
+to bits.
+
+“All right, then,” he said, “I choose Annie.” His voice was strange and
+full of malice. Annie let go of him as if he had been a hot coal.
+
+“He’s chosen Annie!” said the girls in chorus.
+
+“Me!” cried Annie. She was still kneeling, but away from him. He was
+still lying prostrate, with averted face. The girls grouped uneasily
+around.
+
+“Me!” repeated Annie, with a terrible bitter accent.
+
+Then she got up, drawing away from him with strange disgust and
+bitterness.
+
+“I wouldn’t touch him,” she said.
+
+But her face quivered with a kind of agony, she seemed as if she would
+fall. The other girls turned aside. He remained lying on the floor,
+with his torn clothes and bleeding, averted face.
+
+“Oh, if he’s chosen—” said Polly.
+
+“I don’t want him—he can choose again,” said Annie, with the same
+rather bitter hopelessness.
+
+“Get up,” said Polly, lifting his shoulder. “Get up.”
+
+He rose slowly, a strange, ragged, dazed creature. The girls eyed him
+from a distance, curiously, furtively, dangerously.
+
+“Who wants him?” cried Laura, roughly.
+
+“Nobody,” they answered, with contempt. Yet each one of them waited for
+him to look at her, hoped he would look at her. All except Annie, and
+something was broken in her.
+
+He, however, kept his face closed and averted from them all. There was
+a silence of the end. He picked up the torn pieces of his tunic,
+without knowing what to do with them. The girls stood about uneasily,
+flushed, panting, tidying their hair and their dress unconsciously, and
+watching him. He looked at none of them. He espied his cap in a corner,
+and went and picked it up. He put it on his head, and one of the girls
+burst into a shrill, hysteric laugh at the sight he presented. He,
+however, took no heed, but went straight to where his overcoat hung on
+a peg. The girls moved away from contact with him as if he had been an
+electric wire. He put on his coat and buttoned it down. Then he rolled
+his tunic-rags into a bundle, and stood before the locked door, dumbly.
+
+“Open the door, somebody,” said Laura.
+
+“Annie’s got the key,” said one.
+
+Annie silently offered the key to the girls. Nora unlocked the door.
+
+“Tit for tat, old man,” she said. “Show yourself a man, and don’t bear
+a grudge.”
+
+But without a word or sign he had opened the door and gone, his face
+closed, his head dropped.
+
+“That’ll learn him,” said Laura.
+
+“Coddy!” said Nora.
+
+“Shut up, for God’s sake!” cried Annie fiercely, as if in torture.
+
+“Well, I’m about ready to go, Polly. Look sharp!” said Muriel.
+
+The girls were all anxious to be off. They were tidying themselves
+hurriedly, with mute, stupefied faces.
+
+
+
+
+THE BLIND MAN
+
+
+Isabel Pervin was listening for two sounds—for the sound of wheels on
+the drive outside and for the noise of her husband’s footsteps in the
+hall. Her dearest and oldest friend, a man who seemed almost
+indispensable to her living, would drive up in the rainy dusk of the
+closing November day. The trap had gone to fetch him from the station.
+And her husband, who had been blinded in Flanders, and who had a
+disfiguring mark on his brow, would be coming in from the outhouses.
+
+He had been home for a year now. He was totally blind. Yet they had
+been very happy. The Grange was Maurice’s own place. The back was a
+farmstead, and the Wernhams, who occupied the rear premises, acted as
+farmers. Isabel lived with her husband in the handsome rooms in front.
+She and he had been almost entirely alone together since he was
+wounded. They talked and sang and read together in a wonderful and
+unspeakable intimacy. Then she reviewed books for a Scottish newspaper,
+carrying on her old interest, and he occupied himself a good deal with
+the farm. Sightless, he could still discuss everything with Wernham,
+and he could also do a good deal of work about the place—menial work,
+it is true, but it gave him satisfaction. He milked the cows, carried
+in the pails, turned the separator, attended to the pigs and horses.
+Life was still very full and strangely serene for the blind man,
+peaceful with the almost incomprehensible peace of immediate contact in
+darkness. With his wife he had a whole world, rich and real and
+invisible.
+
+They were newly and remotely happy. He did not even regret the loss of
+his sight in these times of dark, palpable joy. A certain exultance
+swelled his soul.
+
+But as time wore on, sometimes the rich glamour would leave them.
+Sometimes, after months of this intensity, a sense of burden overcame
+Isabel, a weariness, a terrible _ennui_, in that silent house
+approached between a colonnade of tall-shafted pines. Then she felt she
+would go mad, for she could not bear it. And sometimes he had
+devastating fits of depression, which seemed to lay waste his whole
+being. It was worse than depression—a black misery, when his own life
+was a torture to him, and when his presence was unbearable to his wife.
+The dread went down to the roots of her soul as these black days
+recurred. In a kind of panic she tried to wrap herself up still further
+in her husband. She forced the old spontaneous cheerfulness and joy to
+continue. But the effort it cost her was almost too much. She knew she
+could not keep it up. She felt she would scream with the strain, and
+would give anything, anything, to escape. She longed to possess her
+husband utterly; it gave her inordinate joy to have him entirely to
+herself. And yet, when again he was gone in a black and massive misery,
+she could not bear him, she could not bear herself; she wished she
+could be snatched away off the earth altogether, anything rather than
+live at this cost.
+
+Dazed, she schemed for a way out. She invited friends, she tried to
+give him some further connexion with the outer world. But it was no
+good. After all their joy and suffering, after their dark, great year
+of blindness and solitude and unspeakable nearness, other people seemed
+to them both shallow, prattling, rather impertinent. Shallow prattle
+seemed presumptuous. He became impatient and irritated, she was
+wearied. And so they lapsed into their solitude again. For they
+preferred it.
+
+But now, in a few weeks’ time, her second baby would be born. The first
+had died, an infant, when her husband first went out to France. She
+looked with joy and relief to the coming of the second. It would be her
+salvation. But also she felt some anxiety. She was thirty years old,
+her husband was a year younger. They both wanted the child very much.
+Yet she could not help feeling afraid. She had her husband on her
+hands, a terrible joy to her, and a terrifying burden. The child would
+occupy her love and attention. And then, what of Maurice? What would he
+do? If only she could feel that he, too, would be at peace and happy
+when the child came! She did so want to luxuriate in a rich, physical
+satisfaction of maternity. But the man, what would he do? How could she
+provide for him, how avert those shattering black moods of his, which
+destroyed them both?
+
+She sighed with fear. But at this time Bertie Reid wrote to Isabel. He
+was her old friend, a second or third cousin, a Scotchman, as she was a
+Scotchwoman. They had been brought up near to one another, and all her
+life he had been her friend, like a brother, but better than her own
+brothers. She loved him—though not in the marrying sense. There was a
+sort of kinship between them, an affinity. They understood one another
+instinctively. But Isabel would never have thought of marrying Bertie.
+It would have seemed like marrying in her own family.
+
+Bertie was a barrister and a man of letters, a Scotchman of the
+intellectual type, quick, ironical, sentimental, and on his knees
+before the woman he adored but did not want to marry. Maurice Pervin
+was different. He came of a good old country family—the Grange was not
+a very great distance from Oxford. He was passionate, sensitive,
+perhaps over-sensitive, wincing—a big fellow with heavy limbs and a
+forehead that flushed painfully. For his mind was slow, as if drugged
+by the strong provincial blood that beat in his veins. He was very
+sensitive to his own mental slowness, his feelings being quick and
+acute. So that he was just the opposite to Bertie, whose mind was much
+quicker than his emotions, which were not so very fine.
+
+From the first the two men did not like each other. Isabel felt that
+they _ought_ to get on together. But they did not. She felt that if
+only each could have the clue to the other there would be such a rare
+understanding between them. It did not come off, however. Bertie
+adopted a slightly ironical attitude, very offensive to Maurice, who
+returned the Scotch irony with English resentment, a resentment which
+deepened sometimes into stupid hatred.
+
+This was a little puzzling to Isabel. However, she accepted it in the
+course of things. Men were made freakish and unreasonable. Therefore,
+when Maurice was going out to France for the second time, she felt
+that, for her husband’s sake, she must discontinue her friendship with
+Bertie. She wrote to the barrister to this effect. Bertram Reid simply
+replied that in this, as in all other matters, he must obey her wishes,
+if these were indeed her wishes.
+
+For nearly two years nothing had passed between the two friends. Isabel
+rather gloried in the fact; she had no compunction. She had one great
+article of faith, which was, that husband and wife should be so
+important to one another, that the rest of the world simply did not
+count. She and Maurice were husband and wife. They loved one another.
+They would have children. Then let everybody and everything else fade
+into insignificance outside this connubial felicity. She professed
+herself quite happy and ready to receive Maurice’s friends. She was
+happy and ready: the happy wife, the ready woman in possession. Without
+knowing why, the friends retired abashed and came no more. Maurice, of
+course, took as much satisfaction in this connubial absorption as
+Isabel did.
+
+He shared in Isabel’s literary activities, she cultivated a real
+interest in agriculture and cattle-raising. For she, being at heart
+perhaps an emotional enthusiast, always cultivated the practical side
+of life, and prided herself on her mastery of practical affairs. Thus
+the husband and wife had spent the five years of their married life.
+The last had been one of blindness and unspeakable intimacy. And now
+Isabel felt a great indifference coming over her, a sort of lethargy.
+She wanted to be allowed to bear her child in peace, to nod by the fire
+and drift vaguely, physically, from day to day. Maurice was like an
+ominous thunder-cloud. She had to keep waking up to remember him.
+
+When a little note came from Bertie, asking if he were to put up a
+tombstone to their dead friendship, and speaking of the real pain he
+felt on account of her husband’s loss of sight, she felt a pang, a
+fluttering agitation of re-awakening. And she read the letter to
+Maurice.
+
+“Ask him to come down,” he said.
+
+“Ask Bertie to come here!” she re-echoed.
+
+“Yes—if he wants to.”
+
+Isabel paused for a few moments.
+
+“I know he wants to—he’d only be too glad,” she replied. “But what
+about you, Maurice? How would you like it?”
+
+“I should like it.”
+
+“Well—in that case—— But I thought you didn’t care for him—”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. I might think differently of him now,” the blind man
+replied. It was rather abstruse to Isabel.
+
+“Well, dear,” she said, “if you’re quite sure—”
+
+“I’m sure enough. Let him come,” said Maurice.
+
+So Bertie was coming, coming this evening, in the November rain and
+darkness. Isabel was agitated, racked with her old restlessness and
+indecision. She had always suffered from this pain of doubt, just an
+agonizing sense of uncertainty. It had begun to pass off, in the
+lethargy of maternity. Now it returned, and she resented it. She
+struggled as usual to maintain her calm, composed, friendly bearing, a
+sort of mask she wore over all her body.
+
+A woman had lighted a tall lamp beside the table, and spread the cloth.
+The long dining-room was dim, with its elegant but rather severe pieces
+of old furniture. Only the round table glowed softly under the light.
+It had a rich, beautiful effect. The white cloth glistened and dropped
+its heavy, pointed lace corners almost to the carpet, the china was old
+and handsome, creamy-yellow, with a blotched pattern of harsh red and
+deep blue, the cups large and bell-shaped, the teapot gallant. Isabel
+looked at it with superficial appreciation.
+
+Her nerves were hurting her. She looked automatically again at the
+high, uncurtained windows. In the last dusk she could just perceive
+outside a huge fir-tree swaying its boughs: it was as if she thought it
+rather than saw it. The rain came flying on the window panes. Ah, why
+had she no peace? These two men, why did they tear at her? Why did they
+not come—why was there this suspense?
+
+She sat in a lassitude that was really suspense and irritation.
+Maurice, at least, might come in—there was nothing to keep him out. She
+rose to her feet. Catching sight of her reflection in a mirror, she
+glanced at herself with a slight smile of recognition, as if she were
+an old friend to herself. Her face was oval and calm, her nose a little
+arched. Her neck made a beautiful line down to her shoulder. With hair
+knotted loosely behind, she had something of a warm, maternal look.
+Thinking this of herself, she arched her eyebrows and her rather heavy
+eyelids, with a little flicker of a smile, and for a moment her grey
+eyes looked amused and wicked, a little sardonic, out of her
+transfigured Madonna face.
+
+Then, resuming her air of womanly patience—she was really fatally
+self-determined—she went with a little jerk towards the door. Her eyes
+were slightly reddened.
+
+She passed down the wide hall, and through a door at the end. Then she
+was in the farm premises. The scent of dairy, and of farm-kitchen, and
+of farm-yard and of leather almost overcame her: but particularly the
+scent of dairy. They had been scalding out the pans. The flagged
+passage in front of her was dark, puddled and wet. Light came out from
+the open kitchen door. She went forward and stood in the doorway. The
+farm-people were at tea, seated at a little distance from her, round a
+long, narrow table, in the centre of which stood a white lamp. Ruddy
+faces, ruddy hands holding food, red mouths working, heads bent over
+the tea-cups: men, land-girls, boys: it was tea-time, feeding-time.
+Some faces caught sight of her. Mrs. Wernham, going round behind the
+chairs with a large black teapot, halting slightly in her walk, was not
+aware of her for a moment. Then she turned suddenly.
+
+“Oh, is it Madam!” she exclaimed. “Come in, then, come in! We’re at
+tea.” And she dragged forward a chair.
+
+“No, I won’t come in,” said Isabel, “I’m afraid I interrupt your meal.”
+
+“No—no—not likely, Madam, not likely.”
+
+“Hasn’t Mr. Pervin come in, do you know?”
+
+“I’m sure I couldn’t say! Missed him, have you, Madam?”
+
+“No, I only wanted him to come in,” laughed Isabel, as if shyly.
+
+“Wanted him, did ye? Get you, boy—get up, now—”
+
+Mrs. Wernham knocked one of the boys on the shoulder. He began to
+scrape to his feet, chewing largely.
+
+“I believe he’s in top stable,” said another face from the table.
+
+“Ah! No, don’t get up. I’m going myself,” said Isabel.
+
+“Don’t you go out of a dirty night like this. Let the lad go. Get along
+wi’ ye, boy,” said Mrs. Wernham.
+
+“No, no,” said Isabel, with a decision that was always obeyed. “Go on
+with your tea, Tom. I’d like to go across to the stable, Mrs. Wernham.”
+
+“Did ever you hear tell!” exclaimed the woman.
+
+“Isn’t the trap late?” asked Isabel.
+
+“Why, no,” said Mrs. Wernham, peering into the distance at the tall,
+dim clock. “No, Madam—we can give it another quarter or twenty minutes
+yet, good—yes, every bit of a quarter.”
+
+“Ah! It seems late when darkness falls so early,” said Isabel.
+
+“It do, that it do. Bother the days, that they draw in so,” answered
+Mrs. Wernham. “Proper miserable!”
+
+“They are,” said Isabel, withdrawing.
+
+She pulled on her overshoes, wrapped a large tartan shawl around her,
+put on a man’s felt hat, and ventured out along the causeways of the
+first yard. It was very dark. The wind was roaring in the great elms
+behind the outhouses. When she came to the second yard the darkness
+seemed deeper. She was unsure of her footing. She wished she had
+brought a lantern. Rain blew against her. Half she liked it, half she
+felt unwilling to battle.
+
+She reached at last the just visible door of the stable. There was no
+sign of a light anywhere. Opening the upper half, she looked in: into a
+simple well of darkness. The smell of horses, and ammonia, and of
+warmth was startling to her, in that full night. She listened with all
+her ears, but could hear nothing save the night, and the stirring of a
+horse.
+
+“Maurice!” she called, softly and musically, though she was afraid.
+“Maurice—are you there?”
+
+Nothing came from the darkness. She knew the rain and wind blew in upon
+the horses, the hot animal life. Feeling it wrong, she entered the
+stable, and drew the lower half of the door shut, holding the upper
+part close. She did not stir, because she was aware of the presence of
+the dark hindquarters of the horses, though she could not see them, and
+she was afraid. Something wild stirred in her heart.
+
+She listened intensely. Then she heard a small noise in the
+distance—far away, it seemed—the chink of a pan, and a man’s voice
+speaking a brief word. It would be Maurice, in the other part of the
+stable. She stood motionless, waiting for him to come through the
+partition door. The horses were so terrifyingly near to her, in the
+invisible.
+
+The loud jarring of the inner door-latch made her start; the door was
+opened. She could hear and feel her husband entering and invisibly
+passing among the horses near to her, in darkness as they were,
+actively intermingled. The rather low sound of his voice as he spoke to
+the horses came velvety to her nerves. How near he was, and how
+invisible! The darkness seemed to be in a strange swirl of violent
+life, just upon her. She turned giddy.
+
+Her presence of mind made her call, quietly and musically:
+
+“Maurice! Maurice—dea-ar!”
+
+“Yes,” he answered. “Isabel?”
+
+She saw nothing, and the sound of his voice seemed to touch her.
+
+“Hello!” she answered cheerfully, straining her eyes to see him. He was
+still busy, attending to the horses near her, but she saw only
+darkness. It made her almost desperate.
+
+“Won’t you come in, dear?” she said.
+
+“Yes, I’m coming. Just half a minute. _Stand over—now!_ Trap’s not
+come, has it?”
+
+“Not yet,” said Isabel.
+
+His voice was pleasant and ordinary, but it had a slight suggestion of
+the stable to her. She wished he would come away. Whilst he was so
+utterly invisible she was afraid of him.
+
+“How’s the time?” he asked.
+
+“Not yet six,” she replied. She disliked to answer into the dark.
+Presently he came very near to her, and she retreated out of doors.
+
+“The weather blows in here,” he said, coming steadily forward, feeling
+for the doors. She shrank away. At last she could dimly see him.
+
+“Bertie won’t have much of a drive,” he said, as he closed the doors.
+
+“He won’t indeed!” said Isabel calmly, watching the dark shape at the
+door.
+
+“Give me your arm, dear,” she said.
+
+She pressed his arm close to her, as she went. But she longed to see
+him, to look at him. She was nervous. He walked erect, with face rather
+lifted, but with a curious tentative movement of his powerful, muscular
+legs. She could feel the clever, careful, strong contact of his feet
+with the earth, as she balanced against him. For a moment he was a
+tower of darkness to her, as if he rose out of the earth.
+
+In the house-passage he wavered, and went cautiously, with a curious
+look of silence about him as he felt for the bench. Then he sat down
+heavily. He was a man with rather sloping shoulders, but with heavy
+limbs, powerful legs that seemed to know the earth. His head was small,
+usually carried high and light. As he bent down to unfasten his gaiters
+and boots he did not look blind. His hair was brown and crisp, his
+hands were large, reddish, intelligent, the veins stood out in the
+wrists; and his thighs and knees seemed massive. When he stood up his
+face and neck were surcharged with blood, the veins stood out on his
+temples. She did not look at his blindness.
+
+Isabel was always glad when they had passed through the dividing door
+into their own regions of repose and beauty. She was a little afraid of
+him, out there in the animal grossness of the back. His bearing also
+changed, as he smelt the familiar, indefinable odour that pervaded his
+wife’s surroundings, a delicate, refined scent, very faintly spicy.
+Perhaps it came from the pot-pourri bowls.
+
+He stood at the foot of the stairs, arrested, listening. She watched
+him, and her heart sickened. He seemed to be listening to fate.
+
+“He’s not here yet,” he said. “I’ll go up and change.”
+
+“Maurice,” she said, “you’re not wishing he wouldn’t come, are you?”
+
+“I couldn’t quite say,” he answered. “I feel myself rather on the _qui
+vive_.”
+
+“I can see you are,” she answered. And she reached up and kissed his
+cheek. She saw his mouth relax into a slow smile.
+
+“What are you laughing at?” she said roguishly.
+
+“You consoling me,” he answered.
+
+“Nay,” she answered. “Why should I console you? You know we love each
+other—you know _how_ married we are! What does anything else matter?”
+
+“Nothing at all, my dear.”
+
+He felt for her face, and touched it, smiling.
+
+“_You’re_ all right, aren’t you?” he asked, anxiously.
+
+“I’m wonderfully all right, love,” she answered. “It’s you I am a
+little troubled about, at times.”
+
+“Why me?” he said, touching her cheeks delicately with the tips of his
+fingers. The touch had an almost hypnotizing effect on her.
+
+He went away upstairs. She saw him mount into the darkness, unseeing
+and unchanging. He did not know that the lamps on the upper corridor
+were unlighted. He went on into the darkness with unchanging step. She
+heard him in the bathroom.
+
+Pervin moved about almost unconsciously in his familiar surroundings,
+dark though everything was. He seemed to know the presence of objects
+before he touched them. It was a pleasure to him to rock thus through a
+world of things, carried on the flood in a sort of blood-prescience. He
+did not think much or trouble much. So long as he kept this sheer
+immediacy of blood-contact with the substantial world he was happy, he
+wanted no intervention of visual consciousness. In this state there was
+a certain rich positivity, bordering sometimes on rapture. Life seemed
+to move in him like a tide lapping, and advancing, enveloping all
+things darkly. It was a pleasure to stretch forth the hand and meet the
+unseen object, clasp it, and possess it in pure contact. He did not try
+to remember, to visualize. He did not want to. The new way of
+consciousness substituted itself in him.
+
+The rich suffusion of this state generally kept him happy, reaching its
+culmination in the consuming passion for his wife. But at times the
+flow would seem to be checked and thrown back. Then it would beat
+inside him like a tangled sea, and he was tortured in the shattered
+chaos of his own blood. He grew to dread this arrest, this throw-back,
+this chaos inside himself, when he seemed merely at the mercy of his
+own powerful and conflicting elements. How to get some measure of
+control or surety, this was the question. And when the question rose
+maddening in him, he would clench his fists as if he would _compel_ the
+whole universe to submit to him. But it was in vain. He could not even
+compel himself.
+
+Tonight, however, he was still serene, though little tremors of
+unreasonable exasperation ran through him. He had to handle the razor
+very carefully, as he shaved, for it was not at one with him, he was
+afraid of it. His hearing also was too much sharpened. He heard the
+woman lighting the lamps on the corridor, and attending to the fire in
+the visitor’s room. And then, as he went to his room he heard the trap
+arrive. Then came Isabel’s voice, lifted and calling, like a bell
+ringing:
+
+“Is it you, Bertie? Have you come?”
+
+And a man’s voice answered out of the wind:
+
+“Hello, Isabel! There you are.”
+
+“Have you had a miserable drive? I’m so sorry we couldn’t send a closed
+carriage. I can’t see you at all, you know.”
+
+“I’m coming. No, I liked the drive—it was like Perthshire. Well, how
+are you? You’re looking fit as ever, as far as I can see.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Isabel. “I’m wonderfully well. How are you? Rather
+thin, I think—”
+
+“Worked to death—everybody’s old cry. But I’m all right, Ciss. How’s
+Pervin?—isn’t he here?”
+
+“Oh, yes, he’s upstairs changing. Yes, he’s awfully well. Take off your
+wet things; I’ll send them to be dried.”
+
+“And how are you both, in spirits? He doesn’t fret?”
+
+“No—no, not at all. No, on the contrary, really. We’ve been wonderfully
+happy, incredibly. It’s more than I can understand—so wonderful: the
+nearness, and the peace—”
+
+“Ah! Well, that’s awfully good news—”
+
+They moved away. Pervin heard no more. But a childish sense of
+desolation had come over him, as he heard their brisk voices. He seemed
+shut out—like a child that is left out. He was aimless and excluded, he
+did not know what to do with himself. The helpless desolation came over
+him. He fumbled nervously as he dressed himself, in a state almost of
+childishness. He disliked the Scotch accent in Bertie’s speech, and the
+slight response it found on Isabel’s tongue. He disliked the slight
+purr of complacency in the Scottish speech. He disliked intensely the
+glib way in which Isabel spoke of their happiness and nearness. It made
+him recoil. He was fretful and beside himself like a child, he had
+almost a childish nostalgia to be included in the life circle. And at
+the same time he was a man, dark and powerful and infuriated by his own
+weakness. By some fatal flaw, he could not be by himself, he had to
+depend on the support of another. And this very dependence enraged him.
+He hated Bertie Reid, and at the same time he knew the hatred was
+nonsense, he knew it was the outcome of his own weakness.
+
+He went downstairs. Isabel was alone in the dining-room. She watched
+him enter, head erect, his feet tentative. He looked so strong-blooded
+and healthy, and, at the same time, cancelled. Cancelled—that was the
+word that flew across her mind. Perhaps it was his scars suggested it.
+
+“You heard Bertie come, Maurice?” she said.
+
+“Yes—isn’t he here?”
+
+“He’s in his room. He looks very thin and worn.”
+
+“I suppose he works himself to death.”
+
+A woman came in with a tray—and after a few minutes Bertie came down.
+He was a little dark man, with a very big forehead, thin, wispy hair,
+and sad, large eyes. His expression was inordinately sad—almost funny.
+He had odd, short legs.
+
+Isabel watched him hesitate under the door, and glance nervously at her
+husband. Pervin heard him and turned.
+
+“Here you are, now,” said Isabel. “Come, let us eat.”
+
+Bertie went across to Maurice.
+
+“How are you, Pervin,” he said, as he advanced.
+
+The blind man stuck his hand out into space, and Bertie took it.
+
+“Very fit. Glad you’ve come,” said Maurice.
+
+Isabel glanced at them, and glanced away, as if she could not bear to
+see them.
+
+“Come,” she said. “Come to table. Aren’t you both awfully hungry? I am,
+tremendously.”
+
+“I’m afraid you waited for me,” said Bertie, as they sat down.
+
+Maurice had a curious monolithic way of sitting in a chair, erect and
+distant. Isabel’s heart always beat when she caught sight of him thus.
+
+“No,” she replied to Bertie. “We’re very little later than usual. We’re
+having a sort of high tea, not dinner. Do you mind? It gives us such a
+nice long evening, uninterrupted.”
+
+“I like it,” said Bertie.
+
+Maurice was feeling, with curious little movements, almost like a cat
+kneading her bed, for his place, his knife and fork, his napkin. He was
+getting the whole geography of his cover into his consciousness. He sat
+erect and inscrutable, remote-seeming Bertie watched the static figure
+of the blind man, the delicate tactile discernment of the large, ruddy
+hands, and the curious mindless silence of the brow, above the scar.
+With difficulty he looked away, and without knowing what he did, picked
+up a little crystal bowl of violets from the table, and held them to
+his nose.
+
+“They are sweet-scented,” he said. “Where do they come from?”
+
+“From the garden—under the windows,” said Isabel.
+
+“So late in the year—and so fragrant! Do you remember the violets under
+Aunt Bell’s south wall?”
+
+The two friends looked at each other and exchanged a smile, Isabel’s
+eyes lighting up.
+
+“Don’t I?” she replied. “_Wasn’t_ she queer!”
+
+“A curious old girl,” laughed Bertie. “There’s a streak of freakishness
+in the family, Isabel.”
+
+“Ah—but not in you and me, Bertie,” said Isabel. “Give them to Maurice,
+will you?” she added, as Bertie was putting down the flowers. “Have you
+smelled the violets, dear? Do!—they are so scented.”
+
+Maurice held out his hand, and Bertie placed the tiny bowl against his
+large, warm-looking fingers. Maurice’s hand closed over the thin white
+fingers of the barrister. Bertie carefully extricated himself. Then the
+two watched the blind man smelling the violets. He bent his head and
+seemed to be thinking. Isabel waited.
+
+“Aren’t they sweet, Maurice?” she said at last, anxiously.
+
+“Very,” he said. And he held out the bowl. Bertie took it. Both he and
+Isabel were a little afraid, and deeply disturbed.
+
+The meal continued. Isabel and Bertie chatted spasmodically. The blind
+man was silent. He touched his food repeatedly, with quick, delicate
+touches of his knife-point, then cut irregular bits. He could not bear
+to be helped. Both Isabel and Bertie suffered: Isabel wondered why. She
+did not suffer when she was alone with Maurice. Bertie made her
+conscious of a strangeness.
+
+After the meal the three drew their chairs to the fire, and sat down to
+talk. The decanters were put on a table near at hand. Isabel knocked
+the logs on the fire, and clouds of brilliant sparks went up the
+chimney. Bertie noticed a slight weariness in her bearing.
+
+“You will be glad when your child comes now, Isabel?” he said.
+
+She looked up to him with a quick wan smile.
+
+“Yes, I shall be glad,” she answered. “It begins to seem long. Yes, I
+shall be very glad. So will you, Maurice, won’t you?” she added.
+
+“Yes, I shall,” replied her husband.
+
+“We are both looking forward so much to having it,” she said.
+
+“Yes, of course,” said Bertie.
+
+He was a bachelor, three or four years older than Isabel. He lived in
+beautiful rooms overlooking the river, guarded by a faithful Scottish
+man-servant. And he had his friends among the fair sex—not lovers,
+friends. So long as he could avoid any danger of courtship or marriage,
+he adored a few good women with constant and unfailing homage, and he
+was chivalrously fond of quite a number. But if they seemed to encroach
+on him, he withdrew and detested them.
+
+Isabel knew him very well, knew his beautiful constancy, and kindness,
+also his incurable weakness, which made him unable ever to enter into
+close contact of any sort. He was ashamed of himself, because he could
+not marry, could not approach women physically. He wanted to do so. But
+he could not. At the centre of him he was afraid, helplessly and even
+brutally afraid. He had given up hope, had ceased to expect any more
+that he could escape his own weakness. Hence he was a brilliant and
+successful barrister, also _littérateur_ of high repute, a rich man,
+and a great social success. At the centre he felt himself neuter,
+nothing.
+
+Isabel knew him well. She despised him even while she admired him. She
+looked at his sad face, his little short legs, and felt contempt of
+him. She looked at his dark grey eyes, with their uncanny, almost
+childlike intuition, and she loved him. He understood amazingly—but she
+had no fear of his understanding. As a man she patronized him.
+
+And she turned to the impassive, silent figure of her husband. He sat
+leaning back, with folded arms, and face a little uptilted. His knees
+were straight and massive. She sighed, picked up the poker, and again
+began to prod the fire, to rouse the clouds of soft, brilliant sparks.
+
+“Isabel tells me,” Bertie began suddenly, “that you have not suffered
+unbearably from the loss of sight.”
+
+Maurice straightened himself to attend, but kept his arms folded.
+
+“No,” he said, “not unbearably. Now and again one struggles against it,
+you know. But there are compensations.”
+
+“They say it is much worse to be stone deaf,” said Isabel.
+
+“I believe it is,” said Bertie. “Are there compensations?” he added, to
+Maurice.
+
+“Yes. You cease to bother about a great many things.” Again Maurice
+stretched his figure, stretched the strong muscles of his back, and
+leaned backwards, with uplifted face.
+
+“And that is a relief,” said Bertie. “But what is there in place of the
+bothering? What replaces the activity?”
+
+There was a pause. At length the blind man replied, as out of a
+negligent, unattentive thinking:
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. There’s a good deal when you’re not active.”
+
+“Is there?” said Bertie. “What, exactly? It always seems to me that
+when there is no thought and no action, there is nothing.”
+
+Again Maurice was slow in replying.
+
+“There is something,” he replied. “I couldn’t tell you what it is.”
+
+And the talk lapsed once more, Isabel and Bertie chatting gossip and
+reminiscence, the blind man silent.
+
+At length Maurice rose restlessly, a big, obtrusive figure. He felt
+tight and hampered. He wanted to go away.
+
+“Do you mind,” he said, “if I go and speak to Wernham?”
+
+“No—go along, dear,” said Isabel.
+
+And he went out. A silence came over the two friends. At length Bertie
+said:
+
+“Nevertheless, it is a great deprivation, Cissie.”
+
+“It is, Bertie. I know it is.”
+
+“Something lacking all the time,” said Bertie.
+
+“Yes, I know. And yet—and yet—Maurice is right. There is something
+else, something _there_, which you never knew was there, and which you
+can’t express.”
+
+“What is there?” asked Bertie.
+
+“I don’t know—it’s awfully hard to define it—but something strong and
+immediate. There’s something strange in Maurice’s
+presence—indefinable—but I couldn’t do without it. I agree that it
+seems to put one’s mind to sleep. But when we’re alone I miss nothing;
+it seems awfully rich, almost splendid, you know.”
+
+“I’m afraid I don’t follow,” said Bertie.
+
+They talked desultorily. The wind blew loudly outside, rain chattered
+on the window-panes, making a sharp, drum-sound, because of the closed,
+mellow-golden shutters inside. The logs burned slowly, with hot, almost
+invisible small flames. Bertie seemed uneasy, there were dark circles
+round his eyes. Isabel, rich with her approaching maternity, leaned
+looking into the fire. Her hair curled in odd, loose strands, very
+pleasing to the man. But she had a curious feeling of old woe in her
+heart, old, timeless night-woe.
+
+“I suppose we’re all deficient somewhere,” said Bertie.
+
+“I suppose so,” said Isabel wearily.
+
+“Damned, sooner or later.”
+
+“I don’t know,” she said, rousing herself. “I feel quite all right, you
+know. The child coming seems to make me indifferent to everything, just
+placid. I can’t feel that there’s anything to trouble about, you know.”
+
+“A good thing, I should say,” he replied slowly.
+
+“Well, there it is. I suppose it’s just Nature. If only I felt I
+needn’t trouble about Maurice, I should be perfectly content—”
+
+“But you feel you must trouble about him?”
+
+“Well—I don’t know—” She even resented this much effort.
+
+The evening passed slowly. Isabel looked at the clock. “I say,” she
+said. “It’s nearly ten o’clock. Where can Maurice be? I’m sure they’re
+all in bed at the back. Excuse me a moment.”
+
+She went out, returning almost immediately.
+
+“It’s all shut up and in darkness,” she said. “I wonder where he is. He
+must have gone out to the farm—”
+
+Bertie looked at her.
+
+“I suppose he’ll come in,” he said.
+
+“I suppose so,” she said. “But it’s unusual for him to be out now.”
+
+“Would you like me to go out and see?”
+
+“Well—if you wouldn’t mind. I’d go, but—” She did not want to make the
+physical effort.
+
+Bertie put on an old overcoat and took a lantern. He went out from the
+side door. He shrank from the wet and roaring night. Such weather had a
+nervous effect on him: too much moisture everywhere made him feel
+almost imbecile. Unwilling, he went through it all. A dog barked
+violently at him. He peered in all the buildings. At last, as he opened
+the upper door of a sort of intermediate barn, he heard a grinding
+noise, and looking in, holding up his lantern, saw Maurice, in his
+shirt-sleeves, standing listening, holding the handle of a
+turnip-pulper. He had been pulping sweet roots, a pile of which lay
+dimly heaped in a corner behind him.
+
+“That you, Wernham?” said Maurice, listening.
+
+“No, it’s me,” said Bertie.
+
+A large, half-wild grey cat was rubbing at Maurice’s leg. The blind man
+stooped to rub its sides. Bertie watched the scene, then unconsciously
+entered and shut the door behind him, He was in a high sort of
+barn-place, from which, right and left, ran off the corridors in front
+of the stalled cattle. He watched the slow, stooping motion of the
+other man, as he caressed the great cat.
+
+Maurice straightened himself.
+
+“You came to look for me?” he said.
+
+“Isabel was a little uneasy,” said Bertie.
+
+“I’ll come in. I like messing about doing these jobs.”
+
+The cat had reared her sinister, feline length against his leg, clawing
+at his thigh affectionately. He lifted her claws out of his flesh.
+
+“I hope I’m not in your way at all at the Grange here,” said Bertie,
+rather shy and stiff.
+
+“My way? No, not a bit. I’m glad Isabel has somebody to talk to. I’m
+afraid it’s I who am in the way. I know I’m not very lively company.
+Isabel’s all right, don’t you think? She’s not unhappy, is she?”
+
+“I don’t think so.”
+
+“What does she say?”
+
+“She says she’s very content—only a little troubled about you.”
+
+“Why me?”
+
+“Perhaps afraid that you might brood,” said Bertie, cautiously.
+
+“She needn’t be afraid of that.” He continued to caress the flattened
+grey head of the cat with his fingers. “What I am a bit afraid of,” he
+resumed, “is that she’ll find me a dead weight, always alone with me
+down here.”
+
+“I don’t think you need think that,” said Bertie, though this was what
+he feared himself.
+
+“I don’t know,” said Maurice. “Sometimes I feel it isn’t fair that
+she’s saddled with me.” Then he dropped his voice curiously. “I say,”
+he asked, secretly struggling, “is my face much disfigured? Do you mind
+telling me?”
+
+“There is the scar,” said Bertie, wondering. “Yes, it is a
+disfigurement. But more pitiable than shocking.”
+
+“A pretty bad scar, though,” said Maurice.
+
+“Oh, yes.”
+
+There was a pause.
+
+“Sometimes I feel I am horrible,” said Maurice, in a low voice, talking
+as if to himself. And Bertie actually felt a quiver of horror.
+
+“That’s nonsense,” he said.
+
+Maurice again straightened himself, leaving the cat.
+
+“There’s no telling,” he said. Then again, in an odd tone, he added: “I
+don’t really know you, do I?”
+
+“Probably not,” said Bertie.
+
+“Do you mind if I touch you?”
+
+The lawyer shrank away instinctively. And yet, out of very
+philanthropy, he said, in a small voice: “Not at all.”
+
+But he suffered as the blind man stretched out a strong, naked hand to
+him. Maurice accidentally knocked off Bertie’s hat.
+
+“I thought you were taller,” he said, starting. Then he laid his hand
+on Bertie Reid’s head, closing the dome of the skull in a soft, firm
+grasp, gathering it, as it were; then, shifting his grasp and softly
+closing again, with a fine, close pressure, till he had covered the
+skull and the face of the smaller man, tracing the brows, and touching
+the full, closed eyes, touching the small nose and the nostrils, the
+rough, short moustache, the mouth, the rather strong chin. The hand of
+the blind man grasped the shoulder, the arm, the hand of the other man.
+He seemed to take him, in the soft, travelling grasp.
+
+“You seem young,” he said quietly, at last.
+
+The lawyer stood almost annihilated, unable to answer.
+
+“Your head seems tender, as if you were young,” Maurice repeated. “So
+do your hands. Touch my eyes, will you?—touch my scar.”
+
+Now Bertie quivered with revulsion. Yet he was under the power of the
+blind man, as if hypnotized. He lifted his hand, and laid the fingers
+on the scar, on the scarred eyes. Maurice suddenly covered them with
+his own hand, pressed the fingers of the other man upon his disfigured
+eye-sockets, trembling in every fibre, and rocking slightly, slowly,
+from side to side. He remained thus for a minute or more, whilst Bertie
+stood as if in a swoon, unconscious, imprisoned.
+
+Then suddenly Maurice removed the hand of the other man from his brow,
+and stood holding it in his own.
+
+“Oh, my God’ he said, “we shall know each other now, shan’t we? We
+shall know each other now.”
+
+Bertie could not answer. He gazed mute and terror-struck, overcome by
+his own weakness. He knew he could not answer. He had an unreasonable
+fear, lest the other man should suddenly destroy him. Whereas Maurice
+was actually filled with hot, poignant love, the passion of friendship.
+Perhaps it was this very passion of friendship which Bertie shrank from
+most.
+
+“We’re all right together now, aren’t we?” said Maurice. “It’s all
+right now, as long as we live, so far as we’re concerned?”
+
+“Yes,” said Bertie, trying by any means to escape.
+
+Maurice stood with head lifted, as if listening. The new delicate
+fulfilment of mortal friendship had come as a revelation and surprise
+to him, something exquisite and unhoped-for. He seemed to be listening
+to hear if it were real.
+
+Then he turned for his coat.
+
+“Come,” he said, “we’ll go to Isabel.”
+
+Bertie took the lantern and opened the door. The cat disappeared. The
+two men went in silence along the causeways. Isabel, as they came,
+thought their footsteps sounded strange. She looked up pathetically and
+anxiously for their entrance. There seemed a curious elation about
+Maurice. Bertie was haggard, with sunken eyes.
+
+“What is it?” she asked.
+
+“We’ve become friends,” said Maurice, standing with his feet apart,
+like a strange colossus.
+
+“Friends!” re-echoed Isabel. And she looked again at Bertie. He met her
+eyes with a furtive, haggard look; his eyes were as if glazed with
+misery.
+
+“I’m so glad,” she said, in sheer perplexity.
+
+“Yes,” said Maurice.
+
+He was indeed so glad. Isabel took his hand with both hers, and held it
+fast.
+
+“You’ll be happier now, dear,” she said.
+
+But she was watching Bertie. She knew that he had one desire—to escape
+from this intimacy, this friendship, which had been thrust upon him. He
+could not bear it that he had been touched by the blind man, his insane
+reserve broken in. He was like a mollusc whose shell is broken.
+
+
+
+
+MONKEY NUTS
+
+
+At first Joe thought the job O.K. He was loading hay on the trucks,
+along with Albert, the corporal. The two men were pleasantly billeted
+in a cottage not far from the station: they were their own masters, for
+Joe never thought of Albert as a master. And the little sidings of the
+tiny village station was as pleasant a place as you could wish for. On
+one side, beyond the line, stretched the woods: on the other, the near
+side, across a green smooth field red houses were dotted among
+flowering apple trees. The weather being sunny, work being easy,
+Albert, a real good pal, what life could be better! After Flanders, it
+was heaven itself.
+
+Albert, the corporal, was a clean-shaven, shrewd-looking fellow of
+about forty. He seemed to think his one aim in life was to be full of
+fun and nonsense. In repose, his face looked a little withered, old. He
+was a very good pal to Joe, steady, decent and grave under all his
+“mischief”; for his mischief was only his laborious way of skirting his
+own _ennui_.
+
+Joe was much younger than Albert—only twenty-three. He was a tallish,
+quiet youth, pleasant looking. He was of a slightly better class than
+his corporal, more personable. Careful about his appearance, he shaved
+every day. “I haven’t got much of a face,” said Albert. “If I was to
+shave every day like you, Joe, I should have none.”
+
+There was plenty of life in the little goods-yard: three porter youths,
+a continual come and go of farm wagons bringing hay, wagons with timber
+from the woods, coal carts loading at the trucks. The black coal seemed
+to make the place sleepier, hotter. Round the big white gate the
+station-master’s children played and his white chickens walked, whilst
+the stationmaster himself, a young man getting too fat, helped his wife
+to peg out the washing on the clothes line in the meadow.
+
+The great boat-shaped wagons came up from Playcross with the hay. At
+first the farm-men waggoned it. On the third day one of the land-girls
+appeared with the first load, drawing to a standstill easily at the
+head of her two great horses. She was a buxom girl, young, in linen
+overalls and gaiters. Her face was ruddy, she had large blue eyes.
+
+“Now that’s the waggoner for us, boys,” said the corporal loudly.
+
+“Whoa!” she said to her horses; and then to the corporal: “Which boys
+do you mean?”
+
+“We are the pick of the bunch. That’s Joe, my pal. Don’t you let on
+that my name’s Albert,” said the corporal to his private. “I’m the
+corporal.”
+
+“And I’m Miss Stokes,” said the land-girl coolly, “if that’s all the
+boys you are.”
+
+“You know you couldn’t want more, Miss Stokes,” said Albert politely.
+Joe, who was bare-headed, whose grey flannel sleeves were rolled up to
+the elbow, and whose shirt was open at the breast, looked modestly
+aside as if he had no part in the affair.
+
+“Are you on this job regular, then?” said the corporal to Miss Stokes.
+
+“I don’t know for sure,” she said, pushing a piece of hair under her
+hat, and attending to her splendid horses.
+
+“Oh, make it a certainty,” said Albert.
+
+She did not reply. She turned and looked over the two men coolly. She
+was pretty, moderately blonde, with crisp hair, a good skin, and large
+blue eyes. She was strong, too, and the work went on leisurely and
+easily.
+
+“Now!” said the corporal, stopping as usual to look round, “pleasant
+company makes work a pleasure—don’t hurry it, boys.” He stood on the
+truck surveying the world. That was one of his great and absorbing
+occupations: to stand and look out on things in general. Joe, also
+standing on the truck, also turned round to look what was to be seen.
+But he could not become blankly absorbed, as Albert could.
+
+Miss Stokes watched the two men from under her broad felt hat. She had
+seen hundreds of Alberts, khaki soldiers standing in loose attitudes,
+absorbed in watching nothing in particular. She had seen also a good
+many Joes, quiet, good-looking young soldiers with half-averted faces.
+But there was something in the turn of Joe’s head, and something in his
+quiet, tender-looking form, young and fresh—which attracted her eye. As
+she watched him closely from below, he turned as if he felt her, and
+his dark-blue eye met her straight, light-blue gaze. He faltered and
+turned aside again and looked as if he were going to fall off the
+truck. A slight flush mounted under the girl’s full, ruddy face. She
+liked him.
+
+Always, after this, when she came into the sidings with her team, it
+was Joe she looked for. She acknowledged to herself that she was sweet
+on him. But Albert did all the talking. He was so full of fun and
+nonsense. Joe was a very shy bird, very brief and remote in his
+answers. Miss Stokes was driven to indulge in repartee with Albert, but
+she fixed her magnetic attention on the younger fellow. Joe would talk
+with Albert, and laugh at his jokes. But Miss Stokes could get little
+out of him. She had to depend on her silent forces. They were more
+effective than might be imagined.
+
+Suddenly, on Saturday afternoon, at about two o’clock, Joe received a
+bolt from the blue—a telegram: “Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m.
+today. M.S.” He knew at once who M.S. was. His heart melted, he felt
+weak as if he had had a blow.
+
+“What’s the trouble, boy?” asked Albert anxiously.
+
+“No—no trouble—it’s to meet somebody.” Joe lifted his dark-blue eyes in
+confusion towards his corporal.
+
+“Meet somebody!” repeated the corporal, watching his young pal with
+keen blue eyes. “It’s all right, then; nothing wrong?”
+
+“No—nothing wrong. I’m not going,” said Joe.
+
+Albert was old and shrewd enough to see that nothing more should be
+said before the housewife. He also saw that Joe did not want to take
+him into confidence. So he held his peace, though he was piqued.
+
+The two soldiers went into town, smartened up. Albert knew a fair
+number of the boys round about; there would be plenty of gossip in the
+market-place, plenty of lounging in groups on the Bath Road, watching
+the Saturday evening shoppers. Then a modest drink or two, and the
+movies. They passed an agreeable, casual, nothing-in-particular
+evening, with which Joe was quite satisfied. He thought of Belbury
+Station, and of M.S. waiting there. He had not the faintest intention
+of meeting her. And he had not the faintest intention of telling
+Albert.
+
+And yet, when the two men were in their bedroom, half undressed, Joe
+suddenly held out the telegram to his corporal, saying: “What d’you
+think of that?”
+
+Albert was just unbuttoning his braces. He desisted, took the telegram
+form, and turned towards the candle to read it.
+
+“_Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today. M.S._,” he read, _sotto
+voce_. His face took on its fun-and-nonsense look.
+
+“Who’s M.S.?” he asked, looking shrewdly at Joe.
+
+“You know as well as I do,” said Joe, non-committal.
+
+“M.S.,” repeated Albert. “Blamed if I know, boy. Is it a woman?”
+
+The conversation was carried on in tiny voices, for fear of disturbing
+the householders.
+
+“I don’t know,” said Joe, turning. He looked full at Albert, the two
+men looked straight into each other’s eyes. There was a lurking grin in
+each of them.
+
+“Well, I’m—_blamed!_” said Albert at last, throwing the telegram down
+emphatically on the bed.
+
+“Wha-at?” said Joe, grinning rather sheepishly, his eyes clouded none
+the less.
+
+Albert sat on the bed and proceeded to undress, nodding his head with
+mock gravity all the while. Joe watched him foolishly.
+
+“What?” he repeated faintly.
+
+Albert looked up at him with a knowing look.
+
+“If that isn’t coming it quick, boy!” he said. “What the blazes! What
+ha’ you bin doing?”
+
+“Nothing!” said Joe.
+
+Albert slowly shook his head as he sat on the side of the bed.
+
+“Don’t happen to me when I’ve bin doin’ nothing,” he said. And he
+proceeded to pull off his stockings.
+
+Joe turned away, looking at himself in the mirror as he unbuttoned his
+tunic.
+
+“You didn’t want to keep the appointment?” Albert asked, in a changed
+voice, from the bedside.
+
+Joe did not answer for a moment. Then he said:
+
+“I made no appointment.”
+
+“I’m not saying you did, boy. Don’t be nasty about it. I mean you
+didn’t want to answer the—unknown person’s summons—shall I put it that
+way?”
+
+“No,” said Joe.
+
+“What was the deterring motive?” asked Albert, who was now lying on his
+back in bed.
+
+“Oh,” said Joe, suddenly looking round rather haughtily. “I didn’t want
+to.” He had a well-balanced head, and could take on a sudden distant
+bearing.
+
+“Didn’t want to—didn’t cotton on, like. Well—_they be artful, the
+women_—” he mimicked his landlord. “Come on into bed, boy. Don’t loiter
+about as if you’d lost something.”
+
+Albert turned over, to sleep.
+
+On Monday Miss Stokes turned up as usual, striding beside her team. Her
+“whoa!” was resonant and challenging, she looked up at the truck as her
+steeds came to a standstill. Joe had turned aside, and had his face
+averted from her. She glanced him over—save for his slender succulent
+tenderness she would have despised him. She sized him up in a steady
+look. Then she turned to Albert, who was looking down at her and
+smiling in his mischievous turn. She knew his aspects by now. She
+looked straight back at him, though her eyes were hot. He saluted her.
+
+“Beautiful morning, Miss Stokes.”
+
+“Very!” she replied.
+
+“Handsome is as handsome looks,” said Albert.
+
+Which produced no response.
+
+“Now, Joe, come on here,” said the corporal. “Don’t keep the ladies
+waiting—it’s the sign of a weak heart.”
+
+Joe turned, and the work began. Nothing more was said for the time
+being. As the week went on all parties became more comfortable. Joe
+remained silent, averted, neutral, a little on his dignity. Miss Stokes
+was off-hand and masterful. Albert was full of mischief.
+
+The great theme was a circus, which was coming to the market town on
+the following Saturday.
+
+“You’ll go to the circus, Miss Stokes?” said Albert.
+
+“I may go. Are you going?”
+
+“Certainly. Give us the pleasure of escorting you.”
+
+“No, thanks.”
+
+“That’s what I call a flat refusal—what, Joe? You don’t mean that you
+have no liking for our company, Miss Stokes?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” said Miss Stokes. “How many are there of you?”
+
+“Only me and Joe.”
+
+“Oh, is that all?” she said, satirically.
+
+Albert was a little nonplussed.
+
+“Isn’t that enough for you?” he asked.
+
+“Too many by half,” blurted out Joe, jeeringly, in a sudden fit of
+uncouth rudeness that made both the others stare.
+
+“Oh, I’ll stand out of the way, boy, if that’s it,” said Albert to Joe.
+Then he turned mischievously to Miss Stokes. “He wants to know what M.
+stands for,” he said, confidentially.
+
+“Monkeys,” she replied, turning to her horses.
+
+“What’s M.S.?” said Albert.
+
+“Monkey-nuts,” she retorted, leading off her team.
+
+Albert looked after her a little discomfited. Joe had flushed dark, and
+cursed Albert in his heart.
+
+On the Saturday afternoon the two soldiers took the train into town.
+They would have to walk home. They had tea at six o’clock, and lounged
+about till half past seven. The circus was in a meadow near the river—a
+great red-and-white striped tent. Caravans stood at the side. A great
+crowd of people was gathered round the ticket-caravan.
+
+Inside the tent the lamps were lighted, shining on a ring of faces, a
+great circular bank of faces round the green grassy centre. Along with
+some comrades, the two soldiers packed themselves on a thin plank seat,
+rather high. They were delighted with the flaring lights, the wild
+effect. But the circus performance did not affect them deeply. They
+admired the lady in black velvet with rose-purple legs who leapt so
+neatly on to the galloping horse; they watched the feats of strength
+and laughed at the clown. But they felt a little patronizing, they
+missed the sensational drama of the cinema.
+
+Half-way through the performance Joe was electrified to see the face of
+Miss Stokes not very far from him. There she was, in her khaki and her
+felt hat, as usual; he pretended not to see her. She was laughing at
+the clown; she also pretended not to see him. It was a blow to him, and
+it made him angry. He would not even mention it to Albert. Least said,
+soonest mended. He liked to believe she had not seen him. But he knew,
+fatally, that she had.
+
+When they came out it was nearly eleven o’clock; a lovely night, with a
+moon and tall, dark, noble trees: a magnificent May night. Joe and
+Albert laughed and chaffed with the boys. Joe looked round frequently
+to see if he were safe from Miss Stokes. It seemed so.
+
+But there were six miles to walk home. At last the two soldiers set
+off, swinging their canes. The road was white between tall hedges,
+other stragglers were passing out of the town towards the villages; the
+air was full of pleased excitement.
+
+They were drawing near to the village when they saw a dark figure
+ahead. Joe’s heart sank with pure fear. It was a figure wheeling a
+bicycle; a land girl; Miss Stokes. Albert was ready with his nonsense.
+Miss Stokes had a puncture.
+
+“Let me wheel the rattler,” said Albert.
+
+“Thank you,” said Miss Stokes. “You _are_ kind.”
+
+“Oh, I’d be kinder than that, if you’d show me how,” said Albert.
+
+“Are you sure?” said Miss Stokes.
+
+“Doubt my words?” said Albert. “That’s cruel of you, Miss Stokes.”
+
+Miss Stokes walked between them, close to Joe.
+
+“Have you been to the circus?” she asked him.
+
+“Yes,” he replied, mildly.
+
+“Have _you_ been?” Albert asked her.
+
+“Yes. I didn’t see you,” she replied.
+
+“What!—you say so! Didn’t see us! Didn’t think us worth looking at,”
+began Albert. “Aren’t I as handsome as the clown, now? And you didn’t
+as much as glance in our direction? I call it a downright oversight.”
+
+“I never _saw_ you,” reiterated Miss Stokes. “I didn’t know you saw
+me.”
+
+“That makes it worse,” said Albert.
+
+The road passed through a belt of dark pine-wood. The village, and the
+branch road, was very near. Miss Stokes put out her fingers and felt
+for Joe’s hand as it swung at his side. To say he was staggered is to
+put it mildly. Yet he allowed her softly to clasp his fingers for a few
+moments. But he was a mortified youth.
+
+At the cross-road they stopped—Miss Stokes should turn off. She had
+another mile to go.
+
+“You’ll let us see you home,” said Albert.
+
+“Do me a kindness,” she said. “Put my bike in your shed, and take it to
+Baker’s on Monday, will you?”
+
+“I’ll sit up all night and mend it for you, if you like.”
+
+“No thanks. And Joe and I’ll walk on.”
+
+“Oh—ho! Oh—ho!” sang Albert. “Joe! Joe! What do you say to that, now,
+boy? Aren’t you in luck’s way. And I get the bloomin’ old bike for my
+pal. Consider it again, Miss Stokes.”
+
+Joe turned aside his face, and did not speak.
+
+“Oh, well! I wheel the grid, do I? I leave you, boy—”
+
+“I’m not keen on going any further,” barked out Joe, in an uncouth
+voice. “She hain’t my choice.”
+
+The girl stood silent, and watched the two men.
+
+“There now!” said Albert. “Think o’ that! If it was _me_ now—” But he
+was uncomfortable. “Well, Miss Stokes, have me,” he added.
+
+Miss Stokes stood quite still, neither moved nor spoke. And so the
+three remained for some time at the lane end. At last Joe began kicking
+the ground—then he suddenly lifted his face. At that moment Miss Stokes
+was at his side. She put her arm delicately round his waist.
+
+“Seems I’m the one extra, don’t you think?” Albert inquired of the high
+bland moon.
+
+Joe had dropped his head and did not answer. Miss Stokes stood with her
+arm lightly round his waist. Albert bowed, saluted, and bade
+good-night. He walked away, leaving the two standing.
+
+Miss Stokes put a light pressure on Joe’s waist, and drew him down the
+road. They walked in silence. The night was full of scent—wild cherry,
+the first bluebells. Still they walked in silence. A nightingale was
+singing. They approached nearer and nearer, till they stood close by
+his dark bush. The powerful notes sounded from the cover, almost like
+flashes of light—then the interval of silence—then the moaning notes,
+almost like a dog faintly howling, followed by the long, rich trill,
+and flashing notes. Then a short silence again.
+
+Miss Stokes turned at last to Joe. She looked up at him, and in the
+moonlight he saw her faintly smiling. He felt maddened, but helpless.
+Her arm was round his waist, she drew him closely to her with a soft
+pressure that made all his bones rotten.
+
+Meanwhile Albert was waiting at home. He put on his overcoat, for the
+fire was out, and he had had malarial fever. He looked fitfully at the
+_Daily Mirror_ and the _Daily Sketch_, but he saw nothing. It seemed a
+long time. He began to yawn widely, even to nod. At last Joe came in.
+
+Albert looked at him keenly. The young man’s brow was black, his face
+sullen.
+
+“All right, boy?” asked Albert.
+
+Joe merely grunted for a reply. There was nothing more to be got out of
+him. So they went to bed.
+
+Next day Joe was silent, sullen. Albert could make nothing of him. He
+proposed a walk after tea.
+
+“I’m going somewhere,” said Joe.
+
+“Where—Monkey-nuts?” asked the corporal. But Joe’s brow only became
+darker.
+
+So the days went by. Almost every evening Joe went off alone, returning
+late. He was sullen, taciturn and had a hang-dog look, a curious way of
+dropping his head and looking dangerously from under his brows. And he
+and Albert did not get on so well any more with one another. For all
+his fun and nonsense, Albert was really irritable, soon made angry. And
+Joe’s stand-offish sulkiness and complete lack of confidence riled him,
+got on his nerves. His fun and nonsense took a biting, sarcastic turn,
+at which Joe’s eyes glittered occasionally, though the young man turned
+unheeding aside. Then again Joe would be full of odd, whimsical fun,
+outshining Albert himself.
+
+Miss Stokes still came to the station with the wain: Monkey-nuts,
+Albert called her, though not to her face. For she was very clear and
+good-looking, almost she seemed to gleam. And Albert was a tiny bit
+afraid of her. She very rarely addressed Joe whilst the hay-loading was
+going on, and that young man always turned his back to her. He seemed
+thinner, and his limber figure looked more slouching. But still it had
+the tender, attractive appearance, especially from behind. His tanned
+face, a little thinned and darkened, took a handsome, slightly sinister
+look.
+
+“Come on, Joe!” the corporal urged sharply one day. “What’re you doing,
+boy? Looking for beetles on the bank?”
+
+Joe turned round swiftly, almost menacing, to work.
+
+“He’s a different fellow these days, Miss Stokes,” said Albert to the
+young woman. “What’s got him? Is it Monkey-nuts that don’t suit him, do
+you think?”
+
+“Choked with chaff, more like,” she retorted. “It’s as bad as feeding a
+threshing machine, to have to listen to some folks.”
+
+“As bad as what?” said Albert. “You don’t mean me, do you, Miss
+Stokes?”
+
+“No,” she cried. “I don’t mean you.”
+
+Joe’s face became dark red during these sallies, but he said nothing.
+He would eye the young woman curiously, as she swung so easily at the
+work, and he had some of the look of a dog which is going to bite.
+
+Albert, with his nerves on edge, began to find the strain rather
+severe. The next Saturday evening, when Joe came in more black-browed
+than ever, he watched him, determined to have it out with him.
+
+When the boy went upstairs to bed, the corporal followed him. He closed
+the door behind him carefully, sat on the bed and watched the younger
+man undressing. And for once he spoke in a natural voice, neither
+chaffing nor commanding.
+
+“What’s gone wrong, boy?”
+
+Joe stopped a moment as if he had been shot. Then he went on unwinding
+his puttees, and did not answer or look up.
+
+“You can hear, can’t you?” said Albert, nettled.
+
+“Yes, I can hear,” said Joe, stooping over his puttees till his face
+was purple.
+
+“Then why don’t you answer?”
+
+Joe sat up. He gave a long, sideways look at the corporal. Then he
+lifted his eyes and stared at a crack in the ceiling.
+
+The corporal watched these movements shrewdly.
+
+“And _then_ what?” he asked, ironically.
+
+Again Joe turned and stared him in the face. The corporal smiled very
+slightly, but kindly.
+
+“There’ll be murder done one of these days,” said Joe, in a quiet,
+unimpassioned voice.
+
+“So long as it’s by daylight—” replied Albert. Then he went over, sat
+down by Joe, put his hand on his shoulder affectionately, and
+continued, “What is it, boy? What’s gone wrong? You can trust me, can’t
+you?”
+
+Joe turned and looked curiously at the face so near to his.
+
+“It’s nothing, that’s all,” he said laconically.
+
+Albert frowned.
+
+“Then who’s going to be murdered?—and who’s going to do the
+murdering?—me or you—which is it, boy?” He smiled gently at the stupid
+youth, looking straight at him all the while, into his eyes. Gradually
+the stupid, hunted, glowering look died out of Joe’s eyes. He turned
+his head aside, gently, as one rousing from a spell.
+
+“I don’t want her,” he said, with fierce resentment.
+
+“Then you needn’t have her,” said Albert. “What do you go for, boy?”
+
+But it wasn’t as simple as all that. Joe made no remark.
+
+“She’s a smart-looking girl. What’s wrong with her, my boy? I should
+have thought you were a lucky chap, myself.”
+
+“I don’t want ’er,” Joe barked, with ferocity and resentment.
+
+“Then tell her so and have done,” said Albert. He waited awhile. There
+was no response. “Why don’t you?” he added.
+
+“Because I don’t,” confessed Joe, sulkily.
+
+Albert pondered—rubbed his head.
+
+“You’re too soft-hearted, that’s where it is, boy. You want your mettle
+dipping in cold water, to temper it. You’re too soft-hearted—”
+
+He laid his arm affectionately across the shoulders of the younger man.
+Joe seemed to yield a little towards him.
+
+“When are you going to see her again?” Albert asked. For a long time
+there was no answer.
+
+“When is it, boy?” persisted the softened voice of the corporal.
+
+“Tomorrow,” confessed Joe.
+
+“Then let me go,” said Albert. “Let me go, will you?”
+
+The morrow was Sunday, a sunny day, but a cold evening. The sky was
+grey, the new foliage very green, but the air was chill and depressing.
+Albert walked briskly down the white road towards Beeley. He crossed a
+larch plantation, and followed a narrow by-road, where blue speedwell
+flowers fell from the banks into the dust. He walked swinging his cane,
+with mixed sensations. Then having gone a certain length, he turned and
+began to walk in the opposite direction.
+
+So he saw a young woman approaching him. She was wearing a wide hat of
+grey straw, and a loose, swinging dress of nigger-grey velvet. She
+walked with slow inevitability. Albert faltered a little as he
+approached her. Then he saluted her, and his roguish, slightly withered
+skin flushed. She was staring straight into his face.
+
+He fell in by her side, saying impudently:
+
+“Not so nice for a walk as it was, is it?”
+
+She only stared at him. He looked back at her.
+
+“You’ve seen me before, you know,” he said, grinning slightly. “Perhaps
+you never noticed me. Oh, I’m quite nice looking, in a quiet way, you
+know. What—?”
+
+But Miss Stokes did not speak: she only stared with large, icy blue
+eyes at him. He became self-conscious, lifted up his chin, walked with
+his nose in the air, and whistled at random. So they went down the
+quiet, deserted grey lane. He was whistling the air: “I’m Gilbert, the
+filbert, the colonel of the nuts.”
+
+At last she found her voice:
+
+“Where’s Joe?”
+
+“He thought you’d like a change: they say variety’s the salt of
+life—that’s why I’m mostly in pickle.”
+
+“Where is he?”
+
+“Am I my brother’s keeper? He’s gone his own ways.”
+
+“Where?”
+
+“Nay, how am I to know? Not so far but he’ll be back for supper.”
+
+She stopped in the middle of the lane. He stopped facing her.
+
+“Where’s Joe?” she asked.
+
+He struck a careless attitude, looked down the road this way and that,
+lifted his eyebrows, pushed his khaki cap on one side, and answered:
+
+“He is not conducting the service tonight: he asked me if I’d
+officiate.”
+
+“Why hasn’t he come?”
+
+“Didn’t want to, I expect. _I_ wanted to.”
+
+She stared him up and down, and he felt uncomfortable in his spine, but
+maintained his air of nonchalance. Then she turned slowly on her heel,
+and started to walk back. The corporal went at her side.
+
+“You’re not going back, are you?” he pleaded. “Why, me and you, we
+should get on like a house on fire.”
+
+She took no heed, but walked on. He went uncomfortably at her side,
+making his funny remarks from time to time. But she was as if stone
+deaf. He glanced at her, and to his dismay saw the tears running down
+her cheeks. He stopped suddenly, and pushed back his cap.
+
+“I say, you know—” he began.
+
+But she was walking on like an automaton, and he had to hurry after
+her.
+
+She never spoke to him. At the gate of her farm she walked straight in,
+as if he were not there. He watched her disappear. Then he turned on
+his heel, cursing silently, puzzled, lifting off his cap to scratch his
+head.
+
+That night, when they were in bed, he remarked: “Say, Joe, boy; strikes
+me you’re well-off without Monkey-nuts. Gord love us, beans ain’t in
+it.”
+
+So they slept in amity. But they waited with some anxiety for the
+morrow.
+
+It was a cold morning, a grey sky shifting in a cold wind, and
+threatening rain. They watched the wagon come up the road and through
+the yard gates. Miss Stokes was with her team as usual; her “Whoa!”
+rang out like a war-whoop.
+
+She faced up at the truck where the two men stood.
+
+“Joe!” she called, to the averted figure which stood up in the wind.
+
+“What?” he turned unwillingly.
+
+She made a queer movement, lifting her head slightly in a sipping,
+half-inviting, half-commanding gesture. And Joe was crouching already
+to jump off the truck to obey her, when Albert put his hand on his
+shoulder.
+
+“Half a minute, boy! Where are you off? Work’s work, and nuts is nuts.
+You stop here.”
+
+Joe slowly straightened himself.
+
+“Joe!” came the woman’s clear call from below.
+
+Again Joe looked at her. But Albert’s hand was on his shoulder,
+detaining him. He stood half averted, with his tail between his legs.
+
+“Take your hand off him, you!” said Miss Stokes.
+
+“Yes, Major,” retorted Albert satirically.
+
+She stood and watched.
+
+“Joe!” Her voice rang for the third time.
+
+Joe turned and looked at her, and a slow, jeering smile gathered on his
+face.
+
+“Monkey-nuts!” he replied, in a tone mocking her call.
+
+She turned white—dead white. The men thought she would fall. Albert
+began yelling to the porters up the line to come and help with the
+load. He could yell like any non-commissioned officer upon occasion.
+
+Some way or other the wagon was unloaded, the girl was gone. Joe and
+his corporal looked at one another and smiled slowly. But they had a
+weight on their minds, they were afraid.
+
+They were reassured, however, when they found that Miss Stokes came no
+more with the hay. As far as they were concerned, she had vanished into
+oblivion. And Joe felt more relieved even than he had felt when he
+heard the firing cease, after the news had come that the armistice was
+signed.
+
+
+
+
+WINTRY PEACOCK
+
+
+There was thin, crisp snow on the ground, the sky was blue, the wind
+very cold, the air clear. Farmers were just turning out the cows for an
+hour or so in the midday, and the smell of cow-sheds was unendurable as
+I entered Tible. I noticed the ash-twigs up in the sky were pale and
+luminous, passing into the blue. And then I saw the peacocks. There
+they were in the road before me, three of them, and tailless, brown,
+speckled birds, with dark-blue necks and ragged crests. They stepped
+archly over the filigree snow, and their bodies moved with slow motion,
+like small, light, flat-bottomed boats. I admired them, they were
+curious. Then a gust of wind caught them, heeled them over as if they
+were three frail boats opening their feathers like ragged sails. They
+hopped and skipped with discomfort, to get out of the draught of the
+wind. And then, in the lee of the walls, they resumed their arch,
+wintry motion, light and unballasted now their tails were gone,
+indifferent. They were indifferent to my presence. I might have touched
+them. They turned off to the shelter of an open shed.
+
+As I passed the end of the upper house, I saw a young woman just coming
+out of the back door. I had spoken to her in the summer. She recognised
+me at once, and waved to me. She was carrying a pail, wearing a white
+apron that was longer than her preposterously short skirt, and she had
+on the cotton bonnet. I took off my hat to her and was going on. But
+she put down her pail and darted with a swift, furtive movement after
+me.
+
+“Do you mind waiting a minute?” she said. “I’ll be out in a minute.”
+
+She gave me a slight, odd smile, and ran back. Her face was long and
+sallow and her nose rather red. But her gloomy black eyes softened
+caressively to me for a moment, with that momentary humility which
+makes a man lord of the earth.
+
+I stood in the road, looking at the fluffy, dark-red young cattle that
+mooed and seemed to bark at me. They seemed happy, frisky cattle, a
+little impudent, and either determined to go back into the warm shed,
+or determined not to go back, I could not decide which.
+
+Presently the woman came forward again, her head rather ducked. But she
+looked up at me and smiled, with that odd, immediate intimacy,
+something witch-like and impossible.
+
+“Sorry to keep you waiting,” she said. “Shall we stand in this
+cart-shed—it will be more out of the wind.”
+
+So we stood among the shafts of the open cart-shed that faced the road.
+Then she looked down at the ground, a little sideways, and I noticed a
+small black frown on her brows. She seemed to brood for a moment. Then
+she looked straight into my eyes, so that I blinked and wanted to turn
+my face aside. She was searching me for something and her look was too
+near. The frown was still on her keen, sallow brow.
+
+“Can you speak French?” she asked me abruptly.
+
+“More or less,” I replied.
+
+“I was supposed to learn it at school,” she said. “But I don’t know a
+word.” She ducked her head and laughed, with a slightly ugly grimace
+and a rolling of her black eyes.
+
+“No good keeping your mind full of scraps,” I answered.
+
+But she had turned aside her sallow, long face, and did not hear what I
+said. Suddenly again she looked at me. She was searching. And at the
+same time she smiled at me, and her eyes looked softly, darkly, with
+infinite trustful humility into mine. I was being cajoled.
+
+“Would you mind reading a letter for me, in French,” she said, her face
+immediately black and bitter-looking. She glanced at me, frowning.
+
+“Not at all,” I said.
+
+“It’s a letter to my husband,” she said, still scrutinizing.
+
+I looked at her, and didn’t quite realise. She looked too far into me,
+my wits were gone. She glanced round. Then she looked at me shrewdly.
+She drew a letter from her pocket, and handed it to me. It was
+addressed from France to Lance-Corporal Goyte, at Tible. I took out the
+letter and began to read it, as mere words. “_Mon cher Alfred_”—it
+might have been a bit of a torn newspaper. So I followed the script:
+the trite phrases of a letter from a French-speaking girl to an English
+soldier. “I think of you always, always. Do you think sometimes of me?”
+And then I vaguely realised that I was reading a man’s private
+correspondence. And yet, how could one consider these trivial, facile
+French phrases private! Nothing more trite and vulgar in the world,
+than such a love-letter—no newspaper more obvious.
+
+Therefore I read with a callous heart the effusions of the Belgian
+damsel. But then I gathered my attention. For the letter went on,
+“_Notre cher petit bébé_—our dear little baby was born a week ago.
+Almost I died, knowing you were far away, and perhaps forgetting the
+fruit of our perfect love. But the child comforted me. He has the
+smiling eyes and virile air of his English father. I pray to the Mother
+of Jesus to send me the dear father of my child, that I may see him
+with my child in his arms, and that we may be united in holy family
+love. Ah, my Alfred, can I tell you how I miss you, how I weep for you.
+My thoughts are with you always, I think of nothing but you, I live for
+nothing but you and our dear baby. If you do not come back to me soon,
+I shall die, and our child will die. But no, you cannot come back to
+me. But I can come to you, come to England with our child. If you do
+not wish to present me to your good mother and father, you can meet me
+in some town, some city, for I shall be so frightened to be alone in
+England with my child, and no one to take care of us. Yet I must come
+to you, I must bring my child, my little Alfred to his father, the big,
+beautiful Alfred that I love so much. Oh, write and tell me where I
+shall come. I have some money, I am not a penniless creature. I have
+money for myself and my dear baby—”
+
+I read to the end. It was signed: “Your very happy and still more
+unhappy Élise.” I suppose I must have been smiling.
+
+“I can see it makes you laugh,” said Mrs. Goyte, sardonically. I looked
+up at her.
+
+“It’s a love-letter, I know that,” she said. “There’s too many
+‘Alfreds’ in it.”
+
+“One too many,” I said.
+
+“Oh, yes—And what does she say—Eliza? We know her name’s Eliza, that’s
+another thing.” She grimaced a little, looking up at me with a mocking
+laugh.
+
+“Where did you get this letter?” I said.
+
+“Postman gave it me last week.”
+
+“And is your husband at home?”
+
+“I expect him home tonight. He’s been wounded, you know, and we’ve been
+applying for him home. He was home about six weeks ago—he’s been in
+Scotland since then. Oh, he was wounded in the leg. Yes, he’s all
+right, a great strapping fellow. But he’s lame, he limps a bit. He
+expects he’ll get his discharge—but I don’t think he will. We married?
+We’ve been married six years—and he joined up the first day of the war.
+Oh, he thought he’d like the life. He’d been through the South African
+War. No, he was sick of it, fed up. I’m living with his father and
+mother—I’ve no home of my own now. My people had a big farm—over a
+thousand acres—in Oxfordshire. Not like here—no. Oh, they’re very good
+to me, his father and mother. Oh, yes, they couldn’t be better. They
+think more of me than of their own daughters. But it’s not like being
+in a place of your own, is it? You can’t _really_ do as you like. No,
+there’s only me and his father and mother at home. Before the war? Oh,
+he was anything. He’s had a good education—but he liked the farming
+better. Then he was a chauffeur. That’s how he knew French. He was
+driving a gentleman in France for a long time—”
+
+At this point the peacocks came round the corner on a puff of wind.
+
+“Hello, Joey!” she called, and one of the birds came forward, on
+delicate legs. Its grey speckled back was very elegant, it rolled its
+full, dark-blue neck as it moved to her. She crouched down. “Joey,
+dear,” she said, in an odd, saturnine caressive voice, “you’re bound to
+find me, aren’t you?” She put her face forward, and the bird rolled his
+neck, almost touching her face with his beak, as if kissing her.
+
+“He loves you,” I said.
+
+She twisted her face up at me with a laugh.
+
+“Yes,” she said, “he loves me, Joey does,”—then, to the bird—“and I
+love Joey, don’t I. I _do_ love Joey.” And she smoothed his feathers
+for a moment. Then she rose, saying: “He’s an affectionate bird.”
+
+I smiled at the roll of her “bir-rrd’.
+
+“Oh, yes, he is,” she protested. “He came with me from my home seven
+years ago. Those others are his descendants—but they’re not like
+Joey—_are they, dee-urr?_” Her voice rose at the end with a witch-like
+cry.
+
+Then she forgot the birds in the cart-shed and turned to business
+again.
+
+“Won’t you read that letter?” she said. “Read it, so that I know what
+it says.”
+
+“It’s rather behind his back,” I said.
+
+“Oh, never mind him,” she cried. “He’s been behind my back long
+enough—all these four years. If he never did no worse things behind my
+back than I do behind his, he wouldn’t have cause to grumble. You read
+me what it says.”
+
+Now I felt a distinct reluctance to do as she bid, and yet I began—“My
+dear Alfred.”
+
+“I guessed that much,” she said. “Eliza’s dear Alfred.” She laughed.
+“How do you say it in French? _Eliza?_”
+
+I told her, and she repeated the name with great contempt—_Élise_.
+
+“Go on,” she said. “You’re not reading.”
+
+So I began—“I have been thinking of you sometimes—have you been
+thinking of me?”—
+
+“Of several others as well, beside her, I’ll wager,” said Mrs. Goyte.
+
+“Probably not,” said I, and continued. “A dear little baby was born
+here a week ago. Ah, can I tell you my feelings when I take my darling
+little brother into my arms—”
+
+“I’ll bet it’s _his_,” cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+“No,” I said. “It’s her mother’s.”
+
+“Don’t you believe it,” she cried. “It’s a blind. You mark, it’s her
+own right enough—and his.”
+
+“No,” I said, “it’s her mother’s.” “He has sweet smiling eyes, but not
+like your beautiful English eyes—”
+
+She suddenly struck her hand on her skirt with a wild motion, and bent
+down, doubled with laughter. Then she rose and covered her face with
+her hand.
+
+“I’m forced to laugh at the beautiful English eyes,” she said.
+
+“Aren’t his eyes beautiful?” I asked.
+
+“Oh, yes—_very!_ Go on!—_Joey, dear, dee-urr, Joey!_”—this to the
+peacock.
+
+—“Er—We miss you very much. We all miss you. We wish you were here to
+see the darling baby. Ah, Alfred, how happy we were when you stayed
+with us. We all loved you so much. My mother will call the baby Alfred
+so that we shall never forget you—”
+
+“Of course it’s his right enough,” cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+“No,” I said. “It’s the mother’s.” Er—“My mother is very well. My
+father came home yesterday—on leave. He is delighted with his son, my
+little brother, and wishes to have him named after you, because you
+were so good to us all in that terrible time, which I shall never
+forget. I must weep now when I think of it. Well, you are far away in
+England, and perhaps I shall never see you again. How did you find your
+dear mother and father? I am so happy that your wound is better, and
+that you can nearly walk—”
+
+“How did he find his dear _wife!_” cried Mrs. Goyte. “He never told her
+he had one. Think of taking the poor girl in like that!”
+
+“We are so pleased when you write to us. Yet now you are in England you
+will forget the family you served so well—”
+
+“A bit too well—eh, _Joey!_” cried the wife.
+
+“If it had not been for you we should not be alive now, to grieve and
+to rejoice in this life, that is so hard for us. But we have recovered
+some of our losses, and no longer feel the burden of poverty. The
+little Alfred is a great comfort to me. I hold him to my breast and
+think of the big, good Alfred, and I weep to think that those times of
+suffering were perhaps the times of a great happiness that is gone for
+ever.”
+
+“Oh, but isn’t it a shame, to take a poor girl in like that!” cried
+Mrs. Goyte. “Never to let on that he was married, and raise her hopes—I
+call it beastly, I do.”
+
+“You don’t know,” I said. “You know how anxious women are to fall in
+love, wife or no wife. How could he help it, if she was determined to
+fall in love with him?”
+
+“He could have helped it if he’d wanted.”
+
+“Well,” I said, “we aren’t all heroes.”
+
+“Oh, but that’s different! The big, good Alfred!—did ever you hear such
+tommy-rot in your life! Go on—what does she say at the end?”
+
+“Er—We shall be pleased to hear of your life in England. We all send
+many kind regards to your good parents. I wish you all happiness for
+your future days. Your very affectionate and ever-grateful Élise.”
+
+There was silence for a moment, during which Mrs. Goyte remained with
+her head dropped, sinister and abstracted. Suddenly she lifted her
+face, and her eyes flashed.
+
+“Oh, but I call it beastly, I call it mean, to take a girl in like
+that.”
+
+“Nay,” I said. “Probably he hasn’t taken her in at all. Do you think
+those French girls are such poor innocent things? I guess she’s a great
+deal more downy than he.”
+
+“Oh, he’s one of the biggest fools that ever walked,” she cried.
+
+“There you are!” said I.
+
+“But it’s his child right enough,” she said.
+
+“I don’t think so,” said I.
+
+“I’m sure of it.”
+
+“Oh, well,” I said, “if you prefer to think that way.”
+
+“What other reason has she for writing like that—”
+
+I went out into the road and looked at the cattle.
+
+“Who is this driving the cows?” I said. She too came out.
+
+“It’s the boy from the next farm,” she said.
+
+“Oh, well,” said I, “those Belgian girls! You never know where their
+letters will end. And, after all, it’s his affair—you needn’t bother.”
+
+“Oh—!” she cried, with rough scorn—“it’s not _me_ that bothers. But
+it’s the nasty meanness of it—me writing him such loving letters”—she
+put her hand before her face and laughed malevolently—“and sending him
+parcels all the time. You bet he fed that gurrl on my parcels—I know he
+did. It’s just like him. I’ll bet they laughed together over my
+letters. I bet anything they did—”
+
+“Nay,” said I. “He’d burn your letters for fear they’d give him away.”
+
+There was a black look on her yellow face. Suddenly a voice was heard
+calling. She poked her head out of the shed, and answered coolly:
+
+“All right!” Then turning to me: “That’s his mother looking after me.”
+
+She laughed into my face, witch-like, and we turned down the road.
+
+When I awoke, the morning after this episode, I found the house
+darkened with deep, soft snow, which had blown against the large west
+windows, covering them with a screen. I went outside, and saw the
+valley all white and ghastly below me, the trees beneath black and thin
+looking like wire, the rock-faces dark between the glistening shroud,
+and the sky above sombre, heavy, yellowish-dark, much too heavy for
+this world below of hollow bluey whiteness figured with black. I felt I
+was in a valley of the dead. And I sensed I was a prisoner, for the
+snow was everywhere deep, and drifted in places. So all the morning I
+remained indoors, looking up the drive at the shrubs so heavily plumed
+with snow, at the gateposts raised high with a foot or more of extra
+whiteness. Or I looked down into the white-and-black valley that was
+utterly motionless and beyond life, a hollow sarcophagus.
+
+Nothing stirred the whole day—no plume fell off the shrubs, the valley
+was as abstracted as a grove of death. I looked over at the tiny,
+half-buried farms away on the bare uplands beyond the valley hollow,
+and I thought of Tible in the snow, of the black witch-like little Mrs.
+Goyte. And the snow seemed to lay me bare to influences I wanted to
+escape.
+
+In the faint glow of the half-clear light that came about four o’clock
+in the afternoon, I was roused to see a motion in the snow away below,
+near where the thorn-trees stood very black and dwarfed, like a little
+savage group, in the dismal white. I watched closely. Yes, there was a
+flapping and a struggle—a big bird, it must be, labouring in the snow.
+I wondered. Our biggest birds, in the valley, were the large hawks that
+often hung flickering opposite my windows, level with me, but high
+above some prey on the steep valleyside. This was much too big for a
+hawk—too big for any known bird. I searched in my mind for the largest
+English wild birds, geese, buzzards.
+
+Still it laboured and strove, then was still, a dark spot, then
+struggled again. I went out of the house and down the steep slope, at
+risk of breaking my leg between the rocks. I knew the ground so
+well—and yet I got well shaken before I drew near the thorn-trees.
+
+Yes, it was a bird. It was Joey. It was the grey-brown peacock with a
+blue neck. He was snow-wet and spent.
+
+“Joey—Joey, de-urr!” I said, staggering unevenly towards him. He looked
+so pathetic, rowing and struggling in the snow, too spent to rise, his
+blue neck stretching out and lying sometimes on the snow, his eye
+closing and opening quickly, his crest all battered.
+
+“Joey dee-uur! Dee-urr!” I said caressingly to him. And at last he lay
+still, blinking, in the surged and furrowed snow, whilst I came near
+and touched him, stroked him, gathered him under my arm. He stretched
+his long, wetted neck away from me as I held him, none the less he was
+quiet in my arm, too tired, perhaps, to struggle. Still he held his
+poor, crested head away from me, and seemed sometimes to droop, to
+wilt, as if he might suddenly die.
+
+He was not so heavy as I expected, yet it was a struggle to get up to
+the house with him again. We set him down, not too near the fire, and
+gently wiped him with cloths. He submitted, only now and then stretched
+his soft neck away from us, avoiding us helplessly. Then we set warm
+food by him. I _put_ it to his beak, tried to make him eat. But he
+ignored it. He seemed to be ignorant of what we were doing, recoiled
+inside himself inexplicably. So we put him in a basket with cloths, and
+left him crouching oblivious. His food we put near him. The blinds were
+drawn, the house was warm, it was night. Sometimes he stirred, but
+mostly he huddled still, leaning his queer crested head on one side. He
+touched no food, and took no heed of sounds or movements. We talked of
+brandy or stimulants. But I realised we had best leave him alone.
+
+In the night, however, we heard him thumping about. I got up anxiously
+with a candle. He had eaten some food, and scattered more, making a
+mess. And he was perched on the back of a heavy arm-chair. So I
+concluded he was recovered, or recovering.
+
+The next day was clear, and the snow had frozen, so I decided to carry
+him back to Tible. He consented, after various flappings, to sit in a
+big fish-bag with his battered head peeping out with wild uneasiness.
+And so I set off with him, slithering down into the valley, making good
+progress down in the pale shadow beside the rushing waters, then
+climbing painfully up the arrested white valleyside, plumed with
+clusters of young pine trees, into the paler white radiance of the
+snowy, upper regions, where the wind cut fine. Joey seemed to watch all
+the time with wide anxious, unseeing eye, brilliant and inscrutable. As
+I drew near to Tible township he stirred violently in the bag, though I
+do not know if he had recognised the place. Then, as I came to the
+sheds, he looked sharply from side to side, and stretched his neck out
+long. I was a little afraid of him. He gave a loud, vehement yell,
+opening his sinister beak, and I stood still, looking at him as he
+struggled in the bag, shaken myself by his struggles, yet not thinking
+to release him.
+
+Mrs. Goyte came darting past the end of the house, her head sticking
+forward in sharp scrutiny. She saw me, and came forward.
+
+“Have you got Joey?” she cried sharply, as if I were a thief.
+
+I opened the bag, and he flopped out, flapping as if he hated the touch
+of the snow now. She gathered him up, and put her lips to his beak. She
+was flushed and handsome, her eyes bright, her hair slack, thick, but
+more witch-like than ever. She did not speak.
+
+She had been followed by a grey-haired woman with a round, rather
+sallow face and a slightly hostile bearing.
+
+“Did you bring him with you, then?” she asked sharply. I answered that
+I had rescued him the previous evening.
+
+From the background slowly approached a slender man with a grey
+moustache and large patches on his trousers.
+
+“You’ve got ’im back ’gain, ah see,” he said to his daughter-in-law.
+His wife explained how I had found Joey.
+
+“Ah,” went on the grey man. “It wor our Alfred scared him off, back
+your life. He must’a flyed ower t’valley. Tha ma’ thank thy stars as ’e
+wor fun, Maggie. ’E’d a bin froze. They a bit nesh, you know,” he
+concluded to me.
+
+“They are,” I answered. “This isn’t their country.”
+
+“No, it isna,” replied Mr. Goyte. He spoke very slowly and
+deliberately, quietly, as if the soft pedal were always down in his
+voice. He looked at his daughter-in-law as she crouched, flushed and
+dark, before the peacock, which would lay its long blue neck for a
+moment along her lap. In spite of his grey moustache and thin grey
+hair, the elderly man had a face young and almost delicate, like a
+young man’s. His blue eyes twinkled with some inscrutable source of
+pleasure, his skin was fine and tender, his nose delicately arched. His
+grey hair being slightly ruffled, he had a debonair look, as of a youth
+who is in love.
+
+“We mun tell ’im it’s come,” he said slowly, and turning he called:
+“Alfred—Alfred! Wheer’s ter gotten to?”
+
+Then he turned again to the group.
+
+“Get up then, Maggie, lass, get up wi’ thee. Tha ma’es too much o’ th’
+bod.”
+
+A young man approached, wearing rough khaki and kneebreeches. He was
+Danish looking, broad at the loins.
+
+“I’s come back then,” said the father to the son; “leastwise, he’s bin
+browt back, flyed ower the Griff Low.”
+
+The son looked at me. He had a devil-may-care bearing, his cap on one
+side, his hands stuck in the front pockets of his breeches. But he said
+nothing.
+
+“Shall you come in a minute, Master,” said the elderly woman, to me.
+
+“Ay, come in an’ ha’e a cup o’ tea or summat. You’ll do wi’ summat,
+carrin’ that bod. Come on, Maggie wench, let’s go in.”
+
+So we went indoors, into the rather stuffy, overcrowded living-room,
+that was too cosy, and too warm. The son followed last, standing in the
+doorway. The father talked to me.
+
+Maggie put out the tea-cups. The mother went into the dairy again.
+
+“Tha’lt rouse thysen up a bit again, now, Maggie,” the father-in-law
+said—and then to me: “’ers not bin very bright sin’ Alfred came whoam,
+an’ the bod flyed awee. ’E come whoam a Wednesday night, Alfred did.
+But ay, you knowed, didna yer. Ay, ’e comed ’a Wednesday—an’ I reckon
+there wor a bit of a to-do between ’em, worn’t there, Maggie?”
+
+He twinkled maliciously to his daughter-in-law, who was flushed,
+brilliant and handsome.
+
+“Oh, be quiet, father. You’re wound up, by the sound of you,” she said
+to him, as if crossly. But she could never be cross with him.
+
+“’Ers got ’er colour back this mornin’,” continued the father-in-law
+slowly. “It’s bin heavy weather wi’ ’er this last two days. Ay—’er’s
+bin northeast sin ’er seed you a Wednesday.”
+
+“Father, do stop talking. You’d wear the leg off an iron pot. I can’t
+think where you’ve found your tongue, all of a sudden,” said Maggie,
+with caressive sharpness.
+
+“Ah’ve found it wheer I lost it. Aren’t goin’ ter come in an’ sit thee
+down, Alfred?”
+
+But Alfred turned and disappeared.
+
+“’E’s got th’ monkey on ’is back ower this letter job,” said the father
+secretly to me. “Mother, ’er knows nowt about it. Lot o’ tom-foolery,
+isn’t it? Ay! What’s good o’ makkin’ a peck o’ trouble over what’s far
+enough off, an’ ned niver come no nigher. No—not a smite o’ use. That’s
+what I tell ’er. ’Er should ta’e no notice on’t. Ty, what can y’
+expect.”
+
+The mother came in again, and the talk became general. Maggie flashed
+her eyes at me from time to time, complacent and satisfied, moving
+among the men. I paid her little compliments, which she did not seem to
+hear. She attended to me with a kind of sinister, witch-like
+graciousness, her dark head ducked between her shoulders, at once
+humble and powerful. She was happy as a child attending to her
+father-in-law and to me. But there was something ominous between her
+eyebrows, as if a dark moth were settled there—and something ominous in
+her bent, hulking bearing.
+
+She sat on a low stool by the fire, near her father-in-law. Her head
+was dropped, she seemed in a state of abstraction. From time to time
+she would suddenly recover, and look up at us, laughing and chatting.
+Then she would forget again. Yet in her hulked black forgetting she
+seemed very near to us.
+
+The door having been opened, the peacock came slowly in, prancing
+calmly. He went near to her and crouched down, coiling his blue neck.
+She glanced at him, but almost as if she did not observe him. The bird
+sat silent, seeming to sleep, and the woman also sat hulked and silent,
+seemingly oblivious. Then once more there was a heavy step, and Alfred
+entered. He looked at his wife, and he looked at the peacock crouching
+by her. He stood large in the doorway, his hands stuck in front of him,
+in his breeches pockets. Nobody spoke. He turned on his heel and went
+out again.
+
+I rose also to go. Maggie started as if coming to herself.
+
+“Must you go?” she asked, rising and coming near to me, standing in
+front of me, twisting her head sideways and looking up at me. “Can’t
+you stop a bit longer? We can all be cosy today, there’s nothing to do
+outdoors.” And she laughed, showing her teeth oddly. She had a long
+chin.
+
+I said I must go. The peacock uncoiled and coiled again his long blue
+neck, as he lay on the hearth. Maggie still stood close in front of me,
+so that I was acutely aware of my waistcoat buttons.
+
+“Oh, well,” she said, “you’ll come again, won’t you? Do come again.”
+
+I promised.
+
+“Come to tea one day—yes, do!”
+
+I promised—one day.
+
+The moment I went out of her presence I ceased utterly to exist for
+her—as utterly as I ceased to exist for Joey. With her curious
+abstractedness she forgot me again immediately. I knew it as I left
+her. Yet she seemed almost in physical contact with me while I was with
+her.
+
+The sky was all pallid again, yellowish. When I went out there was no
+sun; the snow was blue and cold. I hurried away down the hill, musing
+on Maggie. The road made a loop down the sharp face of the slope. As I
+went crunching over the laborious snow I became aware of a figure
+striding down the steep scarp to intercept me. It was a man with his
+hands in front of him, half stuck in his breeches pockets, and his
+shoulders square—a real farmer of the hills; Alfred, of course. He
+waited for me by the stone fence.
+
+“Excuse me,” he said as I came up.
+
+I came to a halt in front of him and looked into his sullen blue eyes.
+He had a certain odd haughtiness on his brows. But his blue eyes stared
+insolently at me.
+
+“Do you know anything about a letter—in French—that my wife opened—a
+letter of mine—?”
+
+“Yes,” said I. “She asked me to read it to her.”
+
+He looked square at me. He did not know exactly how to feel.
+
+“What was there in it?” he asked.
+
+“Why?” I said. “Don’t you know?”
+
+“She makes out she’s burnt it,” he said.
+
+“Without showing it you?” I asked.
+
+He nodded slightly. He seemed to be meditating as to what line of
+action he should take. He wanted to know the contents of the letter: he
+must know: and therefore he must ask me, for evidently his wife had
+taunted him. At the same time, no doubt, he would like to wreak untold
+vengeance on my unfortunate person. So he eyed me, and I eyed him, and
+neither of us spoke. He did not want to repeat his request to me. And
+yet I only looked at him, and considered.
+
+Suddenly he threw back his head and glanced down the valley. Then he
+changed his position—he was a horse-soldier. Then he looked at me
+confidentially.
+
+“She burnt the blasted thing before I saw it,” he said.
+
+“Well,” I answered slowly, “she doesn’t know herself what was in it.”
+
+He continued to watch me narrowly. I grinned to myself.
+
+“I didn’t like to read her out what there was in it,” I continued.
+
+He suddenly flushed so that the veins in his neck stood out, and he
+stirred again uncomfortably.
+
+“The Belgian girl said her baby had been born a week ago, and that they
+were going to call it Alfred,” I told him.
+
+He met my eyes. I was grinning. He began to grin, too.
+
+“Good luck to her,” he said.
+
+“Best of luck,” said I.
+
+“And what did you tell _her_?” he asked.
+
+“That the baby belonged to the old mother—that it was brother to your
+girl, who was writing to you as a friend of the family.”
+
+He stood smiling, with the long, subtle malice of a farmer.
+
+“And did she take it in?” he asked.
+
+“As much as she took anything else.”
+
+He stood grinning fixedly. Then he broke into a short laugh.
+
+“Good for _her_” he exclaimed cryptically.
+
+And then he laughed aloud once more, evidently feeling he had won a big
+move in his contest with his wife.
+
+“What about the other woman?” I asked.
+
+“Who?”
+
+“Élise.”
+
+“Oh”—he shifted uneasily—“she was all right—”
+
+“You’ll be getting back to her,” I said.
+
+He looked at me. Then he made a grimace with his mouth.
+
+“Not me,” he said. “Back your life it’s a plant.”
+
+“You don’t think the _cher petit bébé_ is a little Alfred?”
+
+“It might be,” he said.
+
+“Only might?”
+
+“Yes—an’ there’s lots of mites in a pound of cheese.” He laughed
+boisterously but uneasily.
+
+“What did she say, exactly?” he asked.
+
+I began to repeat, as well as I could, the phrases of the letter:
+
+“_Mon cher Alfred— Figure-toi comme je suis desolée_—”
+
+He listened with some confusion. When I had finished all I could
+remember, he said:
+
+“They know how to pitch you out a letter, those Belgian lasses.”
+
+“Practice,” said I.
+
+“They get plenty,” he said.
+
+There was a pause.
+
+“Oh, well,” he said. “I’ve never got that letter, anyhow.”
+
+The wind blew fine and keen, in the sunshine, across the snow. I blew
+my nose and prepared to depart.
+
+“And _she_ doesn’t know anything?” he continued, jerking his head up
+the hill in the direction of Tible.
+
+“She knows nothing but what I’ve said—that is, if she really burnt the
+letter.”
+
+“I believe she burnt it,” he said, “for spite. She’s a little devil,
+she is. But I shall have it out with her.” His jaw was stubborn and
+sullen. Then suddenly he turned to me with a new note.
+
+“Why?” he said. “Why didn’t you wring that b—— peacock’s neck—that b——
+Joey?”
+
+“Why?” I said. “What for?”
+
+“I hate the brute,” he said. “I had a shot at him—”
+
+I laughed. He stood and mused.
+
+“Poor little Élise,” he murmured.
+
+“Was she small—_petite_?” I asked. He jerked up his head.
+
+“No,” he said. “Rather tall.”
+
+“Taller than your wife, I suppose.”
+
+Again he looked into my eyes. And then once more he went into a loud
+burst of laughter that made the still, snow-deserted valley clap again.
+
+“God, it’s a knockout!” he said, thoroughly amused. Then he stood at
+ease, one foot out, his hands in his breeches pockets, in front of him,
+his head thrown back, a handsome figure of a man.
+
+“But I’ll do that blasted Joey in—” he mused.
+
+I ran down the hill, shouting with laughter.
+
+
+
+
+YOU TOUCHED ME
+
+
+The Pottery House was a square, ugly, brick house girt in by the wall
+that enclosed the whole grounds of the pottery itself. To be sure, a
+privet hedge partly masked the house and its ground from the
+pottery-yard and works: but only partly. Through the hedge could be
+seen the desolate yard, and the many-windowed, factory-like pottery,
+over the hedge could be seen the chimneys and the outhouses. But inside
+the hedge, a pleasant garden and lawn sloped down to a willow pool,
+which had once supplied the works.
+
+The Pottery itself was now closed, the great doors of the yard
+permanently shut. No more the great crates with yellow straw showing
+through, stood in stacks by the packing shed. No more the drays drawn
+by great horses rolled down the hill with a high load. No more the
+pottery-lasses in their clay-coloured overalls, their faces and hair
+splashed with grey fine mud, shrieked and larked with the men. All that
+was over.
+
+“We like it much better—oh, much better—quieter,” said Matilda Rockley.
+
+“Oh, yes,” assented Emmie Rockley, her sister.
+
+“I’m sure you do,” agreed the visitor.
+
+But whether the two Rockley girls really liked it better, or whether
+they only imagined they did, is a question. Certainly their lives were
+much more grey and dreary now that the grey clay had ceased to spatter
+its mud and silt its dust over the premises. They did not quite realise
+how they missed the shrieking, shouting lasses, whom they had known all
+their lives and disliked so much.
+
+Matilda and Emmie were already old maids. In a thorough industrial
+district, it is not easy for the girls who have expectations above the
+common to find husbands. The ugly industrial town was full of men,
+young men who were ready to marry. But they were all colliers or
+pottery-hands, mere workmen. The Rockley girls would have about ten
+thousand pounds each when their father died: ten thousand pounds’ worth
+of profitable house-property. It was not to be sneezed at: they felt so
+themselves, and refrained from sneezing away such a fortune on any mere
+member of the proletariat. Consequently, bank-clerks or nonconformist
+clergymen or even school-teachers having failed to come forward,
+Matilda had begun to give up all idea of ever leaving the Pottery
+House.
+
+Matilda was a tall, thin, graceful fair girl, with a rather large nose.
+She was the Mary to Emmie’s Martha: that is, Matilda loved painting and
+music, and read a good many novels, whilst Emmie looked after the
+house-keeping. Emmie was shorter, plumper than her sister, and she had
+no accomplishments. She looked up to Matilda, whose mind was naturally
+refined and sensible.
+
+In their quiet, melancholy way, the two girls were happy. Their mother
+was dead. Their father was ill also. He was an intelligent man who had
+had some education, but preferred to remain as if he were one with the
+rest of the working people. He had a passion for music and played the
+violin pretty well. But now he was getting old, he was very ill, dying
+of a kidney disease. He had been rather a heavy whisky-drinker.
+
+This quiet household, with one servant-maid, lived on year after year
+in the Pottery House. Friends came in, the girls went out, the father
+drank himself more and more ill. Outside in the street there was a
+continual racket of the colliers and their dogs and children. But
+inside the pottery wall was a deserted quiet.
+
+In all this ointment there was one little fly. Ted Rockley, the father
+of the girls, had had four daughters, and no son. As his girls grew, he
+felt angry at finding himself always in a house-hold of women. He went
+off to London and adopted a boy out of a Charity Institution. Emmie was
+fourteen years old, and Matilda sixteen, when their father arrived home
+with his prodigy, the boy of six, Hadrian.
+
+Hadrian was just an ordinary boy from a Charity Home, with ordinary
+brownish hair and ordinary bluish eyes and of ordinary rather cockney
+speech. The Rockley girls—there were three at home at the time of his
+arrival—had resented his being sprung on them. He, with his watchful,
+charity-institution instinct, knew this at once. Though he was only six
+years old, Hadrian had a subtle, jeering look on his face when he
+regarded the three young women. They insisted he should address them as
+Cousin: Cousin Flora, Cousin Matilda, Cousin Emmie. He complied, but
+there seemed a mockery in his tone.
+
+The girls, however, were kind-hearted by nature. Flora married and left
+home. Hadrian did very much as he pleased with Matilda and Emmie,
+though they had certain strictnesses. He grew up in the Pottery House
+and about the Pottery premises, went to an elementary school, and was
+invariably called Hadrian Rockley. He regarded Cousin Matilda and
+Cousin Emmie with a certain laconic indifference, was quiet and
+reticent in his ways. The girls called him sly, but that was unjust. He
+was merely cautious, and without frankness. His Uncle, Ted Rockley,
+understood him tacitly, their natures were somewhat akin. Hadrian and
+the elderly man had a real but unemotional regard for one another.
+
+When he was thirteen years old the boy was sent to a High School in the
+County town. He did not like it. His Cousin Matilda had longed to make
+a little gentleman of him, but he refused to be made. He would give a
+little contemptuous curve to his lip, and take on a shy, charity-boy
+grin, when refinement was thrust upon him. He played truant from the
+High School, sold his books, his cap with its badge, even his very
+scarf and pocket-handkerchief, to his school-fellows, and went raking
+off heaven knows where with the money. So he spent two very
+unsatisfactory years.
+
+When he was fifteen he announced that he wanted to leave England and go
+to the Colonies. He had kept touch with the Home. The Rockleys knew
+that, when Hadrian made a declaration, in his quiet, half-jeering
+manner, it was worse than useless to oppose him. So at last the boy
+departed, going to Canada under the protection of the Institution to
+which he had belonged. He said good-bye to the Rockleys without a word
+of thanks, and parted, it seemed, without a pang. Matilda and Emmie
+wept often to think of how he left them: even on their father’s face a
+queer look came. But Hadrian wrote fairly regularly from Canada. He had
+entered some electricity works near Montreal, and was doing well.
+
+At last, however, the war came. In his turn, Hadrian joined up and came
+to Europe. The Rockleys saw nothing of him. They lived on, just the
+same, in the Pottery House. Ted Rockley was dying of a sort of dropsy,
+and in his heart he wanted to see the boy. When the armistice was
+signed, Hadrian had a long leave, and wrote that he was coming home to
+the Pottery House.
+
+The girls were terribly fluttered. To tell the truth, they were a
+little afraid of Hadrian. Matilda, tall and thin, was frail in her
+health, both girls were worn with nursing their father. To have
+Hadrian, a young man of twenty-one, in the house with them, after he
+had left them so coldly five years before, was a trying circumstance.
+
+They were in a flutter. Emmie persuaded her father to have his bed made
+finally in the morning-room downstairs, whilst his room upstairs was
+prepared for Hadrian. This was done, and preparations were going on for
+the arrival, when, at ten o’clock in the morning the young man suddenly
+turned up, quite unexpectedly. Cousin Emmie, with her hair bobbed up in
+absurd little bobs round her forehead, was busily polishing the
+stair-rods, while Cousin Matilda was in the kitchen washing the
+drawing-room ornaments in a lather, her sleeves rolled back on her thin
+arms, and her head tied up oddly and coquettishly in a duster.
+
+Cousin Matilda blushed deep with mortification when the self-possessed
+young man walked in with his kit-bag, and put his cap on the sewing
+machine. He was little and self-confident, with a curious neatness
+about him that still suggested the Charity Institution. His face was
+brown, he had a small moustache, he was vigorous enough in his
+smallness.
+
+“_Well_, is it Hadrian!” exclaimed Cousin Matilda, wringing the lather
+off her hand. “We didn’t expect you till tomorrow.”
+
+“I got off Monday night,” said Hadrian, glancing round the room.
+
+“Fancy!” said Cousin Matilda. Then, having dried her hands, she went
+forward, held out her hand, and said:
+
+“How are you?”
+
+“Quite well, thank you,” said Hadrian.
+
+“You’re quite a man,” said Cousin Matilda.
+
+Hadrian glanced at her. She did not look her best: so thin, so
+large-nosed, with that pink-and-white checked duster tied round her
+head. She felt her disadvantage. But she had had a good deal of
+suffering and sorrow, she did not mind any more.
+
+The servant entered—one that did not know Hadrian.
+
+“Come and see my father,” said Cousin Matilda.
+
+In the hall they roused Cousin Emmie like a partridge from cover. She
+was on the stairs pushing the bright stair-rods into place.
+Instinctively her hand went to the little knobs, her front hair bobbed
+on her forehead.
+
+“Why!” she exclaimed, crossly. “What have you come today for?”
+
+“I got off a day earlier,” said Hadrian, and his man’s voice so deep
+and unexpected was like a blow to Cousin Emmie.
+
+“Well, you’ve caught us in the midst of it,” she said, with resentment.
+Then all three went into the middle room.
+
+Mr. Rockley was dressed—that is, he had on his trousers and socks—but
+he was resting on the bed, propped up just under the window, from
+whence he could see his beloved and resplendent garden, where tulips
+and apple-trees were ablaze. He did not look as ill as he was, for the
+water puffed him up, and his face kept its colour. His stomach was much
+swollen. He glanced round swiftly, turning his eyes without turning his
+head. He was the wreck of a handsome, well-built man.
+
+Seeing Hadrian, a queer, unwilling smile went over his face. The young
+man greeted him sheepishly.
+
+“You wouldn’t make a life-guardsman,” he said. “Do you want something
+to eat?”
+
+Hadrian looked round—as if for the meal.
+
+“I don’t mind,” he said.
+
+“What shall you have—egg and bacon?” asked Emmie shortly.
+
+“Yes, I don’t mind,” said Hadrian.
+
+The sisters went down to the kitchen, and sent the servant to finish
+the stairs.
+
+“Isn’t he _altered_?” said Matilda, _sotto voce_.
+
+“Isn’t he!” said Cousin Emmie. “_What_ a little man!”
+
+They both made a grimace, and laughed nervously.
+
+“Get the frying-pan,” said Emmie to Matilda.
+
+“But he’s as cocky as ever,” said Matilda, narrowing her eyes and
+shaking her head knowingly, as she handed the frying-pan.
+
+“Mannie!” said Emmie sarcastically. Hadrian’s new-fledged, cock-sure
+manliness evidently found no favour in her eyes.
+
+“Oh, he’s not bad,” said Matilda. “You don’t want to be prejudiced
+against him.”
+
+I’m not prejudiced against him, I think he’s all right for looks,” said
+Emmie, “but there’s too much of the little mannie about him.”
+
+“Fancy catching us like this,” said Matilda.
+
+“They’ve no thought for anything,” said Emmie with contempt. “You go up
+and get dressed, our Matilda. I don’t care about him. I can see to
+things, and you can talk to him. I shan’t.”
+
+“He’ll talk to my father,” said Matilda, meaningful.
+
+“_Sly—!_” exclaimed Emmie, with a grimace.
+
+The sisters believed that Hadrian had come hoping to get something out
+of their father—hoping for a legacy. And they were not at all sure he
+would not get it.
+
+Matilda went upstairs to change. She had thought it all out how she
+would receive Hadrian, and impress him. And he had caught her with her
+head tied up in a duster, and her thin arms in a basin of lather. But
+she did not care. She now dressed herself most scrupulously, carefully
+folded her long, beautiful, blonde hair, touched her pallor with a
+little rouge, and put her long string of exquisite crystal beads over
+her soft green dress. Now she looked elegant, like a heroine in a
+magazine illustration, and almost as unreal.
+
+She found Hadrian and her father talking away. The young man was short
+of speech as a rule, but he could find his tongue with his “uncle”.
+They were both sipping a glass of brandy, and smoking, and chatting
+like a pair of old cronies. Hadrian was telling about Canada. He was
+going back there when his leave was up.
+
+“You wouldn’t like to stop in England, then?” said Mr. Rockley.
+
+“No, I wouldn’t stop in England,” said Hadrian.
+
+“How’s that? There’s plenty of electricians here,” said Mr. Rockley.
+
+“Yes. But there’s too much difference between the men and the employers
+over here—too much of that for me,” said Hadrian.
+
+The sick man looked at him narrowly, with oddly smiling eyes.
+
+“That’s it, is it?” he replied.
+
+Matilda heard and understood. “So that’s your big idea, is it, my
+little man,” she said to herself. She had always said of Hadrian that
+he had no proper _respect_ for anybody or anything, that he was sly and
+_common_. She went down to the kitchen for a _sotto voce_ confab with
+Emmie.
+
+“He thinks a rare lot of himself!” she whispered.
+
+“He’s somebody, he is!” said Emmie with contempt.
+
+“He thinks there’s too much difference between masters and men, over
+here,” said Matilda.
+
+“Is it any different in Canada?” asked Emmie.
+
+“Oh, yes—democratic,” replied Matilda, “He thinks they’re all on a
+level over there.”
+
+“Ay, well he’s over here now,” said Emmie dryly, “so he can keep his
+place.”
+
+As they talked they saw the young man sauntering down the garden,
+looking casually at the flowers. He had his hands in his pockets, and
+his soldier’s cap neatly on his head. He looked quite at his ease, as
+if in possession. The two women, fluttered, watched him through the
+window.
+
+“We know what he’s come for,” said Emmie, churlishly. Matilda looked a
+long time at the neat khaki figure. It had something of the charity-boy
+about it still; but now it was a man’s figure, laconic, charged with
+plebeian energy. She thought of the derisive passion in his voice as he
+had declaimed against the propertied classes, to her father.
+
+“You don’t know, Emmie. Perhaps he’s not come for that,” she rebuked
+her sister. They were both thinking of the money.
+
+They were still watching the young soldier. He stood away at the bottom
+of the garden, with his back to them, his hands in his pockets, looking
+into the water of the willow pond. Matilda’s dark-blue eyes had a
+strange, full look in them, the lids, with the faint blue veins
+showing, dropped rather low. She carried her head light and high, but
+she had a look of pain. The young man at the bottom of the garden
+turned and looked up the path. Perhaps he saw them through the window.
+Matilda moved into shadow.
+
+That afternoon their father seemed weak and ill. He was easily
+exhausted. The doctor came, and told Matilda that the sick man might
+die suddenly at any moment—but then he might not. They must be
+prepared.
+
+So the day passed, and the next. Hadrian made himself at home. He went
+about in the morning in his brownish jersey and his khaki trousers,
+collarless, his bare neck showing. He explored the pottery premises, as
+if he had some secret purpose in so doing, he talked with Mr. Rockley,
+when the sick man had strength. The two girls were always angry when
+the two men sat talking together like cronies. Yet it was chiefly a
+kind of politics they talked.
+
+On the second day after Hadrian’s arrival, Matilda sat with her father
+in the evening. She was drawing a picture which she wanted to copy. It
+was very still, Hadrian was gone out somewhere, no one knew where, and
+Emmie was busy. Mr. Rockley reclined on his bed, looking out in silence
+over his evening-sunny garden.
+
+“If anything happens to me, Matilda,” he said, “you won’t sell this
+house—you’ll stop here—”
+
+Matilda’s eyes took their slightly haggard look as she stared at her
+father.
+
+“Well, we couldn’t do anything else,” she said.
+
+“You don’t know what you might do,” he said. “Everything is left to you
+and Emmie, equally. You’do as you like with it—only don’t sell this
+house, don’t part with it.”
+
+“No,” she said.
+
+“And give Hadrian my watch and chain, and a hundred pounds out of
+what’s in the bank—and help him if he ever wants helping. I haven’t put
+his name in the will.”
+
+“Your watch and chain, and a hundred pounds—yes. But you’ll be here
+when he goes back to Canada, father.”
+
+“You never know what’ll happen,” said her father.
+
+Matilda sat and watched him, with her full, haggard eyes, for a long
+time, as if tranced. She saw that he knew he must go soon—she saw like
+a clairvoyant.
+
+Later on she told Emmie what her father had said about the watch and
+chain and the money.
+
+“What right has _he”—he_—meaning Hadrian—“to my father’s watch and
+chain—what has it to do with him? Let him have the money, and get off,”
+said Emmie. She loved her father.
+
+That night Matilda sat late in her room. Her heart was anxious and
+breaking, her mind seemed entranced. She was too much entranced even to
+weep, and all the time she thought of her father, only her father. At
+last she felt she must go to him.
+
+It was near midnight. She went along the passage and to his room. There
+was a faint light from the moon outside. She listened at his door. Then
+she softly opened and entered. The room was faintly dark. She heard a
+movement on the bed.
+
+“Are you asleep?” she said softly, advancing to the side of the bed.
+
+“Are you asleep?” she repeated gently, as she stood at the side of the
+bed. And she reached her hand in the darkness to touch his forehead.
+Delicately, her fingers met the nose and the eyebrows, she laid her
+fine, delicate hand on his brow. It seemed fresh and smooth—very fresh
+and smooth. A sort of surprise stirred her, in her entranced state. But
+it could not waken her. Gently, she leaned over the bed and stirred her
+fingers over the low-growing hair on his brow.
+
+“Can’t you sleep tonight?” she said.
+
+There was a quick stirring in the bed. “Yes, I can,” a voice answered.
+It was Hadrian’s voice. She started away. Instantly, she was wakened
+from her late-at-night trance. She remembered that her father was
+downstairs, that Hadrian had his room. She stood in the darkness as if
+stung.
+
+“It is you, Hadrian?” she said. “I thought it was my father.” She was
+so startled, so shocked, that she could not move. The young man gave an
+uncomfortable laugh, and turned in his bed.
+
+At last she got out of the room. When she was back in her own room, in
+the light, and her door was closed, she stood holding up her hand that
+had touched him, as if it were hurt. She was almost too shocked, she
+could not endure.
+
+“Well,” said her calm and weary mind, “it was only a mistake, why take
+any notice of it.”
+
+But she could not reason her feelings so easily. She suffered, feeling
+herself in a false position. Her right hand, which she had laid so
+gently on his face, on his fresh skin, ached now, as if it were really
+injured. She could not forgive Hadrian for the mistake: it made her
+dislike him deeply.
+
+Hadrian too slept badly. He had been awakened by the opening of the
+door, and had not realised what the question meant. But the soft,
+straying tenderness of her hand on his face startled something out of
+his soul. He was a charity boy, aloof and more or less at bay. The
+fragile exquisiteness of her caress startled him most, revealed unknown
+things to him.
+
+In the morning she could feel the consciousness in his eyes, when she
+came downstairs. She tried to bear herself as if nothing at all had
+happened, and she succeeded. She had the calm self-control,
+self-indifference, of one who has suffered and borne her suffering. She
+looked at him from her darkish, almost drugged blue eyes, she met the
+spark of consciousness in his eyes, and quenched it. And with her long,
+fine hand she put the sugar in his coffee.
+
+But she could not control him as she thought she could. He had a keen
+memory stinging his mind, a new set of sensations working in his
+consciousness. Something new was alert in him. At the back of his
+reticent, guarded mind he kept his secret alive and vivid. She was at
+his mercy, for he was unscrupulous, his standard was not her standard.
+
+He looked at her curiously. She was not beautiful, her nose was too
+large, her chin was too small, her neck was too thin. But her skin was
+clear and fine, she had a high-bred sensitiveness. This queer, brave,
+high-bred quality she shared with her father. The charity boy could see
+it in her tapering fingers, which were white and ringed. The same
+glamour that he knew in the elderly man he now saw in the woman. And he
+wanted to possess himself of it, he wanted to make himself master of
+it. As he went about through the old pottery-yard, his secretive mind
+schemed and worked. To be master of that strange soft delicacy such as
+he had felt in her hand upon his face,—this was what he set himself
+towards. He was secretly plotting.
+
+He watched Matilda as she went about, and she became aware of his
+attention, as of some shadow following her. But her pride made her
+ignore it. When he sauntered near her, his hands in his pockets, she
+received him with that same commonplace kindliness which mastered him
+more than any contempt. Her superior breeding seemed to control him.
+She made herself feel towards him exactly as she had always felt: he
+was a young boy who lived in the house with them, but was a stranger.
+Only, she dared not remember his face under her hand. When she
+remembered that, she was bewildered. Her hand had offended her, she
+wanted to cut it off. And she wanted, fiercely, to cut off the memory
+in him. She assumed she had done so.
+
+One day, when he sat talking with his “uncle”, he looked straight into
+the eyes of the sick man, and said:
+
+“But I shouldn’t like to live and die here in Rawsley.”
+
+“No—well—you needn’t,” said the sick man.
+
+“Do you think Cousin Matilda likes it?”
+
+“I should think so.”
+
+“I don’t call it much of a life,” said the youth. “How much older is
+she than me, Uncle?”
+
+The sick man looked at the young soldier.
+
+“A good bit,” he said.
+
+“Over thirty?” said Hadrian.
+
+“Well, not so much. She’s thirty-two.”
+
+Hadrian considered a while.
+
+“She doesn’t look it,” he said.
+
+Again the sick father looked at him.
+
+“Do you think she’d like to leave here?” said Hadrian.
+
+“Nay, I don’t know,” replied the father, restive.
+
+Hadrian sat still, having his own thoughts. Then in a small, quiet
+voice, as if he were speaking from inside himself, he said:
+
+“I’d marry her if you wanted me to.”
+
+The sick man raised his eyes suddenly, and stared. He stared for a long
+time. The youth looked inscrutably out of the window.
+
+“_You!_” said the sick man, mocking, with some contempt. Hadrian turned
+and met his eyes. The two men had an inexplicable understanding.
+
+“If you wasn’t against it,” said Hadrian.
+
+“Nay,” said the father, turning aside, “I don’t think I’m against it.
+I’ve never thought of it. But—But Emmie’s the youngest.”
+
+He had flushed, and looked suddenly more alive. Secretly he loved the
+boy.
+
+“You might ask her,” said Hadrian.
+
+The elder man considered.
+
+“Hadn’t you better ask her yourself?” he said.
+
+“She’d take more notice of you,” said Hadrian.
+
+They were both silent. Then Emmie came in.
+
+For two days Mr. Rockley was excited and thoughtful. Hadrian went about
+quietly, secretly, unquestioning. At last the father and daughter were
+alone together. It was very early morning, the father had been in much
+pain. As the pain abated, he lay still, thinking.
+
+“Matilda!” he said suddenly, looking at his daughter.
+
+“Yes, I’m here,” she said.
+
+“Ay! I want you to do something—”
+
+She rose in anticipation.
+
+“Nay, sit still. I want you to marry Hadrian—”
+
+She thought he was raving. She rose, bewildered and frightened.
+
+“Nay, sit you still, sit you still. You hear what I tell you.”
+
+“But you don’t know what you’re saying, father.”
+
+“Ay, I know well enough. I want you to marry Hadrian, I tell you.”
+
+She was dumbfounded. He was a man of few words.
+
+“You’ll do what I tell you,” he said.
+
+She looked at him slowly.
+
+“What put such an idea in your mind?” she said proudly.
+
+“He did.”
+
+Matilda almost looked her father down, her pride was so offended.
+
+“Why, it’s disgraceful,” she said.
+
+“Why?”
+
+She watched him slowly.
+
+“What do you ask me for?” she said. “It’s disgusting.”
+
+“The lad’s sound enough,” he replied, testily.
+
+“You’d better tell him to clear out,” she said, coldly.
+
+He turned and looked out of the window. She sat flushed and erect for a
+long time. At length her father turned to her, looking really
+malevolent.
+
+“If you won’t,” he said, “you’re a fool, and I’ll make you pay for your
+foolishness, do you see?”
+
+Suddenly a cold fear gripped her. She could not believe her senses. She
+was terrified and bewildered. She stared at her father, believing him
+to be delirious, or mad, or drunk. What could she do?
+
+“I tell you,” he said. “I’ll send for Whittle tomorrow if you don’t.
+You shall neither of you have anything of mine.”
+
+Whittle was the solicitor. She understood her father well enough: he
+would send for his solicitor, and make a will leaving all his property
+to Hadrian: neither she nor Emmie should have anything. It was too
+much. She rose and went out of the room, up to her own room, where she
+locked herself in.
+
+She did not come out for some hours. At last, late at night, she
+confided in Emmie.
+
+“The sliving demon, he wants the money,” said Emmie. “My father’s out
+of his mind.”
+
+The thought that Hadrian merely wanted the money was another blow to
+Matilda. She did not love the impossible youth—but she had not yet
+learned to think of him as a thing of evil. He now became hideous to
+her mind.
+
+Emmie had a little scene with her father next day.
+
+“You don’t mean what you said to our Matilda yesterday, do you,
+father?” she asked aggressively.
+
+“Yes,” he replied.
+
+“What, that you’ll alter your will?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“You won’t,” said his angry daughter.
+
+But he looked at her with a malevolent little smile.
+
+“Annie!” he shouted. “Annie!”
+
+He had still power to make his voice carry. The servant maid came in
+from the kitchen.
+
+“Put your things on, and go down to Whittle’s office, and say I want to
+see Mr. Whittle as soon as he can, and will he bring a will-form.”
+
+The sick man lay back a little—he could not lie down. His daughter sat
+as if she had been struck. Then she left the room.
+
+Hadrian was pottering about in the garden. She went straight down to
+him.
+
+“Here,” she said. “You’d better get off. You’d better take your things
+and go from here, quick.”
+
+Hadrian looked slowly at the infuriated girl.
+
+“Who says so?” he asked.
+
+“_We_ say so—get off, you’ve done enough mischief and damage.”
+
+“Does Uncle say so?”
+
+“Yes, he does.”
+
+“I’ll go and ask him.”
+
+But like a fury Emmie barred his way.
+
+“No, you needn’t. You needn’t ask him nothing at all. We don’t want
+you, so you can go.”
+
+“Uncle’s boss here.”
+
+“A man that’s dying, and you crawling round and working on him for his
+money!—you’re not fit to live.”
+
+“Oh!” he said. “Who says I’m working for his money?”
+
+“I say. But my father told our Matilda, and _she_ knows what you are.
+_She_ knows what you’re after. So you might as well clear out, for all
+you’ll get—guttersnipe!”
+
+He turned his back on her, to think. It had not occurred to him that
+they would think he was after the money. He _did_ want the money—badly.
+He badly wanted to be an employer himself, not one of the employed. But
+he knew, in his subtle, calculating way, that it was not for money he
+wanted Matilda. He wanted both the money and Matilda. But he told
+himself the two desires were separate, not one. He could not do with
+Matilda, _without_ the money. But he did not want her _for_ the money.
+
+When he got this clear in his mind, he sought for an opportunity to
+tell it her, lurking and watching. But she avoided him. In the evening
+the lawyer came. Mr. Rockley seemed to have a new access of strength—a
+will was drawn up, making the previous arrangements wholly conditional.
+The old will held good, if Matilda would consent to marry Hadrian. If
+she refused then at the end of six months the whole property passed to
+Hadrian.
+
+Mr. Rockley told this to the young man, with malevolent satisfaction.
+He seemed to have a strange desire, quite unreasonable, for revenge
+upon the women who had surrounded him for so long, and served him so
+carefully.
+
+“Tell her in front of me,” said Hadrian.
+
+So Mr. Rockley sent for his daughters.
+
+At last they came, pale, mute, stubborn. Matilda seemed to have retired
+far off, Emmie seemed like a fighter ready to fight to the death. The
+sick man reclined on the bed, his eyes bright, his puffed hand
+trembling. But his face had again some of its old, bright handsomeness.
+Hadrian sat quiet, a little aside: the indomitable, dangerous charity
+boy.
+
+“There’s the will,” said their father, pointing them to the paper.
+
+The two women sat mute and immovable, they took no notice.
+
+“Either you marry Hadrian, or he has everything,” said the father with
+satisfaction.
+
+“Then let him have everything,” said Matilda boldly.
+
+“He’s not! He’s not!” cried Emmie fiercely. “He’s not going to have it.
+The guttersnipe!”
+
+An amused look came on her father’s face.
+
+“You hear that, Hadrian,” he said.
+
+“I didn’t offer to marry Cousin Matilda for the money,” said Hadrian,
+flushing and moving on his seat.
+
+Matilda looked at him slowly, with her dark-blue, drugged eyes. He
+seemed a strange little monster to her.
+
+“Why, you liar, you know you did,” cried Emmie.
+
+The sick man laughed. Matilda continued to gaze strangely at the young
+man.
+
+“She knows I didn’t,” said Hadrian.
+
+He too had his courage, as a rat has indomitable courage in the end.
+Hadrian had some of the neatness, the reserve, the underground quality
+of the rat. But he had perhaps the ultimate courage, the most
+unquenchable courage of all.
+
+Emmie looked at her sister.
+
+“Oh, well,” she said. “Matilda—don’t bother. Let him have everything,
+we can look after ourselves.”
+
+“I know he’ll take everything,” said Matilda, abstractedly.
+
+Hadrian did not answer. He knew in fact that if Matilda refused him he
+would take everything, and go off with it.
+
+“A clever little mannie—!” said Emmie, with a jeering grimace.
+
+The father laughed noiselessly to himself. But he was tired....
+
+“Go on, then,” he said. “Go on, let me be quiet.”
+
+Emmie turned and looked at him.
+
+“You deserve what you’ve got,” she said to her father bluntly.
+
+“Go on,” he answered mildly. “Go on.”
+
+Another night passed—a night nurse sat up with Mr. Rockley. Another day
+came. Hadrian was there as ever, in his woollen jersey and coarse khaki
+trousers and bare neck. Matilda went about, frail and distant, Emmie
+black-browed in spite of her blondness. They were all quiet, for they
+did not intend the mystified servant to learn anything.
+
+Mr. Rockley had very bad attacks of pain, he could not breathe. The end
+seemed near. They all went about quiet and stoical, all unyielding.
+Hadrian pondered within himself. If he did not marry Matilda he would
+go to Canada with twenty thousand pounds. This was itself a very
+satisfactory prospect. If Matilda consented he would have nothing—she
+would have her own money.
+
+Emmie was the one to act. She went off in search of the solicitor and
+brought him with her. There was an interview, and Whittle tried to
+frighten the youth into withdrawal—but without avail. The clergyman and
+relatives were summoned—but Hadrian stared at them and took no notice.
+It made him angry, however.
+
+He wanted to catch Matilda alone. Many days went by, and he was not
+successful: she avoided him. At last, lurking, he surprised her one day
+as she came to pick gooseberries, and he cut off her retreat. He came
+to the point at once.
+
+“You don’t want me, then?” he said, in his subtle, insinuating voice.
+
+“I don’t want to speak to you,” she said, averting her face.
+
+“You put your hand on me, though,” he said. “You shouldn’t have done
+that, and then I should never have thought of it. You shouldn’t have
+touched me.”
+
+“If you were anything decent, you’d know that was a mistake, and forget
+it,” she said.
+
+“I know it was a mistake—but I shan’t forget it. If you wake a man up,
+he can’t go to sleep again because he’s told to.”
+
+“If you had any decent feeling in you, you’d have gone away,” she
+replied.
+
+“I didn’t want to,” he replied.
+
+She looked away into the distance. At last she asked:
+
+“What do you persecute me for, if it isn’t for the money. I’m old
+enough to be your mother. In a way I’ve been your mother.”
+
+“Doesn’t matter,” he said. “You’ve been no mother to me. Let us marry
+and go out to Canada—you might as well—you’ve touched me.”
+
+She was white and trembling. Suddenly she flushed with anger.
+
+“It’s so _indecent_,” she said.
+
+“How?” he retorted. “You touched me.”
+
+But she walked away from him. She felt as if he had trapped her. He was
+angry and depressed, he felt again despised.
+
+That same evening she went into her father’s room.
+
+“Yes,” she said suddenly. “I’ll marry him.”
+
+Her father looked up at her. He was in pain, and very ill.
+
+“You like him now, do you?” he said, with a faint smile.
+
+She looked down into his face, and saw death not far off. She turned
+and went coldly out of the room.
+
+The solicitor was sent for, preparations were hastily made. In all the
+interval Matilda did not speak to Hadrian, never answered him if he
+addressed her. He approached her in the morning.
+
+“You’ve come round to it, then?” he said, giving her a pleasant look
+from his twinkling, almost kindly eyes. She looked down at him and
+turned aside. She looked down on him both literally and figuratively.
+Still he persisted, and triumphed.
+
+Emmie raved and wept, the secret flew abroad. But Matilda was silent
+and unmoved, Hadrian was quiet and satisfied, and nipped with fear
+also. But he held out against his fear. Mr. Rockley was very ill, but
+unchanged.
+
+On the third day the marriage took place. Matilda and Hadrian drove
+straight home from the registrar, and went straight into the room of
+the dying man. His face lit up with a clear twinkling smile.
+
+“Hadrian—you’ve got her?” he said, a little hoarsely.
+
+“Yes,” said Hadrian, who was pale round the gills.
+
+“Ay, my lad, I’m glad you’re mine,” replied the dying man. Then he
+turned his eyes closely on Matilda.
+
+“Let’s look at you, Matilda,” he said. Then his voice went strange and
+unrecognisable. “Kiss me,” he said.
+
+She stooped and kissed him. She had never kissed him before, not since
+she was a tiny child. But she was quiet, very still.
+
+“Kiss him,” the dying man said.
+
+Obediently, Matilda put forward her mouth and kissed the young husband.
+
+“That’s right! That’s right!” murmured the dying man.
+
+
+
+
+SAMSON AND DELILAH
+
+
+A man got down from the motor-omnibus that runs from Penzance to St
+Just-in-Penwith, and turned northwards, uphill towards the Polestar. It
+was only half past six, but already the stars were out, a cold little
+wind was blowing from the sea, and the crystalline, three-pulse flash
+of the lighthouse below the cliffs beat rhythmically in the first
+darkness.
+
+The man was alone. He went his way unhesitating, but looked from side
+to side with cautious curiosity. Tall, ruined power-houses of tin-mines
+loomed in the darkness from time to time, like remnants of some by-gone
+civilization. The lights of many miners’ cottages scattered on the
+hilly darkness twinkled desolate in their disorder, yet twinkled with
+the lonely homeliness of the Celtic night.
+
+He tramped steadily on, always watchful with curiosity. He was a tall,
+well-built man, apparently in the prime of life. His shoulders were
+square and rather stiff, he leaned forwards a little as he went, from
+the hips, like a man who must stoop to lower his height. But he did not
+stoop his shoulders: he bent his straight back from the hips.
+
+Now and again short, stump, thick-legged figures of Cornish miners
+passed him, and he invariably gave them goodnight, as if to insist that
+he was on his own ground. He spoke with the west-Cornish intonation.
+And as he went along the dreary road, looking now at the lights of the
+dwellings on land, now at the lights away to sea, vessels veering round
+in sight of the Longships Lighthouse, the whole of the Atlantic Ocean
+in darkness and space between him and America, he seemed a little
+excited and pleased with himself, watchful, thrilled, veering along in
+a sense of mastery and of power in conflict.
+
+The houses began to close on the road, he was entering the straggling,
+formless, desolate mining village, that he knew of old. On the left was
+a little space set back from the road, and cosy lights of an inn. There
+it was. He peered up at the sign: “The Tinners’ Rest”. But he could not
+make out the name of the proprietor. He listened. There was excited
+talking and laughing, a woman’s voice laughing shrilly among the men’s.
+
+Stooping a little, he entered the warmly-lit bar. The lamp was burning,
+a buxom woman rose from the white-scrubbed deal table where the black
+and white and red cards were scattered, and several men, miners, lifted
+their faces from the game.
+
+The stranger went to the counter, averting his face. His cap was pulled
+down over his brow.
+
+“Good-evening!” said the landlady, in her rather ingratiating voice.
+
+“Good-evening. A glass of ale.”
+
+“A glass of ale,” repeated the landlady suavely. “Cold night—but
+bright.”
+
+“Yes,” the man assented, laconically. Then he added, when nobody
+expected him to say any more: “Seasonable weather.”
+
+“Quite seasonable, quite,” said the landlady. “Thank you.”
+
+The man lifted his glass straight to his lips, and emptied it. He put
+it down again on the zinc counter with a click.
+
+“Let’s have another,” he said.
+
+The woman drew the beer, and the man went away with his glass to the
+second table, near the fire. The woman, after a moment’s hesitation,
+took her seat again at the table with the card-players. She had noticed
+the man: a big fine fellow, well dressed, a stranger.
+
+But he spoke with that Cornish-Yankee accent she accepted as the
+natural twang among the miners.
+
+The stranger put his foot on the fender and looked into the fire. He
+was handsome, well coloured, with well-drawn Cornish eyebrows, and the
+usual dark, bright, mindless Cornish eyes. He seemed abstracted in
+thought. Then he watched the card-party.
+
+The woman was buxom and healthy, with dark hair and small, quick brown
+eyes. She was bursting with life and vigour, the energy she threw into
+the game of cards excited all the men, they shouted, and laughed, and
+the woman held her breast, shrieking with laughter.
+
+“Oh, my, it’ll be the death o’ me,” she panted. “Now, come on, Mr.
+Trevorrow, play fair. Play fair, I say, or I s’ll put the cards down.”
+
+“Play fair! Why who’s played unfair?” ejaculated Mr. Trevorrow. “Do you
+mean t’accuse me, as I haven’t played fair, Mrs. Nankervis?”
+
+“I do. I say it, and I mean it. Haven’t you got the queen of spades?
+Now, come on, no dodging round me. _I_ know you’ve got that queen, as
+well as I know my name’s Alice.”
+
+“Well—if your name’s Alice, you’ll have to have it—”
+
+“Ay, now—what did I say? Did you ever see such a man? My word, but your
+missus must be easy took in, by the looks of things.”
+
+And off she went into peals of laughter. She was interrupted by the
+entrance of four men in khaki, a short, stumpy sergeant of middle age,
+a young corporal, and two young privates. The woman leaned back in her
+chair.
+
+“Oh, my!” she cried. “If there isn’t the boys back: looking perished, I
+believe—”
+
+“Perished, Ma!” exclaimed the sergeant. “Not yet.”
+
+“Near enough,” said a young private, uncouthly.
+
+The woman got up.
+
+“I’m sure you are, my dears. You’ll be wanting your suppers, I’ll be
+bound.”
+
+“We could do with ’em.”
+
+“Let’s have a wet first,” said the sergeant.
+
+The woman bustled about getting the drinks. The soldiers moved to the
+fire, spreading out their hands.
+
+“Have your suppers in here, will you?” she said. “Or in the kitchen?”
+
+“Let’s have it here,” said the sergeant. “More cosier—_if_ you don’t
+mind.”
+
+“You shall have it where you like, boys, where you like.”
+
+She disappeared. In a minute a girl of about sixteen came in. She was
+tall and fresh, with dark, young, expressionless eyes, and well-drawn
+brows, and the immature softness and mindlessness of the sensuous
+Celtic type.
+
+“Ho, Maryann! Evenin’, Maryann! How’s Maryann, now?” came the multiple
+greeting.
+
+She replied to everybody in a soft voice, a strange, soft _aplomb_ that
+was very attractive. And she moved round with rather mechanical,
+attractive movements, as if her thoughts were elsewhere. But she had
+always this dim far-awayness in her bearing: a sort of modesty. The
+strange man by the fire watched her curiously. There was an alert,
+inquisitive, mindless curiosity on his well-coloured face.
+
+“I’ll have a bit of supper with you, if I might,” he said.
+
+She looked at him, with her clear, unreasoning eyes, just like the eyes
+of some non-human creature.
+
+“I’ll ask mother,” she said. Her voice was soft-breathing, gently
+singsong.
+
+When she came in again:
+
+“Yes,” she said, almost whispering. “What will you have?”
+
+“What have you got?” he said, looking up into her face.
+
+“There’s cold meat—”
+
+“That’s for me, then.”
+
+The stranger sat at the end of the table and ate with the tired, quiet
+soldiers. Now, the landlady was interested in him. Her brow was knit
+rather tense, there was a look of panic in her large, healthy face, but
+her small brown eyes were fixed most dangerously. She was a big woman,
+but her eyes were small and tense. She drew near the stranger. She wore
+a rather loud-patterned flannelette blouse, and a dark skirt.
+
+“What will you have to drink with your supper?” she asked, and there
+was a new, dangerous note in her voice.
+
+He moved uneasily.
+
+“Oh, I’ll go on with ale.”
+
+She drew him another glass. Then she sat down on the bench at the table
+with him and the soldiers, and fixed him with her attention.
+
+“You’ve come from St Just, have you?” she said.
+
+He looked at her with those clear, dark, inscrutable Cornish eyes, and
+answered at length:
+
+“No, from Penzance.”
+
+“Penzance!—but you’re not thinking of going back there tonight?”
+
+“No—no.”
+
+He still looked at her with those wide, clear eyes that seemed like
+very bright agate. Her anger began to rise. It was seen on her brow.
+Yet her voice was still suave and deprecating.
+
+“I _thought_ not—but you’re not living in these parts, are you?”
+
+“No—no, I’m not living here.” He was always slow in answering, as if
+something intervened between him and any outside question.
+
+“Oh, I see,” she said. “You’ve got relations down here.”
+
+Again he looked straight into her eyes, as if looking her into silence.
+
+“Yes,” he said.
+
+He did not say any more. She rose with a flounce. The anger was tight
+on her brow. There was no more laughing and card-playing that evening,
+though she kept up her motherly, suave, good-humoured way with the men.
+But they knew her, they were all afraid of her.
+
+The supper was finished, the table cleared, the stranger did not go.
+Two of the young soldiers went off to bed, with their cheery:
+
+“Good-night, Ma. Good-night, Maryann.”
+
+The stranger talked a little to the sergeant about the war, which was
+in its first year, about the new army, a fragment of which was
+quartered in this district, about America.
+
+The landlady darted looks at him from her small eyes, minute by minute
+the electric storm welled in her bosom, as still he did not go. She was
+quivering with suppressed, violent passion, something frightening and
+abnormal. She could not sit still for a moment. Her heavy form seemed
+to flash with sudden, involuntary movements as the minutes passed by,
+and still he sat there, and the tension on her heart grew unbearable.
+She watched the hands of the dock move on. Three of the soldiers had
+gone to bed, only the crop-headed, terrier-like old sergeant remained.
+
+The landlady sat behind the bar fidgeting spasmodically with the
+newspaper. She looked again at the clock. At last it was five minutes
+to ten.
+
+“Gentlemen—the enemy!” she said, in her diminished, furious voice.
+“Time, please. Time, my dears. And good-night all!”
+
+The men began to drop out, with a brief good-night. It was a minute to
+ten. The landlady rose.
+
+“Come,” she said. “I’m shutting the door.”
+
+The last of the miners passed out. She stood, stout and menacing,
+holding the door. Still the stranger sat on by the fire, his black
+overcoat opened, smoking.
+
+“We’re closed now, sir,” came the perilous, narrowed voice of the
+landlady.
+
+The little, dog-like, hard-headed sergeant touched the arm of the
+stranger.
+
+“Closing time,” he said.
+
+The stranger turned round in his seat, and his quick-moving, dark,
+jewel-like eyes went from the sergeant to the landlady.
+
+“I’m stopping here tonight,” he said, in his laconic Cornish-Yankee
+accent.
+
+The landlady seemed to tower. Her eyes lifted strangely, frightening.
+
+“Oh! indeed!” she cried.” Oh, indeed! And whose orders are those, may I
+ask?”
+
+He looked at her again.
+
+“My orders,” he said.
+
+Involuntarily she shut the door, and advanced like a great, dangerous
+bird. Her voice rose, there was a touch of hoarseness in it.
+
+“And what might _your_ orders be, if you please?” she cried. “Who might
+_you_ be, to give orders, in the house?”
+
+He sat still, watching her.
+
+“You know who I am,” he said. “At least, I know who you are.”
+
+“Oh, you do? Oh, do you? And who am _I_ then, if you’ll be so good as
+to tell me?”
+
+He stared at her with his bright, dark eyes.
+
+“You’re my Missis, you are,” he said. “And you know it, as well as I
+do.”
+
+She started as if something had exploded in her.
+
+Her eyes lifted and flared madly.
+
+“_Do_ I know it, indeed!” she cried. “I know no such thing! I know no
+such thing! Do you think a man’s going to walk into this bar, and tell
+me off-hand I’m his Missis, and I’m going to believe him?—I say to you,
+whoever you may be, you’re mistaken. I know myself for no Missis of
+yours, and I’ll thank you to go out of this house, this minute, before
+I get those that will put you out.”
+
+The man rose to his feet, stretching his head towards her a little. He
+was a handsomely built Cornishman in the prime of life.
+
+“What you say, eh? You don’t know me?” he said, in his singsong voice,
+emotionless, but rather smothered and pressing: it reminded one of the
+girl’s. “I should know you anywhere, you see. I should! I shouldn’t
+have to look twice to know you, you see. You see, now, don’t you?”
+
+The woman was baffled.
+
+“So you may say,” she replied, staccato. “So you may say. That’s easy
+enough. My name’s known, and respected, by most people for ten miles
+round. But I don’t know _you_.”
+
+Her voice ran to sarcasm. “I can’t say I know _you_. You’re a _perfect_
+stranger to me, and I don’t believe I’ve ever set eyes on you before
+tonight.”
+
+Her voice was very flexible and sarcastic.
+
+“Yes, you have,” replied the man, in his reasonable way.” Yes, you
+have. Your name’s my name, and that girl Maryann is my girl; she’s my
+daughter. You’re my Missis right enough. As sure as I’m Willie
+Nankervis.”
+
+He spoke as if it were an accepted fact. His face was handsome, with a
+strange, watchful alertness and a fundamental fixity of intention that
+maddened her.
+
+“You villain!” she cried. “You villain, to come to this house and dare
+to speak to me. You villain, you down-right rascal!”
+
+He looked at her.
+
+“Ay,” he said, unmoved. “All that.” He was uneasy before her. Only he
+was not afraid of her. There was something impenetrable about him, like
+his eyes, which were as bright as agate.
+
+She towered, and drew near to him menacingly.
+
+“You’re going out of this house, aren’t you?”—She stamped her foot in
+sudden madness. “_This minute!_”
+
+He watched her. He knew she wanted to strike him.
+
+“No,” he said, with suppressed emphasis. “I’ve told you, I’m stopping
+here.”
+
+He was afraid of her personality, but it did not alter him. She
+wavered. Her small, tawny-brown eyes concentrated in a point of vivid,
+sightless fury, like a tiger’s. The man was wincing, but he stood his
+ground. Then she bethought herself. She would gather her forces.
+
+“We’ll see whether you’re stopping here,” she said. And she turned,
+with a curious, frightening lifting of her eyes, and surged out of the
+room. The man, listening, heard her go upstairs, heard her tapping at a
+bedroom door, heard her saying: “Do you mind coming down a minute,
+boys? I want you. I’m in trouble.”
+
+The man in the bar took off his cap and his black overcoat, and threw
+them on the seat behind him. His black hair was short and touched with
+grey at the temples. He wore a well-cut, well-fitting suit of dark
+grey, American in style, and a turn-down collar. He looked well-to-do,
+a fine, solid figure of a man. The rather rigid look of the shoulders
+came from his having had his collar-bone twice broken in the mines.
+
+The little terrier of a sergeant, in dirty khaki, looked at him
+furtively.
+
+“She’s your Missis?” he asked, jerking his head in the direction of the
+departed woman.
+
+“Yes, she is,” barked the man. “She’s that, sure enough.”
+
+“Not seen her for a long time, haven’t ye?”
+
+“Sixteen years come March month.”
+
+“Hm!”
+
+And the sergeant laconically resumed his smoking.
+
+The landlady was coming back, followed by the three young soldiers, who
+entered rather sheepishly, in trousers and shirt and stocking-feet. The
+woman stood histrionically at the end of the bar, and exclaimed:
+
+“That man refuses to leave the house, claims he’s stopping the night
+here. You know very well I have no bed, don’t you? And this house
+doesn’t accommodate travellers. Yet he’s going to stop in spite of all!
+But not while I’ve a drop of blood in my body, that I declare with my
+dying breath. And not if you men are worth the name of men, and will
+help a woman as has no one to help her.”
+
+Her eyes sparkled, her face was flushed pink. She was drawn up like an
+Amazon.
+
+The young soldiers did not quite know what to do. They looked at the
+man, they looked at the sergeant, one of them looked down and fastened
+his braces on the second button.
+
+“What say, sergeant?” asked one whose face twinkled for a little
+devilment.
+
+“Man says he’s husband to Mrs. Nankervis,” said the sergeant.
+
+“He’s no husband of mine. I declare I never set eyes on him before this
+night. It’s a dirty trick, nothing else, it’s a dirty trick.”
+
+“Why, you’re a liar, saying you never set eyes on me before,” barked
+the man near the hearth. “You’re married to me, and that girl Maryann
+you had by me—well enough you know it.”
+
+The young soldiers looked on in delight, the sergeant smoked
+imperturbed.
+
+“Yes,” sang the landlady, slowly shaking her head in supreme sarcasm,
+“it sounds very pretty, doesn’t it? But you see we don’t believe a word
+of it, and _how_ are you going to prove it?” She smiled nastily.
+
+The man watched in silence for a moment, then he said:
+
+“It wants no proof.”
+
+“Oh, yes, but it does! Oh, yes, but it does, sir, it wants a lot of
+proving!” sang the lady’s sarcasm. “We’re not such gulls as all that,
+to swallow your words whole.”
+
+But he stood unmoved near the fire. She stood with one hand resting on
+the zinc-covered bar, the sergeant sat with legs crossed, smoking, on
+the seat halfway between them, the three young soldiers in their shirts
+and braces stood wavering in the gloom behind the bar. There was
+silence.
+
+“Do you know anything of the whereabouts of your husband, Mrs.
+Nankervis? Is he still living?” asked the sergeant, in his judicious
+fashion.
+
+Suddenly the landlady began to cry, great scalding tears, that left the
+young men aghast.
+
+“I know nothing of him,” she sobbed, feeling for her pocket
+handkerchief. “He left me when Maryann was a baby, went mining to
+America, and after about six months never wrote a line nor sent me a
+penny bit. I can’t say whether he’s alive or dead, the villain. All
+I’ve heard of him’s to the bad—and I’ve heard nothing for years an’
+all, now.” She sobbed violently.
+
+The golden-skinned, handsome man near the fire watched her as she wept.
+He was frightened, he was troubled, he was bewildered, but none of his
+emotions altered him underneath.
+
+There was no sound in the room but the violent sobbing of the landlady.
+The men, one and all, were overcome.
+
+“Don’t you think as you’d better go, for tonight?” said the sergeant to
+the man, with sweet reasonableness. “You’d better leave it a bit, and
+arrange something between you. You can’t have much claim on a woman, I
+should imagine, if it’s how she says. And you’ve come down on her a bit
+too sudden-like.”
+
+The landlady sobbed heart-brokenly. The man watched her large breasts
+shaken. They seemed to cast a spell over his mind.
+
+“How I’ve treated her, that’s no matter,” he replied. “I’ve come back,
+and I’m going to stop in my own home—for a bit, anyhow. There you’ve
+got it.”
+
+“A dirty action,” said the sergeant, his face flushing dark. “A dirty
+action, to come, after deserting a woman for that number of years, and
+want to force yourself on her! A dirty action—as isn’t allowed by the
+law.”
+
+The landlady wiped her eyes.
+
+“Never you mind about law nor nothing,” cried the man, in a strange,
+strong voice. “I’m not moving out of this public tonight.”
+
+The woman turned to the soldiers behind her, and said in a wheedling,
+sarcastic tone:
+
+“Are we going to stand it, boys?—Are we going to be done like this,
+Sergeant Thomas, by a scoundrel and a bully as has led a life beyond
+_mention_, in those American mining-camps, and then wants to come back
+and make havoc of a poor woman’s life and savings, after having left
+her with a baby in arms to struggle as best she might? It’s a crying
+shame if nobody will stand up for me—a crying shame—!”
+
+The soldiers and the little sergeant were bristling. The woman stooped
+and rummaged under the counter for a minute. Then, unseen to the man
+away near the fire, she threw out a plaited grass rope, such as is used
+for binding bales, and left it lying near the feet of the young
+soldiers, in the gloom at the back of the bar.
+
+Then she rose and fronted the situation.
+
+“Come now,” she said to the man, in a reasonable, coldly-coaxing tone,
+“put your coat on and leave us alone. Be a man, and not worse than a
+brute of a German. You can get a bed easy enough in St Just, and if
+you’ve nothing to pay for it sergeant would lend you a couple of
+shillings, I’m sure he would.”
+
+All eyes were fixed on the man. He was looking down at the woman like a
+creature spell-bound or possessed by some devil’s own intention.
+
+“I’ve got money of my own,” he said. “Don’t you be frightened for your
+money, I’ve plenty of that, for the time.”
+
+“Well, then,” she coaxed, in a cold, almost sneering propitiation, “put
+your coat on and go where you’re wanted—be a _man_, not a brute of a
+German.”
+
+She had drawn quite near to him, in her challenging coaxing intentness.
+He looked down at her with his bewitched face.
+
+“No, I shan’t,” he said. “I shan’t do no such thing. _You’ll_ put me up
+for tonight.”
+
+“Shall I!” she cried. And suddenly she flung her arms round him, hung
+on to him with all her powerful weight, calling to the soldiers: “Get
+the rope, boys, and fasten him up. Alfred—John, quick now—”
+
+The man reared, looked round with maddened eyes, and heaved his
+powerful body. But the woman was powerful also, and very heavy, and was
+clenched with the determination of death. Her face, with its exulting,
+horribly vindictive look, was turned up to him from his own breast; he
+reached back his head frantically, to get away from it. Meanwhile the
+young soldiers, after having watched this frightful Laocoon swaying for
+a moment, stirred, and the malicious one darted swiftly with the rope.
+It was tangled a little.
+
+“Give me the end here,” cried the sergeant.
+
+Meanwhile the big man heaved and struggled, swung the woman round
+against the seat and the table, in his convulsive effort to get free.
+But she pinned down his arms like a cuttlefish wreathed heavily upon
+him. And he heaved and swayed, and they crashed about the room, the
+soldiers hopping, the furniture bumping.
+
+The young soldier had got the rope once round, the brisk sergeant
+helping him. The woman sank heavily lower, they got the rope round
+several times. In the struggle the victim fell over against the table.
+The ropes tightened till they cut his arms. The woman clung to his
+knees. Another soldier ran in a flash of genius, and fastened the
+strange man’s feet with the pair of braces. Seats had crashed over, the
+table was thrown against the wall, but the man was bound, his arms
+pinned against his sides, his feet tied. He lay half fallen, sunk
+against the table, still for a moment.
+
+The woman rose, and sank, faint, on to the seat against the wall. Her
+breast heaved, she could not speak, she thought she was going to die.
+The bound man lay against the overturned table, his coat all twisted
+and pulled up beneath the ropes, leaving the loins exposed. The
+soldiers stood around, a little dazed, but excited with the row.
+
+The man began to struggle again, heaving instinctively against the
+ropes, taking great, deep breaths. His face, with its golden skin,
+flushed dark and surcharged, he heaved again. The great veins in his
+neck stood out. But it was no good, he went relaxed. Then again,
+suddenly, he jerked his feet.
+
+“Another pair of braces, William,” cried the excited soldier. He threw
+himself on the legs of the bound man, and managed to fasten the knees.
+Then again there was stillness. They could hear the clock tick.
+
+The woman looked at the prostrate figure, the strong, straight limbs,
+the strong back bound in subjection, the wide-eyed face that reminded
+her of a calf tied in a sack in a cart, only its head stretched dumbly
+backwards. And she triumphed.
+
+The bound-up body began to struggle again. She watched fascinated the
+muscles working, the shoulders, the hips, the large, clean thighs. Even
+now he might break the ropes. She was afraid. But the lively young
+soldier sat on the shoulders of the bound man, and after a few perilous
+moments, there was stillness again.
+
+“Now,” said the judicious sergeant to the bound man, “if we untie you,
+will you promise to go off and make no more trouble.”
+
+“You’ll not untie him in here,” cried the woman. “I wouldn’t trust him
+as far as I could blow him.”
+
+There was silence.
+
+“We might carry him outside, and undo him there,” said the soldier.
+“Then we could get the policeman, if he made any bother.”
+
+“Yes,” said the sergeant. “We could do that.” Then again, in an
+altered, almost severe tone, to the prisoner. “If we undo you outside,
+will you take your coat and go without creating any more disturbance?”
+
+But the prisoner would not answer, he only lay with wide, dark, bright,
+eyes, like a bound animal. There was a space of perplexed silence.
+
+“Well, then, do as you say,” said the woman irritably. “Carry him out
+amongst you, and let us shut up the house.”
+
+They did so. Picking up the bound man, the four soldiers staggered
+clumsily into the silent square in front of the inn, the woman
+following with the cap and the overcoat. The young soldiers quickly
+unfastened the braces from the prisoner’s legs, and they hopped
+indoors. They were in their stocking-feet, and outside the stars
+flashed cold. They stood in the doorway watching. The man lay quite
+still on the cold ground.
+
+“Now,” said the sergeant, in a subdued voice, “I’ll loosen the knot,
+and he can work himself free, if you go in, Missis.”
+
+She gave a last look at the dishevelled, bound man, as he sat on the
+ground. Then she went indoors, followed quickly by the sergeant. Then
+they were heard locking and barring the door.
+
+The man seated on the ground outside worked and strained at the rope.
+But it was not so easy to undo himself even now. So, with hands bound,
+making an effort, he got on his feet, and went and worked the cord
+against the rough edge of an old wall. The rope, being of a kind of
+plaited grass, soon frayed and broke, and he freed himself. He had
+various contusions. His arms were hurt and bruised from the bonds. He
+rubbed them slowly. Then he pulled his clothes straight, stooped, put
+on his cap, struggled into his overcoat, and walked away.
+
+The stars were very brilliant. Clear as crystal, the beam from the
+lighthouse under the cliffs struck rhythmically on the night. Dazed,
+the man walked along the road past the churchyard. Then he stood
+leaning up against a wall, for a long time.
+
+He was roused because his feet were so cold. So he pulled himself
+together, and turned again in the silent night, back towards the inn.
+
+The bar was in darkness. But there was a light in the kitchen. He
+hesitated. Then very quietly he tried the door.
+
+He was surprised to find it open. He entered, and quietly closed it
+behind him. Then he went down the step past the bar-counter, and
+through to the lighted doorway of the kitchen. There sat his wife,
+planted in front of the range, where a furze fire was burning. She sat
+in a chair full in front of the range, her knees wide apart on the
+fender. She looked over her shoulder at him as he entered, but she did
+not speak. Then she stared in the fire again.
+
+It was a small, narrow kitchen. He dropped his cap on the table that
+was covered with yellowish American cloth, and took a seat with his
+back to the wall, near the oven. His wife still sat with her knees
+apart, her feet on the steel fender and stared into the fire,
+motionless. Her skin was smooth and rosy in the firelight. Everything
+in the house was very clean and bright. The man sat silent, too, his
+head dropped. And thus they remained.
+
+It was a question who would speak first. The woman leaned forward and
+poked the ends of the sticks in between the bars of the range. He
+lifted his head and looked at her.
+
+“Others gone to bed, have they?” he asked.
+
+But she remained closed in silence.
+
+“’S a cold night, out,” he said, as if to himself.
+
+And he laid his large, yet well-shapen workman’s hand on the top of the
+stove, that was polished black and smooth as velvet. She would not look
+at him, yet she glanced out of the corners of her eyes.
+
+His eyes were fixed brightly on her, the pupils large and electric like
+those of a cat.
+
+“I should have picked you out among thousands,” he said. “Though you’re
+bigger than I’d have believed. Fine flesh you’ve made.”
+
+She was silent for some time. Then she turned in her chair upon him.
+
+“What do you think of yourself,” she said, “coming back on me like this
+after over fifteen years? You don’t think I’ve not heard of you,
+neither, in Butte City and elsewhere?”
+
+He was watching her with his clear, translucent, unchallenged eyes.
+
+“Yes,” he said. “Chaps comes an’ goes—I’ve heard tell of you from time
+to time.”
+
+She drew herself up.
+
+“And what lies have you heard about _me_?” she demanded superbly.
+
+“I dunno as I’ve heard any lies at all—’cept as you was getting on very
+well, like.”
+
+His voice ran warily and detached. Her anger stirred again in her
+violently. But she subdued it, because of the danger there was in him,
+and more, perhaps, because of the beauty of his head and his level
+drawn brows, which she could not bear to forfeit.
+
+“That’s more than I can say of _you_,” she said. “I’ve heard more harm
+than good about _you_.”
+
+“Ay, I dessay,” he said, looking in the fire. It was a long time since
+he had seen the furze burning, he said to himself. There was a silence,
+during which she watched his face.
+
+“Do you call yourself a _man_?” she said, more in contemptuous reproach
+than in anger. “Leave a woman as you’ve left me, you don’t care to
+what!—and then to turn up in _this_ fashion, without a word to say for
+yourself.”
+
+He stirred in his chair, planted his feet apart, and resting his arms
+on his knees, looked steadily into the fire, without answering. So near
+to her was his head, and the close black hair, she could scarcely
+refrain from starting away, as if it would bite her.
+
+“Do you call that the action of a _man_?” she repeated.
+
+“No,” he said, reaching and poking the bits of wood into the fire with
+his fingers. “I didn’t call it anything, as I know of. It’s no good
+calling things by any names whatsoever, as I know of.”
+
+She watched him in his actions. There was a longer and longer pause
+between each speech, though neither knew it.
+
+“I _wonder_ what you think of yourself!” she exclaimed, with vexed
+emphasis. “I _wonder_ what sort of a fellow you take yourself to be!”
+She was really perplexed as well as angry.
+
+“Well,” he said, lifting his head to look at her, “I guess I’ll answer
+for my own faults, if everybody else’ll answer for theirs.”
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot as he lifted his face to her. She breathed
+heavily, averting her face, almost losing her self-control.
+
+“And what do you take _me_ to be?” she cried, in real helplessness.
+
+His face was lifted watching her, watching her soft, averted face, and
+the softly heaving mass of her breasts.
+
+“I take you,” he said, with that laconic truthfulness which exercised
+such power over her, “to be the deuce of a fine woman—darn me if you’re
+not as fine a built woman as I’ve seen, handsome with it as well. I
+shouldn’t have expected you to put on such handsome flesh: ’struth I
+shouldn’t.”
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot, as he watched her with those bright agate
+eyes, fixedly.
+
+“Been very handsome to _you_, for fifteen years, my sakes!” she
+replied.
+
+He made no answer to this, but sat with his bright, quick eyes upon
+her.
+
+Then he rose. She started involuntarily. But he only said, in his
+laconic, measured way:
+
+“It’s warm in here now.”
+
+And he pulled off his overcoat, throwing it on the table. She sat as if
+slightly cowed, whilst he did so.
+
+“Them ropes has given my arms something, by Ga-ard,” he drawled,
+feeling his arms with his hands.
+
+Still she sat in her chair before him, slightly cowed.
+
+“You was sharp, wasn’t you, to catch me like that, eh?” he smiled
+slowly. “By Ga-ard, you had me fixed proper, proper you had. Darn me,
+you fixed me up proper—proper, you did.”
+
+He leaned forwards in his chair towards her.
+
+“I don’t think no worse of you for it, no, darned if I do. Fine pluck
+in a woman’s what I admire. That I do, indeed.”
+
+She only gazed into the fire.
+
+“We fet from the start, we did. And, my word, you begin again quick the
+minute you see me, you did. Darn me, you was too sharp for me. A darn
+fine woman, puts up a darn good fight. Darn me if I could find a woman
+in all the darn States as could get me down like that. Wonderful fine
+woman you be, truth to say, at this minute.”
+
+She only sat glowering into the fire.
+
+“As grand a pluck as a man could wish to find in a woman, true as I’m
+here,” he said, reaching forward his hand and tentatively touching her
+between her full, warm breasts, quietly.
+
+She started, and seemed to shudder. But his hand insinuated itself
+between her breasts, as she continued to gaze in the fire.
+
+“And don’t you think I’ve come back here a-begging,” he said. “I’ve
+more than _one_ thousand pounds to my name, I have. And a bit of a
+fight for a how-de-do pleases me, that it do. But that doesn’t mean as
+you’re going to deny as you’re my Missis....”
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIMROSE PATH
+
+
+A young man came out of the Victoria station, looking undecidedly at
+the taxi-cabs, dark-red and black, pressing against the kerb under the
+glass-roof. Several men in greatcoats and brass buttons jerked
+themselves erect to catch his attention, at the same time keeping an
+eye on the other people as they filtered through the open doorways of
+the station. Berry, however, was occupied by one of the men, a big,
+burly fellow whose blue eyes glared back and whose red-brown moustache
+bristled in defiance.
+
+“Do you _want_ a cab, sir?” the man asked, in a half-mocking,
+challenging voice.
+
+Berry hesitated still.
+
+“Are you Daniel Sutton?” he asked.
+
+“Yes,” replied the other defiantly, with uneasy conscience.
+
+“Then you are my uncle,” said Berry.
+
+They were alike in colouring, and somewhat in features, but the taxi
+driver was a powerful, well-fleshed man who glared at the world
+aggressively, being really on the defensive against his own heart. His
+nephew, of the same height, was thin, well-dressed, quiet and
+indifferent in his manner. And yet they were obviously kin.
+
+“And who the devil are you?” asked the taxi driver.
+
+“I’m Daniel Berry,” replied the nephew.
+
+“Well, I’m damned—never saw you since you were a kid.”
+
+Rather awkwardly at this late hour the two shook hands.
+
+“How are you, lad?”
+
+“All right. I thought you were in Australia.”
+
+“Been back three months—bought a couple of these damned things,”—he
+kicked the tyre of his taxi-cab in affectionate disgust. There was a
+moment’s silence.
+
+“Oh, but I’m going back out there. I can’t stand this cankering,
+rotten-hearted hell of a country any more; you want to come out to
+Sydney with me, lad. That’s the place for you—beautiful place, oh, you
+could wish for nothing better. And money in it, too.—How’s your
+mother?”
+
+“She died at Christmas,” said the young man.
+
+“Dead! What!—our Anna!” The big man’s eyes stared, and he recoiled in
+fear. “God, lad,” he said, “that’s three of ’em gone!”
+
+The two men looked away at the people passing along the pale grey
+pavements, under the wall of Trinity Church.
+
+“Well, strike me lucky!” said the taxi driver at last, out of breath.
+“She wor th’ best o’ th’ bunch of ’em. I see nowt nor hear nowt from
+any of ’em—they’re not worth it, I’ll be damned if they are—our
+sermon-lapping Adela and Maud,” he looked scornfully at his nephew.
+“But she was the best of ’em, our Anna was, that’s a fact.”
+
+He was talking because he was afraid.
+
+“An’ after a hard life like she’d had. How old was she, lad?”
+
+“Fifty-five.”
+
+“Fifty-five....” He hesitated. Then, in a rather hushed voice, he asked
+the question that frightened him:
+
+“And what was it, then?”
+
+“Cancer.”
+
+“Cancer again, like Julia! I never knew there was cancer in our family.
+Oh, my good God, our poor Anna, after the life she’d had!—What, lad, do
+you see any God at the back of that?—I’m damned if I do.”
+
+He was glaring, very blue-eyed and fierce, at his nephew. Berry lifted
+his shoulders slightly.
+
+“God?” went on the taxi driver, in a curious intense tone, “You’ve only
+to look at the folk in the street to know there’s nothing keeps it
+going but gravitation. Look at ’em. Look at him!”—A mongrel-looking man
+was nosing past. “Wouldn’t _he_ murder you for your watch-chain, but
+that he’s afraid of society. He’s got it _in_ him.... Look at ’em.”
+
+Berry watched the towns-people go by, and, sensitively feeling his
+uncle’s antipathy, it seemed he was watching a sort of _danse macabre_
+of ugly criminals.
+
+“Did you ever see such a God-forsaken crew creeping about! It gives you
+the very horrors to look at ’em. I sit in this damned car and watch ’em
+till, I can tell you, I feel like running the cab amuck among ’em, and
+running myself to kingdom come—”
+
+Berry wondered at this outburst. He knew his uncle was the black-sheep,
+the youngest, the darling of his mother’s family. He knew him to be at
+outs with respectability, mixing with the looser, sporting type, all
+betting and drinking and showing dogs and birds, and racing. As a
+critic of life, however, he did not know him. But the young man felt
+curiously understanding. “He uses words like I do, he talks nearly as I
+talk, except that I shouldn’t say those things. But I might feel like
+that, in myself, if I went a certain road.”
+
+“I’ve got to go to Watmore,” he said. “Can you take me?”
+
+“When d’you want to go?” asked the uncle fiercely.
+
+“Now.”
+
+“Come on, then. What d’yer stand gassin’ on th’ causeway for?”
+
+The nephew took his seat beside the driver. The cab began to quiver,
+then it started forward with a whirr. The uncle, his hands and feet
+acting mechanically, kept his blue eyes fixed on the highroad into
+whose traffic the car was insinuating its way. Berry felt curiously as
+if he were sitting beside an older development of himself. His mind
+went back to his mother. She had been twenty years older than this
+brother of hers whom she had loved so dearly. “He was one of the most
+affectionate little lads, and such a curly head! I could never have
+believed he would grow into the great, coarse bully he is—for he’s
+nothing else. My father made a god of him—well, it’s a good thing his
+father is dead. He got in with that sporting gang, that’s what did it.
+Things were made too easy for him, and so he thought of no one but
+himself, and this is the result.”
+
+Not that “Joky” Sutton was so very black a sheep. He had lived idly
+till he was eighteen, then had suddenly married a young, beautiful girl
+with clear brows and dark grey eyes, a factory girl. Having taken her
+to live with his parents he, lover of dogs and pigeons, went on to the
+staff of a sporting paper. But his wife was without uplift or warmth.
+Though they made money enough, their house was dark and cold and
+uninviting. He had two or three dogs, and the whole attic was turned
+into a great pigeon-house. He and his wife lived together roughly, with
+no warmth, no refinement, no touch of beauty anywhere, except that she
+was beautiful. He was a blustering, impetuous man, she was rather cold
+in her soul, did not care about anything very much, was rather capable
+and close with money. And she had a common accent in her speech. He
+outdid her a thousand times in coarse language, and yet that cold twang
+in her voice tortured him with shame that he stamped down in bullying
+and in becoming more violent in his own speech.
+
+Only his dogs adored him, and to them, and to his pigeons, he talked
+with rough, yet curiously tender caresses while they leaped and
+fluttered for joy.
+
+After he and his wife had been married for seven years a little girl
+was born to them, then later, another. But the husband and wife drew no
+nearer together. She had an affection for her children almost like a
+cool governess. He had an emotional man’s fear of sentiment, which
+helped to nip his wife from putting out any shoots. He treated his
+children roughly, and pretended to think it a good job when one was
+adopted by a well-to-do maternal aunt. But in his soul he hated his
+wife that she could give away one of his children. For after her cool
+fashion, she loved him. With a chaos of a man such as he, she had no
+chance of being anything but cold and hard, poor thing. For she did
+love him.
+
+In the end he fell absurdly and violently in love with a rather
+sentimental young woman who read Browning. He made his wife an
+allowance and established a new ménage with the young lady, shortly
+after emigrating with her to Australia. Meanwhile his wife had gone to
+live with a publican, a widower, with whom she had had one of those
+curious, tacit understandings of which quiet women are capable,
+something like an arrangement for provision in the future.
+
+This was as much as the nephew knew. He sat beside his uncle, wondering
+how things stood at the present. They raced lightly out past the
+cemetery and along the boulevard, then turned into the rather grimy
+country. The mud flew out on either side, there was a fine mist of rain
+which blew in their faces. Berry covered himself up.
+
+In the lanes the high hedges shone black with rain. The silvery grey
+sky, faintly dappled, spread wide over the low, green land. The elder
+man glanced fiercely up the road, then turned his red face to his
+nephew.
+
+“And how’re you going on, lad?” he said loudly. Berry noticed that his
+uncle was slightly uneasy of him. It made him also uncomfortable. The
+elder man had evidently something pressing on his soul.
+
+“Who are you living with in town?” asked the nephew. “Have you gone
+back to Aunt Maud?”
+
+“No,” barked the uncle. “She wouldn’t have me. I offered to—I want
+to—but she wouldn’t.”
+
+“You’re alone, then?”
+
+“No, I’m not alone.”
+
+He turned and glared with his fierce blue eyes at his nephew, but said
+no more for some time. The car ran on through the mud, under the wet
+wall of the park.
+
+“That other devil tried to poison me,” suddenly shouted the elder man.
+“The one I went to Australia with.” At which, in spite of himself, the
+younger smiled in secret.
+
+“How was that?” he asked.
+
+“Wanted to get rid of me. She got in with another fellow on the
+ship.... By Jove, I was bad.”
+
+“Where?—on the ship?”
+
+“No,” bellowed the other. “No. That was in Wellington, New Zealand. I
+was bad, and got lower an’ lower—couldn’t think what was up. I could
+hardly crawl about. As certain as I’m here, she was poisoning me, to
+get to th’ other chap—I’m certain of it.”
+
+“And what did you do?”
+
+“I cleared out—went to Sydney—”
+
+“And left her?”
+
+“Yes, I thought begod, I’d better clear out if I wanted to live.”
+
+“And you were all right in Sydney?”
+
+“Better in no time—I _know_ she was putting poison in my coffee.”
+
+“Hm!”
+
+There was a glum silence. The driver stared at the road ahead, fixedly,
+managing the car as if it were a live thing. The nephew felt that his
+uncle was afraid, quite stupefied with fear, fear of life, of death, of
+himself.
+
+“You’re in rooms, then?” asked the nephew.
+
+“No, I’m in a house of my own,” said the uncle defiantly, “wi’ th’ best
+little woman in th’ Midlands. She’s a marvel.—Why don’t you come an’
+see us?”
+
+“I will. Who is she?”
+
+“Oh, she’s a good girl—a beautiful little thing. I was clean gone on
+her first time I saw her. An’ she was on me. Her mother lives with
+us—respectable girl, none o’ your....”
+
+“And how old is she?”
+
+“—how old is she?—she’s twenty-one.”
+
+“Poor thing.”
+
+“_She’s_ right enough.”
+
+“You’d marry her—getting a divorce—?”
+
+“I shall marry her.”
+
+There was a little antagonism between the two men.
+
+“Where’s Aunt Maud?” asked the younger.
+
+“She’s at the Railway Arms—we passed it, just against Rollin’s Mill
+Crossing.... They sent me a note this morning to go an’ see her when I
+can spare time. She’s got consumption.”
+
+“Good Lord! Are you going?”
+
+“Yes—”
+
+But again Berry felt that his uncle was afraid.
+
+The young man got through his commission in the village, had a drink
+with his uncle at the inn, and the two were returning home. The elder
+man’s subject of conversation was Australia. As they drew near the town
+they grew silent, thinking both of the public-house. At last they saw
+the gates of the railway crossing were closed before them.
+
+“Shan’t you call?” asked Berry, jerking his head in the direction of
+the inn, which stood at the corner between two roads, its sign hanging
+under a bare horse-chestnut tree in front.
+
+“I might as well. Come in an’ have a drink,” said the uncle.
+
+It had been raining all the morning, so shallow pools of water lay
+about. A brewer’s wagon, with wet barrels and warm-smelling horses,
+stood near the door of the inn. Everywhere seemed silent, but for the
+rattle of trains at the crossing. The two men went uneasily up the
+steps and into the bar. The place was paddled with wet feet, empty. As
+the bar-man was heard approaching, the uncle asked, his usual bluster
+slightly hushed by fear:
+
+“What yer goin’ ta have, lad? Same as last time?”
+
+A man entered, evidently the proprietor. He was good-looking, with a
+long, heavy face and quick, dark eyes. His glance at Sutton was swift,
+a start, a recognition, and a withdrawal, into heavy neutrality.
+
+“How are yer, Dan?” he said, scarcely troubling to speak.
+
+“Are yer, George?” replied Sutton, hanging back. “My nephew, Dan
+Berry.—Give us Red Seal, George.”
+
+The publican nodded to the younger man, and set the glasses on the bar.
+He pushed forward the two glasses, then leaned back in the dark corner
+behind the door, his arms folded, evidently preferring to get back from
+the watchful eyes of the nephew.
+
+“—’s luck,” said Sutton.
+
+The publican nodded in acknowledgement. Sutton and his nephew drank.
+
+“Why the hell don’t you get that road mended in Cinder Hill—,” said
+Sutton fiercely, pushing back his driver’s cap and showing his
+short-cut, bristling hair.
+
+“They can’t find it in their hearts to pull it up,” replied the
+publican, laconically.
+
+“Find in their hearts! They want settin’ in barrows an’ runnin’ up an’
+down it till they cried for mercy.”
+
+Sutton put down his glass. The publican renewed it with a sure hand, at
+ease in whatsoever he did. Then he leaned back against the bar. He wore
+no coat. He stood with arms folded, his chin on his chest, his long
+moustache hanging. His back was round and slack, so that the lower part
+of his abdomen stuck forward, though he was not stout. His cheek was
+healthy, brown-red, and he was muscular. Yet there was about him this
+physical slackness, a reluctance in his slow, sure movements. His eyes
+were keen under his dark brows, but reluctant also, as if he were
+gloomily apathetic.
+
+There was a halt. The publican evidently would say nothing. Berry
+looked at the mahogany bar-counter, slopped with beer, at the
+whisky-bottles on the shelves. Sutton, his cap pushed back, showing a
+white brow above a weather-reddened face, rubbed his cropped hair
+uneasily.
+
+The publican glanced round suddenly. It seemed that only his dark eyes
+moved.
+
+“Going up?” he asked.
+
+And something, perhaps his eyes, indicated the unseen bed-chamber.
+
+“Ay—that’s what I came for,” replied Sutton, shifting nervously from
+one foot to the other. “She’s been asking for me?”
+
+“This morning,” replied the publican, neutral.
+
+Then he put up a flap of the bar, and turned away through the dark
+doorway behind. Sutton, pulling off his cap, showing a round,
+short-cropped head which now was ducked forward, followed after him,
+the buttons holding the strap of his great-coat behind glittering for a
+moment.
+
+They climbed the dark stairs, the husband placing his feet carefully,
+because of his big boots. Then he followed down the passage, trying
+vaguely to keep a grip on his bowels, which seemed to be melting away,
+and definitely wishing for a neat brandy. The publican opened a door.
+Sutton, big and burly in his great-coat, went past him.
+
+The bedroom seemed light and warm after the passage. There was a red
+eider-down on the bed. Then, making an effort, Sutton turned his eyes
+to see the sick woman. He met her eyes direct, dark, dilated. It was
+such a shock he almost started away. For a second he remained in
+torture, as if some invisible flame were playing on him to reduce his
+bones and fuse him down. Then he saw the sharp white edge of her jaw,
+and the black hair beside the hollow cheek. With a start he went
+towards the bed.
+
+“Hello, Maud!” he said. “Why, what ye been doin’?”
+
+The publican stood at the window with his back to the bed. The husband,
+like one condemned but on the point of starting away, stood by the
+bedside staring in horror at his wife, whose dilated grey eyes, nearly
+all black now, watched him wearily, as if she were looking at something
+a long way off.
+
+Going exceedingly pale, he jerked up his head and stared at the wall
+over the pillows. There was a little coloured picture of a bird perched
+on a bell, and a nest among ivy leaves beneath. It appealed to him,
+made him wonder, roused a feeling of childish magic in him. They were
+wonderfully fresh, green ivy leaves, and nobody had seen the nest among
+them save him.
+
+Then suddenly he looked down again at the face on the bed, to try and
+recognise it. He knew the white brow and the beautiful clear eyebrows.
+That was his wife, with whom he had passed his youth, flesh of his
+flesh, his, himself. Then those tired eyes, which met his again from a
+long way off, disturbed him until he did not know where he was. Only
+the sunken cheeks, and the mouth that seemed to protrude now were
+foreign to him, and filled him with horror. It seemed he lost his
+identity. He was the young husband of the woman with the clear brows;
+he was the married man fighting with her whose eyes watched him, a
+little indifferently, from a long way off; and he was a child in horror
+of that protruding mouth.
+
+There came a crackling sound of her voice. He knew she had consumption
+of the throat, and braced himself hard to bear the noise.
+
+“What was it, Maud?” he asked in panic.
+
+Then the broken, crackling voice came again. He was too terrified of
+the sound of it to hear what was said. There was a pause.
+
+“You’ll take Winnie?” the publican’s voice interpreted from the window.
+
+“Don’t you bother, Maud, I’ll take her,” he said, stupefying his mind
+so as not to understand.
+
+He looked curiously round the room. It was not a bad bedroom, light and
+warm. There were many medicine bottles aggregated in a corner of the
+washstand—and a bottle of Three Star brandy, half full. And there were
+also photographs of strange people on the chest of drawers. It was not
+a bad room.
+
+Again he started as if he were shot. She was speaking. He bent down,
+but did not look at her.
+
+“Be good to her,” she whispered.
+
+When he realised her meaning, that he should be good to their child
+when the mother was gone, a blade went through his flesh.
+
+“I’ll be good to her, Maud, don’t you bother,” he said, beginning to
+feel shaky.
+
+He looked again at the picture of the bird. It perched cheerfully under
+a blue sky, with robust, jolly ivy leaves near. He was gathering his
+courage to depart. He looked down, but struggled hard not to take in
+the sight of his wife’s face.
+
+“I s’ll come again, Maud,” he said. “I hope you’ll go on all right. Is
+there anything as you want?”
+
+There was an almost imperceptible shake of the head from the sick
+woman, making his heart melt swiftly again. Then, dragging his limbs,
+he got out of the room and down the stairs.
+
+The landlord came after him.
+
+“I’ll let you know if anything happens,” the publican said, still
+laconic, but with his eyes dark and swift.
+
+“Ay, a’ right,” said Sutton blindly. He looked round for his cap, which
+he had all the time in his hand. Then he got out of doors.
+
+In a moment the uncle and nephew were in the car jolting on the level
+crossing. The elder man seemed as if something tight in his brain made
+him open his eyes wide, and stare. He held the steering wheel firmly.
+He knew he could steer accurately, to a hair’s breadth. Glaring fixedly
+ahead, he let the car go, till it bounded over the uneven road. There
+were three coal-carts in a string. In an instant the car grazed past
+them, almost biting the kerb on the other side. Sutton aimed his car
+like a projectile, staring ahead. He did not want to know, to think, to
+realise, he wanted to be only the driver of that quick taxi.
+
+The town drew near, suddenly. There were allotment-gardens with
+dark-purple twiggy fruit-trees and wet alleys between the hedges. Then
+suddenly the streets of dwelling-houses whirled close, and the car was
+climbing the hill, with an angry whirr,—up—up—till they rode out on to
+the crest and could see the tram-cars, dark-red and yellow, threading
+their way round the corner below, and all the traffic roaring between
+the shops.
+
+“Got anywhere to go?” asked Sutton of his nephew.
+
+“I was going to see one or two people.”
+
+“Come an’ have a bit o’ dinner with us,” said the other.
+
+Berry knew that his uncle wanted to be distracted, so that he should
+not think nor realise. The big man was running hard away from the
+horror of realisation.
+
+“All right,” Berry agreed.
+
+The car went quickly through the town. It ran up a long street nearly
+into the country again. Then it pulled up at a house that stood alone,
+below the road.
+
+“I s’ll be back in ten minutes,” said the uncle.
+
+The car went on to the garage. Berry stood curiously at the top of the
+stone stairs that led from the highroad down to the level of the house,
+an old stone place. The garden was dilapidated. Broken fruit-trees
+leaned at a sharp angle down the steep bank. Right across the dim grey
+atmosphere, in a kind of valley on the edge of the town, new
+suburb-patches showed pinkish on the dark earth. It was a kind of
+unresolved borderland.
+
+Berry went down the steps. Through the broken black fence of the
+orchard, long grass showed yellow. The place seemed deserted. He
+knocked, then knocked again. An elderly woman appeared. She looked like
+a housekeeper. At first she said suspiciously that Mr. Sutton was not
+in.
+
+“My uncle just put me down. He’ll be in in ten minutes,” replied the
+visitor.
+
+“Oh, are you the Mr. Berry who is related to him?” exclaimed the
+elderly woman. “Come in—come in.”
+
+She was at once kindly and a little bit servile. The young man entered.
+It was an old house, rather dark, and sparsely furnished. The elderly
+woman sat nervously on the edge of one of the chairs in a drawing-room
+that looked as if it were furnished from dismal relics of dismal homes,
+and there was a little straggling attempt at conversation. Mrs.
+Greenwell was evidently a working class woman unused to service or to
+any formality.
+
+Presently she gathered up courage to invite her visitor into the
+dining-room. There from the table under the window rose a tall, slim
+girl with a cat in her arms. She was evidently a little more lady-like
+than was habitual to her, but she had a gentle, delicate, small nature.
+Her brown hair almost covered her ears, her dark lashes came down in
+shy awkwardness over her beautiful blue eyes. She shook hands in a
+frank way, yet she was shrinking. Evidently she was not sure how her
+position would affect her visitor. And yet she was assured in herself,
+shrinking and timid as she was.
+
+“She must be a good deal in love with him,” thought Berry.
+
+Both women glanced shamefacedly at the roughly laid table. Evidently
+they ate in a rather rough and ready fashion.
+
+Elaine—she had this poetic name—fingered her cat timidly, not knowing
+what to say or to do, unable even to ask her visitor to sit down. He
+noticed how her skirt hung almost flat on her hips. She was young,
+scarce developed, a long, slender thing. Her colouring was warm and
+exquisite.
+
+The elder woman bustled out to the kitchen. Berry fondled the terrier
+dogs that had come curiously to his heels, and glanced out of the
+window at the wet, deserted orchard.
+
+This room, too, was not well furnished, and rather dark. But there was
+a big red fire.
+
+“He always has fox terriers,” he said.
+
+“Yes,” she answered, showing her teeth in a smile.
+
+“Do you like them, too?”
+
+“Yes”—she glanced down at the dogs. “I like Tam better than Sally—”
+
+Her speech always tailed off into an awkward silence.
+
+“We’ve been to see Aunt Maud,” said the nephew.
+
+Her eyes, blue and scared and shrinking, met his.
+
+“Dan had a letter,” he explained. “She’s very bad.”
+
+“Isn’t it horrible!” she exclaimed, her face crumbling up with fear.
+
+The old woman, evidently a hard-used, rather down-trodden workman’s
+wife, came in with two soup-plates. She glanced anxiously to see how
+her daughter was progressing with the visitor.
+
+“Mother, Dan’s been to see Maud,” said Elaine, in a quiet voice full of
+fear and trouble.
+
+The old woman looked up anxiously, in question.
+
+“I think she wanted him to take the child. She’s very bad, I believe,”
+explained Berry.
+
+“Oh, we should take Winnie!” cried Elaine. But both women seemed
+uncertain, wavering in their position. Already Berry could see that his
+uncle had bullied them, as he bullied everybody. But they were used to
+unpleasant men, and seemed to keep at a distance.
+
+“Will you have some soup?” asked the mother, humbly.
+
+She evidently did the work. The daughter was to be a lady, more or
+less, always dressed and nice for when Sutton came in.
+
+They heard him heavily running down the steps outside. The dogs got up.
+Elaine seemed to forget the visitor. It was as if she came into life.
+Yet she was nervous and afraid. The mother stood as if ready to
+exculpate herself.
+
+Sutton burst open the door. Big, blustering, wet in his immense grey
+coat, he came into the dining-room.
+
+“Hello!” he said to his nephew, “making yourself at home?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” replied Berry.
+
+“Hello, Jack,” he said to the girl. “Got owt to grizzle about?”
+
+“What for?” she asked, in a clear, half-challenging voice, that had
+that peculiar twang, almost petulant, so female and so attractive. Yet
+she was defiant like a boy.
+
+“It’s a wonder if you haven’t,” growled Sutton. And, with a really
+intimate movement, he stooped down and fondled his dogs, though paying
+no attention to them. Then he stood up, and remained with feet apart on
+the hearthrug, his head ducked forward, watching the girl. He seemed
+abstracted, as if he could only watch her. His great-coat hung open, so
+that she could see his figure, simple and human in the great husk of
+cloth. She stood nervously with her hands behind her, glancing at him,
+unable to see anything else. And he was scarcely conscious but of her.
+His eyes were still strained and staring, and as they followed the
+girl, when, long-limbed and languid, she moved away, it was as if he
+saw in her something impersonal, the female, not the woman.
+
+“Had your dinner?” he asked.
+
+“We were just going to have it,” she replied, with the same curious
+little vibration in her voice, like the twang of a string.
+
+The mother entered, bringing a saucepan from which she ladled soup into
+three plates.
+
+“Sit down, lad,” said Sutton. “You sit down, Jack, an’ give me mine
+here.”
+
+“Oh, aren’t you coming to table?” she complained.
+
+“No, I tell you,” he snarled, almost pretending to be disagreeable. But
+she was slightly afraid even of the pretence, which pleased and
+relieved him. He stood on the hearthrug eating his soup noisily.
+
+“Aren’t you going to take your coat off?” she said. “It’s filling the
+place full of steam.”
+
+He did not answer, but, with his head bent forward over the plate, he
+ate his soup hastily, to get it done with. When he put down his empty
+plate, she rose and went to him.
+
+“Do take your coat off, Dan,” she said, and she took hold of the breast
+of his coat, trying to push it back over his shoulder. But she could
+not. Only the stare in his eyes changed to a glare as her hand moved
+over his shoulder. He looked down into her eyes. She became pale,
+rather frightened-looking, and she turned her face away, and it was
+drawn slightly with love and fear and misery. She tried again to put
+off his coat, her thin wrists pulling at it. He stood solidly planted,
+and did not look at her, but stared straight in front. She was playing
+with passion, afraid of it, and really wretched because it left her,
+the person, out of count. Yet she continued. And there came into his
+bearing, into his eyes, the curious smile of passion, pushing away even
+the death-horror. It was life stronger than death in him. She stood
+close to his breast. Their eyes met, and she was carried away.
+
+“Take your coat off, Dan,” she said coaxingly, in a low tone meant for
+no one but him. And she slid her hands on his shoulder, and he yielded,
+so that the coat was pushed back. She had flushed, and her eyes had
+grown very bright. She got hold of the cuff of his coat. Gently, he
+eased himself, so that she drew it off. Then he stood in a thin suit,
+which revealed his vigorous, almost mature form.
+
+“What a weight!” she exclaimed, in a peculiar penetrating voice, as she
+went out hugging the overcoat. In a moment she came back.
+
+He stood still in the same position, a frown over his fiercely staring
+eyes. The pain, the fear, the horror in his breast were all burning
+away in the new, fiercest flame of passion.
+
+“Get your dinner,” he said roughly to her.
+
+“I’ve had all I want,” she said. “You come an’ have yours.”
+
+He looked at the table as if he found it difficult to see things.
+
+“I want no more,” he said.
+
+She stood close to his chest. She wanted to touch him and to comfort
+him. There was something about him now that fascinated her. Berry felt
+slightly ashamed that she seemed to ignore the presence of others in
+the room.
+
+The mother came in. She glanced at Sutton, standing planted on the
+hearthrug, his head ducked, the heavy frown hiding his eyes. There was
+a peculiar braced intensity about him that made the elder woman afraid.
+Suddenly he jerked his head round to his nephew.
+
+“Get on wi’ your dinner, lad,” he said, and he went to the door. The
+dogs, which had continually lain down and got up again, uneasy, now
+rose and watched. The girl went after him, saying, clearly:
+
+“What did you want, Dan?”
+
+Her slim, quick figure was gone, the door was closed behind her.
+
+There was silence. The mother, still more slave-like in her movement,
+sat down in a low chair. Berry drank some beer.
+
+“That girl will leave him,” he said to himself. “She’ll hate him like
+poison. And serve him right. Then she’ll go off with somebody else.”
+
+And she did.
+
+
+
+
+THE HORSE DEALER’S DAUGHTER
+
+
+“Well, Mabel, and what are you going to do with yourself?” asked Joe,
+with foolish flippancy. He felt quite safe himself. Without listening
+for an answer, he turned aside, worked a grain of tobacco to the tip of
+his tongue, and spat it out. He did not care about anything, since he
+felt safe himself.
+
+The three brothers and the sister sat round the desolate breakfast
+table, attempting some sort of desultory consultation. The morning’s
+post had given the final tap to the family fortunes, and all was over.
+The dreary dining-room itself, with its heavy mahogany furniture,
+looked as if it were waiting to be done away with.
+
+But the consultation amounted to nothing. There was a strange air of
+ineffectuality about the three men, as they sprawled at table, smoking
+and reflecting vaguely on their own condition. The girl was alone, a
+rather short, sullen-looking young woman of twenty-seven. She did not
+share the same life as her brothers. She would have been good-looking,
+save for the impassive fixity of her face, “bull-dog”, as her brothers
+called it.
+
+There was a confused tramping of horses’ feet outside. The three men
+all sprawled round in their chairs to watch. Beyond the dark
+holly-bushes that separated the strip of lawn from the highroad, they
+could see a cavalcade of shire horses swinging out of their own yard,
+being taken for exercise. This was the last time. These were the last
+horses that would go through their hands. The young men watched with
+critical, callous look. They were all frightened at the collapse of
+their lives, and the sense of disaster in which they were involved left
+them no inner freedom.
+
+Yet they were three fine, well-set fellows enough. Joe, the eldest, was
+a man of thirty-three, broad and handsome in a hot, flushed way. His
+face was red, he twisted his black moustache over a thick finger, his
+eyes were shallow and restless. He had a sensual way of uncovering his
+teeth when he laughed, and his bearing was stupid. Now he watched the
+horses with a glazed look of helplessness in his eyes, a certain stupor
+of downfall.
+
+The great draught-horses swung past. They were tied head to tail, four
+of them, and they heaved along to where a lane branched off from the
+highroad, planting their great hoofs floutingly in the fine black mud,
+swinging their great rounded haunches sumptuously, and trotting a few
+sudden steps as they were led into the lane, round the corner. Every
+movement showed a massive, slumbrous strength, and a stupidity which
+held them in subjection. The groom at the head looked back, jerking the
+leading rope. And the calvalcade moved out of sight up the lane, the
+tail of the last horse, bobbed up tight and stiff, held out taut from
+the swinging great haunches as they rocked behind the hedges in a
+motionlike sleep.
+
+Joe watched with glazed hopeless eyes. The horses were almost like his
+own body to him. He felt he was done for now. Luckily he was engaged to
+a woman as old as himself, and therefore her father, who was steward of
+a neighbouring estate, would provide him with a job. He would marry and
+go into harness. His life was over, he would be a subject animal now.
+
+He turned uneasily aside, the retreating steps of the horses echoing in
+his ears. Then, with foolish restlessness, he reached for the scraps of
+bacon-rind from the plates, and making a faint whistling sound, flung
+them to the terrier that lay against the fender. He watched the dog
+swallow them, and waited till the creature looked into his eyes. Then a
+faint grin came on his face, and in a high, foolish voice he said:
+
+“You won’t get much more bacon, shall you, you little b——?”
+
+The dog faintly and dismally wagged its tail, then lowered his
+haunches, circled round, and lay down again.
+
+There was another helpless silence at the table. Joe sprawled uneasily
+in his seat, not willing to go till the family conclave was dissolved.
+Fred Henry, the second brother, was erect, clean-limbed, alert. He had
+watched the passing of the horses with more _sang-froid_. If he was an
+animal, like Joe, he was an animal which controls, not one which is
+controlled. He was master of any horse, and he carried himself with a
+well-tempered air of mastery. But he was not master of the situations
+of life. He pushed his coarse brown moustache upwards, off his lip, and
+glanced irritably at his sister, who sat impassive and inscrutable.
+
+“You’ll go and stop with Lucy for a bit, shan’t you?” he asked. The
+girl did not answer.
+
+“I don’t see what else you can do,” persisted Fred Henry.
+
+“Go as a skivvy,” Joe interpolated laconically.
+
+The girl did not move a muscle.
+
+“If I was her, I should go in for training for a nurse,” said Malcolm,
+the youngest of them all. He was the baby of the family, a young man of
+twenty-two, with a fresh, jaunty _museau_.
+
+But Mabel did not take any notice of him. They had talked at her and
+round her for so many years, that she hardly heard them at all.
+
+The marble clock on the mantel-piece softly chimed the half-hour, the
+dog rose uneasily from the hearthrug and looked at the party at the
+breakfast table. But still they sat on in ineffectual conclave.
+
+“Oh, all right,” said Joe suddenly, _à propos_ of nothing. “I’ll get a
+move on.”
+
+He pushed back his chair, straddled his knees with a downward jerk, to
+get them free, in horsy fashion, and went to the fire. Still he did not
+go out of the room; he was curious to know what the others would do or
+say. He began to charge his pipe, looking down at the dog and saying,
+in a high, affected voice:
+
+“Going wi’ me? Going wi’ me are ter? Tha’rt goin’ further than tha
+counts on just now, dost hear?”
+
+The dog faintly wagged its tail, the man stuck out his jaw and covered
+his pipe with his hands, and puffed intently, losing himself in the
+tobacco, looking down all the while at the dog with an absent brown
+eye. The dog looked up at him in mournful distrust. Joe stood with his
+knees stuck out, in real horsy fashion.
+
+“Have you had a letter from Lucy?” Fred Henry asked of his sister.
+
+“Last week,” came the neutral reply.
+
+“And what does she say?”
+
+There was no answer.
+
+“Does she _ask_ you to go and stop there?” persisted Fred Henry.
+
+“She says I can if I like.”
+
+“Well, then, you’d better. Tell her you’ll come on Monday.”
+
+This was received in silence.
+
+“That’s what you’ll do then, is it?” said Fred Henry, in some
+exasperation.
+
+But she made no answer. There was a silence of futility and irritation
+in the room. Malcolm grinned fatuously.
+
+“You’ll have to make up your mind between now and next Wednesday,” said
+Joe loudly, “or else find yourself lodgings on the kerbstone.”
+
+The face of the young woman darkened, but she sat on immutable.
+
+“Here’s Jack Fergusson!” exclaimed Malcolm, who was looking aimlessly
+out of the window.
+
+“Where?” exclaimed Joe, loudly.
+
+“Just gone past.”
+
+“Coming in?”
+
+Malcolm craned his neck to see the gate.
+
+“Yes,” he said.
+
+There was a silence. Mabel sat on like one condemned, at the head of
+the table. Then a whistle was heard from the kitchen. The dog got up
+and barked sharply. Joe opened the door and shouted:
+
+“Come on.”
+
+After a moment a young man entered. He was muffled up in overcoat and a
+purple woollen scarf, and his tweed cap, which he did not remove, was
+pulled down on his head. He was of medium height, his face was rather
+long and pale, his eyes looked tired.
+
+“Hello, Jack! Well, Jack!” exclaimed Malcolm and Joe. Fred Henry merely
+said, “Jack.”
+
+“What’s doing?” asked the newcomer, evidently addressing Fred Henry.
+
+“Same. We’ve got to be out by Wednesday.—Got a cold?”
+
+“I have—got it bad, too.”
+
+“Why don’t you stop in?”
+
+“_Me_ stop in? When I can’t stand on my legs, perhaps I shall have a
+chance.” The young man spoke huskily. He had a slight Scotch accent.
+
+“It’s a knock-out, isn’t it,” said Joe, boisterously, “if a doctor goes
+round croaking with a cold. Looks bad for the patients, doesn’t it?”
+
+The young doctor looked at him slowly.
+
+“Anything the matter with _you_, then?” he asked sarcastically.
+
+“Not as I know of. Damn your eyes, I hope not. Why?”
+
+“I thought you were very concerned about the patients, wondered if you
+might be one yourself.”
+
+“Damn it, no, I’ve never been patient to no flaming doctor, and hope I
+never shall be,” returned Joe.
+
+At this point Mabel rose from the table, and they all seemed to become
+aware of her existence. She began putting the dishes together. The
+young doctor looked at her, but did not address her. He had not greeted
+her. She went out of the room with the tray, her face impassive and
+unchanged.
+
+“When are you off then, all of you?” asked the doctor.
+
+“I’m catching the eleven-forty,” replied Malcolm. “Are you goin’ down
+wi’ th’ trap, Joe?”
+
+“Yes, I’ve told you I’m going down wi’ th’ trap, haven’t I?”
+
+“We’d better be getting her in then.—So long, Jack, if I don’t see you
+before I go,” said Malcolm, shaking hands.
+
+He went out, followed by Joe, who seemed to have his tail between his
+legs.
+
+“Well, this is the devil’s own,” exclaimed the doctor, when he was left
+alone with Fred Henry. “Going before Wednesday, are you?”
+
+“That’s the orders,” replied the other.
+
+“Where, to Northampton?”
+
+“That’s it.”
+
+“The devil!” exclaimed Fergusson, with quiet chagrin.
+
+And there was silence between the two.
+
+“All settled up, are you?” asked Fergusson.
+
+“About.”
+
+There was another pause.
+
+“Well, I shall miss yer, Freddy, boy,” said the young doctor.
+
+“And I shall miss thee, Jack,” returned the other.
+
+“Miss you like hell,” mused the doctor.
+
+Fred Henry turned aside. There was nothing to say. Mabel came in again,
+to finish clearing the table.
+
+“What are _you_ going to do, then, Miss Pervin?” asked Fergusson.
+“Going to your sister’s, are you?”
+
+Mabel looked at him with her steady, dangerous eyes, that always made
+him uncomfortable, unsettling his superficial ease.
+
+“No,” she said.
+
+“Well, what in the name of fortune _are_ you going to do? Say what you
+mean to do,” cried Fred Henry, with futile intensity.
+
+But she only averted her head, and continued her work. She folded the
+white table-cloth, and put on the chenille cloth.
+
+“The sulkiest bitch that ever trod!” muttered her brother.
+
+But she finished her task with perfectly impassive face, the young
+doctor watching her interestedly all the while. Then she went out.
+
+Fred Henry stared after her, clenching his lips, his blue eyes fixing
+in sharp antagonism, as he made a grimace of sour exasperation.
+
+“You could bray her into bits, and that’s all you’d get out of her,” he
+said, in a small, narrowed tone.
+
+The doctor smiled faintly.
+
+“What’s she _going_ to do, then?” he asked.
+
+“Strike me if I know!” returned the other.
+
+There was a pause. Then the doctor stirred.
+
+“I’ll be seeing you tonight, shall I?” he said to his friend.
+
+“Ay—where’s it to be? Are we going over to Jessdale?”
+
+“I don’t know. I’ve got such a cold on me. I’ll come round to the Moon
+and Stars, anyway.”
+
+“Let Lizzie and May miss their night for once, eh?”
+
+“That’s it—if I feel as I do now.”
+
+“All’s one—”
+
+The two young men went through the passage and down to the back door
+together. The house was large, but it was servantless now, and
+desolate. At the back was a small bricked house-yard, and beyond that a
+big square, gravelled fine and red, and having stables on two sides.
+Sloping, dank, winter-dark fields stretched away on the open sides.
+
+But the stables were empty. Joseph Pervin, the father of the family,
+had been a man of no education, who had become a fairly large horse
+dealer. The stables had been full of horses, there was a great turmoil
+and come-and-go of horses and of dealers and grooms. Then the kitchen
+was full of servants. But of late things had declined. The old man had
+married a second time, to retrieve his fortunes. Now he was dead and
+everything was gone to the dogs, there was nothing but debt and
+threatening.
+
+For months, Mabel had been servantless in the big house, keeping the
+home together in penury for her ineffectual brothers. She had kept
+house for ten years. But previously, it was with unstinted means. Then,
+however brutal and coarse everything was, the sense of money had kept
+her proud, confident. The men might be foul-mouthed, the women in the
+kitchen might have bad reputations, her brothers might have
+illegitimate children. But so long as there was money, the girl felt
+herself established, and brutally proud, reserved.
+
+No company came to the house, save dealers and coarse men. Mabel had no
+associates of her own sex, after her sister went away. But she did not
+mind. She went regularly to church, she attended to her father. And she
+lived in the memory of her mother, who had died when she was fourteen,
+and whom she had loved. She had loved her father, too, in a different
+way, depending upon him, and feeling secure in him, until at the age of
+fifty-four he married again. And then she had set hard against him. Now
+he had died and left them all hopelessly in debt.
+
+She had suffered badly during the period of poverty. Nothing, however,
+could shake the curious sullen, animal pride that dominated each member
+of the family. Now, for Mabel, the end had come. Still she would not
+cast about her. She would follow her own way just the same. She would
+always hold the keys of her own situation. Mindless and persistent, she
+endured from day to day. Why should she think? Why should she answer
+anybody? It was enough that this was the end, and there was no way out.
+She need not pass any more darkly along the main street of the small
+town, avoiding every eye. She need not demean herself any more, going
+into the shops and buying the cheapest food. This was at an end. She
+thought of nobody, not even of herself. Mindless and persistent, she
+seemed in a sort of ecstasy to be coming nearer to her fulfilment, her
+own glorification, approaching her dead mother, who was glorified.
+
+In the afternoon she took a little bag, with shears and sponge and a
+small scrubbing brush, and went out. It was a grey, wintry day, with
+saddened, dark-green fields and an atmosphere blackened by the smoke of
+foundries not far off. She went quickly, darkly along the causeway,
+heeding nobody, through the town to the churchyard.
+
+There she always felt secure, as if no one could see her, although as a
+matter of fact she was exposed to the stare of everyone who passed
+along under the churchyard wall. Nevertheless, once under the shadow of
+the great looming church, among the graves, she felt immune from the
+world, reserved within the thick churchyard wall as in another country.
+
+Carefully she clipped the grass from the grave, and arranged the
+pinky-white, small chrysanthemums in the tin cross. When this was done,
+she took an empty jar from a neighbouring grave, brought water, and
+carefully, most scrupulously sponged the marble headstone and the
+coping-stone.
+
+It gave her sincere satisfaction to do this. She felt in immediate
+contact with the world of her mother. She took minute pains, went
+through the park in a state bordering on pure happiness, as if in
+performing this task she came into a subtle, intimate connexion with
+her mother. For the life she followed here in the world was far less
+real than the world of death she inherited from her mother.
+
+The doctor’s house was just by the church. Fergusson, being a mere
+hired assistant, was slave to the countryside. As he hurried now to
+attend to the outpatients in the surgery, glancing across the graveyard
+with his quick eye, he saw the girl at her task at the grave. She
+seemed so intent and remote, it was like looking into another world.
+Some mystical element was touched in him. He slowed down as he walked,
+watching her as if spell-bound.
+
+She lifted her eyes, feeling him looking. Their eyes met. And each
+looked again at once, each feeling, in some way, found out by the
+other. He lifted his cap and passed on down the road. There remained
+distinct in his consciousness, like a vision, the memory of her face,
+lifted from the tombstone in the churchyard, and looking at him with
+slow, large, portentous eyes. It _was_ portentous, her face. It seemed
+to mesmerise him. There was a heavy power in her eyes which laid hold
+of his whole being, as if he had drunk some powerful drug. He had been
+feeling weak and done before. Now the life came back into him, he felt
+delivered from his own fretted, daily self.
+
+He finished his duties at the surgery as quickly as might be, hastily
+filling up the bottles of the waiting people with cheap drugs. Then, in
+perpetual haste, he set off again to visit several cases in another
+part of his round, before teatime. At all times he preferred to walk,
+if he could, but particularly when he was not well. He fancied the
+motion restored him.
+
+The afternoon was falling. It was grey, deadened, and wintry, with a
+slow, moist, heavy coldness sinking in and deadening all the faculties.
+But why should he think or notice? He hastily climbed the hill and
+turned across the dark-green fields, following the black cinder-track.
+In the distance, across a shallow dip in the country, the small town
+was clustered like smouldering ash, a tower, a spire, a heap of low,
+raw, extinct houses. And on the nearest fringe of the town, sloping
+into the dip, was Oldmeadow, the Pervins’ house. He could see the
+stables and the outbuildings distinctly, as they lay towards him on the
+slope. Well, he would not go there many more times! Another resource
+would be lost to him, another place gone: the only company he cared for
+in the alien, ugly little town he was losing. Nothing but work,
+drudgery, constant hastening from dwelling to dwelling among the
+colliers and the iron-workers. It wore him out, but at the same time he
+had a craving for it. It was a stimulant to him to be in the homes of
+the working people, moving as it were through the innermost body of
+their life. His nerves were excited and gratified. He could come so
+near, into the very lives of the rough, inarticulate, powerfully
+emotional men and women. He grumbled, he said he hated the hellish
+hole. But as a matter of fact it excited him, the contact with the
+rough, strongly-feeling people was a stimulant applied direct to his
+nerves.
+
+Below Oldmeadow, in the green, shallow, soddened hollow of fields, lay
+a square, deep pond. Roving across the landscape, the doctor’s quick
+eye detected a figure in black passing through the gate of the field,
+down towards the pond. He looked again. It would be Mabel Pervin. His
+mind suddenly became alive and attentive.
+
+Why was she going down there? He pulled up on the path on the slope
+above, and stood staring. He could just make sure of the small black
+figure moving in the hollow of the failing day. He seemed to see her in
+the midst of such obscurity, that he was like a clairvoyant, seeing
+rather with the mind’s eye than with ordinary sight. Yet he could see
+her positively enough, whilst he kept his eye attentive. He felt, if he
+looked away from her, in the thick, ugly falling dusk, he would lose
+her altogether.
+
+He followed her minutely as she moved, direct and intent, like
+something transmitted rather than stirring in voluntary activity,
+straight down the field towards the pond. There she stood on the bank
+for a moment. She never raised her head. Then she waded slowly into the
+water.
+
+He stood motionless as the small black figure walked slowly and
+deliberately towards the centre of the pond, very slowly, gradually
+moving deeper into the motionless water, and still moving forward as
+the water got up to her breast. Then he could see her no more in the
+dusk of the dead afternoon.
+
+“There!” he exclaimed. “Would you believe it?”
+
+And he hastened straight down, running over the wet, soddened fields,
+pushing through the hedges, down into the depression of callous wintry
+obscurity. It took him several minutes to come to the pond. He stood on
+the bank, breathing heavily. He could see nothing. His eyes seemed to
+penetrate the dead water. Yes, perhaps that was the dark shadow of her
+black clothing beneath the surface of the water.
+
+He slowly ventured into the pond. The bottom was deep, soft clay, he
+sank in, and the water clasped dead cold round his legs. As he stirred
+he could smell the cold, rotten clay that fouled up into the water. It
+was objectionable in his lungs. Still, repelled and yet not heeding, he
+moved deeper into the pond. The cold water rose over his thighs, over
+his loins, upon his abdomen. The lower part of his body was all sunk in
+the hideous cold element. And the bottom was so deeply soft and
+uncertain, he was afraid of pitching with his mouth underneath. He
+could not swim, and was afraid.
+
+He crouched a little, spreading his hands under the water and moving
+them round, trying to feel for her. The dead cold pond swayed upon his
+chest. He moved again, a little deeper, and again, with his hands
+underneath, he felt all around under the water. And he touched her
+clothing. But it evaded his fingers. He made a desperate effort to
+grasp it.
+
+And so doing he lost his balance and went under, horribly, suffocating
+in the foul earthy water, struggling madly for a few moments. At last,
+after what seemed an eternity, he got his footing, rose again into the
+air and looked around. He gasped, and knew he was in the world. Then he
+looked at the water. She had risen near him. He grasped her clothing,
+and drawing her nearer, turned to take his way to land again.
+
+He went very slowly, carefully, absorbed in the slow progress. He rose
+higher, climbing out of the pond. The water was now only about his
+legs; he was thankful, full of relief to be out of the clutches of the
+pond. He lifted her and staggered on to the bank, out of the horror of
+wet, grey clay.
+
+He laid her down on the bank. She was quite unconscious and running
+with water. He made the water come from her mouth, he worked to restore
+her. He did not have to work very long before he could feel the
+breathing begin again in her; she was breathing naturally. He worked a
+little longer. He could feel her live beneath his hands; she was coming
+back. He wiped her face, wrapped her in his overcoat, looked round into
+the dim, dark-grey world, then lifted her and staggered down the bank
+and across the fields.
+
+It seemed an unthinkably long way, and his burden so heavy he felt he
+would never get to the house. But at last he was in the stable-yard,
+and then in the house-yard. He opened the door and went into the house.
+In the kitchen he laid her down on the hearthrug, and called. The house
+was empty. But the fire was burning in the grate.
+
+Then again he kneeled to attend to her. She was breathing regularly,
+her eyes were wide open and as if conscious, but there seemed something
+missing in her look. She was conscious in herself, but unconscious of
+her surroundings.
+
+He ran upstairs, took blankets from a bed, and put them before the fire
+to warm. Then he removed her saturated, earthy-smelling clothing,
+rubbed her dry with a towel, and wrapped her naked in the blankets.
+Then he went into the dining-room, to look for spirits. There was a
+little whisky. He drank a gulp himself, and put some into her mouth.
+
+The effect was instantaneous. She looked full into his face, as if she
+had been seeing him for some time, and yet had only just become
+conscious of him.
+
+“Dr. Fergusson?” she said.
+
+“What?” he answered.
+
+He was divesting himself of his coat, intending to find some dry
+clothing upstairs. He could not bear the smell of the dead, clayey
+water, and he was mortally afraid for his own health.
+
+“What did I do?” she asked.
+
+“Walked into the pond,” he replied. He had begun to shudder like one
+sick, and could hardly attend to her. Her eyes remained full on him, he
+seemed to be going dark in his mind, looking back at her helplessly.
+The shuddering became quieter in him, his life came back in him, dark
+and unknowing, but strong again.
+
+“Was I out of my mind?” she asked, while her eyes were fixed on him all
+the time.
+
+“Maybe, for the moment,” he replied. He felt quiet, because his
+strength had come back. The strange fretful strain had left him.
+
+“Am I out of my mind now?” she asked.
+
+“Are you?” he reflected a moment. “No,” he answered truthfully, “I
+don’t see that you are.” He turned his face aside. He was afraid now,
+because he felt dazed, and felt dimly that her power was stronger than
+his, in this issue. And she continued to look at him fixedly all the
+time. “Can you tell me where I shall find some dry things to put on?”
+he asked.
+
+“Did you dive into the pond for me?” she asked.
+
+“No,” he answered. “I walked in. But I went in overhead as well.”
+
+There was silence for a moment. He hesitated. He very much wanted to go
+upstairs to get into dry clothing. But there was another desire in him.
+And she seemed to hold him. His will seemed to have gone to sleep, and
+left him, standing there slack before her. But he felt warm inside
+himself. He did not shudder at all, though his clothes were sodden on
+him.
+
+“Why did you?” she asked.
+
+“Because I didn’t want you to do such a foolish thing,” he said.
+
+“It wasn’t foolish,” she said, still gazing at him as she lay on the
+floor, with a sofa cushion under her head. “It was the right thing to
+do. _I_ knew best, then.”
+
+“I’ll go and shift these wet things,” he said. But still he had not the
+power to move out of her presence, until she sent him. It was as if she
+had the life of his body in her hands, and he could not extricate
+himself. Or perhaps he did not want to.
+
+Suddenly she sat up. Then she became aware of her own immediate
+condition. She felt the blankets about her, she knew her own limbs. For
+a moment it seemed as if her reason were going. She looked round, with
+wild eye, as if seeking something. He stood still with fear. She saw
+her clothing lying scattered.
+
+“Who undressed me?” she asked, her eyes resting full and inevitable on
+his face.
+
+“I did,” he replied, “to bring you round.”
+
+For some moments she sat and gazed at him awfully, her lips parted.
+
+“Do you love me then?” she asked.
+
+He only stood and stared at her, fascinated. His soul seemed to melt.
+
+She shuffled forward on her knees, and put her arms round him, round
+his legs, as he stood there, pressing her breasts against his knees and
+thighs, clutching him with strange, convulsive certainty, pressing his
+thighs against her, drawing him to her face, her throat, as she looked
+up at him with flaring, humble eyes, of transfiguration, triumphant in
+first possession.
+
+“You love me,” she murmured, in strange transport, yearning and
+triumphant and confident. “You love me. I know you love me, I know.”
+
+And she was passionately kissing his knees, through the wet clothing,
+passionately and indiscriminately kissing his knees, his legs, as if
+unaware of everything.
+
+He looked down at the tangled wet hair, the wild, bare, animal
+shoulders. He was amazed, bewildered, and afraid. He had never thought
+of loving her. He had never wanted to love her. When he rescued her and
+restored her, he was a doctor, and she was a patient. He had had no
+single personal thought of her. Nay, this introduction of the personal
+element was very distasteful to him, a violation of his professional
+honour. It was horrible to have her there embracing his knees. It was
+horrible. He revolted from it, violently. And yet—and yet—he had not
+the power to break away.
+
+She looked at him again, with the same supplication of powerful love,
+and that same transcendent, frightening light of triumph. In view of
+the delicate flame which seemed to come from her face like a light, he
+was powerless. And yet he had never intended to love her. He had never
+intended. And something stubborn in him could not give way.
+
+“You love me,” she repeated, in a murmur of deep, rhapsodic assurance.
+“You love me.”
+
+Her hands were drawing him, drawing him down to her. He was afraid,
+even a little horrified. For he had, really, no intention of loving
+her. Yet her hands were drawing him towards her. He put out his hand
+quickly to steady himself, and grasped her bare shoulder. A flame
+seemed to burn the hand that grasped her soft shoulder. He had no
+intention of loving her: his whole will was against his yielding. It
+was horrible. And yet wonderful was the touch of her shoulders,
+beautiful the shining of her face. Was she perhaps mad? He had a horror
+of yielding to her. Yet something in him ached also.
+
+He had been staring away at the door, away from her. But his hand
+remained on her shoulder. She had gone suddenly very still. He looked
+down at her. Her eyes were now wide with fear, with doubt, the light
+was dying from her face, a shadow of terrible greyness was returning.
+He could not bear the touch of her eyes’ question upon him, and the
+look of death behind the question.
+
+With an inward groan he gave way, and let his heart yield towards her.
+A sudden gentle smile came on his face. And her eyes, which never left
+his face, slowly, slowly filled with tears. He watched the strange
+water rise in her eyes, like some slow fountain coming up. And his
+heart seemed to burn and melt away in his breast.
+
+He could not bear to look at her any more. He dropped on his knees and
+caught her head with his arms and pressed her face against his throat.
+She was very still. His heart, which seemed to have broken, was burning
+with a kind of agony in his breast. And he felt her slow, hot tears
+wetting his throat. But he could not move.
+
+He felt the hot tears wet his neck and the hollows of his neck, and he
+remained motionless, suspended through one of man’s eternities. Only
+now it had become indispensable to him to have her face pressed close
+to him; he could never let her go again. He could never let her head go
+away from the close clutch of his arm. He wanted to remain like that
+for ever, with his heart hurting him in a pain that was also life to
+him. Without knowing, he was looking down on her damp, soft brown hair.
+
+Then, as it were suddenly, he smelt the horrid stagnant smell of that
+water. And at the same moment she drew away from him and looked at him.
+Her eyes were wistful and unfathomable. He was afraid of them, and he
+fell to kissing her, not knowing what he was doing. He wanted her eyes
+not to have that terrible, wistful, unfathomable look.
+
+When she turned her face to him again, a faint delicate flush was
+glowing, and there was again dawning that terrible shining of joy in
+her eyes, which really terrified him, and yet which he now wanted to
+see, because he feared the look of doubt still more.
+
+“You love me?” she said, rather faltering.
+
+“Yes.” The word cost him a painful effort. Not because it wasn’t true.
+But because it was too newly true, the _saying_ seemed to tear open
+again his newly-torn heart. And he hardly wanted it to be true, even
+now.
+
+She lifted her face to him, and he bent forward and kissed her on the
+mouth, gently, with the one kiss that is an eternal pledge. And as he
+kissed her his heart strained again in his breast. He never intended to
+love her. But now it was over. He had crossed over the gulf to her, and
+all that he had left behind had shrivelled and become void.
+
+After the kiss, her eyes again slowly filled with tears. She sat still,
+away from him, with her face drooped aside, and her hands folded in her
+lap. The tears fell very slowly. There was complete silence. He too sat
+there motionless and silent on the hearthrug. The strange pain of his
+heart that was broken seemed to consume him. That he should love her?
+That this was love! That he should be ripped open in this way!—Him, a
+doctor!—How they would all jeer if they knew!—It was agony to him to
+think they might know.
+
+In the curious naked pain of the thought he looked again to her. She
+was sitting there drooped into a muse. He saw a tear fall, and his
+heart flared hot. He saw for the first time that one of her shoulders
+was quite uncovered, one arm bare, he could see one of her small
+breasts; dimly, because it had become almost dark in the room.
+
+“Why are you crying?” he asked, in an altered voice.
+
+She looked up at him, and behind her tears the consciousness of her
+situation for the first time brought a dark look of shame to her eyes.
+
+“I’m not crying, really,” she said, watching him half frightened.
+
+He reached his hand, and softly closed it on her bare arm.
+
+“I love you! I love you!” he said in a soft, low vibrating voice,
+unlike himself.
+
+She shrank, and dropped her head. The soft, penetrating grip of his
+hand on her arm distressed her. She looked up at him.
+
+“I want to go,” she said. “I want to go and get you some dry things.”
+
+“Why?” he said. “I’m all right.”
+
+“But I want to go,” she said. “And I want you to change your things.”
+
+He released her arm, and she wrapped herself in the blanket, looking at
+him rather frightened. And still she did not rise.
+
+“Kiss me,” she said wistfully.
+
+He kissed her, but briefly, half in anger.
+
+Then, after a second, she rose nervously, all mixed up in the blanket.
+He watched her in her confusion, as she tried to extricate herself and
+wrap herself up so that she could walk. He watched her relentlessly, as
+she knew. And as she went, the blanket trailing, and as he saw a
+glimpse of her feet and her white leg, he tried to remember her as she
+was when he had wrapped her in the blanket. But then he didn’t want to
+remember, because she had been nothing to him then, and his nature
+revolted from remembering her as she was when she was nothing to him.
+
+A tumbling, muffled noise from within the dark house startled him. Then
+he heard her voice:—“There are clothes.” He rose and went to the foot
+of the stairs, and gathered up the garments she had thrown down. Then
+he came back to the fire, to rub himself down and dress. He grinned at
+his own appearance when he had finished.
+
+The fire was sinking, so he put on coal. The house was now quite dark,
+save for the light of a street-lamp that shone in faintly from beyond
+the holly trees. He lit the gas with matches he found on the
+mantel-piece. Then he emptied the pockets of his own clothes, and threw
+all his wet things in a heap into the scullery. After which he gathered
+up her sodden clothes, gently, and put them in a separate heap on the
+copper-top in the scullery.
+
+It was six o’clock on the clock. His own watch had stopped. He ought to
+go back to the surgery. He waited, and still she did not come down. So
+he went to the foot of the stairs and called:
+
+“I shall have to go.”
+
+Almost immediately he heard her coming down. She had on her best dress
+of black voile, and her hair was tidy, but still damp. She looked at
+him—and in spite of herself, smiled.
+
+“I don’t like you in those clothes,” she said.
+
+“Do I look a sight?” he answered.
+
+They were shy of one another.
+
+“I’ll make you some tea,” she said.
+
+“No, I must go.”
+
+“Must you?” And she looked at him again with the wide, strained,
+doubtful eyes. And again, from the pain of his breast, he knew how he
+loved her. He went and bent to kiss her, gently, passionately, with his
+heart’s painful kiss.
+
+“And my hair smells so horrible,” she murmured in distraction. “And I’m
+so awful, I’m so awful! Oh, no, I’m too awful.” And she broke into
+bitter, heart-broken sobbing. “You can’t want to love me, I’m
+horrible.”
+
+“Don’t be silly, don’t be silly,” he said, trying to comfort her,
+kissing her, holding her in his arms. “I want you, I want to marry you,
+we’re going to be married, quickly, quickly—tomorrow if I can.”
+
+But she only sobbed terribly, and cried:
+
+“I feel awful. I feel awful. I feel I’m horrible to you.”
+
+“No, I want you, I want you,” was all he answered, blindly, with that
+terrible intonation which frightened her almost more than her horror
+lest he should _not_ want her.
+
+
+
+
+FANNY AND ANNIE
+
+
+Flame-lurid his face as he turned among the throng of flame-lit and
+dark faces upon the platform. In the light of the furnace she caught
+sight of his drifting countenance, like a piece of floating fire. And
+the nostalgia, the doom of homecoming went through her veins like a
+drug. His eternal face, flame-lit now! The pulse and darkness of red
+fire from the furnace towers in the sky, lighting the desultory,
+industrial crowd on the wayside station, lit him and went out.
+
+Of course he did not see her. Flame-lit and unseeing! Always the same,
+with his meeting eyebrows, his common cap, and his red-and-black scarf
+knotted round his throat. Not even a collar to meet her! The flames had
+sunk, there was shadow.
+
+She opened the door of her grimy, branch-line carriage, and began to
+get down her bags. The porter was nowhere, of course, but there was
+Harry, obscure, on the outer edge of the little crowd, missing her, of
+course.
+
+“Here! Harry!” she called, waving her umbrella in the twilight. He
+hurried forward.
+
+“Tha’s come, has ter?” he said, in a sort of cheerful welcome. She got
+down, rather flustered, and gave him a peck of a kiss.
+
+“Two suit-cases!” she said.
+
+Her soul groaned within her, as he clambered into the carriage after
+her bags. Up shot the fire in the twilight sky, from the great furnace
+behind the station. She felt the red flame go across her face. She had
+come back, she had come back for good. And her spirit groaned dismally.
+She doubted if she could bear it.
+
+There, on the sordid little station under the furnaces, she stood, tall
+and distinguished, in her well-made coat and skirt and her broad grey
+velour hat. She held her umbrella, her bead chatelaine, and a little
+leather case in her grey-gloved hands, while Harry staggered out of the
+ugly little train with her bags.
+
+“There’s a trunk at the back,” she said in her bright voice. But she
+was not feeling bright. The twin black cones of the iron foundry
+blasted their sky-high fires into the night. The whole scene was lurid.
+The train waited cheerfully. It would wait another ten minutes. She
+knew it. It was all so deadly familiar.
+
+Let us confess it at once. She was a lady’s maid, thirty years old,
+come back to marry her first-love, a foundry worker: after having kept
+him dangling, off and on, for a dozen years. Why had she come back? Did
+she love him? No. She didn’t pretend to. She had loved her brilliant
+and ambitious cousin, who had jilted her, and who had died. She had had
+other affairs which had come to nothing. So here she was, come back
+suddenly to marry her first-love, who had waited—or remained single—all
+these years.
+
+“Won’t a porter carry those?” she said, as Harry strode with his
+workman’s stride down the platform towards the guard’s van.
+
+“I can manage,” he said.
+
+And with her umbrella, her chatelaine, and her little leather case, she
+followed him.
+
+The trunk was there.
+
+“We’ll get Heather’s greengrocer’s cart to fetch it up,” he said.
+
+“Isn’t there a cab?” said Fanny, knowing dismally enough that there
+wasn’t.
+
+“I’ll just put it aside o’ the penny-in-the-slot, and Heather’s
+greengrocers’ll fetch it about half past eight,” he said.
+
+He seized the box by its two handles and staggered with it across the
+level-crossing, bumping his legs against it as he waddled. Then he
+dropped it by the red sweet-meats machine.
+
+“Will it be safe there?” she said.
+
+“Ay—safe as houses,” he answered. He returned for the two bags. Thus
+laden, they started to plod up the hill, under the great long black
+building of the foundry. She walked beside him—workman of workmen he
+was, trudging with that luggage. The red lights flared over the
+deepening darkness. From the foundry came the horrible, slow clang,
+clang, clang of iron, a great noise, with an interval just long enough
+to make it unendurable.
+
+Compare this with the arrival at Gloucester: the carriage for her
+mistress, the dog-cart for herself with the luggage; the drive out past
+the river, the pleasant trees of the carriage-approach; and herself
+sitting beside Arthur, everybody so polite to her.
+
+She had come home—for good! Her heart nearly stopped beating as she
+trudged up that hideous and interminable hill, beside the laden figure.
+What a come-down! What a come-down! She could not take it with her
+usual bright cheerfulness. She knew it all too well. It is easy to bear
+up against the unusual, but the deadly familiarity of an old stale
+past!
+
+He dumped the bags down under a lamp-post, for a rest. There they
+stood, the two of them, in the lamplight. Passers-by stared at her, and
+gave good-night to Harry. Her they hardly knew, she had become a
+stranger.
+
+“They’re too heavy for you, let me carry one,” she said.
+
+“They begin to weigh a bit by the time you’ve gone a mile,” he
+answered.
+
+“Let me carry the little one,” she insisted.
+
+“Tha can ha’e it for a minute, if ter’s a mind,” he said, handing over
+the valise.
+
+And thus they arrived in the streets of shops of the little ugly town
+on top of the hill. How everybody stared at her; my word, how they
+stared! And the cinema was just going in, and the queues were tailing
+down the road to the corner. And everybody took full stock of her.
+“Night, Harry!” shouted the fellows, in an interested voice.
+
+However, they arrived at her aunt’s—a little sweet-shop in a side
+street. They “pinged” the door-bell, and her aunt came running forward
+out of the kitchen.
+
+“There you are, child! Dying for a cup of tea, I’m sure. How are you?”
+
+Fanny’s aunt kissed her, and it was all Fanny could do to refrain from
+bursting into tears, she felt so low. Perhaps it was her tea she
+wanted.
+
+“You’ve had a drag with that luggage,” said Fanny’s aunt to Harry.
+
+“Ay—I’m not sorry to put it down,” he said, looking at his hand which
+was crushed and cramped by the bag handle.
+
+Then he departed to see about Heather’s greengrocery cart.
+
+When Fanny sat at tea, her aunt, a grey-haired, fair-faced little
+woman, looked at her with an admiring heart, feeling bitterly sore for
+her. For Fanny was beautiful: tall, erect, finely coloured, with her
+delicately arched nose, her rich brown hair, her large lustrous grey
+eyes. A passionate woman—a woman to be afraid of. So proud, so inwardly
+violent! She came of a violent race.
+
+It needed a woman to sympathise with her. Men had not the courage. Poor
+Fanny! She was such a lady, and so straight and magnificent. And yet
+everything seemed to do her down. Every time she seemed to be doomed to
+humiliation and disappointment, this handsome, brilliantly sensitive
+woman, with her nervous, overwrought laugh.
+
+“So you’ve really come back, child?” said her aunt.
+
+“I really have, Aunt,” said Fanny.
+
+“Poor Harry! I’m not sure, you know, Fanny, that you’re not taking a
+bit of an advantage of him.”
+
+“Oh, Aunt, he’s waited so long, he may as well have what he’s waited
+for.” Fanny laughed grimly.
+
+“Yes, child, he’s waited so long, that I’m not sure it isn’t a bit hard
+on him. You know, I _like_ him, Fanny—though as you know quite well, I
+don’t think he’s good enough for you. And I think he thinks so himself,
+poor fellow.”
+
+“Don’t you be so sure of that, Aunt. Harry is common, but he’s not
+humble. He wouldn’t think the Queen was any too good for him, if he’d a
+mind to her.”
+
+“Well—It’s as well if he has a proper opinion of himself.”
+
+“It depends what you call proper,” said Fanny. “But he’s got his good
+points—”
+
+“Oh, he’s a nice fellow, and I like him, I do like him. Only, as I tell
+you, he’s not good enough for you.”
+
+“I’ve made up my mind, Aunt,” said Fanny, grimly.
+
+“Yes,” mused the aunt. “They say all things come to him who waits—”
+
+“More than he’s bargained for, eh, Aunt?” laughed Fanny rather
+bitterly.
+
+The poor aunt, this bitterness grieved her for her niece.
+
+They were interrupted by the ping of the shop-bell, and Harry’s call of
+“Right!” But as he did not come in at once, Fanny, feeling solicitous
+for him presumably at the moment, rose and went into the shop. She saw
+a cart outside, and went to the door.
+
+And the moment she stood in the doorway, she heard a woman’s common
+vituperative voice crying from the darkness of the opposite side of the
+road:
+
+“Tha’rt theer, ar ter? I’ll shame thee, Mester. I’ll shame thee, see if
+I dunna.”
+
+Startled, Fanny stared across the darkness, and saw a woman in a black
+bonnet go under one of the lamps up the side street.
+
+Harry and Bill Heather had dragged the trunk off the little dray, and
+she retreated before them as they came up the shop step with it.
+
+“Wheer shalt ha’e it?” asked Harry.
+
+“Best take it upstairs,” said Fanny.
+
+She went up first to light the gas.
+
+When Heather had gone, and Harry was sitting down having tea and pork
+pie, Fanny asked:
+
+“Who was that woman shouting?”
+
+“Nay, I canna tell thee. To somebody, I’s’d think,” replied Harry.
+Fanny looked at him, but asked no more.
+
+He was a fair-haired fellow of thirty-two, with a fair moustache. He
+was broad in his speech, and looked like a foundry-hand, which he was.
+But women always liked him. There was something of a mother’s lad about
+him—something warm and playful and really sensitive.
+
+He had his attractions even for Fanny. What she rebelled against so
+bitterly was that he had no sort of ambition. He was a moulder, but of
+very commonplace skill. He was thirty-two years old, and hadn’t saved
+twenty pounds. She would have to provide the money for the home. He
+didn’t care. He just didn’t care. He had no initiative at all. He had
+no vices—no obvious ones. But he was just indifferent, spending as he
+went, and not caring. Yet he did not look happy. She remembered his
+face in the fire-glow: something haunted, abstracted about it. As he
+sat there eating his pork pie, bulging his cheek out, she felt he was
+like a doom to her. And she raged against the doom of him. It wasn’t
+that he was gross. His way was common, almost on purpose. But he
+himself wasn’t really common. For instance, his food was not
+particularly important to him, he was not greedy. He had a charm, too,
+particularly for women, with his blondness and his sensitiveness and
+his way of making a woman feel that she was a higher being. But Fanny
+knew him, knew the peculiar obstinate limitedness of him, that would
+nearly send her mad.
+
+He stayed till about half past nine. She went to the door with him.
+
+“When are you coming up?” he said, jerking his head in the direction,
+presumably, of his own home.
+
+“I’ll come tomorrow afternoon,” she said brightly. Between Fanny and
+Mrs. Goodall, his mother, there was naturally no love lost.
+
+Again she gave him an awkward little kiss, and said good-night.
+
+“You can’t wonder, you know, child, if he doesn’t seem so very keen,”
+said her aunt. “It’s your own fault.”
+
+“Oh, Aunt, I couldn’t stand him when he was keen. I can do with him a
+lot better as he is.”
+
+The two women sat and talked far into the night. They understood each
+other. The aunt, too, had married as Fanny was marrying: a man who was
+no companion to her, a violent man, brother of Fanny’s father. He was
+dead, Fanny’s father was dead.
+
+Poor Aunt Lizzie, she cried woefully over her bright niece, when she
+had gone to bed.
+
+Fanny paid the promised visit to his people the next afternoon. Mrs.
+Goodall was a large woman with smooth-parted hair, a common, obstinate
+woman, who had spoiled her four lads and her one vixen of a married
+daughter. She was one of those old-fashioned powerful natures that
+couldn’t do with looks or education or any form of showing off. She
+fairly hated the sound of correct English. She _thee’d_ and _tha’d_ her
+prospective daughter-in-law, and said:
+
+“I’m none as ormin’ as I look, seest ta.”
+
+Fanny did not think her prospective mother-in-law looked at all orming,
+so the speech was unnecessary.
+
+“I towd him mysen,” said Mrs. Goodall, “’Er’s held back all this long,
+let ’er stop as ’er is. ’E’d none ha’ had thee for _my_ tellin’—tha
+hears. No, ’e’s a fool, an’ I know it. I says to him, ‘Tha looks a man,
+doesn’t ter, at thy age, goin’ an’ openin’ to her when ter hears her
+scrat’ at th’ gate, after she’s done gallivantin’ round wherever she’d
+a mind. That looks rare an’ soft.’ But it’s no use o’ any talking: he
+answered that letter o’ thine and made his own bad bargain.”
+
+But in spite of the old woman’s anger, she was also flattered at
+Fanny’s coming back to Harry. For Mrs. Goodall was impressed by Fanny—a
+woman of her own match. And more than this, everybody knew that Fanny’s
+Aunt Kate had left her two hundred pounds: this apart from the girl’s
+savings.
+
+So there was high tea in Princes Street when Harry came home black from
+work, and a rather acrid odour of cordiality, the vixen Jinny darting
+in to say vulgar things. Of course Jinny lived in a house whose garden
+end joined the paternal garden. They were a clan who stuck together,
+these Goodalls.
+
+It was arranged that Fanny should come to tea again on the Sunday, and
+the wedding was discussed. It should take place in a fortnight’s time
+at Morley Chapel. Morley was a hamlet on the edge of the real country,
+and in its little Congregational Chapel Fanny and Harry had first met.
+
+What a creature of habit he was! He was still in the choir of Morley
+Chapel—not very regular. He belonged just because he had a tenor voice,
+and enjoyed singing. Indeed his solos were only spoilt to local fame
+because when he sang he handled his aitches so hopelessly.
+
+“And I saw ’eaven hopened
+And be’old, a wite ’orse——”
+
+
+This was one of Harry’s classics, only surpassed by the fine outburst
+of his heaving:
+
+“Hangels—hever bright an’ fair——”
+
+
+It was a pity, but it was inalterable. He had a good voice, and he sang
+with a certain lacerating fire, but his pronunciation made it all
+funny. And nothing could alter him.
+
+So he was never heard save at cheap concerts and in the little, poorer
+chapels. The others scoffed.
+
+Now the month was September, and Sunday was Harvest Festival at Morley
+Chapel, and Harry was singing solos. So that Fanny was to go to
+afternoon service, and come home to a grand spread of Sunday tea with
+him. Poor Fanny! One of the most wonderful afternoons had been a Sunday
+afternoon service, with her cousin Luther at her side, Harvest Festival
+in Morley Chapel. Harry had sung solos then—ten years ago. She
+remembered his pale blue tie, and the purple asters and the great
+vegetable marrows in which he was framed, and her cousin Luther at her
+side, young, clever, come down from London, where he was getting on
+well, learning his Latin and his French and German so brilliantly.
+
+However, once again it was Harvest Festival at Morley Chapel, and once
+again, as ten years before, a soft, exquisite September day, with the
+last roses pink in the cottage gardens, the last dahlias crimson, the
+last sunflowers yellow. And again the little old chapel was a bower,
+with its famous sheaves of corn and corn-plaited pillars, its great
+bunches of grapes, dangling like tassels from the pulpit corners, its
+marrows and potatoes and pears and apples and damsons, its purple
+asters and yellow Japanese sunflowers. Just as before, the red dahlias
+round the pillars were dropping, weak-headed among the oats. The place
+was crowded and hot, the plates of tomatoes seemed balanced perilously
+on the gallery front, the Rev. Enderby was weirder than ever to look
+at, so long and emaciated and hairless.
+
+The Rev. Enderby, probably forewarned, came and shook hands with her
+and welcomed her, in his broad northern, melancholy singsong before he
+mounted the pulpit. Fanny was handsome in a gauzy dress and a beautiful
+lace hat. Being a little late, she sat in a chair in the side-aisle
+wedged in, right in front of the chapel. Harry was in the gallery
+above, and she could only see him from the eyes upwards. She noticed
+again how his eyebrows met, blond and not very marked, over his nose.
+He was attractive too: physically lovable, very. If only—if only her
+_pride_ had not suffered! She felt he dragged her down.
+
+“Come, ye thankful people come,
+Raise the song of harvest-home.
+All is safely gathered in
+Ere the winter storms begin——”
+
+
+Even the hymn was a falsehood, as the season had been wet, and half the
+crops were still out, and in a poor way.
+
+Poor Fanny! She sang little, and looked beautiful through that
+inappropriate hymn. Above her stood Harry—mercifully in a dark suit and
+dark tie, looking almost handsome. And his lacerating, pure tenor
+sounded well, when the words were drowned in the general commotion.
+Brilliant she looked, and brilliant she felt, for she was hot and
+angrily miserable and inflamed with a sort of fatal despair. Because
+there was about him a physical attraction which she really hated, but
+which she could not escape from. He was the first man who had ever
+kissed her. And his kisses, even while she rebelled from them, had
+lived in her blood and sent roots down into her soul. After all this
+time she had come back to them. And her soul groaned, for she felt
+dragged down, dragged down to earth, as a bird which some dog has got
+down in the dust. She knew her life would be unhappy. She knew that
+what she was doing was fatal. Yet it was her doom. She had to come back
+to him.
+
+He had to sing two solos this afternoon: one before the “address” from
+the pulpit and one after. Fanny looked at him, and wondered he was not
+too shy to stand up there in front of all the people. But no, he was
+not shy. He had even a kind of assurance on his face as he looked down
+from the choir gallery at her: the assurance of a common man
+deliberately entrenched in his commonness. Oh, such a rage went through
+her veins as she saw the air of triumph, laconic, indifferent triumph
+which sat so obstinately and recklessly on his eyelids as he looked
+down at her. Ah, she despised him! But there he stood up in that choir
+gallery like Balaam’s ass in front of her, and she could not get beyond
+him. A certain winsomeness also about him. A certain physical
+winsomeness, and as if his flesh were new and lovely to touch. The
+thorn of desire rankled bitterly in her heart.
+
+He, it goes without saying, sang like a canary this particular
+afternoon, with a certain defiant passion which pleasantly crisped the
+blood of the congregation. Fanny felt the crisp flames go through her
+veins as she listened. Even the curious loud-mouthed vernacular had a
+certain fascination. But, oh, also, it was so repugnant. He would
+triumph over her, obstinately he would drag her right back into the
+common people: a doom, a vulgar doom.
+
+The second performance was an anthem, in which Harry sang the solo
+parts. It was clumsy, but beautiful, with lovely words.
+
+“They that sow in tears shall reap in joy,
+He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed
+Shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
+him—”
+
+
+“Shall doubtless come, Shall doubtless come—” softly intoned the
+altos—“Bringing his she-e-eaves with him,” the trebles flourished
+brightly, and then again began the half-wistful solo:
+
+“They that sow in tears shall reap in joy—”
+
+
+Yes, it was effective and moving.
+
+But at the moment when Harry’s voice sank carelessly down to his close,
+and the choir, standing behind him, were opening their mouths for the
+final triumphant outburst, a shouting female voice rose up from the
+body of the congregation. The organ gave one startled trump, and went
+silent; the choir stood transfixed.
+
+“You look well standing there, singing in God’s holy house,” came the
+loud, angry female shout. Everybody turned electrified. A stoutish,
+red-faced woman in a black bonnet was standing up denouncing the
+soloist. Almost fainting with shock, the congregation realised it. “You
+look well, don’t you, standing there singing solos in God’s holy house,
+you, Goodall. But I said I’d shame you. You look well, bringing your
+young woman here with you, don’t you? I’ll let her know who she’s
+dealing with. A scamp as won’t take the consequences of what he’s
+done.” The hard-faced, frenzied woman turned in the direction of Fanny.
+“_That’s_ what Harry Goodall is, if you want to know.”
+
+And she sat down again in her seat. Fanny, startled like all the rest,
+had turned to look. She had gone white, and then a burning red, under
+the attack. She knew the woman: a Mrs. Nixon, a devil of a woman, who
+beat her pathetic, drunken, red-nosed second husband, Bob, and her two
+lanky daughters, grown-up as they were. A notorious character. Fanny
+turned round again, and sat motionless as eternity in her seat.
+
+There was a minute of perfect silence and suspense. The audience was
+open-mouthed and dumb; the choir stood like Lot’s wife; and Harry, with
+his music-sheet, stood there uplifted, looking down with a dumb sort of
+indifference on Mrs. Nixon, his face naïve and faintly mocking. Mrs.
+Nixon sat defiant in her seat, braving them all.
+
+Then a rustle, like a wood when the wind suddenly catches the leaves.
+And then the tall, weird minister got to his feet, and in his strong,
+bell-like, beautiful voice—the only beautiful thing about him—he said
+with infinite mournful pathos:
+
+“Let us unite in singing the last hymn on the hymn-sheet; the last hymn
+on the hymn-sheet, number eleven.
+
+‘Fair waved the golden corn,
+In Canaan’s pleasant land.’”
+
+
+The organ tuned up promptly. During the hymn the offertory was taken.
+And after the hymn, the prayer.
+
+Mr. Enderby came from Northumberland. Like Harry, he had never been
+able to conquer his accent, which was very broad. He was a little
+simple, one of God’s fools, perhaps, an odd bachelor soul, emotional,
+ugly, but very gentle.
+
+“And if, O our dear Lord, beloved Jesus, there should fall a shadow of
+sin upon our harvest, we leave it to Thee to judge, for Thou art judge.
+We lift our spirits and our sorrow, Jesus, to Thee, and our mouths are
+dumb. O, Lord, keep us from forward speech, restrain us from foolish
+words and thoughts, we pray Thee, Lord Jesus, who knowest all and
+judgest all.”
+
+Thus the minister said in his sad, resonant voice, washed his hands
+before the Lord. Fanny bent forward open-eyed during the prayer. She
+could see the roundish head of Harry, also bent forward. His face was
+inscrutable and expressionless. The shock left her bewildered. Anger
+perhaps was her dominating emotion.
+
+The audience began to rustle to its feet, to ooze slowly and excitedly
+out of the chapel, looking with wildly-interested eyes at Fanny, at
+Mrs. Nixon, and at Harry. Mrs. Nixon, shortish, stood defiant in her
+pew, facing the aisle, as if announcing that, without rolling her
+sleeves up, she was ready for anybody. Fanny sat quite still. Luckily
+the people did not have to pass her. And Harry, with red ears, was
+making his way sheepishly out of the gallery. The loud noise of the
+organ covered all the downstairs commotion of exit.
+
+The minister sat silent and inscrutable in his pulpit, rather like a
+death’s-head, while the congregation filed out. When the last lingerers
+had unwillingly departed, craning their necks to stare at the still
+seated Fanny, he rose, stalked in his hooked fashion down the little
+country chapel and fastened the door. Then he returned and sat down by
+the silent young woman.
+
+“This is most unfortunate, most unfortunate!” he moaned. “I am so
+sorry, I am so sorry, indeed, indeed, ah, indeed!” he sighed himself to
+a close.
+
+“It’s a sudden surprise, that’s one thing,” said Fanny brightly.
+
+“Yes—yes—indeed. Yes, a surprise, yes. I don’t know the woman, I don’t
+know her.”
+
+“I know her,” said Fanny. “She’s a bad one.”
+
+“Well! Well!” said the minister. “I don’t know her. I don’t understand.
+I don’t understand at all. But it is to be regretted, it is very much
+to be regretted. I am very sorry.”
+
+Fanny was watching the vestry door. The gallery stairs communicated
+with the vestry, not with the body of the chapel. She knew the choir
+members had been peeping for information.
+
+At last Harry came—rather sheepishly—with his hat in his hand.
+
+“Well!” said Fanny, rising to her feet.
+
+“We’ve had a bit of an extra,” said Harry.
+
+“I should think so,” said Fanny.
+
+“A most unfortunate circumstance—a most _unfortunate_ circumstance. Do
+you understand it, Harry? I don’t understand it at all.”
+
+“Ah, I understand it. The daughter’s goin’ to have a childt, an’ ’er
+lays it on to me.”
+
+“And has she no occasion to?” asked Fanny, rather censorious.
+
+“It’s no more mine than it is some other chap’s,” said Harry, looking
+aside.
+
+There was a moment of pause.
+
+“Which girl is it?” asked Fanny.
+
+“Annie—the young one—”
+
+There followed another silence.
+
+“I don’t think I know them, do I?” asked the minister.
+
+“I shouldn’t think so. Their name’s Nixon—mother married old Bob for
+her second husband. She’s a tanger—’s driven the gel to what she is.
+They live in Manners Road.”
+
+“Why, what’s amiss with the girl?” asked Fanny sharply. “She was all
+right when I knew her.”
+
+“Ay—she’s all right. But she’s always in an’ out o’ th’ pubs, wi’ th’
+fellows,” said Harry.
+
+“A nice thing!” said Fanny.
+
+Harry glanced towards the door. He wanted to get out.
+
+“Most distressing, indeed!” The minister slowly shook his head.
+
+“What about tonight, Mr. Enderby?” asked Harry, in rather a small
+voice. “Shall you want me?”
+
+Mr. Enderby looked up painedly, and put his hand to his brow. He
+studied Harry for some time, vacantly. There was the faintest sort of a
+resemblance between the two men.
+
+“Yes,” he said. “Yes, I think. I think we must take no notice, and
+cause as little remark as possible.”
+
+Fanny hesitated. Then she said to Harry.
+
+“But _will_ you come?”
+
+He looked at her.
+
+“Ay, I s’ll come,” he said.
+
+Then he turned to Mr. Enderby.
+
+“Well, good-afternoon, Mr. Enderby,” he said.
+
+“Good-afternoon, Harry, good-afternoon,” replied the mournful minister.
+Fanny followed Harry to the door, and for some time they walked in
+silence through the late afternoon.
+
+“And it’s yours as much as anybody else’s?” she said.
+
+“Ay,” he answered shortly.
+
+And they went without another word, for the long mile or so, till they
+came to the corner of the street where Harry lived. Fanny hesitated.
+Should she go on to her aunt’s? Should she? It would mean leaving all
+this, for ever. Harry stood silent.
+
+Some obstinacy made her turn with him along the road to his own home.
+When they entered the house-place, the whole family was there, mother
+and father and Jinny, with Jinny’s husband and children and Harry’s two
+brothers.
+
+“You’ve been having yours ears warmed, they tell me,” said Mrs. Goodall
+grimly.
+
+“Who telled thee?” asked Harry shortly.
+
+“Maggie and Luke’s both been in.”
+
+“You look well, don’t you!” said interfering Jinny.
+
+Harry went and hung his hat up, without replying.
+
+“Come upstairs and take your hat off,” said Mrs. Goodall to Fanny,
+almost kindly. It would have annoyed her very much if Fanny had dropped
+her son at this moment.
+
+“What’s ’er say, then?” asked the father secretly of Harry, jerking his
+head in the direction of the stairs whence Fanny had disappeared.
+
+“Nowt yet,” said Harry.
+
+“Serve you right if she chucks you now,” said Jinny. “I’ll bet it’s
+right about Annie Nixon an’ you.”
+
+“Tha bets so much,” said Harry.
+
+“Yi—but you can’t deny it,” said Jinny.
+
+“I can if I’ve a mind.”
+
+His father looked at him inquiringly.
+
+“It’s no more mine than it is Bill Bower’s, or Ted Slaney’s, or six or
+seven on ’em,” said Harry to his father.
+
+And the father nodded silently.
+
+“That’ll not get you out of it, in court,” said Jinny.
+
+Upstairs Fanny evaded all the thrusts made by his mother, and did not
+declare her hand. She tidied her hair, washed her hands, and put the
+tiniest bit of powder on her face, for coolness, there in front of Mrs.
+Goodall’s indignant gaze. It was like a declaration of independence.
+But the old woman said nothing.
+
+They came down to Sunday tea, with sardines and tinned salmon and
+tinned peaches, besides tarts and cakes. The chatter was general. It
+concerned the Nixon family and the scandal.
+
+“Oh, she’s a foul-mouthed woman,” said Jinny of Mrs. Nixon. “She may
+well talk about God’s holy house, _she_ had. It’s first time she’s set
+foot in it, ever since she dropped off from being converted. She’s a
+devil and she always was one. Can’t you remember how she treated Bob’s
+children, mother, when we lived down in the Buildings? I can remember
+when I was a little girl she used to bathe them in the yard, in the
+cold, so that they shouldn’t splash the house. She’d half kill them if
+they made a mark on the floor, and the language she’d use! And one
+Saturday I can remember Garry, that was Bob’s own girl, she ran off
+when her stepmother was going to bathe her—ran off without a rag of
+clothes on—can you remember, mother? And she hid in Smedley’s closes—it
+was the time of mowing-grass—and nobody could find her. She hid out
+there all night, didn’t she, mother? Nobody could find her. My word,
+there was a talk. They found her on Sunday morning—”
+
+“Fred Coutts threatened to break every bone in the woman’s body, if she
+touched the children again,” put in the father.
+
+“Anyhow, they frightened her,” said Jinny. “But she was nearly as bad
+with her own two. And anybody can see that she’s driven old Bob till
+he’s gone soft.”
+
+“Ah, soft as mush,” said Jack Goodall. “’E’d never addle a week’s wage,
+nor yet a day’s if th’ chaps didn’t make it up to him.”
+
+“My word, if he didn’t bring her a week’s wage, she’d pull his head
+off,” said Jinny.
+
+“But a clean woman, and respectable, except for her foul mouth,” said
+Mrs. Goodall. “Keeps to herself like a bull-dog. Never lets anybody
+come near the house, and neighbours with nobody.”
+
+“Wanted it thrashed out of her,” said Mr. Goodall, a silent, evasive
+sort of man.
+
+“Where Bob gets the money for his drink from is a mystery,” said Jinny.
+
+“Chaps treats him,” said Harry.
+
+“Well, he’s got the pair of frightenedest rabbit-eyes you’d wish to
+see,” said Jinny.
+
+“Ay, with a drunken man’s murder in them, _I_ think,” said Mrs.
+Goodall.
+
+So the talk went on after tea, till it was practically time to start
+off to chapel again.
+
+“You’ll have to be getting ready, Fanny,” said Mrs. Goodall.
+
+“I’m not going tonight,” said Fanny abruptly. And there was a sudden
+halt in the family. “I’ll stop with _you_ tonight, Mother,” she added.
+
+“Best you had, my gel,” said Mrs. Goodall, flattered and assured.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND ***
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence</title>
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+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: England, My England</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: D.H. Lawrence</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 24, 2003 [eBook #8914]<br />
+[Most recently updated: September 17, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Distributed Proofreaders</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND ***</div>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:55%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="cover " />
+</div>
+
+<h1>England, My England</h1>
+
+<h4>AND OTHER STORIES</h4>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by D.H. Lawrence</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">TICKETS, PLEASE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">THE BLIND MAN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">MONKEY NUTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">WINTRY PEACOCK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">YOU TOUCHED ME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">SAMSON AND DELILAH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">THE PRIMROSE PATH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">THE HORSE DEALER&rsquo;S DAUGHTER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">FANNY AND ANNIE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND</h2>
+
+<p>
+He was working on the edge of the common, beyond the small brook that ran in
+the dip at the bottom of the garden, carrying the garden path in continuation
+from the plank bridge on to the common. He had cut the rough turf and bracken,
+leaving the grey, dryish soil bare. But he was worried because he could not get
+the path straight, there was a pleat between his brows. He had set up his
+sticks, and taken the sights between the big pine trees, but for some reason
+everything seemed wrong. He looked again, straining his keen blue eyes, that
+had a touch of the Viking in them, through the shadowy pine trees as through a
+doorway, at the green-grassed garden-path rising from the shadow of alders by
+the log bridge up to the sunlit flowers. Tall white and purple columbines, and
+the butt-end of the old Hampshire cottage that crouched near the earth amid
+flowers, blossoming in the bit of shaggy wildness round about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a sound of children&rsquo;s voices calling and talking: high,
+childish, girlish voices, slightly didactic and tinged with domineering:
+&ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where
+there are snakes.&rdquo; And nobody had the <i>sang-froid</i> to reply:
+&ldquo;Run then, little fool.&rdquo; It was always, &ldquo;No, darling. Very
+well, darling. In a moment, darling. Darling, you <i>must</i> be
+patient.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His heart was hard with disillusion: a continual gnawing and resistance. But he
+worked on. What was there to do but submit!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sunlight blazed down upon the earth, there was a vividness of flamy
+vegetation, of fierce seclusion amid the savage peace of the commons. Strange
+how the savage England lingers in patches: as here, amid these shaggy gorse
+commons, and marshy, snake infested places near the foot of the south downs.
+The spirit of place lingering on primeval, as when the Saxons came, so long
+ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah, how he had loved it! The green garden path, the tufts of flowers, purple
+and white columbines, and great oriental red poppies with their black chaps and
+mulleins tall and yellow, this flamy garden which had been a garden for a
+thousand years, scooped out in the little hollow among the snake-infested
+commons. He had made it flame with flowers, in a sun cup under its hedges and
+trees. So old, so old a place! And yet he had re-created it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The timbered cottage with its sloping, cloak-like roof was old and forgotten.
+It belonged to the old England of hamlets and yeomen. Lost all alone on the
+edge of the common, at the end of a wide, grassy, briar-entangled lane shaded
+with oak, it had never known the world of today. Not till Egbert came with his
+bride. And he had come to fill it with flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The house was ancient and very uncomfortable. But he did not want to alter it.
+Ah, marvellous to sit there in the wide, black, time-old chimney, at night when
+the wind roared overhead, and the wood which he had chopped himself sputtered
+on the hearth! Himself on one side the angle, and Winifred on the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah, how he had wanted her: Winifred! She was young and beautiful and strong
+with life, like a flame in sunshine. She moved with a slow grace of energy like
+a blossoming, red-flowered bush in motion. She, too, seemed to come out of the
+old England, ruddy, strong, with a certain crude, passionate quiescence and a
+hawthorn robustness. And he, he was tall and slim and agile, like an English
+archer with his long supple legs and fine movements. Her hair was nut-brown and
+all in energic curls and tendrils. Her eyes were nut-brown, too, like a
+robin&rsquo;s for brightness. And he was white-skinned with fine, silky hair
+that had darkened from fair, and a slightly arched nose of an old country
+family. They were a beautiful couple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The house was Winifred&rsquo;s. Her father was a man of energy, too. He had
+come from the north poor. Now he was moderately rich. He had bought this fair
+stretch of inexpensive land, down in Hampshire. Not far from the tiny church of
+the almost extinct hamlet stood his own house, a commodious old farmhouse
+standing back from the road across a bare grassed yard. On one side of this
+quadrangle was the long, long barn or shed which he had made into a cottage for
+his youngest daughter Priscilla. One saw little blue-and-white check curtains
+at the long windows, and inside, overhead, the grand old timbers of the
+high-pitched shed. This was Prissy&rsquo;s house. Fifty yards away was the
+pretty little new cottage which he had built for his daughter Magdalen, with
+the vegetable garden stretching away to the oak copse. And then away beyond the
+lawns and rose trees of the house-garden went the track across a shaggy, wild
+grass space, towards the ridge of tall black pines that grew on a dyke-bank,
+through the pines and above the sloping little bog, under the wide, desolate
+oak trees, till there was Winifred&rsquo;s cottage crouching unexpectedly in
+front, so much alone, and so primitive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Winifred&rsquo;s own house, and the gardens and the bit of common and
+the boggy slope were hers: her tiny domain. She had married just at the time
+when her father had bought the estate, about ten years before the war, so she
+had been able to come to Egbert with this for a marriage portion. And who was
+more delighted, he or she, it would be hard to say. She was only twenty at the
+time, and he was only twenty-one. He had about a hundred and fifty pounds a
+year of his own&mdash;and nothing else but his very considerable personal
+attractions. He had no profession: he earned nothing. But he talked of
+literature and music, he had a passion for old folk-music, collecting
+folk-songs and folk-dances, studying the Morris-dance and the old customs. Of
+course in time he would make money in these ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile youth and health and passion and promise. Winifred&rsquo;s father was
+always generous: but still, he was a man from the north with a hard head and a
+hard skin too, having received a good many knocks. At home he kept the hard
+head out of sight, and played at poetry and romance with his literary wife and
+his sturdy, passionate girls. He was a man of courage, not given to
+complaining, bearing his burdens by himself. No, he did not let the world
+intrude far into his home. He had a delicate, sensitive wife whose poetry won
+some fame in the narrow world of letters. He himself, with his tough old
+barbarian fighting spirit, had an almost child-like delight in verse, in sweet
+poetry, and in the delightful game of a cultured home. His blood was strong
+even to coarseness. But that only made the home more vigorous, more robust and
+Christmassy. There was always a touch of Christmas about him, now he was well
+off. If there was poetry after dinner, there were also chocolates and nuts, and
+good little out-of-the-way things to be munching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well then, into this family came Egbert. He was made of quite a different
+paste. The girls and the father were strong-limbed, thick-blooded people, true
+English, as holly-trees and hawthorn are English. Their culture was grafted on
+to them, as one might perhaps graft a common pink rose on to a thornstem. It
+flowered oddly enough, but it did not alter their blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Egbert was a born rose. The age-long breeding had left him with a
+delightful spontaneous passion. He was not clever, nor even
+&ldquo;literary&rdquo;. No, but the intonation of his voice, and the movement
+of his supple, handsome body, and the fine texture of his flesh and his hair,
+the slight arch of his nose, the quickness of his blue eyes would easily take
+the place of poetry. Winifred loved him, loved him, this southerner, as a
+higher being. A <i>higher</i> being, mind you. Not a deeper. And as for him, he
+loved her in passion with every fibre of him. She was the very warm stuff of
+life to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wonderful then, those days at Crockham Cottage, the first days, all alone save
+for the woman who came to work in the mornings. Marvellous days, when she had
+all his tall, supple, fine-fleshed youth to herself, for herself, and he had
+her like a ruddy fire into which he could cast himself for rejuvenation. Ah,
+that it might never end, this passion, this marriage! The flame of their two
+bodies burnt again into that old cottage, that was haunted already by so much
+by-gone, physical desire. You could not be in the dark room for an hour without
+the influences coming over you. The hot blood-desire of by-gone yeomen, there
+in this old den where they had lusted and bred for so many generations. The
+silent house, dark, with thick, timbered walls and the big black chimney-place,
+and the sense of secrecy. Dark, with low, little windows, sunk into the earth.
+Dark, like a lair where strong beasts had lurked and mated, lonely at night and
+lonely by day, left to themselves and their own intensity for so many
+generations. It seemed to cast a spell on the two young people. They became
+different. There was a curious secret glow about them, a certain slumbering
+flame hard to understand, that enveloped them both. They too felt that they did
+not belong to the London world any more. Crockham had changed their blood: the
+sense of the snakes that lived and slept even in their own garden, in the sun,
+so that he, going forward with the spade, would see a curious coiled brownish
+pile on the black soil, which suddenly would start up, hiss, and dazzle rapidly
+away, hissing. One day Winifred heard the strangest scream from the flower-bed
+under the low window of the living room: ah, the strangest scream, like the
+very soul of the dark past crying aloud. She ran out, and saw a long brown
+snake on the flower-bed, and in its flat mouth the one hind leg of a frog was
+striving to escape, and screaming its strange, tiny, bellowing scream. She
+looked at the snake, and from its sullen flat head it looked at her,
+obstinately. She gave a cry, and it released the frog and slid angrily away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was Crockham. The spear of modern invention had not passed through it, and
+it lay there secret, primitive, savage as when the Saxons first came. And
+Egbert and she were caught there, caught out of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not idle, nor was she. There were plenty of things to be done, the house
+to be put into final repair after the workmen had gone, cushions and curtains
+to sew, the paths to make, the water to fetch and attend to, and then the slope
+of the deep-soiled, neglected garden to level, to terrace with little terraces
+and paths, and to fill with flowers. He worked away, in his shirt-sleeves,
+worked all day intermittently doing this thing and the other. And she, quiet
+and rich in herself, seeing him stooping and labouring away by himself, would
+come to help him, to be near him. He of course was an amateur&mdash;a born
+amateur. He worked so hard, and did so little, and nothing he ever did would
+hold together for long. If he terraced the garden, he held up the earth with a
+couple of long narrow planks that soon began to bend with the pressure from
+behind, and would not need many years to rot through and break and let the soil
+slither all down again in a heap towards the stream-bed. But there you are. He
+had not been brought up to come to grips with anything, and he thought it would
+do. Nay, he did not think there was anything else except little temporary
+contrivances possible, he who had such a passion for his old enduring cottage,
+and for the old enduring things of the bygone England. Curious that the sense
+of permanency in the past had such a hold over him, whilst in the present he
+was all amateurish and sketchy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred could not criticize him. Town-bred, everything seemed to her splendid,
+and the very digging and shovelling itself seemed romantic. But neither Egbert
+nor she yet realised the difference between work and romance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Godfrey Marshall, her father, was at first perfectly pleased with the ménage
+down at Crockham Cottage. He thought Egbert was wonderful, the many things he
+accomplished, and he was gratified by the glow of physical passion between the
+two young people. To the man who in London still worked hard to keep steady his
+modest fortune, the thought of this young couple digging away and loving one
+another down at Crockham Cottage, buried deep among the commons and marshes,
+near the pale-showing bulk of the downs, was like a chapter of living romance.
+And they drew the sustenance for their fire of passion from him, from the old
+man. It was he who fed their flame. He triumphed secretly in the thought. And
+it was to her father that Winifred still turned, as the one source of all
+surety and life and support. She loved Egbert with passion. But behind her was
+the power of her father. It was the power of her father she referred to,
+whenever she needed to refer. It never occurred to her to refer to Egbert, if
+she were in difficulty or doubt. No, in all the <i>serious</i> matters she
+depended on her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Egbert had no intention of coming to grips with life. He had no ambition
+whatsoever. He came from a decent family, from a pleasant country home, from
+delightful surroundings. He should, of course, have had a profession. He should
+have studied law or entered business in some way. But no&mdash;that fatal three
+pounds a week would keep him from starving as long as he lived, and he did not
+want to give himself into bondage. It was not that he was idle. He was always
+doing something, in his amateurish way. But he had no desire to give himself to
+the world, and still less had he any desire to fight his way in the world. No,
+no, the world wasn&rsquo;t worth it. He wanted to ignore it, to go his own way
+apart, like a casual pilgrim down the forsaken sidetracks. He loved his wife,
+his cottage and garden. He would make his life there, as a sort of epicurean
+hermit. He loved the past, the old music and dances and customs of old England.
+He would try and live in the spirit of these, not in the spirit of the world of
+business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But often Winifred&rsquo;s father called her to London: for he loved to have
+his children round him. So Egbert and she must have a tiny flat in town, and
+the young couple must transfer themselves from time to time from the country to
+the city. In town Egbert had plenty of friends, of the same ineffectual sort as
+himself, tampering with the arts, literature, painting, sculpture, music. He
+was not bored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three pounds a week, however, would not pay for all this. Winifred&rsquo;s
+father paid. He liked paying. He made her only a very small allowance, but he
+often gave her ten pounds&mdash;or gave Egbert ten pounds. So they both looked
+on the old man as the mainstay. Egbert didn&rsquo;t mind being patronized and
+paid for. Only when he felt the family was a little <i>too</i> condescending,
+on account of money, he began to get huffy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then of course children came: a lovely little blonde daughter with a head of
+thistle-down. Everybody adored the child. It was the first exquisite blonde
+thing that had come into the family, a little mite with the white, slim,
+beautiful limbs of its father, and as it grew up the dancing, dainty movement
+of a wild little daisy-spirit. No wonder the Marshalls all loved the child:
+they called her Joyce. They themselves had their own grace, but it was slow,
+rather heavy. They had everyone of them strong, heavy limbs and darkish skins,
+and they were short in stature. And now they had for one of their own this
+light little cowslip child. She was like a little poem in herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But nevertheless, she brought a new difficulty. Winifred must have a nurse for
+her. Yes, yes, there must be a nurse. It was the family decree. Who was to pay
+for the nurse? The grandfather&mdash;seeing the father himself earned no money.
+Yes, the grandfather would pay, as he had paid all the lying-in expenses. There
+came a slight sense of money-strain. Egbert was living on his father-in-law.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the child was born, it was never quite the same between him and Winifred.
+The difference was at first hardly perceptible. But it was there. In the first
+place Winifred had a new centre of interest. She was not going to adore her
+child. But she had what the modern mother so often has in the place of
+spontaneous love: a profound sense of duty towards her child. Winifred
+appreciated her darling little girl, and felt a deep sense of duty towards her.
+Strange, that this sense of duty should go deeper than the love for her
+husband. But so it was. And so it often is. The responsibility of motherhood
+was the prime responsibility in Winifred&rsquo;s heart: the responsibility of
+wifehood came a long way second.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her child seemed to link her up again in a circuit with her own family. Her
+father and mother, herself, and her child, that was the human trinity for her.
+Her husband&mdash;? Yes, she loved him still. But that was like play. She had
+an almost barbaric sense of duty and of family. Till she married, her first
+human duty had been towards her father: he was the pillar, the source of life,
+the everlasting support. Now another link was added to the chain of duty: her
+father, herself, and her child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert was out of it. Without anything happening, he was gradually,
+unconsciously excluded from the circle. His wife still loved him, physically.
+But, but&mdash;he was <i>almost</i> the unnecessary party in the affair. He
+could not complain of Winifred. She still did her duty towards him. She still
+had a physical passion for him, that physical passion on which he had put all
+his life and soul. But&mdash;but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was for a long while an ever-recurring <i>but</i>. And then, after the
+second child, another blonde, winsome touching little thing, not so proud and
+flame-like as Joyce; after Annabel came, then Egbert began truly to realise how
+it was. His wife still loved him. But&mdash;and now the but had grown
+enormous&mdash;her physical love for him was of secondary importance to her. It
+became ever less important. After all, she had had it, this physical passion,
+for two years now. It was not this that one lived from. No, no&mdash;something
+sterner, realer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She began to resent her own passion for Egbert&mdash;just a little she began to
+despise it. For after all there he was, he was charming, he was lovable, he was
+terribly desirable. But&mdash;but&mdash;oh, the awful looming cloud of that
+<i>but!</i>&mdash;He did not stand firm in the landscape of her life like a
+tower of strength, like a great pillar of significance. No, he was like a cat
+one has about the house, which will one day disappear and leave no trace. He
+was like a flower in the garden, trembling in the wind of life, and then gone,
+leaving nothing to show. As an adjunct, as an accessory, he was perfect. Many a
+woman would have adored to have him about her all her life, the most beautiful
+and desirable of all her possessions. But Winifred belonged to another school.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The years went by, and instead of coming more to grips with life, he relaxed
+more. He was of a subtle, sensitive, passionate nature. But he simply
+<i>would</i> not give himself to what Winifred called life, <i>Work</i>. No, he
+would not go into the world and work for money. No, he just would not. If
+Winifred liked to live beyond their small income&mdash;well, it was her
+look-out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Winifred did not really want him to go out into the world to work for
+money. Money became, alas, a word like a firebrand between them, setting them
+both aflame with anger. But that is because we must talk in symbols. Winifred
+did not really care about money. She did not care whether he earned or did not
+earn anything. Only she knew she was dependent on her father for three-fourths
+of the money spent for herself and her children, that she let that be the
+<i>casus belli</i>, the drawn weapon between herself and Egbert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What did she want&mdash;what did she want? Her mother once said to her, with
+that characteristic touch of irony: &ldquo;Well, dear, if it is your fate to
+consider the lilies, that toil not, neither do they spin, that is one destiny
+among many others, and perhaps not so unpleasant as most. Why do you take it
+amiss, my child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mother was subtler than her children, they very rarely knew how to answer
+her. So Winifred was only more confused. It was not a question of lilies. At
+least, if it were a question of lilies, then her children were the little
+blossoms. They at least <i>grew</i>. Doesn&rsquo;t Jesus say: &ldquo;Consider
+the lilies <i>how they grow</i>.&rdquo; Good then, she had her growing babies.
+But as for that other tall, handsome flower of a father of theirs, he was full
+grown already, so she did not want to spend her life considering him in the
+flower of his days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, it was not that he didn&rsquo;t earn money. It was not that he was idle. He
+was <i>not</i> idle. He was always doing something, always working away, down
+at Crockham, doing little jobs. But, oh dear, the little jobs&mdash;the garden
+paths&mdash;the gorgeous flowers&mdash;the chairs to mend, old chairs to mend!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was that he stood for nothing. If he had done something unsuccessfully, and
+<i>lost</i> what money they had! If he had but striven with something. Nay,
+even if he had been wicked, a waster, she would have been more free. She would
+have had something to resist, at least. A waster stands for something, really.
+He says: &ldquo;No, I will not aid and abet society in this business of
+increase and hanging together, I will upset the apple-cart as much as I can, in
+my small way.&rdquo; Or else he says: &ldquo;No, I will <i>not</i> bother about
+others. If I have lusts, they are my own, and I prefer them to other
+people&rsquo;s virtues.&rdquo; So, a waster, a scamp, takes a sort of stand. He
+exposes himself to opposition and final castigation: at any rate in
+story-books.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Egbert! What are you to do with a man like Egbert? He had no vices. He was
+really kind, nay generous. And he was not weak. If he had been weak Winifred
+could have been kind to him. But he did not even give her that consolation. He
+was not weak, and he did not want her consolation or her kindness. No, thank
+you. He was of a fine passionate temper, and of a rarer steel than she. He knew
+it, and she knew it. Hence she was only the more baffled and maddened, poor
+thing. He, the higher, the finer, in his way the stronger, played with his
+garden, and his old folk-songs and Morris-dances, just played, and let her
+support the pillars of the future on her own heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he began to get bitter, and a wicked look began to come on his face. He did
+not give in to her; not he. There were seven devils inside his long, slim,
+white body. He was healthy, full of restrained life. Yes, even he himself had
+to lock up his own vivid life inside himself, now she would not take it from
+him. Or rather, now that she only took it occasionally. For she had to yield at
+times. She loved him so, she desired him so, he was so exquisite to her, the
+fine creature that he was, finer than herself. Yes, with a groan she had to
+give in to her own unquenched passion for him. And he came to her
+then&mdash;ah, terrible, ah, wonderful, sometimes she wondered how either of
+them could live after the terror of the passion that swept between them. It was
+to her as if pure lightning, flash after flash, went through every fibre of
+her, till extinction came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is the fate of human beings to live on. And it is the fate of clouds
+that seem nothing but bits of vapour slowly to pile up, to pile up and fill the
+heavens and blacken the sun entirely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So it was. The love came back, the lightning of passion flashed tremendously
+between them. And there was blue sky and gorgeousness for a little while. And
+then, as inevitably, as inevitably, slowly the clouds began to edge up again
+above the horizon, slowly, slowly to lurk about the heavens, throwing an
+occasional cold and hateful shadow: slowly, slowly to congregate, to fill the
+empyrean space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as the years passed, the lightning cleared the sky more and more rarely,
+less and less the blue showed. Gradually the grey lid sank down upon them, as
+if it would be permanent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why didn&rsquo;t Egbert do something, then? Why didn&rsquo;t he come to grips
+with life? Why wasn&rsquo;t he like Winifred&rsquo;s father, a pillar of
+society, even if a slender, exquisite column? Why didn&rsquo;t he go into
+harness of some sort? Why didn&rsquo;t he take <i>some</i> direction?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, you can bring an ass to the water, but you cannot make him drink. The
+world was the water and Egbert was the ass. And he wasn&rsquo;t having any. He
+couldn&rsquo;t: he just couldn&rsquo;t. Since necessity did not force him to
+work for his bread and butter, he would not work for work&rsquo;s sake. You
+can&rsquo;t make the columbine flowers nod in January, nor make the cuckoo sing
+in England at Christmas. Why? It isn&rsquo;t his season. He doesn&rsquo;t want
+to. Nay, he <i>can&rsquo;t</i> want to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there it was with Egbert. He couldn&rsquo;t link up with the world&rsquo;s
+work, because the basic desire was absent from him. Nay, at the bottom of him
+he had an even stronger desire: to hold aloof. To hold aloof. To do nobody any
+damage. But to hold aloof. It was not his season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps he should not have married and had children. But you can&rsquo;t stop
+the waters flowing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Which held true for Winifred, too. She was not made to endure aloof. Her family
+tree was a robust vegetation that had to be stirring and believing. In one
+direction or another her life <i>had</i> to go. In her own home she had known
+nothing of this diffidence which she found in Egbert, and which she could not
+understand, and which threw her into such dismay. What was she to do, what was
+she to do, in face of this terrible diffidence?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all so different in her own home. Her father may have had his own
+misgivings, but he kept them to himself. Perhaps he had no very profound belief
+in this world of ours, this society which we have elaborated with so much
+effort, only to find ourselves elaborated to death at last. But Godfrey
+Marshall was of tough, rough fibre, not without a vein of healthy cunning
+through it all. It was for him a question of winning through, and leaving the
+rest to heaven. Without having many illusions to grace him, he still <i>did</i>
+believe in heaven. In a dark and unquestioning way, he had a sort of faith: an
+acrid faith like the sap of some not-to-be-exterminated tree. Just a blind
+acrid faith as sap is blind and acrid, and yet pushes on in growth and in
+faith. Perhaps he was unscrupulous, but only as a striving tree is
+unscrupulous, pushing its single way in a jungle of others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the end, it is only this robust, sap-like faith which keeps man going. He
+may live on for many generations inside the shelter of the social establishment
+which he has erected for himself, as pear-trees and currant bushes would go on
+bearing fruit for many seasons, inside a walled garden, even if the race of man
+were suddenly exterminated. But bit by bit the wall-fruit-trees would gradually
+pull down the very walls that sustained them. Bit by bit every establishment
+collapses, unless it is renewed or restored by living hands, all the while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert could not bring himself to any more of this restoring or renewing
+business. He was not aware of the fact: but awareness doesn&rsquo;t help much,
+anyhow. He just couldn&rsquo;t. He had the stoic and epicurean quality of his
+old, fine breeding. His father-in-law, however, though he was not one bit more
+of a fool than Egbert, realised that since we are here we may as well live. And
+so he applied himself to his own tiny section of the social work, and to doing
+the best for his family, and to leaving the rest to the ultimate will of
+heaven. A certain robustness of blood made him able to go on. But sometimes
+even from him spurted a sudden gall of bitterness against the world and its
+make-up. And yet&mdash;he had his own will-to-succeed, and this carried him
+through. He refused to ask himself what the success would amount to. It
+amounted to the estate down in Hampshire, and his children lacking for nothing,
+and himself of some importance in the world: and <i>basta!</i>&mdash;Basta!
+Basta!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless do not let us imagine that he was a common pusher. He was not. He
+knew as well as Egbert what disillusion meant. Perhaps in his soul he had the
+same estimation of success. But he had a certain acrid courage, and a certain
+will-to-power. In his own small circle he would emanate power, the single power
+of his own blind self. With all his spoiling of his children, he was still the
+father of the old English type. He was too wise to make laws and to domineer in
+the abstract. But he had kept, and all honour to him, a certain primitive
+dominion over the souls of his children, the old, almost magic prestige of
+paternity. There it was, still burning in him, the old smoky torch or paternal
+godhead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in the sacred glare of this torch his children had been brought up. He had
+given the girls every liberty, at last. But he had never really let them go
+beyond his power. And they, venturing out into the hard white light of our
+fatherless world, learned to see with the eyes of the world. They learned to
+criticize their father, even, from some effulgence of worldly white light, to
+see him as inferior. But this was all very well in the head. The moment they
+forgot their tricks of criticism, the old red glow of his authority came over
+them again. He was not to be quenched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let the psychoanalysts talk about father complex. It is just a word invented.
+Here was a man who had kept alive the old red flame of fatherhood, fatherhood
+that had even the right to sacrifice the child to God, like Isaac. Fatherhood
+that had life-and-death authority over the children: a great natural power. And
+till his children could be brought under some other great authority as girls;
+or could arrive at manhood and become themselves centres of the same power,
+continuing the same male mystery as men; until such time, willy-nilly, Godfrey
+Marshall would keep his children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had seemed as if he might lose Winifred. Winifred had <i>adored</i> her
+husband, and looked up to him as to something wonderful. Perhaps she had
+expected in him another great authority, a male authority greater, finer than
+her father&rsquo;s. For having once known the glow of male power, she would not
+easily turn to the cold white light of feminine independence. She would hunger,
+hunger all her life for the warmth and shelter of true male strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And hunger she might, for Egbert&rsquo;s power lay in the abnegation of power.
+He was himself the living negative of power. Even of responsibility. For the
+negation of power at last means the negation of responsibility. As far as these
+things went, he would confine himself to himself. He would try to confine his
+own <i>influence</i> even to himself. He would try, as far as possible, to
+abstain from influencing his children by assuming any responsibility for them.
+&ldquo;A little child shall lead them&mdash;&rdquo; His child should lead,
+then. He would try not to make it go in any direction whatever. He would
+abstain from influencing it. Liberty!&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor Winifred was like a fish out of water in this liberty, gasping for the
+denser element which should contain her. Till her child came. And then she knew
+that she must be responsible for it, that she must have authority over it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But here Egbert silently and negatively stepped in. Silently, negatively, but
+fatally he neutralized her authority over her children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a third little girl born. And after this Winifred wanted no more
+children. Her soul was turning to salt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So she had charge of the children, they were her responsibility. The money for
+them had come from her father. She would do her very best for them, and have
+command over their life and death. But no! Egbert would not take the
+responsibility. He would not even provide the money. But he would not let her
+have her way. Her dark, silent, passionate authority he would not allow. It was
+a battle between them, the battle between liberty and the old blood-power. And
+of course he won. The little girls loved him and adored him. &ldquo;Daddy!
+Daddy!&rdquo; They could do as they liked with him. Their mother would have
+ruled them. She would have ruled them passionately, with indulgence, with the
+old dark magic of parental authority, something looming and unquestioned and,
+after all, divine: if we believe in divine authority. The Marshalls did, being
+Catholic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Egbert, he turned her old dark, Catholic blood-authority into a sort of
+tyranny. He would not leave her her children. He stole them from her, and yet
+without assuming responsibility for them. He stole them from her, in emotion
+and spirit, and left her only to command their behaviour. A thankless lot for a
+mother. And her children adored him, adored him, little knowing the empty
+bitterness they were preparing for themselves when they too grew up to have
+husbands: husbands such as Egbert, adorable and null.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joyce, the eldest, was still his favourite. She was now a quicksilver little
+thing of six years old. Barbara, the youngest, was a toddler of two years. They
+spent most of their time down at Crockham, because he wanted to be there. And
+even Winifred loved the place really. But now, in her frustrated and blinded
+state, it was full of menace for her children. The adders, the poison-berries,
+the brook, the marsh, the water that might not be pure&mdash;one thing and
+another. From mother and nurse it was a guerilla gunfire of commands, and
+blithe, quicksilver disobedience from the three blonde, never-still little
+girls. Behind the girls was the father, against mother and nurse. And so it
+was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where
+there are snakes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joyce, you <i>must</i> be patient. I&rsquo;m just changing
+Annabel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There you are. There it was: always the same. Working away on the common across
+the brook he heard it. And he worked on, just the same.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly he heard a shriek, and he flung the spade from him and started for the
+bridge, looking up like a startled deer. Ah, there was Winifred&mdash;Joyce had
+hurt herself. He went on up the garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The child was still screaming&mdash;now it was&mdash;&ldquo;Daddy! Daddy!
+Oh&mdash;oh, Daddy!&rdquo; And the mother was saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be frightened, darling. Let mother look.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the child only cried:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was terrified by the sight of the blood running from her own knee. Winifred
+crouched down, with her child of six in her lap, to examine the knee. Egbert
+bent over also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t make such a noise, Joyce,&rdquo; he said irritably.
+&ldquo;How did she do it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She fell on that sickle thing which you left lying about after cutting
+the grass,&rdquo; said Winifred, looking into his face with bitter accusation
+as he bent near.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had taken his handkerchief and tied it round the knee. Then he lifted the
+still sobbing child in his arms, and carried her into the house and upstairs to
+her bed. In his arms she became quiet. But his heart was burning with pain and
+with guilt. He had left the sickle there lying on the edge of the grass, and so
+his first-born child whom he loved so dearly had come to hurt. But then it was
+an accident&mdash;it was an accident. Why should he feel guilty? It would
+probably be nothing, better in two or three days. Why take it to heart, why
+worry? He put it aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The child lay on the bed in her little summer frock, her face very white now
+after the shock, Nurse had come carrying the youngest child: and little Annabel
+stood holding her skirt. Winifred, terribly serious and wooden-seeming, was
+bending over the knee, from which she had taken his blood-soaked handkerchief.
+Egbert bent forward, too, keeping more <i>sang-froid</i> in his face than in his
+heart. Winifred went all of a lump of seriousness, so he had to keep some
+reserve. The child moaned and whimpered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The knee was still bleeding profusely&mdash;it was a deep cut right in the
+joint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better go for the doctor, Egbert,&rdquo; said Winifred
+bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, no! Oh, no!&rdquo; cried Joyce in a panic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joyce, my darling, don&rsquo;t cry!&rdquo; said Winifred, suddenly
+catching the little girl to her breast in a strange tragic anguish, the
+<i>Mater Dolorata</i>. Even the child was frightened into silence. Egbert
+looked at the tragic figure of his wife with the child at her breast, and
+turned away. Only Annabel started suddenly to cry: &ldquo;Joycey, Joycey,
+don&rsquo;t have your leg bleeding!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert rode four miles to the village for the doctor. He could not help feeling
+that Winifred was laying it on rather. Surely the knee itself wasn&rsquo;t
+hurt! Surely not. It was only a surface cut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor was out. Egbert left the message and came cycling swiftly home, his
+heart pinched with anxiety. He dropped sweating off his bicycle and went into
+the house, looking rather small, like a man who is at fault. Winifred was
+upstairs sitting by Joyce, who was looking pale and important in bed, and was
+eating some tapioca pudding. The pale, small, scared face of his child went to
+Egbert&rsquo;s heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doctor Wing was out. He&rsquo;ll be here about half past two,&rdquo;
+said Egbert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want him to come,&rdquo; whimpered Joyce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joyce, dear, you must be patient and quiet,&rdquo; said Winifred.
+&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t hurt you. But he will tell us what to do to make your
+knee better quickly. That is why he must come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred always explained carefully to her little girls: and it always took the
+words off their lips for the moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does it bleed yet?&rdquo; said Egbert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred moved the bedclothes carefully aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert stooped also to look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, it doesn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; she said. Then he stood up with a relieved
+look on his face. He turned to the child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eat your pudding, Joyce,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It won&rsquo;t be
+anything. You&rsquo;ve only got to keep still for a few days.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t had your dinner, have you, Daddy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nurse will give it to you,&rdquo; said Winifred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be all right, Joyce,&rdquo; he said, smiling to the child
+and pushing the blonde hair off her brow. She smiled back winsomely into his
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went downstairs and ate his meal alone. Nurse served him. She liked waiting
+on him. All women liked him and liked to do things for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor came&mdash;a fat country practitioner, pleasant and kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, little girl, been tumbling down, have you? There&rsquo;s a thing
+to be doing, for a smart little lady like you! What! And cutting your knee!
+Tut-tut-tut! That <i>wasn&rsquo;t</i> clever of you, now was it? Never mind,
+never mind, soon be better. Let us look at it. Won&rsquo;t hurt you. Not the
+least in life. Bring a bowl with a little warm water, nurse. Soon have it all
+right again, soon have it all right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joyce smiled at him with a pale smile of faint superiority. This was <i>not</i>
+the way in which she was used to being talked to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bent down, carefully looking at the little, thin, wounded knee of the child.
+Egbert bent over him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, dear, oh, dear! Quite a deep little cut. Nasty little cut. Nasty
+little cut. But, never mind. Never mind, little lady. We&rsquo;ll soon have it
+better. Soon have it better, little lady. What&rsquo;s your name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My name is Joyce,&rdquo; said the child distinctly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, really!&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;Oh, really! Well, that&rsquo;s a
+fine name too, in my opinion. Joyce, eh?&mdash;And how old might Miss Joyce be?
+Can she tell me that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m six,&rdquo; said the child, slightly amused and very
+condescending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Six! There now. Add up and count as far as six, can you? Well,
+that&rsquo;s a clever little girl, a clever little girl. And if she has to
+drink a spoonful of medicine, she won&rsquo;t make a murmur, I&rsquo;ll be
+bound. Not like <i>some</i> little girls. What? Eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take it if mother wishes me to,&rdquo; said Joyce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, there now! That&rsquo;s the style! That&rsquo;s what I like to hear
+from a little lady in bed because she&rsquo;s cut her knee. That&rsquo;s the
+style&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The comfortable and prolix doctor dressed and bandaged the knee and recommended
+bed and a light diet for the little lady. He thought a week or a fortnight
+would put it right. No bones or ligatures damaged&mdash;fortunately. Only a
+flesh cut. He would come again in a day or two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Joyce was reassured and stayed in bed and had all her toys up. Her father
+often played with her. The doctor came the third day. He was fairly pleased
+with the knee. It was healing. It was healing&mdash;yes&mdash;yes. Let the
+child continue in bed. He came again after a day or two. Winifred was a trifle
+uneasy. The wound seemed to be healing on the top, but it hurt the child too
+much. It didn&rsquo;t look quite right. She said so to Egbert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Egbert, I&rsquo;m sure Joyce&rsquo;s knee isn&rsquo;t healing
+properly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think it is,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s all
+right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather Doctor Wing came again&mdash;I don&rsquo;t feel
+satisfied.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you trying to imagine it worse than it really is?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would say so, of course. But I shall write a post-card to Doctor
+Wing now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor came next day. He examined the knee. Yes, there was inflammation.
+Yes, there <i>might</i> be a little septic poisoning&mdash;there might. There
+might. Was the child feverish?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So a fortnight passed by, and the child <i>was</i> feverish, and the knee was
+more inflamed and grew worse and was painful, painful. She cried in the night,
+and her mother had to sit up with her. Egbert still insisted it was nothing,
+really&mdash;it would pass. But in his heart he was anxious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred wrote again to her father. On Saturday the elderly man appeared. And
+no sooner did Winifred see the thick, rather short figure in its grey suit than
+a great yearning came over her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father, I&rsquo;m not satisfied with Joyce. I&rsquo;m not satisfied with
+Doctor Wing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Winnie, dear, if you&rsquo;re not satisfied we must have further
+advice, that is all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sturdy, powerful, elderly man went upstairs, his voice sounding rather
+grating through the house, as if it cut upon the tense atmosphere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are you, Joyce, darling?&rdquo; he said to the child. &ldquo;Does
+your knee hurt you? Does it hurt you, dear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It does sometimes.&rdquo; The child was shy of him, cold towards him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, dear, I&rsquo;m sorry for that. I hope you try to bear it, and not
+trouble mother too much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no answer. He looked at the knee. It was red and stiff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I think we must have another
+doctor&rsquo;s opinion. And if we&rsquo;re going to have it, we had better have
+it at once. Egbert, do you think you might cycle in to Bingham for Doctor
+Wayne? I found him very satisfactory for Winnie&rsquo;s mother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can go if you think it necessary,&rdquo; said Egbert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly I think it necessary. Even if there <i>is</i> nothing, we can
+have peace of mind. Certainly I think it necessary. I should like Doctor Wayne
+to come this evening if possible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Egbert set off on his bicycle through the wind, like a boy sent on an
+errand, leaving his father-in-law a pillar of assurance, with Winifred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Doctor Wayne came, and looked grave. Yes, the knee was certainly taking the
+wrong way. The child might be lame for life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up went the fire and fear and anger in every heart. Doctor Wayne came again the
+next day for a proper examination. And, yes, the knee had really taken bad
+ways. It should be X-rayed. It was very important.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Godfrey Marshall walked up and down the lane with the doctor, beside the
+standing motor-car: up and down, up and down in one of those consultations of
+which he had had so many in his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a result he came indoors to Winifred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Winnie, dear, the best thing to do is to take Joyce up to London,
+to a nursing home where she can have proper treatment. Of course this knee has
+been allowed to go wrong. And apparently there is a risk that the child may
+even lose her leg. What do you think, dear? You agree to our taking her up to
+town and putting her under the best care?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, father, you <i>know</i> I would do anything on earth for her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know you would, Winnie darling. The pity is that there has been this
+unfortunate delay already. I can&rsquo;t think what Doctor Wing was doing.
+Apparently the child is in danger of losing her leg. Well then, if you will
+have everything ready, we will take her up to town tomorrow. I will order the
+large car from Denley&rsquo;s to be here at ten. Egbert, will you take a
+telegram at once to Doctor Jackson? It is a small nursing home for children and
+for surgical cases, not far from Baker Street. I&rsquo;m sure Joyce will be all
+right there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, father, can&rsquo;t I nurse her myself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, darling, if she is to have proper treatment, she had best be in a
+home. The X-ray treatment, and the electric treatment, and whatever is
+necessary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will cost a great deal&mdash;&rdquo; said Winifred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t think of cost, if the child&rsquo;s leg is in
+danger&mdash;or even her life. No use speaking of cost,&rdquo; said the elder
+man impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so it was. Poor Joyce, stretched out on a bed in the big closed
+motor-car&mdash;the mother sitting by her head, the grandfather in his short
+grey beard and a bowler hat, sitting by her feet, thick, and implacable in his
+responsibility&mdash;they rolled slowly away from Crockham, and from Egbert who
+stood there bareheaded and a little ignominious, left behind. He was to shut up
+the house and bring the rest of the family back to town, by train, the next
+day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Followed a dark and bitter time. The poor child. The poor, poor child, how she
+suffered, an agony and a long crucifixion in that nursing home. It was a bitter
+six weeks which changed the soul of Winifred for ever. As she sat by the bed of
+her poor, tortured little child, tortured with the agony of the knee, and the
+still worse agony of these diabolic, but perhaps necessary modern treatments,
+she felt her heart killed and going cold in her breast. Her little Joyce, her
+frail, brave, wonderful, little Joyce, frail and small and pale as a white
+flower! Ah, how had she, Winifred, dared to be so wicked, so wicked, so
+careless, so sensual.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let my heart die! Let my woman&rsquo;s heart of flesh die! Saviour, let
+my heart die. And save my child. Let my heart die from the world and from the
+flesh. Oh, destroy my heart that is so wayward. Let my heart of pride die. Let
+my heart die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So she prayed beside the bed of her child. And like the Mother with the seven
+swords in her breast, slowly her heart of pride and passion died in her breast,
+bleeding away. Slowly it died, bleeding away, and she turned to the Church for
+comfort, to Jesus, to the Mother of God, but most of all, to that great and
+enduring institution, the Roman Catholic Church. She withdrew into the shadow
+of the Church. She was a mother with three children. But in her soul she died,
+her heart of pride and passion and desire bled to death, her soul belonged to
+her church, her body belonged to her duty as a mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her duty as a wife did not enter. As a wife she had no sense of duty: only a
+certain bitterness towards the man with whom she had known such sensuality and
+distraction. She was purely the <i>Mater Dolorata</i>. To the man she was
+closed as a tomb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert came to see his child. But Winifred seemed to be always seated there,
+like the tomb of his manhood and his fatherhood. Poor Winifred: she was still
+young, still strong and ruddy and beautiful like a ruddy hard flower of the
+field. Strange&mdash;her ruddy, healthy face, so sombre, and her strong, heavy,
+full-blooded body, so still. She, a nun! Never. And yet the gates of her heart
+and soul had shut in his face with a slow, resonant clang, shutting him out for
+ever. There was no need for her to go into a convent. Her will had done it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And between this young mother and this young father lay the crippled child,
+like a bit of pale silk floss on the pillow, and a little white pain-quenched
+face. He could not bear it. He just could not bear it. He turned aside. There
+was nothing to do but to turn aside. He turned aside, and went hither and
+thither, desultory. He was still attractive and desirable. But there was a
+little frown between his brow as if he had been cleft there with a hatchet:
+cleft right in, for ever, and that was the stigma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The child&rsquo;s leg was saved: but the knee was locked stiff. The fear now
+was lest the lower leg should wither, or cease to grow. There must be
+long-continued massage and treatment, daily treatment, even when the child left
+the nursing home. And the whole of the expense was borne by the grandfather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert now had no real home. Winifred with the children and nurse was tied to
+the little flat in London. He could not live there: he could not contain
+himself. The cottage was shut-up&mdash;or lent to friends. He went down
+sometimes to work in his garden and keep the place in order. Then with the
+empty house around him at night, all the empty rooms, he felt his heart go
+wicked. The sense of frustration and futility, like some slow, torpid snake,
+slowly bit right through his heart. Futility, futility: the horrible
+marsh-poison went through his veins and killed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he worked in the garden in the silence of day he would listen for a sound.
+No sound. No sound of Winifred from the dark inside of the cottage: no sound of
+children&rsquo;s voices from the air, from the common, from the near distance.
+No sound, nothing but the old dark marsh-venomous atmosphere of the place. So
+he worked spasmodically through the day, and at night made a fire and cooked
+some food alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was alone. He himself cleaned the cottage and made his bed. But his mending
+he did not do. His shirts were slit on the shoulders, when he had been working,
+and the white flesh showed through. He would feel the air and the spots of rain
+on his exposed flesh. And he would look again across the common, where the
+dark, tufted gorse was dying to seed, and the bits of cat-heather were coming
+pink in tufts, like a sprinkling of sacrificial blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His heart went back to the savage old spirit of the place: the desire for old
+gods, old, lost passions, the passion of the cold-blooded, darting snakes that
+hissed and shot away from him, the mystery of blood-sacrifices, all the lost,
+intense sensations of the primeval people of the place, whose passions seethed
+in the air still, from those long days before the Romans came. The seethe of a
+lost, dark passion in the air. The presence of unseen snakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A queer, baffled, half-wicked look came on his face. He could not stay long at
+the cottage. Suddenly he must swing on to his bicycle and go&mdash;anywhere.
+Anywhere, away from the place. He would stay a few days with his mother in the
+old home. His mother adored him and grieved as a mother would. But the little,
+baffled, half-wicked smile curled on his face, and he swung away from his
+mother&rsquo;s solicitude as from everything else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Always moving on&mdash;from place to place, friend to friend: and always
+swinging away from sympathy. As soon as sympathy, like a soft hand, was reached
+out to touch him, away he swerved, instinctively, as a harmless snake swerves
+and swerves and swerves away from an outstretched hand. Away he must go. And
+periodically he went back to Winifred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was terrible to her now, like a temptation. She had devoted herself to her
+children and her church. Joyce was once more on her feet; but, alas! lame, with
+iron supports to her leg, and a little crutch. It was strange how she had grown
+into a long, pallid, wild little thing. Strange that the pain had not made her
+soft and docile, but had brought out a wild, almost maenad temper in the child.
+She was seven, and long and white and thin, but by no means subdued. Her blonde
+hair was darkening. She still had long sufferings to face, and, in her own
+childish consciousness, the stigma of her lameness to bear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she bore it. An almost maenad courage seemed to possess her, as if she were
+a long, thin, young weapon of life. She acknowledged all her mother&rsquo;s
+care. She would stand by her mother for ever. But some of her father&rsquo;s
+fine-tempered desperation flashed in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Egbert saw his little girl limping horribly&mdash;not only limping but
+lurching horribly in crippled, childish way, his heart again hardened with
+chagrin, like steel that is tempered again. There was a tacit understanding
+between him and his little girl: not what we would call love, but a weapon-like
+kinship. There was a tiny touch of irony in his manner towards her, contrasting
+sharply with Winifred&rsquo;s heavy, unleavened solicitude and care. The child
+flickered back to him with an answering little smile of irony and recklessness:
+an odd flippancy which made Winifred only the more sombre and earnest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Marshalls took endless thought and trouble for the child, searching out
+every means to save her limb and her active freedom. They spared no effort and
+no money, they spared no strength of will. With all their slow, heavy power of
+will they willed that Joyce should save her liberty of movement, should win
+back her wild, free grace. Even if it took a long time to recover, it should be
+recovered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the situation stood. And Joyce submitted, week after week, month after month
+to the tyranny and pain of the treatment. She acknowledged the honourable
+effort on her behalf. But her flamy reckless spirit was her father&rsquo;s. It
+was he who had all the glamour for her. He and she were like members of some
+forbidden secret society who know one another but may not recognise one
+another. Knowledge they had in common, the same secret of life, the father and
+the child. But the child stayed in the camp of her mother, honourably, and the
+father wandered outside like Ishmael, only coming sometimes to sit in the home
+for an hour or two, an evening or two beside the camp fire, like Ishmael, in a
+curious silence and tension, with the mocking answer of the desert speaking out
+of his silence, and annulling the whole convention of the domestic home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His presence was almost an anguish to Winifred. She prayed against it. That
+little cleft between his brow, that flickering, wicked, little smile that
+seemed to haunt his face, and above all, the triumphant loneliness, the Ishmael
+quality. And then the erectness of his supple body, like a symbol. The very way
+he stood, so quiet, so insidious, like an erect, supple symbol of life, the
+living body, confronting her downcast soul, was torture to her. He was like a
+supple living idol moving before her eyes, and she felt if she watched him she
+was damned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he came and made himself at home in her little home. When he was there,
+moving in his own quiet way, she felt as if the whole great law of sacrifice,
+by which she had elected to live, were annulled. He annulled by his very
+presence the laws of her life. And what did he substitute? Ah, against that
+question she hardened herself in recoil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was awful to her to have to have him about&mdash;moving about in his
+shirt-sleeves, speaking in his tenor, throaty voice to the children. Annabel
+simply adored him, and he teased the little girl. The baby, Barbara, was not
+sure of him. She had been born a stranger to him. But even the nurse, when she
+saw his white shoulder of flesh through the slits of his torn shirt, thought it
+a shame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred felt it was only another weapon of his against her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have other shirts&mdash;why do you wear that old one that is all
+torn, Egbert?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may as well wear it out,&rdquo; he said subtly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew she would not offer to mend it for him. She <i>could</i> not. And no,
+she would not. Had she not her own gods to honour? And could she betray them,
+submitting to his Baal and Ashtaroth? And it was terrible to her, his
+unsheathed presence, that seemed to annul her and her faith, like another
+revelation. Like a gleaming idol evoked against her, a vivid life-idol that
+might triumph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came and he went&mdash;and she persisted. And then the great war broke out.
+He was a man who could not go to the dogs. He could not dissipate himself. He
+was pure-bred in his Englishness, and even when he would have killed to be
+vicious, he could not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So when the war broke out his whole instinct was against it: against war. He
+had not the faintest desire to overcome any foreigners or to help in their
+death. He had no conception of Imperial England, and Rule Britannia was just a
+joke to him. He was a pure-blooded Englishman, perfect in his race, and when he
+was truly himself he could no more have been aggressive on the score of his
+Englishness than a rose can be aggressive on the score of its rosiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, he had no desire to defy Germany and to exalt England. The distinction
+between German and English was not for him the distinction between good and
+bad. It was the distinction between blue water-flowers and red or white
+bush-blossoms: just difference. The difference between the wild boar and the
+wild bear. And a man was good or bad according to his nature, not according to
+his nationality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert was well-bred, and this was part of his natural understanding. It was
+merely unnatural to him to hate a nation <i>en bloc</i>. Certain individuals he
+disliked, and others he liked, and the mass he knew nothing about. Certain
+deeds he disliked, certain deeds seemed natural to him, and about most deeds he
+had no particular feeling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had, however, the one deepest pure-bred instinct. He recoiled inevitably
+from having his feelings dictated to him by the mass feeling. His feelings were
+his own, his understanding was his own, and he would never go back on either,
+willingly. Shall a man become inferior to his own true knowledge and self, just
+because the mob expects it of him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What Egbert felt subtly and without question, his father-in-law felt also in a
+rough, more combative way. Different as the two men were, they were two real
+Englishmen, and their instincts were almost the same.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Godfrey Marshall had the world to reckon with. There was German military
+aggression, and the English non-military idea of liberty and the
+&ldquo;conquests of peace&rdquo;&mdash;meaning industrialism. Even if the
+choice between militarism and industrialism were a choice of evils, the elderly
+man asserted his choice of the latter, perforce. He whose soul was quick with
+the instinct of power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert just refused to reckon with the world. He just refused even to decide
+between German militarism and British industrialism. He chose neither. As for
+atrocities, he despised the people who committed them as inferior criminal
+types. There was nothing national about crime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, war! War! Just war! Not right or wrong, but just war itself. Should he
+join? Should he give himself over to war? The question was in his mind for some
+weeks. Not because he thought England was right and Germany wrong. Probably
+Germany was wrong, but he refused to make a choice. Not because he felt
+inspired. No. But just&mdash;war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The deterrent was, the giving himself over into the power of other men, and
+into the power of the mob-spirit of a democratic army. Should he give himself
+over? Should he make over his own life and body to the control of something
+which he <i>knew</i> was inferior, in spirit, to his own self? Should he commit
+himself into the power of an inferior control? Should he? Should he betray
+himself?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was going to put himself into the power of his inferiors, and he knew it. He
+was going to subjugate himself. He was going to be ordered about by petty
+<i>canaille</i> of non-commissioned officers&mdash;and even commissioned
+officers. He who was born and bred free. Should he do it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went to his wife, to speak to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I join up, Winifred?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was silent. Her instinct also was dead against it. And yet a certain
+profound resentment made her answer:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have three children dependent on you. I don&rsquo;t know whether you
+have thought of that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was still only the third month of the war, and the old pre-war ideas were
+still alive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course. But it won&rsquo;t make much difference to them. I shall be
+earning a shilling a day, at least.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better speak to father, I think,&rdquo; she replied heavily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert went to his father-in-law. The elderly man&rsquo;s heart was full of
+resentment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should say,&rdquo; he said rather sourly, &ldquo;it is the best thing
+you could do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert went and joined up immediately, as a private soldier. He was drafted
+into the light artillery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred now had a new duty towards him: the duty of a wife towards a husband
+who is himself performing his duty towards the world. She loved him still. She
+would always love him, as far as earthly love went. But it was duty she now
+lived by. When he came back to her in khaki, a soldier, she submitted to him as
+a wife. It was her duty. But to his passion she could never again fully submit.
+Something prevented her, for ever: even her own deepest choice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went back again to camp. It did not suit him to be a modern soldier. In the
+thick, gritty, hideous khaki his subtle physique was extinguished as if he had
+been killed. In the ugly intimacy of the camp his thoroughbred sensibilities
+were just degraded. But he had chosen, so he accepted. An ugly little look came
+on to his face, of a man who has accepted his own degradation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the early spring Winifred went down to Crockham to be there when primroses
+were out, and the tassels hanging on the hazel-bushes. She felt something like
+a reconciliation towards Egbert, now he was a prisoner in camp most of his
+days. Joyce was wild with delight at seeing the garden and the common again,
+after the eight or nine months of London and misery. She was still lame. She
+still had the irons up her leg. But she lurched about with a wild, crippled
+agility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Egbert came for a week-end, in his gritty, thick, sand-paper khaki and puttees
+and the hideous cap. Nay, he looked terrible. And on his face a slightly impure
+look, a little sore on his lip, as if he had eaten too much or drunk too much
+or let his blood become a little unclean. He was almost uglily healthy, with
+the camp life. It did not suit him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred waited for him in a little passion of duty and sacrifice, willing to
+serve the soldier, if not the man. It only made him feel a little more ugly
+inside. The week-end was torment to him: the memory of the camp, the knowledge
+of the life he led there; even the sight of his own legs in that abhorrent
+khaki. He felt as if the hideous cloth went into his blood and made it gritty
+and dirty. Then Winifred so ready to serve the <i>soldier</i>, when she
+repudiated the man. And this made the grit worse between his teeth. And the
+children running around playing and calling in the rather mincing fashion of
+children who have nurses and governesses and literature in the family. And
+Joyce so lame! It had all become unreal to him, after the camp. It only set his
+soul on edge. He left at dawn on the Monday morning, glad to get back to the
+realness and vulgarity of the camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winifred would never meet him again at the cottage&mdash;only in London, where
+the world was with them. But sometimes he came alone to Crockham perhaps when
+friends were staying there. And then he would work awhile in his garden. This
+summer still it would flame with blue anchusas and big red poppies, the
+mulleins would sway their soft, downy erections in the air: he loved mulleins:
+and the honeysuckle would stream out scent like memory, when the owl was
+whooing. Then he sat by the fire with the friends and with Winifred&rsquo;s
+sisters, and they sang the folk-songs. He put on thin civilian clothes and his
+charm and his beauty and the supple dominancy of his body glowed out again. But
+Winifred was not there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of the summer he went to Flanders, into action. He seemed already to
+have gone out of life, beyond the pale of life. He hardly remembered his life
+any more, being like a man who is going to take a jump from a height, and is
+only looking to where he must land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was twice slightly wounded, in two months. But not enough to put him off
+duty for more than a day or two. They were retiring again, holding the enemy
+back. He was in the rear&mdash;three machine-guns. The country was all
+pleasant, war had not yet trampled it. Only the air seemed shattered, and the
+land awaiting death. It was a small, unimportant action in which he was
+engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The guns were stationed on a little bushy hillock just outside a village. But
+occasionally, it was difficult to say from which direction, came the sharp
+crackle of rifle-fire, and beyond, the far-off thud of cannon. The afternoon
+was wintry and cold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A lieutenant stood on a little iron platform at the top of the ladders, taking
+the sights and giving the aim, calling in a high, tense, mechanical voice. Out
+of the sky came the sharp cry of the directions, then the warning numbers, then
+&ldquo;Fire!&rdquo; The shot went, the piston of the gun sprang back, there was
+a sharp explosion, and a very faint film of smoke in the air. Then the other
+two guns fired, and there was a lull. The officer was uncertain of the
+enemy&rsquo;s position. The thick clump of horse-chestnut trees below was
+without change. Only in the far distance the sound of heavy firing continued,
+so far off as to give a sense of peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gorse bushes on either hand were dark, but a few sparks of flowers showed
+yellow. He noticed them almost unconsciously as he waited, in the lull. He was
+in his shirt-sleeves, and the air came chill on his arms. Again his shirt was
+slit on the shoulders, and the flesh showed through. He was dirty and unkempt.
+But his face was quiet. So many things go out of consciousness before we come
+to the end of consciousness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before him, below, was the highroad, running between high banks of grass and
+gorse. He saw the whitish muddy tracks and deep scores in the road, where the
+part of the regiment had retired. Now all was still. Sounds that came, came
+from the outside. The place where he stood was still silent, chill, serene: the
+white church among the trees beyond seemed like a thought only.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He moved into a lightning-like mechanical response at the sharp cry from the
+officer overhead. Mechanism, the pure mechanical action of obedience at the
+guns. Pure mechanical action at the guns. It left the soul unburdened, brooding
+in dark nakedness. In the end, the soul is alone, brooding on the face of the
+uncreated flux, as a bird on a dark sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing could be seen but the road, and a crucifix knocked slanting and the
+dark, autumnal fields and woods. There appeared three horsemen on a little
+eminence, very small, on the crest of a ploughed field. They were our own men.
+Of the enemy, nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lull continued. Then suddenly came sharp orders, and a new direction of the
+guns, and an intense, exciting activity. Yet at the centre the soul remained
+dark and aloof, alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even so, it was the soul that heard the new sound: the new, deep
+&ldquo;papp!&rdquo; of a gun that seemed to touch right upon the soul. He kept
+up the rapid activity at the machine-gun, sweating. But in his soul was the
+echo of the new, deep sound, deeper than life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in confirmation came the awful faint whistling of a shell, advancing almost
+suddenly into a piercing, tearing shriek that would tear through the membrane
+of life. He heard it in his ears, but he heard it also in his soul, in tension.
+There was relief when the thing had swung by and struck, away beyond. He heard
+the hoarseness of its explosion, and the voice of the soldier calling to the
+horses. But he did not turn round to look. He only noticed a twig of holly with
+red berries fall like a gift on to the road below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not this time, not this time. Whither thou goest I will go. Did he say it to
+the shell, or to whom? Whither thou goest I will go. Then, the faint whistling
+of another shell dawned, and his blood became small and still to receive it. It
+drew nearer, like some horrible blast of wind; his blood lost consciousness.
+But in the second of suspension he saw the heavy shell swoop to earth, into the
+rocky bushes on the right, and earth and stones poured up into the sky. It was
+as if he heard no sound. The earth and stones and fragments of bush fell to
+earth again, and there was the same unchanging peace. The Germans had got the
+aim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Would they move now? Would they retire? Yes. The officer was giving the last
+lightning-rapid orders to fire before withdrawing. A shell passed unnoticed in
+the rapidity of action. And then, into the silence, into the suspense where the
+soul brooded, finally crashed a noise and a darkness and a moment&rsquo;s
+flaming agony and horror. Ah, he had seen the dark bird flying towards him,
+flying home this time. In one instant life and eternity went up in a
+conflagration of agony, then there was a weight of darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When faintly something began to struggle in the darkness, a consciousness of
+himself, he was aware of a great load and a clanging sound. To have known the
+moment of death! And to be forced, before dying, to review it. So, fate, even
+in death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a resounding of pain. It seemed to sound from the outside of his
+consciousness: like a loud bell clanging very near. Yet he knew it was himself.
+He must associate himself with it. After a lapse and a new effort, he
+identified a pain in his head, a large pain that clanged and resounded. So far
+he could identify himself with himself. Then there was a lapse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a time he seemed to wake up again, and waking, to know that he was at the
+front, and that he was killed. He did not open his eyes. Light was not yet his.
+The clanging pain in his head rang out the rest of his consciousness. So he
+lapsed away from consciousness, in unutterable sick abandon of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bit by bit, like a doom came the necessity to know. He was hit in the head. It
+was only a vague surmise at first. But in the swinging of the pendulum of pain,
+swinging ever nearer and nearer, to touch him into an agony of consciousness
+and a consciousness of agony, gradually the knowledge emerged&mdash;he must be
+hit in the head&mdash;hit on the left brow; if so, there would be
+blood&mdash;was there blood?&mdash;could he feel blood in his left eye? Then
+the clanging seemed to burst the membrane of his brain, like death-madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was there blood on his face? Was hot blood flowing? Or was it dry blood
+congealing down his cheek? It took him hours even to ask the question: time
+being no more than an agony in darkness, without measurement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A long time after he had opened his eyes he realised he was seeing
+something&mdash;something, something, but the effort to recall what was too
+great. No, no; no recall!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Were they the stars in the dark sky? Was it possible it was stars in the dark
+sky? Stars? The world? Ah, no, he could not know it! Stars and the world were
+gone for him, he closed his eyes. No stars, no sky, no world. No, No! The thick
+darkness of blood alone. It should be one great lapse into the thick darkness
+of blood in agony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Death, oh, death! The world all blood, and the blood all writhing with death.
+The soul like the tiniest little light out on a dark sea, the sea of blood. And
+the light guttering, beating, pulsing in a windless storm, wishing it could go
+out, yet unable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There had been life. There had been Winifred and his children. But the frail
+death-agony effort to catch at straws of memory, straws of life from the past,
+brought on too great a nausea. No, No! No Winifred, no children. No world, no
+people. Better the agony of dissolution ahead than the nausea of the effort
+backwards. Better the terrible work should go forward, the dissolving into the
+black sea of death, in the extremity of dissolution, than that there should be
+any reaching back towards life. To forget! To forget! Utterly, utterly to
+forget, in the great forgetting of death. To break the core and the unit of
+life, and to lapse out on the great darkness. Only that. To break the clue, and
+mingle and commingle with the one darkness, without afterwards or forwards. Let
+the black sea of death itself solve the problem of futurity. Let the will of
+man break and give up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was that? A light! A terrible light! Was it figures? Was it legs of a
+horse colossal&mdash;colossal above him: huge, huge?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Germans heard a slight noise, and started. Then, in the glare of a
+light-bomb, by the side of the heap of earth thrown up by the shell, they saw
+the dead face.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>TICKETS, PLEASE</h2>
+
+<p>
+There is in the Midlands a single-line tramway system which boldly leaves the
+county town and plunges off into the black, industrial countryside, up hill and
+down dale, through the long ugly villages of workmen&rsquo;s houses, over
+canals and railways, past churches perched high and nobly over the smoke and
+shadows, through stark, grimy cold little market-places, tilting away in a rush
+past cinemas and shops down to the hollow where the collieries are, then up
+again, past a little rural church, under the ash trees, on in a rush to the
+terminus, the last little ugly place of industry, the cold little town that
+shivers on the edge of the wild, gloomy country beyond. There the green and
+creamy coloured tram-car seems to pause and purr with curious satisfaction. But
+in a few minutes&mdash;the clock on the turret of the Co-operative Wholesale
+Society&rsquo;s Shops gives the time&mdash;away it starts once more on the
+adventure. Again there are the reckless swoops downhill, bouncing the loops:
+again the chilly wait in the hill-top market-place: again the breathless
+slithering round the precipitous drop under the church: again the patient halts
+at the loops, waiting for the outcoming car: so on and on, for two long hours,
+till at last the city looms beyond the fat gas-works, the narrow factories draw
+near, we are in the sordid streets of the great town, once more we sidle to a
+standstill at our terminus, abashed by the great crimson and cream-coloured
+city cars, but still perky, jaunty, somewhat dare-devil, green as a jaunty
+sprig of parsley out of a black colliery garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To ride on these cars is always an adventure. Since we are in war-time, the
+drivers are men unfit for active service: cripples and hunchbacks. So they have
+the spirit of the devil in them. The ride becomes a steeple-chase. Hurray! we
+have leapt in a clear jump over the canal bridges&mdash;now for the four-lane
+corner. With a shriek and a trail of sparks we are clear again. To be sure, a
+tram often leaps the rails&mdash;but what matter! It sits in a ditch till other
+trams come to haul it out. It is quite common for a car, packed with one solid
+mass of living people, to come to a dead halt in the midst of unbroken
+blackness, the heart of nowhere on a dark night, and for the driver and the
+girl conductor to call, &ldquo;All get off&mdash;car&rsquo;s on fire!&rdquo;
+Instead, however, of rushing out in a panic, the passengers stolidly reply:
+&ldquo;Get on&mdash;get on! We&rsquo;re not coming out. We&rsquo;re stopping
+where we are. Push on, George.&rdquo; So till flames actually appear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reason for this reluctance to dismount is that the nights are howlingly
+cold, black, and windswept, and a car is a haven of refuge. From village to
+village the miners travel, for a change of cinema, of girl, of pub. The trams
+are desperately packed. Who is going to risk himself in the black gulf outside,
+to wait perhaps an hour for another tram, then to see the forlorn notice
+&ldquo;Depot Only,&rdquo; because there is something wrong! Or to greet a unit
+of three bright cars all so tight with people that they sail past with a howl
+of derision. Trams that pass in the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, the most dangerous tram-service in England, as the authorities themselves
+declare, with pride, is entirely conducted by girls, and driven by rash young
+men, a little crippled, or by delicate young men, who creep forward in terror.
+The girls are fearless young hussies. In their ugly blue uniform, skirts up to
+their knees, shapeless old peaked caps on their heads, they have all the
+<i>sang-froid</i> of an old non-commissioned officer. With a tram packed with
+howling colliers, roaring hymns downstairs and a sort of antiphony of
+obscenities upstairs, the lasses are perfectly at their ease. They pounce on
+the youths who try to evade their ticket-machine. They push off the men at the
+end of their distance. They are not going to be done in the eye&mdash;not they.
+They fear nobody&mdash;and everybody fears them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Annie!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Ted!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, mind my corn, Miss Stone. It&rsquo;s my belief you&rsquo;ve got a
+heart of stone, for you&rsquo;ve trod on it again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You should keep it in your pocket,&rdquo; replies Miss Stone, and she
+goes sturdily upstairs in her high boots.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tickets, please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She is peremptory, suspicious, and ready to hit first. She can hold her own
+against ten thousand. The step of that tram-car is her Thermopylæ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Therefore, there is a certain wild romance aboard these cars&mdash;and in the
+sturdy bosom of Annie herself. The time for soft romance is in the morning,
+between ten o&rsquo;clock and one, when things are rather slack: that is,
+except market-day and Saturday. Thus Annie has time to look about her. Then she
+often hops off her car and into a shop where she has spied something, while the
+driver chats in the main road. There is very good feeling between the girls and
+the drivers. Are they not companions in peril, shipments aboard this careering
+vessel of a tram-car, for ever rocking on the waves of a stormy land?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, also, during the easy hours, the inspectors are most in evidence. For
+some reason, everybody employed in this tram-service is young: there are no
+grey heads. It would not do. Therefore the inspectors are of the right age, and
+one, the chief, is also good-looking. See him stand on a wet, gloomy morning,
+in his long oil-skin, his peaked cap well down over his eyes, waiting to board
+a car. His face is ruddy, his small brown moustache is weathered, he has a
+faint impudent smile. Fairly tall and agile, even in his waterproof, he springs
+aboard a car and greets Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Annie! Keeping the wet out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Trying to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are only two people in the car. Inspecting is soon over. Then for a long
+and impudent chat on the foot-board, a good, easy, twelve-mile chat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The inspector&rsquo;s name is John Thomas Raynor&mdash;always called John
+Thomas, except sometimes, in malice, Coddy. His face sets in fury when he is
+addressed, from a distance, with this abbreviation. There is considerable
+scandal about John Thomas in half a dozen villages. He flirts with the girl
+conductors in the morning, and walks out with them in the dark night, when they
+leave their tram-car at the depôt. Of course, the girls quit the service
+frequently. Then he flirts and walks out with the newcomer: always providing
+she is sufficiently attractive, and that she will consent to walk. It is
+remarkable, however, that most of the girls are quite comely, they are all
+young, and this roving life aboard the car gives them a sailor&rsquo;s dash and
+recklessness. What matter how they behave when the ship is in port. Tomorrow
+they will be aboard again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Annie, however, was something of a Tartar, and her sharp tongue had kept John
+Thomas at arm&rsquo;s length for many months. Perhaps, therefore, she liked him
+all the more: for he always came up smiling, with impudence. She watched him
+vanquish one girl, then another. She could tell by the movement of his mouth
+and eyes, when he flirted with her in the morning, that he had been walking out
+with this lass, or the other, the night before. A fine cock-of-the-walk he was.
+She could sum him up pretty well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this subtle antagonism they knew each other like old friends, they were as
+shrewd with one another almost as man and wife. But Annie had always kept him
+sufficiently at arm&rsquo;s length. Besides, she had a boy of her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Statutes fair, however, came in November, at Bestwood. It happened that
+Annie had the Monday night off. It was a drizzling ugly night, yet she dressed
+herself up and went to the fair ground. She was alone, but she expected soon to
+find a pal of some sort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The roundabouts were veering round and grinding out their music, the side shows
+were making as much commotion as possible. In the cocoanut shies there were no
+cocoanuts, but artificial war-time substitutes, which the lads declared were
+fastened into the irons. There was a sad decline in brilliance and luxury. None
+the less, the ground was muddy as ever, there was the same crush, the press of
+faces lighted up by the flares and the electric lights, the same smell of
+naphtha and a few fried potatoes, and of electricity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who should be the first to greet Miss Annie on the showground but John Thomas?
+He had a black overcoat buttoned up to his chin, and a tweed cap pulled down
+over his brows, his face between was ruddy and smiling and handy as ever. She
+knew so well the way his mouth moved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was very glad to have a &ldquo;boy&rdquo;. To be at the Statutes without a
+fellow was no fun. Instantly, like the gallant he was, he took her on the
+dragons, grim-toothed, round-about switchbacks. It was not nearly so exciting
+as a tram-car actually. But, then, to be seated in a shaking, green dragon,
+uplifted above the sea of bubble faces, careering in a rickety fashion in the
+lower heavens, whilst John Thomas leaned over her, his cigarette in his mouth,
+was after all the right style. She was a plump, quick, alive little creature.
+So she was quite excited and happy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Thomas made her stay on for the next round. And therefore she could hardly
+for shame repulse him when he put his arm round her and drew her a little
+nearer to him, in a very warm and cuddly manner. Besides, he was fairly
+discreet, he kept his movement as hidden as possible. She looked down, and saw
+that his red, clean hand was out of sight of the crowd. And they knew each
+other so well. So they warmed up to the fair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the dragons they went on the horses. John Thomas paid each time, so she
+could but be complaisant. He, of course, sat astride on the outer
+horse&mdash;named &ldquo;Black Bess&rdquo;&mdash;and she sat sideways, towards
+him, on the inner horse&mdash;named &ldquo;Wildfire&rdquo;. But of course John
+Thomas was not going to sit discreetly on &ldquo;Black Bess&rdquo;, holding the
+brass bar. Round they spun and heaved, in the light. And round he swung on his
+wooden steed, flinging one leg across her mount, and perilously tipping up and
+down, across the space, half lying back, laughing at her. He was perfectly
+happy; she was afraid her hat was on one side, but she was excited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He threw quoits on a table, and won for her two large, pale-blue hat-pins. And
+then, hearing the noise of the cinemas, announcing another performance, they
+climbed the boards and went in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course, during these performances pitch darkness falls from time to time,
+when the machine goes wrong. Then there is a wild whooping, and a loud smacking
+of simulated kisses. In these moments John Thomas drew Annie towards him. After
+all, he had a wonderfully warm, cosy way of holding a girl with his arm, he
+seemed to make such a nice fit. And, after all, it was pleasant to be so held:
+so very comforting and cosy and nice. He leaned over her and she felt his
+breath on her hair; she knew he wanted to kiss her on the lips. And, after all,
+he was so warm and she fitted in to him so softly. After all, she wanted him to
+touch her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the light sprang up; she also started electrically, and put her hat
+straight. He left his arm lying nonchalantly behind her. Well, it was fun, it
+was exciting to be at the Statutes with John Thomas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the cinema was over they went for a walk across the dark, damp fields. He
+had all the arts of love-making. He was especially good at holding a girl, when
+he sat with her on a stile in the black, drizzling darkness. He seemed to be
+holding her in space, against his own warmth and gratification. And his kisses
+were soft and slow and searching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Annie walked out with John Thomas, though she kept her own boy dangling in
+the distance. Some of the tram-girls chose to be huffy. But there, you must
+take things as you find them, in this life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no mistake about it, Annie liked John Thomas a good deal. She felt so
+rich and warm in herself whenever he was near. And John Thomas really liked
+Annie, more than usual. The soft, melting way in which she could flow into a
+fellow, as if she melted into his very bones, was something rare and good. He
+fully appreciated this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But with a developing acquaintance there began a developing intimacy. Annie
+wanted to consider him a person, a man; she wanted to take an intelligent
+interest in him, and to have an intelligent response. She did not want a mere
+nocturnal presence, which was what he was so far. And she prided herself that
+he could not leave her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here she made a mistake. John Thomas intended to remain a nocturnal presence;
+he had no idea of becoming an all-round individual to her. When she started to
+take an intelligent interest in him and his life and his character, he sheered
+off. He hated intelligent interest. And he knew that the only way to stop it
+was to avoid it. The possessive female was aroused in Annie. So he left her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is no use saying she was not surprised. She was at first startled, thrown
+out of her count. For she had been so <i>very</i> sure of holding him. For a
+while she was staggered, and everything became uncertain to her. Then she wept
+with fury, indignation, desolation, and misery. Then she had a spasm of
+despair. And then, when he came, still impudently, on to her car, still
+familiar, but letting her see by the movement of his head that he had gone away
+to somebody else for the time being, and was enjoying pastures new, then she
+determined to have her own back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had a very shrewd idea what girls John Thomas had taken out. She went to
+Nora Purdy. Nora was a tall, rather pale, but well-built girl, with beautiful
+yellow hair. She was rather secretive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hey!&rdquo; said Annie, accosting her; then softly, &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s
+John Thomas on with now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why tha does,&rdquo; said Annie, ironically lapsing into dialect.
+&ldquo;Tha knows as well as I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I do, then,&rdquo; said Nora. &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t me, so
+don&rsquo;t bother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Cissy Meakin, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is, for all I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hasn&rsquo;t he got a face on him!&rdquo; said Annie. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t half like his cheek. I could knock him off the foot-board when he
+comes round at me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll get dropped-on one of these days,&rdquo; said Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, he will, when somebody makes up their mind to drop it on him. I
+should like to see him taken down a peg or two, shouldn&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; said Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got quite as much cause to as I have,&rdquo; said Annie.
+&ldquo;But we&rsquo;ll drop on him one of these days, my girl. What?
+Don&rsquo;t you want to?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; said Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as a matter of fact, Nora was much more vindictive than Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One by one Annie went the round of the old flames. It so happened that Cissy
+Meakin left the tramway service in quite a short time. Her mother made her
+leave. Then John Thomas was on the <i>qui-vive</i>. He cast his eyes over his
+old flock. And his eyes lighted on Annie. He thought she would be safe now.
+Besides, he liked her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She arranged to walk home with him on Sunday night. It so happened that her car
+would be in the depôt at half past nine: the last car would come in at 10.15.
+So John Thomas was to wait for her there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the depôt the girls had a little waiting-room of their own. It was quite
+rough, but cosy, with a fire and an oven and a mirror, and table and wooden
+chairs. The half dozen girls who knew John Thomas only too well had arranged to
+take service this Sunday afternoon. So, as the cars began to come in, early,
+the girls dropped into the waiting-room. And instead of hurrying off home, they
+sat around the fire and had a cup of tea. Outside was the darkness and
+lawlessness of war-time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Thomas came on the car after Annie, at about a quarter to ten. He poked
+his head easily into the girls&rsquo; waiting-room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Prayer-meeting?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Laura Sharp. &ldquo;Ladies only.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s me!&rdquo; said John Thomas. It was one of his favourite
+exclamations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shut the door, boy,&rdquo; said Muriel Baggaley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On which side of me?&rdquo; said John Thomas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which tha likes,&rdquo; said Polly Birkin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had come in and closed the door behind him. The girls moved in their circle,
+to make a place for him near the fire. He took off his great-coat and pushed
+back his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who handles the teapot?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora Purdy silently poured him out a cup of tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Want a bit o&rsquo; my bread and drippin&rsquo;?&rdquo; said Muriel
+Baggaley to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, give us a bit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he began to eat his piece of bread.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no place like home, girls,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all looked at him as he uttered this piece of impudence. He seemed to be
+sunning himself in the presence of so many damsels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Especially if you&rsquo;re not afraid to go home in the dark,&rdquo;
+said Laura Sharp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me! By myself I am.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sat till they heard the last tram come in. In a few minutes Emma Houselay
+entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on, my old duck!&rdquo; cried Polly Birkin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It <i>is</i> perishing,&rdquo; said Emma, holding her fingers to the
+fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But&mdash;I&rsquo;m afraid to, go home in, the dark,&rdquo; sang Laura
+Sharp, the tune having got into her mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who&rsquo;re you going with tonight, John Thomas?&rdquo; asked Muriel
+Baggaley, coolly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tonight?&rdquo; said John Thomas. &ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m going home by
+myself tonight&mdash;all on my lonely-O.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s me!&rdquo; said Nora Purdy, using his own ejaculation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girls laughed shrilly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me as well, Nora,&rdquo; said John Thomas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know what you mean,&rdquo; said Laura.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m toddling,&rdquo; said he, rising and reaching for his
+overcoat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Polly. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re all here waiting for
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got to be up in good time in the morning,&rdquo; he said, in
+the benevolent official manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Muriel. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t leave us all lonely, John
+Thomas. Take one!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take the lot, if you like,&rdquo; he responded gallantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you won&rsquo;t either,&rdquo; said Muriel, &ldquo;Two&rsquo;s
+company; seven&rsquo;s too much of a good thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay&mdash;take one,&rdquo; said Laura. &ldquo;Fair and square, all above
+board, and say which.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; cried Annie, speaking for the first time. &ldquo;Pick, John
+Thomas; let&rsquo;s hear thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going home quiet tonight. Feeling
+good, for once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whereabouts?&rdquo; said Annie. &ldquo;Take a good un, then. But
+tha&rsquo;s got to take one of us!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, how can I take one,&rdquo; he said, laughing uneasily. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t want to make enemies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d only make <i>one</i>,&rdquo; said Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The chosen <i>one</i>,&rdquo; added Laura.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, my! Who said girls!&rdquo; exclaimed John Thomas, again turning, as
+if to escape. &ldquo;Well&mdash;good-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, you&rsquo;ve got to make your pick,&rdquo; said Muriel. &ldquo;Turn
+your face to the wall, and say which one touches you. Go on&mdash;we shall only
+just touch your back&mdash;one of us. Go on&mdash;turn your face to the wall,
+and don&rsquo;t look, and say which one touches you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was uneasy, mistrusting them. Yet he had not the courage to break away. They
+pushed him to a wall and stood him there with his face to it. Behind his back
+they all grimaced, tittering. He looked so comical. He looked around uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re looking&mdash;you&rsquo;re looking!&rdquo; they shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned his head away. And suddenly, with a movement like a swift cat, Annie
+went forward and fetched him a box on the side of the head that sent his cap
+flying and himself staggering. He started round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at Annie&rsquo;s signal they all flew at him, slapping him, pinching him,
+pulling his hair, though more in fun than in spite or anger. He, however, saw
+red. His blue eyes flamed with strange fear as well as fury, and he butted
+through the girls to the door. It was locked. He wrenched at it. Roused, alert,
+the girls stood round and looked at him. He faced them, at bay. At that moment
+they were rather horrifying to him, as they stood in their short uniforms. He
+was distinctly afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on, John Thomas! Come on! Choose!&rdquo; said Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you after? Open the door,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shan&rsquo;t&mdash;not till you&rsquo;ve chosen!&rdquo; said Muriel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Chosen what?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Chosen the one you&rsquo;re going to marry,&rdquo; she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hesitated a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Open the blasted door,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and get back to your
+senses.&rdquo; He spoke with official authority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to choose!&rdquo; cried the girls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on!&rdquo; cried Annie, looking him in the eye.&rdquo; Come on!
+Come on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went forward, rather vaguely. She had taken off her belt, and swinging it,
+she fetched him a sharp blow over the head with the buckle end. He sprang and
+seized her. But immediately the other girls rushed upon him, pulling and
+tearing and beating him. Their blood was now thoroughly up. He was their sport
+now. They were going to have their own back, out of him. Strange, wild
+creatures, they hung on him and rushed at him to bear him down. His tunic was
+torn right up the back, Nora had hold at the back of his collar, and was
+actually strangling him. Luckily the button burst. He struggled in a wild
+frenzy of fury and terror, almost mad terror. His tunic was simply torn off his
+back, his shirt-sleeves were torn away, his arms were naked. The girls rushed
+at him, clenched their hands on him and pulled at him: or they rushed at him
+and pushed him, butted him with all their might: or they struck him wild blows.
+He ducked and cringed and struck sideways. They became more intense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last he was down. They rushed on him, kneeling on him. He had neither breath
+nor strength to move. His face was bleeding with a long scratch, his brow was
+bruised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Annie knelt on him, the other girls knelt and hung on to him. Their faces were
+flushed, their hair wild, their eyes were all glittering strangely. He lay at
+last quite still, with face averted, as an animal lies when it is defeated and
+at the mercy of the captor. Sometimes his eye glanced back at the wild faces of
+the girls. His breast rose heavily, his wrists were torn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, then, my fellow!&rdquo; gasped Annie at length. &ldquo;Now
+then&mdash;now&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sound of her terrifying, cold triumph, he suddenly started to struggle
+as an animal might, but the girls threw themselves upon him with unnatural
+strength and power, forcing him down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;now, then!&rdquo; gasped Annie at length.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there was a dead silence, in which the thud of heart-beating was to be
+heard. It was a suspense of pure silence in every soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now you know where you are,&rdquo; said Annie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sight of his white, bare arm maddened the girls. He lay in a kind of trance
+of fear and antagonism. They felt themselves filled with supernatural strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly Polly started to laugh&mdash;to giggle
+wildly&mdash;helplessly&mdash;and Emma and Muriel joined in. But Annie and Nora
+and Laura remained the same, tense, watchful, with gleaming eyes. He winced
+away from these eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Annie, in a curious low tone, secret and deadly.
+&ldquo;Yes! You&rsquo;ve got it now! You know what you&rsquo;ve done,
+don&rsquo;t you? You know what you&rsquo;ve done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made no sound nor sign, but lay with bright, averted eyes, and averted,
+bleeding face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You ought to be <i>killed</i>, that&rsquo;s what you ought,&rdquo; said
+Annie, tensely. &ldquo;You ought to be <i>killed</i>.&rdquo; And there was a
+terrifying lust in her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Polly was ceasing to laugh, and giving long-drawn Oh-h-hs and sighs as she came
+to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s got to choose,&rdquo; she said vaguely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes, he has,&rdquo; said Laura, with vindictive decision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you hear&mdash;do you hear?&rdquo; said Annie. And with a sharp
+movement, that made him wince, she turned his face to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you hear?&rdquo; she repeated, shaking him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was quite dumb. She fetched him a sharp slap on the face. He started,
+and his eyes widened. Then his face darkened with defiance, after all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you hear?&rdquo; she repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He only looked at her with hostile eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak!&rdquo; she said, putting her face devilishly near his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he said, almost overcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got to <i>choose!</i>&rdquo; she cried, as if it were some
+terrible menace, and as if it hurt her that she could not exact more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he said, in fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Choose your girl, Coddy. You&rsquo;ve got to choose her now. And
+you&rsquo;ll get your neck broken if you play any more of your tricks, my boy.
+You&rsquo;re settled now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause. Again he averted his face. He was cunning in his overthrow.
+He did not give in to them really&mdash;no, not if they tore him to bits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, then,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I choose Annie.&rdquo; His voice
+was strange and full of malice. Annie let go of him as if he had been a hot
+coal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s chosen Annie!&rdquo; said the girls in chorus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me!&rdquo; cried Annie. She was still kneeling, but away from him. He
+was still lying prostrate, with averted face. The girls grouped uneasily
+around.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me!&rdquo; repeated Annie, with a terrible bitter accent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she got up, drawing away from him with strange disgust and bitterness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t touch him,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But her face quivered with a kind of agony, she seemed as if she would fall.
+The other girls turned aside. He remained lying on the floor, with his torn
+clothes and bleeding, averted face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, if he&rsquo;s chosen&mdash;&rdquo; said Polly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want him&mdash;he can choose again,&rdquo; said Annie,
+with the same rather bitter hopelessness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get up,&rdquo; said Polly, lifting his shoulder. &ldquo;Get up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose slowly, a strange, ragged, dazed creature. The girls eyed him from a
+distance, curiously, furtively, dangerously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who wants him?&rdquo; cried Laura, roughly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nobody,&rdquo; they answered, with contempt. Yet each one of them waited
+for him to look at her, hoped he would look at her. All except Annie, and
+something was broken in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, however, kept his face closed and averted from them all. There was a
+silence of the end. He picked up the torn pieces of his tunic, without knowing
+what to do with them. The girls stood about uneasily, flushed, panting, tidying
+their hair and their dress unconsciously, and watching him. He looked at none
+of them. He espied his cap in a corner, and went and picked it up. He put it on
+his head, and one of the girls burst into a shrill, hysteric laugh at the sight
+he presented. He, however, took no heed, but went straight to where his
+overcoat hung on a peg. The girls moved away from contact with him as if he had
+been an electric wire. He put on his coat and buttoned it down. Then he rolled
+his tunic-rags into a bundle, and stood before the locked door, dumbly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Open the door, somebody,&rdquo; said Laura.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Annie&rsquo;s got the key,&rdquo; said one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Annie silently offered the key to the girls. Nora unlocked the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tit for tat, old man,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Show yourself a man, and
+don&rsquo;t bear a grudge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But without a word or sign he had opened the door and gone, his face closed,
+his head dropped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;ll learn him,&rdquo; said Laura.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Coddy!&rdquo; said Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shut up, for God&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo; cried Annie fiercely, as if in
+torture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m about ready to go, Polly. Look sharp!&rdquo; said
+Muriel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girls were all anxious to be off. They were tidying themselves hurriedly,
+with mute, stupefied faces.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>THE BLIND MAN</h2>
+
+<p>
+Isabel Pervin was listening for two sounds&mdash;for the sound of wheels on the
+drive outside and for the noise of her husband&rsquo;s footsteps in the hall.
+Her dearest and oldest friend, a man who seemed almost indispensable to her
+living, would drive up in the rainy dusk of the closing November day. The trap
+had gone to fetch him from the station. And her husband, who had been blinded
+in Flanders, and who had a disfiguring mark on his brow, would be coming in
+from the outhouses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been home for a year now. He was totally blind. Yet they had been very
+happy. The Grange was Maurice&rsquo;s own place. The back was a farmstead, and
+the Wernhams, who occupied the rear premises, acted as farmers. Isabel lived
+with her husband in the handsome rooms in front. She and he had been almost
+entirely alone together since he was wounded. They talked and sang and read
+together in a wonderful and unspeakable intimacy. Then she reviewed books for a
+Scottish newspaper, carrying on her old interest, and he occupied himself a
+good deal with the farm. Sightless, he could still discuss everything with
+Wernham, and he could also do a good deal of work about the place&mdash;menial
+work, it is true, but it gave him satisfaction. He milked the cows, carried in
+the pails, turned the separator, attended to the pigs and horses. Life was
+still very full and strangely serene for the blind man, peaceful with the
+almost incomprehensible peace of immediate contact in darkness. With his wife
+he had a whole world, rich and real and invisible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were newly and remotely happy. He did not even regret the loss of his
+sight in these times of dark, palpable joy. A certain exultance swelled his
+soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as time wore on, sometimes the rich glamour would leave them. Sometimes,
+after months of this intensity, a sense of burden overcame Isabel, a weariness,
+a terrible <i>ennui</i>, in that silent house approached between a colonnade of
+tall-shafted pines. Then she felt she would go mad, for she could not bear it.
+And sometimes he had devastating fits of depression, which seemed to lay waste
+his whole being. It was worse than depression&mdash;a black misery, when his
+own life was a torture to him, and when his presence was unbearable to his
+wife. The dread went down to the roots of her soul as these black days
+recurred. In a kind of panic she tried to wrap herself up still further in her
+husband. She forced the old spontaneous cheerfulness and joy to continue. But
+the effort it cost her was almost too much. She knew she could not keep it up.
+She felt she would scream with the strain, and would give anything, anything,
+to escape. She longed to possess her husband utterly; it gave her inordinate
+joy to have him entirely to herself. And yet, when again he was gone in a black
+and massive misery, she could not bear him, she could not bear herself; she
+wished she could be snatched away off the earth altogether, anything rather
+than live at this cost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dazed, she schemed for a way out. She invited friends, she tried to give him
+some further connexion with the outer world. But it was no good. After all
+their joy and suffering, after their dark, great year of blindness and solitude
+and unspeakable nearness, other people seemed to them both shallow, prattling,
+rather impertinent. Shallow prattle seemed presumptuous. He became impatient
+and irritated, she was wearied. And so they lapsed into their solitude again.
+For they preferred it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now, in a few weeks&rsquo; time, her second baby would be born. The first
+had died, an infant, when her husband first went out to France. She looked with
+joy and relief to the coming of the second. It would be her salvation. But also
+she felt some anxiety. She was thirty years old, her husband was a year
+younger. They both wanted the child very much. Yet she could not help feeling
+afraid. She had her husband on her hands, a terrible joy to her, and a
+terrifying burden. The child would occupy her love and attention. And then,
+what of Maurice? What would he do? If only she could feel that he, too, would
+be at peace and happy when the child came! She did so want to luxuriate in a
+rich, physical satisfaction of maternity. But the man, what would he do? How
+could she provide for him, how avert those shattering black moods of his, which
+destroyed them both?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sighed with fear. But at this time Bertie Reid wrote to Isabel. He was her
+old friend, a second or third cousin, a Scotchman, as she was a Scotchwoman.
+They had been brought up near to one another, and all her life he had been her
+friend, like a brother, but better than her own brothers. She loved
+him&mdash;though not in the marrying sense. There was a sort of kinship between
+them, an affinity. They understood one another instinctively. But Isabel would
+never have thought of marrying Bertie. It would have seemed like marrying in
+her own family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie was a barrister and a man of letters, a Scotchman of the intellectual
+type, quick, ironical, sentimental, and on his knees before the woman he adored
+but did not want to marry. Maurice Pervin was different. He came of a good old
+country family&mdash;the Grange was not a very great distance from Oxford. He
+was passionate, sensitive, perhaps over-sensitive, wincing&mdash;a big fellow
+with heavy limbs and a forehead that flushed painfully. For his mind was slow,
+as if drugged by the strong provincial blood that beat in his veins. He was
+very sensitive to his own mental slowness, his feelings being quick and acute.
+So that he was just the opposite to Bertie, whose mind was much quicker than
+his emotions, which were not so very fine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the first the two men did not like each other. Isabel felt that they
+<i>ought</i> to get on together. But they did not. She felt that if only each
+could have the clue to the other there would be such a rare understanding
+between them. It did not come off, however. Bertie adopted a slightly ironical
+attitude, very offensive to Maurice, who returned the Scotch irony with English
+resentment, a resentment which deepened sometimes into stupid hatred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a little puzzling to Isabel. However, she accepted it in the course of
+things. Men were made freakish and unreasonable. Therefore, when Maurice was
+going out to France for the second time, she felt that, for her husband&rsquo;s
+sake, she must discontinue her friendship with Bertie. She wrote to the
+barrister to this effect. Bertram Reid simply replied that in this, as in all
+other matters, he must obey her wishes, if these were indeed her wishes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For nearly two years nothing had passed between the two friends. Isabel rather
+gloried in the fact; she had no compunction. She had one great article of
+faith, which was, that husband and wife should be so important to one another,
+that the rest of the world simply did not count. She and Maurice were husband
+and wife. They loved one another. They would have children. Then let everybody
+and everything else fade into insignificance outside this connubial felicity.
+She professed herself quite happy and ready to receive Maurice&rsquo;s friends.
+She was happy and ready: the happy wife, the ready woman in possession. Without
+knowing why, the friends retired abashed and came no more. Maurice, of course,
+took as much satisfaction in this connubial absorption as Isabel did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shared in Isabel&rsquo;s literary activities, she cultivated a real interest
+in agriculture and cattle-raising. For she, being at heart perhaps an emotional
+enthusiast, always cultivated the practical side of life, and prided herself on
+her mastery of practical affairs. Thus the husband and wife had spent the five
+years of their married life. The last had been one of blindness and unspeakable
+intimacy. And now Isabel felt a great indifference coming over her, a sort of
+lethargy. She wanted to be allowed to bear her child in peace, to nod by the
+fire and drift vaguely, physically, from day to day. Maurice was like an
+ominous thunder-cloud. She had to keep waking up to remember him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When a little note came from Bertie, asking if he were to put up a tombstone to
+their dead friendship, and speaking of the real pain he felt on account of her
+husband&rsquo;s loss of sight, she felt a pang, a fluttering agitation of
+re-awakening. And she read the letter to Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask him to come down,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask Bertie to come here!&rdquo; she re-echoed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;if he wants to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel paused for a few moments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know he wants to&mdash;he&rsquo;d only be too glad,&rdquo; she
+replied. &ldquo;But what about you, Maurice? How would you like it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should like it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;in that case&mdash;&mdash; But I thought you didn&rsquo;t
+care for him&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know. I might think differently of him now,&rdquo; the
+blind man replied. It was rather abstruse to Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, dear,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if you&rsquo;re quite
+sure&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure enough. Let him come,&rdquo; said Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Bertie was coming, coming this evening, in the November rain and darkness.
+Isabel was agitated, racked with her old restlessness and indecision. She had
+always suffered from this pain of doubt, just an agonizing sense of
+uncertainty. It had begun to pass off, in the lethargy of maternity. Now it
+returned, and she resented it. She struggled as usual to maintain her calm,
+composed, friendly bearing, a sort of mask she wore over all her body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman had lighted a tall lamp beside the table, and spread the cloth. The
+long dining-room was dim, with its elegant but rather severe pieces of old
+furniture. Only the round table glowed softly under the light. It had a rich,
+beautiful effect. The white cloth glistened and dropped its heavy, pointed lace
+corners almost to the carpet, the china was old and handsome, creamy-yellow,
+with a blotched pattern of harsh red and deep blue, the cups large and
+bell-shaped, the teapot gallant. Isabel looked at it with superficial
+appreciation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her nerves were hurting her. She looked automatically again at the high,
+uncurtained windows. In the last dusk she could just perceive outside a huge
+fir-tree swaying its boughs: it was as if she thought it rather than saw it.
+The rain came flying on the window panes. Ah, why had she no peace? These two
+men, why did they tear at her? Why did they not come&mdash;why was there this
+suspense?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat in a lassitude that was really suspense and irritation. Maurice, at
+least, might come in&mdash;there was nothing to keep him out. She rose to her
+feet. Catching sight of her reflection in a mirror, she glanced at herself with
+a slight smile of recognition, as if she were an old friend to herself. Her
+face was oval and calm, her nose a little arched. Her neck made a beautiful
+line down to her shoulder. With hair knotted loosely behind, she had something
+of a warm, maternal look. Thinking this of herself, she arched her eyebrows and
+her rather heavy eyelids, with a little flicker of a smile, and for a moment
+her grey eyes looked amused and wicked, a little sardonic, out of her
+transfigured Madonna face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, resuming her air of womanly patience&mdash;she was really fatally
+self-determined&mdash;she went with a little jerk towards the door. Her eyes
+were slightly reddened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She passed down the wide hall, and through a door at the end. Then she was in
+the farm premises. The scent of dairy, and of farm-kitchen, and of farm-yard
+and of leather almost overcame her: but particularly the scent of dairy. They
+had been scalding out the pans. The flagged passage in front of her was dark,
+puddled and wet. Light came out from the open kitchen door. She went forward
+and stood in the doorway. The farm-people were at tea, seated at a little
+distance from her, round a long, narrow table, in the centre of which stood a
+white lamp. Ruddy faces, ruddy hands holding food, red mouths working, heads
+bent over the tea-cups: men, land-girls, boys: it was tea-time, feeding-time.
+Some faces caught sight of her. Mrs. Wernham, going round behind the chairs
+with a large black teapot, halting slightly in her walk, was not aware of her
+for a moment. Then she turned suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, is it Madam!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Come in, then, come in!
+We&rsquo;re at tea.&rdquo; And she dragged forward a chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I won&rsquo;t come in,&rdquo; said Isabel, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I
+interrupt your meal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no&mdash;not likely, Madam, not likely.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hasn&rsquo;t Mr. Pervin come in, do you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I couldn&rsquo;t say! Missed him, have you, Madam?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I only wanted him to come in,&rdquo; laughed Isabel, as if shyly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wanted him, did ye? Get you, boy&mdash;get up, now&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Wernham knocked one of the boys on the shoulder. He began to scrape to his
+feet, chewing largely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe he&rsquo;s in top stable,&rdquo; said another face from the
+table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! No, don&rsquo;t get up. I&rsquo;m going myself,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you go out of a dirty night like this. Let the lad go. Get
+along wi&rsquo; ye, boy,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wernham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Isabel, with a decision that was always obeyed.
+&ldquo;Go on with your tea, Tom. I&rsquo;d like to go across to the stable,
+Mrs. Wernham.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did ever you hear tell!&rdquo; exclaimed the woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t the trap late?&rdquo; asked Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; said Mrs. Wernham, peering into the distance at the
+tall, dim clock. &ldquo;No, Madam&mdash;we can give it another quarter or
+twenty minutes yet, good&mdash;yes, every bit of a quarter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! It seems late when darkness falls so early,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It do, that it do. Bother the days, that they draw in so,&rdquo;
+answered Mrs. Wernham. &ldquo;Proper miserable!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are,&rdquo; said Isabel, withdrawing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She pulled on her overshoes, wrapped a large tartan shawl around her, put on a
+man&rsquo;s felt hat, and ventured out along the causeways of the first yard.
+It was very dark. The wind was roaring in the great elms behind the outhouses.
+When she came to the second yard the darkness seemed deeper. She was unsure of
+her footing. She wished she had brought a lantern. Rain blew against her. Half
+she liked it, half she felt unwilling to battle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She reached at last the just visible door of the stable. There was no sign of a
+light anywhere. Opening the upper half, she looked in: into a simple well of
+darkness. The smell of horses, and ammonia, and of warmth was startling to her,
+in that full night. She listened with all her ears, but could hear nothing save
+the night, and the stirring of a horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maurice!&rdquo; she called, softly and musically, though she was afraid.
+&ldquo;Maurice&mdash;are you there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing came from the darkness. She knew the rain and wind blew in upon the
+horses, the hot animal life. Feeling it wrong, she entered the stable, and drew
+the lower half of the door shut, holding the upper part close. She did not
+stir, because she was aware of the presence of the dark hindquarters of the
+horses, though she could not see them, and she was afraid. Something wild
+stirred in her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She listened intensely. Then she heard a small noise in the distance&mdash;far
+away, it seemed&mdash;the chink of a pan, and a man&rsquo;s voice speaking a
+brief word. It would be Maurice, in the other part of the stable. She stood
+motionless, waiting for him to come through the partition door. The horses were
+so terrifyingly near to her, in the invisible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The loud jarring of the inner door-latch made her start; the door was opened.
+She could hear and feel her husband entering and invisibly passing among the
+horses near to her, in darkness as they were, actively intermingled. The rather
+low sound of his voice as he spoke to the horses came velvety to her nerves.
+How near he was, and how invisible! The darkness seemed to be in a strange
+swirl of violent life, just upon her. She turned giddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her presence of mind made her call, quietly and musically:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maurice! Maurice&mdash;dea-ar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Isabel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw nothing, and the sound of his voice seemed to touch her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; she answered cheerfully, straining her eyes to see him. He
+was still busy, attending to the horses near her, but she saw only darkness. It
+made her almost desperate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you come in, dear?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m coming. Just half a minute. <i>Stand over&mdash;now!</i>
+Trap&rsquo;s not come, has it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice was pleasant and ordinary, but it had a slight suggestion of the
+stable to her. She wished he would come away. Whilst he was so utterly
+invisible she was afraid of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How&rsquo;s the time?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not yet six,&rdquo; she replied. She disliked to answer into the dark.
+Presently he came very near to her, and she retreated out of doors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The weather blows in here,&rdquo; he said, coming steadily forward,
+feeling for the doors. She shrank away. At last she could dimly see him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bertie won&rsquo;t have much of a drive,&rdquo; he said, as he closed
+the doors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t indeed!&rdquo; said Isabel calmly, watching the dark
+shape at the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me your arm, dear,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She pressed his arm close to her, as she went. But she longed to see him, to
+look at him. She was nervous. He walked erect, with face rather lifted, but
+with a curious tentative movement of his powerful, muscular legs. She could
+feel the clever, careful, strong contact of his feet with the earth, as she
+balanced against him. For a moment he was a tower of darkness to her, as if he
+rose out of the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the house-passage he wavered, and went cautiously, with a curious look of
+silence about him as he felt for the bench. Then he sat down heavily. He was a
+man with rather sloping shoulders, but with heavy limbs, powerful legs that
+seemed to know the earth. His head was small, usually carried high and light.
+As he bent down to unfasten his gaiters and boots he did not look blind. His
+hair was brown and crisp, his hands were large, reddish, intelligent, the veins
+stood out in the wrists; and his thighs and knees seemed massive. When he stood
+up his face and neck were surcharged with blood, the veins stood out on his
+temples. She did not look at his blindness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel was always glad when they had passed through the dividing door into
+their own regions of repose and beauty. She was a little afraid of him, out
+there in the animal grossness of the back. His bearing also changed, as he
+smelt the familiar, indefinable odour that pervaded his wife&rsquo;s
+surroundings, a delicate, refined scent, very faintly spicy. Perhaps it came
+from the pot-pourri bowls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood at the foot of the stairs, arrested, listening. She watched him, and
+her heart sickened. He seemed to be listening to fate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not here yet,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go up and
+change.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maurice,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re not wishing he
+wouldn&rsquo;t come, are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t quite say,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I feel myself
+rather on the <i>qui vive</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can see you are,&rdquo; she answered. And she reached up and kissed
+his cheek. She saw his mouth relax into a slow smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you laughing at?&rdquo; she said roguishly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You consoling me,&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Why should I console you? You know we
+love each other&mdash;you know <i>how</i> married we are! What does anything
+else matter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing at all, my dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He felt for her face, and touched it, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>You&rsquo;re</i> all right, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; he asked,
+anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m wonderfully all right, love,&rdquo; she answered.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s you I am a little troubled about, at times.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why me?&rdquo; he said, touching her cheeks delicately with the tips of
+his fingers. The touch had an almost hypnotizing effect on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went away upstairs. She saw him mount into the darkness, unseeing and
+unchanging. He did not know that the lamps on the upper corridor were
+unlighted. He went on into the darkness with unchanging step. She heard him in
+the bathroom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pervin moved about almost unconsciously in his familiar surroundings, dark
+though everything was. He seemed to know the presence of objects before he
+touched them. It was a pleasure to him to rock thus through a world of things,
+carried on the flood in a sort of blood-prescience. He did not think much or
+trouble much. So long as he kept this sheer immediacy of blood-contact with the
+substantial world he was happy, he wanted no intervention of visual
+consciousness. In this state there was a certain rich positivity, bordering
+sometimes on rapture. Life seemed to move in him like a tide lapping, and
+advancing, enveloping all things darkly. It was a pleasure to stretch forth the
+hand and meet the unseen object, clasp it, and possess it in pure contact. He
+did not try to remember, to visualize. He did not want to. The new way of
+consciousness substituted itself in him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rich suffusion of this state generally kept him happy, reaching its
+culmination in the consuming passion for his wife. But at times the flow would
+seem to be checked and thrown back. Then it would beat inside him like a
+tangled sea, and he was tortured in the shattered chaos of his own blood. He
+grew to dread this arrest, this throw-back, this chaos inside himself, when he
+seemed merely at the mercy of his own powerful and conflicting elements. How to
+get some measure of control or surety, this was the question. And when the
+question rose maddening in him, he would clench his fists as if he would
+<i>compel</i> the whole universe to submit to him. But it was in vain. He could
+not even compel himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tonight, however, he was still serene, though little tremors of unreasonable
+exasperation ran through him. He had to handle the razor very carefully, as he
+shaved, for it was not at one with him, he was afraid of it. His hearing also
+was too much sharpened. He heard the woman lighting the lamps on the corridor,
+and attending to the fire in the visitor&rsquo;s room. And then, as he went to
+his room he heard the trap arrive. Then came Isabel&rsquo;s voice, lifted and
+calling, like a bell ringing:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it you, Bertie? Have you come?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a man&rsquo;s voice answered out of the wind:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Isabel! There you are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you had a miserable drive? I&rsquo;m so sorry we couldn&rsquo;t
+send a closed carriage. I can&rsquo;t see you at all, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m coming. No, I liked the drive&mdash;it was like Perthshire.
+Well, how are you? You&rsquo;re looking fit as ever, as far as I can
+see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; said Isabel. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m wonderfully well. How are
+you? Rather thin, I think&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Worked to death&mdash;everybody&rsquo;s old cry. But I&rsquo;m all
+right, Ciss. How&rsquo;s Pervin?&mdash;isn&rsquo;t he here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes, he&rsquo;s upstairs changing. Yes, he&rsquo;s awfully well.
+Take off your wet things; I&rsquo;ll send them to be dried.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how are you both, in spirits? He doesn&rsquo;t fret?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no, not at all. No, on the contrary, really. We&rsquo;ve been
+wonderfully happy, incredibly. It&rsquo;s more than I can understand&mdash;so
+wonderful: the nearness, and the peace&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Well, that&rsquo;s awfully good news&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They moved away. Pervin heard no more. But a childish sense of desolation had
+come over him, as he heard their brisk voices. He seemed shut out&mdash;like a
+child that is left out. He was aimless and excluded, he did not know what to do
+with himself. The helpless desolation came over him. He fumbled nervously as he
+dressed himself, in a state almost of childishness. He disliked the Scotch
+accent in Bertie&rsquo;s speech, and the slight response it found on
+Isabel&rsquo;s tongue. He disliked the slight purr of complacency in the
+Scottish speech. He disliked intensely the glib way in which Isabel spoke of
+their happiness and nearness. It made him recoil. He was fretful and beside
+himself like a child, he had almost a childish nostalgia to be included in the
+life circle. And at the same time he was a man, dark and powerful and
+infuriated by his own weakness. By some fatal flaw, he could not be by himself,
+he had to depend on the support of another. And this very dependence enraged
+him. He hated Bertie Reid, and at the same time he knew the hatred was
+nonsense, he knew it was the outcome of his own weakness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went downstairs. Isabel was alone in the dining-room. She watched him enter,
+head erect, his feet tentative. He looked so strong-blooded and healthy, and,
+at the same time, cancelled. Cancelled&mdash;that was the word that flew across
+her mind. Perhaps it was his scars suggested it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You heard Bertie come, Maurice?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;isn&rsquo;t he here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s in his room. He looks very thin and worn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose he works himself to death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A woman came in with a tray&mdash;and after a few minutes Bertie came down. He
+was a little dark man, with a very big forehead, thin, wispy hair, and sad,
+large eyes. His expression was inordinately sad&mdash;almost funny. He had odd,
+short legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel watched him hesitate under the door, and glance nervously at her
+husband. Pervin heard him and turned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here you are, now,&rdquo; said Isabel. &ldquo;Come, let us eat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie went across to Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are you, Pervin,&rdquo; he said, as he advanced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The blind man stuck his hand out into space, and Bertie took it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very fit. Glad you&rsquo;ve come,&rdquo; said Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel glanced at them, and glanced away, as if she could not bear to see them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Come to table. Aren&rsquo;t you both
+awfully hungry? I am, tremendously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid you waited for me,&rdquo; said Bertie, as they sat
+down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice had a curious monolithic way of sitting in a chair, erect and distant.
+Isabel&rsquo;s heart always beat when she caught sight of him thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she replied to Bertie. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re very little later
+than usual. We&rsquo;re having a sort of high tea, not dinner. Do you mind? It
+gives us such a nice long evening, uninterrupted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I like it,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice was feeling, with curious little movements, almost like a cat kneading
+her bed, for his place, his knife and fork, his napkin. He was getting the
+whole geography of his cover into his consciousness. He sat erect and
+inscrutable, remote-seeming Bertie watched the static figure of the blind man,
+the delicate tactile discernment of the large, ruddy hands, and the curious
+mindless silence of the brow, above the scar. With difficulty he looked away,
+and without knowing what he did, picked up a little crystal bowl of violets
+from the table, and held them to his nose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are sweet-scented,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Where do they come
+from?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From the garden&mdash;under the windows,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So late in the year&mdash;and so fragrant! Do you remember the violets
+under Aunt Bell&rsquo;s south wall?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two friends looked at each other and exchanged a smile, Isabel&rsquo;s eyes
+lighting up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t I?&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;<i>Wasn&rsquo;t</i> she
+queer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A curious old girl,&rdquo; laughed Bertie. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a streak
+of freakishness in the family, Isabel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah&mdash;but not in you and me, Bertie,&rdquo; said Isabel. &ldquo;Give
+them to Maurice, will you?&rdquo; she added, as Bertie was putting down the
+flowers. &ldquo;Have you smelled the violets, dear? Do!&mdash;they are so
+scented.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice held out his hand, and Bertie placed the tiny bowl against his large,
+warm-looking fingers. Maurice&rsquo;s hand closed over the thin white fingers
+of the barrister. Bertie carefully extricated himself. Then the two watched the
+blind man smelling the violets. He bent his head and seemed to be thinking.
+Isabel waited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t they sweet, Maurice?&rdquo; she said at last, anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very,&rdquo; he said. And he held out the bowl. Bertie took it. Both he
+and Isabel were a little afraid, and deeply disturbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The meal continued. Isabel and Bertie chatted spasmodically. The blind man was
+silent. He touched his food repeatedly, with quick, delicate touches of his
+knife-point, then cut irregular bits. He could not bear to be helped. Both
+Isabel and Bertie suffered: Isabel wondered why. She did not suffer when she
+was alone with Maurice. Bertie made her conscious of a strangeness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the meal the three drew their chairs to the fire, and sat down to talk.
+The decanters were put on a table near at hand. Isabel knocked the logs on the
+fire, and clouds of brilliant sparks went up the chimney. Bertie noticed a
+slight weariness in her bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will be glad when your child comes now, Isabel?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked up to him with a quick wan smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I shall be glad,&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;It begins to seem
+long. Yes, I shall be very glad. So will you, Maurice, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+she added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I shall,&rdquo; replied her husband.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are both looking forward so much to having it,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, of course,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a bachelor, three or four years older than Isabel. He lived in beautiful
+rooms overlooking the river, guarded by a faithful Scottish man-servant. And he
+had his friends among the fair sex&mdash;not lovers, friends. So long as he
+could avoid any danger of courtship or marriage, he adored a few good women
+with constant and unfailing homage, and he was chivalrously fond of quite a
+number. But if they seemed to encroach on him, he withdrew and detested them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel knew him very well, knew his beautiful constancy, and kindness, also his
+incurable weakness, which made him unable ever to enter into close contact of
+any sort. He was ashamed of himself, because he could not marry, could not
+approach women physically. He wanted to do so. But he could not. At the centre
+of him he was afraid, helplessly and even brutally afraid. He had given up
+hope, had ceased to expect any more that he could escape his own weakness.
+Hence he was a brilliant and successful barrister, also <i>littérateur</i> of
+high repute, a rich man, and a great social success. At the centre he felt
+himself neuter, nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Isabel knew him well. She despised him even while she admired him. She looked
+at his sad face, his little short legs, and felt contempt of him. She looked at
+his dark grey eyes, with their uncanny, almost childlike intuition, and she
+loved him. He understood amazingly&mdash;but she had no fear of his
+understanding. As a man she patronized him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she turned to the impassive, silent figure of her husband. He sat leaning
+back, with folded arms, and face a little uptilted. His knees were straight and
+massive. She sighed, picked up the poker, and again began to prod the fire, to
+rouse the clouds of soft, brilliant sparks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isabel tells me,&rdquo; Bertie began suddenly, &ldquo;that you have not
+suffered unbearably from the loss of sight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice straightened himself to attend, but kept his arms folded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;not unbearably. Now and again one struggles
+against it, you know. But there are compensations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They say it is much worse to be stone deaf,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe it is,&rdquo; said Bertie. &ldquo;Are there
+compensations?&rdquo; he added, to Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. You cease to bother about a great many things.&rdquo; Again Maurice
+stretched his figure, stretched the strong muscles of his back, and leaned
+backwards, with uplifted face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that is a relief,&rdquo; said Bertie. &ldquo;But what is there in
+place of the bothering? What replaces the activity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause. At length the blind man replied, as out of a negligent,
+unattentive thinking:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know. There&rsquo;s a good deal when you&rsquo;re not
+active.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is there?&rdquo; said Bertie. &ldquo;What, exactly? It always seems to
+me that when there is no thought and no action, there is nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Maurice was slow in replying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is something,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t tell you
+what it is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the talk lapsed once more, Isabel and Bertie chatting gossip and
+reminiscence, the blind man silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length Maurice rose restlessly, a big, obtrusive figure. He felt tight and
+hampered. He wanted to go away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mind,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if I go and speak to Wernham?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;go along, dear,&rdquo; said Isabel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he went out. A silence came over the two friends. At length Bertie said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nevertheless, it is a great deprivation, Cissie.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is, Bertie. I know it is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Something lacking all the time,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I know. And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;Maurice is right. There is
+something else, something <i>there</i>, which you never knew was there, and
+which you can&rsquo;t express.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is there?&rdquo; asked Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know&mdash;it&rsquo;s awfully hard to define it&mdash;but
+something strong and immediate. There&rsquo;s something strange in
+Maurice&rsquo;s presence&mdash;indefinable&mdash;but I couldn&rsquo;t do
+without it. I agree that it seems to put one&rsquo;s mind to sleep. But when
+we&rsquo;re alone I miss nothing; it seems awfully rich, almost splendid, you
+know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid I don&rsquo;t follow,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They talked desultorily. The wind blew loudly outside, rain chattered on the
+window-panes, making a sharp, drum-sound, because of the closed, mellow-golden
+shutters inside. The logs burned slowly, with hot, almost invisible small
+flames. Bertie seemed uneasy, there were dark circles round his eyes. Isabel,
+rich with her approaching maternity, leaned looking into the fire. Her hair
+curled in odd, loose strands, very pleasing to the man. But she had a curious
+feeling of old woe in her heart, old, timeless night-woe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose we&rsquo;re all deficient somewhere,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; said Isabel wearily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Damned, sooner or later.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; she said, rousing herself. &ldquo;I feel
+quite all right, you know. The child coming seems to make me indifferent to
+everything, just placid. I can&rsquo;t feel that there&rsquo;s anything to
+trouble about, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A good thing, I should say,&rdquo; he replied slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, there it is. I suppose it&rsquo;s just Nature. If only I felt I
+needn&rsquo;t trouble about Maurice, I should be perfectly
+content&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you feel you must trouble about him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;I don&rsquo;t know&mdash;&rdquo; She even resented this much
+effort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The evening passed slowly. Isabel looked at the clock. &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; she
+said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s nearly ten o&rsquo;clock. Where can Maurice be?
+I&rsquo;m sure they&rsquo;re all in bed at the back. Excuse me a moment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went out, returning almost immediately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all shut up and in darkness,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I wonder
+where he is. He must have gone out to the farm&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose he&rsquo;ll come in,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose so,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But it&rsquo;s unusual for him to
+be out now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you like me to go out and see?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;if you wouldn&rsquo;t mind. I&rsquo;d go, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+She did not want to make the physical effort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie put on an old overcoat and took a lantern. He went out from the side
+door. He shrank from the wet and roaring night. Such weather had a nervous
+effect on him: too much moisture everywhere made him feel almost imbecile.
+Unwilling, he went through it all. A dog barked violently at him. He peered in
+all the buildings. At last, as he opened the upper door of a sort of
+intermediate barn, he heard a grinding noise, and looking in, holding up his
+lantern, saw Maurice, in his shirt-sleeves, standing listening, holding the
+handle of a turnip-pulper. He had been pulping sweet roots, a pile of which lay
+dimly heaped in a corner behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you, Wernham?&rdquo; said Maurice, listening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, it&rsquo;s me,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A large, half-wild grey cat was rubbing at Maurice&rsquo;s leg. The blind man
+stooped to rub its sides. Bertie watched the scene, then unconsciously entered
+and shut the door behind him, He was in a high sort of barn-place, from which,
+right and left, ran off the corridors in front of the stalled cattle. He
+watched the slow, stooping motion of the other man, as he caressed the great
+cat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice straightened himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You came to look for me?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isabel was a little uneasy,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come in. I like messing about doing these jobs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cat had reared her sinister, feline length against his leg, clawing at his
+thigh affectionately. He lifted her claws out of his flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope I&rsquo;m not in your way at all at the Grange here,&rdquo; said
+Bertie, rather shy and stiff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My way? No, not a bit. I&rsquo;m glad Isabel has somebody to talk to.
+I&rsquo;m afraid it&rsquo;s I who am in the way. I know I&rsquo;m not very
+lively company. Isabel&rsquo;s all right, don&rsquo;t you think? She&rsquo;s
+not unhappy, is she?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What does she say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She says she&rsquo;s very content&mdash;only a little troubled about
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps afraid that you might brood,&rdquo; said Bertie, cautiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She needn&rsquo;t be afraid of that.&rdquo; He continued to caress the
+flattened grey head of the cat with his fingers. &ldquo;What I am a bit afraid
+of,&rdquo; he resumed, &ldquo;is that she&rsquo;ll find me a dead weight,
+always alone with me down here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think you need think that,&rdquo; said Bertie, though this
+was what he feared himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Maurice. &ldquo;Sometimes I feel it
+isn&rsquo;t fair that she&rsquo;s saddled with me.&rdquo; Then he dropped his
+voice curiously. &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; he asked, secretly struggling, &ldquo;is
+my face much disfigured? Do you mind telling me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is the scar,&rdquo; said Bertie, wondering. &ldquo;Yes, it is a
+disfigurement. But more pitiable than shocking.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pretty bad scar, though,&rdquo; said Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sometimes I feel I am horrible,&rdquo; said Maurice, in a low voice,
+talking as if to himself. And Bertie actually felt a quiver of horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s nonsense,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice again straightened himself, leaving the cat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no telling,&rdquo; he said. Then again, in an odd tone, he
+added: &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t really know you, do I?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Probably not,&rdquo; said Bertie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mind if I touch you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer shrank away instinctively. And yet, out of very philanthropy, he
+said, in a small voice: &ldquo;Not at all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he suffered as the blind man stretched out a strong, naked hand to him.
+Maurice accidentally knocked off Bertie&rsquo;s hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought you were taller,&rdquo; he said, starting. Then he laid his
+hand on Bertie Reid&rsquo;s head, closing the dome of the skull in a soft, firm
+grasp, gathering it, as it were; then, shifting his grasp and softly closing
+again, with a fine, close pressure, till he had covered the skull and the face
+of the smaller man, tracing the brows, and touching the full, closed eyes,
+touching the small nose and the nostrils, the rough, short moustache, the
+mouth, the rather strong chin. The hand of the blind man grasped the shoulder,
+the arm, the hand of the other man. He seemed to take him, in the soft,
+travelling grasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You seem young,&rdquo; he said quietly, at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer stood almost annihilated, unable to answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your head seems tender, as if you were young,&rdquo; Maurice repeated.
+&ldquo;So do your hands. Touch my eyes, will you?&mdash;touch my scar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Bertie quivered with revulsion. Yet he was under the power of the blind
+man, as if hypnotized. He lifted his hand, and laid the fingers on the scar, on
+the scarred eyes. Maurice suddenly covered them with his own hand, pressed the
+fingers of the other man upon his disfigured eye-sockets, trembling in every
+fibre, and rocking slightly, slowly, from side to side. He remained thus for a
+minute or more, whilst Bertie stood as if in a swoon, unconscious, imprisoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly Maurice removed the hand of the other man from his brow, and
+stood holding it in his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, my God&rsquo; he said, &ldquo;we shall know each other now,
+shan&rsquo;t we? We shall know each other now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie could not answer. He gazed mute and terror-struck, overcome by his own
+weakness. He knew he could not answer. He had an unreasonable fear, lest the
+other man should suddenly destroy him. Whereas Maurice was actually filled with
+hot, poignant love, the passion of friendship. Perhaps it was this very passion
+of friendship which Bertie shrank from most.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all right together now, aren&rsquo;t we?&rdquo; said
+Maurice. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right now, as long as we live, so far as
+we&rsquo;re concerned?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Bertie, trying by any means to escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maurice stood with head lifted, as if listening. The new delicate fulfilment of
+mortal friendship had come as a revelation and surprise to him, something
+exquisite and unhoped-for. He seemed to be listening to hear if it were real.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned for his coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll go to Isabel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bertie took the lantern and opened the door. The cat disappeared. The two men
+went in silence along the causeways. Isabel, as they came, thought their
+footsteps sounded strange. She looked up pathetically and anxiously for their
+entrance. There seemed a curious elation about Maurice. Bertie was haggard,
+with sunken eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve become friends,&rdquo; said Maurice, standing with his feet
+apart, like a strange colossus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Friends!&rdquo; re-echoed Isabel. And she looked again at Bertie. He met
+her eyes with a furtive, haggard look; his eyes were as if glazed with misery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m so glad,&rdquo; she said, in sheer perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Maurice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was indeed so glad. Isabel took his hand with both hers, and held it fast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be happier now, dear,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was watching Bertie. She knew that he had one desire&mdash;to escape
+from this intimacy, this friendship, which had been thrust upon him. He could
+not bear it that he had been touched by the blind man, his insane reserve
+broken in. He was like a mollusc whose shell is broken.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>MONKEY NUTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+At first Joe thought the job O.K. He was loading hay on the trucks, along with
+Albert, the corporal. The two men were pleasantly billeted in a cottage not far
+from the station: they were their own masters, for Joe never thought of Albert
+as a master. And the little sidings of the tiny village station was as pleasant
+a place as you could wish for. On one side, beyond the line, stretched the
+woods: on the other, the near side, across a green smooth field red houses were
+dotted among flowering apple trees. The weather being sunny, work being easy,
+Albert, a real good pal, what life could be better! After Flanders, it was
+heaven itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert, the corporal, was a clean-shaven, shrewd-looking fellow of about forty.
+He seemed to think his one aim in life was to be full of fun and nonsense. In
+repose, his face looked a little withered, old. He was a very good pal to Joe,
+steady, decent and grave under all his &ldquo;mischief&rdquo;; for his mischief
+was only his laborious way of skirting his own <i>ennui</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe was much younger than Albert&mdash;only twenty-three. He was a tallish,
+quiet youth, pleasant looking. He was of a slightly better class than his
+corporal, more personable. Careful about his appearance, he shaved every day.
+&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t got much of a face,&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;If I was
+to shave every day like you, Joe, I should have none.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was plenty of life in the little goods-yard: three porter youths, a
+continual come and go of farm wagons bringing hay, wagons with timber from the
+woods, coal carts loading at the trucks. The black coal seemed to make the
+place sleepier, hotter. Round the big white gate the station-master&rsquo;s
+children played and his white chickens walked, whilst the stationmaster
+himself, a young man getting too fat, helped his wife to peg out the washing on
+the clothes line in the meadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great boat-shaped wagons came up from Playcross with the hay. At first the
+farm-men waggoned it. On the third day one of the land-girls appeared with the
+first load, drawing to a standstill easily at the head of her two great horses.
+She was a buxom girl, young, in linen overalls and gaiters. Her face was ruddy,
+she had large blue eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now that&rsquo;s the waggoner for us, boys,&rdquo; said the corporal
+loudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo; she said to her horses; and then to the corporal:
+&ldquo;Which boys do you mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are the pick of the bunch. That&rsquo;s Joe, my pal. Don&rsquo;t you
+let on that my name&rsquo;s Albert,&rdquo; said the corporal to his private.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m the corporal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m Miss Stokes,&rdquo; said the land-girl coolly, &ldquo;if
+that&rsquo;s all the boys you are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know you couldn&rsquo;t want more, Miss Stokes,&rdquo; said Albert
+politely. Joe, who was bare-headed, whose grey flannel sleeves were rolled up
+to the elbow, and whose shirt was open at the breast, looked modestly aside as
+if he had no part in the affair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you on this job regular, then?&rdquo; said the corporal to Miss
+Stokes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know for sure,&rdquo; she said, pushing a piece of hair
+under her hat, and attending to her splendid horses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, make it a certainty,&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not reply. She turned and looked over the two men coolly. She was
+pretty, moderately blonde, with crisp hair, a good skin, and large blue eyes.
+She was strong, too, and the work went on leisurely and easily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now!&rdquo; said the corporal, stopping as usual to look round,
+&ldquo;pleasant company makes work a pleasure&mdash;don&rsquo;t hurry it,
+boys.&rdquo; He stood on the truck surveying the world. That was one of his
+great and absorbing occupations: to stand and look out on things in general.
+Joe, also standing on the truck, also turned round to look what was to be seen.
+But he could not become blankly absorbed, as Albert could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes watched the two men from under her broad felt hat. She had seen
+hundreds of Alberts, khaki soldiers standing in loose attitudes, absorbed in
+watching nothing in particular. She had seen also a good many Joes, quiet,
+good-looking young soldiers with half-averted faces. But there was something in
+the turn of Joe&rsquo;s head, and something in his quiet, tender-looking form,
+young and fresh&mdash;which attracted her eye. As she watched him closely from
+below, he turned as if he felt her, and his dark-blue eye met her straight,
+light-blue gaze. He faltered and turned aside again and looked as if he were
+going to fall off the truck. A slight flush mounted under the girl&rsquo;s
+full, ruddy face. She liked him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Always, after this, when she came into the sidings with her team, it was Joe
+she looked for. She acknowledged to herself that she was sweet on him. But
+Albert did all the talking. He was so full of fun and nonsense. Joe was a very
+shy bird, very brief and remote in his answers. Miss Stokes was driven to
+indulge in repartee with Albert, but she fixed her magnetic attention on the
+younger fellow. Joe would talk with Albert, and laugh at his jokes. But Miss
+Stokes could get little out of him. She had to depend on her silent forces.
+They were more effective than might be imagined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly, on Saturday afternoon, at about two o&rsquo;clock, Joe received a
+bolt from the blue&mdash;a telegram: &ldquo;Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m.
+today. M.S.&rdquo; He knew at once who M.S. was. His heart melted, he felt weak
+as if he had had a blow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble, boy?&rdquo; asked Albert anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no trouble&mdash;it&rsquo;s to meet somebody.&rdquo; Joe lifted
+his dark-blue eyes in confusion towards his corporal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Meet somebody!&rdquo; repeated the corporal, watching his young pal with
+keen blue eyes. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right, then; nothing wrong?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;nothing wrong. I&rsquo;m not going,&rdquo; said Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert was old and shrewd enough to see that nothing more should be said before
+the housewife. He also saw that Joe did not want to take him into confidence.
+So he held his peace, though he was piqued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two soldiers went into town, smartened up. Albert knew a fair number of the
+boys round about; there would be plenty of gossip in the market-place, plenty
+of lounging in groups on the Bath Road, watching the Saturday evening shoppers.
+Then a modest drink or two, and the movies. They passed an agreeable, casual,
+nothing-in-particular evening, with which Joe was quite satisfied. He thought
+of Belbury Station, and of M.S. waiting there. He had not the faintest
+intention of meeting her. And he had not the faintest intention of telling
+Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, when the two men were in their bedroom, half undressed, Joe suddenly
+held out the telegram to his corporal, saying: &ldquo;What d&rsquo;you think of
+that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert was just unbuttoning his braces. He desisted, took the telegram form,
+and turned towards the candle to read it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today. M.S.</i>,&rdquo; he read,
+<i>sotto voce</i>. His face took on its fun-and-nonsense look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s M.S.?&rdquo; he asked, looking shrewdly at Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know as well as I do,&rdquo; said Joe, non-committal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;M.S.,&rdquo; repeated Albert. &ldquo;Blamed if I know, boy. Is it a
+woman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The conversation was carried on in tiny voices, for fear of disturbing the
+householders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Joe, turning. He looked full at Albert,
+the two men looked straight into each other&rsquo;s eyes. There was a lurking
+grin in each of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m&mdash;<i>blamed!</i>&rdquo; said Albert at last,
+throwing the telegram down emphatically on the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wha-at?&rdquo; said Joe, grinning rather sheepishly, his eyes clouded
+none the less.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert sat on the bed and proceeded to undress, nodding his head with mock
+gravity all the while. Joe watched him foolishly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he repeated faintly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert looked up at him with a knowing look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If that isn&rsquo;t coming it quick, boy!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What
+the blazes! What ha&rsquo; you bin doing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; said Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert slowly shook his head as he sat on the side of the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t happen to me when I&rsquo;ve bin doin&rsquo; nothing,&rdquo;
+he said. And he proceeded to pull off his stockings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned away, looking at himself in the mirror as he unbuttoned his tunic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t want to keep the appointment?&rdquo; Albert asked, in a
+changed voice, from the bedside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe did not answer for a moment. Then he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I made no appointment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not saying you did, boy. Don&rsquo;t be nasty about it. I mean
+you didn&rsquo;t want to answer the&mdash;unknown person&rsquo;s
+summons&mdash;shall I put it that way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was the deterring motive?&rdquo; asked Albert, who was now lying on
+his back in bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Joe, suddenly looking round rather haughtily. &ldquo;I
+didn&rsquo;t want to.&rdquo; He had a well-balanced head, and could take on a
+sudden distant bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t want to&mdash;didn&rsquo;t cotton on, like.
+Well&mdash;<i>they be artful, the women</i>&mdash;&rdquo; he mimicked his
+landlord. &ldquo;Come on into bed, boy. Don&rsquo;t loiter about as if
+you&rsquo;d lost something.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert turned over, to sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Monday Miss Stokes turned up as usual, striding beside her team. Her
+&ldquo;whoa!&rdquo; was resonant and challenging, she looked up at the truck as
+her steeds came to a standstill. Joe had turned aside, and had his face averted
+from her. She glanced him over&mdash;save for his slender succulent tenderness
+she would have despised him. She sized him up in a steady look. Then she turned
+to Albert, who was looking down at her and smiling in his mischievous turn. She
+knew his aspects by now. She looked straight back at him, though her eyes were
+hot. He saluted her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Beautiful morning, Miss Stokes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very!&rdquo; she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Handsome is as handsome looks,&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Which produced no response.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Joe, come on here,&rdquo; said the corporal. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+keep the ladies waiting&mdash;it&rsquo;s the sign of a weak heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned, and the work began. Nothing more was said for the time being. As
+the week went on all parties became more comfortable. Joe remained silent,
+averted, neutral, a little on his dignity. Miss Stokes was off-hand and
+masterful. Albert was full of mischief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great theme was a circus, which was coming to the market town on the
+following Saturday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll go to the circus, Miss Stokes?&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may go. Are you going?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly. Give us the pleasure of escorting you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, thanks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I call a flat refusal&mdash;what, Joe? You don&rsquo;t
+mean that you have no liking for our company, Miss Stokes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Miss Stokes. &ldquo;How many are
+there of you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only me and Joe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, is that all?&rdquo; she said, satirically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert was a little nonplussed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that enough for you?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too many by half,&rdquo; blurted out Joe, jeeringly, in a sudden fit of
+uncouth rudeness that made both the others stare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll stand out of the way, boy, if that&rsquo;s it,&rdquo;
+said Albert to Joe. Then he turned mischievously to Miss Stokes. &ldquo;He
+wants to know what M. stands for,&rdquo; he said, confidentially.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Monkeys,&rdquo; she replied, turning to her horses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s M.S.?&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Monkey-nuts,&rdquo; she retorted, leading off her team.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert looked after her a little discomfited. Joe had flushed dark, and cursed
+Albert in his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the Saturday afternoon the two soldiers took the train into town. They would
+have to walk home. They had tea at six o&rsquo;clock, and lounged about till
+half past seven. The circus was in a meadow near the river&mdash;a great
+red-and-white striped tent. Caravans stood at the side. A great crowd of people
+was gathered round the ticket-caravan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inside the tent the lamps were lighted, shining on a ring of faces, a great
+circular bank of faces round the green grassy centre. Along with some comrades,
+the two soldiers packed themselves on a thin plank seat, rather high. They were
+delighted with the flaring lights, the wild effect. But the circus performance
+did not affect them deeply. They admired the lady in black velvet with
+rose-purple legs who leapt so neatly on to the galloping horse; they watched
+the feats of strength and laughed at the clown. But they felt a little
+patronizing, they missed the sensational drama of the cinema.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half-way through the performance Joe was electrified to see the face of Miss
+Stokes not very far from him. There she was, in her khaki and her felt hat, as
+usual; he pretended not to see her. She was laughing at the clown; she also
+pretended not to see him. It was a blow to him, and it made him angry. He would
+not even mention it to Albert. Least said, soonest mended. He liked to believe
+she had not seen him. But he knew, fatally, that she had.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they came out it was nearly eleven o&rsquo;clock; a lovely night, with a
+moon and tall, dark, noble trees: a magnificent May night. Joe and Albert
+laughed and chaffed with the boys. Joe looked round frequently to see if he
+were safe from Miss Stokes. It seemed so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there were six miles to walk home. At last the two soldiers set off,
+swinging their canes. The road was white between tall hedges, other stragglers
+were passing out of the town towards the villages; the air was full of pleased
+excitement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were drawing near to the village when they saw a dark figure ahead.
+Joe&rsquo;s heart sank with pure fear. It was a figure wheeling a bicycle; a
+land girl; Miss Stokes. Albert was ready with his nonsense. Miss Stokes had a
+puncture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me wheel the rattler,&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Miss Stokes. &ldquo;You <i>are</i> kind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;d be kinder than that, if you&rsquo;d show me how,&rdquo;
+said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo; said Miss Stokes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doubt my words?&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s cruel of you,
+Miss Stokes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes walked between them, close to Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you been to the circus?&rdquo; she asked him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied, mildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have <i>you</i> been?&rdquo; Albert asked her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. I didn&rsquo;t see you,&rdquo; she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What!&mdash;you say so! Didn&rsquo;t see us! Didn&rsquo;t think us worth
+looking at,&rdquo; began Albert. &ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t I as handsome as the
+clown, now? And you didn&rsquo;t as much as glance in our direction? I call it
+a downright oversight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never <i>saw</i> you,&rdquo; reiterated Miss Stokes. &ldquo;I
+didn&rsquo;t know you saw me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That makes it worse,&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road passed through a belt of dark pine-wood. The village, and the branch
+road, was very near. Miss Stokes put out her fingers and felt for Joe&rsquo;s
+hand as it swung at his side. To say he was staggered is to put it mildly. Yet
+he allowed her softly to clasp his fingers for a few moments. But he was a
+mortified youth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the cross-road they stopped&mdash;Miss Stokes should turn off. She had
+another mile to go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll let us see you home,&rdquo; said Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do me a kindness,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Put my bike in your shed, and
+take it to Baker&rsquo;s on Monday, will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll sit up all night and mend it for you, if you like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No thanks. And Joe and I&rsquo;ll walk on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh&mdash;ho! Oh&mdash;ho!&rdquo; sang Albert. &ldquo;Joe! Joe! What do
+you say to that, now, boy? Aren&rsquo;t you in luck&rsquo;s way. And I get the
+bloomin&rsquo; old bike for my pal. Consider it again, Miss Stokes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned aside his face, and did not speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well! I wheel the grid, do I? I leave you, boy&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not keen on going any further,&rdquo; barked out Joe, in an
+uncouth voice. &ldquo;She hain&rsquo;t my choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl stood silent, and watched the two men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There now!&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;Think o&rsquo; that! If it was
+<i>me</i> now&mdash;&rdquo; But he was uncomfortable. &ldquo;Well, Miss Stokes,
+have me,&rdquo; he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes stood quite still, neither moved nor spoke. And so the three
+remained for some time at the lane end. At last Joe began kicking the
+ground&mdash;then he suddenly lifted his face. At that moment Miss Stokes was
+at his side. She put her arm delicately round his waist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seems I&rsquo;m the one extra, don&rsquo;t you think?&rdquo; Albert
+inquired of the high bland moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe had dropped his head and did not answer. Miss Stokes stood with her arm
+lightly round his waist. Albert bowed, saluted, and bade good-night. He walked
+away, leaving the two standing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes put a light pressure on Joe&rsquo;s waist, and drew him down the
+road. They walked in silence. The night was full of scent&mdash;wild cherry,
+the first bluebells. Still they walked in silence. A nightingale was singing.
+They approached nearer and nearer, till they stood close by his dark bush. The
+powerful notes sounded from the cover, almost like flashes of light&mdash;then
+the interval of silence&mdash;then the moaning notes, almost like a dog faintly
+howling, followed by the long, rich trill, and flashing notes. Then a short
+silence again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes turned at last to Joe. She looked up at him, and in the moonlight
+he saw her faintly smiling. He felt maddened, but helpless. Her arm was round
+his waist, she drew him closely to her with a soft pressure that made all his
+bones rotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Albert was waiting at home. He put on his overcoat, for the fire was
+out, and he had had malarial fever. He looked fitfully at the <i>Daily
+Mirror</i> and the <i>Daily Sketch</i>, but he saw nothing. It seemed a long
+time. He began to yawn widely, even to nod. At last Joe came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert looked at him keenly. The young man&rsquo;s brow was black, his face
+sullen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, boy?&rdquo; asked Albert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe merely grunted for a reply. There was nothing more to be got out of him. So
+they went to bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next day Joe was silent, sullen. Albert could make nothing of him. He proposed
+a walk after tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going somewhere,&rdquo; said Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&mdash;Monkey-nuts?&rdquo; asked the corporal. But Joe&rsquo;s brow
+only became darker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the days went by. Almost every evening Joe went off alone, returning late.
+He was sullen, taciturn and had a hang-dog look, a curious way of dropping his
+head and looking dangerously from under his brows. And he and Albert did not
+get on so well any more with one another. For all his fun and nonsense, Albert
+was really irritable, soon made angry. And Joe&rsquo;s stand-offish sulkiness
+and complete lack of confidence riled him, got on his nerves. His fun and
+nonsense took a biting, sarcastic turn, at which Joe&rsquo;s eyes glittered
+occasionally, though the young man turned unheeding aside. Then again Joe would
+be full of odd, whimsical fun, outshining Albert himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Stokes still came to the station with the wain: Monkey-nuts, Albert called
+her, though not to her face. For she was very clear and good-looking, almost
+she seemed to gleam. And Albert was a tiny bit afraid of her. She very rarely
+addressed Joe whilst the hay-loading was going on, and that young man always
+turned his back to her. He seemed thinner, and his limber figure looked more
+slouching. But still it had the tender, attractive appearance, especially from
+behind. His tanned face, a little thinned and darkened, took a handsome,
+slightly sinister look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on, Joe!&rdquo; the corporal urged sharply one day.
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;re you doing, boy? Looking for beetles on the bank?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned round swiftly, almost menacing, to work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a different fellow these days, Miss Stokes,&rdquo; said
+Albert to the young woman. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s got him? Is it Monkey-nuts that
+don&rsquo;t suit him, do you think?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Choked with chaff, more like,&rdquo; she retorted. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s as
+bad as feeding a threshing machine, to have to listen to some folks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As bad as what?&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean me, do
+you, Miss Stokes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe&rsquo;s face became dark red during these sallies, but he said nothing. He
+would eye the young woman curiously, as she swung so easily at the work, and he
+had some of the look of a dog which is going to bite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert, with his nerves on edge, began to find the strain rather severe. The
+next Saturday evening, when Joe came in more black-browed than ever, he watched
+him, determined to have it out with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the boy went upstairs to bed, the corporal followed him. He closed the
+door behind him carefully, sat on the bed and watched the younger man
+undressing. And for once he spoke in a natural voice, neither chaffing nor
+commanding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s gone wrong, boy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe stopped a moment as if he had been shot. Then he went on unwinding his
+puttees, and did not answer or look up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can hear, can&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; said Albert, nettled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I can hear,&rdquo; said Joe, stooping over his puttees till his
+face was purple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then why don&rsquo;t you answer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe sat up. He gave a long, sideways look at the corporal. Then he lifted his
+eyes and stared at a crack in the ceiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The corporal watched these movements shrewdly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And <i>then</i> what?&rdquo; he asked, ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Joe turned and stared him in the face. The corporal smiled very slightly,
+but kindly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;ll be murder done one of these days,&rdquo; said Joe, in a
+quiet, unimpassioned voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So long as it&rsquo;s by daylight&mdash;&rdquo; replied Albert. Then he
+went over, sat down by Joe, put his hand on his shoulder affectionately, and
+continued, &ldquo;What is it, boy? What&rsquo;s gone wrong? You can trust me,
+can&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned and looked curiously at the face so near to his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s nothing, that&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; he said laconically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then who&rsquo;s going to be murdered?&mdash;and who&rsquo;s going to do
+the murdering?&mdash;me or you&mdash;which is it, boy?&rdquo; He smiled gently
+at the stupid youth, looking straight at him all the while, into his eyes.
+Gradually the stupid, hunted, glowering look died out of Joe&rsquo;s eyes. He
+turned his head aside, gently, as one rousing from a spell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want her,&rdquo; he said, with fierce resentment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you needn&rsquo;t have her,&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;What do you
+go for, boy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it wasn&rsquo;t as simple as all that. Joe made no remark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s a smart-looking girl. What&rsquo;s wrong with her, my boy? I
+should have thought you were a lucky chap, myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want &rsquo;er,&rdquo; Joe barked, with ferocity and
+resentment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then tell her so and have done,&rdquo; said Albert. He waited awhile.
+There was no response. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because I don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; confessed Joe, sulkily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Albert pondered&mdash;rubbed his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re too soft-hearted, that&rsquo;s where it is, boy. You want
+your mettle dipping in cold water, to temper it. You&rsquo;re too
+soft-hearted&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laid his arm affectionately across the shoulders of the younger man. Joe
+seemed to yield a little towards him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When are you going to see her again?&rdquo; Albert asked. For a long
+time there was no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When is it, boy?&rdquo; persisted the softened voice of the corporal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tomorrow,&rdquo; confessed Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then let me go,&rdquo; said Albert. &ldquo;Let me go, will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morrow was Sunday, a sunny day, but a cold evening. The sky was grey, the
+new foliage very green, but the air was chill and depressing. Albert walked
+briskly down the white road towards Beeley. He crossed a larch plantation, and
+followed a narrow by-road, where blue speedwell flowers fell from the banks
+into the dust. He walked swinging his cane, with mixed sensations. Then having
+gone a certain length, he turned and began to walk in the opposite direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he saw a young woman approaching him. She was wearing a wide hat of grey
+straw, and a loose, swinging dress of nigger-grey velvet. She walked with slow
+inevitability. Albert faltered a little as he approached her. Then he saluted
+her, and his roguish, slightly withered skin flushed. She was staring straight
+into his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He fell in by her side, saying impudently:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so nice for a walk as it was, is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She only stared at him. He looked back at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve seen me before, you know,&rdquo; he said, grinning
+slightly. &ldquo;Perhaps you never noticed me. Oh, I&rsquo;m quite nice
+looking, in a quiet way, you know. What&mdash;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Miss Stokes did not speak: she only stared with large, icy blue eyes at
+him. He became self-conscious, lifted up his chin, walked with his nose in the
+air, and whistled at random. So they went down the quiet, deserted grey lane.
+He was whistling the air: &ldquo;I&rsquo;m Gilbert, the filbert, the colonel of
+the nuts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last she found her voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Joe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He thought you&rsquo;d like a change: they say variety&rsquo;s the salt
+of life&mdash;that&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;m mostly in pickle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Am I my brother&rsquo;s keeper? He&rsquo;s gone his own ways.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, how am I to know? Not so far but he&rsquo;ll be back for
+supper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped in the middle of the lane. He stopped facing her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Joe?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He struck a careless attitude, looked down the road this way and that, lifted
+his eyebrows, pushed his khaki cap on one side, and answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is not conducting the service tonight: he asked me if I&rsquo;d
+officiate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why hasn&rsquo;t he come?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t want to, I expect. <i>I</i> wanted to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stared him up and down, and he felt uncomfortable in his spine, but
+maintained his air of nonchalance. Then she turned slowly on her heel, and
+started to walk back. The corporal went at her side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not going back, are you?&rdquo; he pleaded. &ldquo;Why, me
+and you, we should get on like a house on fire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took no heed, but walked on. He went uncomfortably at her side, making his
+funny remarks from time to time. But she was as if stone deaf. He glanced at
+her, and to his dismay saw the tears running down her cheeks. He stopped
+suddenly, and pushed back his cap.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say, you know&mdash;&rdquo; he began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was walking on like an automaton, and he had to hurry after her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She never spoke to him. At the gate of her farm she walked straight in, as if
+he were not there. He watched her disappear. Then he turned on his heel,
+cursing silently, puzzled, lifting off his cap to scratch his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night, when they were in bed, he remarked: &ldquo;Say, Joe, boy; strikes
+me you&rsquo;re well-off without Monkey-nuts. Gord love us, beans ain&rsquo;t
+in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they slept in amity. But they waited with some anxiety for the morrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a cold morning, a grey sky shifting in a cold wind, and threatening
+rain. They watched the wagon come up the road and through the yard gates. Miss
+Stokes was with her team as usual; her &ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo; rang out like a
+war-whoop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She faced up at the truck where the two men stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joe!&rdquo; she called, to the averted figure which stood up in the
+wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he turned unwillingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made a queer movement, lifting her head slightly in a sipping,
+half-inviting, half-commanding gesture. And Joe was crouching already to jump
+off the truck to obey her, when Albert put his hand on his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Half a minute, boy! Where are you off? Work&rsquo;s work, and nuts is
+nuts. You stop here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe slowly straightened himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joe!&rdquo; came the woman&rsquo;s clear call from below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Joe looked at her. But Albert&rsquo;s hand was on his shoulder, detaining
+him. He stood half averted, with his tail between his legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take your hand off him, you!&rdquo; said Miss Stokes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Major,&rdquo; retorted Albert satirically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood and watched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joe!&rdquo; Her voice rang for the third time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe turned and looked at her, and a slow, jeering smile gathered on his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Monkey-nuts!&rdquo; he replied, in a tone mocking her call.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned white&mdash;dead white. The men thought she would fall. Albert began
+yelling to the porters up the line to come and help with the load. He could
+yell like any non-commissioned officer upon occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some way or other the wagon was unloaded, the girl was gone. Joe and his
+corporal looked at one another and smiled slowly. But they had a weight on
+their minds, they were afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were reassured, however, when they found that Miss Stokes came no more
+with the hay. As far as they were concerned, she had vanished into oblivion.
+And Joe felt more relieved even than he had felt when he heard the firing
+cease, after the news had come that the armistice was signed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>WINTRY PEACOCK</h2>
+
+<p>
+There was thin, crisp snow on the ground, the sky was blue, the wind very cold,
+the air clear. Farmers were just turning out the cows for an hour or so in the
+midday, and the smell of cow-sheds was unendurable as I entered Tible. I
+noticed the ash-twigs up in the sky were pale and luminous, passing into the
+blue. And then I saw the peacocks. There they were in the road before me, three
+of them, and tailless, brown, speckled birds, with dark-blue necks and ragged
+crests. They stepped archly over the filigree snow, and their bodies moved with
+slow motion, like small, light, flat-bottomed boats. I admired them, they were
+curious. Then a gust of wind caught them, heeled them over as if they were
+three frail boats opening their feathers like ragged sails. They hopped and
+skipped with discomfort, to get out of the draught of the wind. And then, in
+the lee of the walls, they resumed their arch, wintry motion, light and
+unballasted now their tails were gone, indifferent. They were indifferent to my
+presence. I might have touched them. They turned off to the shelter of an open
+shed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I passed the end of the upper house, I saw a young woman just coming out of
+the back door. I had spoken to her in the summer. She recognised me at once,
+and waved to me. She was carrying a pail, wearing a white apron that was longer
+than her preposterously short skirt, and she had on the cotton bonnet. I took
+off my hat to her and was going on. But she put down her pail and darted with a
+swift, furtive movement after me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mind waiting a minute?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be out
+in a minute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gave me a slight, odd smile, and ran back. Her face was long and sallow and
+her nose rather red. But her gloomy black eyes softened caressively to me for a
+moment, with that momentary humility which makes a man lord of the earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood in the road, looking at the fluffy, dark-red young cattle that mooed
+and seemed to bark at me. They seemed happy, frisky cattle, a little impudent,
+and either determined to go back into the warm shed, or determined not to go
+back, I could not decide which.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the woman came forward again, her head rather ducked. But she looked
+up at me and smiled, with that odd, immediate intimacy, something witch-like
+and impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sorry to keep you waiting,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Shall we stand in
+this cart-shed&mdash;it will be more out of the wind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we stood among the shafts of the open cart-shed that faced the road. Then
+she looked down at the ground, a little sideways, and I noticed a small black
+frown on her brows. She seemed to brood for a moment. Then she looked straight
+into my eyes, so that I blinked and wanted to turn my face aside. She was
+searching me for something and her look was too near. The frown was still on
+her keen, sallow brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you speak French?&rdquo; she asked me abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More or less,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was supposed to learn it at school,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But I
+don&rsquo;t know a word.&rdquo; She ducked her head and laughed, with a
+slightly ugly grimace and a rolling of her black eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No good keeping your mind full of scraps,&rdquo; I answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she had turned aside her sallow, long face, and did not hear what I said.
+Suddenly again she looked at me. She was searching. And at the same time she
+smiled at me, and her eyes looked softly, darkly, with infinite trustful
+humility into mine. I was being cajoled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you mind reading a letter for me, in French,&rdquo; she said, her
+face immediately black and bitter-looking. She glanced at me, frowning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a letter to my husband,&rdquo; she said, still scrutinizing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked at her, and didn&rsquo;t quite realise. She looked too far into me, my
+wits were gone. She glanced round. Then she looked at me shrewdly. She drew a
+letter from her pocket, and handed it to me. It was addressed from France to
+Lance-Corporal Goyte, at Tible. I took out the letter and began to read it, as
+mere words. &ldquo;<i>Mon cher Alfred</i>&rdquo;&mdash;it might have been a bit
+of a torn newspaper. So I followed the script: the trite phrases of a letter
+from a French-speaking girl to an English soldier. &ldquo;I think of you
+always, always. Do you think sometimes of me?&rdquo; And then I vaguely
+realised that I was reading a man&rsquo;s private correspondence. And yet, how
+could one consider these trivial, facile French phrases private! Nothing more
+trite and vulgar in the world, than such a love-letter&mdash;no newspaper more
+obvious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Therefore I read with a callous heart the effusions of the Belgian damsel. But
+then I gathered my attention. For the letter went on, &ldquo;<i>Notre cher
+petit bébé</i>&mdash;our dear little baby was born a week ago. Almost I died,
+knowing you were far away, and perhaps forgetting the fruit of our perfect
+love. But the child comforted me. He has the smiling eyes and virile air of his
+English father. I pray to the Mother of Jesus to send me the dear father of my
+child, that I may see him with my child in his arms, and that we may be united
+in holy family love. Ah, my Alfred, can I tell you how I miss you, how I weep
+for you. My thoughts are with you always, I think of nothing but you, I live
+for nothing but you and our dear baby. If you do not come back to me soon, I
+shall die, and our child will die. But no, you cannot come back to me. But I
+can come to you, come to England with our child. If you do not wish to present
+me to your good mother and father, you can meet me in some town, some city, for
+I shall be so frightened to be alone in England with my child, and no one to
+take care of us. Yet I must come to you, I must bring my child, my little
+Alfred to his father, the big, beautiful Alfred that I love so much. Oh, write
+and tell me where I shall come. I have some money, I am not a penniless
+creature. I have money for myself and my dear baby&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I read to the end. It was signed: &ldquo;Your very happy and still more unhappy
+Élise.&rdquo; I suppose I must have been smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can see it makes you laugh,&rdquo; said Mrs. Goyte, sardonically. I
+looked up at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a love-letter, I know that,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s too many &lsquo;Alfreds&rsquo; in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One too many,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes&mdash;And what does she say&mdash;Eliza? We know her
+name&rsquo;s Eliza, that&rsquo;s another thing.&rdquo; She grimaced a little,
+looking up at me with a mocking laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where did you get this letter?&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Postman gave it me last week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And is your husband at home?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I expect him home tonight. He&rsquo;s been wounded, you know, and
+we&rsquo;ve been applying for him home. He was home about six weeks
+ago&mdash;he&rsquo;s been in Scotland since then. Oh, he was wounded in the
+leg. Yes, he&rsquo;s all right, a great strapping fellow. But he&rsquo;s lame,
+he limps a bit. He expects he&rsquo;ll get his discharge&mdash;but I
+don&rsquo;t think he will. We married? We&rsquo;ve been married six
+years&mdash;and he joined up the first day of the war. Oh, he thought
+he&rsquo;d like the life. He&rsquo;d been through the South African War. No, he
+was sick of it, fed up. I&rsquo;m living with his father and
+mother&mdash;I&rsquo;ve no home of my own now. My people had a big
+farm&mdash;over a thousand acres&mdash;in Oxfordshire. Not like here&mdash;no.
+Oh, they&rsquo;re very good to me, his father and mother. Oh, yes, they
+couldn&rsquo;t be better. They think more of me than of their own daughters.
+But it&rsquo;s not like being in a place of your own, is it? You can&rsquo;t
+<i>really</i> do as you like. No, there&rsquo;s only me and his father and
+mother at home. Before the war? Oh, he was anything. He&rsquo;s had a good
+education&mdash;but he liked the farming better. Then he was a chauffeur.
+That&rsquo;s how he knew French. He was driving a gentleman in France for a
+long time&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this point the peacocks came round the corner on a puff of wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Joey!&rdquo; she called, and one of the birds came forward, on
+delicate legs. Its grey speckled back was very elegant, it rolled its full,
+dark-blue neck as it moved to her. She crouched down. &ldquo;Joey, dear,&rdquo;
+she said, in an odd, saturnine caressive voice, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re bound to
+find me, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; She put her face forward, and the bird rolled
+his neck, almost touching her face with his beak, as if kissing her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He loves you,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She twisted her face up at me with a laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he loves me, Joey does,&rdquo;&mdash;then,
+to the bird&mdash;&ldquo;and I love Joey, don&rsquo;t I. I <i>do</i> love
+Joey.&rdquo; And she smoothed his feathers for a moment. Then she rose, saying:
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s an affectionate bird.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I smiled at the roll of her &ldquo;bir-rrd&rsquo;.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes, he is,&rdquo; she protested. &ldquo;He came with me from my
+home seven years ago. Those others are his descendants&mdash;but they&rsquo;re
+not like Joey&mdash;<i>are they, dee-urr?</i>&rdquo; Her voice rose at the end
+with a witch-like cry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she forgot the birds in the cart-shed and turned to business again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you read that letter?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Read it, so
+that I know what it says.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s rather behind his back,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, never mind him,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s been behind my
+back long enough&mdash;all these four years. If he never did no worse things
+behind my back than I do behind his, he wouldn&rsquo;t have cause to grumble.
+You read me what it says.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now I felt a distinct reluctance to do as she bid, and yet I
+began&mdash;&ldquo;My dear Alfred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I guessed that much,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Eliza&rsquo;s dear
+Alfred.&rdquo; She laughed. &ldquo;How do you say it in French?
+<i>Eliza?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told her, and she repeated the name with great contempt&mdash;<i>Élise</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re not reading.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I began&mdash;&ldquo;I have been thinking of you sometimes&mdash;have you
+been thinking of me?&rdquo;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of several others as well, beside her, I&rsquo;ll wager,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Goyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Probably not,&rdquo; said I, and continued. &ldquo;A dear little baby
+was born here a week ago. Ah, can I tell you my feelings when I take my darling
+little brother into my arms&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet it&rsquo;s <i>his</i>,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Goyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s her mother&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you believe it,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a blind.
+You mark, it&rsquo;s her own right enough&mdash;and his.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s her mother&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;He has sweet smiling eyes, but not like your beautiful English
+eyes&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She suddenly struck her hand on her skirt with a wild motion, and bent down,
+doubled with laughter. Then she rose and covered her face with her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m forced to laugh at the beautiful English eyes,&rdquo; she
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t his eyes beautiful?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes&mdash;<i>very!</i> Go on!&mdash;<i>Joey, dear, dee-urr,
+Joey!</i>&rdquo;&mdash;this to the peacock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;&ldquo;Er&mdash;We miss you very much. We all miss you. We wish you were
+here to see the darling baby. Ah, Alfred, how happy we were when you stayed
+with us. We all loved you so much. My mother will call the baby Alfred so that
+we shall never forget you&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course it&rsquo;s his right enough,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Goyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s the mother&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+Er&mdash;&ldquo;My mother is very well. My father came home yesterday&mdash;on
+leave. He is delighted with his son, my little brother, and wishes to have him
+named after you, because you were so good to us all in that terrible time,
+which I shall never forget. I must weep now when I think of it. Well, you are
+far away in England, and perhaps I shall never see you again. How did you find
+your dear mother and father? I am so happy that your wound is better, and that
+you can nearly walk&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How did he find his dear <i>wife!</i>&rdquo; cried Mrs. Goyte. &ldquo;He
+never told her he had one. Think of taking the poor girl in like that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are so pleased when you write to us. Yet now you are in England you
+will forget the family you served so well&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A bit too well&mdash;eh, <i>Joey!</i>&rdquo; cried the wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If it had not been for you we should not be alive now, to grieve and to
+rejoice in this life, that is so hard for us. But we have recovered some of our
+losses, and no longer feel the burden of poverty. The little Alfred is a great
+comfort to me. I hold him to my breast and think of the big, good Alfred, and I
+weep to think that those times of suffering were perhaps the times of a great
+happiness that is gone for ever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but isn&rsquo;t it a shame, to take a poor girl in like that!&rdquo;
+cried Mrs. Goyte. &ldquo;Never to let on that he was married, and raise her
+hopes&mdash;I call it beastly, I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;You know how anxious women
+are to fall in love, wife or no wife. How could he help it, if she was
+determined to fall in love with him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He could have helped it if he&rsquo;d wanted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;we aren&rsquo;t all heroes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but that&rsquo;s different! The big, good Alfred!&mdash;did ever you
+hear such tommy-rot in your life! Go on&mdash;what does she say at the
+end?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Er&mdash;We shall be pleased to hear of your life in England. We all
+send many kind regards to your good parents. I wish you all happiness for your
+future days. Your very affectionate and ever-grateful Élise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was silence for a moment, during which Mrs. Goyte remained with her head
+dropped, sinister and abstracted. Suddenly she lifted her face, and her eyes
+flashed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but I call it beastly, I call it mean, to take a girl in like
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Probably he hasn&rsquo;t taken her in at all.
+Do you think those French girls are such poor innocent things? I guess
+she&rsquo;s a great deal more downy than he.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s one of the biggest fools that ever walked,&rdquo; she
+cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There you are!&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it&rsquo;s his child right enough,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if you prefer to think that way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What other reason has she for writing like that&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went out into the road and looked at the cattle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is this driving the cows?&rdquo; I said. She too came out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the boy from the next farm,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;those Belgian girls! You never know
+where their letters will end. And, after all, it&rsquo;s his affair&mdash;you
+needn&rsquo;t bother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh&mdash;!&rdquo; she cried, with rough scorn&mdash;&ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+not <i>me</i> that bothers. But it&rsquo;s the nasty meanness of it&mdash;me
+writing him such loving letters&rdquo;&mdash;she put her hand before her face
+and laughed malevolently&mdash;&ldquo;and sending him parcels all the time. You
+bet he fed that gurrl on my parcels&mdash;I know he did. It&rsquo;s just like
+him. I&rsquo;ll bet they laughed together over my letters. I bet anything they
+did&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d burn your letters for fear
+they&rsquo;d give him away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a black look on her yellow face. Suddenly a voice was heard calling.
+She poked her head out of the shed, and answered coolly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; Then turning to me: &ldquo;That&rsquo;s his mother
+looking after me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed into my face, witch-like, and we turned down the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I awoke, the morning after this episode, I found the house darkened with
+deep, soft snow, which had blown against the large west windows, covering them
+with a screen. I went outside, and saw the valley all white and ghastly below
+me, the trees beneath black and thin looking like wire, the rock-faces dark
+between the glistening shroud, and the sky above sombre, heavy, yellowish-dark,
+much too heavy for this world below of hollow bluey whiteness figured with
+black. I felt I was in a valley of the dead. And I sensed I was a prisoner, for
+the snow was everywhere deep, and drifted in places. So all the morning I
+remained indoors, looking up the drive at the shrubs so heavily plumed with
+snow, at the gateposts raised high with a foot or more of extra whiteness. Or I
+looked down into the white-and-black valley that was utterly motionless and
+beyond life, a hollow sarcophagus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing stirred the whole day&mdash;no plume fell off the shrubs, the valley
+was as abstracted as a grove of death. I looked over at the tiny, half-buried
+farms away on the bare uplands beyond the valley hollow, and I thought of Tible
+in the snow, of the black witch-like little Mrs. Goyte. And the snow seemed to
+lay me bare to influences I wanted to escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the faint glow of the half-clear light that came about four o&rsquo;clock in
+the afternoon, I was roused to see a motion in the snow away below, near where
+the thorn-trees stood very black and dwarfed, like a little savage group, in
+the dismal white. I watched closely. Yes, there was a flapping and a
+struggle&mdash;a big bird, it must be, labouring in the snow. I wondered. Our
+biggest birds, in the valley, were the large hawks that often hung flickering
+opposite my windows, level with me, but high above some prey on the steep
+valleyside. This was much too big for a hawk&mdash;too big for any known bird.
+I searched in my mind for the largest English wild birds, geese, buzzards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still it laboured and strove, then was still, a dark spot, then struggled
+again. I went out of the house and down the steep slope, at risk of breaking my
+leg between the rocks. I knew the ground so well&mdash;and yet I got well
+shaken before I drew near the thorn-trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, it was a bird. It was Joey. It was the grey-brown peacock with a blue
+neck. He was snow-wet and spent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joey&mdash;Joey, de-urr!&rdquo; I said, staggering unevenly towards him.
+He looked so pathetic, rowing and struggling in the snow, too spent to rise,
+his blue neck stretching out and lying sometimes on the snow, his eye closing
+and opening quickly, his crest all battered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Joey dee-uur! Dee-urr!&rdquo; I said caressingly to him. And at last he
+lay still, blinking, in the surged and furrowed snow, whilst I came near and
+touched him, stroked him, gathered him under my arm. He stretched his long,
+wetted neck away from me as I held him, none the less he was quiet in my arm,
+too tired, perhaps, to struggle. Still he held his poor, crested head away from
+me, and seemed sometimes to droop, to wilt, as if he might suddenly die.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not so heavy as I expected, yet it was a struggle to get up to the house
+with him again. We set him down, not too near the fire, and gently wiped him
+with cloths. He submitted, only now and then stretched his soft neck away from
+us, avoiding us helplessly. Then we set warm food by him. I <i>put</i> it to
+his beak, tried to make him eat. But he ignored it. He seemed to be ignorant of
+what we were doing, recoiled inside himself inexplicably. So we put him in a
+basket with cloths, and left him crouching oblivious. His food we put near him.
+The blinds were drawn, the house was warm, it was night. Sometimes he stirred,
+but mostly he huddled still, leaning his queer crested head on one side. He
+touched no food, and took no heed of sounds or movements. We talked of brandy
+or stimulants. But I realised we had best leave him alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the night, however, we heard him thumping about. I got up anxiously with a
+candle. He had eaten some food, and scattered more, making a mess. And he was
+perched on the back of a heavy arm-chair. So I concluded he was recovered, or
+recovering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day was clear, and the snow had frozen, so I decided to carry him back
+to Tible. He consented, after various flappings, to sit in a big fish-bag with
+his battered head peeping out with wild uneasiness. And so I set off with him,
+slithering down into the valley, making good progress down in the pale shadow
+beside the rushing waters, then climbing painfully up the arrested white
+valleyside, plumed with clusters of young pine trees, into the paler white
+radiance of the snowy, upper regions, where the wind cut fine. Joey seemed to
+watch all the time with wide anxious, unseeing eye, brilliant and inscrutable.
+As I drew near to Tible township he stirred violently in the bag, though I do
+not know if he had recognised the place. Then, as I came to the sheds, he
+looked sharply from side to side, and stretched his neck out long. I was a
+little afraid of him. He gave a loud, vehement yell, opening his sinister beak,
+and I stood still, looking at him as he struggled in the bag, shaken myself by
+his struggles, yet not thinking to release him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Goyte came darting past the end of the house, her head sticking forward in
+sharp scrutiny. She saw me, and came forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you got Joey?&rdquo; she cried sharply, as if I were a thief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I opened the bag, and he flopped out, flapping as if he hated the touch of the
+snow now. She gathered him up, and put her lips to his beak. She was flushed
+and handsome, her eyes bright, her hair slack, thick, but more witch-like than
+ever. She did not speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had been followed by a grey-haired woman with a round, rather sallow face
+and a slightly hostile bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you bring him with you, then?&rdquo; she asked sharply. I answered
+that I had rescued him the previous evening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the background slowly approached a slender man with a grey moustache and
+large patches on his trousers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got &rsquo;im back &rsquo;gain, ah see,&rdquo; he said to
+his daughter-in-law. His wife explained how I had found Joey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; went on the grey man. &ldquo;It wor our Alfred scared him
+off, back your life. He must&rsquo;a flyed ower t&rsquo;valley. Tha ma&rsquo;
+thank thy stars as &rsquo;e wor fun, Maggie. &rsquo;E&rsquo;d a bin froze. They
+a bit nesh, you know,&rdquo; he concluded to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t their
+country.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, it isna,&rdquo; replied Mr. Goyte. He spoke very slowly and
+deliberately, quietly, as if the soft pedal were always down in his voice. He
+looked at his daughter-in-law as she crouched, flushed and dark, before the
+peacock, which would lay its long blue neck for a moment along her lap. In
+spite of his grey moustache and thin grey hair, the elderly man had a face
+young and almost delicate, like a young man&rsquo;s. His blue eyes twinkled
+with some inscrutable source of pleasure, his skin was fine and tender, his
+nose delicately arched. His grey hair being slightly ruffled, he had a debonair
+look, as of a youth who is in love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We mun tell &rsquo;im it&rsquo;s come,&rdquo; he said slowly, and
+turning he called: &ldquo;Alfred&mdash;Alfred! Wheer&rsquo;s ter gotten
+to?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned again to the group.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get up then, Maggie, lass, get up wi&rsquo; thee. Tha ma&rsquo;es too
+much o&rsquo; th&rsquo; bod.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A young man approached, wearing rough khaki and kneebreeches. He was Danish
+looking, broad at the loins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;s come back then,&rdquo; said the father to the son;
+&ldquo;leastwise, he&rsquo;s bin browt back, flyed ower the Griff Low.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The son looked at me. He had a devil-may-care bearing, his cap on one side, his
+hands stuck in the front pockets of his breeches. But he said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall you come in a minute, Master,&rdquo; said the elderly woman, to
+me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, come in an&rsquo; ha&rsquo;e a cup o&rsquo; tea or summat.
+You&rsquo;ll do wi&rsquo; summat, carrin&rsquo; that bod. Come on, Maggie
+wench, let&rsquo;s go in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we went indoors, into the rather stuffy, overcrowded living-room, that was
+too cosy, and too warm. The son followed last, standing in the doorway. The
+father talked to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Maggie put out the tea-cups. The mother went into the dairy again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tha&rsquo;lt rouse thysen up a bit again, now, Maggie,&rdquo; the
+father-in-law said&mdash;and then to me: &ldquo;&rsquo;ers not bin very bright
+sin&rsquo; Alfred came whoam, an&rsquo; the bod flyed awee. &rsquo;E come whoam
+a Wednesday night, Alfred did. But ay, you knowed, didna yer. Ay, &rsquo;e
+comed &rsquo;a Wednesday&mdash;an&rsquo; I reckon there wor a bit of a to-do
+between &rsquo;em, worn&rsquo;t there, Maggie?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He twinkled maliciously to his daughter-in-law, who was flushed, brilliant and
+handsome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, be quiet, father. You&rsquo;re wound up, by the sound of you,&rdquo;
+she said to him, as if crossly. But she could never be cross with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Ers got &rsquo;er colour back this mornin&rsquo;,&rdquo;
+continued the father-in-law slowly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s bin heavy weather
+wi&rsquo; &rsquo;er this last two days. Ay&mdash;&rsquo;er&rsquo;s bin
+northeast sin &rsquo;er seed you a Wednesday.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father, do stop talking. You&rsquo;d wear the leg off an iron pot. I
+can&rsquo;t think where you&rsquo;ve found your tongue, all of a sudden,&rdquo;
+said Maggie, with caressive sharpness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah&rsquo;ve found it wheer I lost it. Aren&rsquo;t goin&rsquo; ter come
+in an&rsquo; sit thee down, Alfred?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Alfred turned and disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;E&rsquo;s got th&rsquo; monkey on &rsquo;is back ower this letter
+job,&rdquo; said the father secretly to me. &ldquo;Mother, &rsquo;er knows nowt
+about it. Lot o&rsquo; tom-foolery, isn&rsquo;t it? Ay! What&rsquo;s good
+o&rsquo; makkin&rsquo; a peck o&rsquo; trouble over what&rsquo;s far enough
+off, an&rsquo; ned niver come no nigher. No&mdash;not a smite o&rsquo; use.
+That&rsquo;s what I tell &rsquo;er. &rsquo;Er should ta&rsquo;e no notice
+on&rsquo;t. Ty, what can y&rsquo; expect.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mother came in again, and the talk became general. Maggie flashed her eyes
+at me from time to time, complacent and satisfied, moving among the men. I paid
+her little compliments, which she did not seem to hear. She attended to me with
+a kind of sinister, witch-like graciousness, her dark head ducked between her
+shoulders, at once humble and powerful. She was happy as a child attending to
+her father-in-law and to me. But there was something ominous between her
+eyebrows, as if a dark moth were settled there&mdash;and something ominous in
+her bent, hulking bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat on a low stool by the fire, near her father-in-law. Her head was
+dropped, she seemed in a state of abstraction. From time to time she would
+suddenly recover, and look up at us, laughing and chatting. Then she would
+forget again. Yet in her hulked black forgetting she seemed very near to us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door having been opened, the peacock came slowly in, prancing calmly. He
+went near to her and crouched down, coiling his blue neck. She glanced at him,
+but almost as if she did not observe him. The bird sat silent, seeming to
+sleep, and the woman also sat hulked and silent, seemingly oblivious. Then once
+more there was a heavy step, and Alfred entered. He looked at his wife, and he
+looked at the peacock crouching by her. He stood large in the doorway, his
+hands stuck in front of him, in his breeches pockets. Nobody spoke. He turned
+on his heel and went out again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rose also to go. Maggie started as if coming to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Must you go?&rdquo; she asked, rising and coming near to me, standing in
+front of me, twisting her head sideways and looking up at me.
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you stop a bit longer? We can all be cosy today,
+there&rsquo;s nothing to do outdoors.&rdquo; And she laughed, showing her teeth
+oddly. She had a long chin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I said I must go. The peacock uncoiled and coiled again his long blue neck, as
+he lay on the hearth. Maggie still stood close in front of me, so that I was
+acutely aware of my waistcoat buttons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll come again, won&rsquo;t
+you? Do come again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I promised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come to tea one day&mdash;yes, do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I promised&mdash;one day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moment I went out of her presence I ceased utterly to exist for
+her&mdash;as utterly as I ceased to exist for Joey. With her curious
+abstractedness she forgot me again immediately. I knew it as I left her. Yet
+she seemed almost in physical contact with me while I was with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sky was all pallid again, yellowish. When I went out there was no sun; the
+snow was blue and cold. I hurried away down the hill, musing on Maggie. The
+road made a loop down the sharp face of the slope. As I went crunching over the
+laborious snow I became aware of a figure striding down the steep scarp to
+intercept me. It was a man with his hands in front of him, half stuck in his
+breeches pockets, and his shoulders square&mdash;a real farmer of the hills;
+Alfred, of course. He waited for me by the stone fence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Excuse me,&rdquo; he said as I came up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I came to a halt in front of him and looked into his sullen blue eyes. He had a
+certain odd haughtiness on his brows. But his blue eyes stared insolently at
+me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know anything about a letter&mdash;in French&mdash;that my wife
+opened&mdash;a letter of mine&mdash;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;She asked me to read it to her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked square at me. He did not know exactly how to feel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was there in it?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She makes out she&rsquo;s burnt it,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Without showing it you?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He nodded slightly. He seemed to be meditating as to what line of action he
+should take. He wanted to know the contents of the letter: he must know: and
+therefore he must ask me, for evidently his wife had taunted him. At the same
+time, no doubt, he would like to wreak untold vengeance on my unfortunate
+person. So he eyed me, and I eyed him, and neither of us spoke. He did not want
+to repeat his request to me. And yet I only looked at him, and considered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly he threw back his head and glanced down the valley. Then he changed
+his position&mdash;he was a horse-soldier. Then he looked at me confidentially.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She burnt the blasted thing before I saw it,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; I answered slowly, &ldquo;she doesn&rsquo;t know herself
+what was in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He continued to watch me narrowly. I grinned to myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t like to read her out what there was in it,&rdquo; I
+continued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He suddenly flushed so that the veins in his neck stood out, and he stirred
+again uncomfortably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Belgian girl said her baby had been born a week ago, and that they
+were going to call it Alfred,&rdquo; I told him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He met my eyes. I was grinning. He began to grin, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good luck to her,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Best of luck,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what did you tell <i>her</i>?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That the baby belonged to the old mother&mdash;that it was brother to
+your girl, who was writing to you as a friend of the family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood smiling, with the long, subtle malice of a farmer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And did she take it in?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As much as she took anything else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood grinning fixedly. Then he broke into a short laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good for <i>her</i>&rdquo; he exclaimed cryptically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then he laughed aloud once more, evidently feeling he had won a big move in
+his contest with his wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What about the other woman?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Élise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh&rdquo;&mdash;he shifted uneasily&mdash;&ldquo;she was all
+right&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be getting back to her,&rdquo; I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at me. Then he made a grimace with his mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Back your life it&rsquo;s a plant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think the <i>cher petit bébé</i> is a little
+Alfred?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It might be,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only might?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;an&rsquo; there&rsquo;s lots of mites in a pound of
+cheese.&rdquo; He laughed boisterously but uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did she say, exactly?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I began to repeat, as well as I could, the phrases of the letter:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Mon cher Alfred&mdash; Figure-toi comme je suis
+desolée</i>&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He listened with some confusion. When I had finished all I could remember, he
+said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They know how to pitch you out a letter, those Belgian lasses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Practice,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They get plenty,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve never got that letter,
+anyhow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wind blew fine and keen, in the sunshine, across the snow. I blew my nose
+and prepared to depart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And <i>she</i> doesn&rsquo;t know anything?&rdquo; he continued, jerking
+his head up the hill in the direction of Tible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She knows nothing but what I&rsquo;ve said&mdash;that is, if she really
+burnt the letter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe she burnt it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for spite. She&rsquo;s a
+little devil, she is. But I shall have it out with her.&rdquo; His jaw was
+stubborn and sullen. Then suddenly he turned to me with a new note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you wring that
+b&mdash;&mdash; peacock&rsquo;s neck&mdash;that b&mdash;&mdash; Joey?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hate the brute,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I had a shot at
+him&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laughed. He stood and mused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor little Élise,&rdquo; he murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was she small&mdash;<i>petite</i>?&rdquo; I asked. He jerked up his
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Rather tall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Taller than your wife, I suppose.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he looked into my eyes. And then once more he went into a loud burst of
+laughter that made the still, snow-deserted valley clap again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God, it&rsquo;s a knockout!&rdquo; he said, thoroughly amused. Then he
+stood at ease, one foot out, his hands in his breeches pockets, in front of
+him, his head thrown back, a handsome figure of a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll do that blasted Joey in&mdash;&rdquo; he mused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I ran down the hill, shouting with laughter.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>YOU TOUCHED ME</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Pottery House was a square, ugly, brick house girt in by the wall that
+enclosed the whole grounds of the pottery itself. To be sure, a privet hedge
+partly masked the house and its ground from the pottery-yard and works: but
+only partly. Through the hedge could be seen the desolate yard, and the
+many-windowed, factory-like pottery, over the hedge could be seen the chimneys
+and the outhouses. But inside the hedge, a pleasant garden and lawn sloped down
+to a willow pool, which had once supplied the works.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pottery itself was now closed, the great doors of the yard permanently
+shut. No more the great crates with yellow straw showing through, stood in
+stacks by the packing shed. No more the drays drawn by great horses rolled down
+the hill with a high load. No more the pottery-lasses in their clay-coloured
+overalls, their faces and hair splashed with grey fine mud, shrieked and larked
+with the men. All that was over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We like it much better&mdash;oh, much better&mdash;quieter,&rdquo; said
+Matilda Rockley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; assented Emmie Rockley, her sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure you do,&rdquo; agreed the visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But whether the two Rockley girls really liked it better, or whether they only
+imagined they did, is a question. Certainly their lives were much more grey and
+dreary now that the grey clay had ceased to spatter its mud and silt its dust
+over the premises. They did not quite realise how they missed the shrieking,
+shouting lasses, whom they had known all their lives and disliked so much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda and Emmie were already old maids. In a thorough industrial district, it
+is not easy for the girls who have expectations above the common to find
+husbands. The ugly industrial town was full of men, young men who were ready to
+marry. But they were all colliers or pottery-hands, mere workmen. The Rockley
+girls would have about ten thousand pounds each when their father died: ten
+thousand pounds&rsquo; worth of profitable house-property. It was not to be
+sneezed at: they felt so themselves, and refrained from sneezing away such a
+fortune on any mere member of the proletariat. Consequently, bank-clerks or
+nonconformist clergymen or even school-teachers having failed to come forward,
+Matilda had begun to give up all idea of ever leaving the Pottery House.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda was a tall, thin, graceful fair girl, with a rather large nose. She was
+the Mary to Emmie&rsquo;s Martha: that is, Matilda loved painting and music,
+and read a good many novels, whilst Emmie looked after the house-keeping. Emmie
+was shorter, plumper than her sister, and she had no accomplishments. She
+looked up to Matilda, whose mind was naturally refined and sensible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In their quiet, melancholy way, the two girls were happy. Their mother was
+dead. Their father was ill also. He was an intelligent man who had had some
+education, but preferred to remain as if he were one with the rest of the
+working people. He had a passion for music and played the violin pretty well.
+But now he was getting old, he was very ill, dying of a kidney disease. He had
+been rather a heavy whisky-drinker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This quiet household, with one servant-maid, lived on year after year in the
+Pottery House. Friends came in, the girls went out, the father drank himself
+more and more ill. Outside in the street there was a continual racket of the
+colliers and their dogs and children. But inside the pottery wall was a
+deserted quiet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In all this ointment there was one little fly. Ted Rockley, the father of the
+girls, had had four daughters, and no son. As his girls grew, he felt angry at
+finding himself always in a house-hold of women. He went off to London and
+adopted a boy out of a Charity Institution. Emmie was fourteen years old, and
+Matilda sixteen, when their father arrived home with his prodigy, the boy of
+six, Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian was just an ordinary boy from a Charity Home, with ordinary brownish
+hair and ordinary bluish eyes and of ordinary rather cockney speech. The
+Rockley girls&mdash;there were three at home at the time of his
+arrival&mdash;had resented his being sprung on them. He, with his watchful,
+charity-institution instinct, knew this at once. Though he was only six years
+old, Hadrian had a subtle, jeering look on his face when he regarded the three
+young women. They insisted he should address them as Cousin: Cousin Flora,
+Cousin Matilda, Cousin Emmie. He complied, but there seemed a mockery in his
+tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girls, however, were kind-hearted by nature. Flora married and left home.
+Hadrian did very much as he pleased with Matilda and Emmie, though they had
+certain strictnesses. He grew up in the Pottery House and about the Pottery
+premises, went to an elementary school, and was invariably called Hadrian
+Rockley. He regarded Cousin Matilda and Cousin Emmie with a certain laconic
+indifference, was quiet and reticent in his ways. The girls called him sly, but
+that was unjust. He was merely cautious, and without frankness. His Uncle, Ted
+Rockley, understood him tacitly, their natures were somewhat akin. Hadrian and
+the elderly man had a real but unemotional regard for one another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was thirteen years old the boy was sent to a High School in the County
+town. He did not like it. His Cousin Matilda had longed to make a little
+gentleman of him, but he refused to be made. He would give a little
+contemptuous curve to his lip, and take on a shy, charity-boy grin, when
+refinement was thrust upon him. He played truant from the High School, sold his
+books, his cap with its badge, even his very scarf and pocket-handkerchief, to
+his school-fellows, and went raking off heaven knows where with the money. So
+he spent two very unsatisfactory years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was fifteen he announced that he wanted to leave England and go to the
+Colonies. He had kept touch with the Home. The Rockleys knew that, when Hadrian
+made a declaration, in his quiet, half-jeering manner, it was worse than
+useless to oppose him. So at last the boy departed, going to Canada under the
+protection of the Institution to which he had belonged. He said good-bye to the
+Rockleys without a word of thanks, and parted, it seemed, without a pang.
+Matilda and Emmie wept often to think of how he left them: even on their
+father&rsquo;s face a queer look came. But Hadrian wrote fairly regularly from
+Canada. He had entered some electricity works near Montreal, and was doing
+well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, however, the war came. In his turn, Hadrian joined up and came to
+Europe. The Rockleys saw nothing of him. They lived on, just the same, in the
+Pottery House. Ted Rockley was dying of a sort of dropsy, and in his heart he
+wanted to see the boy. When the armistice was signed, Hadrian had a long leave,
+and wrote that he was coming home to the Pottery House.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girls were terribly fluttered. To tell the truth, they were a little afraid
+of Hadrian. Matilda, tall and thin, was frail in her health, both girls were
+worn with nursing their father. To have Hadrian, a young man of twenty-one, in
+the house with them, after he had left them so coldly five years before, was a
+trying circumstance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were in a flutter. Emmie persuaded her father to have his bed made finally
+in the morning-room downstairs, whilst his room upstairs was prepared for
+Hadrian. This was done, and preparations were going on for the arrival, when,
+at ten o&rsquo;clock in the morning the young man suddenly turned up, quite
+unexpectedly. Cousin Emmie, with her hair bobbed up in absurd little bobs round
+her forehead, was busily polishing the stair-rods, while Cousin Matilda was in
+the kitchen washing the drawing-room ornaments in a lather, her sleeves rolled
+back on her thin arms, and her head tied up oddly and coquettishly in a duster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cousin Matilda blushed deep with mortification when the self-possessed young
+man walked in with his kit-bag, and put his cap on the sewing machine. He was
+little and self-confident, with a curious neatness about him that still
+suggested the Charity Institution. His face was brown, he had a small
+moustache, he was vigorous enough in his smallness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Well</i>, is it Hadrian!&rdquo; exclaimed Cousin Matilda, wringing
+the lather off her hand. &ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t expect you till
+tomorrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I got off Monday night,&rdquo; said Hadrian, glancing round the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fancy!&rdquo; said Cousin Matilda. Then, having dried her hands, she
+went forward, held out her hand, and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite well, thank you,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re quite a man,&rdquo; said Cousin Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian glanced at her. She did not look her best: so thin, so large-nosed,
+with that pink-and-white checked duster tied round her head. She felt her
+disadvantage. But she had had a good deal of suffering and sorrow, she did not
+mind any more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The servant entered&mdash;one that did not know Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come and see my father,&rdquo; said Cousin Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the hall they roused Cousin Emmie like a partridge from cover. She was on
+the stairs pushing the bright stair-rods into place. Instinctively her hand
+went to the little knobs, her front hair bobbed on her forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why!&rdquo; she exclaimed, crossly. &ldquo;What have you come today
+for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I got off a day earlier,&rdquo; said Hadrian, and his man&rsquo;s voice
+so deep and unexpected was like a blow to Cousin Emmie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you&rsquo;ve caught us in the midst of it,&rdquo; she said, with
+resentment. Then all three went into the middle room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Rockley was dressed&mdash;that is, he had on his trousers and
+socks&mdash;but he was resting on the bed, propped up just under the window,
+from whence he could see his beloved and resplendent garden, where tulips and
+apple-trees were ablaze. He did not look as ill as he was, for the water puffed
+him up, and his face kept its colour. His stomach was much swollen. He glanced
+round swiftly, turning his eyes without turning his head. He was the wreck of a
+handsome, well-built man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing Hadrian, a queer, unwilling smile went over his face. The young man
+greeted him sheepishly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t make a life-guardsman,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Do you
+want something to eat?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian looked round&mdash;as if for the meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What shall you have&mdash;egg and bacon?&rdquo; asked Emmie shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I don&rsquo;t mind,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sisters went down to the kitchen, and sent the servant to finish the
+stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t he <i>altered</i>?&rdquo; said Matilda, <i>sotto voce</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t he!&rdquo; said Cousin Emmie. &ldquo;<i>What</i> a little
+man!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They both made a grimace, and laughed nervously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get the frying-pan,&rdquo; said Emmie to Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s as cocky as ever,&rdquo; said Matilda, narrowing her eyes
+and shaking her head knowingly, as she handed the frying-pan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mannie!&rdquo; said Emmie sarcastically. Hadrian&rsquo;s new-fledged,
+cock-sure manliness evidently found no favour in her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s not bad,&rdquo; said Matilda. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t want
+to be prejudiced against him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I&rsquo;m not prejudiced against him, I think he&rsquo;s all right for
+looks,&rdquo; said Emmie, &ldquo;but there&rsquo;s too much of the little
+mannie about him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fancy catching us like this,&rdquo; said Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve no thought for anything,&rdquo; said Emmie with contempt.
+&ldquo;You go up and get dressed, our Matilda. I don&rsquo;t care about him. I
+can see to things, and you can talk to him. I shan&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll talk to my father,&rdquo; said Matilda, meaningful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Sly&mdash;!</i>&rdquo; exclaimed Emmie, with a grimace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sisters believed that Hadrian had come hoping to get something out of their
+father&mdash;hoping for a legacy. And they were not at all sure he would not
+get it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda went upstairs to change. She had thought it all out how she would
+receive Hadrian, and impress him. And he had caught her with her head tied up
+in a duster, and her thin arms in a basin of lather. But she did not care. She
+now dressed herself most scrupulously, carefully folded her long, beautiful,
+blonde hair, touched her pallor with a little rouge, and put her long string of
+exquisite crystal beads over her soft green dress. Now she looked elegant, like
+a heroine in a magazine illustration, and almost as unreal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She found Hadrian and her father talking away. The young man was short of
+speech as a rule, but he could find his tongue with his &ldquo;uncle&rdquo;.
+They were both sipping a glass of brandy, and smoking, and chatting like a pair
+of old cronies. Hadrian was telling about Canada. He was going back there when
+his leave was up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t like to stop in England, then?&rdquo; said Mr.
+Rockley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I wouldn&rsquo;t stop in England,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How&rsquo;s that? There&rsquo;s plenty of electricians here,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Rockley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. But there&rsquo;s too much difference between the men and the
+employers over here&mdash;too much of that for me,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sick man looked at him narrowly, with oddly smiling eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, is it?&rdquo; he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda heard and understood. &ldquo;So that&rsquo;s your big idea, is it, my
+little man,&rdquo; she said to herself. She had always said of Hadrian that he
+had no proper <i>respect</i> for anybody or anything, that he was sly and
+<i>common</i>. She went down to the kitchen for a <i>sotto voce</i> confab with
+Emmie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He thinks a rare lot of himself!&rdquo; she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s somebody, he is!&rdquo; said Emmie with contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He thinks there&rsquo;s too much difference between masters and men,
+over here,&rdquo; said Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it any different in Canada?&rdquo; asked Emmie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes&mdash;democratic,&rdquo; replied Matilda, &ldquo;He thinks
+they&rsquo;re all on a level over there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, well he&rsquo;s over here now,&rdquo; said Emmie dryly, &ldquo;so he
+can keep his place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they talked they saw the young man sauntering down the garden, looking
+casually at the flowers. He had his hands in his pockets, and his
+soldier&rsquo;s cap neatly on his head. He looked quite at his ease, as if in
+possession. The two women, fluttered, watched him through the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We know what he&rsquo;s come for,&rdquo; said Emmie, churlishly. Matilda
+looked a long time at the neat khaki figure. It had something of the
+charity-boy about it still; but now it was a man&rsquo;s figure, laconic,
+charged with plebeian energy. She thought of the derisive passion in his voice
+as he had declaimed against the propertied classes, to her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know, Emmie. Perhaps he&rsquo;s not come for
+that,&rdquo; she rebuked her sister. They were both thinking of the money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were still watching the young soldier. He stood away at the bottom of the
+garden, with his back to them, his hands in his pockets, looking into the water
+of the willow pond. Matilda&rsquo;s dark-blue eyes had a strange, full look in
+them, the lids, with the faint blue veins showing, dropped rather low. She
+carried her head light and high, but she had a look of pain. The young man at
+the bottom of the garden turned and looked up the path. Perhaps he saw them
+through the window. Matilda moved into shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That afternoon their father seemed weak and ill. He was easily exhausted. The
+doctor came, and told Matilda that the sick man might die suddenly at any
+moment&mdash;but then he might not. They must be prepared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the day passed, and the next. Hadrian made himself at home. He went about in
+the morning in his brownish jersey and his khaki trousers, collarless, his bare
+neck showing. He explored the pottery premises, as if he had some secret
+purpose in so doing, he talked with Mr. Rockley, when the sick man had
+strength. The two girls were always angry when the two men sat talking together
+like cronies. Yet it was chiefly a kind of politics they talked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the second day after Hadrian&rsquo;s arrival, Matilda sat with her father in
+the evening. She was drawing a picture which she wanted to copy. It was very
+still, Hadrian was gone out somewhere, no one knew where, and Emmie was busy.
+Mr. Rockley reclined on his bed, looking out in silence over his evening-sunny
+garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If anything happens to me, Matilda,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you
+won&rsquo;t sell this house&mdash;you&rsquo;ll stop here&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda&rsquo;s eyes took their slightly haggard look as she stared at her
+father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, we couldn&rsquo;t do anything else,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know what you might do,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Everything is left to you and Emmie, equally. You&rsquo;do as you like
+with it&mdash;only don&rsquo;t sell this house, don&rsquo;t part with
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And give Hadrian my watch and chain, and a hundred pounds out of
+what&rsquo;s in the bank&mdash;and help him if he ever wants helping. I
+haven&rsquo;t put his name in the will.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your watch and chain, and a hundred pounds&mdash;yes. But you&rsquo;ll
+be here when he goes back to Canada, father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You never know what&rsquo;ll happen,&rdquo; said her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda sat and watched him, with her full, haggard eyes, for a long time, as
+if tranced. She saw that he knew he must go soon&mdash;she saw like a
+clairvoyant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later on she told Emmie what her father had said about the watch and chain and
+the money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What right has <i>he&rdquo;&mdash;he</i>&mdash;meaning
+Hadrian&mdash;&ldquo;to my father&rsquo;s watch and chain&mdash;what has it to
+do with him? Let him have the money, and get off,&rdquo; said Emmie. She loved
+her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night Matilda sat late in her room. Her heart was anxious and breaking,
+her mind seemed entranced. She was too much entranced even to weep, and all the
+time she thought of her father, only her father. At last she felt she must go
+to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was near midnight. She went along the passage and to his room. There was a
+faint light from the moon outside. She listened at his door. Then she softly
+opened and entered. The room was faintly dark. She heard a movement on the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you asleep?&rdquo; she said softly, advancing to the side of the
+bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you asleep?&rdquo; she repeated gently, as she stood at the side of
+the bed. And she reached her hand in the darkness to touch his forehead.
+Delicately, her fingers met the nose and the eyebrows, she laid her fine,
+delicate hand on his brow. It seemed fresh and smooth&mdash;very fresh and
+smooth. A sort of surprise stirred her, in her entranced state. But it could
+not waken her. Gently, she leaned over the bed and stirred her fingers over the
+low-growing hair on his brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you sleep tonight?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a quick stirring in the bed. &ldquo;Yes, I can,&rdquo; a voice
+answered. It was Hadrian&rsquo;s voice. She started away. Instantly, she was
+wakened from her late-at-night trance. She remembered that her father was
+downstairs, that Hadrian had his room. She stood in the darkness as if stung.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is you, Hadrian?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I thought it was my
+father.&rdquo; She was so startled, so shocked, that she could not move. The
+young man gave an uncomfortable laugh, and turned in his bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last she got out of the room. When she was back in her own room, in the
+light, and her door was closed, she stood holding up her hand that had touched
+him, as if it were hurt. She was almost too shocked, she could not endure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said her calm and weary mind, &ldquo;it was only a mistake,
+why take any notice of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she could not reason her feelings so easily. She suffered, feeling herself
+in a false position. Her right hand, which she had laid so gently on his face,
+on his fresh skin, ached now, as if it were really injured. She could not
+forgive Hadrian for the mistake: it made her dislike him deeply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian too slept badly. He had been awakened by the opening of the door, and
+had not realised what the question meant. But the soft, straying tenderness of
+her hand on his face startled something out of his soul. He was a charity boy,
+aloof and more or less at bay. The fragile exquisiteness of her caress startled
+him most, revealed unknown things to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the morning she could feel the consciousness in his eyes, when she came
+downstairs. She tried to bear herself as if nothing at all had happened, and
+she succeeded. She had the calm self-control, self-indifference, of one who has
+suffered and borne her suffering. She looked at him from her darkish, almost
+drugged blue eyes, she met the spark of consciousness in his eyes, and quenched
+it. And with her long, fine hand she put the sugar in his coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she could not control him as she thought she could. He had a keen memory
+stinging his mind, a new set of sensations working in his consciousness.
+Something new was alert in him. At the back of his reticent, guarded mind he
+kept his secret alive and vivid. She was at his mercy, for he was unscrupulous,
+his standard was not her standard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her curiously. She was not beautiful, her nose was too large, her
+chin was too small, her neck was too thin. But her skin was clear and fine, she
+had a high-bred sensitiveness. This queer, brave, high-bred quality she shared
+with her father. The charity boy could see it in her tapering fingers, which
+were white and ringed. The same glamour that he knew in the elderly man he now
+saw in the woman. And he wanted to possess himself of it, he wanted to make
+himself master of it. As he went about through the old pottery-yard, his
+secretive mind schemed and worked. To be master of that strange soft delicacy
+such as he had felt in her hand upon his face,&mdash;this was what he set
+himself towards. He was secretly plotting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He watched Matilda as she went about, and she became aware of his attention, as
+of some shadow following her. But her pride made her ignore it. When he
+sauntered near her, his hands in his pockets, she received him with that same
+commonplace kindliness which mastered him more than any contempt. Her superior
+breeding seemed to control him. She made herself feel towards him exactly as
+she had always felt: he was a young boy who lived in the house with them, but
+was a stranger. Only, she dared not remember his face under her hand. When she
+remembered that, she was bewildered. Her hand had offended her, she wanted to
+cut it off. And she wanted, fiercely, to cut off the memory in him. She assumed
+she had done so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day, when he sat talking with his &ldquo;uncle&rdquo;, he looked straight
+into the eyes of the sick man, and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I shouldn&rsquo;t like to live and die here in Rawsley.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;well&mdash;you needn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the sick man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think Cousin Matilda likes it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should think so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t call it much of a life,&rdquo; said the youth. &ldquo;How
+much older is she than me, Uncle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sick man looked at the young soldier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A good bit,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Over thirty?&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, not so much. She&rsquo;s thirty-two.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian considered a while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t look it,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the sick father looked at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think she&rsquo;d like to leave here?&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; replied the father, restive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian sat still, having his own thoughts. Then in a small, quiet voice, as if
+he were speaking from inside himself, he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;d marry her if you wanted me to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sick man raised his eyes suddenly, and stared. He stared for a long time.
+The youth looked inscrutably out of the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>You!</i>&rdquo; said the sick man, mocking, with some contempt.
+Hadrian turned and met his eyes. The two men had an inexplicable understanding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you wasn&rsquo;t against it,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the father, turning aside, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think
+I&rsquo;m against it. I&rsquo;ve never thought of it. But&mdash;But
+Emmie&rsquo;s the youngest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had flushed, and looked suddenly more alive. Secretly he loved the boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You might ask her,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The elder man considered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hadn&rsquo;t you better ask her yourself?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;d take more notice of you,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were both silent. Then Emmie came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For two days Mr. Rockley was excited and thoughtful. Hadrian went about
+quietly, secretly, unquestioning. At last the father and daughter were alone
+together. It was very early morning, the father had been in much pain. As the
+pain abated, he lay still, thinking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Matilda!&rdquo; he said suddenly, looking at his daughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m here,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay! I want you to do something&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose in anticipation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, sit still. I want you to marry Hadrian&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought he was raving. She rose, bewildered and frightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, sit you still, sit you still. You hear what I tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;re saying, father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, I know well enough. I want you to marry Hadrian, I tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was dumbfounded. He was a man of few words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do what I tell you,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What put such an idea in your mind?&rdquo; she said proudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda almost looked her father down, her pride was so offended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, it&rsquo;s disgraceful,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She watched him slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you ask me for?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+disgusting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The lad&rsquo;s sound enough,&rdquo; he replied, testily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better tell him to clear out,&rdquo; she said, coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and looked out of the window. She sat flushed and erect for a long
+time. At length her father turned to her, looking really malevolent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re a fool, and
+I&rsquo;ll make you pay for your foolishness, do you see?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly a cold fear gripped her. She could not believe her senses. She was
+terrified and bewildered. She stared at her father, believing him to be
+delirious, or mad, or drunk. What could she do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll send for Whittle tomorrow
+if you don&rsquo;t. You shall neither of you have anything of mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whittle was the solicitor. She understood her father well enough: he would send
+for his solicitor, and make a will leaving all his property to Hadrian: neither
+she nor Emmie should have anything. It was too much. She rose and went out of
+the room, up to her own room, where she locked herself in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not come out for some hours. At last, late at night, she confided in
+Emmie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sliving demon, he wants the money,&rdquo; said Emmie. &ldquo;My
+father&rsquo;s out of his mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thought that Hadrian merely wanted the money was another blow to Matilda.
+She did not love the impossible youth&mdash;but she had not yet learned to
+think of him as a thing of evil. He now became hideous to her mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emmie had a little scene with her father next day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean what you said to our Matilda yesterday, do you,
+father?&rdquo; she asked aggressively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, that you&rsquo;ll alter your will?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said his angry daughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he looked at her with a malevolent little smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Annie!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;Annie!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had still power to make his voice carry. The servant maid came in from the
+kitchen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Put your things on, and go down to Whittle&rsquo;s office, and say I
+want to see Mr. Whittle as soon as he can, and will he bring a
+will-form.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sick man lay back a little&mdash;he could not lie down. His daughter sat as
+if she had been struck. Then she left the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian was pottering about in the garden. She went straight down to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d better get off. You&rsquo;d
+better take your things and go from here, quick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian looked slowly at the infuriated girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who says so?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>We</i> say so&mdash;get off, you&rsquo;ve done enough mischief and
+damage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does Uncle say so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, he does.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go and ask him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But like a fury Emmie barred his way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, you needn&rsquo;t. You needn&rsquo;t ask him nothing at all. We
+don&rsquo;t want you, so you can go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Uncle&rsquo;s boss here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A man that&rsquo;s dying, and you crawling round and working on him for
+his money!&mdash;you&rsquo;re not fit to live.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Who says I&rsquo;m working for his
+money?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say. But my father told our Matilda, and <i>she</i> knows what you
+are. <i>She</i> knows what you&rsquo;re after. So you might as well clear out,
+for all you&rsquo;ll get&mdash;guttersnipe!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned his back on her, to think. It had not occurred to him that they would
+think he was after the money. He <i>did</i> want the money&mdash;badly. He
+badly wanted to be an employer himself, not one of the employed. But he knew,
+in his subtle, calculating way, that it was not for money he wanted Matilda. He
+wanted both the money and Matilda. But he told himself the two desires were
+separate, not one. He could not do with Matilda, <i>without</i> the money. But
+he did not want her <i>for</i> the money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he got this clear in his mind, he sought for an opportunity to tell it
+her, lurking and watching. But she avoided him. In the evening the lawyer came.
+Mr. Rockley seemed to have a new access of strength&mdash;a will was drawn up,
+making the previous arrangements wholly conditional. The old will held good, if
+Matilda would consent to marry Hadrian. If she refused then at the end of six
+months the whole property passed to Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Rockley told this to the young man, with malevolent satisfaction. He seemed
+to have a strange desire, quite unreasonable, for revenge upon the women who
+had surrounded him for so long, and served him so carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell her in front of me,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Mr. Rockley sent for his daughters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last they came, pale, mute, stubborn. Matilda seemed to have retired far
+off, Emmie seemed like a fighter ready to fight to the death. The sick man
+reclined on the bed, his eyes bright, his puffed hand trembling. But his face
+had again some of its old, bright handsomeness. Hadrian sat quiet, a little
+aside: the indomitable, dangerous charity boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the will,&rdquo; said their father, pointing them to the
+paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two women sat mute and immovable, they took no notice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Either you marry Hadrian, or he has everything,&rdquo; said the father
+with satisfaction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then let him have everything,&rdquo; said Matilda boldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not! He&rsquo;s not!&rdquo; cried Emmie fiercely.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not going to have it. The guttersnipe!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An amused look came on her father&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You hear that, Hadrian,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t offer to marry Cousin Matilda for the money,&rdquo; said
+Hadrian, flushing and moving on his seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Matilda looked at him slowly, with her dark-blue, drugged eyes. He seemed a
+strange little monster to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, you liar, you know you did,&rdquo; cried Emmie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sick man laughed. Matilda continued to gaze strangely at the young man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She knows I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Hadrian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He too had his courage, as a rat has indomitable courage in the end. Hadrian
+had some of the neatness, the reserve, the underground quality of the rat. But
+he had perhaps the ultimate courage, the most unquenchable courage of all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emmie looked at her sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Matilda&mdash;don&rsquo;t bother. Let
+him have everything, we can look after ourselves.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know he&rsquo;ll take everything,&rdquo; said Matilda, abstractedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hadrian did not answer. He knew in fact that if Matilda refused him he would
+take everything, and go off with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A clever little mannie&mdash;!&rdquo; said Emmie, with a jeering
+grimace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The father laughed noiselessly to himself. But he was tired....
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on, then,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Go on, let me be quiet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emmie turned and looked at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You deserve what you&rsquo;ve got,&rdquo; she said to her father
+bluntly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; he answered mildly. &ldquo;Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another night passed&mdash;a night nurse sat up with Mr. Rockley. Another day
+came. Hadrian was there as ever, in his woollen jersey and coarse khaki
+trousers and bare neck. Matilda went about, frail and distant, Emmie
+black-browed in spite of her blondness. They were all quiet, for they did not
+intend the mystified servant to learn anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Rockley had very bad attacks of pain, he could not breathe. The end seemed
+near. They all went about quiet and stoical, all unyielding. Hadrian pondered
+within himself. If he did not marry Matilda he would go to Canada with twenty
+thousand pounds. This was itself a very satisfactory prospect. If Matilda
+consented he would have nothing&mdash;she would have her own money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emmie was the one to act. She went off in search of the solicitor and brought
+him with her. There was an interview, and Whittle tried to frighten the youth
+into withdrawal&mdash;but without avail. The clergyman and relatives were
+summoned&mdash;but Hadrian stared at them and took no notice. It made him
+angry, however.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He wanted to catch Matilda alone. Many days went by, and he was not successful:
+she avoided him. At last, lurking, he surprised her one day as she came to pick
+gooseberries, and he cut off her retreat. He came to the point at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t want me, then?&rdquo; he said, in his subtle,
+insinuating voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to speak to you,&rdquo; she said, averting her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You put your hand on me, though,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You
+shouldn&rsquo;t have done that, and then I should never have thought of it. You
+shouldn&rsquo;t have touched me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you were anything decent, you&rsquo;d know that was a mistake, and
+forget it,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know it was a mistake&mdash;but I shan&rsquo;t forget it. If you wake
+a man up, he can&rsquo;t go to sleep again because he&rsquo;s told to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you had any decent feeling in you, you&rsquo;d have gone away,&rdquo;
+she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t want to,&rdquo; he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked away into the distance. At last she asked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you persecute me for, if it isn&rsquo;t for the money. I&rsquo;m
+old enough to be your mother. In a way I&rsquo;ve been your mother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doesn&rsquo;t matter,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been no mother
+to me. Let us marry and go out to Canada&mdash;you might as
+well&mdash;you&rsquo;ve touched me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was white and trembling. Suddenly she flushed with anger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s so <i>indecent</i>,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How?&rdquo; he retorted. &ldquo;You touched me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she walked away from him. She felt as if he had trapped her. He was angry
+and depressed, he felt again despised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That same evening she went into her father&rsquo;s room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said suddenly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll marry him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her father looked up at her. He was in pain, and very ill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You like him now, do you?&rdquo; he said, with a faint smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked down into his face, and saw death not far off. She turned and went
+coldly out of the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The solicitor was sent for, preparations were hastily made. In all the interval
+Matilda did not speak to Hadrian, never answered him if he addressed her. He
+approached her in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come round to it, then?&rdquo; he said, giving her a
+pleasant look from his twinkling, almost kindly eyes. She looked down at him
+and turned aside. She looked down on him both literally and figuratively. Still
+he persisted, and triumphed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Emmie raved and wept, the secret flew abroad. But Matilda was silent and
+unmoved, Hadrian was quiet and satisfied, and nipped with fear also. But he
+held out against his fear. Mr. Rockley was very ill, but unchanged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the third day the marriage took place. Matilda and Hadrian drove straight
+home from the registrar, and went straight into the room of the dying man. His
+face lit up with a clear twinkling smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hadrian&mdash;you&rsquo;ve got her?&rdquo; he said, a little hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Hadrian, who was pale round the gills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, my lad, I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re mine,&rdquo; replied the dying
+man. Then he turned his eyes closely on Matilda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s look at you, Matilda,&rdquo; he said. Then his voice went
+strange and unrecognisable. &ldquo;Kiss me,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stooped and kissed him. She had never kissed him before, not since she was
+a tiny child. But she was quiet, very still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Kiss him,&rdquo; the dying man said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Obediently, Matilda put forward her mouth and kissed the young husband.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right! That&rsquo;s right!&rdquo; murmured the dying man.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>SAMSON AND DELILAH</h2>
+
+<p>
+A man got down from the motor-omnibus that runs from Penzance to St
+Just-in-Penwith, and turned northwards, uphill towards the Polestar. It was
+only half past six, but already the stars were out, a cold little wind was
+blowing from the sea, and the crystalline, three-pulse flash of the lighthouse
+below the cliffs beat rhythmically in the first darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man was alone. He went his way unhesitating, but looked from side to side
+with cautious curiosity. Tall, ruined power-houses of tin-mines loomed in the
+darkness from time to time, like remnants of some by-gone civilization. The
+lights of many miners&rsquo; cottages scattered on the hilly darkness twinkled
+desolate in their disorder, yet twinkled with the lonely homeliness of the
+Celtic night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tramped steadily on, always watchful with curiosity. He was a tall,
+well-built man, apparently in the prime of life. His shoulders were square and
+rather stiff, he leaned forwards a little as he went, from the hips, like a man
+who must stoop to lower his height. But he did not stoop his shoulders: he bent
+his straight back from the hips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now and again short, stump, thick-legged figures of Cornish miners passed him,
+and he invariably gave them goodnight, as if to insist that he was on his own
+ground. He spoke with the west-Cornish intonation. And as he went along the
+dreary road, looking now at the lights of the dwellings on land, now at the
+lights away to sea, vessels veering round in sight of the Longships Lighthouse,
+the whole of the Atlantic Ocean in darkness and space between him and America,
+he seemed a little excited and pleased with himself, watchful, thrilled,
+veering along in a sense of mastery and of power in conflict.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The houses began to close on the road, he was entering the straggling,
+formless, desolate mining village, that he knew of old. On the left was a
+little space set back from the road, and cosy lights of an inn. There it was.
+He peered up at the sign: &ldquo;The Tinners&rsquo; Rest&rdquo;. But he could
+not make out the name of the proprietor. He listened. There was excited talking
+and laughing, a woman&rsquo;s voice laughing shrilly among the men&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stooping a little, he entered the warmly-lit bar. The lamp was burning, a buxom
+woman rose from the white-scrubbed deal table where the black and white and red
+cards were scattered, and several men, miners, lifted their faces from the
+game.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger went to the counter, averting his face. His cap was pulled down
+over his brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-evening!&rdquo; said the landlady, in her rather ingratiating
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-evening. A glass of ale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A glass of ale,&rdquo; repeated the landlady suavely. &ldquo;Cold
+night&mdash;but bright.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the man assented, laconically. Then he added, when nobody
+expected him to say any more: &ldquo;Seasonable weather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite seasonable, quite,&rdquo; said the landlady. &ldquo;Thank
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man lifted his glass straight to his lips, and emptied it. He put it down
+again on the zinc counter with a click.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have another,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman drew the beer, and the man went away with his glass to the second
+table, near the fire. The woman, after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, took her
+seat again at the table with the card-players. She had noticed the man: a big
+fine fellow, well dressed, a stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he spoke with that Cornish-Yankee accent she accepted as the natural twang
+among the miners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger put his foot on the fender and looked into the fire. He was
+handsome, well coloured, with well-drawn Cornish eyebrows, and the usual dark,
+bright, mindless Cornish eyes. He seemed abstracted in thought. Then he watched
+the card-party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman was buxom and healthy, with dark hair and small, quick brown eyes.
+She was bursting with life and vigour, the energy she threw into the game of
+cards excited all the men, they shouted, and laughed, and the woman held her
+breast, shrieking with laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, my, it&rsquo;ll be the death o&rsquo; me,&rdquo; she panted.
+&ldquo;Now, come on, Mr. Trevorrow, play fair. Play fair, I say, or I
+s&rsquo;ll put the cards down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Play fair! Why who&rsquo;s played unfair?&rdquo; ejaculated Mr.
+Trevorrow. &ldquo;Do you mean t&rsquo;accuse me, as I haven&rsquo;t played
+fair, Mrs. Nankervis?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do. I say it, and I mean it. Haven&rsquo;t you got the queen of
+spades? Now, come on, no dodging round me. <i>I</i> know you&rsquo;ve got that
+queen, as well as I know my name&rsquo;s Alice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;if your name&rsquo;s Alice, you&rsquo;ll have to have
+it&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, now&mdash;what did I say? Did you ever see such a man? My word, but
+your missus must be easy took in, by the looks of things.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And off she went into peals of laughter. She was interrupted by the entrance of
+four men in khaki, a short, stumpy sergeant of middle age, a young corporal,
+and two young privates. The woman leaned back in her chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, my!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;If there isn&rsquo;t the boys back:
+looking perished, I believe&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perished, Ma!&rdquo; exclaimed the sergeant. &ldquo;Not yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Near enough,&rdquo; said a young private, uncouthly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman got up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure you are, my dears. You&rsquo;ll be wanting your suppers,
+I&rsquo;ll be bound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We could do with &rsquo;em.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have a wet first,&rdquo; said the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman bustled about getting the drinks. The soldiers moved to the fire,
+spreading out their hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have your suppers in here, will you?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Or in the
+kitchen?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have it here,&rdquo; said the sergeant. &ldquo;More
+cosier&mdash;<i>if</i> you don&rsquo;t mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall have it where you like, boys, where you like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She disappeared. In a minute a girl of about sixteen came in. She was tall and
+fresh, with dark, young, expressionless eyes, and well-drawn brows, and the
+immature softness and mindlessness of the sensuous Celtic type.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ho, Maryann! Evenin&rsquo;, Maryann! How&rsquo;s Maryann, now?&rdquo;
+came the multiple greeting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She replied to everybody in a soft voice, a strange, soft <i>aplomb</i> that
+was very attractive. And she moved round with rather mechanical, attractive
+movements, as if her thoughts were elsewhere. But she had always this dim
+far-awayness in her bearing: a sort of modesty. The strange man by the fire
+watched her curiously. There was an alert, inquisitive, mindless curiosity on
+his well-coloured face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have a bit of supper with you, if I might,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him, with her clear, unreasoning eyes, just like the eyes of some
+non-human creature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll ask mother,&rdquo; she said. Her voice was soft-breathing,
+gently singsong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she came in again:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, almost whispering. &ldquo;What will you
+have?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What have you got?&rdquo; he said, looking up into her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s cold meat&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s for me, then.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger sat at the end of the table and ate with the tired, quiet
+soldiers. Now, the landlady was interested in him. Her brow was knit rather
+tense, there was a look of panic in her large, healthy face, but her small
+brown eyes were fixed most dangerously. She was a big woman, but her eyes were
+small and tense. She drew near the stranger. She wore a rather loud-patterned
+flannelette blouse, and a dark skirt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What will you have to drink with your supper?&rdquo; she asked, and
+there was a new, dangerous note in her voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He moved uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll go on with ale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew him another glass. Then she sat down on the bench at the table with
+him and the soldiers, and fixed him with her attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come from St Just, have you?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her with those clear, dark, inscrutable Cornish eyes, and answered
+at length:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, from Penzance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Penzance!&mdash;but you&rsquo;re not thinking of going back there
+tonight?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He still looked at her with those wide, clear eyes that seemed like very bright
+agate. Her anger began to rise. It was seen on her brow. Yet her voice was
+still suave and deprecating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I <i>thought</i> not&mdash;but you&rsquo;re not living in these parts,
+are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no, I&rsquo;m not living here.&rdquo; He was always slow in
+answering, as if something intervened between him and any outside question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I see,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got relations down
+here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he looked straight into her eyes, as if looking her into silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not say any more. She rose with a flounce. The anger was tight on her
+brow. There was no more laughing and card-playing that evening, though she kept
+up her motherly, suave, good-humoured way with the men. But they knew her, they
+were all afraid of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The supper was finished, the table cleared, the stranger did not go. Two of the
+young soldiers went off to bed, with their cheery:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-night, Ma. Good-night, Maryann.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger talked a little to the sergeant about the war, which was in its
+first year, about the new army, a fragment of which was quartered in this
+district, about America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady darted looks at him from her small eyes, minute by minute the
+electric storm welled in her bosom, as still he did not go. She was quivering
+with suppressed, violent passion, something frightening and abnormal. She could
+not sit still for a moment. Her heavy form seemed to flash with sudden,
+involuntary movements as the minutes passed by, and still he sat there, and the
+tension on her heart grew unbearable. She watched the hands of the dock move
+on. Three of the soldiers had gone to bed, only the crop-headed, terrier-like
+old sergeant remained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady sat behind the bar fidgeting spasmodically with the newspaper. She
+looked again at the clock. At last it was five minutes to ten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen&mdash;the enemy!&rdquo; she said, in her diminished, furious
+voice. &ldquo;Time, please. Time, my dears. And good-night all!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men began to drop out, with a brief good-night. It was a minute to ten. The
+landlady rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m shutting the door.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last of the miners passed out. She stood, stout and menacing, holding the
+door. Still the stranger sat on by the fire, his black overcoat opened,
+smoking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;re closed now, sir,&rdquo; came the perilous, narrowed voice of
+the landlady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little, dog-like, hard-headed sergeant touched the arm of the stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Closing time,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger turned round in his seat, and his quick-moving, dark, jewel-like
+eyes went from the sergeant to the landlady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m stopping here tonight,&rdquo; he said, in his laconic
+Cornish-Yankee accent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady seemed to tower. Her eyes lifted strangely, frightening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! indeed!&rdquo; she cried.&rdquo; Oh, indeed! And whose orders are
+those, may I ask?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My orders,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Involuntarily she shut the door, and advanced like a great, dangerous bird. Her
+voice rose, there was a touch of hoarseness in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what might <i>your</i> orders be, if you please?&rdquo; she cried.
+&ldquo;Who might <i>you</i> be, to give orders, in the house?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat still, watching her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know who I am,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;At least, I know who you
+are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, you do? Oh, do you? And who am <i>I</i> then, if you&rsquo;ll be so
+good as to tell me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared at her with his bright, dark eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re my Missis, you are,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And you know it,
+as well as I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She started as if something had exploded in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes lifted and flared madly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Do</i> I know it, indeed!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;I know no such
+thing! I know no such thing! Do you think a man&rsquo;s going to walk into this
+bar, and tell me off-hand I&rsquo;m his Missis, and I&rsquo;m going to believe
+him?&mdash;I say to you, whoever you may be, you&rsquo;re mistaken. I know
+myself for no Missis of yours, and I&rsquo;ll thank you to go out of this
+house, this minute, before I get those that will put you out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man rose to his feet, stretching his head towards her a little. He was a
+handsomely built Cornishman in the prime of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What you say, eh? You don&rsquo;t know me?&rdquo; he said, in his
+singsong voice, emotionless, but rather smothered and pressing: it reminded
+one of the girl&rsquo;s. &ldquo;I should know you anywhere, you see. I should!
+I shouldn&rsquo;t have to look twice to know you, you see. You see, now,
+don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman was baffled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So you may say,&rdquo; she replied, staccato. &ldquo;So you may say.
+That&rsquo;s easy enough. My name&rsquo;s known, and respected, by most people
+for ten miles round. But I don&rsquo;t know <i>you</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice ran to sarcasm. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say I know <i>you</i>.
+You&rsquo;re a <i>perfect</i> stranger to me, and I don&rsquo;t believe
+I&rsquo;ve ever set eyes on you before tonight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice was very flexible and sarcastic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, you have,&rdquo; replied the man, in his reasonable way.&rdquo;
+Yes, you have. Your name&rsquo;s my name, and that girl Maryann is my girl;
+she&rsquo;s my daughter. You&rsquo;re my Missis right enough. As sure as
+I&rsquo;m Willie Nankervis.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke as if it were an accepted fact. His face was handsome, with a strange,
+watchful alertness and a fundamental fixity of intention that maddened her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You villain!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;You villain, to come to this house
+and dare to speak to me. You villain, you down-right rascal!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; he said, unmoved. &ldquo;All that.&rdquo; He was uneasy
+before her. Only he was not afraid of her. There was something impenetrable
+about him, like his eyes, which were as bright as agate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She towered, and drew near to him menacingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going out of this house, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;&mdash;She
+stamped her foot in sudden madness. &ldquo;<i>This minute!</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He watched her. He knew she wanted to strike him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, with suppressed emphasis. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve told
+you, I&rsquo;m stopping here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was afraid of her personality, but it did not alter him. She wavered. Her
+small, tawny-brown eyes concentrated in a point of vivid, sightless fury, like
+a tiger&rsquo;s. The man was wincing, but he stood his ground. Then she
+bethought herself. She would gather her forces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see whether you&rsquo;re stopping here,&rdquo; she said. And
+she turned, with a curious, frightening lifting of her eyes, and surged out of
+the room. The man, listening, heard her go upstairs, heard her tapping at a
+bedroom door, heard her saying: &ldquo;Do you mind coming down a minute, boys?
+I want you. I&rsquo;m in trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man in the bar took off his cap and his black overcoat, and threw them on
+the seat behind him. His black hair was short and touched with grey at the
+temples. He wore a well-cut, well-fitting suit of dark grey, American in style,
+and a turn-down collar. He looked well-to-do, a fine, solid figure of a man.
+The rather rigid look of the shoulders came from his having had his collar-bone
+twice broken in the mines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little terrier of a sergeant, in dirty khaki, looked at him furtively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s your Missis?&rdquo; he asked, jerking his head in the
+direction of the departed woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, she is,&rdquo; barked the man. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s that, sure
+enough.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not seen her for a long time, haven&rsquo;t ye?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sixteen years come March month.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hm!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the sergeant laconically resumed his smoking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady was coming back, followed by the three young soldiers, who entered
+rather sheepishly, in trousers and shirt and stocking-feet. The woman stood
+histrionically at the end of the bar, and exclaimed:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That man refuses to leave the house, claims he&rsquo;s stopping the
+night here. You know very well I have no bed, don&rsquo;t you? And this house
+doesn&rsquo;t accommodate travellers. Yet he&rsquo;s going to stop in spite of
+all! But not while I&rsquo;ve a drop of blood in my body, that I declare with
+my dying breath. And not if you men are worth the name of men, and will help a
+woman as has no one to help her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes sparkled, her face was flushed pink. She was drawn up like an Amazon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young soldiers did not quite know what to do. They looked at the man, they
+looked at the sergeant, one of them looked down and fastened his braces on the
+second button.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What say, sergeant?&rdquo; asked one whose face twinkled for a little
+devilment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Man says he&rsquo;s husband to Mrs. Nankervis,&rdquo; said the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s no husband of mine. I declare I never set eyes on him before
+this night. It&rsquo;s a dirty trick, nothing else, it&rsquo;s a dirty
+trick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, you&rsquo;re a liar, saying you never set eyes on me before,&rdquo;
+barked the man near the hearth. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re married to me, and that
+girl Maryann you had by me&mdash;well enough you know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young soldiers looked on in delight, the sergeant smoked imperturbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; sang the landlady, slowly shaking her head in supreme
+sarcasm, &ldquo;it sounds very pretty, doesn&rsquo;t it? But you see we
+don&rsquo;t believe a word of it, and <i>how</i> are you going to prove
+it?&rdquo; She smiled nastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man watched in silence for a moment, then he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It wants no proof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes, but it does! Oh, yes, but it does, sir, it wants a lot of
+proving!&rdquo; sang the lady&rsquo;s sarcasm. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re not such
+gulls as all that, to swallow your words whole.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he stood unmoved near the fire. She stood with one hand resting on the
+zinc-covered bar, the sergeant sat with legs crossed, smoking, on the seat
+halfway between them, the three young soldiers in their shirts and braces stood
+wavering in the gloom behind the bar. There was silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know anything of the whereabouts of your husband, Mrs. Nankervis?
+Is he still living?&rdquo; asked the sergeant, in his judicious fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the landlady began to cry, great scalding tears, that left the young
+men aghast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know nothing of him,&rdquo; she sobbed, feeling for her pocket
+handkerchief. &ldquo;He left me when Maryann was a baby, went mining to
+America, and after about six months never wrote a line nor sent me a penny bit.
+I can&rsquo;t say whether he&rsquo;s alive or dead, the villain. All I&rsquo;ve
+heard of him&rsquo;s to the bad&mdash;and I&rsquo;ve heard nothing for years
+an&rsquo; all, now.&rdquo; She sobbed violently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The golden-skinned, handsome man near the fire watched her as she wept. He was
+frightened, he was troubled, he was bewildered, but none of his emotions
+altered him underneath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no sound in the room but the violent sobbing of the landlady. The
+men, one and all, were overcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think as you&rsquo;d better go, for tonight?&rdquo; said
+the sergeant to the man, with sweet reasonableness. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d better
+leave it a bit, and arrange something between you. You can&rsquo;t have much
+claim on a woman, I should imagine, if it&rsquo;s how she says. And
+you&rsquo;ve come down on her a bit too sudden-like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady sobbed heart-brokenly. The man watched her large breasts shaken.
+They seemed to cast a spell over his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How I&rsquo;ve treated her, that&rsquo;s no matter,&rdquo; he replied.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come back, and I&rsquo;m going to stop in my own
+home&mdash;for a bit, anyhow. There you&rsquo;ve got it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A dirty action,&rdquo; said the sergeant, his face flushing dark.
+&ldquo;A dirty action, to come, after deserting a woman for that number of
+years, and want to force yourself on her! A dirty action&mdash;as isn&rsquo;t
+allowed by the law.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlady wiped her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never you mind about law nor nothing,&rdquo; cried the man, in a
+strange, strong voice. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m not moving out of this public
+tonight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman turned to the soldiers behind her, and said in a wheedling, sarcastic
+tone:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we going to stand it, boys?&mdash;Are we going to be done like this,
+Sergeant Thomas, by a scoundrel and a bully as has led a life beyond
+<i>mention</i>, in those American mining-camps, and then wants to come back and
+make havoc of a poor woman&rsquo;s life and savings, after having left her with
+a baby in arms to struggle as best she might? It&rsquo;s a crying shame if
+nobody will stand up for me&mdash;a crying shame&mdash;!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The soldiers and the little sergeant were bristling. The woman stooped and
+rummaged under the counter for a minute. Then, unseen to the man away near the
+fire, she threw out a plaited grass rope, such as is used for binding bales,
+and left it lying near the feet of the young soldiers, in the gloom at the back
+of the bar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she rose and fronted the situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come now,&rdquo; she said to the man, in a reasonable, coldly-coaxing
+tone, &ldquo;put your coat on and leave us alone. Be a man, and not worse than
+a brute of a German. You can get a bed easy enough in St Just, and if
+you&rsquo;ve nothing to pay for it sergeant would lend you a couple of
+shillings, I&rsquo;m sure he would.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All eyes were fixed on the man. He was looking down at the woman like a
+creature spell-bound or possessed by some devil&rsquo;s own intention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got money of my own,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+be frightened for your money, I&rsquo;ve plenty of that, for the time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; she coaxed, in a cold, almost sneering propitiation,
+&ldquo;put your coat on and go where you&rsquo;re wanted&mdash;be a <i>man</i>,
+not a brute of a German.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had drawn quite near to him, in her challenging coaxing intentness. He
+looked down at her with his bewitched face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I shan&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t do no such
+thing. <i>You&rsquo;ll</i> put me up for tonight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I!&rdquo; she cried. And suddenly she flung her arms round him,
+hung on to him with all her powerful weight, calling to the soldiers:
+&ldquo;Get the rope, boys, and fasten him up. Alfred&mdash;John, quick
+now&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man reared, looked round with maddened eyes, and heaved his powerful body.
+But the woman was powerful also, and very heavy, and was clenched with the
+determination of death. Her face, with its exulting, horribly vindictive look,
+was turned up to him from his own breast; he reached back his head frantically,
+to get away from it. Meanwhile the young soldiers, after having watched this
+frightful Laocoon swaying for a moment, stirred, and the malicious one darted
+swiftly with the rope. It was tangled a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me the end here,&rdquo; cried the sergeant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the big man heaved and struggled, swung the woman round against the
+seat and the table, in his convulsive effort to get free. But she pinned down
+his arms like a cuttlefish wreathed heavily upon him. And he heaved and swayed,
+and they crashed about the room, the soldiers hopping, the furniture bumping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young soldier had got the rope once round, the brisk sergeant helping him.
+The woman sank heavily lower, they got the rope round several times. In the
+struggle the victim fell over against the table. The ropes tightened till they
+cut his arms. The woman clung to his knees. Another soldier ran in a flash of
+genius, and fastened the strange man&rsquo;s feet with the pair of braces.
+Seats had crashed over, the table was thrown against the wall, but the man was
+bound, his arms pinned against his sides, his feet tied. He lay half fallen,
+sunk against the table, still for a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman rose, and sank, faint, on to the seat against the wall. Her breast
+heaved, she could not speak, she thought she was going to die. The bound man
+lay against the overturned table, his coat all twisted and pulled up beneath
+the ropes, leaving the loins exposed. The soldiers stood around, a little
+dazed, but excited with the row.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man began to struggle again, heaving instinctively against the ropes,
+taking great, deep breaths. His face, with its golden skin, flushed dark and
+surcharged, he heaved again. The great veins in his neck stood out. But it was
+no good, he went relaxed. Then again, suddenly, he jerked his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Another pair of braces, William,&rdquo; cried the excited soldier. He
+threw himself on the legs of the bound man, and managed to fasten the knees.
+Then again there was stillness. They could hear the clock tick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman looked at the prostrate figure, the strong, straight limbs, the
+strong back bound in subjection, the wide-eyed face that reminded her of a calf
+tied in a sack in a cart, only its head stretched dumbly backwards. And she
+triumphed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bound-up body began to struggle again. She watched fascinated the muscles
+working, the shoulders, the hips, the large, clean thighs. Even now he might
+break the ropes. She was afraid. But the lively young soldier sat on the
+shoulders of the bound man, and after a few perilous moments, there was
+stillness again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said the judicious sergeant to the bound man, &ldquo;if we
+untie you, will you promise to go off and make no more trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll not untie him in here,&rdquo; cried the woman. &ldquo;I
+wouldn&rsquo;t trust him as far as I could blow him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We might carry him outside, and undo him there,&rdquo; said the soldier.
+&ldquo;Then we could get the policeman, if he made any bother.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the sergeant. &ldquo;We could do that.&rdquo; Then
+again, in an altered, almost severe tone, to the prisoner. &ldquo;If we undo
+you outside, will you take your coat and go without creating any more
+disturbance?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the prisoner would not answer, he only lay with wide, dark, bright, eyes,
+like a bound animal. There was a space of perplexed silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then, do as you say,&rdquo; said the woman irritably. &ldquo;Carry
+him out amongst you, and let us shut up the house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They did so. Picking up the bound man, the four soldiers staggered clumsily
+into the silent square in front of the inn, the woman following with the cap
+and the overcoat. The young soldiers quickly unfastened the braces from the
+prisoner&rsquo;s legs, and they hopped indoors. They were in their
+stocking-feet, and outside the stars flashed cold. They stood in the doorway
+watching. The man lay quite still on the cold ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said the sergeant, in a subdued voice, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+loosen the knot, and he can work himself free, if you go in, Missis.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gave a last look at the dishevelled, bound man, as he sat on the ground.
+Then she went indoors, followed quickly by the sergeant. Then they were heard
+locking and barring the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man seated on the ground outside worked and strained at the rope. But it
+was not so easy to undo himself even now. So, with hands bound, making an
+effort, he got on his feet, and went and worked the cord against the rough edge
+of an old wall. The rope, being of a kind of plaited grass, soon frayed and
+broke, and he freed himself. He had various contusions. His arms were hurt and
+bruised from the bonds. He rubbed them slowly. Then he pulled his clothes
+straight, stooped, put on his cap, struggled into his overcoat, and walked
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stars were very brilliant. Clear as crystal, the beam from the lighthouse
+under the cliffs struck rhythmically on the night. Dazed, the man walked along
+the road past the churchyard. Then he stood leaning up against a wall, for a
+long time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was roused because his feet were so cold. So he pulled himself together, and
+turned again in the silent night, back towards the inn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bar was in darkness. But there was a light in the kitchen. He hesitated.
+Then very quietly he tried the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was surprised to find it open. He entered, and quietly closed it behind him.
+Then he went down the step past the bar-counter, and through to the lighted
+doorway of the kitchen. There sat his wife, planted in front of the range,
+where a furze fire was burning. She sat in a chair full in front of the range,
+her knees wide apart on the fender. She looked over her shoulder at him as he
+entered, but she did not speak. Then she stared in the fire again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a small, narrow kitchen. He dropped his cap on the table that was
+covered with yellowish American cloth, and took a seat with his back to the
+wall, near the oven. His wife still sat with her knees apart, her feet on the
+steel fender and stared into the fire, motionless. Her skin was smooth and rosy
+in the firelight. Everything in the house was very clean and bright. The man
+sat silent, too, his head dropped. And thus they remained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a question who would speak first. The woman leaned forward and poked the
+ends of the sticks in between the bars of the range. He lifted his head and
+looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Others gone to bed, have they?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she remained closed in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;S a cold night, out,&rdquo; he said, as if to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he laid his large, yet well-shapen workman&rsquo;s hand on the top of the
+stove, that was polished black and smooth as velvet. She would not look at him,
+yet she glanced out of the corners of her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eyes were fixed brightly on her, the pupils large and electric like those
+of a cat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should have picked you out among thousands,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Though you&rsquo;re bigger than I&rsquo;d have believed. Fine flesh
+you&rsquo;ve made.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was silent for some time. Then she turned in her chair upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you think of yourself,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;coming back on me
+like this after over fifteen years? You don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;ve not heard
+of you, neither, in Butte City and elsewhere?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was watching her with his clear, translucent, unchallenged eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Chaps comes an&rsquo; goes&mdash;I&rsquo;ve
+heard tell of you from time to time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew herself up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what lies have you heard about <i>me</i>?&rdquo; she demanded
+superbly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I dunno as I&rsquo;ve heard any lies at all&mdash;&rsquo;cept as you was
+getting on very well, like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice ran warily and detached. Her anger stirred again in her violently.
+But she subdued it, because of the danger there was in him, and more, perhaps,
+because of the beauty of his head and his level drawn brows, which she could
+not bear to forfeit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s more than I can say of <i>you</i>,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard more harm than good about <i>you</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, I dessay,&rdquo; he said, looking in the fire. It was a long time
+since he had seen the furze burning, he said to himself. There was a silence,
+during which she watched his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you call yourself a <i>man</i>?&rdquo; she said, more in contemptuous
+reproach than in anger. &ldquo;Leave a woman as you&rsquo;ve left me, you
+don&rsquo;t care to what!&mdash;and then to turn up in <i>this</i> fashion,
+without a word to say for yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stirred in his chair, planted his feet apart, and resting his arms on his
+knees, looked steadily into the fire, without answering. So near to her was his
+head, and the close black hair, she could scarcely refrain from starting away,
+as if it would bite her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you call that the action of a <i>man</i>?&rdquo; she repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, reaching and poking the bits of wood into the fire
+with his fingers. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t call it anything, as I know of.
+It&rsquo;s no good calling things by any names whatsoever, as I know of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She watched him in his actions. There was a longer and longer pause between
+each speech, though neither knew it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I <i>wonder</i> what you think of yourself!&rdquo; she exclaimed, with
+vexed emphasis. &ldquo;I <i>wonder</i> what sort of a fellow you take yourself
+to be!&rdquo; She was really perplexed as well as angry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, lifting his head to look at her, &ldquo;I guess
+I&rsquo;ll answer for my own faults, if everybody else&rsquo;ll answer for
+theirs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her heart beat fiery hot as he lifted his face to her. She breathed heavily,
+averting her face, almost losing her self-control.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what do you take <i>me</i> to be?&rdquo; she cried, in real
+helplessness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His face was lifted watching her, watching her soft, averted face, and the
+softly heaving mass of her breasts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take you,&rdquo; he said, with that laconic truthfulness which
+exercised such power over her, &ldquo;to be the deuce of a fine
+woman&mdash;darn me if you&rsquo;re not as fine a built woman as I&rsquo;ve
+seen, handsome with it as well. I shouldn&rsquo;t have expected you to put on
+such handsome flesh: &rsquo;struth I shouldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her heart beat fiery hot, as he watched her with those bright agate eyes,
+fixedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Been very handsome to <i>you</i>, for fifteen years, my sakes!&rdquo;
+she replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made no answer to this, but sat with his bright, quick eyes upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he rose. She started involuntarily. But he only said, in his laconic,
+measured way:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s warm in here now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he pulled off his overcoat, throwing it on the table. She sat as if
+slightly cowed, whilst he did so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Them ropes has given my arms something, by Ga-ard,&rdquo; he drawled,
+feeling his arms with his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still she sat in her chair before him, slightly cowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You was sharp, wasn&rsquo;t you, to catch me like that, eh?&rdquo; he
+smiled slowly. &ldquo;By Ga-ard, you had me fixed proper, proper you had. Darn
+me, you fixed me up proper&mdash;proper, you did.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leaned forwards in his chair towards her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think no worse of you for it, no, darned if I do. Fine
+pluck in a woman&rsquo;s what I admire. That I do, indeed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She only gazed into the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We fet from the start, we did. And, my word, you begin again quick the
+minute you see me, you did. Darn me, you was too sharp for me. A darn fine
+woman, puts up a darn good fight. Darn me if I could find a woman in all the
+darn States as could get me down like that. Wonderful fine woman you be, truth
+to say, at this minute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She only sat glowering into the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As grand a pluck as a man could wish to find in a woman, true as
+I&rsquo;m here,&rdquo; he said, reaching forward his hand and tentatively
+touching her between her full, warm breasts, quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She started, and seemed to shudder. But his hand insinuated itself between her
+breasts, as she continued to gaze in the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t you think I&rsquo;ve come back here a-begging,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve more than <i>one</i> thousand pounds to my name, I
+have. And a bit of a fight for a how-de-do pleases me, that it do. But that
+doesn&rsquo;t mean as you&rsquo;re going to deny as you&rsquo;re my
+Missis....&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>THE PRIMROSE PATH</h2>
+
+<p>
+A young man came out of the Victoria station, looking undecidedly at the
+taxi-cabs, dark-red and black, pressing against the kerb under the glass-roof.
+Several men in greatcoats and brass buttons jerked themselves erect to catch
+his attention, at the same time keeping an eye on the other people as they
+filtered through the open doorways of the station. Berry, however, was occupied
+by one of the men, a big, burly fellow whose blue eyes glared back and whose
+red-brown moustache bristled in defiance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you <i>want</i> a cab, sir?&rdquo; the man asked, in a half-mocking,
+challenging voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berry hesitated still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you Daniel Sutton?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the other defiantly, with uneasy conscience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then you are my uncle,&rdquo; said Berry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were alike in colouring, and somewhat in features, but the taxi driver was
+a powerful, well-fleshed man who glared at the world aggressively, being really
+on the defensive against his own heart. His nephew, of the same height, was
+thin, well-dressed, quiet and indifferent in his manner. And yet they were
+obviously kin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And who the devil are you?&rdquo; asked the taxi driver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Daniel Berry,&rdquo; replied the nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m damned&mdash;never saw you since you were a kid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rather awkwardly at this late hour the two shook hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are you, lad?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right. I thought you were in Australia.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Been back three months&mdash;bought a couple of these damned
+things,&rdquo;&mdash;he kicked the tyre of his taxi-cab in affectionate disgust.
+There was a moment&rsquo;s silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, but I&rsquo;m going back out there. I can&rsquo;t stand this
+cankering, rotten-hearted hell of a country any more; you want to come out to
+Sydney with me, lad. That&rsquo;s the place for you&mdash;beautiful place, oh,
+you could wish for nothing better. And money in it, too.&mdash;How&rsquo;s your
+mother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She died at Christmas,&rdquo; said the young man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dead! What!&mdash;our Anna!&rdquo; The big man&rsquo;s eyes stared, and
+he recoiled in fear. &ldquo;God, lad,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s three
+of &rsquo;em gone!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men looked away at the people passing along the pale grey pavements,
+under the wall of Trinity Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, strike me lucky!&rdquo; said the taxi driver at last, out of
+breath. &ldquo;She wor th&rsquo; best o&rsquo; th&rsquo; bunch of &rsquo;em. I
+see nowt nor hear nowt from any of &rsquo;em&mdash;they&rsquo;re not worth it,
+I&rsquo;ll be damned if they are&mdash;our sermon-lapping Adela and
+Maud,&rdquo; he looked scornfully at his nephew. &ldquo;But she was the best of
+&rsquo;em, our Anna was, that&rsquo;s a fact.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was talking because he was afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An&rsquo; after a hard life like she&rsquo;d had. How old was she,
+lad?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifty-five.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifty-five....&rdquo; He hesitated. Then, in a rather hushed voice, he
+asked the question that frightened him:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was it, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cancer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cancer again, like Julia! I never knew there was cancer in our family.
+Oh, my good God, our poor Anna, after the life she&rsquo;d had!&mdash;What,
+lad, do you see any God at the back of that?&mdash;I&rsquo;m damned if I
+do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was glaring, very blue-eyed and fierce, at his nephew. Berry lifted his
+shoulders slightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God?&rdquo; went on the taxi driver, in a curious intense tone,
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve only to look at the folk in the street to know
+there&rsquo;s nothing keeps it going but gravitation. Look at &rsquo;em. Look
+at him!&rdquo;&mdash;A mongrel-looking man was nosing past.
+&ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t <i>he</i> murder you for your watch-chain, but that
+he&rsquo;s afraid of society. He&rsquo;s got it <i>in</i> him.... Look at
+&rsquo;em.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berry watched the towns-people go by, and, sensitively feeling his
+uncle&rsquo;s antipathy, it seemed he was watching a sort of <i>danse
+macabre</i> of ugly criminals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you ever see such a God-forsaken crew creeping about! It gives you
+the very horrors to look at &rsquo;em. I sit in this damned car and watch
+&rsquo;em till, I can tell you, I feel like running the cab amuck among
+&rsquo;em, and running myself to kingdom come&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berry wondered at this outburst. He knew his uncle was the black-sheep, the
+youngest, the darling of his mother&rsquo;s family. He knew him to be at outs
+with respectability, mixing with the looser, sporting type, all betting and
+drinking and showing dogs and birds, and racing. As a critic of life, however,
+he did not know him. But the young man felt curiously understanding. &ldquo;He
+uses words like I do, he talks nearly as I talk, except that I shouldn&rsquo;t
+say those things. But I might feel like that, in myself, if I went a certain
+road.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to go to Watmore,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Can you take
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When d&rsquo;you want to go?&rdquo; asked the uncle fiercely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on, then. What d&rsquo;yer stand gassin&rsquo; on th&rsquo;
+causeway for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nephew took his seat beside the driver. The cab began to quiver, then it
+started forward with a whirr. The uncle, his hands and feet acting
+mechanically, kept his blue eyes fixed on the highroad into whose traffic the
+car was insinuating its way. Berry felt curiously as if he were sitting beside
+an older development of himself. His mind went back to his mother. She had been
+twenty years older than this brother of hers whom she had loved so dearly.
+&ldquo;He was one of the most affectionate little lads, and such a curly head!
+I could never have believed he would grow into the great, coarse bully he
+is&mdash;for he&rsquo;s nothing else. My father made a god of him&mdash;well,
+it&rsquo;s a good thing his father is dead. He got in with that sporting gang,
+that&rsquo;s what did it. Things were made too easy for him, and so he thought
+of no one but himself, and this is the result.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not that &ldquo;Joky&rdquo; Sutton was so very black a sheep. He had lived idly
+till he was eighteen, then had suddenly married a young, beautiful girl with
+clear brows and dark grey eyes, a factory girl. Having taken her to live with
+his parents he, lover of dogs and pigeons, went on to the staff of a sporting
+paper. But his wife was without uplift or warmth. Though they made money
+enough, their house was dark and cold and uninviting. He had two or three dogs,
+and the whole attic was turned into a great pigeon-house. He and his wife lived
+together roughly, with no warmth, no refinement, no touch of beauty anywhere,
+except that she was beautiful. He was a blustering, impetuous man, she was
+rather cold in her soul, did not care about anything very much, was rather
+capable and close with money. And she had a common accent in her speech. He
+outdid her a thousand times in coarse language, and yet that cold twang in her
+voice tortured him with shame that he stamped down in bullying and in becoming
+more violent in his own speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only his dogs adored him, and to them, and to his pigeons, he talked with
+rough, yet curiously tender caresses while they leaped and fluttered for joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After he and his wife had been married for seven years a little girl was born
+to them, then later, another. But the husband and wife drew no nearer together.
+She had an affection for her children almost like a cool governess. He had an
+emotional man&rsquo;s fear of sentiment, which helped to nip his wife from
+putting out any shoots. He treated his children roughly, and pretended to think
+it a good job when one was adopted by a well-to-do maternal aunt. But in his
+soul he hated his wife that she could give away one of his children. For after
+her cool fashion, she loved him. With a chaos of a man such as he, she had no
+chance of being anything but cold and hard, poor thing. For she did love him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the end he fell absurdly and violently in love with a rather sentimental
+young woman who read Browning. He made his wife an allowance and established a
+new ménage with the young lady, shortly after emigrating with her to Australia.
+Meanwhile his wife had gone to live with a publican, a widower, with whom she
+had had one of those curious, tacit understandings of which quiet women are
+capable, something like an arrangement for provision in the future.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was as much as the nephew knew. He sat beside his uncle, wondering how
+things stood at the present. They raced lightly out past the cemetery and along
+the boulevard, then turned into the rather grimy country. The mud flew out on
+either side, there was a fine mist of rain which blew in their faces. Berry
+covered himself up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the lanes the high hedges shone black with rain. The silvery grey sky,
+faintly dappled, spread wide over the low, green land. The elder man glanced
+fiercely up the road, then turned his red face to his nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how&rsquo;re you going on, lad?&rdquo; he said loudly. Berry noticed
+that his uncle was slightly uneasy of him. It made him also uncomfortable. The
+elder man had evidently something pressing on his soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who are you living with in town?&rdquo; asked the nephew. &ldquo;Have
+you gone back to Aunt Maud?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; barked the uncle. &ldquo;She wouldn&rsquo;t have me. I
+offered to&mdash;I want to&mdash;but she wouldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re alone, then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m not alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and glared with his fierce blue eyes at his nephew, but said no more
+for some time. The car ran on through the mud, under the wet wall of the park.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That other devil tried to poison me,&rdquo; suddenly shouted the elder
+man. &ldquo;The one I went to Australia with.&rdquo; At which, in spite of
+himself, the younger smiled in secret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How was that?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wanted to get rid of me. She got in with another fellow on the ship....
+By Jove, I was bad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where?&mdash;on the ship?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; bellowed the other. &ldquo;No. That was in Wellington, New
+Zealand. I was bad, and got lower an&rsquo; lower&mdash;couldn&rsquo;t think
+what was up. I could hardly crawl about. As certain as I&rsquo;m here, she was
+poisoning me, to get to th&rsquo; other chap&mdash;I&rsquo;m certain of
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what did you do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cleared out&mdash;went to Sydney&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And left her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I thought begod, I&rsquo;d better clear out if I wanted to
+live.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you were all right in Sydney?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better in no time&mdash;I <i>know</i> she was putting poison in my
+coffee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hm!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a glum silence. The driver stared at the road ahead, fixedly,
+managing the car as if it were a live thing. The nephew felt that his uncle was
+afraid, quite stupefied with fear, fear of life, of death, of himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re in rooms, then?&rdquo; asked the nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I&rsquo;m in a house of my own,&rdquo; said the uncle defiantly,
+&ldquo;wi&rsquo; th&rsquo; best little woman in th&rsquo; Midlands. She&rsquo;s
+a marvel.&mdash;Why don&rsquo;t you come an&rsquo; see us?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will. Who is she?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, she&rsquo;s a good girl&mdash;a beautiful little thing. I was clean
+gone on her first time I saw her. An&rsquo; she was on me. Her mother lives
+with us&mdash;respectable girl, none o&rsquo; your....&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how old is she?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&mdash;how old is she?&mdash;she&rsquo;s twenty-one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>She&rsquo;s</i> right enough.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;d marry her&mdash;getting a divorce&mdash;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall marry her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a little antagonism between the two men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s Aunt Maud?&rdquo; asked the younger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s at the Railway Arms&mdash;we passed it, just against
+Rollin&rsquo;s Mill Crossing.... They sent me a note this morning to go
+an&rsquo; see her when I can spare time. She&rsquo;s got consumption.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good Lord! Are you going?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But again Berry felt that his uncle was afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man got through his commission in the village, had a drink with his
+uncle at the inn, and the two were returning home. The elder man&rsquo;s
+subject of conversation was Australia. As they drew near the town they grew
+silent, thinking both of the public-house. At last they saw the gates of the
+railway crossing were closed before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shan&rsquo;t you call?&rdquo; asked Berry, jerking his head in the
+direction of the inn, which stood at the corner between two roads, its sign
+hanging under a bare horse-chestnut tree in front.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might as well. Come in an&rsquo; have a drink,&rdquo; said the uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been raining all the morning, so shallow pools of water lay about. A
+brewer&rsquo;s wagon, with wet barrels and warm-smelling horses, stood near the
+door of the inn. Everywhere seemed silent, but for the rattle of trains at the
+crossing. The two men went uneasily up the steps and into the bar. The place
+was paddled with wet feet, empty. As the bar-man was heard approaching, the
+uncle asked, his usual bluster slightly hushed by fear:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What yer goin&rsquo; ta have, lad? Same as last time?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man entered, evidently the proprietor. He was good-looking, with a long,
+heavy face and quick, dark eyes. His glance at Sutton was swift, a start, a
+recognition, and a withdrawal, into heavy neutrality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How are yer, Dan?&rdquo; he said, scarcely troubling to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are yer, George?&rdquo; replied Sutton, hanging back. &ldquo;My nephew,
+Dan Berry.&mdash;Give us Red Seal, George.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publican nodded to the younger man, and set the glasses on the bar. He
+pushed forward the two glasses, then leaned back in the dark corner behind the
+door, his arms folded, evidently preferring to get back from the watchful eyes
+of the nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&mdash;&rsquo;s luck,&rdquo; said Sutton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publican nodded in acknowledgement. Sutton and his nephew drank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why the hell don&rsquo;t you get that road mended in Cinder
+Hill&mdash;,&rdquo; said Sutton fiercely, pushing back his driver&rsquo;s cap
+and showing his short-cut, bristling hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They can&rsquo;t find it in their hearts to pull it up,&rdquo; replied
+the publican, laconically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Find in their hearts! They want settin&rsquo; in barrows an&rsquo;
+runnin&rsquo; up an&rsquo; down it till they cried for mercy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sutton put down his glass. The publican renewed it with a sure hand, at ease in
+whatsoever he did. Then he leaned back against the bar. He wore no coat. He
+stood with arms folded, his chin on his chest, his long moustache hanging. His
+back was round and slack, so that the lower part of his abdomen stuck forward,
+though he was not stout. His cheek was healthy, brown-red, and he was muscular.
+Yet there was about him this physical slackness, a reluctance in his slow, sure
+movements. His eyes were keen under his dark brows, but reluctant also, as if
+he were gloomily apathetic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a halt. The publican evidently would say nothing. Berry looked at the
+mahogany bar-counter, slopped with beer, at the whisky-bottles on the shelves.
+Sutton, his cap pushed back, showing a white brow above a weather-reddened
+face, rubbed his cropped hair uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publican glanced round suddenly. It seemed that only his dark eyes moved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going up?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And something, perhaps his eyes, indicated the unseen bed-chamber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;that&rsquo;s what I came for,&rdquo; replied Sutton, shifting
+nervously from one foot to the other. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s been asking for
+me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This morning,&rdquo; replied the publican, neutral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he put up a flap of the bar, and turned away through the dark doorway
+behind. Sutton, pulling off his cap, showing a round, short-cropped head which
+now was ducked forward, followed after him, the buttons holding the strap of
+his great-coat behind glittering for a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They climbed the dark stairs, the husband placing his feet carefully, because
+of his big boots. Then he followed down the passage, trying vaguely to keep a
+grip on his bowels, which seemed to be melting away, and definitely wishing for
+a neat brandy. The publican opened a door. Sutton, big and burly in his
+great-coat, went past him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bedroom seemed light and warm after the passage. There was a red eider-down
+on the bed. Then, making an effort, Sutton turned his eyes to see the sick
+woman. He met her eyes direct, dark, dilated. It was such a shock he almost
+started away. For a second he remained in torture, as if some invisible flame
+were playing on him to reduce his bones and fuse him down. Then he saw the
+sharp white edge of her jaw, and the black hair beside the hollow cheek. With a
+start he went towards the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Maud!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why, what ye been
+doin&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The publican stood at the window with his back to the bed. The husband, like
+one condemned but on the point of starting away, stood by the bedside staring
+in horror at his wife, whose dilated grey eyes, nearly all black now, watched
+him wearily, as if she were looking at something a long way off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Going exceedingly pale, he jerked up his head and stared at the wall over the
+pillows. There was a little coloured picture of a bird perched on a bell, and a
+nest among ivy leaves beneath. It appealed to him, made him wonder, roused a
+feeling of childish magic in him. They were wonderfully fresh, green ivy
+leaves, and nobody had seen the nest among them save him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly he looked down again at the face on the bed, to try and recognise
+it. He knew the white brow and the beautiful clear eyebrows. That was his wife,
+with whom he had passed his youth, flesh of his flesh, his, himself. Then those
+tired eyes, which met his again from a long way off, disturbed him until he did
+not know where he was. Only the sunken cheeks, and the mouth that seemed to
+protrude now were foreign to him, and filled him with horror. It seemed he lost
+his identity. He was the young husband of the woman with the clear brows; he
+was the married man fighting with her whose eyes watched him, a little
+indifferently, from a long way off; and he was a child in horror of that
+protruding mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came a crackling sound of her voice. He knew she had consumption of the
+throat, and braced himself hard to bear the noise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was it, Maud?&rdquo; he asked in panic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the broken, crackling voice came again. He was too terrified of the sound
+of it to hear what was said. There was a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll take Winnie?&rdquo; the publican&rsquo;s voice interpreted
+from the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you bother, Maud, I&rsquo;ll take her,&rdquo; he said,
+stupefying his mind so as not to understand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked curiously round the room. It was not a bad bedroom, light and warm.
+There were many medicine bottles aggregated in a corner of the
+washstand&mdash;and a bottle of Three Star brandy, half full. And there were
+also photographs of strange people on the chest of drawers. It was not a bad
+room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again he started as if he were shot. She was speaking. He bent down, but did
+not look at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be good to her,&rdquo; she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he realised her meaning, that he should be good to their child when the
+mother was gone, a blade went through his flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be good to her, Maud, don&rsquo;t you bother,&rdquo; he said,
+beginning to feel shaky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked again at the picture of the bird. It perched cheerfully under a blue
+sky, with robust, jolly ivy leaves near. He was gathering his courage to
+depart. He looked down, but struggled hard not to take in the sight of his
+wife&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I s&rsquo;ll come again, Maud,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I hope
+you&rsquo;ll go on all right. Is there anything as you want?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was an almost imperceptible shake of the head from the sick woman, making
+his heart melt swiftly again. Then, dragging his limbs, he got out of the room
+and down the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlord came after him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let you know if anything happens,&rdquo; the publican said,
+still laconic, but with his eyes dark and swift.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, a&rsquo; right,&rdquo; said Sutton blindly. He looked round for his
+cap, which he had all the time in his hand. Then he got out of doors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a moment the uncle and nephew were in the car jolting on the level crossing.
+The elder man seemed as if something tight in his brain made him open his eyes
+wide, and stare. He held the steering wheel firmly. He knew he could steer
+accurately, to a hair&rsquo;s breadth. Glaring fixedly ahead, he let the car
+go, till it bounded over the uneven road. There were three coal-carts in a
+string. In an instant the car grazed past them, almost biting the kerb on the
+other side. Sutton aimed his car like a projectile, staring ahead. He did not
+want to know, to think, to realise, he wanted to be only the driver of that
+quick taxi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The town drew near, suddenly. There were allotment-gardens with dark-purple
+twiggy fruit-trees and wet alleys between the hedges. Then suddenly the streets
+of dwelling-houses whirled close, and the car was climbing the hill, with an
+angry whirr,&mdash;up&mdash;up&mdash;till they rode out on to the crest and
+could see the tram-cars, dark-red and yellow, threading their way round the
+corner below, and all the traffic roaring between the shops.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Got anywhere to go?&rdquo; asked Sutton of his nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was going to see one or two people.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come an&rsquo; have a bit o&rsquo; dinner with us,&rdquo; said the
+other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berry knew that his uncle wanted to be distracted, so that he should not think
+nor realise. The big man was running hard away from the horror of realisation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Berry agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car went quickly through the town. It ran up a long street nearly into the
+country again. Then it pulled up at a house that stood alone, below the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I s&rsquo;ll be back in ten minutes,&rdquo; said the uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car went on to the garage. Berry stood curiously at the top of the stone
+stairs that led from the highroad down to the level of the house, an old stone
+place. The garden was dilapidated. Broken fruit-trees leaned at a sharp angle
+down the steep bank. Right across the dim grey atmosphere, in a kind of valley
+on the edge of the town, new suburb-patches showed pinkish on the dark earth.
+It was a kind of unresolved borderland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berry went down the steps. Through the broken black fence of the orchard, long
+grass showed yellow. The place seemed deserted. He knocked, then knocked again.
+An elderly woman appeared. She looked like a housekeeper. At first she said
+suspiciously that Mr. Sutton was not in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My uncle just put me down. He&rsquo;ll be in in ten minutes,&rdquo;
+replied the visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, are you the Mr. Berry who is related to him?&rdquo; exclaimed the
+elderly woman. &ldquo;Come in&mdash;come in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was at once kindly and a little bit servile. The young man entered. It was
+an old house, rather dark, and sparsely furnished. The elderly woman sat
+nervously on the edge of one of the chairs in a drawing-room that looked as if
+it were furnished from dismal relics of dismal homes, and there was a little
+straggling attempt at conversation. Mrs. Greenwell was evidently a working
+class woman unused to service or to any formality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently she gathered up courage to invite her visitor into the dining-room.
+There from the table under the window rose a tall, slim girl with a cat in her
+arms. She was evidently a little more lady-like than was habitual to her, but
+she had a gentle, delicate, small nature. Her brown hair almost covered her
+ears, her dark lashes came down in shy awkwardness over her beautiful blue
+eyes. She shook hands in a frank way, yet she was shrinking. Evidently she was
+not sure how her position would affect her visitor. And yet she was assured in
+herself, shrinking and timid as she was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She must be a good deal in love with him,&rdquo; thought Berry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both women glanced shamefacedly at the roughly laid table. Evidently they ate
+in a rather rough and ready fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elaine&mdash;she had this poetic name&mdash;fingered her cat timidly, not
+knowing what to say or to do, unable even to ask her visitor to sit down. He
+noticed how her skirt hung almost flat on her hips. She was young, scarce
+developed, a long, slender thing. Her colouring was warm and exquisite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The elder woman bustled out to the kitchen. Berry fondled the terrier dogs that
+had come curiously to his heels, and glanced out of the window at the wet,
+deserted orchard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This room, too, was not well furnished, and rather dark. But there was a big
+red fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He always has fox terriers,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she answered, showing her teeth in a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you like them, too?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&rdquo;&mdash;she glanced down at the dogs. &ldquo;I like Tam better
+than Sally&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her speech always tailed off into an awkward silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve been to see Aunt Maud,&rdquo; said the nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes, blue and scared and shrinking, met his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dan had a letter,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s very
+bad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it horrible!&rdquo; she exclaimed, her face crumbling up
+with fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old woman, evidently a hard-used, rather down-trodden workman&rsquo;s wife,
+came in with two soup-plates. She glanced anxiously to see how her daughter was
+progressing with the visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mother, Dan&rsquo;s been to see Maud,&rdquo; said Elaine, in a quiet
+voice full of fear and trouble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old woman looked up anxiously, in question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think she wanted him to take the child. She&rsquo;s very bad, I
+believe,&rdquo; explained Berry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, we should take Winnie!&rdquo; cried Elaine. But both women seemed
+uncertain, wavering in their position. Already Berry could see that his uncle
+had bullied them, as he bullied everybody. But they were used to unpleasant
+men, and seemed to keep at a distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you have some soup?&rdquo; asked the mother, humbly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She evidently did the work. The daughter was to be a lady, more or less, always
+dressed and nice for when Sutton came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They heard him heavily running down the steps outside. The dogs got up. Elaine
+seemed to forget the visitor. It was as if she came into life. Yet she was
+nervous and afraid. The mother stood as if ready to exculpate herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sutton burst open the door. Big, blustering, wet in his immense grey coat, he
+came into the dining-room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; he said to his nephew, &ldquo;making yourself at
+home?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; replied Berry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Jack,&rdquo; he said to the girl. &ldquo;Got owt to grizzle
+about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What for?&rdquo; she asked, in a clear, half-challenging voice, that had
+that peculiar twang, almost petulant, so female and so attractive. Yet she was
+defiant like a boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a wonder if you haven&rsquo;t,&rdquo; growled Sutton. And,
+with a really intimate movement, he stooped down and fondled his dogs, though
+paying no attention to them. Then he stood up, and remained with feet apart on
+the hearthrug, his head ducked forward, watching the girl. He seemed
+abstracted, as if he could only watch her. His great-coat hung open, so that
+she could see his figure, simple and human in the great husk of cloth. She
+stood nervously with her hands behind her, glancing at him, unable to see
+anything else. And he was scarcely conscious but of her. His eyes were still
+strained and staring, and as they followed the girl, when, long-limbed and
+languid, she moved away, it was as if he saw in her something impersonal, the
+female, not the woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Had your dinner?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We were just going to have it,&rdquo; she replied, with the same curious
+little vibration in her voice, like the twang of a string.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mother entered, bringing a saucepan from which she ladled soup into three
+plates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sit down, lad,&rdquo; said Sutton. &ldquo;You sit down, Jack, an&rsquo;
+give me mine here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, aren&rsquo;t you coming to table?&rdquo; she complained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I tell you,&rdquo; he snarled, almost pretending to be disagreeable.
+But she was slightly afraid even of the pretence, which pleased and relieved
+him. He stood on the hearthrug eating his soup noisily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you going to take your coat off?&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s filling the place full of steam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not answer, but, with his head bent forward over the plate, he ate his
+soup hastily, to get it done with. When he put down his empty plate, she rose
+and went to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do take your coat off, Dan,&rdquo; she said, and she took hold of the
+breast of his coat, trying to push it back over his shoulder. But she could
+not. Only the stare in his eyes changed to a glare as her hand moved over his
+shoulder. He looked down into her eyes. She became pale, rather
+frightened-looking, and she turned her face away, and it was drawn slightly
+with love and fear and misery. She tried again to put off his coat, her thin
+wrists pulling at it. He stood solidly planted, and did not look at her, but
+stared straight in front. She was playing with passion, afraid of it, and
+really wretched because it left her, the person, out of count. Yet she
+continued. And there came into his bearing, into his eyes, the curious smile of
+passion, pushing away even the death-horror. It was life stronger than death in
+him. She stood close to his breast. Their eyes met, and she was carried away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take your coat off, Dan,&rdquo; she said coaxingly, in a low tone meant
+for no one but him. And she slid her hands on his shoulder, and he yielded, so
+that the coat was pushed back. She had flushed, and her eyes had grown very
+bright. She got hold of the cuff of his coat. Gently, he eased himself, so that
+she drew it off. Then he stood in a thin suit, which revealed his vigorous,
+almost mature form.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a weight!&rdquo; she exclaimed, in a peculiar penetrating voice, as
+she went out hugging the overcoat. In a moment she came back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood still in the same position, a frown over his fiercely staring eyes.
+The pain, the fear, the horror in his breast were all burning away in the new,
+fiercest flame of passion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get your dinner,&rdquo; he said roughly to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had all I want,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;You come an&rsquo;
+have yours.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at the table as if he found it difficult to see things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want no more,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood close to his chest. She wanted to touch him and to comfort him. There
+was something about him now that fascinated her. Berry felt slightly ashamed
+that she seemed to ignore the presence of others in the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mother came in. She glanced at Sutton, standing planted on the hearthrug,
+his head ducked, the heavy frown hiding his eyes. There was a peculiar braced
+intensity about him that made the elder woman afraid. Suddenly he jerked his
+head round to his nephew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get on wi&rsquo; your dinner, lad,&rdquo; he said, and he went to the
+door. The dogs, which had continually lain down and got up again, uneasy, now
+rose and watched. The girl went after him, saying, clearly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did you want, Dan?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her slim, quick figure was gone, the door was closed behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was silence. The mother, still more slave-like in her movement, sat down
+in a low chair. Berry drank some beer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That girl will leave him,&rdquo; he said to himself. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll
+hate him like poison. And serve him right. Then she&rsquo;ll go off with
+somebody else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she did.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>THE HORSE DEALER&rsquo;S DAUGHTER</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Mabel, and what are you going to do with yourself?&rdquo; asked
+Joe, with foolish flippancy. He felt quite safe himself. Without listening for
+an answer, he turned aside, worked a grain of tobacco to the tip of his tongue,
+and spat it out. He did not care about anything, since he felt safe himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The three brothers and the sister sat round the desolate breakfast table,
+attempting some sort of desultory consultation. The morning&rsquo;s post had
+given the final tap to the family fortunes, and all was over. The dreary
+dining-room itself, with its heavy mahogany furniture, looked as if it were
+waiting to be done away with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the consultation amounted to nothing. There was a strange air of
+ineffectuality about the three men, as they sprawled at table, smoking and
+reflecting vaguely on their own condition. The girl was alone, a rather short,
+sullen-looking young woman of twenty-seven. She did not share the same life as
+her brothers. She would have been good-looking, save for the impassive fixity
+of her face, &ldquo;bull-dog&rdquo;, as her brothers called it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a confused tramping of horses&rsquo; feet outside. The three men all
+sprawled round in their chairs to watch. Beyond the dark holly-bushes that
+separated the strip of lawn from the highroad, they could see a cavalcade of
+shire horses swinging out of their own yard, being taken for exercise. This was
+the last time. These were the last horses that would go through their hands.
+The young men watched with critical, callous look. They were all frightened at
+the collapse of their lives, and the sense of disaster in which they were
+involved left them no inner freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet they were three fine, well-set fellows enough. Joe, the eldest, was a man
+of thirty-three, broad and handsome in a hot, flushed way. His face was red, he
+twisted his black moustache over a thick finger, his eyes were shallow and
+restless. He had a sensual way of uncovering his teeth when he laughed, and his
+bearing was stupid. Now he watched the horses with a glazed look of
+helplessness in his eyes, a certain stupor of downfall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great draught-horses swung past. They were tied head to tail, four of them,
+and they heaved along to where a lane branched off from the highroad, planting
+their great hoofs floutingly in the fine black mud, swinging their great
+rounded haunches sumptuously, and trotting a few sudden steps as they were led
+into the lane, round the corner. Every movement showed a massive, slumbrous
+strength, and a stupidity which held them in subjection. The groom at the head
+looked back, jerking the leading rope. And the calvalcade moved out of sight up
+the lane, the tail of the last horse, bobbed up tight and stiff, held out taut
+from the swinging great haunches as they rocked behind the hedges in a
+motionlike sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Joe watched with glazed hopeless eyes. The horses were almost like his own body
+to him. He felt he was done for now. Luckily he was engaged to a woman as old
+as himself, and therefore her father, who was steward of a neighbouring estate,
+would provide him with a job. He would marry and go into harness. His life was
+over, he would be a subject animal now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned uneasily aside, the retreating steps of the horses echoing in his
+ears. Then, with foolish restlessness, he reached for the scraps of bacon-rind
+from the plates, and making a faint whistling sound, flung them to the terrier
+that lay against the fender. He watched the dog swallow them, and waited till
+the creature looked into his eyes. Then a faint grin came on his face, and in a
+high, foolish voice he said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You won&rsquo;t get much more bacon, shall you, you little
+b&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dog faintly and dismally wagged its tail, then lowered his haunches,
+circled round, and lay down again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was another helpless silence at the table. Joe sprawled uneasily in his
+seat, not willing to go till the family conclave was dissolved. Fred Henry, the
+second brother, was erect, clean-limbed, alert. He had watched the passing of
+the horses with more <i>sang-froid</i>. If he was an animal, like Joe, he was
+an animal which controls, not one which is controlled. He was master of any
+horse, and he carried himself with a well-tempered air of mastery. But he was
+not master of the situations of life. He pushed his coarse brown moustache
+upwards, off his lip, and glanced irritably at his sister, who sat impassive
+and inscrutable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll go and stop with Lucy for a bit, shan&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+he asked. The girl did not answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what else you can do,&rdquo; persisted Fred Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go as a skivvy,&rdquo; Joe interpolated laconically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl did not move a muscle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I was her, I should go in for training for a nurse,&rdquo; said
+Malcolm, the youngest of them all. He was the baby of the family, a young man
+of twenty-two, with a fresh, jaunty <i>museau</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mabel did not take any notice of him. They had talked at her and round her
+for so many years, that she hardly heard them at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The marble clock on the mantel-piece softly chimed the half-hour, the dog rose
+uneasily from the hearthrug and looked at the party at the breakfast table. But
+still they sat on in ineffectual conclave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, all right,&rdquo; said Joe suddenly, <i>à propos</i> of nothing.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get a move on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pushed back his chair, straddled his knees with a downward jerk, to get them
+free, in horsy fashion, and went to the fire. Still he did not go out of the
+room; he was curious to know what the others would do or say. He began to
+charge his pipe, looking down at the dog and saying, in a high, affected voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going wi&rsquo; me? Going wi&rsquo; me are ter? Tha&rsquo;rt goin&rsquo;
+further than tha counts on just now, dost hear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dog faintly wagged its tail, the man stuck out his jaw and covered his pipe
+with his hands, and puffed intently, losing himself in the tobacco, looking
+down all the while at the dog with an absent brown eye. The dog looked up at
+him in mournful distrust. Joe stood with his knees stuck out, in real horsy
+fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you had a letter from Lucy?&rdquo; Fred Henry asked of his sister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Last week,&rdquo; came the neutral reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what does she say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does she <i>ask</i> you to go and stop there?&rdquo; persisted Fred
+Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She says I can if I like.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then, you&rsquo;d better. Tell her you&rsquo;ll come on
+Monday.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was received in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ll do then, is it?&rdquo; said Fred Henry,
+in some exasperation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she made no answer. There was a silence of futility and irritation in the
+room. Malcolm grinned fatuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to make up your mind between now and next
+Wednesday,&rdquo; said Joe loudly, &ldquo;or else find yourself lodgings on the
+kerbstone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The face of the young woman darkened, but she sat on immutable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s Jack Fergusson!&rdquo; exclaimed Malcolm, who was looking
+aimlessly out of the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where?&rdquo; exclaimed Joe, loudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just gone past.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Coming in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Malcolm craned his neck to see the gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a silence. Mabel sat on like one condemned, at the head of the table.
+Then a whistle was heard from the kitchen. The dog got up and barked sharply.
+Joe opened the door and shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a moment a young man entered. He was muffled up in overcoat and a purple
+woollen scarf, and his tweed cap, which he did not remove, was pulled down on
+his head. He was of medium height, his face was rather long and pale, his eyes
+looked tired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hello, Jack! Well, Jack!&rdquo; exclaimed Malcolm and Joe. Fred Henry
+merely said, &ldquo;Jack.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s doing?&rdquo; asked the newcomer, evidently addressing Fred
+Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Same. We&rsquo;ve got to be out by Wednesday.&mdash;Got a cold?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have&mdash;got it bad, too.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you stop in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Me</i> stop in? When I can&rsquo;t stand on my legs, perhaps I shall
+have a chance.&rdquo; The young man spoke huskily. He had a slight Scotch
+accent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a knock-out, isn&rsquo;t it,&rdquo; said Joe, boisterously,
+&ldquo;if a doctor goes round croaking with a cold. Looks bad for the patients,
+doesn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young doctor looked at him slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anything the matter with <i>you</i>, then?&rdquo; he asked
+sarcastically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not as I know of. Damn your eyes, I hope not. Why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought you were very concerned about the patients, wondered if you
+might be one yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Damn it, no, I&rsquo;ve never been patient to no flaming doctor, and
+hope I never shall be,&rdquo; returned Joe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this point Mabel rose from the table, and they all seemed to become aware of
+her existence. She began putting the dishes together. The young doctor looked
+at her, but did not address her. He had not greeted her. She went out of the
+room with the tray, her face impassive and unchanged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When are you off then, all of you?&rdquo; asked the doctor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m catching the eleven-forty,&rdquo; replied Malcolm. &ldquo;Are
+you goin&rsquo; down wi&rsquo; th&rsquo; trap, Joe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve told you I&rsquo;m going down wi&rsquo; th&rsquo; trap,
+haven&rsquo;t I?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;d better be getting her in then.&mdash;So long, Jack, if I
+don&rsquo;t see you before I go,&rdquo; said Malcolm, shaking hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went out, followed by Joe, who seemed to have his tail between his legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, this is the devil&rsquo;s own,&rdquo; exclaimed the doctor, when
+he was left alone with Fred Henry. &ldquo;Going before Wednesday, are
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the orders,&rdquo; replied the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where, to Northampton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The devil!&rdquo; exclaimed Fergusson, with quiet chagrin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there was silence between the two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All settled up, are you?&rdquo; asked Fergusson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;About.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was another pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I shall miss yer, Freddy, boy,&rdquo; said the young doctor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I shall miss thee, Jack,&rdquo; returned the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss you like hell,&rdquo; mused the doctor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fred Henry turned aside. There was nothing to say. Mabel came in again, to
+finish clearing the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are <i>you</i> going to do, then, Miss Pervin?&rdquo; asked
+Fergusson. &ldquo;Going to your sister&rsquo;s, are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mabel looked at him with her steady, dangerous eyes, that always made him
+uncomfortable, unsettling his superficial ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, what in the name of fortune <i>are</i> you going to do? Say what
+you mean to do,&rdquo; cried Fred Henry, with futile intensity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she only averted her head, and continued her work. She folded the white
+table-cloth, and put on the chenille cloth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The sulkiest bitch that ever trod!&rdquo; muttered her brother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she finished her task with perfectly impassive face, the young doctor
+watching her interestedly all the while. Then she went out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fred Henry stared after her, clenching his lips, his blue eyes fixing in sharp
+antagonism, as he made a grimace of sour exasperation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You could bray her into bits, and that&rsquo;s all you&rsquo;d get out
+of her,&rdquo; he said, in a small, narrowed tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor smiled faintly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s she <i>going</i> to do, then?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strike me if I know!&rdquo; returned the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause. Then the doctor stirred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be seeing you tonight, shall I?&rdquo; he said to his friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;where&rsquo;s it to be? Are we going over to Jessdale?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. I&rsquo;ve got such a cold on me. I&rsquo;ll come
+round to the Moon and Stars, anyway.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let Lizzie and May miss their night for once, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it&mdash;if I feel as I do now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All&rsquo;s one&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two young men went through the passage and down to the back door together.
+The house was large, but it was servantless now, and desolate. At the back was
+a small bricked house-yard, and beyond that a big square, gravelled fine and
+red, and having stables on two sides. Sloping, dank, winter-dark fields
+stretched away on the open sides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the stables were empty. Joseph Pervin, the father of the family, had been a
+man of no education, who had become a fairly large horse dealer. The stables
+had been full of horses, there was a great turmoil and come-and-go of horses
+and of dealers and grooms. Then the kitchen was full of servants. But of late
+things had declined. The old man had married a second time, to retrieve his
+fortunes. Now he was dead and everything was gone to the dogs, there was
+nothing but debt and threatening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For months, Mabel had been servantless in the big house, keeping the home
+together in penury for her ineffectual brothers. She had kept house for ten
+years. But previously, it was with unstinted means. Then, however brutal and
+coarse everything was, the sense of money had kept her proud, confident. The
+men might be foul-mouthed, the women in the kitchen might have bad reputations,
+her brothers might have illegitimate children. But so long as there was money,
+the girl felt herself established, and brutally proud, reserved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No company came to the house, save dealers and coarse men. Mabel had no
+associates of her own sex, after her sister went away. But she did not mind.
+She went regularly to church, she attended to her father. And she lived in the
+memory of her mother, who had died when she was fourteen, and whom she had
+loved. She had loved her father, too, in a different way, depending upon him,
+and feeling secure in him, until at the age of fifty-four he married again. And
+then she had set hard against him. Now he had died and left them all hopelessly
+in debt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had suffered badly during the period of poverty. Nothing, however, could
+shake the curious sullen, animal pride that dominated each member of the
+family. Now, for Mabel, the end had come. Still she would not cast about her.
+She would follow her own way just the same. She would always hold the keys of
+her own situation. Mindless and persistent, she endured from day to day. Why
+should she think? Why should she answer anybody? It was enough that this was
+the end, and there was no way out. She need not pass any more darkly along the
+main street of the small town, avoiding every eye. She need not demean herself
+any more, going into the shops and buying the cheapest food. This was at an
+end. She thought of nobody, not even of herself. Mindless and persistent, she
+seemed in a sort of ecstasy to be coming nearer to her fulfilment, her own
+glorification, approaching her dead mother, who was glorified.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon she took a little bag, with shears and sponge and a small
+scrubbing brush, and went out. It was a grey, wintry day, with saddened,
+dark-green fields and an atmosphere blackened by the smoke of foundries not far
+off. She went quickly, darkly along the causeway, heeding nobody, through the
+town to the churchyard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There she always felt secure, as if no one could see her, although as a matter
+of fact she was exposed to the stare of everyone who passed along under the
+churchyard wall. Nevertheless, once under the shadow of the great looming
+church, among the graves, she felt immune from the world, reserved within the
+thick churchyard wall as in another country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carefully she clipped the grass from the grave, and arranged the pinky-white,
+small chrysanthemums in the tin cross. When this was done, she took an empty
+jar from a neighbouring grave, brought water, and carefully, most scrupulously
+sponged the marble headstone and the coping-stone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It gave her sincere satisfaction to do this. She felt in immediate contact with
+the world of her mother. She took minute pains, went through the park in a
+state bordering on pure happiness, as if in performing this task she came into
+a subtle, intimate connexion with her mother. For the life she followed here in
+the world was far less real than the world of death she inherited from her
+mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor&rsquo;s house was just by the church. Fergusson, being a mere hired
+assistant, was slave to the countryside. As he hurried now to attend to the
+outpatients in the surgery, glancing across the graveyard with his quick eye,
+he saw the girl at her task at the grave. She seemed so intent and remote, it
+was like looking into another world. Some mystical element was touched in him.
+He slowed down as he walked, watching her as if spell-bound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted her eyes, feeling him looking. Their eyes met. And each looked again
+at once, each feeling, in some way, found out by the other. He lifted his cap
+and passed on down the road. There remained distinct in his consciousness, like
+a vision, the memory of her face, lifted from the tombstone in the churchyard,
+and looking at him with slow, large, portentous eyes. It <i>was</i> portentous,
+her face. It seemed to mesmerise him. There was a heavy power in her eyes which
+laid hold of his whole being, as if he had drunk some powerful drug. He had
+been feeling weak and done before. Now the life came back into him, he felt
+delivered from his own fretted, daily self.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He finished his duties at the surgery as quickly as might be, hastily filling
+up the bottles of the waiting people with cheap drugs. Then, in perpetual
+haste, he set off again to visit several cases in another part of his round,
+before teatime. At all times he preferred to walk, if he could, but
+particularly when he was not well. He fancied the motion restored him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The afternoon was falling. It was grey, deadened, and wintry, with a slow,
+moist, heavy coldness sinking in and deadening all the faculties. But why
+should he think or notice? He hastily climbed the hill and turned across the
+dark-green fields, following the black cinder-track. In the distance, across a
+shallow dip in the country, the small town was clustered like smouldering ash,
+a tower, a spire, a heap of low, raw, extinct houses. And on the nearest fringe
+of the town, sloping into the dip, was Oldmeadow, the Pervins&rsquo; house. He
+could see the stables and the outbuildings distinctly, as they lay towards him
+on the slope. Well, he would not go there many more times! Another resource
+would be lost to him, another place gone: the only company he cared for in the
+alien, ugly little town he was losing. Nothing but work, drudgery, constant
+hastening from dwelling to dwelling among the colliers and the iron-workers. It
+wore him out, but at the same time he had a craving for it. It was a stimulant
+to him to be in the homes of the working people, moving as it were through the
+innermost body of their life. His nerves were excited and gratified. He could
+come so near, into the very lives of the rough, inarticulate, powerfully
+emotional men and women. He grumbled, he said he hated the hellish hole. But as
+a matter of fact it excited him, the contact with the rough, strongly-feeling
+people was a stimulant applied direct to his nerves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below Oldmeadow, in the green, shallow, soddened hollow of fields, lay a
+square, deep pond. Roving across the landscape, the doctor&rsquo;s quick eye
+detected a figure in black passing through the gate of the field, down towards
+the pond. He looked again. It would be Mabel Pervin. His mind suddenly became
+alive and attentive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why was she going down there? He pulled up on the path on the slope above, and
+stood staring. He could just make sure of the small black figure moving in the
+hollow of the failing day. He seemed to see her in the midst of such obscurity,
+that he was like a clairvoyant, seeing rather with the mind&rsquo;s eye than
+with ordinary sight. Yet he could see her positively enough, whilst he kept his
+eye attentive. He felt, if he looked away from her, in the thick, ugly falling
+dusk, he would lose her altogether.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He followed her minutely as she moved, direct and intent, like something
+transmitted rather than stirring in voluntary activity, straight down the field
+towards the pond. There she stood on the bank for a moment. She never raised
+her head. Then she waded slowly into the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood motionless as the small black figure walked slowly and deliberately
+towards the centre of the pond, very slowly, gradually moving deeper into the
+motionless water, and still moving forward as the water got up to her breast.
+Then he could see her no more in the dusk of the dead afternoon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Would you believe it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he hastened straight down, running over the wet, soddened fields, pushing
+through the hedges, down into the depression of callous wintry obscurity. It
+took him several minutes to come to the pond. He stood on the bank, breathing
+heavily. He could see nothing. His eyes seemed to penetrate the dead water.
+Yes, perhaps that was the dark shadow of her black clothing beneath the surface
+of the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He slowly ventured into the pond. The bottom was deep, soft clay, he sank in,
+and the water clasped dead cold round his legs. As he stirred he could smell
+the cold, rotten clay that fouled up into the water. It was objectionable in
+his lungs. Still, repelled and yet not heeding, he moved deeper into the pond.
+The cold water rose over his thighs, over his loins, upon his abdomen. The
+lower part of his body was all sunk in the hideous cold element. And the bottom
+was so deeply soft and uncertain, he was afraid of pitching with his mouth
+underneath. He could not swim, and was afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He crouched a little, spreading his hands under the water and moving them
+round, trying to feel for her. The dead cold pond swayed upon his chest. He
+moved again, a little deeper, and again, with his hands underneath, he felt all
+around under the water. And he touched her clothing. But it evaded his fingers.
+He made a desperate effort to grasp it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so doing he lost his balance and went under, horribly, suffocating in the
+foul earthy water, struggling madly for a few moments. At last, after what
+seemed an eternity, he got his footing, rose again into the air and looked
+around. He gasped, and knew he was in the world. Then he looked at the water.
+She had risen near him. He grasped her clothing, and drawing her nearer, turned
+to take his way to land again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went very slowly, carefully, absorbed in the slow progress. He rose higher,
+climbing out of the pond. The water was now only about his legs; he was
+thankful, full of relief to be out of the clutches of the pond. He lifted her
+and staggered on to the bank, out of the horror of wet, grey clay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laid her down on the bank. She was quite unconscious and running with water.
+He made the water come from her mouth, he worked to restore her. He did not
+have to work very long before he could feel the breathing begin again in her;
+she was breathing naturally. He worked a little longer. He could feel her live
+beneath his hands; she was coming back. He wiped her face, wrapped her in his
+overcoat, looked round into the dim, dark-grey world, then lifted her and
+staggered down the bank and across the fields.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed an unthinkably long way, and his burden so heavy he felt he would
+never get to the house. But at last he was in the stable-yard, and then in the
+house-yard. He opened the door and went into the house. In the kitchen he laid
+her down on the hearthrug, and called. The house was empty. But the fire was
+burning in the grate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then again he kneeled to attend to her. She was breathing regularly, her eyes
+were wide open and as if conscious, but there seemed something missing in her
+look. She was conscious in herself, but unconscious of her surroundings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ran upstairs, took blankets from a bed, and put them before the fire to
+warm. Then he removed her saturated, earthy-smelling clothing, rubbed her dry
+with a towel, and wrapped her naked in the blankets. Then he went into the
+dining-room, to look for spirits. There was a little whisky. He drank a gulp
+himself, and put some into her mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The effect was instantaneous. She looked full into his face, as if she had been
+seeing him for some time, and yet had only just become conscious of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dr. Fergusson?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was divesting himself of his coat, intending to find some dry clothing
+upstairs. He could not bear the smell of the dead, clayey water, and he was
+mortally afraid for his own health.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What did I do?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Walked into the pond,&rdquo; he replied. He had begun to shudder like
+one sick, and could hardly attend to her. Her eyes remained full on him, he
+seemed to be going dark in his mind, looking back at her helplessly. The
+shuddering became quieter in him, his life came back in him, dark and
+unknowing, but strong again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was I out of my mind?&rdquo; she asked, while her eyes were fixed on him
+all the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe, for the moment,&rdquo; he replied. He felt quiet, because his
+strength had come back. The strange fretful strain had left him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Am I out of my mind now?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you?&rdquo; he reflected a moment. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered
+truthfully, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see that you are.&rdquo; He turned his face
+aside. He was afraid now, because he felt dazed, and felt dimly that her power
+was stronger than his, in this issue. And she continued to look at him fixedly
+all the time. &ldquo;Can you tell me where I shall find some dry things to put
+on?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you dive into the pond for me?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;I walked in. But I went in overhead as
+well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was silence for a moment. He hesitated. He very much wanted to go
+upstairs to get into dry clothing. But there was another desire in him. And she
+seemed to hold him. His will seemed to have gone to sleep, and left him,
+standing there slack before her. But he felt warm inside himself. He did not
+shudder at all, though his clothes were sodden on him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why did you?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because I didn&rsquo;t want you to do such a foolish thing,&rdquo; he
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t foolish,&rdquo; she said, still gazing at him as she lay
+on the floor, with a sofa cushion under her head. &ldquo;It was the right thing
+to do. <i>I</i> knew best, then.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go and shift these wet things,&rdquo; he said. But still he
+had not the power to move out of her presence, until she sent him. It was as if
+she had the life of his body in her hands, and he could not extricate himself.
+Or perhaps he did not want to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she sat up. Then she became aware of her own immediate condition. She
+felt the blankets about her, she knew her own limbs. For a moment it seemed as
+if her reason were going. She looked round, with wild eye, as if seeking
+something. He stood still with fear. She saw her clothing lying scattered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who undressed me?&rdquo; she asked, her eyes resting full and inevitable
+on his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;to bring you round.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For some moments she sat and gazed at him awfully, her lips parted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you love me then?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He only stood and stared at her, fascinated. His soul seemed to melt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shuffled forward on her knees, and put her arms round him, round his legs,
+as he stood there, pressing her breasts against his knees and thighs, clutching
+him with strange, convulsive certainty, pressing his thighs against her,
+drawing him to her face, her throat, as she looked up at him with flaring,
+humble eyes, of transfiguration, triumphant in first possession.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You love me,&rdquo; she murmured, in strange transport, yearning and
+triumphant and confident. &ldquo;You love me. I know you love me, I
+know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she was passionately kissing his knees, through the wet clothing,
+passionately and indiscriminately kissing his knees, his legs, as if unaware of
+everything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked down at the tangled wet hair, the wild, bare, animal shoulders. He
+was amazed, bewildered, and afraid. He had never thought of loving her. He had
+never wanted to love her. When he rescued her and restored her, he was a
+doctor, and she was a patient. He had had no single personal thought of her.
+Nay, this introduction of the personal element was very distasteful to him, a
+violation of his professional honour. It was horrible to have her there
+embracing his knees. It was horrible. He revolted from it, violently. And
+yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;he had not the power to break away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him again, with the same supplication of powerful love, and that
+same transcendent, frightening light of triumph. In view of the delicate flame
+which seemed to come from her face like a light, he was powerless. And yet he
+had never intended to love her. He had never intended. And something stubborn
+in him could not give way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You love me,&rdquo; she repeated, in a murmur of deep, rhapsodic
+assurance. &ldquo;You love me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her hands were drawing him, drawing him down to her. He was afraid, even a
+little horrified. For he had, really, no intention of loving her. Yet her hands
+were drawing him towards her. He put out his hand quickly to steady himself,
+and grasped her bare shoulder. A flame seemed to burn the hand that grasped her
+soft shoulder. He had no intention of loving her: his whole will was against
+his yielding. It was horrible. And yet wonderful was the touch of her
+shoulders, beautiful the shining of her face. Was she perhaps mad? He had a
+horror of yielding to her. Yet something in him ached also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been staring away at the door, away from her. But his hand remained on
+her shoulder. She had gone suddenly very still. He looked down at her. Her eyes
+were now wide with fear, with doubt, the light was dying from her face, a
+shadow of terrible greyness was returning. He could not bear the touch of her
+eyes&rsquo; question upon him, and the look of death behind the question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With an inward groan he gave way, and let his heart yield towards her. A sudden
+gentle smile came on his face. And her eyes, which never left his face, slowly,
+slowly filled with tears. He watched the strange water rise in her eyes, like
+some slow fountain coming up. And his heart seemed to burn and melt away in his
+breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He could not bear to look at her any more. He dropped on his knees and caught
+her head with his arms and pressed her face against his throat. She was very
+still. His heart, which seemed to have broken, was burning with a kind of agony
+in his breast. And he felt her slow, hot tears wetting his throat. But he could
+not move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He felt the hot tears wet his neck and the hollows of his neck, and he remained
+motionless, suspended through one of man&rsquo;s eternities. Only now it had
+become indispensable to him to have her face pressed close to him; he could
+never let her go again. He could never let her head go away from the close
+clutch of his arm. He wanted to remain like that for ever, with his heart
+hurting him in a pain that was also life to him. Without knowing, he was
+looking down on her damp, soft brown hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, as it were suddenly, he smelt the horrid stagnant smell of that water.
+And at the same moment she drew away from him and looked at him. Her eyes were
+wistful and unfathomable. He was afraid of them, and he fell to kissing her,
+not knowing what he was doing. He wanted her eyes not to have that terrible,
+wistful, unfathomable look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she turned her face to him again, a faint delicate flush was glowing, and
+there was again dawning that terrible shining of joy in her eyes, which really
+terrified him, and yet which he now wanted to see, because he feared the look
+of doubt still more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You love me?&rdquo; she said, rather faltering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; The word cost him a painful effort. Not because it
+wasn&rsquo;t true. But because it was too newly true, the <i>saying</i> seemed
+to tear open again his newly-torn heart. And he hardly wanted it to be true,
+even now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She lifted her face to him, and he bent forward and kissed her on the mouth,
+gently, with the one kiss that is an eternal pledge. And as he kissed her his
+heart strained again in his breast. He never intended to love her. But now it
+was over. He had crossed over the gulf to her, and all that he had left behind
+had shrivelled and become void.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the kiss, her eyes again slowly filled with tears. She sat still, away
+from him, with her face drooped aside, and her hands folded in her lap. The
+tears fell very slowly. There was complete silence. He too sat there motionless
+and silent on the hearthrug. The strange pain of his heart that was broken
+seemed to consume him. That he should love her? That this was love! That he
+should be ripped open in this way!&mdash;Him, a doctor!&mdash;How they would
+all jeer if they knew!&mdash;It was agony to him to think they might know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the curious naked pain of the thought he looked again to her. She was
+sitting there drooped into a muse. He saw a tear fall, and his heart flared
+hot. He saw for the first time that one of her shoulders was quite uncovered,
+one arm bare, he could see one of her small breasts; dimly, because it had
+become almost dark in the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why are you crying?&rdquo; he asked, in an altered voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked up at him, and behind her tears the consciousness of her situation
+for the first time brought a dark look of shame to her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not crying, really,&rdquo; she said, watching him half
+frightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He reached his hand, and softly closed it on her bare arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I love you! I love you!&rdquo; he said in a soft, low vibrating voice,
+unlike himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shrank, and dropped her head. The soft, penetrating grip of his hand on her
+arm distressed her. She looked up at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want to go,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I want to go and get you some dry
+things.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m all right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I want to go,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And I want you to change your
+things.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He released her arm, and she wrapped herself in the blanket, looking at him
+rather frightened. And still she did not rise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Kiss me,&rdquo; she said wistfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He kissed her, but briefly, half in anger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, after a second, she rose nervously, all mixed up in the blanket. He
+watched her in her confusion, as she tried to extricate herself and wrap
+herself up so that she could walk. He watched her relentlessly, as she knew.
+And as she went, the blanket trailing, and as he saw a glimpse of her feet and
+her white leg, he tried to remember her as she was when he had wrapped her in
+the blanket. But then he didn&rsquo;t want to remember, because she had been
+nothing to him then, and his nature revolted from remembering her as she was
+when she was nothing to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A tumbling, muffled noise from within the dark house startled him. Then he
+heard her voice:&mdash;&ldquo;There are clothes.&rdquo; He rose and went to the
+foot of the stairs, and gathered up the garments she had thrown down. Then he
+came back to the fire, to rub himself down and dress. He grinned at his own
+appearance when he had finished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fire was sinking, so he put on coal. The house was now quite dark, save for
+the light of a street-lamp that shone in faintly from beyond the holly trees.
+He lit the gas with matches he found on the mantel-piece. Then he emptied the
+pockets of his own clothes, and threw all his wet things in a heap into the
+scullery. After which he gathered up her sodden clothes, gently, and put them
+in a separate heap on the copper-top in the scullery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was six o&rsquo;clock on the clock. His own watch had stopped. He ought to
+go back to the surgery. He waited, and still she did not come down. So he went
+to the foot of the stairs and called:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall have to go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost immediately he heard her coming down. She had on her best dress of black
+voile, and her hair was tidy, but still damp. She looked at him&mdash;and in
+spite of herself, smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like you in those clothes,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I look a sight?&rdquo; he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were shy of one another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make you some tea,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I must go.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Must you?&rdquo; And she looked at him again with the wide, strained,
+doubtful eyes. And again, from the pain of his breast, he knew how he loved
+her. He went and bent to kiss her, gently, passionately, with his heart&rsquo;s
+painful kiss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And my hair smells so horrible,&rdquo; she murmured in distraction.
+&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m so awful, I&rsquo;m so awful! Oh, no, I&rsquo;m too
+awful.&rdquo; And she broke into bitter, heart-broken sobbing. &ldquo;You
+can&rsquo;t want to love me, I&rsquo;m horrible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be silly, don&rsquo;t be silly,&rdquo; he said, trying to
+comfort her, kissing her, holding her in his arms. &ldquo;I want you, I want to
+marry you, we&rsquo;re going to be married, quickly, quickly&mdash;tomorrow if
+I can.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she only sobbed terribly, and cried:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I feel awful. I feel awful. I feel I&rsquo;m horrible to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I want you, I want you,&rdquo; was all he answered, blindly, with
+that terrible intonation which frightened her almost more than her horror lest
+he should <i>not</i> want her.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>FANNY AND ANNIE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Flame-lurid his face as he turned among the throng of flame-lit and dark faces
+upon the platform. In the light of the furnace she caught sight of his drifting
+countenance, like a piece of floating fire. And the nostalgia, the doom of
+homecoming went through her veins like a drug. His eternal face, flame-lit now!
+The pulse and darkness of red fire from the furnace towers in the sky, lighting
+the desultory, industrial crowd on the wayside station, lit him and went out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course he did not see her. Flame-lit and unseeing! Always the same, with his
+meeting eyebrows, his common cap, and his red-and-black scarf knotted round his
+throat. Not even a collar to meet her! The flames had sunk, there was shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She opened the door of her grimy, branch-line carriage, and began to get down
+her bags. The porter was nowhere, of course, but there was Harry, obscure, on
+the outer edge of the little crowd, missing her, of course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here! Harry!&rdquo; she called, waving her umbrella in the twilight. He
+hurried forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tha&rsquo;s come, has ter?&rdquo; he said, in a sort of cheerful
+welcome. She got down, rather flustered, and gave him a peck of a kiss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two suit-cases!&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her soul groaned within her, as he clambered into the carriage after her bags.
+Up shot the fire in the twilight sky, from the great furnace behind the
+station. She felt the red flame go across her face. She had come back, she had
+come back for good. And her spirit groaned dismally. She doubted if she could
+bear it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There, on the sordid little station under the furnaces, she stood, tall and
+distinguished, in her well-made coat and skirt and her broad grey velour hat.
+She held her umbrella, her bead chatelaine, and a little leather case in her
+grey-gloved hands, while Harry staggered out of the ugly little train with her
+bags.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a trunk at the back,&rdquo; she said in her bright voice.
+But she was not feeling bright. The twin black cones of the iron foundry
+blasted their sky-high fires into the night. The whole scene was lurid. The
+train waited cheerfully. It would wait another ten minutes. She knew it. It was
+all so deadly familiar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let us confess it at once. She was a lady&rsquo;s maid, thirty years old, come
+back to marry her first-love, a foundry worker: after having kept him dangling,
+off and on, for a dozen years. Why had she come back? Did she love him? No. She
+didn&rsquo;t pretend to. She had loved her brilliant and ambitious cousin, who
+had jilted her, and who had died. She had had other affairs which had come to
+nothing. So here she was, come back suddenly to marry her first-love, who had
+waited&mdash;or remained single&mdash;all these years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t a porter carry those?&rdquo; she said, as Harry strode with
+his workman&rsquo;s stride down the platform towards the guard&rsquo;s van.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can manage,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with her umbrella, her chatelaine, and her little leather case, she
+followed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trunk was there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll get Heather&rsquo;s greengrocer&rsquo;s cart to fetch it
+up,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t there a cab?&rdquo; said Fanny, knowing dismally enough that
+there wasn&rsquo;t.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just put it aside o&rsquo; the penny-in-the-slot, and
+Heather&rsquo;s greengrocers&rsquo;ll fetch it about half past eight,&rdquo; he
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seized the box by its two handles and staggered with it across the
+level-crossing, bumping his legs against it as he waddled. Then he dropped it
+by the red sweet-meats machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will it be safe there?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;safe as houses,&rdquo; he answered. He returned for the two
+bags. Thus laden, they started to plod up the hill, under the great long black
+building of the foundry. She walked beside him&mdash;workman of workmen he was,
+trudging with that luggage. The red lights flared over the deepening darkness.
+From the foundry came the horrible, slow clang, clang, clang of iron, a great
+noise, with an interval just long enough to make it unendurable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare this with the arrival at Gloucester: the carriage for her mistress, the
+dog-cart for herself with the luggage; the drive out past the river, the
+pleasant trees of the carriage-approach; and herself sitting beside Arthur,
+everybody so polite to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had come home&mdash;for good! Her heart nearly stopped beating as she
+trudged up that hideous and interminable hill, beside the laden figure. What a
+come-down! What a come-down! She could not take it with her usual bright
+cheerfulness. She knew it all too well. It is easy to bear up against the
+unusual, but the deadly familiarity of an old stale past!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He dumped the bags down under a lamp-post, for a rest. There they stood, the
+two of them, in the lamplight. Passers-by stared at her, and gave good-night to
+Harry. Her they hardly knew, she had become a stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re too heavy for you, let me carry one,&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They begin to weigh a bit by the time you&rsquo;ve gone a mile,&rdquo;
+he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me carry the little one,&rdquo; she insisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tha can ha&rsquo;e it for a minute, if ter&rsquo;s a mind,&rdquo; he
+said, handing over the valise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus they arrived in the streets of shops of the little ugly town on top of
+the hill. How everybody stared at her; my word, how they stared! And the cinema
+was just going in, and the queues were tailing down the road to the corner. And
+everybody took full stock of her. &ldquo;Night, Harry!&rdquo; shouted the
+fellows, in an interested voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, they arrived at her aunt&rsquo;s&mdash;a little sweet-shop in a side
+street. They &ldquo;pinged&rdquo; the door-bell, and her aunt came running
+forward out of the kitchen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There you are, child! Dying for a cup of tea, I&rsquo;m sure. How are
+you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fanny&rsquo;s aunt kissed her, and it was all Fanny could do to refrain from
+bursting into tears, she felt so low. Perhaps it was her tea she wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve had a drag with that luggage,&rdquo; said Fanny&rsquo;s
+aunt to Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;I&rsquo;m not sorry to put it down,&rdquo; he said, looking at
+his hand which was crushed and cramped by the bag handle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he departed to see about Heather&rsquo;s greengrocery cart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Fanny sat at tea, her aunt, a grey-haired, fair-faced little woman, looked
+at her with an admiring heart, feeling bitterly sore for her. For Fanny was
+beautiful: tall, erect, finely coloured, with her delicately arched nose, her
+rich brown hair, her large lustrous grey eyes. A passionate woman&mdash;a woman
+to be afraid of. So proud, so inwardly violent! She came of a violent race.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It needed a woman to sympathise with her. Men had not the courage. Poor Fanny!
+She was such a lady, and so straight and magnificent. And yet everything seemed
+to do her down. Every time she seemed to be doomed to humiliation and
+disappointment, this handsome, brilliantly sensitive woman, with her nervous,
+overwrought laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So you&rsquo;ve really come back, child?&rdquo; said her aunt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I really have, Aunt,&rdquo; said Fanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Harry! I&rsquo;m not sure, you know, Fanny, that you&rsquo;re not
+taking a bit of an advantage of him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Aunt, he&rsquo;s waited so long, he may as well have what he&rsquo;s
+waited for.&rdquo; Fanny laughed grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, child, he&rsquo;s waited so long, that I&rsquo;m not sure it
+isn&rsquo;t a bit hard on him. You know, I <i>like</i> him, Fanny&mdash;though
+as you know quite well, I don&rsquo;t think he&rsquo;s good enough for you. And
+I think he thinks so himself, poor fellow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you be so sure of that, Aunt. Harry is common, but
+he&rsquo;s not humble. He wouldn&rsquo;t think the Queen was any too good for
+him, if he&rsquo;d a mind to her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;It&rsquo;s as well if he has a proper opinion of
+himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It depends what you call proper,&rdquo; said Fanny. &ldquo;But
+he&rsquo;s got his good points&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s a nice fellow, and I like him, I do like him. Only, as I
+tell you, he&rsquo;s not good enough for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve made up my mind, Aunt,&rdquo; said Fanny, grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; mused the aunt. &ldquo;They say all things come to him who
+waits&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More than he&rsquo;s bargained for, eh, Aunt?&rdquo; laughed Fanny
+rather bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The poor aunt, this bitterness grieved her for her niece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were interrupted by the ping of the shop-bell, and Harry&rsquo;s call of
+&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; But as he did not come in at once, Fanny, feeling
+solicitous for him presumably at the moment, rose and went into the shop. She
+saw a cart outside, and went to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the moment she stood in the doorway, she heard a woman&rsquo;s common
+vituperative voice crying from the darkness of the opposite side of the road:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tha&rsquo;rt theer, ar ter? I&rsquo;ll shame thee, Mester. I&rsquo;ll
+shame thee, see if I dunna.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Startled, Fanny stared across the darkness, and saw a woman in a black bonnet
+go under one of the lamps up the side street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry and Bill Heather had dragged the trunk off the little dray, and she
+retreated before them as they came up the shop step with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wheer shalt ha&rsquo;e it?&rdquo; asked Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Best take it upstairs,&rdquo; said Fanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went up first to light the gas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Heather had gone, and Harry was sitting down having tea and pork pie,
+Fanny asked:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was that woman shouting?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, I canna tell thee. To somebody, I&rsquo;s&rsquo;d think,&rdquo;
+replied Harry. Fanny looked at him, but asked no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a fair-haired fellow of thirty-two, with a fair moustache. He was broad
+in his speech, and looked like a foundry-hand, which he was. But women always
+liked him. There was something of a mother&rsquo;s lad about
+him&mdash;something warm and playful and really sensitive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had his attractions even for Fanny. What she rebelled against so bitterly
+was that he had no sort of ambition. He was a moulder, but of very commonplace
+skill. He was thirty-two years old, and hadn&rsquo;t saved twenty pounds. She
+would have to provide the money for the home. He didn&rsquo;t care. He just
+didn&rsquo;t care. He had no initiative at all. He had no vices&mdash;no
+obvious ones. But he was just indifferent, spending as he went, and not caring.
+Yet he did not look happy. She remembered his face in the fire-glow: something
+haunted, abstracted about it. As he sat there eating his pork pie, bulging his
+cheek out, she felt he was like a doom to her. And she raged against the doom
+of him. It wasn&rsquo;t that he was gross. His way was common, almost on
+purpose. But he himself wasn&rsquo;t really common. For instance, his food was
+not particularly important to him, he was not greedy. He had a charm, too,
+particularly for women, with his blondness and his sensitiveness and his way of
+making a woman feel that she was a higher being. But Fanny knew him, knew the
+peculiar obstinate limitedness of him, that would nearly send her mad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stayed till about half past nine. She went to the door with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When are you coming up?&rdquo; he said, jerking his head in the
+direction, presumably, of his own home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come tomorrow afternoon,&rdquo; she said brightly. Between
+Fanny and Mrs. Goodall, his mother, there was naturally no love lost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again she gave him an awkward little kiss, and said good-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t wonder, you know, child, if he doesn&rsquo;t seem so
+very keen,&rdquo; said her aunt. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s your own fault.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Aunt, I couldn&rsquo;t stand him when he was keen. I can do with him
+a lot better as he is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two women sat and talked far into the night. They understood each other.
+The aunt, too, had married as Fanny was marrying: a man who was no companion to
+her, a violent man, brother of Fanny&rsquo;s father. He was dead, Fanny&rsquo;s
+father was dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor Aunt Lizzie, she cried woefully over her bright niece, when she had gone
+to bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fanny paid the promised visit to his people the next afternoon. Mrs. Goodall
+was a large woman with smooth-parted hair, a common, obstinate woman, who had
+spoiled her four lads and her one vixen of a married daughter. She was one of
+those old-fashioned powerful natures that couldn&rsquo;t do with looks or
+education or any form of showing off. She fairly hated the sound of correct
+English. She <i>thee&rsquo;d</i> and <i>tha&rsquo;d</i> her prospective
+daughter-in-law, and said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m none as ormin&rsquo; as I look, seest ta.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fanny did not think her prospective mother-in-law looked at all orming, so the
+speech was unnecessary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I towd him mysen,&rdquo; said Mrs. Goodall, &ldquo;&rsquo;Er&rsquo;s
+held back all this long, let &rsquo;er stop as &rsquo;er is. &rsquo;E&rsquo;d
+none ha&rsquo; had thee for <i>my</i> tellin&rsquo;&mdash;tha hears. No,
+&rsquo;e&rsquo;s a fool, an&rsquo; I know it. I says to him, &lsquo;Tha looks a
+man, doesn&rsquo;t ter, at thy age, goin&rsquo; an&rsquo; openin&rsquo; to her
+when ter hears her scrat&rsquo; at th&rsquo; gate, after she&rsquo;s done
+gallivantin&rsquo; round wherever she&rsquo;d a mind. That looks rare an&rsquo;
+soft.&rsquo; But it&rsquo;s no use o&rsquo; any talking: he answered that
+letter o&rsquo; thine and made his own bad bargain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in spite of the old woman&rsquo;s anger, she was also flattered at
+Fanny&rsquo;s coming back to Harry. For Mrs. Goodall was impressed by
+Fanny&mdash;a woman of her own match. And more than this, everybody knew that
+Fanny&rsquo;s Aunt Kate had left her two hundred pounds: this apart from the
+girl&rsquo;s savings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So there was high tea in Princes Street when Harry came home black from work,
+and a rather acrid odour of cordiality, the vixen Jinny darting in to say
+vulgar things. Of course Jinny lived in a house whose garden end joined the
+paternal garden. They were a clan who stuck together, these Goodalls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was arranged that Fanny should come to tea again on the Sunday, and the
+wedding was discussed. It should take place in a fortnight&rsquo;s time at
+Morley Chapel. Morley was a hamlet on the edge of the real country, and in its
+little Congregational Chapel Fanny and Harry had first met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a creature of habit he was! He was still in the choir of Morley
+Chapel&mdash;not very regular. He belonged just because he had a tenor voice,
+and enjoyed singing. Indeed his solos were only spoilt to local fame because
+when he sang he handled his aitches so hopelessly.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;And I saw &rsquo;eaven hopened<br/>
+And be&rsquo;old, a wite &rsquo;orse&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was one of Harry&rsquo;s classics, only surpassed by the fine outburst of
+his heaving:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Hangels&mdash;hever bright an&rsquo; fair&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a pity, but it was inalterable. He had a good voice, and he sang with a
+certain lacerating fire, but his pronunciation made it all funny. And nothing
+could alter him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he was never heard save at cheap concerts and in the little, poorer chapels.
+The others scoffed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the month was September, and Sunday was Harvest Festival at Morley Chapel,
+and Harry was singing solos. So that Fanny was to go to afternoon service, and
+come home to a grand spread of Sunday tea with him. Poor Fanny! One of the most
+wonderful afternoons had been a Sunday afternoon service, with her cousin
+Luther at her side, Harvest Festival in Morley Chapel. Harry had sung solos
+then&mdash;ten years ago. She remembered his pale blue tie, and the purple
+asters and the great vegetable marrows in which he was framed, and her cousin
+Luther at her side, young, clever, come down from London, where he was getting
+on well, learning his Latin and his French and German so brilliantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, once again it was Harvest Festival at Morley Chapel, and once again,
+as ten years before, a soft, exquisite September day, with the last roses pink
+in the cottage gardens, the last dahlias crimson, the last sunflowers yellow.
+And again the little old chapel was a bower, with its famous sheaves of corn
+and corn-plaited pillars, its great bunches of grapes, dangling like tassels
+from the pulpit corners, its marrows and potatoes and pears and apples and
+damsons, its purple asters and yellow Japanese sunflowers. Just as before, the
+red dahlias round the pillars were dropping, weak-headed among the oats. The
+place was crowded and hot, the plates of tomatoes seemed balanced perilously on
+the gallery front, the Rev. Enderby was weirder than ever to look at, so long
+and emaciated and hairless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Rev. Enderby, probably forewarned, came and shook hands with her and
+welcomed her, in his broad northern, melancholy singsong before he mounted the
+pulpit. Fanny was handsome in a gauzy dress and a beautiful lace hat. Being a
+little late, she sat in a chair in the side-aisle wedged in, right in front of
+the chapel. Harry was in the gallery above, and she could only see him from the
+eyes upwards. She noticed again how his eyebrows met, blond and not very
+marked, over his nose. He was attractive too: physically lovable, very. If
+only&mdash;if only her <i>pride</i> had not suffered! She felt he dragged her
+down.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Come, ye thankful people come,<br/>
+Raise the song of harvest-home.<br/>
+All is safely gathered in<br/>
+Ere the winter storms begin&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even the hymn was a falsehood, as the season had been wet, and half the crops
+were still out, and in a poor way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor Fanny! She sang little, and looked beautiful through that inappropriate
+hymn. Above her stood Harry&mdash;mercifully in a dark suit and dark tie,
+looking almost handsome. And his lacerating, pure tenor sounded well, when the
+words were drowned in the general commotion. Brilliant she looked, and
+brilliant she felt, for she was hot and angrily miserable and inflamed with a
+sort of fatal despair. Because there was about him a physical attraction which
+she really hated, but which she could not escape from. He was the first man who
+had ever kissed her. And his kisses, even while she rebelled from them, had
+lived in her blood and sent roots down into her soul. After all this time she
+had come back to them. And her soul groaned, for she felt dragged down, dragged
+down to earth, as a bird which some dog has got down in the dust. She knew her
+life would be unhappy. She knew that what she was doing was fatal. Yet it was
+her doom. She had to come back to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had to sing two solos this afternoon: one before the &ldquo;address&rdquo;
+from the pulpit and one after. Fanny looked at him, and wondered he was not too
+shy to stand up there in front of all the people. But no, he was not shy. He
+had even a kind of assurance on his face as he looked down from the choir
+gallery at her: the assurance of a common man deliberately entrenched in his
+commonness. Oh, such a rage went through her veins as she saw the air of
+triumph, laconic, indifferent triumph which sat so obstinately and recklessly
+on his eyelids as he looked down at her. Ah, she despised him! But there he
+stood up in that choir gallery like Balaam&rsquo;s ass in front of her, and she
+could not get beyond him. A certain winsomeness also about him. A certain
+physical winsomeness, and as if his flesh were new and lovely to touch. The
+thorn of desire rankled bitterly in her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, it goes without saying, sang like a canary this particular afternoon, with
+a certain defiant passion which pleasantly crisped the blood of the
+congregation. Fanny felt the crisp flames go through her veins as she listened.
+Even the curious loud-mouthed vernacular had a certain fascination. But, oh,
+also, it was so repugnant. He would triumph over her, obstinately he would drag
+her right back into the common people: a doom, a vulgar doom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second performance was an anthem, in which Harry sang the solo parts. It
+was clumsy, but beautiful, with lovely words.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;They that sow in tears shall reap in joy,<br/>
+He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed<br/>
+Shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
+him&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall doubtless come, Shall doubtless come&mdash;&rdquo; softly intoned
+the altos&mdash;&ldquo;Bringing his she-e-eaves with him,&rdquo; the trebles
+flourished brightly, and then again began the half-wistful solo:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;They that sow in tears shall reap in joy&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, it was effective and moving.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at the moment when Harry&rsquo;s voice sank carelessly down to his close,
+and the choir, standing behind him, were opening their mouths for the final
+triumphant outburst, a shouting female voice rose up from the body of the
+congregation. The organ gave one startled trump, and went silent; the choir
+stood transfixed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You look well standing there, singing in God&rsquo;s holy house,&rdquo;
+came the loud, angry female shout. Everybody turned electrified. A stoutish,
+red-faced woman in a black bonnet was standing up denouncing the soloist.
+Almost fainting with shock, the congregation realised it. &ldquo;You look well,
+don&rsquo;t you, standing there singing solos in God&rsquo;s holy house, you,
+Goodall. But I said I&rsquo;d shame you. You look well, bringing your young
+woman here with you, don&rsquo;t you? I&rsquo;ll let her know who she&rsquo;s
+dealing with. A scamp as won&rsquo;t take the consequences of what he&rsquo;s
+done.&rdquo; The hard-faced, frenzied woman turned in the direction of Fanny.
+&ldquo;<i>That&rsquo;s</i> what Harry Goodall is, if you want to know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she sat down again in her seat. Fanny, startled like all the rest, had
+turned to look. She had gone white, and then a burning red, under the attack.
+She knew the woman: a Mrs. Nixon, a devil of a woman, who beat her pathetic,
+drunken, red-nosed second husband, Bob, and her two lanky daughters, grown-up
+as they were. A notorious character. Fanny turned round again, and sat
+motionless as eternity in her seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a minute of perfect silence and suspense. The audience was
+open-mouthed and dumb; the choir stood like Lot&rsquo;s wife; and Harry, with
+his music-sheet, stood there uplifted, looking down with a dumb sort of
+indifference on Mrs. Nixon, his face naïve and faintly mocking. Mrs. Nixon sat
+defiant in her seat, braving them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a rustle, like a wood when the wind suddenly catches the leaves. And then
+the tall, weird minister got to his feet, and in his strong, bell-like,
+beautiful voice&mdash;the only beautiful thing about him&mdash;he said with
+infinite mournful pathos:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us unite in singing the last hymn on the hymn-sheet; the last hymn
+on the hymn-sheet, number eleven.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&lsquo;Fair waved the golden corn,<br/>
+In Canaan&rsquo;s pleasant land.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The organ tuned up promptly. During the hymn the offertory was taken. And after
+the hymn, the prayer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Enderby came from Northumberland. Like Harry, he had never been able to
+conquer his accent, which was very broad. He was a little simple, one of
+God&rsquo;s fools, perhaps, an odd bachelor soul, emotional, ugly, but very
+gentle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if, O our dear Lord, beloved Jesus, there should fall a shadow of
+sin upon our harvest, we leave it to Thee to judge, for Thou art judge. We lift
+our spirits and our sorrow, Jesus, to Thee, and our mouths are dumb. O, Lord,
+keep us from forward speech, restrain us from foolish words and thoughts, we
+pray Thee, Lord Jesus, who knowest all and judgest all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus the minister said in his sad, resonant voice, washed his hands before the
+Lord. Fanny bent forward open-eyed during the prayer. She could see the
+roundish head of Harry, also bent forward. His face was inscrutable and
+expressionless. The shock left her bewildered. Anger perhaps was her dominating
+emotion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The audience began to rustle to its feet, to ooze slowly and excitedly out of
+the chapel, looking with wildly-interested eyes at Fanny, at Mrs. Nixon, and at
+Harry. Mrs. Nixon, shortish, stood defiant in her pew, facing the aisle, as if
+announcing that, without rolling her sleeves up, she was ready for anybody.
+Fanny sat quite still. Luckily the people did not have to pass her. And Harry,
+with red ears, was making his way sheepishly out of the gallery. The loud noise
+of the organ covered all the downstairs commotion of exit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minister sat silent and inscrutable in his pulpit, rather like a
+death&rsquo;s-head, while the congregation filed out. When the last lingerers
+had unwillingly departed, craning their necks to stare at the still seated
+Fanny, he rose, stalked in his hooked fashion down the little country chapel
+and fastened the door. Then he returned and sat down by the silent young woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is most unfortunate, most unfortunate!&rdquo; he moaned. &ldquo;I
+am so sorry, I am so sorry, indeed, indeed, ah, indeed!&rdquo; he sighed
+himself to a close.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a sudden surprise, that&rsquo;s one thing,&rdquo; said Fanny
+brightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;indeed. Yes, a surprise, yes. I don&rsquo;t know the
+woman, I don&rsquo;t know her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know her,&rdquo; said Fanny. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s a bad one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well! Well!&rdquo; said the minister. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know her. I
+don&rsquo;t understand. I don&rsquo;t understand at all. But it is to be
+regretted, it is very much to be regretted. I am very sorry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fanny was watching the vestry door. The gallery stairs communicated with the
+vestry, not with the body of the chapel. She knew the choir members had been
+peeping for information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Harry came&mdash;rather sheepishly&mdash;with his hat in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Fanny, rising to her feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve had a bit of an extra,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should think so,&rdquo; said Fanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A most unfortunate circumstance&mdash;a most <i>unfortunate</i>
+circumstance. Do you understand it, Harry? I don&rsquo;t understand it at
+all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, I understand it. The daughter&rsquo;s goin&rsquo; to have a childt,
+an&rsquo; &rsquo;er lays it on to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And has she no occasion to?&rdquo; asked Fanny, rather censorious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no more mine than it is some other chap&rsquo;s,&rdquo; said
+Harry, looking aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a moment of pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which girl is it?&rdquo; asked Fanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Annie&mdash;the young one&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There followed another silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think I know them, do I?&rdquo; asked the minister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t think so. Their name&rsquo;s Nixon&mdash;mother
+married old Bob for her second husband. She&rsquo;s a tanger&mdash;&rsquo;s
+driven the gel to what she is. They live in Manners Road.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, what&rsquo;s amiss with the girl?&rdquo; asked Fanny sharply.
+&ldquo;She was all right when I knew her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay&mdash;she&rsquo;s all right. But she&rsquo;s always in an&rsquo; out
+o&rsquo; th&rsquo; pubs, wi&rsquo; th&rsquo; fellows,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A nice thing!&rdquo; said Fanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry glanced towards the door. He wanted to get out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most distressing, indeed!&rdquo; The minister slowly shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What about tonight, Mr. Enderby?&rdquo; asked Harry, in rather a small
+voice. &ldquo;Shall you want me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Enderby looked up painedly, and put his hand to his brow. He studied Harry
+for some time, vacantly. There was the faintest sort of a resemblance between
+the two men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yes, I think. I think we must take no
+notice, and cause as little remark as possible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fanny hesitated. Then she said to Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But <i>will</i> you come?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, I s&rsquo;ll come,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he turned to Mr. Enderby.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, good-afternoon, Mr. Enderby,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-afternoon, Harry, good-afternoon,&rdquo; replied the mournful
+minister. Fanny followed Harry to the door, and for some time they walked in
+silence through the late afternoon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it&rsquo;s yours as much as anybody else&rsquo;s?&rdquo; she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; he answered shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And they went without another word, for the long mile or so, till they came to
+the corner of the street where Harry lived. Fanny hesitated. Should she go on
+to her aunt&rsquo;s? Should she? It would mean leaving all this, for ever.
+Harry stood silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some obstinacy made her turn with him along the road to his own home. When they
+entered the house-place, the whole family was there, mother and father and
+Jinny, with Jinny&rsquo;s husband and children and Harry&rsquo;s two brothers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been having yours ears warmed, they tell me,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Goodall grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who telled thee?&rdquo; asked Harry shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maggie and Luke&rsquo;s both been in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You look well, don&rsquo;t you!&rdquo; said interfering Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry went and hung his hat up, without replying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come upstairs and take your hat off,&rdquo; said Mrs. Goodall to Fanny,
+almost kindly. It would have annoyed her very much if Fanny had dropped her son
+at this moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s &rsquo;er say, then?&rdquo; asked the father secretly of
+Harry, jerking his head in the direction of the stairs whence Fanny had
+disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nowt yet,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Serve you right if she chucks you now,&rdquo; said Jinny.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet it&rsquo;s right about Annie Nixon an&rsquo; you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tha bets so much,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yi&mdash;but you can&rsquo;t deny it,&rdquo; said Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can if I&rsquo;ve a mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His father looked at him inquiringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s no more mine than it is Bill Bower&rsquo;s, or Ted
+Slaney&rsquo;s, or six or seven on &rsquo;em,&rdquo; said Harry to his father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the father nodded silently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;ll not get you out of it, in court,&rdquo; said Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upstairs Fanny evaded all the thrusts made by his mother, and did not declare
+her hand. She tidied her hair, washed her hands, and put the tiniest bit of
+powder on her face, for coolness, there in front of Mrs. Goodall&rsquo;s
+indignant gaze. It was like a declaration of independence. But the old woman
+said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came down to Sunday tea, with sardines and tinned salmon and tinned
+peaches, besides tarts and cakes. The chatter was general. It concerned the
+Nixon family and the scandal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, she&rsquo;s a foul-mouthed woman,&rdquo; said Jinny of Mrs. Nixon.
+&ldquo;She may well talk about God&rsquo;s holy house, <i>she</i> had.
+It&rsquo;s first time she&rsquo;s set foot in it, ever since she dropped off
+from being converted. She&rsquo;s a devil and she always was one. Can&rsquo;t
+you remember how she treated Bob&rsquo;s children, mother, when we lived down
+in the Buildings? I can remember when I was a little girl she used to bathe
+them in the yard, in the cold, so that they shouldn&rsquo;t splash the house.
+She&rsquo;d half kill them if they made a mark on the floor, and the language
+she&rsquo;d use! And one Saturday I can remember Garry, that was Bob&rsquo;s
+own girl, she ran off when her stepmother was going to bathe her&mdash;ran off
+without a rag of clothes on&mdash;can you remember, mother? And she hid in
+Smedley&rsquo;s closes&mdash;it was the time of mowing-grass&mdash;and nobody
+could find her. She hid out there all night, didn&rsquo;t she, mother? Nobody
+could find her. My word, there was a talk. They found her on Sunday
+morning&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred Coutts threatened to break every bone in the woman&rsquo;s body, if
+she touched the children again,&rdquo; put in the father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Anyhow, they frightened her,&rdquo; said Jinny. &ldquo;But she was
+nearly as bad with her own two. And anybody can see that she&rsquo;s driven old
+Bob till he&rsquo;s gone soft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, soft as mush,&rdquo; said Jack Goodall. &ldquo;&rsquo;E&rsquo;d
+never addle a week&rsquo;s wage, nor yet a day&rsquo;s if th&rsquo; chaps
+didn&rsquo;t make it up to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My word, if he didn&rsquo;t bring her a week&rsquo;s wage, she&rsquo;d
+pull his head off,&rdquo; said Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But a clean woman, and respectable, except for her foul mouth,&rdquo;
+said Mrs. Goodall. &ldquo;Keeps to herself like a bull-dog. Never lets anybody
+come near the house, and neighbours with nobody.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wanted it thrashed out of her,&rdquo; said Mr. Goodall, a silent,
+evasive sort of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where Bob gets the money for his drink from is a mystery,&rdquo; said
+Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Chaps treats him,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;s got the pair of frightenedest rabbit-eyes you&rsquo;d
+wish to see,&rdquo; said Jinny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, with a drunken man&rsquo;s murder in them, <i>I</i> think,&rdquo;
+said Mrs. Goodall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the talk went on after tea, till it was practically time to start off to
+chapel again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have to be getting ready, Fanny,&rdquo; said Mrs. Goodall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going tonight,&rdquo; said Fanny abruptly. And there was a
+sudden halt in the family. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stop with <i>you</i> tonight,
+Mother,&rdquo; she added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Best you had, my gel,&rdquo; said Mrs. Goodall, flattered and assured.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: England, My England
+
+Author: D.H. Lawrence
+
+Posting Date: August 18, 2011 [EBook #8914]
+Release Date: September, 2005
+[This file was first posted on August 24, 2003]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+
+ BY
+ D. H. LAWRENCE
+
+
+
+
+_Contents_
+
+ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+
+TICKETS, PLEASE
+
+THE BLIND MAN
+
+MONKEY NUTS
+
+WINTRY PEACOCK
+
+YOU TOUCHED ME
+
+SAMSON AND DELILAH
+
+THE PRIMROSE PATH
+
+THE HORSE DEALER'S DAUGHTER
+
+FANNY AND ANNIE
+
+
+
+
+_England, My England_
+
+
+He was working on the edge of the common, beyond the small brook that ran
+in the dip at the bottom of the garden, carrying the garden path in
+continuation from the plank bridge on to the common. He had cut the rough
+turf and bracken, leaving the grey, dryish soil bare. But he was worried
+because he could not get the path straight, there was a pleat between his
+brows. He had set up his sticks, and taken the sights between the big
+pine trees, but for some reason everything seemed wrong. He looked again,
+straining his keen blue eyes, that had a touch of the Viking in them,
+through the shadowy pine trees as through a doorway, at the green-grassed
+garden-path rising from the shadow of alders by the log bridge up to the
+sunlit flowers. Tall white and purple columbines, and the butt-end of the
+old Hampshire cottage that crouched near the earth amid flowers,
+blossoming in the bit of shaggy wildness round about.
+
+There was a sound of children's voices calling and talking: high,
+childish, girlish voices, slightly didactic and tinged with domineering:
+'If you don't come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where there are
+snakes.' And nobody had the _sangfroid_ to reply: 'Run then, little
+fool.' It was always, 'No, darling. Very well, darling. In a moment,
+darling. Darling, you _must_ be patient.'
+
+His heart was hard with disillusion: a continual gnawing and resistance.
+But he worked on. What was there to do but submit!
+
+The sunlight blazed down upon the earth, there was a vividness of flamy
+vegetation, of fierce seclusion amid the savage peace of the commons.
+Strange how the savage England lingers in patches: as here, amid these
+shaggy gorse commons, and marshy, snake infested places near the foot of
+the south downs. The spirit of place lingering on primeval, as when the
+Saxons came, so long ago.
+
+Ah, how he had loved it! The green garden path, the tufts of flowers,
+purple and white columbines, and great oriental red poppies with their
+black chaps and mulleins tall and yellow, this flamy garden which had
+been a garden for a thousand years, scooped out in the little hollow
+among the snake-infested commons. He had made it flame with flowers, in a
+sun cup under its hedges and trees. So old, so old a place! And yet he
+had re-created it.
+
+The timbered cottage with its sloping, cloak-like roof was old and
+forgotten. It belonged to the old England of hamlets and yeomen. Lost
+all alone on the edge of the common, at the end of a wide, grassy,
+briar-entangled lane shaded with oak, it had never known the world of
+today. Not till Egbert came with his bride. And he had come to fill it
+with flowers.
+
+The house was ancient and very uncomfortable. But he did not want to
+alter it. Ah, marvellous to sit there in the wide, black, time-old
+chimney, at night when the wind roared overhead, and the wood which he
+had chopped himself sputtered on the hearth! Himself on one side the
+angle, and Winifred on the other.
+
+Ah, how he had wanted her: Winifred! She was young and beautiful and
+strong with life, like a flame in sunshine. She moved with a slow grace
+of energy like a blossoming, red-flowered bush in motion. She, too,
+seemed to come out of the old England, ruddy, strong, with a certain
+crude, passionate quiescence and a hawthorn robustness. And he, he was
+tall and slim and agile, like an English archer with his long supple legs
+and fine movements. Her hair was nut-brown and all in energic curls and
+tendrils. Her eyes were nut-brown, too, like a robin's for brightness.
+And he was white-skinned with fine, silky hair that had darkened from
+fair, and a slightly arched nose of an old country family. They were a
+beautiful couple.
+
+The house was Winifred's. Her father was a man of energy, too. He had
+come from the north poor. Now he was moderately rich. He had bought this
+fair stretch of inexpensive land, down in Hampshire. Not far from the
+tiny church of the almost extinct hamlet stood his own house, a
+commodious old farmhouse standing back from the road across a bare
+grassed yard. On one side of this quadrangle was the long, long barn or
+shed which he had made into a cottage for his youngest daughter
+Priscilla. One saw little blue-and-white check curtains at the long
+windows, and inside, overhead, the grand old timbers of the high-pitched
+shed. This was Prissy's house. Fifty yards away was the pretty little new
+cottage which he had built for his daughter Magdalen, with the vegetable
+garden stretching away to the oak copse. And then away beyond the lawns
+and rose trees of the house-garden went the track across a shaggy, wild
+grass space, towards the ridge of tall black pines that grew on a
+dyke-bank, through the pines and above the sloping little bog, under the
+wide, desolate oak trees, till there was Winifred's cottage crouching
+unexpectedly in front, so much alone, and so primitive.
+
+It was Winifred's own house, and the gardens and the bit of common and
+the boggy slope were hers: her tiny domain. She had married just at the
+time when her father had bought the estate, about ten years before the
+war, so she had been able to come to Egbert with this for a marriage
+portion. And who was more delighted, he or she, it would be hard to say.
+She was only twenty at the time, and he was only twenty-one. He had about
+a hundred and fifty pounds a year of his own--and nothing else but his
+very considerable personal attractions. He had no profession: he earned
+nothing. But he talked of literature and music, he had a passion for
+old folk-music, collecting folk-songs and folk-dances, studying the
+Morris-dance and the old customs. Of course in time he would make money
+in these ways.
+
+Meanwhile youth and health and passion and promise. Winifred's father was
+always generous: but still, he was a man from the north with a hard head
+and a hard skin too, having received a good many knocks. At home he kept
+the hard head out of sight, and played at poetry and romance with his
+literary wife and his sturdy, passionate girls. He was a man of courage,
+not given to complaining, bearing his burdens by himself. No, he did not
+let the world intrude far into his home. He had a delicate, sensitive
+wife whose poetry won some fame in the narrow world of letters. He
+himself, with his tough old barbarian fighting spirit, had an almost
+child-like delight in verse, in sweet poetry, and in the delightful game
+of a cultured home. His blood was strong even to coarseness. But that
+only made the home more vigorous, more robust and Christmassy. There was
+always a touch of Christmas about him, now he was well off. If there was
+poetry after dinner, there were also chocolates and nuts, and good little
+out-of-the-way things to be munching.
+
+Well then, into this family came Egbert. He was made of quite a different
+paste. The girls and the father were strong-limbed, thick-blooded people,
+true English, as holly-trees and hawthorn are English. Their culture was
+grafted on to them, as one might perhaps graft a common pink rose on to a
+thornstem. It flowered oddly enough, but it did not alter their blood.
+
+And Egbert was a born rose. The age-long breeding had left him with a
+delightful spontaneous passion. He was not clever, nor even 'literary'.
+No, but the intonation of his voice, and the movement of his supple,
+handsome body, and the fine texture of his flesh and his hair, the slight
+arch of his nose, the quickness of his blue eyes would easily take the
+place of poetry. Winifred loved him, loved him, this southerner, as a
+higher being. A _higher_ being, mind you. Not a deeper. And as for him,
+he loved her in passion with every fibre of him. She was the very warm
+stuff of life to him.
+
+Wonderful then, those days at Crockham Cottage, the first days, all alone
+save for the woman who came to work in the mornings. Marvellous days,
+when she had all his tall, supple, fine-fleshed youth to herself, for
+herself, and he had her like a ruddy fire into which he could cast
+himself for rejuvenation. Ah, that it might never end, this passion, this
+marriage! The flame of their two bodies burnt again into that old
+cottage, that was haunted already by so much by-gone, physical desire.
+You could not be in the dark room for an hour without the influences
+coming over you. The hot blood-desire of by-gone yeomen, there in this
+old den where they had lusted and bred for so many generations. The
+silent house, dark, with thick, timbered walls and the big black
+chimney-place, and the sense of secrecy. Dark, with low, little windows,
+sunk into the earth. Dark, like a lair where strong beasts had lurked and
+mated, lonely at night and lonely by day, left to themselves and their
+own intensity for so many generations. It seemed to cast a spell on the
+two young people. They became different. There was a curious secret glow
+about them, a certain slumbering flame hard to understand, that enveloped
+them both. They too felt that they did not belong to the London world any
+more. Crockham had changed their blood: the sense of the snakes that
+lived and slept even in their own garden, in the sun, so that he, going
+forward with the spade, would see a curious coiled brownish pile on the
+black soil, which suddenly would start up, hiss, and dazzle rapidly away,
+hissing. One day Winifred heard the strangest scream from the flower-bed
+under the low window of the living room: ah, the strangest scream, like
+the very soul of the dark past crying aloud. She ran out, and saw a long
+brown snake on the flower-bed, and in its flat mouth the one hind leg of
+a frog was striving to escape, and screaming its strange, tiny, bellowing
+scream. She looked at the snake, and from its sullen flat head it looked
+at her, obstinately. She gave a cry, and it released the frog and slid
+angrily away.
+
+That was Crockham. The spear of modern invention had not passed through
+it, and it lay there secret, primitive, savage as when the Saxons first
+came. And Egbert and she were caught there, caught out of the world.
+
+He was not idle, nor was she. There were plenty of things to be done, the
+house to be put into final repair after the workmen had gone, cushions
+and curtains to sew, the paths to make, the water to fetch and attend to,
+and then the slope of the deep-soiled, neglected garden to level, to
+terrace with little terraces and paths, and to fill with flowers. He
+worked away, in his shirt-sleeves, worked all day intermittently doing
+this thing and the other. And she, quiet and rich in herself, seeing him
+stooping and labouring away by himself, would come to help him, to be
+near him. He of course was an amateur--a born amateur. He worked so hard,
+and did so little, and nothing he ever did would hold together for long.
+If he terraced the garden, he held up the earth with a couple of long
+narrow planks that soon began to bend with the pressure from behind, and
+would not need many years to rot through and break and let the soil
+slither all down again in a heap towards the stream-bed. But there you
+are. He had not been brought up to come to grips with anything, and he
+thought it would do. Nay, he did not think there was anything else except
+little temporary contrivances possible, he who had such a passion for his
+old enduring cottage, and for the old enduring things of the bygone
+England. Curious that the sense of permanency in the past had such a hold
+over him, whilst in the present he was all amateurish and sketchy.
+
+Winifred could not criticize him. Town-bred, everything seemed to her
+splendid, and the very digging and shovelling itself seemed romantic. But
+neither Egbert nor she yet realized the difference between work and
+romance.
+
+Godfrey Marshall, her father, was at first perfectly pleased with the
+mnage down at Crockham Cottage. He thought Egbert was wonderful, the
+many things he accomplished, and he was gratified by the glow of physical
+passion between the two young people. To the man who in London still
+worked hard to keep steady his modest fortune, the thought of this young
+couple digging away and loving one another down at Crockham Cottage,
+buried deep among the commons and marshes, near the pale-showing bulk of
+the downs, was like a chapter of living romance. And they drew the
+sustenance for their fire of passion from him, from the old man. It was
+he who fed their flame. He triumphed secretly in the thought. And it was
+to her father that Winifred still turned, as the one source of all surety
+and life and support. She loved Egbert with passion. But behind her was
+the power of her father. It was the power of her father she referred to,
+whenever she needed to refer. It never occurred to her to refer to
+Egbert, if she were in difficulty or doubt. No, in all the _serious_
+matters she depended on her father.
+
+For Egbert had no intention of coming to grips with life. He had no
+ambition whatsoever. He came from a decent family, from a pleasant
+country home, from delightful surroundings. He should, of course, have
+had a profession. He should have studied law or entered business in some
+way. But no--that fatal three pounds a week would keep him from starving
+as long as he lived, and he did not want to give himself into bondage. It
+was not that he was idle. He was always doing something, in his
+amateurish way. But he had no desire to give himself to the world, and
+still less had he any desire to fight his way in the world. No, no, the
+world wasn't worth it. He wanted to ignore it, to go his own way apart,
+like a casual pilgrim down the forsaken sidetracks. He loved his wife,
+his cottage and garden. He would make his life there, as a sort of
+epicurean hermit. He loved the past, the old music and dances and customs
+of old England. He would try and live in the spirit of these, not in the
+spirit of the world of business.
+
+But often Winifred's father called her to London: for he loved to have
+his children round him. So Egbert and she must have a tiny flat in town,
+and the young couple must transfer themselves from time to time from the
+country to the city. In town Egbert had plenty of friends, of the same
+ineffectual sort as himself, tampering with the arts, literature,
+painting, sculpture, music. He was not bored.
+
+Three pounds a week, however, would not pay for all this. Winifred's
+father paid. He liked paying. He made her only a very small allowance,
+but he often gave her ten pounds--or gave Egbert ten pounds. So they both
+looked on the old man as the mainstay. Egbert didn't mind being
+patronized and paid for. Only when he felt the family was a little _too_
+condescending, on account of money, he began to get huffy.
+
+Then of course children came: a lovely little blonde daughter with a head
+of thistle-down. Everybody adored the child. It was the first exquisite
+blonde thing that had come into the family, a little mite with the white,
+slim, beautiful limbs of its father, and as it grew up the dancing,
+dainty movement of a wild little daisy-spirit. No wonder the Marshalls
+all loved the child: they called her Joyce. They themselves had their own
+grace, but it was slow, rather heavy. They had everyone of them strong,
+heavy limbs and darkish skins, and they were short in stature. And now
+they had for one of their own this light little cowslip child. She was
+like a little poem in herself.
+
+But nevertheless, she brought a new difficulty. Winifred must have a
+nurse for her. Yes, yes, there must be a nurse. It was the family decree.
+Who was to pay for the nurse? The grandfather--seeing the father himself
+earned no money. Yes, the grandfather would pay, as he had paid all the
+lying-in expenses. There came a slight sense of money-strain. Egbert was
+living on his father-in-law.
+
+After the child was born, it was never quite the same between him and
+Winifred. The difference was at first hardly perceptible. But it was
+there. In the first place Winifred had a new centre of interest. She was
+not going to adore her child. But she had what the modern mother so often
+has in the place of spontaneous love: a profound sense of duty towards
+her child. Winifred appreciated her darling little girl, and felt a deep
+sense of duty towards her. Strange, that this sense of duty should go
+deeper than the love for her husband. But so it was. And so it often is.
+The responsibility of motherhood was the prime responsibility in
+Winifred's heart: the responsibility of wifehood came a long way second.
+
+Her child seemed to link her up again in a circuit with her own family.
+Her father and mother, herself, and her child, that was the human trinity
+for her. Her husband--? Yes, she loved him still. But that was like play.
+She had an almost barbaric sense of duty and of family. Till she married,
+her first human duty had been towards her father: he was the pillar, the
+source of life, the everlasting support. Now another link was added to
+the chain of duty: her father, herself, and her child.
+
+Egbert was out of it. Without anything happening, he was gradually,
+unconsciously excluded from the circle. His wife still loved him,
+physically. But, but--he was _almost_ the unnecessary party in the
+affair. He could not complain of Winifred. She still did her duty towards
+him. She still had a physical passion for him, that physical passion on
+which he had put all his life and soul. But--but--
+
+It was for a long while an ever-recurring _but_. And then, after the
+second child, another blonde, winsome touching little thing, not so proud
+and flame-like as Joyce--after Annabel came, then Egbert began truly to
+realize how it was. His wife still loved him. But--and now the but had
+grown enormous--her physical love for him was of secondary importance to
+her. It became ever less important. After all, she had had it, this
+physical passion, for two years now. It was not this that one lived from.
+No, no--something sterner, realer.
+
+She began to resent her own passion for Egbert--just a little she began
+to despise it. For after all there he was, he was charming, he was
+lovable, he was terribly desirable. But--but--oh, the awful looming cloud
+of that _but!_--he did not stand firm in the landscape of her life like a
+tower of strength, like a great pillar of significance. No, he was like a
+cat one has about the house, which will one day disappear and leave no
+trace. He was like a flower in the garden, trembling in the wind of life,
+and then gone, leaving nothing to show. As an adjunct, as an accessory,
+he was perfect. Many a woman would have adored to have him about her all
+her life, the most beautiful and desirable of all her possessions. But
+Winifred belonged to another school.
+
+The years went by, and instead of coming more to grips with life, he
+relaxed more. He was of a subtle, sensitive, passionate nature. But he
+simply _would_ not give himself to what Winifred called life, _Work_. No,
+he would not go into the world and work for money. No, he just would not.
+If Winifred liked to live beyond their small income--well, it was her
+look-out.
+
+And Winifred did not really want him to go out into the world to work for
+money. Money became, alas, a word like a firebrand between them, setting
+them both aflame with anger. But that is because we must talk in symbols.
+Winifred did not really care about money. She did not care whether he
+earned or did not earn anything. Only she knew she was dependent on her
+father for three-fourths of the money spent for herself and her children,
+that she let that be the _casus belli_, the drawn weapon between herself
+and Egbert.
+
+What did she want--what did she want? Her mother once said to her, with
+that characteristic touch of irony: 'Well, dear, if it is your fate to
+consider the lilies, that toil not, neither do they spin, that is one
+destiny among many others, and perhaps not so unpleasant as most. Why do
+you take it amiss, my child?'
+
+The mother was subtler than her children, they very rarely knew how to
+answer her. So Winifred was only more confused. It was not a question of
+lilies. At least, if it were a question of lilies, then her children were
+the little blossoms. They at least _grew_. Doesn't Jesus say: 'Consider
+the lilies _how they grow_.' Good then, she had her growing babies. But
+as for that other tall, handsome flower of a father of theirs, he was
+full grown already, so she did not want to spend her life considering him
+in the flower of his days.
+
+No, it was not that he didn't earn money. It was not that he was idle. He
+was _not_ idle. He was always doing something, always working away, down
+at Crockham, doing little jobs. But, oh dear, the little jobs--the garden
+paths--the gorgeous flowers--the chairs to mend, old chairs to mend!
+
+It was that he stood for nothing. If he had done something
+unsuccessfully, and _lost_ what money they had! If he had but striven
+with something. Nay, even if he had been wicked, a waster, she would have
+been more free. She would have had something to resist, at least. A
+waster stands for something, really. He says: 'No, I will not aid and
+abet society in this business of increase and hanging together, I will
+upset the apple-cart as much as I can, in my small way.' Or else he says:
+'No, I will _not_ bother about others. If I have lusts, they are my own,
+and I prefer them to other people's virtues.' So, a waster, a scamp,
+takes a sort of stand. He exposes himself to opposition and final
+castigation: at any rate in story-books.
+
+But Egbert! What are you to do with a man like Egbert? He had no vices.
+He was really kind, nay generous. And he was not weak. If he had been
+weak Winifred could have been kind to him. But he did not even give her
+that consolation. He was not weak, and he did not want her consolation or
+her kindness. No, thank you. He was of a fine passionate temper, and of a
+rarer steel than she. He knew it, and she knew it. Hence she was only the
+more baffled and maddened, poor thing. He, the higher, the finer, in his
+way the stronger, played with his garden, and his old folk-songs and
+Morris-dances, just played, and let her support the pillars of the future
+on her own heart.
+
+And he began to get bitter, and a wicked look began to come on his face.
+He did not give in to her; not he. There were seven devils inside his
+long, slim, white body. He was healthy, full of restrained life. Yes,
+even he himself had to lock up his own vivid life inside himself, now she
+would not take it from him. Or rather, now that she only took it
+occasionally. For she had to yield at times. She loved him so, she
+desired him so, he was so exquisite to her, the fine creature that he
+was, finer than herself. Yes, with a groan she had to give in to her own
+unquenched passion for him. And he came to her then--ah, terrible, ah,
+wonderful, sometimes she wondered how either of them could live after the
+terror of the passion that swept between them. It was to her as if pure
+lightning, flash after flash, went through every fibre of her, till
+extinction came.
+
+But it is the fate of human beings to live on. And it is the fate of
+clouds that seem nothing but bits of vapour slowly to pile up, to pile up
+and fill the heavens and blacken the sun entirely.
+
+So it was. The love came back, the lightning of passion flashed
+tremendously between them. And there was blue sky and gorgeousness for a
+little while. And then, as inevitably, as inevitably, slowly the clouds
+began to edge up again above the horizon, slowly, slowly to lurk about
+the heavens, throwing an occasional cold and hateful shadow: slowly,
+slowly to congregate, to fill the empyrean space.
+
+And as the years passed, the lightning cleared the sky more and more
+rarely, less and less the blue showed. Gradually the grey lid sank down
+upon them, as if it would be permanent.
+
+Why didn't Egbert do something, then? Why didn't he come to grips with
+life? Why wasn't he like Winifred's father, a pillar of society, even if
+a slender, exquisite column? Why didn't he go into harness of some sort?
+Why didn't he take _some_ direction?
+
+Well, you can bring an ass to the water, but you cannot make him drink.
+The world was the water and Egbert was the ass. And he wasn't having any.
+He couldn't: he just couldn't. Since necessity did not force him to work
+for his bread and butter, he would not work for work's sake. You can't
+make the columbine flowers nod in January, nor make the cuckoo sing in
+England at Christmas. Why? It isn't his season. He doesn't want to. Nay,
+he _can't_ want to.
+
+And there it was with Egbert. He couldn't link up with the world's work,
+because the basic desire was absent from him. Nay, at the bottom of him
+he had an even stronger desire: to hold aloof. To hold aloof. To do
+nobody any damage. But to hold aloof. It was not his season.
+
+Perhaps he should not have married and had children. But you can't stop
+the waters flowing.
+
+Which held true for Winifred, too. She was not made to endure aloof. Her
+family tree was a robust vegetation that had to be stirring and
+believing. In one direction or another her life _had_ to go. In her own
+home she had known nothing of this diffidence which she found in Egbert,
+and which she could not understand, and which threw her into such dismay.
+What was she to do, what was she to do, in face of this terrible
+diffidence?
+
+It was all so different in her own home. Her father may have had his own
+misgivings, but he kept them to himself. Perhaps he had no very profound
+belief in this world of ours, this society which we have elaborated with
+so much effort, only to find ourselves elaborated to death at last. But
+Godfrey Marshall was of tough, rough fibre, not without a vein of
+healthy cunning through it all. It was for him a question of winning
+through, and leaving the rest to heaven. Without having many illusions
+to grace him, he still _did_ believe in heaven. In a dark and
+unquestioning way, he had a sort of faith: an acrid faith like the sap of
+some not-to-be-exterminated tree. Just a blind acrid faith as sap is
+blind and acrid, and yet pushes on in growth and in faith. Perhaps he was
+unscrupulous, but only as a striving tree is unscrupulous, pushing its
+single way in a jungle of others.
+
+In the end, it is only this robust, sap-like faith which keeps man going.
+He may live on for many generations inside the shelter of the social
+establishment which he has erected for himself, as pear-trees and currant
+bushes would go on bearing fruit for many seasons, inside a walled
+garden, even if the race of man were suddenly exterminated. But bit by
+bit the wall-fruit-trees would gradually pull down the very walls that
+sustained them. Bit by bit every establishment collapses, unless it is
+renewed or restored by living hands, all the while.
+
+Egbert could not bring himself to any more of this restoring or renewing
+business. He was not aware of the fact: but awareness doesn't help much,
+anyhow. He just couldn't. He had the stoic and epicurean quality of his
+old, fine breeding. His father-in-law, however, though he was not one bit
+more of a fool than Egbert, realized that since we are here we may as
+well live. And so he applied himself to his own tiny section of the
+social work, and to doing the best for his family, and to leaving the
+rest to the ultimate will of heaven. A certain robustness of blood made
+him able to go on. But sometimes even from him spurted a sudden gall of
+bitterness against the world and its make-up. And yet--he had his own
+will-to-succeed, and this carried him through. He refused to ask himself
+what the success would amount to. It amounted to the estate down in
+Hampshire, and his children lacking for nothing, and himself of some
+importance in the world: and _basta!--Basta! Basta!_
+
+Nevertheless do not let us imagine that he was a common pusher. He was
+not. He knew as well as Egbert what disillusion meant. Perhaps in his
+soul he had the same estimation of success. But he had a certain acrid
+courage, and a certain will-to-power. In his own small circle he would
+emanate power, the single power of his own blind self. With all his
+spoiling of his children, he was still the father of the old English
+type. He was too wise to make laws and to domineer in the abstract. But
+he had kept, and all honour to him, a certain primitive dominion over the
+souls of his children, the old, almost magic prestige of paternity. There
+it was, still burning in him, the old smoky torch or paternal godhead.
+
+And in the sacred glare of this torch his children had been brought up.
+He had given the girls every liberty, at last. But he had never really
+let them go beyond his power. And they, venturing out into the hard white
+light of our fatherless world, learned to see with the eyes of the world.
+They learned to criticize their father, even, from some effulgence of
+worldly white light, to see him as inferior. But this was all very well
+in the head. The moment they forgot their tricks of criticism, the old
+red glow of his authority came over them again. He was not to be
+quenched.
+
+Let the psycho-analyst talk about father complex. It is just a word
+invented. Here was a man who had kept alive the old red flame of
+fatherhood, fatherhood that had even the right to sacrifice the child to
+God, like Isaac. Fatherhood that had life-and-death authority over the
+children: a great natural power. And till his children could be brought
+under some other great authority as girls; or could arrive at manhood and
+become themselves centres of the same power, continuing the same male
+mystery as men; until such time, willy-nilly, Godfrey Marshall would keep
+his children.
+
+It had seemed as if he might lose Winifred. Winifred had _adored_ her
+husband, and looked up to him as to something wonderful. Perhaps she had
+expected in him another great authority, a male authority greater, finer
+than her father's. For having once known the glow of male power, she
+would not easily turn to the cold white light of feminine independence.
+She would hunger, hunger all her life for the warmth and shelter of true
+male strength.
+
+And hunger she might, for Egbert's power lay in the abnegation of power.
+He was himself the living negative of power. Even of responsibility. For
+the negation of power at last means the negation of responsibility. As
+far as these things went, he would confine himself to himself. He would
+try to confine his own _influence_ even to himself. He would try, as far
+as possible, to abstain from influencing his children by assuming any
+responsibility for them. 'A little child shall lead them--' His child
+should lead, then. He would try not to make it go in any direction
+whatever. He would abstain from influencing it. Liberty!--
+
+Poor Winifred was like a fish out of water in this liberty, gasping for
+the denser element which should contain her. Till her child came. And
+then she knew that she must be responsible for it, that she must have
+authority over it.
+
+But here Egbert silently and negatively stepped in. Silently, negatively,
+but fatally he neutralized her authority over her children.
+
+There was a third little girl born. And after this Winifred wanted no
+more children. Her soul was turning to salt.
+
+So she had charge of the children, they were her responsibility. The
+money for them had come from her father. She would do her very best for
+them, and have command over their life and death. But no! Egbert would
+not take the responsibility. He would not even provide the money. But he
+would not let her have her way. Her dark, silent, passionate authority he
+would not allow. It was a battle between them, the battle between liberty
+and the old blood-power. And of course he won. The little girls loved him
+and adored him. 'Daddy! Daddy!' They could do as they liked with him.
+Their mother would have ruled them. She would have ruled them
+passionately, with indulgence, with the old dark magic of parental
+authority, something looming and unquestioned and, after all, divine: if
+we believe in divine authority. The Marshalls did, being Catholic.
+
+And Egbert, he turned her old dark, Catholic blood-authority into a sort
+of tyranny. He would not leave her her children. He stole them from her,
+and yet without assuming responsibility for them. He stole them from her,
+in emotion and spirit, and left her only to command their behaviour. A
+thankless lot for a mother. And her children adored him, adored him,
+little knowing the empty bitterness they were preparing for themselves
+when they too grew up to have husbands: husbands such as Egbert, adorable
+and null.
+
+Joyce, the eldest, was still his favourite. She was now a quicksilver
+little thing of six years old. Barbara, the youngest, was a toddler of
+two years. They spent most of their time down at Crockham, because he
+wanted to be there. And even Winifred loved the place really. But now, in
+her frustrated and blinded state, it was full of menace for her children.
+The adders, the poison-berries, the brook, the marsh, the water that
+might not be pure--one thing and another. From mother and nurse it was a
+guerilla gunfire of commands, and blithe, quicksilver disobedience from
+the three blonde, never-still little girls. Behind the girls was the
+father, against mother and nurse. And so it was.
+
+'If you don't come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where there are
+snakes.'
+
+'Joyce, you _must_ be patient. I'm just changing Annabel.'
+
+There you are. There it was: always the same. Working away on the common
+across the brook he heard it. And he worked on, just the same.
+
+Suddenly he heard a shriek, and he flung the spade from him and started
+for the bridge, looking up like a startled deer. Ah, there was
+Winifred--Joyce had hurt herself. He went on up the garden.
+
+'What is it?'
+
+The child was still screaming--now it was--'Daddy! Daddy! Oh--oh, Daddy!'
+And the mother was saying:
+
+'Don't be frightened, darling. Let mother look.'
+
+But the child only cried:
+
+'Oh, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!'
+
+She was terrified by the sight of the blood running from her own knee.
+Winifred crouched down, with her child of six in her lap, to examine the
+knee. Egbert bent over also.
+
+'Don't make such a noise, Joyce,' he said irritably. 'How did she do it?'
+
+'She fell on that sickle thing which you left lying about after cutting
+the grass,' said Winifred, looking into his face with bitter accusation
+as he bent near.
+
+He had taken his handkerchief and tied it round the knee. Then he lifted
+the still sobbing child in his arms, and carried her into the house and
+upstairs to her bed. In his arms she became quiet. But his heart was
+burning with pain and with guilt. He had left the sickle there lying on
+the edge of the grass, and so his first-born child whom he loved so
+dearly had come to hurt. But then it was an accident--it was an accident.
+Why should he feel guilty? It would probably be nothing, better in two or
+three days. Why take it to heart, why worry? He put it aside.
+
+The child lay on the bed in her little summer frock, her face very white
+now after the shock, Nurse had come carrying the youngest child: and
+little Annabel stood holding her skirt. Winifred, terribly serious and
+wooden-seeming, was bending over the knee, from which she had taken his
+blood-soaked handkerchief. Egbert bent forward, too, keeping more
+_sangfroid_ in his face than in his heart. Winifred went all of a lump of
+seriousness, so he had to keep some reserve. The child moaned and
+whimpered.
+
+The knee was still bleeding profusely--it was a deep cut right in the
+joint.
+
+'You'd better go for the doctor, Egbert,' said Winifred bitterly.
+
+'Oh, no! Oh, no!' cried Joyce in a panic.
+
+'Joyce, my darling, don't cry!' said Winifred, suddenly catching the
+little girl to her breast in a strange tragic anguish, the _Mater
+Dolorata_. Even the child was frightened into silence. Egbert looked at
+the tragic figure of his wife with the child at her breast, and turned
+away. Only Annabel started suddenly to cry: 'Joycey, Joycey, don't have
+your leg bleeding!'
+
+Egbert rode four miles to the village for the doctor. He could not help
+feeling that Winifred was laying it on rather. Surely the knee itself
+wasn't hurt! Surely not. It was only a surface cut.
+
+The doctor was out. Egbert left the message and came cycling swiftly
+home, his heart pinched with anxiety. He dropped sweating off his bicycle
+and went into the house, looking rather small, like a man who is at
+fault. Winifred was upstairs sitting by Joyce, who was looking pale and
+important in bed, and was eating some tapioca pudding. The pale, small,
+scared face of his child went to Egbert's heart.
+
+'Doctor Wing was out. He'll be here about half past two,' said Egbert.
+
+'I don't want him to come,' whimpered Joyce.
+
+'Joyce, dear, you must be patient and quiet,' said Winifred. 'He won't
+hurt you. But he will tell us what to do to make your knee better
+quickly. That is why he must come.'
+
+Winifred always explained carefully to her little girls: and it always
+took the words off their lips for the moment.
+
+'Does it bleed yet?' said Egbert.
+
+Winifred moved the bedclothes carefully aside.
+
+'I think not,' she said.
+
+Egbert stooped also to look.
+
+'No, it doesn't,' she said. Then he stood up with a relieved look on his
+face. He turned to the child.
+
+'Eat your pudding, Joyce,' he said. 'It won't be anything. You've only
+got to keep still for a few days.'
+
+'You haven't had your dinner, have you, Daddy?'
+
+'Not yet.'
+
+'Nurse will give it to you,' said Winifred.
+
+'You'll be all right, Joyce,' he said, smiling to the child and pushing
+the blonde hair off her brow. She smiled back winsomely into his face.
+
+He went downstairs and ate his meal alone. Nurse served him. She liked
+waiting on him. All women liked him and liked to do things for him.
+
+The doctor came--a fat country practitioner, pleasant and kind.
+
+'What, little girl, been tumbling down, have you? There's a thing to be
+doing, for a smart little lady like you! What! And cutting your knee!
+Tut-tut-tut! That _wasn't_ clever of you, now was it? Never mind, never
+mind, soon be better. Let us look at it. Won't hurt you. Not the least in
+life. Bring a bowl with a little warm water, nurse. Soon have it all
+right again, soon have it all right.'
+
+Joyce smiled at him with a pale smile of faint superiority. This was
+_not_ the way in which she was used to being talked to.
+
+He bent down, carefully looking at the little, thin, wounded knee of the
+child. Egbert bent over him.
+
+'Oh, dear, oh, dear! Quite a deep little cut. Nasty little cut. Nasty
+little cut. But, never mind. Never mind, little lady. We'll soon have it
+better. Soon have it better, little lady. What's your name?'
+
+'My name is Joyce,' said the child distinctly.
+
+'Oh, really!' he replied. 'Oh, really! Well, that's a fine name too, in
+my opinion. Joyce, eh?--And how old might Miss Joyce be? Can she tell me
+that?'
+
+'I'm six,' said the child, slightly amused and very condescending.
+
+'Six! There now. Add up and count as far as six, can you? Well, that's a
+clever little girl, a clever little girl. And if she has to drink a
+spoonful of medicine, she won't make a murmur, I'll be bound. Not like
+_some_ little girls. What? Eh?'
+
+'I take it if mother wishes me to,' said Joyce.
+
+'Ah, there now! That's the style! That's what I like to hear from a
+little lady in bed because she's cut her knee. That's the style--'
+
+The comfortable and prolix doctor dressed and bandaged the knee and
+recommended bed and a light diet for the little lady. He thought
+a week or a fortnight would put it right. No bones or ligatures
+damaged--fortunately. Only a flesh cut. He would come again in a day or
+two.
+
+So Joyce was reassured and stayed in bed and had all her toys up. Her
+father often played with her. The doctor came the third day. He was
+fairly pleased with the knee. It was healing. It was healing--yes--yes.
+Let the child continue in bed. He came again after a day or two. Winifred
+was a trifle uneasy. The wound seemed to be healing on the top, but it
+hurt the child too much. It didn't look quite right. She said so to
+Egbert.
+
+'Egbert, I'm sure Joyce's knee isn't healing properly.'
+
+'I think it is,' he said. 'I think it's all right.'
+
+'I'd rather Doctor Wing came again--I don't feel satisfied.'
+
+'Aren't you trying to imagine it worse than it really is?'
+
+'You would say so, of course. But I shall write a post-card to Doctor
+Wing now.'
+
+The doctor came next day. He examined the knee. Yes, there was
+inflammation. Yes, there _might_ be a little septic poisoning--there
+might. There might. Was the child feverish?
+
+So a fortnight passed by, and the child _was_ feverish, and the knee was
+more inflamed and grew worse and was painful, painful. She cried in the
+night, and her mother had to sit up with her. Egbert still insisted it
+was nothing, really--it would pass. But in his heart he was anxious.
+
+Winifred wrote again to her father. On Saturday the elderly man appeared.
+And no sooner did Winifred see the thick, rather short figure in its grey
+suit than a great yearning came over her.
+
+'Father, I'm not satisfied with Joyce. I'm not satisfied with Doctor
+Wing.'
+
+'Well, Winnie, dear, if you're not satisfied we must have further advice,
+that is all.'
+
+The sturdy, powerful, elderly man went upstairs, his voice sounding
+rather grating through the house, as if it cut upon the tense atmosphere.
+
+'How are you, Joyce, darling?' he said to the child. 'Does your knee hurt
+you? Does it hurt you, dear?'
+
+'It does sometimes.' The child was shy of him, cold towards him.
+
+'Well, dear, I'm sorry for that. I hope you try to bear it, and not
+trouble mother too much.'
+
+There was no answer. He looked at the knee. It was red and stiff.
+
+'Of course,' he said, 'I think we must have another doctor's opinion. And
+if we're going to have it, we had better have it at once. Egbert, do you
+think you might cycle in to Bingham for Doctor Wayne? I found him very
+satisfactory for Winnie's mother.'
+
+'I can go if you think it necessary,' said Egbert.
+
+'Certainly I think it necessary. Even if there if nothing, we can have
+peace of mind. Certainly I think it necessary. I should like Doctor Wayne
+to come this evening if possible.'
+
+So Egbert set off on his bicycle through the wind, like a boy sent on an
+errand, leaving his father-in-law a pillar of assurance, with Winifred.
+
+Doctor Wayne came, and looked grave. Yes, the knee was certainly taking
+the wrong way. The child might be lame for life.
+
+Up went the fire and fear and anger in every heart. Doctor Wayne came
+again the next day for a proper examination. And, yes, the knee had
+really taken bad ways. It should be X-rayed. It was very important.
+
+Godfrey Marshall walked up and down the lane with the doctor, beside the
+standing motor-car: up and down, up and down in one of those
+consultations of which he had had so many in his life.
+
+As a result he came indoors to Winifred.
+
+'Well, Winnie, dear, the best thing to do is to take Joyce up to London,
+to a nursing home where she can have proper treatment. Of course this
+knee has been allowed to go wrong. And apparently there is a risk that
+the child may even lose her leg. What do you think, dear? You agree to
+our taking her up to town and putting her under the best care?'
+
+'Oh, father, you _know_ I would do anything on earth for her.'
+
+'I know you would, Winnie darling. The pity is that there has been this
+unfortunate delay already. I can't think what Doctor Wing was doing.
+Apparently the child is in danger of losing her leg. Well then, if you
+will have everything ready, we will take her up to town tomorrow. I will
+order the large car from Denley's to be here at ten. Egbert, will you
+take a telegram at once to Doctor Jackson? It is a small nursing home for
+children and for surgical cases, not far from Baker Street. I'm sure
+Joyce will be all right there.'
+
+'Oh, father, can't I nurse her myself!'
+
+'Well, darling, if she is to have proper treatment, she had best be in a
+home. The X-ray treatment, and the electric treatment, and whatever is
+necessary.'
+
+'It will cost a great deal--' said Winifred.
+
+'We can't think of cost, if the child's leg is in danger--or even her
+life. No use speaking of cost,' said the elder man impatiently.
+
+And so it was. Poor Joyce, stretched out on a bed in the big closed
+motor-car--the mother sitting by her head, the grandfather in his short
+grey beard and a bowler hat, sitting by her feet, thick, and implacable
+in his responsibility--they rolled slowly away from Crockham, and from
+Egbert who stood there bareheaded and a little ignominious, left behind.
+He was to shut up the house and bring the rest of the family back to
+town, by train, the next day.
+
+Followed a dark and bitter time. The poor child. The poor, poor child,
+how she suffered, an agony and a long crucifixion in that nursing home.
+It was a bitter six weeks which changed the soul of Winifred for ever. As
+she sat by the bed of her poor, tortured little child, tortured with the
+agony of the knee, and the still worse agony of these diabolic, but
+perhaps necessary modern treatments, she felt her heart killed and going
+cold in her breast. Her little Joyce, her frail, brave, wonderful, little
+Joyce, frail and small and pale as a white flower! Ah, how had she,
+Winifred, dared to be so wicked, so wicked, so careless, so sensual.
+
+'Let my heart die! Let my woman's heart of flesh die! Saviour, let my
+heart die. And save my child. Let my heart die from the world and from
+the flesh. Oh, destroy my heart that is so wayward. Let my heart of pride
+die. Let my heart die.'
+
+So she prayed beside the bed of her child. And like the Mother with the
+seven swords in her breast, slowly her heart of pride and passion died in
+her breast, bleeding away. Slowly it died, bleeding away, and she turned
+to the Church for comfort, to Jesus, to the Mother of God, but most of
+all, to that great and enduring institution, the Roman Catholic Church.
+She withdrew into the shadow of the Church. She was a mother with three
+children. But in her soul she died, her heart of pride and passion and
+desire bled to death, her soul belonged to her church, her body belonged
+to her duty as a mother.
+
+Her duty as a wife did not enter. As a wife she had no sense of duty:
+only a certain bitterness towards the man with whom she had known such
+sensuality and distraction. She was purely the _Mater Dolorata_. To the
+man she was closed as a tomb.
+
+Egbert came to see his child. But Winifred seemed to be always seated
+there, like the tomb of his manhood and his fatherhood. Poor Winifred:
+she was still young, still strong and ruddy and beautiful like a ruddy
+hard flower of the field. Strange--her ruddy, healthy face, so sombre,
+and her strong, heavy, full-blooded body, so still. She, a nun! Never.
+And yet the gates of her heart and soul had shut in his face with a slow,
+resonant clang, shutting him out for ever. There was no need for her to
+go into a convent. Her will had done it.
+
+And between this young mother and this young father lay the crippled
+child, like a bit of pale silk floss on the pillow, and a little white
+pain-quenched face. He could not bear it. He just could not bear it. He
+turned aside. There was nothing to do but to turn aside. He turned aside,
+and went hither and thither, desultory. He was still attractive and
+desirable. But there was a little frown between his brow as if he had
+been cleft there with a hatchet: cleft right in, for ever, and that was
+the stigma.
+
+The child's leg was saved: but the knee was locked stiff. The fear now
+was lest the lower leg should wither, or cease to grow. There must be
+long-continued massage and treatment, daily treatment, even when the
+child left the nursing home. And the whole of the expense was borne by
+the grandfather.
+
+Egbert now had no real home. Winifred with the children and nurse was
+tied to the little flat in London. He could not live there: he could not
+contain himself. The cottage was shut-up--or lent to friends. He went
+down sometimes to work in his garden and keep the place in order. Then
+with the empty house around him at night, all the empty rooms, he felt
+his heart go wicked. The sense of frustration and futility, like some
+slow, torpid snake, slowly bit right through his heart. Futility,
+futility: the horrible marsh-poison went through his veins and killed
+him.
+
+As he worked in the garden in the silence of day he would listen for a
+sound. No sound. No sound of Winifred from the dark inside of the
+cottage: no sound of children's voices from the air, from the common,
+from the near distance. No sound, nothing but the old dark marsh-venomous
+atmosphere of the place. So he worked spasmodically through the day, and
+at night made a fire and cooked some food alone.
+
+He was alone. He himself cleaned the cottage and made his bed. But his
+mending he did not do. His shirts were slit on the shoulders, when he had
+been working, and the white flesh showed through. He would feel the air
+and the spots of rain on his exposed flesh. And he would look again
+across the common, where the dark, tufted gorse was dying to seed, and
+the bits of cat-heather were coming pink in tufts, like a sprinkling of
+sacrificial blood.
+
+His heart went back to the savage old spirit of the place: the desire
+for old gods, old, lost passions, the passion of the cold-blooded,
+darting snakes that hissed and shot away from him, the mystery of
+blood-sacrifices, all the lost, intense sensations of the primeval people
+of the place, whose passions seethed in the air still, from those long
+days before the Romans came. The seethe of a lost, dark passion in the
+air. The presence of unseen snakes.
+
+A queer, baffled, half-wicked look came on his face. He could not
+stay long at the cottage. Suddenly he must swing on to his bicycle and
+go--anywhere. Anywhere, away from the place. He would stay a few days
+with his mother in the old home. His mother adored him and grieved as a
+mother would. But the little, baffled, half-wicked smile curled on his
+face, and he swung away from his mother's solicitude as from everything
+else.
+
+Always moving on--from place to place, friend to friend: and always
+swinging away from sympathy. As soon as sympathy, like a soft hand, was
+reached out to touch him, away he swerved, instinctively, as a harmless
+snake swerves and swerves and swerves away from an outstretched hand.
+Away he must go. And periodically he went back to Winifred.
+
+He was terrible to her now, like a temptation. She had devoted herself to
+her children and her church. Joyce was once more on her feet; but, alas!
+lame, with iron supports to her leg, and a little crutch. It was strange
+how she had grown into a long, pallid, wild little thing. Strange that
+the pain had not made her soft and docile, but had brought out a wild,
+almost maenad temper in the child. She was seven, and long and white and
+thin, but by no means subdued. Her blonde hair was darkening. She still
+had long sufferings to face, and, in her own childish consciousness, the
+stigma of her lameness to bear.
+
+And she bore it. An almost maenad courage seemed to possess her, as if
+she were a long, thin, young weapon of life. She acknowledged all her
+mother's care. She would stand by her mother for ever. But some of her
+father's fine-tempered desperation flashed in her.
+
+When Egbert saw his little girl limping horribly--not only limping but
+lurching horribly in crippled, childish way, his heart again hardened
+with chagrin, like steel that is tempered again. There was a tacit
+understanding between him and his little girl: not what we would call
+love, but a weapon-like kinship. There was a tiny touch of irony in his
+manner towards her, contrasting sharply with Winifred's heavy, unleavened
+solicitude and care. The child flickered back to him with an answering
+little smile of irony and recklessness: an odd flippancy which made
+Winifred only the more sombre and earnest.
+
+The Marshalls took endless thought and trouble for the child, searching
+out every means to save her limb and her active freedom. They spared no
+effort and no money, they spared no strength of will. With all their
+slow, heavy power of will they willed that Joyce should save her liberty
+of movement, should win back her wild, free grace. Even if it took a long
+time to recover, it should be recovered.
+
+So the situation stood. And Joyce submitted, week after week, month after
+month to the tyranny and pain of the treatment. She acknowledged the
+honourable effort on her behalf. But her flamy reckless spirit was her
+father's. It was he who had all the glamour for her. He and she were like
+members of some forbidden secret society who know one another but may not
+recognize one another. Knowledge they had in common, the same secret of
+life, the father and the child. But the child stayed in the camp of her
+mother, honourably, and the father wandered outside like Ishmael, only
+coming sometimes to sit in the home for an hour or two, an evening or two
+beside the camp fire, like Ishmael, in a curious silence and tension,
+with the mocking answer of the desert speaking out of his silence, and
+annulling the whole convention of the domestic home.
+
+His presence was almost an anguish to Winifred. She prayed against it.
+That little cleft between his brow, that flickering, wicked, little smile
+that seemed to haunt his face, and above all, the triumphant loneliness,
+the Ishmael quality. And then the erectness of his supple body, like a
+symbol. The very way he stood, so quiet, so insidious, like an erect,
+supple symbol of life, the living body, confronting her downcast soul,
+was torture to her. He was like a supple living idol moving before her
+eyes, and she felt if she watched him she was damned.
+
+And he came and made himself at home in her little home. When he was
+there, moving in his own quiet way, she felt as if the whole great law of
+sacrifice, by which she had elected to live, were annulled. He annulled
+by his very presence the laws of her life. And what did he substitute?
+Ah, against that question she hardened herself in recoil.
+
+It was awful to her to have to have him about--moving about in his
+shirt-sleeves, speaking in his tenor, throaty voice to the children.
+Annabel simply adored him, and he teased the little girl. The baby,
+Barbara, was not sure of him. She had been born a stranger to him. But
+even the nurse, when she saw his white shoulder of flesh through the
+slits of his torn shirt, thought it a shame.
+
+Winifred felt it was only another weapon of his against her.
+
+'You have other shirts--why do you wear that old one that is all torn,
+Egbert?' she said.
+
+'I may as well wear it out,' he said subtly.
+
+He knew she would not offer to mend it for him. She _could_ not. And no,
+she would not. Had she not her own gods to honour? And could she betray
+them, submitting to his Baal and Ashtaroth? And it was terrible to her,
+his unsheathed presence, that seemed to annul her and her faith, like
+another revelation. Like a gleaming idol evoked against her, a vivid
+life-idol that might triumph.
+
+He came and he went--and she persisted. And then the great war broke out.
+He was a man who could not go to the dogs. He could not dissipate
+himself. He was pure-bred in his Englishness, and even when he would have
+killed to be vicious, he could not.
+
+So when the war broke out his whole instinct was against it: against war.
+He had not the faintest desire to overcome any foreigners or to help in
+their death. He had no conception of Imperial England, and Rule Britannia
+was just a joke to him. He was a pure-blooded Englishman, perfect in his
+race, and when he was truly himself he could no more have been aggressive
+on the score of his Englishness than a rose can be aggressive on the
+score of its rosiness.
+
+No, he had no desire to defy Germany and to exalt England. The
+distinction between German and English was not for him the distinction
+between good and bad. It was the distinction between blue water-flowers
+and red or white bush-blossoms: just difference. The difference between
+the wild boar and the wild bear. And a man was good or bad according to
+his nature, not according to his nationality.
+
+Egbert was well-bred, and this was part of his natural understanding. It
+was merely unnatural to him to hate a nation _en bloc_. Certain
+individuals he disliked, and others he liked, and the mass he knew
+nothing about. Certain deeds he disliked, certain deeds seemed natural to
+him, and about most deeds he had no particular feeling.
+
+He had, however, the one deepest pure-bred instinct. He recoiled
+inevitably from having his feelings dictated to him by the mass feeling.
+His feelings were his own, his understanding was his own, and he would
+never go back on either, willingly. Shall a man become inferior to his
+own true knowledge and self, just because the mob expects it of him?
+
+What Egbert felt subtly and without question, his father-in-law felt also
+in a rough, more combative way. Different as the two men were, they were
+two real Englishmen, and their instincts were almost the same.
+
+And Godfrey Marshall had the world to reckon with. There was German
+military aggression, and the English non-military idea of liberty and the
+'conquests of peace'--meaning industrialism. Even if the choice between
+militarism and industrialism were a choice of evils, the elderly man
+asserted his choice of the latter, perforce. He whose soul was quick with
+the instinct of power.
+
+Egbert just refused to reckon with the world. He just refused even to
+decide between German militarism and British industrialism. He chose
+neither. As for atrocities, he despised the people who committed them as
+inferior criminal types. There was nothing national about crime.
+
+And yet, war! War! Just war! Not right or wrong, but just war itself.
+Should he join? Should he give himself over to war? The question was in
+his mind for some weeks. Not because he thought England was right and
+Germany wrong. Probably Germany was wrong, but he refused to make a
+choice. Not because he felt inspired. No. But just--war.
+
+The deterrent was, the giving himself over into the power of other men,
+and into the power of the mob-spirit of a democratic army. Should he give
+himself over? Should he make over his own life and body to the control of
+something which he _knew_ was inferior, in spirit, to his own self?
+Should he commit himself into the power of an inferior control? Should
+he? Should he betray himself?
+
+He was going to put himself into the power of his inferiors, and he knew
+it. He was going to subjugate himself. He was going to be ordered about
+by petty _canaille_ of non-commissioned officers--and even commissioned
+officers. He who was born and bred free. Should he do it?
+
+He went to his wife, to speak to her.
+
+'Shall I join up, Winifred?'
+
+She was silent. Her instinct also was dead against it. And yet a certain
+profound resentment made her answer:
+
+'You have three children dependent on you. I don't know whether you have
+thought of that.'
+
+It was still only the third month of the war, and the old pre-war ideas
+were still alive.
+
+'Of course. But it won't make much difference to them. I shall be earning
+a shilling a day, at least.'
+
+'You'd better speak to father, I think,' she replied heavily.
+
+Egbert went to his father-in-law. The elderly man's heart was full of
+resentment.
+
+'I should say,' he said rather sourly, 'it is the best thing you could
+do.'
+
+Egbert went and joined up immediately, as a private soldier. He was
+drafted into the light artillery.
+
+Winifred now had a new duty towards him: the duty of a wife towards a
+husband who is himself performing his duty towards the world. She loved
+him still. She would always love him, as far as earthly love went. But it
+was duty she now lived by. When he came back to her in khaki, a soldier,
+she submitted to him as a wife. It was her duty. But to his passion she
+could never again fully submit. Something prevented her, for ever: even
+her own deepest choice.
+
+He went back again to camp. It did not suit him to be a modern soldier.
+In the thick, gritty, hideous khaki his subtle physique was extinguished
+as if he had been killed. In the ugly intimacy of the camp his
+thoroughbred sensibilities were just degraded. But he had chosen, so he
+accepted. An ugly little look came on to his face, of a man who has
+accepted his own degradation.
+
+In the early spring Winifred went down to Crockham to be there when
+primroses were out, and the tassels hanging on the hazel-bushes. She felt
+something like a reconciliation towards Egbert, now he was a prisoner in
+camp most of his days. Joyce was wild with delight at seeing the garden
+and the common again, after the eight or nine months of London and
+misery. She was still lame. She still had the irons up her leg. But she
+lurched about with a wild, crippled agility.
+
+Egbert came for a week-end, in his gritty, thick, sand-paper khaki and
+puttees and the hideous cap. Nay, he looked terrible. And on his face a
+slightly impure look, a little sore on his lip, as if he had eaten too
+much or drunk too much or let his blood become a little unclean. He was
+almost uglily healthy, with the camp life. It did not suit him.
+
+Winifred waited for him in a little passion of duty and sacrifice,
+willing to serve the soldier, if not the man. It only made him feel a
+little more ugly inside. The week-end was torment to him: the memory of
+the camp, the knowledge of the life he led there; even the sight of his
+own legs in that abhorrent khaki. He felt as if the hideous cloth went
+into his blood and made it gritty and dirty. Then Winifred so ready to
+serve the _soldier_, when she repudiated the man. And this made the grit
+worse between his teeth. And the children running around playing and
+calling in the rather mincing fashion of children who have nurses and
+governesses and literature in the family. And Joyce so lame! It had all
+become unreal to him, after the camp. It only set his soul on edge. He
+left at dawn on the Monday morning, glad to get back to the realness and
+vulgarity of the camp.
+
+Winifred would never meet him again at the cottage--only in London, where
+the world was with them. But sometimes he came alone to Crockham perhaps
+when friends were staying there. And then he would work awhile in his
+garden. This summer still it would flame with blue anchusas and big red
+poppies, the mulleins would sway their soft, downy erections in the air:
+he loved mulleins: and the honeysuckle would stream out scent like
+memory, when the owl was whooing. Then he sat by the fire with the
+friends and with Winifred's sisters, and they sang the folk-songs. He put
+on thin civilian clothes and his charm and his beauty and the supple
+dominancy of his body glowed out again. But Winifred was not there.
+
+At the end of the summer he went to Flanders, into action. He seemed
+already to have gone out of life, beyond the pale of life. He hardly
+remembered his life any more, being like a man who is going to take a
+jump from a height, and is only looking to where he must land.
+
+He was twice slightly wounded, in two months. But not enough to put him
+off duty for more than a day or two. They were retiring again, holding
+the enemy back. He was in the rear--three machine-guns. The country was
+all pleasant, war had not yet trampled it. Only the air seemed shattered,
+and the land awaiting death. It was a small, unimportant action in which
+he was engaged.
+
+The guns were stationed on a little bushy hillock just outside a village.
+But occasionally, it was difficult to say from which direction, came the
+sharp crackle of rifle-fire, and beyond, the far-off thud of cannon. The
+afternoon was wintry and cold.
+
+A lieutenant stood on a little iron platform at the top of the ladders,
+taking the sights and giving the aim, calling in a high, tense,
+mechanical voice. Out of the sky came the sharp cry of the directions,
+then the warning numbers, then 'Fire!' The shot went, the piston of the
+gun sprang back, there was a sharp explosion, and a very faint film of
+smoke in the air. Then the other two guns fired, and there was a lull.
+The officer was uncertain of the enemy's position. The thick clump of
+horse-chestnut trees below was without change. Only in the far distance
+the sound of heavy firing continued, so far off as to give a sense of
+peace.
+
+The gorse bushes on either hand were dark, but a few sparks of flowers
+showed yellow. He noticed them almost unconsciously as he waited, in the
+lull. He was in his shirt-sleeves, and the air came chill on his arms.
+Again his shirt was slit on the shoulders, and the flesh showed through.
+He was dirty and unkempt. But his face was quiet. So many things go out
+of consciousness before we come to the end of consciousness.
+
+Before him, below, was the highroad, running between high banks of grass
+and gorse. He saw the whitish muddy tracks and deep scores in the road,
+where the part of the regiment had retired. Now all was still. Sounds
+that came, came from the outside. The place where he stood was still
+silent, chill, serene: the white church among the trees beyond seemed
+like a thought only.
+
+He moved into a lightning-like mechanical response at the sharp cry from
+the officer overhead. Mechanism, the pure mechanical action of obedience
+at the guns. Pure mechanical action at the guns. It left the soul
+unburdened, brooding in dark nakedness. In the end, the soul is alone,
+brooding on the face of the uncreated flux, as a bird on a dark sea.
+
+Nothing could be seen but the road, and a crucifix knocked slanting and
+the dark, autumnal fields and woods. There appeared three horsemen on a
+little eminence, very small, on the crest of a ploughed field. They were
+our own men. Of the enemy, nothing.
+
+The lull continued. Then suddenly came sharp orders, and a new direction
+of the guns, and an intense, exciting activity. Yet at the centre the
+soul remained dark and aloof, alone.
+
+But even so, it was the soul that heard the new sound: the new, deep
+'papp!' of a gun that seemed to touch right upon the soul. He kept up the
+rapid activity at the machine-gun, sweating. But in his soul was the echo
+of the new, deep sound, deeper than life.
+
+And in confirmation came the awful faint whistling of a shell, advancing
+almost suddenly into a piercing, tearing shriek that would tear through
+the membrane of life. He heard it in his ears, but he heard it also in
+his soul, in tension. There was relief when the thing had swung by and
+struck, away beyond. He heard the hoarseness of its explosion, and the
+voice of the soldier calling to the horses. But he did not turn round to
+look. He only noticed a twig of holly with red berries fall like a gift
+on to the road below.
+
+Not this time, not this time. Whither thou goest I will go. Did he say it
+to the shell, or to whom? Whither thou goest I will go. Then, the faint
+whistling of another shell dawned, and his blood became small and still
+to receive it. It drew nearer, like some horrible blast of wind; his
+blood lost consciousness. But in the second of suspension he saw the
+heavy shell swoop to earth, into the rocky bushes on the right, and earth
+and stones poured up into the sky. It was as if he heard no sound. The
+earth and stones and fragments of bush fell to earth again, and there was
+the same unchanging peace. The Germans had got the aim.
+
+Would they move now? Would they retire? Yes. The officer was giving the
+last lightning-rapid orders to fire before withdrawing. A shell passed
+unnoticed in the rapidity of action. And then, into the silence, into the
+suspense where the soul brooded, finally crashed a noise and a darkness
+and a moment's flaming agony and horror. Ah, he had seen the dark bird
+flying towards him, flying home this time. In one instant life and
+eternity went up in a conflagration of agony, then there was a weight of
+darkness.
+
+When faintly something began to struggle in the darkness, a consciousness
+of himself, he was aware of a great load and a clanging sound. To have
+known the moment of death! And to be forced, before dying, to review it.
+So, fate, even in death.
+
+There was a resounding of pain. It seemed to sound from the outside of
+his consciousness: like a loud bell clanging very near. Yet he knew it
+was himself. He must associate himself with it. After a lapse and a new
+effort, he identified a pain in his head, a large pain that clanged and
+resounded. So far he could identify himself with himself. Then there was
+a lapse.
+
+After a time he seemed to wake up again, and waking, to know that he was
+at the front, and that he was killed. He did not open his eyes. Light was
+not yet his. The clanging pain in his head rang out the rest of his
+consciousness. So he lapsed away from consciousness, in unutterable sick
+abandon of life.
+
+Bit by bit, like a doom came the necessity to know. He was hit in the
+head. It was only a vague surmise at first. But in the swinging of the
+pendulum of pain, swinging ever nearer and nearer, to touch him into an
+agony of consciousness and a consciousness of agony, gradually the
+knowledge emerged--he must be hit in the head--hit on the left brow; if
+so, there would be blood--was there blood?--could he feel blood in his
+left eye? Then the clanging seemed to burst the membrane of his brain,
+like death-madness.
+
+Was there blood on his face? Was hot blood flowing? Or was it dry blood
+congealing down his cheek? It took him hours even to ask the question:
+time being no more than an agony in darkness, without measurement.
+
+A long time after he had opened his eyes he realized he was seeing
+something--something, something, but the effort to recall what was too
+great. No, no; no recall!
+
+Were they the stars in the dark sky? Was it possible it was stars in the
+dark sky? Stars? The world? Ah, no, he could not know it! Stars and the
+world were gone for him, he closed his eyes. No stars, no sky, no world.
+No, No! The thick darkness of blood alone. It should be one great lapse
+into the thick darkness of blood in agony.
+
+Death, oh, death! The world all blood, and the blood all writhing with
+death. The soul like the tiniest little light out on a dark sea, the sea
+of blood. And the light guttering, beating, pulsing in a windless storm,
+wishing it could go out, yet unable.
+
+There had been life. There had been Winifred and his children. But the
+frail death-agony effort to catch at straws of memory, straws of life
+from the past, brought on too great a nausea. No, No! No Winifred, no
+children. No world, no people. Better the agony of dissolution ahead than
+the nausea of the effort backwards. Better the terrible work should go
+forward, the dissolving into the black sea of death, in the extremity of
+dissolution, than that there should be any reaching back towards life. To
+forget! To forget! Utterly, utterly to forget, in the great forgetting of
+death. To break the core and the unit of life, and to lapse out on the
+great darkness. Only that. To break the clue, and mingle and commingle
+with the one darkness, without afterwards or forwards. Let the black sea
+of death itself solve the problem of futurity. Let the will of man break
+and give up.
+
+What was that? A light! A terrible light! Was it figures? Was it legs of
+a horse colossal--colossal above him: huge, huge?
+
+The Germans heard a slight noise, and started. Then, in the glare of a
+light-bomb, by the side of the heap of earth thrown up by the shell, they
+saw the dead face.
+
+
+
+
+_Tickets, Please_
+
+
+There is in the Midlands a single-line tramway system which boldly
+leaves the county town and plunges off into the black, industrial
+countryside, up hill and down dale, through the long ugly villages of
+workmen's houses, over canals and railways, past churches perched high
+and nobly over the smoke and shadows, through stark, grimy cold little
+market-places, tilting away in a rush past cinemas and shops down to the
+hollow where the collieries are, then up again, past a little rural
+church, under the ash trees, on in a rush to the terminus, the last
+little ugly place of industry, the cold little town that shivers on the
+edge of the wild, gloomy country beyond. There the green and creamy
+coloured tram-car seems to pause and purr with curious satisfaction. But
+in a few minutes--the clock on the turret of the Co-operative Wholesale
+Society's Shops gives the time--away it starts once more on the
+adventure. Again there are the reckless swoops downhill, bouncing the
+loops: again the chilly wait in the hill-top market-place: again the
+breathless slithering round the precipitous drop under the church: again
+the patient halts at the loops, waiting for the outcoming car: so on and
+on, for two long hours, till at last the city looms beyond the fat
+gas-works, the narrow factories draw near, we are in the sordid streets
+of the great town, once more we sidle to a standstill at our terminus,
+abashed by the great crimson and cream-coloured city cars, but still
+perky, jaunty, somewhat dare-devil, green as a jaunty sprig of parsley
+out of a black colliery garden.
+
+To ride on these cars is always an adventure. Since we are in war-time,
+the drivers are men unfit for active service: cripples and hunchbacks.
+So they have the spirit of the devil in them. The ride becomes a
+steeple-chase. Hurray! we have leapt in a clear jump over the canal
+bridges--now for the four-lane corner. With a shriek and a trail of
+sparks we are clear again. To be sure, a tram often leaps the rails--but
+what matter! It sits in a ditch till other trams come to haul it out. It
+is quite common for a car, packed with one solid mass of living people,
+to come to a dead halt in the midst of unbroken blackness, the heart of
+nowhere on a dark night, and for the driver and the girl conductor to
+call, 'All get off--car's on fire!' Instead, however, of rushing out in a
+panic, the passengers stolidly reply: 'Get on--get on! We're not coming
+out. We're stopping where we are. Push on, George.' So till flames
+actually appear.
+
+The reason for this reluctance to dismount is that the nights are
+howlingly cold, black, and windswept, and a car is a haven of refuge.
+From village to village the miners travel, for a change of cinema, of
+girl, of pub. The trams are desperately packed. Who is going to risk
+himself in the black gulf outside, to wait perhaps an hour for another
+tram, then to see the forlorn notice 'Depot Only', because there is
+something wrong! Or to greet a unit of three bright cars all so tight
+with people that they sail past with a howl of derision. Trams that pass
+in the night.
+
+This, the most dangerous tram-service in England, as the authorities
+themselves declare, with pride, is entirely conducted by girls, and
+driven by rash young men, a little crippled, or by delicate young men,
+who creep forward in terror. The girls are fearless young hussies. In
+their ugly blue uniform, skirts up to their knees, shapeless old
+peaked caps on their heads, they have all the _sang-froid_ of an old
+non-commissioned officer. With a tram packed with howling colliers,
+roaring hymns downstairs and a sort of antiphony of obscenities upstairs,
+the lasses are perfectly at their ease. They pounce on the youths who try
+to evade their ticket-machine. They push off the men at the end of their
+distance. They are not going to be done in the eye--not they. They fear
+nobody--and everybody fears them.
+
+'Hello, Annie!'
+
+'Hello, Ted!'
+
+'Oh, mind my corn, Miss Stone. It's my belief you've got a heart of
+stone, for you've trod on it again.'
+
+'You should keep it in your pocket,' replies Miss Stone, and she goes
+sturdily upstairs in her high boots.
+
+'Tickets, please.'
+
+She is peremptory, suspicious, and ready to hit first. She can hold her
+own against ten thousand. The step of that tram-car is her Thermopylae.
+
+Therefore, there is a certain wild romance aboard these cars--and in the
+sturdy bosom of Annie herself. The time for soft romance is in the
+morning, between ten o'clock and one, when things are rather slack: that
+is, except market-day and Saturday. Thus Annie has time to look about
+her. Then she often hops off her car and into a shop where she has spied
+something, while the driver chats in the main road. There is very good
+feeling between the girls and the drivers. Are they not companions in
+peril, shipments aboard this careering vessel of a tram-car, for ever
+rocking on the waves of a stormy land?
+
+Then, also, during the easy hours, the inspectors are most in evidence.
+For some reason, everybody employed in this tram-service is young: there
+are no grey heads. It would not do. Therefore the inspectors are of the
+right age, and one, the chief, is also good-looking. See him stand on a
+wet, gloomy morning, in his long oil-skin, his peaked cap well down over
+his eyes, waiting to board a car. His face is ruddy, his small brown
+moustache is weathered, he has a faint impudent smile. Fairly tall and
+agile, even in his waterproof, he springs aboard a car and greets Annie.
+
+'Hello, Annie! Keeping the wet out?'
+
+'Trying to.'
+
+There are only two people in the car. Inspecting is soon over. Then for a
+long and impudent chat on the foot-board, a good, easy, twelve-mile chat.
+
+The inspector's name is John Thomas Raynor--always called John Thomas,
+except sometimes, in malice, Coddy. His face sets in fury when he is
+addressed, from a distance, with this abbreviation. There is considerable
+scandal about John Thomas in half a dozen villages. He flirts with the
+girl conductors in the morning, and walks out with them in the dark
+night, when they leave their tram-car at the depot. Of course, the girls
+quit the service frequently. Then he flirts and walks out with the
+newcomer: always providing she is sufficiently attractive, and that she
+will consent to walk. It is remarkable, however, that most of the girls
+are quite comely, they are all young, and this roving life aboard the car
+gives them a sailor's dash and recklessness. What matter how they behave
+when the ship is in port. Tomorrow they will be aboard again.
+
+Annie, however, was something of a Tartar, and her sharp tongue had kept
+John Thomas at arm's length for many months. Perhaps, therefore, she
+liked him all the more: for he always came up smiling, with impudence.
+She watched him vanquish one girl, then another. She could tell by the
+movement of his mouth and eyes, when he flirted with her in the morning,
+that he had been walking out with this lass, or the other, the night
+before. A fine cock-of-the-walk he was. She could sum him up pretty well.
+
+In this subtle antagonism they knew each other like old friends, they
+were as shrewd with one another almost as man and wife. But Annie had
+always kept him sufficiently at arm's length. Besides, she had a boy of
+her own.
+
+The Statutes fair, however, came in November, at Bestwood. It happened
+that Annie had the Monday night off. It was a drizzling ugly night, yet
+she dressed herself up and went to the fair ground. She was alone, but
+she expected soon to find a pal of some sort.
+
+The roundabouts were veering round and grinding out their music, the side
+shows were making as much commotion as possible. In the coco-nut shies
+there were no coco-nuts, but artificial war-time substitutes, which the
+lads declared were fastened into the irons. There was a sad decline in
+brilliance and luxury. None the less, the ground was muddy as ever, there
+was the same crush, the press of faces lighted up by the flares and the
+electric lights, the same smell of naphtha and a few fried potatoes, and
+of electricity.
+
+Who should be the first to greet Miss Annie on the showground but John
+Thomas? He had a black overcoat buttoned up to his chin, and a tweed cap
+pulled down over his brows, his face between was ruddy and smiling and
+handy as ever. She knew so well the way his mouth moved.
+
+She was very glad to have a 'boy'. To be at the Statutes without a fellow
+was no fun. Instantly, like the gallant he was, he took her on the
+dragons, grim-toothed, round-about switchbacks. It was not nearly so
+exciting as a tram-car actually. But, then, to be seated in a shaking,
+green dragon, uplifted above the sea of bubble faces, careering in a
+rickety fashion in the lower heavens, whilst John Thomas leaned over her,
+his cigarette in his mouth, was after all the right style. She was a
+plump, quick, alive little creature. So she was quite excited and happy.
+
+John Thomas made her stay on for the next round. And therefore she could
+hardly for shame repulse him when he put his arm round her and drew her a
+little nearer to him, in a very warm and cuddly manner. Besides, he was
+fairly discreet, he kept his movement as hidden as possible. She looked
+down, and saw that his red, clean hand was out of sight of the crowd. And
+they knew each other so well. So they warmed up to the fair.
+
+After the dragons they went on the horses. John Thomas paid each time, so
+she could but be complaisant. He, of course, sat astride on the outer
+horse--named 'Black Bess'--and she sat sideways, towards him, on the
+inner horse--named 'Wildfire'. But of course John Thomas was not going to
+sit discreetly on 'Black Bess', holding the brass bar. Round they spun
+and heaved, in the light. And round he swung on his wooden steed,
+flinging one leg across her mount, and perilously tipping up and down,
+across the space, half lying back, laughing at her. He was perfectly
+happy; she was afraid her hat was on one side, but she was excited.
+
+He threw quoits on a table, and won for her two large, pale-blue
+hat-pins. And then, hearing the noise of the cinemas, announcing another
+performance, they climbed the boards and went in.
+
+Of course, during these performances pitch darkness falls from time to
+time, when the machine goes wrong. Then there is a wild whooping, and a
+loud smacking of simulated kisses. In these moments John Thomas drew
+Annie towards him. After all, he had a wonderfully warm, cosy way of
+holding a girl with his arm, he seemed to make such a nice fit. And,
+after all, it was pleasant to be so held: so very comforting and cosy and
+nice. He leaned over her and she felt his breath on her hair; she knew he
+wanted to kiss her on the lips. And, after all, he was so warm and she
+fitted in to him so softly. After all, she wanted him to touch her lips.
+
+But the light sprang up; she also started electrically, and put her hat
+straight. He left his arm lying nonchalantly behind her. Well, it was
+fun, it was exciting to be at the Statutes with John Thomas.
+
+When the cinema was over they went for a walk across the dark, damp
+fields. He had all the arts of love-making. He was especially good at
+holding a girl, when he sat with her on a stile in the black, drizzling
+darkness. He seemed to be holding her in space, against his own warmth
+and gratification. And his kisses were soft and slow and searching.
+
+So Annie walked out with John Thomas, though she kept her own boy
+dangling in the distance. Some of the tram-girls chose to be huffy. But
+there, you must take things as you find them, in this life.
+
+There was no mistake about it, Annie liked John Thomas a good deal. She
+felt so rich and warm in herself whenever he was near. And John Thomas
+really liked Annie, more than usual. The soft, melting way in which she
+could flow into a fellow, as if she melted into his very bones, was
+something rare and good. He fully appreciated this.
+
+But with a developing acquaintance there began a developing intimacy.
+Annie wanted to consider him a person, a man; she wanted to take an
+intelligent interest in him, and to have an intelligent response. She did
+not want a mere nocturnal presence, which was what he was so far. And she
+prided herself that he could not leave her.
+
+Here she made a mistake. John Thomas intended to remain a nocturnal
+presence; he had no idea of becoming an all-round individual to her. When
+she started to take an intelligent interest in him and his life and his
+character, he sheered off. He hated intelligent interest. And he knew
+that the only way to stop it was to avoid it. The possessive female was
+aroused in Annie. So he left her.
+
+It is no use saying she was not surprised. She was at first startled,
+thrown out of her count. For she had been so _very_ sure of holding him.
+For a while she was staggered, and everything became uncertain to her.
+Then she wept with fury, indignation, desolation, and misery. Then she
+had a spasm of despair. And then, when he came, still impudently, on to
+her car, still familiar, but letting her see by the movement of his head
+that he had gone away to somebody else for the time being, and was
+enjoying pastures new, then she determined to have her own back.
+
+She had a very shrewd idea what girls John Thomas had taken out. She went
+to Nora Purdy. Nora was a tall, rather pale, but well-built girl, with
+beautiful yellow hair. She was rather secretive.
+
+'Hey!' said Annie, accosting her; then softly, 'Who's John Thomas on with
+now?'
+
+'I don't know,' said Nora.
+
+'Why tha does,' said Annie, ironically lapsing into dialect. 'Tha knows
+as well as I do.'
+
+'Well, I do, then,' said Nora. 'It isn't me, so don't bother.'
+
+'It's Cissy Meakin, isn't it?'
+
+'It is, for all I know.'
+
+'Hasn't he got a face on him!' said Annie. 'I don't half like his cheek.
+I could knock him off the foot-board when he comes round at me.'
+
+'He'll get dropped-on one of these days,' said Nora.
+
+'Ay, he will, when somebody makes up their mind to drop it on him. I
+should like to see him taken down a peg or two, shouldn't you?'
+
+'I shouldn't mind,' said Nora.
+
+'You've got quite as much cause to as I have,' said Annie. 'But we'll
+drop on him one of these days, my girl. What? Don't you want to?'
+
+'I don't mind,' said Nora.
+
+But as a matter of fact, Nora was much more vindictive than Annie.
+
+One by one Annie went the round of the old flames. It so happened that
+Cissy Meakin left the tramway service in quite a short time. Her mother
+made her leave. Then John Thomas was on the _qui-vive_. He cast his eyes
+over his old flock. And his eyes lighted on Annie. He thought she would
+be safe now. Besides, he liked her.
+
+She arranged to walk home with him on Sunday night. It so happened that
+her car would be in the depot at half past nine: the last car would come
+in at 10.15. So John Thomas was to wait for her there.
+
+At the depot the girls had a little waiting-room of their own. It was
+quite rough, but cosy, with a fire and an oven and a mirror, and table
+and wooden chairs. The half dozen girls who knew John Thomas only too
+well had arranged to take service this Sunday afternoon. So, as the cars
+began to come in, early, the girls dropped into the waiting-room. And
+instead of hurrying off home, they sat around the fire and had a cup of
+tea. Outside was the darkness and lawlessness of wartime.
+
+John Thomas came on the car after Annie, at about a quarter to ten. He
+poked his head easily into the girls' waiting-room.
+
+'Prayer-meeting?' he asked.
+
+'Ay,' said Laura Sharp. 'Ladies only.'
+
+'That's me!' said John Thomas. It was one of his favourite exclamations.
+
+'Shut the door, boy,' said Muriel Baggaley.
+
+'On which side of me?' said John Thomas.
+
+'Which tha likes,' said Polly Birkin.
+
+He had come in and closed the door behind him. The girls moved in their
+circle, to make a place for him near the fire. He took off his great-coat
+and pushed back his hat.
+
+'Who handles the teapot?' he said.
+
+Nora Purdy silently poured him out a cup of tea.
+
+'Want a bit o' my bread and drippin'?' said Muriel Baggaley to him.
+
+'Ay, give us a bit.'
+
+And he began to eat his piece of bread.
+
+'There's no place like home, girls,' he said.
+
+They all looked at him as he uttered this piece of impudence. He seemed
+to be sunning himself in the presence of so many damsels.
+
+'Especially if you're not afraid to go home in the dark,' said Laura
+Sharp.
+
+'Me! By myself I am.'
+
+They sat till they heard the last tram come in. In a few minutes Emma
+Houselay entered.
+
+'Come on, my old duck!' cried Polly Birkin.
+
+'It _is_ perishing,' said Emma, holding her fingers to the fire.
+
+'But--I'm afraid to, go home in, the dark,' sang Laura Sharp, the tune
+having got into her mind.
+
+'Who're you going with tonight, John Thomas?' asked Muriel Baggaley,
+coolly.
+
+'Tonight?' said John Thomas. 'Oh, I'm going home by myself tonight--all
+on my lonely-O.'
+
+'That's me!' said Nora Purdy, using his own ejaculation.
+
+The girls laughed shrilly.
+
+'Me as well, Nora,' said John Thomas.
+
+'Don't know what you mean,' said Laura.
+
+'Yes, I'm toddling,' said he, rising and reaching for his overcoat.
+
+'Nay,' said Polly. 'We're all here waiting for you.'
+
+'We've got to be up in good time in the morning,' he said, in the
+benevolent official manner.
+
+They all laughed.
+
+'Nay,' said Muriel. 'Don't leave us all lonely, John Thomas. Take one!'
+
+'I'll take the lot, if you like,' he responded gallantly.
+
+'That you won't either,' said Muriel, 'Two's company; seven's too much of
+a good thing.'
+
+'Nay--take one,' said Laura. 'Fair and square, all above board, and say
+which.'
+
+'Ay,' cried Annie, speaking for the first time. 'Pick, John Thomas; let's
+hear thee.'
+
+'Nay,' he said. 'I'm going home quiet tonight. Feeling good, for once.'
+
+'Whereabouts?' said Annie. 'Take a good 'un, then. But tha's got to take
+one of us!'
+
+'Nay, how can I take one,' he said, laughing uneasily. 'I don't want to
+make enemies.'
+
+'You'd only make _one_' said Annie.
+
+'The chosen _one_,' added Laura.
+
+'Oh, my! Who said girls!' exclaimed John Thomas, again turning, as if to
+escape. 'Well--good-night.'
+
+'Nay, you've got to make your pick,' said Muriel. 'Turn your face to the
+wall, and say which one touches you. Go on--we shall only just touch your
+back--one of us. Go on--turn your face to the wall, and don't look, and
+say which one touches you.'
+
+He was uneasy, mistrusting them. Yet he had not the courage to break
+away. They pushed him to a wall and stood him there with his face to it.
+Behind his back they all grimaced, tittering. He looked so comical. He
+looked around uneasily.
+
+'Go on!' he cried.
+
+'You're looking--you're looking!' they shouted.
+
+He turned his head away. And suddenly, with a movement like a swift cat,
+Annie went forward and fetched him a box on the side of the head that
+sent his cap flying and himself staggering. He started round.
+
+But at Annie's signal they all flew at him, slapping him, pinching him,
+pulling his hair, though more in fun than in spite or anger. He, however,
+saw red. His blue eyes flamed with strange fear as well as fury, and he
+butted through the girls to the door. It was locked. He wrenched at it.
+Roused, alert, the girls stood round and looked at him. He faced them, at
+bay. At that moment they were rather horrifying to him, as they stood in
+their short uniforms. He was distinctly afraid.
+
+'Come on, John Thomas! Come on! Choose!' said Annie.
+
+'What are you after? Open the door,' he said.
+
+'We shan't--not till you've chosen!' said Muriel.
+
+'Chosen what?' he said.
+
+'Chosen the one you're going to marry,' she replied.
+
+He hesitated a moment.
+
+'Open the blasted door,' he said, 'and get back to your senses.' He spoke
+with official authority.
+
+'You've got to choose!' cried the girls.
+
+'Come on!' cried Annie, looking him in the eye.' Come on! Come on!'
+
+He went forward, rather vaguely. She had taken off her belt, and swinging
+it, she fetched him a sharp blow over the head with the buckle end. He
+sprang and seized her. But immediately the other girls rushed upon him,
+pulling and tearing and beating him. Their blood was now thoroughly up.
+He was their sport now. They were going to have their own back, out of
+him. Strange, wild creatures, they hung on him and rushed at him to bear
+him down. His tunic was torn right up the back, Nora had hold at the back
+of his collar, and was actually strangling him. Luckily the button burst.
+He struggled in a wild frenzy of fury and terror, almost mad terror. His
+tunic was simply torn off his back, his shirt-sleeves were torn away, his
+arms were naked. The girls rushed at him, clenched their hands on him and
+pulled at him: or they rushed at him and pushed him, butted him with all
+their might: or they struck him wild blows. He ducked and cringed and
+struck sideways. They became more intense.
+
+At last he was down. They rushed on him, kneeling on him. He had neither
+breath nor strength to move. His face was bleeding with a long scratch,
+his brow was bruised.
+
+Annie knelt on him, the other girls knelt and hung on to him. Their faces
+were flushed, their hair wild, their eyes were all glittering strangely.
+He lay at last quite still, with face averted, as an animal lies when it
+is defeated and at the mercy of the captor. Sometimes his eye glanced
+back at the wild faces of the girls. His breast rose heavily, his wrists
+were torn.
+
+'Now, then, my fellow!' gasped Annie at length. 'Now then--now--'
+
+At the sound of her terrifying, cold triumph, he suddenly started to
+struggle as an animal might, but the girls threw themselves upon him with
+unnatural strength and power, forcing him down.
+
+'Yes--now, then!' gasped Annie at length.
+
+And there was a dead silence, in which the thud of heart-beating was to
+be heard. It was a suspense of pure silence in every soul.
+
+'Now you know where you are,' said Annie.
+
+The sight of his white, bare arm maddened the girls. He lay in a kind of
+trance of fear and antagonism. They felt themselves filled with
+supernatural strength.
+
+Suddenly Polly started to laugh--to giggle wildly--helplessly--and Emma
+and Muriel joined in. But Annie and Nora and Laura remained the same,
+tense, watchful, with gleaming eyes. He winced away from these eyes.
+
+'Yes,' said Annie, in a curious low tone, secret and deadly. 'Yes! You've
+got it now! You know what you've done, don't you? You know what you've
+done.'
+
+He made no sound nor sign, but lay with bright, averted eyes, and
+averted, bleeding face.
+
+'You ought to be _killed_, that's what you ought,' said Annie, tensely.
+'You ought to be _killed_.' And there was a terrifying lust in her voice.
+
+Polly was ceasing to laugh, and giving long-drawn Oh-h-hs and sighs as
+she came to herself.
+
+'He's got to choose,' she said vaguely.
+
+'Oh, yes, he has,' said Laura, with vindictive decision.
+
+'Do you hear--do you hear?' said Annie. And with a sharp movement, that
+made him wince, she turned his face to her.
+
+'Do you hear?' she repeated, shaking him.
+
+But he was quite dumb. She fetched him a sharp slap on the face. He
+started, and his eyes widened. Then his face darkened with defiance,
+after all.
+
+'Do you hear?' she repeated.
+
+He only looked at her with hostile eyes.
+
+'Speak!' she said, putting her face devilishly near his.
+
+'What?' he said, almost overcome.
+
+'You've got to _choose_!' she cried, as if it were some terrible menace,
+and as if it hurt her that she could not exact more.
+
+'What?' he said, in fear.
+
+'Choose your girl, Coddy. You've got to choose her now. And you'll get
+your neck broken if you play any more of your tricks, my boy. You're
+settled now.'
+
+There was a pause. Again he averted his face. He was cunning in his
+overthrow. He did not give in to them really--no, not if they tore him to
+bits.
+
+'All right, then,' he said, 'I choose Annie.' His voice was strange and
+full of malice. Annie let go of him as if he had been a hot coal.
+
+'He's chosen Annie!' said the girls in chorus.
+
+'Me!' cried Annie. She was still kneeling, but away from him. He was
+still lying prostrate, with averted face. The girls grouped uneasily
+around.
+
+'Me!' repeated Annie, with a terrible bitter accent.
+
+Then she got up, drawing away from him with strange disgust and
+bitterness.
+
+'I wouldn't touch him,' she said.
+
+But her face quivered with a kind of agony, she seemed as if she would
+fall. The other girls turned aside. He remained lying on the floor, with
+his torn clothes and bleeding, averted face.
+
+'Oh, if he's chosen--' said Polly.
+
+'I don't want him--he can choose again,' said Annie, with the same rather
+bitter hopelessness.
+
+'Get up,' said Polly, lifting his shoulder. 'Get up.'
+
+He rose slowly, a strange, ragged, dazed creature. The girls eyed him
+from a distance, curiously, furtively, dangerously.
+
+'Who wants him?' cried Laura, roughly.
+
+'Nobody,' they answered, with contempt. Yet each one of them waited for
+him to look at her, hoped he would look at her. All except Annie, and
+something was broken in her.
+
+He, however, kept his face closed and averted from them all. There was a
+silence of the end. He picked up the torn pieces of his tunic, without
+knowing what to do with them. The girls stood about uneasily, flushed,
+panting, tidying their hair and their dress unconsciously, and watching
+him. He looked at none of them. He espied his cap in a corner, and went
+and picked it up. He put it on his head, and one of the girls burst into
+a shrill, hysteric laugh at the sight he presented. He, however, took no
+heed, but went straight to where his overcoat hung on a peg. The girls
+moved away from contact with him as if he had been an electric wire. He
+put on his coat and buttoned it down. Then he rolled his tunic-rags into
+a bundle, and stood before the locked door, dumbly.
+
+'Open the door, somebody,' said Laura.
+
+'Annie's got the key,' said one.
+
+Annie silently offered the key to the girls. Nora unlocked the door.
+
+'Tit for tat, old man,' she said. 'Show yourself a man, and don't bear a
+grudge.'
+
+But without a word or sign he had opened the door and gone, his face
+closed, his head dropped.
+
+'That'll learn him,' said Laura.
+
+'Coddy!' said Nora.
+
+'Shut up, for God's sake!' cried Annie fiercely, as if in torture.
+
+'Well, I'm about ready to go, Polly. Look sharp!' said Muriel.
+
+The girls were all anxious to be off. They were tidying themselves
+hurriedly, with mute, stupefied faces.
+
+
+
+
+_The Blind Man_
+
+
+Isabel Pervin was listening for two sounds--for the sound of wheels on
+the drive outside and for the noise of her husband's footsteps in the
+hall. Her dearest and oldest friend, a man who seemed almost
+indispensable to her living, would drive up in the rainy dusk of the
+closing November day. The trap had gone to fetch him from the station.
+And her husband, who had been blinded in Flanders, and who had a
+disfiguring mark on his brow, would be coming in from the outhouses.
+
+He had been home for a year now. He was totally blind. Yet they had been
+very happy. The Grange was Maurice's own place. The back was a farmstead,
+and the Wernhams, who occupied the rear premises, acted as farmers.
+Isabel lived with her husband in the handsome rooms in front. She and he
+had been almost entirely alone together since he was wounded. They talked
+and sang and read together in a wonderful and unspeakable intimacy. Then
+she reviewed books for a Scottish newspaper, carrying on her old
+interest, and he occupied himself a good deal with the farm. Sightless,
+he could still discuss everything with Wernham, and he could also do a
+good deal of work about the place--menial work, it is true, but it gave
+him satisfaction. He milked the cows, carried in the pails, turned the
+separator, attended to the pigs and horses. Life was still very full and
+strangely serene for the blind man, peaceful with the almost
+incomprehensible peace of immediate contact in darkness. With his wife he
+had a whole world, rich and real and invisible.
+
+They were newly and remotely happy. He did not even regret the loss of
+his sight in these times of dark, palpable joy. A certain exultance
+swelled his soul.
+
+But as time wore on, sometimes the rich glamour would leave them.
+Sometimes, after months of this intensity, a sense of burden overcame
+Isabel, a weariness, a terrible _ennui_, in that silent house approached
+between a colonnade of tall-shafted pines. Then she felt she would go
+mad, for she could not bear it. And sometimes he had devastating fits of
+depression, which seemed to lay waste his whole being. It was worse than
+depression--a black misery, when his own life was a torture to him, and
+when his presence was unbearable to his wife. The dread went down to the
+roots of her soul as these black days recurred. In a kind of panic she
+tried to wrap herself up still further in her husband. She forced the old
+spontaneous cheerfulness and joy to continue. But the effort it cost her
+was almost too much. She knew she could not keep it up. She felt she
+would scream with the strain, and would give anything, anything, to
+escape. She longed to possess her husband utterly; it gave her inordinate
+joy to have him entirely to herself. And yet, when again he was gone in a
+black and massive misery, she could not bear him, she could not bear
+herself; she wished she could be snatched away off the earth altogether,
+anything rather than live at this cost.
+
+Dazed, she schemed for a way out. She invited friends, she tried to give
+him some further connexion with the outer world. But it was no good.
+After all their joy and suffering, after their dark, great year of
+blindness and solitude and unspeakable nearness, other people seemed to
+them both shallow, prattling, rather impertinent. Shallow prattle seemed
+presumptuous. He became impatient and irritated, she was wearied. And so
+they lapsed into their solitude again. For they preferred it.
+
+But now, in a few weeks' time, her second baby would be born. The first
+had died, an infant, when her husband first went out to France. She
+looked with joy and relief to the coming of the second. It would be her
+salvation. But also she felt some anxiety. She was thirty years old, her
+husband was a year younger. They both wanted the child very much. Yet she
+could not help feeling afraid. She had her husband on her hands, a
+terrible joy to her, and a terrifying burden. The child would occupy her
+love and attention. And then, what of Maurice? What would he do? If only
+she could feel that he, too, would be at peace and happy when the child
+came! She did so want to luxuriate in a rich, physical satisfaction of
+maternity. But the man, what would he do? How could she provide for him,
+how avert those shattering black moods of his, which destroyed them both?
+
+She sighed with fear. But at this time Bertie Reid wrote to Isabel. He
+was her old friend, a second or third cousin, a Scotchman, as she was a
+Scotchwoman. They had been brought up near to one another, and all her
+life he had been her friend, like a brother, but better than her own
+brothers. She loved him--though not in the marrying sense. There was a
+sort of kinship between them, an affinity. They understood one another
+instinctively. But Isabel would never have thought of marrying Bertie. It
+would have seemed like marrying in her own family.
+
+Bertie was a barrister and a man of letters, a Scotchman of the
+intellectual type, quick, ironical, sentimental, and on his knees before
+the woman he adored but did not want to marry. Maurice Pervin was
+different. He came of a good old country family--the Grange was not a
+very great distance from Oxford. He was passionate, sensitive, perhaps
+over-sensitive, wincing--a big fellow with heavy limbs and a forehead
+that flushed painfully. For his mind was slow, as if drugged by the
+strong provincial blood that beat in his veins. He was very sensitive to
+his own mental slowness, his feelings being quick and acute. So that he
+was just the opposite to Bertie, whose mind was much quicker than his
+emotions, which were not so very fine.
+
+From the first the two men did not like each other. Isabel felt that they
+_ought_ to get on together. But they did not. She felt that if only each
+could have the clue to the other there would be such a rare understanding
+between them. It did not come off, however. Bertie adopted a slightly
+ironical attitude, very offensive to Maurice, who returned the Scotch
+irony with English resentment, a resentment which deepened sometimes into
+stupid hatred.
+
+This was a little puzzling to Isabel. However, she accepted it in the
+course of things. Men were made freakish and unreasonable. Therefore,
+when Maurice was going out to France for the second time, she felt that,
+for her husband's sake, she must discontinue her friendship with Bertie.
+She wrote to the barrister to this effect. Bertram Reid simply replied
+that in this, as in all other matters, he must obey her wishes, if these
+were indeed her wishes.
+
+For nearly two years nothing had passed between the two friends. Isabel
+rather gloried in the fact; she had no compunction. She had one great
+article of faith, which was, that husband and wife should be so important
+to one another, that the rest of the world simply did not count. She and
+Maurice were husband and wife. They loved one another. They would have
+children. Then let everybody and everything else fade into insignificance
+outside this connubial felicity. She professed herself quite happy and
+ready to receive Maurice's friends. She was happy and ready: the happy
+wife, the ready woman in possession. Without knowing why, the friends
+retired abashed and came no more. Maurice, of course, took as much
+satisfaction in this connubial absorption as Isabel did.
+
+He shared in Isabel's literary activities, she cultivated a real interest
+in agriculture and cattle-raising. For she, being at heart perhaps an
+emotional enthusiast, always cultivated the practical side of life, and
+prided herself on her mastery of practical affairs. Thus the husband and
+wife had spent the five years of their married life. The last had been
+one of blindness and unspeakable intimacy. And now Isabel felt a great
+indifference coming over her, a sort of lethargy. She wanted to be
+allowed to bear her child in peace, to nod by the fire and drift vaguely,
+physically, from day to day. Maurice was like an ominous thunder-cloud.
+She had to keep waking up to remember him.
+
+When a little note came from Bertie, asking if he were to put up a
+tombstone to their dead friendship, and speaking of the real pain he felt
+on account of her husband's loss of sight, she felt a pang, a fluttering
+agitation of re-awakening. And she read the letter to Maurice.
+
+'Ask him to come down,' he said.
+
+'Ask Bertie to come here!' she re-echoed.
+
+'Yes--if he wants to.'
+
+Isabel paused for a few moments.
+
+'I know he wants to--he'd only be too glad,' she replied. 'But what about
+you, Maurice? How would you like it?'
+
+'I should like it.'
+
+'Well--in that case--But I thought you didn't care for him--'
+
+'Oh, I don't know. I might think differently of him now,' the blind man
+replied. It was rather abstruse to Isabel.
+
+'Well, dear,' she said, 'if you're quite sure--'
+
+'I'm sure enough. Let him come,' said Maurice.
+
+So Bertie was coming, coming this evening, in the November rain and
+darkness. Isabel was agitated, racked with her old restlessness and
+indecision. She had always suffered from this pain of doubt, just an
+agonizing sense of uncertainty. It had begun to pass off, in the lethargy
+of maternity. Now it returned, and she resented it. She struggled as
+usual to maintain her calm, composed, friendly bearing, a sort of mask
+she wore over all her body.
+
+A woman had lighted a tall lamp beside the table, and spread the cloth.
+The long dining-room was dim, with its elegant but rather severe pieces
+of old furniture. Only the round table glowed softly under the light. It
+had a rich, beautiful effect. The white cloth glistened and dropped its
+heavy, pointed lace corners almost to the carpet, the china was old and
+handsome, creamy-yellow, with a blotched pattern of harsh red and deep
+blue, the cups large and bell-shaped, the teapot gallant. Isabel looked
+at it with superficial appreciation.
+
+Her nerves were hurting her. She looked automatically again at the high,
+uncurtained windows. In the last dusk she could just perceive outside a
+huge fir-tree swaying its boughs: it was as if she thought it rather
+than saw it. The rain came flying on the window panes. Ah, why had she
+no peace? These two men, why did they tear at her? Why did they not
+come--why was there this suspense?
+
+She sat in a lassitude that was really suspense and irritation. Maurice,
+at least, might come in--there was nothing to keep him out. She rose to
+her feet. Catching sight of her reflection in a mirror, she glanced at
+herself with a slight smile of recognition, as if she were an old friend
+to herself. Her face was oval and calm, her nose a little arched. Her
+neck made a beautiful line down to her shoulder. With hair knotted
+loosely behind, she had something of a warm, maternal look. Thinking this
+of herself, she arched her eyebrows and her rather heavy eyelids, with a
+little flicker of a smile, and for a moment her grey eyes looked amused
+and wicked, a little sardonic, out of her transfigured Madonna face.
+
+Then, resuming her air of womanly patience--she was really fatally
+self-determined--she went with a little jerk towards the door. Her eyes
+were slightly reddened.
+
+She passed down the wide hall, and through a door at the end. Then she
+was in the farm premises. The scent of dairy, and of farm-kitchen, and of
+farm-yard and of leather almost overcame her: but particularly the scent
+of dairy. They had been scalding out the pans. The flagged passage in
+front of her was dark, puddled and wet. Light came out from the open
+kitchen door. She went forward and stood in the doorway. The farm-people
+were at tea, seated at a little distance from her, round a long, narrow
+table, in the centre of which stood a white lamp. Ruddy faces, ruddy
+hands holding food, red mouths working, heads bent over the tea-cups:
+men, land-girls, boys: it was tea-time, feeding-time. Some faces caught
+sight of her. Mrs. Wernham, going round behind the chairs with a large
+black teapot, halting slightly in her walk, was not aware of her for a
+moment. Then she turned suddenly.
+
+'Oh, is it Madam!' she exclaimed. 'Come in, then, come in! We're at tea.'
+And she dragged forward a chair.
+
+'No, I won't come in,' said Isabel, 'I'm afraid I interrupt your meal.'
+
+'No--no--not likely, Madam, not likely.'
+
+'Hasn't Mr. Pervin come in, do you know?'
+
+'I'm sure I couldn't say! Missed him, have you, Madam?'
+
+'No, I only wanted him to come in,' laughed Isabel, as if shyly.
+
+'Wanted him, did ye? Get you, boy--get up, now--'
+
+Mrs. Wernham knocked one of the boys on the shoulder. He began to scrape
+to his feet, chewing largely.
+
+'I believe he's in top stable,' said another face from the table.
+
+'Ah! No, don't get up. I'm going myself,' said Isabel.
+
+'Don't you go out of a dirty night like this. Let the lad go. Get along
+wi' ye, boy,' said Mrs. Wernham.
+
+'No, no,' said Isabel, with a decision that was always obeyed. 'Go on
+with your tea, Tom. I'd like to go across to the stable, Mrs. Wernham.'
+
+'Did ever you hear tell!' exclaimed the woman.
+
+'Isn't the trap late?' asked Isabel.
+
+'Why, no,' said Mrs. Wernham, peering into the distance at the tall, dim
+clock. 'No, Madam--we can give it another quarter or twenty minutes yet,
+good--yes, every bit of a quarter.'
+
+'Ah! It seems late when darkness falls so early,' said Isabel.
+
+'It do, that it do. Bother the days, that they draw in so,' answered Mrs.
+Wernham.' Proper miserable!'
+
+'They are,' said Isabel, withdrawing.
+
+She pulled on her overshoes, wrapped a large tartan shawl around her, put
+on a man's felt hat, and ventured out along the causeways of the first
+yard. It was very dark. The wind was roaring in the great elms behind the
+outhouses. When she came to the second yard the darkness seemed deeper.
+She was unsure of her footing. She wished she had brought a lantern. Rain
+blew against her. Half she liked it, half she felt unwilling to battle.
+
+She reached at last the just visible door of the stable. There was no
+sign of a light anywhere. Opening the upper half, she looked in: into a
+simple well of darkness. The smell of horses, and ammonia, and of warmth
+was startling to her, in that full night. She listened with all her ears,
+but could hear nothing save the night, and the stirring of a horse.
+
+'Maurice!' she called, softly and musically, though she was afraid.
+'Maurice--are you there?'
+
+Nothing came from the darkness. She knew the rain and wind blew in upon
+the horses, the hot animal life. Feeling it wrong, she entered the
+stable, and drew the lower half of the door shut, holding the upper part
+close. She did not stir, because she was aware of the presence of the
+dark hindquarters of the horses, though she could not see them, and she
+was afraid. Something wild stirred in her heart.
+
+She listened intensely. Then she heard a small noise in the distance--far
+away, it seemed--the chink of a pan, and a man's voice speaking a brief
+word. It would be Maurice, in the other part of the stable. She stood
+motionless, waiting for him to come through the partition door. The
+horses were so terrifyingly near to her, in the invisible.
+
+The loud jarring of the inner door-latch made her start; the door was
+opened. She could hear and feel her husband entering and invisibly
+passing among the horses near to her, in darkness as they were, actively
+intermingled. The rather low sound of his voice as he spoke to the horses
+came velvety to her nerves. How near he was, and how invisible! The
+darkness seemed to be in a strange swirl of violent life, just upon her.
+She turned giddy.
+
+Her presence of mind made her call, quietly and musically:
+
+'Maurice! Maurice--dea-ar!'
+
+'Yes,' he answered. 'Isabel?'
+
+She saw nothing, and the sound of his voice seemed to touch her.
+
+'Hello!' she answered cheerfully, straining her eyes to see him. He was
+still busy, attending to the horses near her, but she saw only darkness.
+It made her almost desperate.
+
+'Won't you come in, dear?' she said.
+
+'Yes, I'm coming. Just half a minute. _Stand over--now_! Trap's not come,
+has it?'
+
+'Not yet,' said Isabel.
+
+His voice was pleasant and ordinary, but it had a slight suggestion of
+the stable to her. She wished he would come away. Whilst he was so
+utterly invisible she was afraid of him.
+
+'How's the time?' he asked.
+
+'Not yet six,' she replied. She disliked to answer into the dark.
+Presently he came very near to her, and she retreated out of doors.
+
+'The weather blows in here,' he said, coming steadily forward, feeling
+for the doors. She shrank away. At last she could dimly see him.
+
+'Bertie won't have much of a drive,' he said, as he closed the doors.
+
+'He won't indeed!' said Isabel calmly, watching the dark shape at the
+door.
+
+'Give me your arm, dear,' she said.
+
+She pressed his arm close to her, as she went. But she longed to see him,
+to look at him. She was nervous. He walked erect, with face rather
+lifted, but with a curious tentative movement of his powerful, muscular
+legs. She could feel the clever, careful, strong contact of his feet with
+the earth, as she balanced against him. For a moment he was a tower of
+darkness to her, as if he rose out of the earth.
+
+In the house-passage he wavered, and went cautiously, with a curious look
+of silence about him as he felt for the bench. Then he sat down heavily.
+He was a man with rather sloping shoulders, but with heavy limbs,
+powerful legs that seemed to know the earth. His head was small, usually
+carried high and light. As he bent down to unfasten his gaiters and boots
+he did not look blind. His hair was brown and crisp, his hands were
+large, reddish, intelligent, the veins stood out in the wrists; and his
+thighs and knees seemed massive. When he stood up his face and neck were
+surcharged with blood, the veins stood out on his temples. She did not
+look at his blindness.
+
+Isabel was always glad when they had passed through the dividing door
+into their own regions of repose and beauty. She was a little afraid of
+him, out there in the animal grossness of the back. His bearing also
+changed, as he smelt the familiar, indefinable odour that pervaded his
+wife's surroundings, a delicate, refined scent, very faintly spicy.
+Perhaps it came from the pot-pourri bowls.
+
+He stood at the foot of the stairs, arrested, listening. She watched him,
+and her heart sickened. He seemed to be listening to fate.
+
+'He's not here yet,' he said. 'I'll go up and change.'
+
+'Maurice,' she said, 'you're not wishing he wouldn't come, are you?'
+
+'I couldn't quite say,' he answered. 'I feel myself rather on the _qui
+vive_.'
+
+'I can see you are,' she answered. And she reached up and kissed his
+cheek. She saw his mouth relax into a slow smile.
+
+'What are you laughing at?' she said roguishly.
+
+'You consoling me,' he answered.
+
+'Nay,' she answered. 'Why should I console you? You know we love each
+other--you know _how_ married we are! What does anything else matter?'
+
+'Nothing at all, my dear.'
+
+He felt for her face, and touched it, smiling.
+
+'_You're_ all right, aren't you?' he asked, anxiously.
+
+'I'm wonderfully all right, love,' she answered. 'It's you I am a little
+troubled about, at times.'
+
+'Why me?' he said, touching her cheeks delicately with the tips of his
+fingers. The touch had an almost hypnotizing effect on her.
+
+He went away upstairs. She saw him mount into the darkness, unseeing and
+unchanging. He did not know that the lamps on the upper corridor were
+unlighted. He went on into the darkness with unchanging step. She heard
+him in the bathroom.
+
+Pervin moved about almost unconsciously in his familiar surroundings,
+dark though everything was. He seemed to know the presence of objects
+before he touched them. It was a pleasure to him to rock thus through a
+world of things, carried on the flood in a sort of blood-prescience. He
+did not think much or trouble much. So long as he kept this sheer
+immediacy of blood-contact with the substantial world he was happy, he
+wanted no intervention of visual consciousness. In this state there was a
+certain rich positivity, bordering sometimes on rapture. Life seemed to
+move in him like a tide lapping, and advancing, enveloping all things
+darkly. It was a pleasure to stretch forth the hand and meet the unseen
+object, clasp it, and possess it in pure contact. He did not try to
+remember, to visualize. He did not want to. The new way of consciousness
+substituted itself in him.
+
+The rich suffusion of this state generally kept him happy, reaching its
+culmination in the consuming passion for his wife. But at times the flow
+would seem to be checked and thrown back. Then it would beat inside him
+like a tangled sea, and he was tortured in the shattered chaos of his own
+blood. He grew to dread this arrest, this throw-back, this chaos inside
+himself, when he seemed merely at the mercy of his own powerful and
+conflicting elements. How to get some measure of control or surety, this
+was the question. And when the question rose maddening in him, he would
+clench his fists as if he would _compel_ the whole universe to submit to
+him. But it was in vain. He could not even compel himself.
+
+Tonight, however, he was still serene, though little tremors of
+unreasonable exasperation ran through him. He had to handle the razor
+very carefully, as he shaved, for it was not at one with him, he was
+afraid of it. His hearing also was too much sharpened. He heard the woman
+lighting the lamps on the corridor, and attending to the fire in the
+visitor's room. And then, as he went to his room he heard the trap
+arrive. Then came Isabel's voice, lifted and calling, like a bell
+ringing:
+
+'Is it you, Bertie? Have you come?'
+
+And a man's voice answered out of the wind:
+
+'Hello, Isabell There you are.'
+
+'Have you had a miserable drive? I'm so sorry we couldn't send a closed
+carriage. I can't see you at all, you know.'
+
+'I'm coming. No, I liked the drive--it was like Perthshire. Well, how are
+you? You're looking fit as ever, as far as I can see.'
+
+'Oh, yes,' said Isabel. 'I'm wonderfully well. How are you? Rather thin,
+I think--'
+
+'Worked to death--everybody's old cry. But I'm all right, Ciss. How's
+Pervin?--isn't he here?'
+
+'Oh, yes, he's upstairs changing. Yes, he's awfully well. Take off your
+wet things; I'll send them to be dried.'
+
+'And how are you both, in spirits? He doesn't fret?'
+
+'No--no, not at all. No, on the contrary, really. We've been wonderfully
+happy, incredibly. It's more than I can understand--so wonderful: the
+nearness, and the peace--'
+
+'Ah! Well, that's awfully good news--'
+
+They moved away. Pervin heard no more. But a childish sense of desolation
+had come over him, as he heard their brisk voices. He seemed shut
+out--like a child that is left out. He was aimless and excluded, he did
+not know what to do with himself. The helpless desolation came over him.
+He fumbled nervously as he dressed himself, in a state almost of
+childishness. He disliked the Scotch accent in Bertie's speech, and the
+slight response it found on Isabel's tongue. He disliked the slight purr
+of complacency in the Scottish speech. He disliked intensely the glib way
+in which Isabel spoke of their happiness and nearness. It made him
+recoil. He was fretful and beside himself like a child, he had almost a
+childish nostalgia to be included in the life circle. And at the same
+time he was a man, dark and powerful and infuriated by his own weakness.
+By some fatal flaw, he could not be by himself, he had to depend on the
+support of another. And this very dependence enraged him. He hated Bertie
+Reid, and at the same time he knew the hatred was nonsense, he knew it
+was the outcome of his own weakness.
+
+He went downstairs. Isabel was alone in the dining-room. She watched him
+enter, head erect, his feet tentative. He looked so strong-blooded and
+healthy, and, at the same time, cancelled. Cancelled--that was the word
+that flew across her mind. Perhaps it was his scars suggested it.
+
+'You heard Bertie come, Maurice?' she said.
+
+'Yes--isn't he here?'
+
+'He's in his room. He looks very thin and worn.'
+
+'I suppose he works himself to death.'
+
+A woman came in with a tray--and after a few minutes Bertie came down. He
+was a little dark man, with a very big forehead, thin, wispy hair, and
+sad, large eyes. His expression was inordinately sad--almost funny. He
+had odd, short legs.
+
+Isabel watched him hesitate under the door, and glance nervously at her
+husband. Pervin heard him and turned.
+
+'Here you are, now,' said Isabel. 'Come, let us eat.'
+
+Bertie went across to Maurice.
+
+'How are you, Pervin,' he said, as he advanced.
+
+The blind man stuck his hand out into space, and Bertie took it.
+
+'Very fit. Glad you've come,' said Maurice.
+
+Isabel glanced at them, and glanced away, as if she could not bear to see
+them.
+
+'Come,' she said. 'Come to table. Aren't you both awfully hungry? I am,
+tremendously.'
+
+'I'm afraid you waited for me,' said Bertie, as they sat down.
+
+Maurice had a curious monolithic way of sitting in a chair, erect and
+distant. Isabel's heart always beat when she caught sight of him thus.
+
+'No,' she replied to Bertie. 'We're very little later than usual. We're
+having a sort of high tea, not dinner. Do you mind? It gives us such a
+nice long evening, uninterrupted.'
+
+'I like it,' said Bertie.
+
+Maurice was feeling, with curious little movements, almost like a cat
+kneading her bed, for his place, his knife and fork, his napkin. He was
+getting the whole geography of his cover into his consciousness. He sat
+erect and inscrutable, remote-seeming Bertie watched the static figure of
+the blind man, the delicate tactile discernment of the large, ruddy
+hands, and the curious mindless silence of the brow, above the scar. With
+difficulty he looked away, and without knowing what he did, picked up a
+little crystal bowl of violets from the table, and held them to his nose.
+
+'They are sweet-scented,' he said. 'Where do they come from?'
+
+'From the garden--under the windows,' said Isabel.
+
+'So late in the year--and so fragrant! Do you remember the violets under
+Aunt Bell's south wall?'
+
+The two friends looked at each other and exchanged a smile, Isabel's eyes
+lighting up.
+
+'Don't I?' she replied. '_Wasn't_ she queer!'
+
+'A curious old girl,' laughed Bertie. 'There's a streak of freakishness
+in the family, Isabel.'
+
+'Ah--but not in you and me, Bertie,' said Isabel. 'Give them to Maurice,
+will you?' she added, as Bertie was putting down the flowers. 'Have you
+smelled the violets, dear? Do!--they are so scented.'
+
+Maurice held out his hand, and Bertie placed the tiny bowl against his
+large, warm-looking fingers. Maurice's hand closed over the thin white
+fingers of the barrister. Bertie carefully extricated himself. Then the
+two watched the blind man smelling the violets. He bent his head and
+seemed to be thinking. Isabel waited.
+
+'Aren't they sweet, Maurice?' she said at last, anxiously.
+
+'Very,' he said. And he held out the bowl. Bertie took it. Both he and
+Isabel were a little afraid, and deeply disturbed.
+
+The meal continued. Isabel and Bertie chatted spasmodically. The blind
+man was silent. He touched his food repeatedly, with quick, delicate
+touches of his knife-point, then cut irregular bits. He could not bear to
+be helped. Both Isabel and Bertie suffered: Isabel wondered why. She did
+not suffer when she was alone with Maurice. Bertie made her conscious of
+a strangeness.
+
+After the meal the three drew their chairs to the fire, and sat down to
+talk. The decanters were put on a table near at hand. Isabel knocked the
+logs on the fire, and clouds of brilliant sparks went up the chimney.
+Bertie noticed a slight weariness in her bearing.
+
+'You will be glad when your child comes now, Isabel?' he said.
+
+She looked up to him with a quick wan smile.
+
+'Yes, I shall be glad,' she answered. 'It begins to seem long. Yes, I
+shall be very glad. So will you, Maurice, won't you?' she added.
+
+'Yes, I shall,' replied her husband.
+
+'We are both looking forward so much to having it,' she said.
+
+'Yes, of course,' said Bertie.
+
+He was a bachelor, three or four years older than Isabel. He lived in
+beautiful rooms overlooking the river, guarded by a faithful Scottish
+man-servant. And he had his friends among the fair sex--not lovers,
+friends. So long as he could avoid any danger of courtship or marriage,
+he adored a few good women with constant and unfailing homage, and he was
+chivalrously fond of quite a number. But if they seemed to encroach on
+him, he withdrew and detested them.
+
+Isabel knew him very well, knew his beautiful constancy, and kindness,
+also his incurable weakness, which made him unable ever to enter into
+close contact of any sort. He was ashamed of himself, because he could
+not marry, could not approach women physically. He wanted to do so. But
+he could not. At the centre of him he was afraid, helplessly and even
+brutally afraid. He had given up hope, had ceased to expect any more that
+he could escape his own weakness. Hence he was a brilliant and successful
+barrister, also _littrateur_ of high repute, a rich man, and a great
+social success. At the centre he felt himself neuter, nothing.
+
+Isabel knew him well. She despised him even while she admired him. She
+looked at his sad face, his little short legs, and felt contempt of him.
+She looked at his dark grey eyes, with their uncanny, almost childlike
+intuition, and she loved him. He understood amazingly--but she had no
+fear of his understanding. As a man she patronized him.
+
+And she turned to the impassive, silent figure of her husband. He sat
+leaning back, with folded arms, and face a little uptilted. His knees
+were straight and massive. She sighed, picked up the poker, and again
+began to prod the fire, to rouse the clouds of soft, brilliant sparks.
+
+'Isabel tells me,' Bertie began suddenly, 'that you have not suffered
+unbearably from the loss of sight.'
+
+Maurice straightened himself to attend, but kept his arms folded.
+
+'No,' he said, 'not unbearably. Now and again one struggles against it,
+you know. But there are compensations.'
+
+'They say it is much worse to be stone deaf,' said Isabel.
+
+'I believe it is,' said Bertie. 'Are there compensations?' he added, to
+Maurice.
+
+'Yes. You cease to bother about a great many things.' Again Maurice
+stretched his figure, stretched the strong muscles of his back, and
+leaned backwards, with uplifted face.
+
+'And that is a relief,' said Bertie. 'But what is there in place of the
+bothering? What replaces the activity?'
+
+There was a pause. At length the blind man replied, as out of a
+negligent, unattentive thinking:
+
+'Oh, I don't know. There's a good deal when you're not active.'
+
+'Is there?' said Bertie. 'What, exactly? It always seems to me that when
+there is no thought and no action, there is nothing.'
+
+Again Maurice was slow in replying.
+
+'There is something,' he replied. 'I couldn't tell you what it is.'
+
+And the talk lapsed once more, Isabel and Bertie chatting gossip and
+reminiscence, the blind man silent.
+
+At length Maurice rose restlessly, a big, obtrusive figure. He felt tight
+and hampered. He wanted to go away.
+
+'Do you mind,' he said, 'if I go and speak to Wernham?'
+
+'No--go along, dear,' said Isabel.
+
+And he went out. A silence came over the two friends. At length Bertie
+said:
+
+'Nevertheless, it is a great deprivation, Cissie.'
+
+'It is, Bertie. I know it is.'
+
+'Something lacking all the time,' said Bertie.
+
+'Yes, I know. And yet--and yet--Maurice is right. There is something
+else, something _there_, which you never knew was there, and which you
+can't express.'
+
+'What is there?' asked Bertie.
+
+'I don't know--it's awfully hard to define it--but something
+strong and immediate. There's something strange in Maurice's
+presence--indefinable--but I couldn't do without it. I agree that it
+seems to put one's mind to sleep. But when we're alone I miss nothing; it
+seems awfully rich, almost splendid, you know.'
+
+'I'm afraid I don't follow,' said Bertie.
+
+They talked desultorily. The wind blew loudly outside, rain chattered on
+the window-panes, making a sharp, drum-sound, because of the closed,
+mellow-golden shutters inside. The logs burned slowly, with hot, almost
+invisible small flames. Bertie seemed uneasy, there were dark circles
+round his eyes. Isabel, rich with her approaching maternity, leaned
+looking into the fire. Her hair curled in odd, loose strands, very
+pleasing to the man. But she had a curious feeling of old woe in her
+heart, old, timeless night-woe.
+
+'I suppose we're all deficient somewhere,' said Bertie.
+
+'I suppose so,' said Isabel wearily.
+
+'Damned, sooner or later.'
+
+'I don't know,' she said, rousing herself. 'I feel quite all right, you
+know. The child coming seems to make me indifferent to everything, just
+placid. I can't feel that there's anything to trouble about, you know.'
+
+'A good thing, I should say,' he replied slowly.
+
+'Well, there it is. I suppose it's just Nature. If only I felt I needn't
+trouble about Maurice, I should be perfectly content--'
+
+'But you feel you must trouble about him?'
+
+'Well--I don't know--' She even resented this much effort.
+
+The evening passed slowly. Isabel looked at the clock. 'I say,' she said.
+'It's nearly ten o'clock. Where can Maurice be? I'm sure they're all in
+bed at the back. Excuse me a moment.'
+
+She went out, returning almost immediately.
+
+'It's all shut up and in darkness,' she said. 'I wonder where he is. He
+must have gone out to the farm--'
+
+Bertie looked at her.
+
+'I suppose he'll come in,' he said.
+
+'I suppose so,' she said. 'But it's unusual for him to be out now.'
+
+'Would you like me to go out and see?'
+
+'Well--if you wouldn't mind. I'd go, but--' She did not want to make the
+physical effort.
+
+Bertie put on an old overcoat and took a lantern. He went out from the
+side door. He shrank from the wet and roaring night. Such weather had a
+nervous effect on him: too much moisture everywhere made him feel almost
+imbecile. Unwilling, he went through it all. A dog barked violently at
+him. He peered in all the buildings. At last, as he opened the upper door
+of a sort of intermediate barn, he heard a grinding noise, and looking
+in, holding up his lantern, saw Maurice, in his shirt-sleeves, standing
+listening, holding the handle of a turnip-pulper. He had been pulping
+sweet roots, a pile of which lay dimly heaped in a corner behind him.
+
+'That you, Wernham?' said Maurice, listening.
+
+'No, it's me,' said Bertie.
+
+A large, half-wild grey cat was rubbing at Maurice's leg. The blind
+man stooped to rub its sides. Bertie watched the scene, then
+unconsciously entered and shut the door behind him, He was in a high sort
+of barn-place, from which, right and left, ran off the corridors in front
+of the stalled cattle. He watched the slow, stooping motion of the other
+man, as he caressed the great cat.
+
+Maurice straightened himself.
+
+'You came to look for me?' he said.
+
+'Isabel was a little uneasy,' said Bertie.
+
+'I'll come in. I like messing about doing these jobs.'
+
+The cat had reared her sinister, feline length against his leg, clawing
+at his thigh affectionately. He lifted her claws out of his flesh.
+
+'I hope I'm not in your way at all at the Grange here,' said Bertie,
+rather shy and stiff.
+
+'My way? No, not a bit. I'm glad Isabel has somebody to talk to. I'm
+afraid it's I who am in the way. I know I'm not very lively company.
+Isabel's all right, don't you think? She's not unhappy, is she?'
+
+'I don't think so.'
+
+'What does she say?'
+
+'She says she's very content--only a little troubled about you.'
+
+'Why me?'
+
+'Perhaps afraid that you might brood,' said Bertie, cautiously.
+
+'She needn't be afraid of that.' He continued to caress the flattened
+grey head of the cat with his fingers. 'What I am a bit afraid of,' he
+resumed, 'is that she'll find me a dead weight, always alone with me down
+here.'
+
+'I don't think you need think that,' said Bertie, though this was what he
+feared himself.
+
+'I don't know,' said Maurice. 'Sometimes I feel it isn't fair that she's
+saddled with me.' Then he dropped his voice curiously. 'I say,' he asked,
+secretly struggling, 'is my face much disfigured? Do you mind telling
+me?'
+
+'There is the scar,' said Bertie, wondering. 'Yes, it is a disfigurement.
+But more pitiable than shocking.'
+
+'A pretty bad scar, though,' said Maurice.
+
+'Oh, yes.'
+
+There was a pause.
+
+'Sometimes I feel I am horrible,' said Maurice, in a low voice, talking
+as if to himself. And Bertie actually felt a quiver of horror.
+
+'That's nonsense,' he said.
+
+Maurice again straightened himself, leaving the cat.
+
+'There's no telling,' he said. Then again, in an odd tone, he added: 'I
+don't really know you, do I?'
+
+'Probably not,' said Bertie.
+
+'Do you mind if I touch you?'
+
+The lawyer shrank away instinctively. And yet, out of very philanthropy,
+he said, in a small voice: 'Not at all.'
+
+But he suffered as the blind man stretched out a strong, naked hand to
+him. Maurice accidentally knocked off Bertie's hat.
+
+'I thought you were taller,' he said, starting. Then he laid his hand on
+Bertie Reid's head, closing the dome of the skull in a soft, firm grasp,
+gathering it, as it were; then, shifting his grasp and softly closing
+again, with a fine, close pressure, till he had covered the skull and the
+face of the smaller man, tracing the brows, and touching the full, closed
+eyes, touching the small nose and the nostrils, the rough, short
+moustache, the mouth, the rather strong chin. The hand of the blind man
+grasped the shoulder, the arm, the hand of the other man. He seemed to
+take him, in the soft, travelling grasp.
+
+'You seem young,' he said quietly, at last.
+
+The lawyer stood almost annihilated, unable to answer.
+
+'Your head seems tender, as if you were young,' Maurice repeated. 'So do
+your hands. Touch my eyes, will you?--touch my scar.'
+
+Now Bertie quivered with revulsion. Yet he was under the power of the
+blind man, as if hypnotized. He lifted his hand, and laid the fingers
+on the scar, on the scarred eyes. Maurice suddenly covered them with
+his own hand, pressed the fingers of the other man upon his disfigured
+eye-sockets, trembling in every fibre, and rocking slightly, slowly, from
+side to side. He remained thus for a minute or more, whilst Bertie stood
+as if in a swoon, unconscious, imprisoned.
+
+Then suddenly Maurice removed the hand of the other man from his brow,
+and stood holding it in his own.
+
+'Oh, my God' he said, 'we shall know each other now, shan't we? We shall
+know each other now.'
+
+Bertie could not answer. He gazed mute and terror-struck, overcome by his
+own weakness. He knew he could not answer. He had an unreasonable fear,
+lest the other man should suddenly destroy him. Whereas Maurice was
+actually filled with hot, poignant love, the passion of friendship.
+Perhaps it was this very passion of friendship which Bertie shrank from
+most.
+
+'We're all right together now, aren't we?' said Maurice. 'It's all right
+now, as long as we live, so far as we're concerned?'
+
+'Yes,' said Bertie, trying by any means to escape.
+
+Maurice stood with head lifted, as if listening. The new delicate
+fulfilment of mortal friendship had come as a revelation and surprise to
+him, something exquisite and unhoped-for. He seemed to be listening to
+hear if it were real.
+
+Then he turned for his coat.
+
+'Come,' he said, 'we'll go to Isabel.'
+
+Bertie took the lantern and opened the door. The cat disappeared. The two
+men went in silence along the causeways. Isabel, as they came, thought
+their footsteps sounded strange. She looked up pathetically and anxiously
+for their entrance. There seemed a curious elation about Maurice. Bertie
+was haggard, with sunken eyes.
+
+'What is it?' she asked.
+
+'We've become friends,' said Maurice, standing with his feet apart, like
+a strange colossus.
+
+'Friends!' re-echoed Isabel. And she looked again at Bertie. He met her
+eyes with a furtive, haggard look; his eyes were as if glazed with
+misery.
+
+'I'm so glad,' she said, in sheer perplexity.
+
+'Yes,' said Maurice.
+
+He was indeed so glad. Isabel took his hand with both hers, and held it
+fast.
+
+'You'll be happier now, dear,' she said.
+
+But she was watching Bertie. She knew that he had one desire--to escape
+from this intimacy, this friendship, which had been thrust upon him. He
+could not bear it that he had been touched by the blind man, his insane
+reserve broken in. He was like a mollusk whose shell is broken.
+
+
+
+
+_MONKEY NUTS_
+
+
+At first Joe thought the job O.K. He was loading hay on the trucks, along
+with Albert, the corporal. The two men were pleasantly billeted in a
+cottage not far from the station: they were their own masters, for Joe
+never thought of Albert as a master. And the little sidings of the tiny
+village station was as pleasant a place as you could wish for. On one
+side, beyond the line, stretched the woods: on the other, the near side,
+across a green smooth field red houses were dotted among flowering apple
+trees. The weather being sunny, work being easy, Albert, a real good pal,
+what life could be better! After Flanders, it was heaven itself.
+
+Albert, the corporal, was a clean-shaven, shrewd-looking fellow of about
+forty. He seemed to think his one aim in life was to be full of fun and
+nonsense. In repose, his face looked a little withered, old. He was a
+very good pal to Joe, steady, decent and grave under all his 'mischief';
+for his mischief was only his laborious way of skirting his own _ennui_.
+
+Joe was much younger than Albert--only twenty-three. He was a tallish,
+quiet youth, pleasant looking. He was of a slightly better class than his
+corporal, more personable. Careful about his appearance, he shaved every
+day. 'I haven't got much of a face,' said Albert. 'If I was to shave
+every day like you, Joe, I should have none.'
+
+There was plenty of life in the little goods-yard: three porter youths,
+a continual come and go of farm wagons bringing hay, wagons with timber
+from the woods, coal carts loading at the trucks. The black coal seemed
+to make the place sleepier, hotter. Round the big white gate the
+station-master's children played and his white chickens walked, whilst
+the stationmaster himself, a young man getting too fat, helped his wife
+to peg out the washing on the clothes line in the meadow.
+
+The great boat-shaped wagons came up from Playcross with the hay. At
+first the farm-men waggoned it. On the third day one of the land-girls
+appeared with the first load, drawing to a standstill easily at the head
+of her two great horses. She was a buxom girl, young, in linen overalls
+and gaiters. Her face was ruddy, she had large blue eyes.
+
+'Now that's the waggoner for us, boys,' said the corporal loudly.
+
+'Whoa!' she said to her horses; and then to the corporal: 'Which boys do
+you mean?'
+
+'We are the pick of the bunch. That's Joe, my pal. Don't you let on that
+my name's Albert,' said the corporal to his private. 'I'm the corporal.'
+
+'And I'm Miss Stokes,' said the land-girl coolly, 'if that's all the boys
+you are.'
+
+'You know you couldn't want more, Miss Stokes,' said Albert politely.
+Joe, who was bare-headed, whose grey flannel sleeves were rolled up to
+the elbow, and whose shirt was open at the breast, looked modestly aside
+as if he had no part in the affair.
+
+'Are you on this job regular, then?' said the corporal to Miss Stokes.
+
+'I don't know for sure,' she said, pushing a piece of hair under her hat,
+and attending to her splendid horses.
+
+'Oh, make it a certainty,' said Albert.
+
+She did not reply. She turned and looked over the two men coolly. She was
+pretty, moderately blonde, with crisp hair, a good skin, and large blue
+eyes. She was strong, too, and the work went on leisurely and easily.
+
+'Now!' said the corporal, stopping as usual to look round, 'pleasant
+company makes work a pleasure--don't hurry it, boys.' He stood on the
+truck surveying the world. That was one of his great and absorbing
+occupations: to stand and look out on things in general. Joe, also
+standing on the truck, also turned round to look what was to be seen. But
+he could not become blankly absorbed, as Albert could.
+
+Miss Stokes watched the two men from under her broad felt hat. She had
+seen hundreds of Alberts, khaki soldiers standing in loose attitudes,
+absorbed in watching nothing in particular. She had seen also a good many
+Joes, quiet, good-looking young soldiers with half-averted faces. But
+there was something in the turn of Joe's head, and something in his
+quiet, tender-looking form, young and fresh--which attracted her eye. As
+she watched him closely from below, he turned as if he felt her, and his
+dark-blue eye met her straight, light-blue gaze. He faltered and turned
+aside again and looked as if he were going to fall off the truck. A
+slight flush mounted under the girl's full, ruddy face. She liked him.
+
+Always, after this, when she came into the sidings with her team, it was
+Joe she looked for. She acknowledged to herself that she was sweet on
+him. But Albert did all the talking. He was so full of fun and nonsense.
+Joe was a very shy bird, very brief and remote in his answers. Miss
+Stokes was driven to indulge in repartee with Albert, but she fixed her
+magnetic attention on the younger fellow. Joe would talk with Albert, and
+laugh at his jokes. But Miss Stokes could get little out of him. She had
+to depend on her silent forces. They were more effective than might be
+imagined.
+
+Suddenly, on Saturday afternoon, at about two o'clock, Joe received a
+bolt from the blue--a telegram: 'Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today.
+M.S.' He knew at once who M.S. was. His heart melted, he felt weak as if
+he had had a blow.
+
+'What's the trouble, boy?' asked Albert anxiously.
+
+'No--no trouble--it's to meet somebody.' Joe lifted his dark-blue eyes in
+confusion towards his corporal.
+
+'Meet somebody!' repeated the corporal, watching his young pal with keen
+blue eyes. 'It's all right, then; nothing wrong?'
+
+'No--nothing wrong. I'm not going,' said Joe.
+
+Albert was old and shrewd enough to see that nothing more should be said
+before the housewife. He also saw that Joe did not want to take him into
+confidence. So he held his peace, though he was piqued.
+
+The two soldiers went into town, smartened up. Albert knew a fair
+number of the boys round about; there would be plenty of gossip in the
+market-place, plenty of lounging in groups on the Bath Road, watching the
+Saturday evening shoppers. Then a modest drink or two, and the movies.
+They passed an agreeable, casual, nothing-in-particular evening, with
+which Joe was quite satisfied. He thought of Belbury Station, and of
+M.S. waiting there. He had not the faintest intention of meeting her. And
+he had not the faintest intention of telling Albert.
+
+And yet, when the two men were in their bedroom, half undressed, Joe
+suddenly held out the telegram to his corporal, saying: 'What d'you think
+of that?'
+
+Albert was just unbuttoning his braces. He desisted, took the telegram
+form, and turned towards the candle to read it.
+
+'_Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today. M.S._,' he read, _sotto voce_.
+His face took on its fun-and-nonsense look.
+
+'Who's M.S.?' he asked, looking shrewdly at Joe.
+
+'You know as well as I do,' said Joe, non-committal.
+
+'M.S.,' repeated Albert. 'Blamed if I know, boy. Is it a woman?'
+
+The conversation was carried on in tiny voices, for fear of disturbing
+the householders.
+
+'I don't know,' said Joe, turning. He looked full at Albert, the two men
+looked straight into each other's eyes. There was a lurking grin in each
+of them.
+
+'Well, I'm--_blamed_!' said Albert at last, throwing the telegram down
+emphatically on the bed.
+
+'Wha-at?' said Joe, grinning rather sheepishly, his eyes clouded none the
+less.
+
+Albert sat on the bed and proceeded to undress, nodding his head with
+mock gravity all the while. Joe watched him foolishly.
+
+'What?' he repeated faintly.
+
+Albert looked up at him with a knowing look.
+
+'If that isn't coming it quick, boy!' he said. 'What the blazes! What ha'
+you bin doing?'
+
+'Nothing!' said Joe.
+
+Albert slowly shook his head as he sat on the side of the bed.
+
+'Don't happen to me when I've bin doin' nothing,' he said. And he
+proceeded to pull off his stockings.
+
+Joe turned away, looking at himself in the mirror as he unbuttoned his
+tunic.
+
+'You didn't want to keep the appointment?' Albert asked, in a changed
+voice, from the bedside.
+
+Joe did not answer for a moment. Then he said:
+
+'I made no appointment.'
+
+'I'm not saying you did, boy. Don't be nasty about it. I mean you didn't
+want to answer the--unknown person's summons--shall I put it that way?'
+
+'No,' said Joe.
+
+'What was the deterring motive?' asked Albert, who was now lying on his
+back in bed.
+
+'Oh,' said Joe, suddenly looking round rather haughtily. 'I didn't want
+to.' He had a well-balanced head, and could take on a sudden distant
+bearing.
+
+'Didn't want to--didn't cotton on, like. Well--_they be artful, the
+women_--' he mimicked his landlord. 'Come on into bed, boy. Don't loiter
+about as if you'd lost something.'
+
+Albert turned over, to sleep.
+
+On Monday Miss Stokes turned up as usual, striding beside her team. Her
+'whoa!' was resonant and challenging, she looked up at the truck as her
+steeds came to a standstill. Joe had turned aside, and had his face
+averted from her. She glanced him over--save for his slender succulent
+tenderness she would have despised him. She sized him up in a steady
+look. Then she turned to Albert, who was looking down at her and smiling
+in his mischievous turn. She knew his aspects by now. She looked straight
+back at him, though her eyes were hot. He saluted her.
+
+'Beautiful morning, Miss Stokes.'
+
+'Very!' she replied.
+
+'Handsome is as handsome looks,' said Albert.
+
+Which produced no response.
+
+'Now, Joe, come on here,' said the corporal. 'Don't keep the ladies
+waiting--it's the sign of a weak heart.'
+
+Joe turned, and the work began. Nothing more was said for the time being.
+As the week went on all parties became more comfortable. Joe remained
+silent, averted, neutral, a little on his dignity. Miss Stokes was
+off-hand and masterful. Albert was full of mischief.
+
+The great theme was a circus, which was coming to the market town on the
+following Saturday.
+
+'You'll go to the circus, Miss Stokes?' said Albert.
+
+'I may go. Are you going?'
+
+'Certainly. Give us the pleasure of escorting you.'
+
+'No, thanks.'
+
+'That's what I call a flat refusal--what, Joe? You don't mean that you
+have no liking for our company, Miss Stokes?'
+
+'Oh, I don't know,' said Miss Stokes. 'How many are there of you?'
+
+'Only me and Joe.'
+
+'Oh, is that all?' she said, satirically.
+
+Albert was a little nonplussed.
+
+'Isn't that enough for you?' he asked.
+
+'Too many by half,' blurted out Joe, jeeringly, in a sudden fit of
+uncouth rudeness that made both the others stare.
+
+'Oh, I'll stand out of the way, boy, if that's it,' said Albert to Joe.
+Then he turned mischievously to Miss Stokes. 'He wants to know what M.
+stands for,' he said, confidentially.
+
+'Monkeys,' she replied, turning to her horses.
+
+'What's M.S.?' said Albert.
+
+'Monkey nuts,' she retorted, leading off her team.
+
+Albert looked after her a little discomfited. Joe had flushed dark, and
+cursed Albert in his heart.
+
+On the Saturday afternoon the two soldiers took the train into town. They
+would have to walk home. They had tea at six o'clock, and lounged about
+till half past seven. The circus was in a meadow near the river--a great
+red-and-white striped tent. Caravans stood at the side. A great crowd of
+people was gathered round the ticket-caravan.
+
+Inside the tent the lamps were lighted, shining on a ring of faces, a
+great circular bank of faces round the green grassy centre. Along with
+some comrades, the two soldiers packed themselves on a thin plank seat,
+rather high. They were delighted with the flaring lights, the wild
+effect. But the circus performance did not affect them deeply. They
+admired the lady in black velvet with rose-purple legs who leapt so
+neatly on to the galloping horse; they watched the feats of strength and
+laughed at the clown. But they felt a little patronizing, they missed the
+sensational drama of the cinema.
+
+Half-way through the performance Joe was electrified to see the face of
+Miss Stokes not very far from him. There she was, in her khaki and her
+felt hat, as usual; he pretended not to see her. She was laughing at the
+clown; she also pretended not to see him. It was a blow to him, and it
+made him angry. He would not even mention it to Albert. Least said,
+soonest mended. He liked to believe she had not seen him. But he knew,
+fatally, that she had.
+
+When they came out it was nearly eleven o'clock; a lovely night, with a
+moon and tall, dark, noble trees: a magnificent May night. Joe and Albert
+laughed and chaffed with the boys. Joe looked round frequently to see if
+he were safe from Miss Stokes. It seemed so.
+
+But there were six miles to walk home. At last the two soldiers set off,
+swinging their canes. The road was white between tall hedges, other
+stragglers were passing out of the town towards the villages; the air was
+full of pleased excitement.
+
+They were drawing near to the village when they saw a dark figure ahead.
+Joe's heart sank with pure fear. It was a figure wheeling a bicycle; a
+land girl; Miss Stokes. Albert was ready with his nonsense. Miss Stokes
+had a puncture.
+
+'Let me wheel the rattler,' said Albert.
+
+'Thank you,' said Miss Stokes. 'You _are_ kind.'
+
+'Oh, I'd be kinder than that, if you'd show me how,' said Albert.
+
+'Are you sure?' said Miss Stokes.
+
+'Doubt my words?' said Albert. 'That's cruel of you, Miss Stokes.'
+
+Miss Stokes walked between them, close to Joe.
+
+'Have you been to the circus?' she asked him.
+
+'Yes,' he replied, mildly.
+
+'Have _you_ been?' Albert asked her.
+
+'Yes. I didn't see you,' she replied.
+
+'What!--you say so! Didn't see us! Didn't think us worth looking at,'
+began Albert. 'Aren't I as handsome as the clown, now? And you didn't as
+much as glance in our direction? I call it a downright oversight.'
+
+'I never _saw_ you,' reiterated Miss Stokes. 'I didn't know you saw me.'
+
+'That makes it worse,' said Albert.
+
+The road passed through a belt of dark pine-wood. The village, and the
+branch road, was very near. Miss Stokes put out her fingers and felt for
+Joe's hand as it swung at his side. To say he was staggered is to put it
+mildly. Yet he allowed her softly to clasp his fingers for a few moments.
+But he was a mortified youth.
+
+At the cross-road they stopped--Miss Stokes should turn off. She had
+another mile to go.
+
+'You'll let us see you home,' said Albert.
+
+'Do me a kindness,' she said. 'Put my bike in your shed, and take it to
+Baker's on Monday, will you?'
+
+'I'll sit up all night and mend it for you, if you like.'
+
+'No thanks. And Joe and I'll walk on.'
+
+'Oh--ho! Oh--ho!' sang Albert. 'Joe! Joe! What do you say to that, now,
+boy? Aren't you in luck's way. And I get the bloomin' old bike for my
+pal. Consider it again, Miss Stokes.'
+
+Joe turned aside his face, and did not speak.
+
+'Oh, well! I wheel the grid, do I? I leave you, boy--'
+
+'I'm not keen on going any further,' barked out Joe, in an uncouth voice.
+'She hain't my choice.'
+
+The girl stood silent, and watched the two men.
+
+'There now!' said Albert. 'Think o' that! If it was _me_ now--' But he
+was uncomfortable. 'Well, Miss Stokes, have me,' he added.
+
+Miss Stokes stood quite still, neither moved nor spoke. And so the three
+remained for some time at the lane end. At last Joe began kicking the
+ground--then he suddenly lifted his face. At that moment Miss Stokes was
+at his side. She put her arm delicately round his waist.
+
+'Seems I'm the one extra, don't you think?' Albert inquired of the high
+bland moon.
+
+Joe had dropped his head and did not answer. Miss Stokes stood with her
+arm lightly round his waist. Albert bowed, saluted, and bade good-night.
+He walked away, leaving the two standing.
+
+Miss Stokes put a light pressure on Joe's waist, and drew him down the
+road. They walked in silence. The night was full of scent--wild cherry,
+the first bluebells. Still they walked in silence. A nightingale was
+singing. They approached nearer and nearer, till they stood close by his
+dark bush. The powerful notes sounded from the cover, almost like flashes
+of light--then the interval of silence--then the moaning notes, almost
+like a dog faintly howling, followed by the long, rich trill, and
+flashing notes. Then a short silence again.
+
+Miss Stokes turned at last to Joe. She looked up at him, and in the
+moonlight he saw her faintly smiling. He felt maddened, but helpless. Her
+arm was round his waist, she drew him closely to her with a soft pressure
+that made all his bones rotten.
+
+Meanwhile Albert was waiting at home. He put on his overcoat, for the
+fire was out, and he had had malarial fever. He looked fitfully at the
+_Daily Mirror_ and the _Daily Sketch_, but he saw nothing. It seemed a
+long time. He began to yawn widely, even to nod. At last Joe came in.
+
+Albert looked at him keenly. The young man's brow was black, his face
+sullen.
+
+'All right, boy?' asked Albert.
+
+Joe merely grunted for a reply. There was nothing more to be got out of
+him. So they went to bed.
+
+Next day Joe was silent, sullen. Albert could make nothing of him. He
+proposed a walk after tea.
+
+'I'm going somewhere,' said Joe.
+
+'Where--Monkey nuts?' asked the corporal. But Joe's brow only became
+darker.
+
+So the days went by. Almost every evening Joe went off alone, returning
+late. He was sullen, taciturn and had a hang-dog look, a curious way of
+dropping his head and looking dangerously from under his brows. And he
+and Albert did not get on so well any more with one another. For all his
+fun and nonsense, Albert was really irritable, soon made angry. And Joe's
+stand-offish sulkiness and complete lack of confidence riled him, got on
+his nerves. His fun and nonsense took a biting, sarcastic turn, at which
+Joe's eyes glittered occasionally, though the young man turned unheeding
+aside. Then again Joe would be full of odd, whimsical fun, outshining
+Albert himself.
+
+Miss Stokes still came to the station with the wain: Monkey-nuts,
+Albert called her, though not to her face. For she was very clear and
+good-looking, almost she seemed to gleam. And Albert was a tiny bit
+afraid of her. She very rarely addressed Joe whilst the hay-loading was
+going on, and that young man always turned his back to her. He seemed
+thinner, and his limber figure looked more slouching. But still it had
+the tender, attractive appearance, especially from behind. His tanned
+face, a little thinned and darkened, took a handsome, slightly sinister
+look.
+
+'Come on, Joe!' the corporal urged sharply one day. 'What're you doing,
+boy? Looking for beetles on the bank?'
+
+Joe turned round swiftly, almost menacing, to work.
+
+'He's a different fellow these days, Miss Stokes,' said Albert to the
+young woman. 'What's got him? Is it Monkey nuts that don't suit him, do
+you think?'
+
+'Choked with chaff, more like,' she retorted. 'It's as bad as feeding a
+threshing machine, to have to listen to some folks.'
+
+'As bad as what?' said Albert. 'You don't mean me, do you, Miss Stokes?'
+
+'No,' she cried. 'I don't mean you.'
+
+Joe's face became dark red during these sallies, but he said nothing. He
+would eye the young woman curiously, as she swung so easily at the work,
+and he had some of the look of a dog which is going to bite.
+
+Albert, with his nerves on edge, began to find the strain rather severe.
+The next Saturday evening, when Joe came in more black-browed than ever,
+he watched him, determined to have it out with him.
+
+When the boy went upstairs to bed, the corporal followed him. He closed
+the door behind him carefully, sat on the bed and watched the younger man
+undressing. And for once he spoke in a natural voice, neither chaffing
+nor commanding.
+
+'What's gone wrong, boy?'
+
+Joe stopped a moment as if he had been shot. Then he went on unwinding
+his puttees, and did not answer or look up.
+
+'You can hear, can't you?' said Albert, nettled.
+
+'Yes, I can hear,' said Joe, stooping over his puttees till his face was
+purple.
+
+'Then why don't you answer?'
+
+Joe sat up. He gave a long, sideways look at the corporal. Then he lifted
+his eyes and stared at a crack in the ceiling.
+
+The corporal watched these movements shrewdly.
+
+'And _then_ what?' he asked, ironically.
+
+Again Joe turned and stared him in the face. The corporal smiled very
+slightly, but kindly.
+
+'There'll be murder done one of these days,' said Joe, in a quiet,
+unimpassioned voice.
+
+'So long as it's by daylight--' replied Albert. Then he went over, sat
+down by Joe, put his hand on his shoulder affectionately, and continued,
+'What is it, boy? What's gone wrong? You can trust me, can't you?'
+
+Joe turned and looked curiously at the face so near to his.
+
+'It's nothing, that's all,' he said laconically.
+
+Albert frowned.
+
+'Then who's going to be murdered?--and who's going to do the
+murdering?--me or you--which is it, boy?' He smiled gently at the stupid
+youth, looking straight at him all the while, into his eyes. Gradually
+the stupid, hunted, glowering look died out of Joe's eyes. He turned his
+head aside, gently, as one rousing from a spell.
+
+'I don't want her,' he said, with fierce resentment.
+
+'Then you needn't have her,' said Albert. 'What do you go for, boy?'
+
+But it wasn't as simple as all that. Joe made no remark.
+
+'She's a smart-looking girl. What's wrong with her, my boy? I should have
+thought you were a lucky chap, myself.'
+
+'I don't want 'er,' Joe barked, with ferocity and resentment.
+
+'Then tell her so and have done,' said Albert. He waited awhile. There
+was no response. 'Why don't you?' he added.
+
+'Because I don't,' confessed Joe, sulkily.
+
+Albert pondered--rubbed his head.
+
+'You're too soft-hearted, that's where it is, boy. You want your mettle
+dipping in cold water, to temper it. You're too soft-hearted--'
+
+He laid his arm affectionately across the shoulders of the younger man.
+Joe seemed to yield a little towards him.
+
+'When are you going to see her again?' Albert asked. For a long time
+there was no answer.
+
+'When is it, boy?' persisted the softened voice of the corporal.
+
+'Tomorrow,' confessed Joe.
+
+'Then let me go,' said Albert. 'Let me go, will you?'
+
+The morrow was Sunday, a sunny day, but a cold evening. The sky was grey,
+the new foliage very green, but the air was chill and depressing. Albert
+walked briskly down the white road towards Beeley. He crossed a larch
+plantation, and followed a narrow by-road, where blue speedwell flowers
+fell from the banks into the dust. He walked swinging his cane, with
+mixed sensations. Then having gone a certain length, he turned and began
+to walk in the opposite direction.
+
+So he saw a young woman approaching him. She was wearing a wide hat of
+grey straw, and a loose, swinging dress of nigger-grey velvet. She walked
+with slow inevitability. Albert faltered a little as he approached her.
+Then he saluted her, and his roguish, slightly withered skin flushed. She
+was staring straight into his face.
+
+He fell in by her side, saying impudently:
+
+'Not so nice for a walk as it was, is it?'
+
+She only stared at him. He looked back at her.
+
+'You've seen me before, you know,' he said, grinning slightly. 'Perhaps
+you never noticed me. Oh, I'm quite nice looking, in a quiet way, you
+know. What--?'
+
+But Miss Stokes did not speak: she only stared with large, icy blue eyes
+at him. He became self-conscious, lifted up his chin, walked with his
+nose in the air, and whistled at random. So they went down the quiet,
+deserted grey lane. He was whistling the air: 'I'm Gilbert, the filbert,
+the colonel of the nuts.'
+
+At last she found her voice:
+
+'Where's Joe?'
+
+'He thought you'd like a change: they say variety's the salt of
+life--that's why I'm mostly in pickle.'
+
+'Where is he?'
+
+'Am I my brother's keeper? He's gone his own ways.'
+
+'Where?'
+
+'Nay, how am I to know? Not so far but he'll be back for supper.'
+
+She stopped in the middle of the lane. He stopped facing her.
+
+'Where's Joe?' she asked.
+
+He struck a careless attitude, looked down the road this way and that,
+lifted his eyebrows, pushed his khaki cap on one side, and answered:
+
+'He is not conducting the service tonight: he asked me if I'd officiate.'
+
+'Why hasn't he come?'
+
+'Didn't want to, I expect. I wanted to.'
+
+She stared him up and down, and he felt uncomfortable in his spine, but
+maintained his air of nonchalance. Then she turned slowly on her heel,
+and started to walk back. The corporal went at her side.
+
+'You're not going back, are you?' he pleaded. 'Why, me and you, we should
+get on like a house on fire.'
+
+She took no heed, but walked on. He went uncomfortably at her side,
+making his funny remarks from time to time. But she was as if stone deaf.
+He glanced at her, and to his dismay saw the tears running down her
+cheeks. He stopped suddenly, and pushed back his cap.
+
+'I say, you know--' he began.
+
+But she was walking on like an automaton, and he had to hurry after her.
+
+She never spoke to him. At the gate of her farm she walked straight in,
+as if he were not there. He watched her disappear. Then he turned on his
+heel, cursing silently, puzzled, lifting off his cap to scratch his head.
+
+That night, when they were in bed, he remarked: 'Say, Joe, boy; strikes
+me you're well-off without Monkey nuts. Gord love us, beans ain't in it.'
+
+So they slept in amity. But they waited with some anxiety for the morrow.
+
+It was a cold morning, a grey sky shifting in a cold wind, and
+threatening rain. They watched the wagon come up the road and through the
+yard gates. Miss Stokes was with her team as usual; her 'Whoa!' rang out
+like a war-whoop.
+
+She faced up at the truck where the two men stood.
+
+'Joe!' she called, to the averted figure which stood up in the wind.
+
+'What?' he turned unwillingly.
+
+She made a queer movement, lifting her head slightly in a sipping,
+half-inviting, half-commanding gesture. And Joe was crouching already to
+jump off the truck to obey her, when Albert put his hand on his shoulder.
+
+'Half a minute, boy! Where are you off? Work's work, and nuts is nuts.
+You stop here.'
+
+Joe slowly straightened himself.
+
+'Joe!' came the woman's clear call from below.
+
+Again Joe looked at her. But Albert's hand was on his shoulder, detaining
+him. He stood half averted, with his tail between his legs.
+
+'Take your hand off him, you!' said Miss Stokes.
+
+'Yes, Major,' retorted Albert satirically.
+
+She stood and watched.
+
+'Joe!' Her voice rang for the third time.
+
+Joe turned and looked at her, and a slow, jeering smile gathered on his
+face.
+
+'Monkey nuts!' he replied, in a tone mocking her call.
+
+She turned white--dead white. The men thought she would fall. Albert
+began yelling to the porters up the line to come and help with the load.
+He could yell like any non-commissioned officer upon occasion.
+
+Some way or other the wagon was unloaded, the girl was gone. Joe and his
+corporal looked at one another and smiled slowly. But they had a weight
+on their minds, they were afraid.
+
+They were reassured, however, when they found that Miss Stokes came no
+more with the hay. As far as they were concerned, she had vanished into
+oblivion. And Joe felt more relieved even than he had felt when he heard
+the firing cease, after the news had come that the armistice was signed.
+
+
+
+
+WINTRY PEACOCK
+
+
+There was thin, crisp snow on the ground, the sky was blue, the wind very
+cold, the air clear. Farmers were just turning out the cows for an hour
+or so in the midday, and the smell of cow-sheds was unendurable as I
+entered Tible. I noticed the ash-twigs up in the sky were pale and
+luminous, passing into the blue. And then I saw the peacocks. There they
+were in the road before me, three of them, and tailless, brown, speckled
+birds, with dark-blue necks and ragged crests. They stepped archly over
+the filigree snow, and their bodies moved with slow motion, like small,
+light, flat-bottomed boats. I admired them, they were curious. Then a
+gust of wind caught them, heeled them over as if they were three frail
+boats opening their feathers like ragged sails. They hopped and skipped
+with discomfort, to get out of the draught of the wind. And then, in the
+lee of the walls, they resumed their arch, wintry motion, light and
+unballasted now their tails were gone, indifferent. They were indifferent
+to my presence. I might have touched them. They turned off to the shelter
+of an open shed.
+
+As I passed the end of the upper house, I saw a young woman just coming
+out of the back door. I had spoken to her in the summer. She recognized
+me at once, and waved to me. She was carrying a pail, wearing a white
+apron that was longer than her preposterously short skirt, and she had on
+the cotton bonnet. I took off my hat to her and was going on. But she put
+down her pail and darted with a swift, furtive movement after me.
+
+'Do you mind waiting a minute?' she said. 'I'll be out in a minute.'
+
+She gave me a slight, odd smile, and ran back. Her face was long and
+sallow and her nose rather red. But her gloomy black eyes softened
+caressively to me for a moment, with that momentary humility which makes
+a man lord of the earth.
+
+I stood in the road, looking at the fluffy, dark-red young cattle that
+mooed and seemed to bark at me. They seemed happy, frisky cattle, a
+little impudent, and either determined to go back into the warm shed, or
+determined not to go back, I could not decide which.
+
+Presently the woman came forward again, her head rather ducked. But she
+looked up at me and smiled, with that odd, immediate intimacy, something
+witch-like and impossible.
+
+'Sorry to keep you waiting,' she said. 'Shall we stand in this
+cart-shed--it will be more out of the wind.'
+
+So we stood among the shafts of the open cart-shed that faced the road.
+Then she looked down at the ground, a little sideways, and I noticed a
+small black frown on her brows. She seemed to brood for a moment. Then
+she looked straight into my eyes, so that I blinked and wanted to turn my
+face aside. She was searching me for something and her look was too near.
+The frown was still on her keen, sallow brow.
+
+'Can you speak French?' she asked me abruptly.
+
+'More or less,' I replied.
+
+'I was supposed to learn it at school,' she said. 'But I don't know a
+word.' She ducked her head and laughed, with a slightly ugly grimace and
+a rolling of her black eyes.
+
+'No good keeping your mind full of scraps,' I answered.
+
+But she had turned aside her sallow, long face, and did not hear what I
+said. Suddenly again she looked at me. She was searching. And at the same
+time she smiled at me, and her eyes looked softly, darkly, with infinite
+trustful humility into mine. I was being cajoled.
+
+'Would you mind reading a letter for me, in French,' she said, her face
+immediately black and bitter-looking. She glanced at me, frowning.
+
+'Not at all,' I said.
+
+'It's a letter to my husband,' she said, still scrutinizing.
+
+I looked at her, and didn't quite realize. She looked too far into me, my
+wits were gone. She glanced round. Then she looked at me shrewdly. She
+drew a letter from her pocket, and handed it to me. It was addressed from
+France to Lance-Corporal Goyte, at Tible. I took out the letter and began
+to read it, as mere words. '_Mon cher Alfred_'--it might have been a bit
+of a torn newspaper. So I followed the script: the trite phrases of a
+letter from a French-speaking girl to an English soldier. 'I think of you
+always, always. Do you think sometimes of me?' And then I vaguely
+realized that I was reading a man's private correspondence. And yet, how
+could one consider these trivial, facile French phrases private! Nothing
+more trite and vulgar in the world, than such a love-letter--no newspaper
+more obvious.
+
+Therefore I read with a callous heart the effusions of the Belgian
+damsel. But then I gathered my attention. For the letter went on, '_Notre
+cher petit bb_--our dear little baby was born a week ago. Almost I
+died, knowing you were far away, and perhaps forgetting the fruit of our
+perfect love. But the child comforted me. He has the smiling eyes and
+virile air of his English father. I pray to the Mother of Jesus to send
+me the dear father of my child, that I may see him with my child in his
+arms, and that we may be united in holy family love. Ah, my Alfred, can I
+tell you how I miss you, how I weep for you. My thoughts are with you
+always, I think of nothing but you, I live for nothing but you and our
+dear baby. If you do not come back to me soon, I shall die, and our child
+will die. But no, you cannot come back to me. But I can come to you, come
+to England with our child. If you do not wish to present me to your good
+mother and father, you can meet me in some town, some city, for I shall
+be so frightened to be alone in England with my child, and no one to take
+care of us. Yet I must come to you, I must bring my child, my little
+Alfred to his father, the big, beautiful Alfred that I love so much. Oh,
+write and tell me where I shall come. I have some money, I am not a
+penniless creature. I have money for myself and my dear baby--'
+
+I read to the end. It was signed: 'Your very happy and still more unhappy
+lise.' I suppose I must have been smiling.
+
+'I can see it makes you laugh,' said Mrs. Goyte, sardonically. I looked
+up at her.
+
+'It's a love-letter, I know that,' she said. 'There's too many "Alfreds"
+in it.'
+
+'One too many,' I said.
+
+'Oh, yes--And what does she say--Eliza? We know her name's Eliza, that's
+another thing.' She grimaced a little, looking up at me with a mocking
+laugh.
+
+'Where did you get this letter?' I said.
+
+'Postman gave it me last week.'
+
+'And is your husband at home?'
+
+'I expect him home tonight. He's been wounded, you know, and we've been
+applying for him home. He was home about six weeks ago--he's been in
+Scotland since then. Oh, he was wounded in the leg. Yes, he's all right,
+a great strapping fellow. But he's lame, he limps a bit. He expects he'll
+get his discharge--but I don't think he will. We married? We've been
+married six years--and he joined up the first day of the war. Oh, he
+thought he'd like the life. He'd been through the South African War. No,
+he was sick of it, fed up. I'm living with his father and mother--I've no
+home of my own now. My people had a big farm--over a thousand acres--in
+Oxfordshire. Not like here--no. Oh, they're very good to me, his father
+and mother. Oh, yes, they couldn't be better. They think more of me than
+of their own daughters. But it's not like being in a place of your own,
+is it? You can't _really_ do as you like. No, there's only me and his
+father and mother at home. Before the war? Oh, he was anything. He's had
+a good education--but he liked the farming better. Then he was a
+chauffeur. That's how he knew French. He was driving a gentleman in
+France for a long time--'
+
+At this point the peacocks came round the corner on a puff of wind.
+
+'Hello, Joey!' she called, and one of the birds came forward, on delicate
+legs. Its grey speckled back was very elegant, it rolled its full,
+dark-blue neck as it moved to her. She crouched down. 'Joey, dear,' she
+said, in an odd, saturnine caressive voice, 'you're bound to find me,
+aren't you?' She put her face forward, and the bird rolled his neck,
+almost touching her face with his beak, as if kissing her.
+
+'He loves you,' I said.
+
+She twisted her face up at me with a laugh.
+
+'Yes,' she said, 'he loves me, Joey does,'--then, to the bird--'and I
+love Joey, don't I. I _do_ love Joey.' And she smoothed his feathers for
+a moment. Then she rose, saying: 'He's an affectionate bird.'
+
+I smiled at the roll of her 'bir-rrd'.
+
+'Oh, yes, he is,' she protested. 'He came with me from my home seven
+years ago. Those others are his descendants--but they're not like
+Joey--_are they, dee-urr?_' Her voice rose at the end with a witch-like
+cry.
+
+Then she forgot the birds in the cart-shed and turned to business again.
+
+'Won't you read that letter?' she said. 'Read it, so that I know what it
+says.'
+
+'It's rather behind his back,' I said.
+
+'Oh, never mind him,' she cried. 'He's been behind my back long
+enough--all these four years. If he never did no worse things behind my
+back than I do behind his, he wouldn't have cause to grumble. You read me
+what it says.'
+
+Now I felt a distinct reluctance to do as she bid, and yet I began--'My
+dear Alfred.'
+
+'I guessed that much,' she said. 'Eliza's dear Alfred.' She laughed. 'How
+do you say it in French? _Eliza?_'
+
+I told her, and she repeated the name with great contempt--_lise_.
+
+'Go on,' she said. 'You're not reading.'
+
+So I began--'I have been thinking of you sometimes--have you been
+thinking of me?'--
+
+'Of several others as well, beside her, I'll wager,' said Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'Probably not,' said I, and continued. 'A dear little baby was born here
+a week ago. Ah, can I tell you my feelings when I take my darling little
+brother into my arms--'
+
+'I'll bet it's _his_,' cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'No,' I said. 'It's her mother's.'
+
+'Don't you believe it,' she cried. 'It's a blind. You mark, it's her own
+right enough--and his.'
+
+'No,' I said, 'it's her mother's.' 'He has sweet smiling eyes, but not
+like your beautiful English eyes--'
+
+She suddenly struck her hand on her skirt with a wild motion, and bent
+down, doubled with laughter. Then she rose and covered her face with her
+hand.
+
+'I'm forced to laugh at the beautiful English eyes,' she said.
+
+'Aren't his eyes beautiful?' I asked.
+
+'Oh, yes--_very!_ Go on!--_Joey, dear, dee-urr, Joey!_'--this to the
+peacock.
+
+--'Er--We miss you very much. We all miss you. We wish you were here to
+see the darling baby. Ah, Alfred, how happy we were when you stayed with
+us. We all loved you so much. My mother will call the baby Alfred so that
+we shall never forget you--'
+
+'Of course it's his right enough,' cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'No,' I said. 'It's the mother's.' Er--'My mother is very well. My father
+came home yesterday--on leave. He is delighted with his son, my little
+brother, and wishes to have him named after you, because you were so good
+to us all in that terrible time, which I shall never forget. I must weep
+now when I think of it. Well, you are far away in England, and perhaps I
+shall never see you again. How did you find your dear mother and father?
+I am so happy that your wound is better, and that you can nearly walk--'
+
+'How did he find his dear _wife!_' cried Mrs. Goyte. 'He never told her
+he had one. Think of taking the poor girl in like that!'
+
+'We are so pleased when you write to us. Yet now you are in England you
+will forget the family you served so well--'
+
+'A bit too well--eh, _Joey!_' cried the wife.
+
+'If it had not been for you we should not be alive now, to grieve and to
+rejoice in this life, that is so hard for us. But we have recovered some
+of our losses, and no longer feel the burden of poverty. The little
+Alfred is a great comfort to me. I hold him to my breast and think of the
+big, good Alfred, and I weep to think that those times of suffering were
+perhaps the times of a great happiness that is gone for ever.'
+
+'Oh, but isn't it a shame, to take a poor girl in like that!' cried Mrs.
+Goyte. 'Never to let on that he was married, and raise her hopes--I call
+it beastly, I do.'
+
+'You don't know,' I said. 'You know how anxious women are to fall in
+love, wife or no wife. How could he help it, if she was determined to
+fall in love with him?'
+
+'He could have helped it if he'd wanted.'
+
+'Well,' I said, 'we aren't all heroes.'
+
+'Oh, but that's different! The big, good Alfred!--did ever you hear such
+tommy-rot in your life! Go on--what does she say at the end?'
+
+'Er--We shall be pleased to hear of your life in England. We all send
+many kind regards to your good parents. I wish you all happiness for your
+future days. Your very affectionate and ever-grateful lise.'
+
+There was silence for a moment, during which Mrs. Goyte remained with her
+head dropped, sinister and abstracted. Suddenly she lifted her face, and
+her eyes flashed.
+
+'Oh, but I call it beastly, I call it mean, to take a girl in like that.'
+
+'Nay,' I said. 'Probably he hasn't taken her in at all. Do you think
+those French girls are such poor innocent things? I guess she's a great
+deal more downy than he.'
+
+'Oh, he's one of the biggest fools that ever walked,' she cried.
+
+'There you are!' said I.
+
+'But it's his child right enough,' she said.
+
+'I don't think so,' said I.
+
+'I'm sure of it.'
+
+'Oh, well,' I said, 'if you prefer to think that way.'
+
+'What other reason has she for writing like that--'
+
+I went out into the road and looked at the cattle.
+
+'Who is this driving the cows?' I said. She too came out.
+
+'It's the boy from the next farm,' she said.
+
+'Oh, well,' said I, 'those Belgian girls! You never know where their
+letters will end. And, after all, it's his affair--you needn't bother.'
+
+'Oh--!' she cried, with rough scorn--'it's not _me_ that bothers. But
+it's the nasty meanness of it--me writing him such loving letters'--she
+put her hand before her face and laughed malevolently--'and sending him
+parcels all the time. You bet he fed that gurrl on my parcels--I know he
+did. It's just like him. I'll bet they laughed together over my letters.
+I bet anything they did--'
+
+'Nay,' said I. 'He'd burn your letters for fear they'd give him away.'
+
+There was a black look on her yellow face. Suddenly a voice was heard
+calling. She poked her head out of the shed, and answered coolly:
+
+'All right!' Then turning to me: 'That's his mother looking after me.'
+
+She laughed into my face, witch-like, and we turned down the road.
+
+When I awoke, the morning after this episode, I found the house darkened
+with deep, soft snow, which had blown against the large west windows,
+covering them with a screen. I went outside, and saw the valley all white
+and ghastly below me, the trees beneath black and thin looking like wire,
+the rock-faces dark between the glistening shroud, and the sky above
+sombre, heavy, yellowish-dark, much too heavy for this world below of
+hollow bluey whiteness figured with black. I felt I was in a valley of
+the dead. And I sensed I was a prisoner, for the snow was everywhere
+deep, and drifted in places. So all the morning I remained indoors,
+looking up the drive at the shrubs so heavily plumed with snow, at the
+gateposts raised high with a foot or more of extra whiteness. Or I looked
+down into the white-and-black valley that was utterly motionless and
+beyond life, a hollow sarcophagus.
+
+Nothing stirred the whole day--no plume fell off the shrubs, the valley
+was as abstracted as a grove of death. I looked over at the tiny,
+half-buried farms away on the bare uplands beyond the valley hollow, and
+I thought of Tible in the snow, of the black witch-like little Mrs.
+Goyte. And the snow seemed to lay me bare to influences I wanted to
+escape.
+
+In the faint glow of the half-clear light that came about four o'clock in
+the afternoon, I was roused to see a motion in the snow away below, near
+where the thorn trees stood very black and dwarfed, like a little savage
+group, in the dismal white. I watched closely. Yes, there was a flapping
+and a struggle--a big bird, it must be, labouring in the snow. I
+wondered. Our biggest birds, in the valley, were the large hawks that
+often hung flickering opposite my windows, level with me, but high above
+some prey on the steep valleyside. This was much too big for a hawk--too
+big for any known bird. I searched in my mind for the largest English
+wild birds, geese, buzzards.
+
+Still it laboured and strove, then was still, a dark spot, then struggled
+again. I went out of the house and down the steep slope, at risk of
+breaking my leg between the rocks. I knew the ground so well--and yet I
+got well shaken before I drew near the thorn-trees.
+
+Yes, it was a bird. It was Joey. It was the grey-brown peacock with a
+blue neck. He was snow-wet and spent.
+
+'Joey--Joey, de-urr!' I said, staggering unevenly towards him. He looked
+so pathetic, rowing and struggling in the snow, too spent to rise, his
+blue neck stretching out and lying sometimes on the snow, his eye closing
+and opening quickly, his crest all battered.
+
+'Joey dee-uur! Dee-urr!' I said caressingly to him. And at last he lay
+still, blinking, in the surged and furrowed snow, whilst I came near and
+touched him, stroked him, gathered him under my arm. He stretched his
+long, wetted neck away from me as I held him, none the less he was quiet
+in my arm, too tired, perhaps, to struggle. Still he held his poor,
+crested head away from me, and seemed sometimes to droop, to wilt, as if
+he might suddenly die.
+
+He was not so heavy as I expected, yet it was a struggle to get up to the
+house with him again. We set him down, not too near the fire, and gently
+wiped him with cloths. He submitted, only now and then stretched his soft
+neck away from us, avoiding us helplessly. Then we set warm food by him.
+I _put_ it to his beak, tried to make him eat. But he ignored it. He
+seemed to be ignorant of what we were doing, recoiled inside himself
+inexplicably. So we put him in a basket with cloths, and left him
+crouching oblivious. His food we put near him. The blinds were drawn, the
+house was warm, it was night. Sometimes he stirred, but mostly he huddled
+still, leaning his queer crested head on one side. He touched no food,
+and took no heed of sounds or movements. We talked of brandy or
+stimulants. But I realized we had best leave him alone.
+
+In the night, however, we heard him thumping about. I got up anxiously
+with a candle. He had eaten some food, and scattered more, making a mess.
+And he was perched on the back of a heavy arm-chair. So I concluded he
+was recovered, or recovering.
+
+The next day was clear, and the snow had frozen, so I decided to carry
+him back to Tible. He consented, after various flappings, to sit in a big
+fish-bag with his battered head peeping out with wild uneasiness. And so
+I set off with him, slithering down into the valley, making good progress
+down in the pale shadow beside the rushing waters, then climbing
+painfully up the arrested white valleyside, plumed with clusters of young
+pine trees, into the paler white radiance of the snowy, upper regions,
+where the wind cut fine. Joey seemed to watch all the time with wide
+anxious, unseeing eye, brilliant and inscrutable. As I drew near to Tible
+township he stirred violently in the bag, though I do not know if he had
+recognized the place. Then, as I came to the sheds, he looked sharply
+from side to side, and stretched his neck out long. I was a little afraid
+of him. He gave a loud, vehement yell, opening his sinister beak, and I
+stood still, looking at him as he struggled in the bag, shaken myself by
+his struggles, yet not thinking to release him.
+
+Mrs. Goyte came darting past the end of the house, her head sticking
+forward in sharp scrutiny. She saw me, and came forward.
+
+'Have you got Joey?' she cried sharply, as if I were a thief.
+
+I opened the bag, and he flopped out, flapping as if he hated the touch
+of the snow now. She gathered him up, and put her lips to his beak. She
+was flushed and handsome, her eyes bright, her hair slack, thick, but
+more witch-like than ever. She did not speak.
+
+She had been followed by a grey-haired woman with a round, rather sallow
+face and a slightly hostile bearing.
+
+'Did you bring him with you, then?' she asked sharply. I answered that I
+had rescued him the previous evening.
+
+From the background slowly approached a slender man with a grey moustache
+and large patches on his trousers.
+
+'You've got'im back 'gain, ah see,' he said to his daughter-in-law. His
+wife explained how I had found Joey.
+
+'Ah,' went on the grey man. 'It wor our Alfred scared him off, back your
+life. He must'a flyed ower t'valley. Tha ma' thank thy stars as 'e wor
+fun, Maggie. 'E'd a bin froze. They a bit nesh, you know,' he concluded
+to me.
+
+'They are,' I answered. 'This isn't their country.'
+
+'No, it isna,' replied Mr. Goyte. He spoke very slowly and deliberately,
+quietly, as if the soft pedal were always down in his voice. He looked at
+his daughter-in-law as she crouched, flushed and dark, before the
+peacock, which would lay its long blue neck for a moment along her lap.
+In spite of his grey moustache and thin grey hair, the elderly man had a
+face young and almost delicate, like a young man's. His blue eyes
+twinkled with some inscrutable source of pleasure, his skin was fine and
+tender, his nose delicately arched. His grey hair being slightly ruffled,
+he had a debonair look, as of a youth who is in love.
+
+'We mun tell 'im it's come,' he said slowly, and turning he called:
+'Alfred--Alfred! Wheer's ter gotten to?'
+
+Then he turned again to the group.
+
+'Get up then, Maggie, lass, get up wi' thee. Tha ma'es too much o'
+th'bod.'
+
+A young man approached, wearing rough khaki and kneebreeches. He was
+Danish looking, broad at the loins.
+
+'I's come back then,' said the father to the son; 'leastwise, he's bin
+browt back, flyed ower the Griff Low.'
+
+The son looked at me. He had a devil-may-care bearing, his cap on one
+side, his hands stuck in the front pockets of his breeches. But he said
+nothing.
+
+'Shall you come in a minute, Master,' said the elderly woman, to me.
+
+'Ay, come in an' ha'e a cup o' tea or summat. You'll do wi' summat,
+carrin' that bod. Come on, Maggie wench, let's go in.'
+
+So we went indoors, into the rather stuffy, overcrowded living-room, that
+was too cosy, and too warm. The son followed last, standing in the
+doorway. The father talked to me.
+
+Maggie put out the tea-cups. The mother went into the dairy again.
+
+'Tha'lt rouse thysen up a bit again, now, Maggie,' the father-in-law
+said--and then to me: ''ers not bin very bright sin' Alfred came whoam,
+an' the bod flyed awee. 'E come whoam a Wednesday night, Alfred did. But
+ay, you knowed, didna yer. Ay, 'e comed 'a Wednesday--an' I reckon there
+wor a bit of a to-do between 'em, worn't there, Maggie?'
+
+He twinkled maliciously to his daughter-in-law, who was flushed,
+brilliant and handsome.
+
+'Oh, be quiet, father. You're wound up, by the sound of you,' she said to
+him, as if crossly. But she could never be cross with him.
+
+''Ers got 'er colour back this mornin',' continued the father-in-law
+slowly. 'It's bin heavy weather wi' 'er this last two days. Ay--'er's bin
+northeast sin 'er seed you a Wednesday.'
+
+'Father, do stop talking. You'd wear the leg off an iron pot. I can't
+think where you've found your tongue, all of a sudden,' said Maggie, with
+caressive sharpness.
+
+'Ah've found it wheer I lost it. Aren't goin' ter come in an' sit thee
+down, Alfred?'
+
+But Alfred turned and disappeared.
+
+''E's got th' monkey on 'is back ower this letter job,' said the father
+secretly to me. 'Mother, 'er knows nowt about it. Lot o' tom-foolery,
+isn't it? Ay! What's good o' makkin' a peck o' trouble over what's far
+enough off, an' ned niver come no nigher. No--not a smite o' use. That's
+what I tell 'er. 'Er should ta'e no notice on't. Ty, what can y' expect.'
+
+The mother came in again, and the talk became general. Maggie flashed her
+eyes at me from time to time, complacent and satisfied, moving among the
+men. I paid her little compliments, which she did not seem to hear. She
+attended to me with a kind of sinister, witch-like graciousness, her dark
+head ducked between her shoulders, at once humble and powerful. She was
+happy as a child attending to her father-in-law and to me. But there was
+something ominous between her eyebrows, as if a dark moth were settled
+there--and something ominous in her bent, hulking bearing.
+
+She sat on a low stool by the fire, near her father-in-law. Her head was
+dropped, she seemed in a state of abstraction. From time to time she
+would suddenly recover, and look up at us, laughing and chatting. Then
+she would forget again. Yet in her hulked black forgetting she seemed
+very near to us.
+
+The door having been opened, the peacock came slowly in, prancing calmly.
+He went near to her and crouched down, coiling his blue neck. She glanced
+at him, but almost as if she did not observe him. The bird sat silent,
+seeming to sleep, and the woman also sat hulked and silent, seemingly
+oblivious. Then once more there was a heavy step, and Alfred entered. He
+looked at his wife, and he looked at the peacock crouching by her. He
+stood large in the doorway, his hands stuck in front of him, in his
+breeches pockets. Nobody spoke. He turned on his heel and went out again.
+
+I rose also to go. Maggie started as if coming to herself.
+
+'Must you go?' she asked, rising and coming near to me, standing in front
+of me, twisting her head sideways and looking up at me. 'Can't you stop a
+bit longer? We can all be cosy today, there's nothing to do outdoors.'
+And she laughed, showing her teeth oddly. She had a long chin.
+
+I said I must go. The peacock uncoiled and coiled again his long blue
+neck, as he lay on the hearth. Maggie still stood close in front of me,
+so that I was acutely aware of my waistcoat buttons.
+
+'Oh, well,' she said, 'you'll come again, won't you? Do come again.'
+
+I promised.
+
+'Come to tea one day--yes, do!'
+
+I promised--one day.
+
+The moment I went out of her presence I ceased utterly to exist for
+her--as utterly as I ceased to exist for Joey. With her curious
+abstractedness she forgot me again immediately. I knew it as I left her.
+Yet she seemed almost in physical contact with me while I was with her.
+
+The sky was all pallid again, yellowish. When I went out there was no
+sun; the snow was blue and cold. I hurried away down the hill, musing on
+Maggie. The road made a loop down the sharp face of the slope. As I went
+crunching over the laborious snow I became aware of a figure striding
+down the steep scarp to intercept me. It was a man with his hands in
+front of him, half stuck in his breeches pockets, and his shoulders
+square--a real farmer of the hills; Alfred, of course. He waited for me
+by the stone fence.
+
+'Excuse me,' he said as I came up.
+
+I came to a halt in front of him and looked into his sullen blue eyes. He
+had a certain odd haughtiness on his brows. But his blue eyes stared
+insolently at me.
+
+'Do you know anything about a letter--in French--that my wife opened--a
+letter of mine--?'
+
+'Yes,' said I. 'She asked me to read it to her.'
+
+He looked square at me. He did not know exactly how to feel.
+
+'What was there in it?' he asked.
+
+'Why?' I said. 'Don't you know?'
+
+'She makes out she's burnt it,' he said.
+
+'Without showing it you?' I asked.
+
+He nodded slightly. He seemed to be meditating as to what line of action
+he should take. He wanted to know the contents of the letter: he must
+know: and therefore he must ask me, for evidently his wife had taunted
+him. At the same time, no doubt, he would like to wreak untold vengeance
+on my unfortunate person. So he eyed me, and I eyed him, and neither of
+us spoke. He did not want to repeat his request to me. And yet I only
+looked at him, and considered.
+
+Suddenly he threw back his head and glanced down the valley. Then he
+changed his position--he was a horse-soldier. Then he looked at me
+confidentially.
+
+'She burnt the blasted thing before I saw it,' he said.
+
+'Well,' I answered slowly, 'she doesn't know herself what was in it.'
+
+He continued to watch me narrowly. I grinned to myself.
+
+'I didn't like to read her out what there was in it,' I continued.
+
+He suddenly flushed so that the veins in his neck stood out, and he
+stirred again uncomfortably.
+
+'The Belgian girl said her baby had been born a week ago, and that they
+were going to call it Alfred,' I told him.
+
+He met my eyes. I was grinning. He began to grin, too.
+
+'Good luck to her,' he said.
+
+'Best of luck,' said I.
+
+'And what did you tell _her_?' he asked.
+
+'That the baby belonged to the old mother--that it was brother to your
+girl, who was writing to you as a friend of the family.'
+
+He stood smiling, with the long, subtle malice of a farmer.
+
+'And did she take it in?' he asked.
+
+'As much as she took anything else.'
+
+He stood grinning fixedly. Then he broke into a short laugh.
+
+'Good for _her_' he exclaimed cryptically.
+
+And then he laughed aloud once more, evidently feeling he had won a big
+move in his contest with his wife.
+
+'What about the other woman?' I asked.
+
+'Who?'
+
+'lise.'
+
+'Oh'--he shifted uneasily--'she was all right--'
+
+'You'll be getting back to her,' I said.
+
+He looked at me. Then he made a grimace with his mouth.
+
+'Not me,' he said. 'Back your life it's a plant.'
+
+'You don't think the _cher petit bb_ is a little Alfred?'
+
+'It might be,' he said.
+
+'Only might?'
+
+'Yes--an' there's lots of mites in a pound of cheese.' He laughed
+boisterously but uneasily.
+
+'What did she say, exactly?' he asked.
+
+I began to repeat, as well as I could, the phrases of the letter:
+
+'_Mon cher Alfred--Figure-toi comme je suis desole_--'
+
+He listened with some confusion. When I had finished all I could
+remember, he said:
+
+'They know how to pitch you out a letter, those Belgian lasses.'
+
+'Practice,' said I.
+
+'They get plenty,' he said.
+
+There was a pause.
+
+'Oh, well,' he said. 'I've never got that letter, anyhow.'
+
+The wind blew fine and keen, in the sunshine, across the snow. I blew my
+nose and prepared to depart.
+
+'And _she_ doesn't know anything?' he continued, jerking his head up the
+hill in the direction of Tible.
+
+'She knows nothing but what I've said--that is, if she really burnt the
+letter.'
+
+'I believe she burnt it,' he said, 'for spite. She's a little devil, she
+is. But I shall have it out with her.' His jaw was stubborn and sullen.
+Then suddenly he turned to me with a new note.
+
+'Why?' he said. 'Why didn't you wring that b---- peacock's neck-that
+b---- Joey?'
+
+'Why?' I said. 'What for?'
+
+'I hate the brute,' he said. 'I had a shot at him--'
+
+I laughed. He stood and mused.
+
+'Poor little lise,' he murmured.
+
+'Was she small--_petite_?' I asked. He jerked up his head.
+
+'No,' he said. 'Rather tall.'
+
+'Taller than your wife, I suppose.'
+
+Again he looked into my eyes. And then once more he went into a loud
+burst of laughter that made the still, snow-deserted valley clap again.
+
+'God, it's a knockout!' he said, thoroughly amused. Then he stood at
+ease, one foot out, his hands in his breeches pockets, in front of him,
+his head thrown back, a handsome figure of a man.
+
+'But I'll do that blasted Joey in--' he mused.
+
+I ran down the hill, shouting with laughter.
+
+
+
+
+_You Touched Me_
+
+
+The Pottery House was a square, ugly, brick house girt in by the wall
+that enclosed the whole grounds of the pottery itself. To be sure, a
+privet hedge partly masked the house and its ground from the pottery-yard
+and works: but only partly. Through the hedge could be seen the desolate
+yard, and the many-windowed, factory-like pottery, over the hedge could
+be seen the chimneys and the outhouses. But inside the hedge, a pleasant
+garden and lawn sloped down to a willow pool, which had once supplied the
+works.
+
+The Pottery itself was now closed, the great doors of the yard
+permanently shut. No more the great crates with yellow straw showing
+through, stood in stacks by the packing shed. No more the drays drawn by
+great horses rolled down the hill with a high load. No more the
+pottery-lasses in their clay-coloured overalls, their faces and hair
+splashed with grey fine mud, shrieked and larked with the men. All that
+was over.
+
+'We like it much better--oh, much better--quieter,' said Matilda Rockley.
+
+'Oh, yes,' assented Emmie Rockley, her sister.
+
+'I'm sure you do,' agreed the visitor.
+
+But whether the two Rockley girls really liked it better, or whether they
+only imagined they did, is a question. Certainly their lives were much
+more grey and dreary now that the grey clay had ceased to spatter its mud
+and silt its dust over the premises. They did not quite realize how they
+missed the shrieking, shouting lasses, whom they had known all their
+lives and disliked so much.
+
+Matilda and Emmie were already old maids. In a thorough industrial
+district, it is not easy for the girls who have expectations above the
+common to find husbands. The ugly industrial town was full of men, young
+men who were ready to marry. But they were all colliers or pottery-hands,
+mere workmen. The Rockley girls would have about ten thousand pounds each
+when their father died: ten thousand pounds' worth of profitable
+house-property. It was not to be sneezed at: they felt so themselves, and
+refrained from sneezing away such a fortune on any mere member of the
+proletariat. Consequently, bank-clerks or nonconformist clergymen or even
+school-teachers having failed to come forward, Matilda had begun to give
+up all idea of ever leaving the Pottery House.
+
+Matilda was a tall, thin, graceful fair girl, with a rather large nose.
+She was the Mary to Emmie's Martha: that is, Matilda loved painting and
+music, and read a good many novels, whilst Emmie looked after the
+house-keeping. Emmie was shorter, plumper than her sister, and she had no
+accomplishments. She looked up to Matilda, whose mind was naturally
+refined and sensible.
+
+In their quiet, melancholy way, the two girls were happy. Their mother
+was dead. Their father was ill also. He was an intelligent man who had
+had some education, but preferred to remain as if he were one with the
+rest of the working people. He had a passion for music and played the
+violin pretty well. But now he was getting old, he was very ill, dying of
+a kidney disease. He had been rather a heavy whisky-drinker.
+
+This quiet household, with one servant-maid, lived on year after year in
+the Pottery House. Friends came in, the girls went out, the father drank
+himself more and more ill. Outside in the street there was a continual
+racket of the colliers and their dogs and children. But inside the
+pottery wall was a deserted quiet.
+
+In all this ointment there was one little fly. Ted Rockley, the father of
+the girls, had had four daughters, and no son. As his girls grew, he felt
+angry at finding himself always in a house-hold of women. He went off to
+London and adopted a boy out of a Charity Institution. Emmie was fourteen
+years old, and Matilda sixteen, when their father arrived home with his
+prodigy, the boy of six, Hadrian.
+
+Hadrian was just an ordinary boy from a Charity Home, with ordinary
+brownish hair and ordinary bluish eyes and of ordinary rather cockney
+speech. The Rockley girls--there were three at home at the time of his
+arrival--had resented his being sprung on them. He, with his watchful,
+charity-institution instinct, knew this at once. Though he was only six
+years old, Hadrian had a subtle, jeering look on his face when he
+regarded the three young women. They insisted he should address them as
+Cousin: Cousin Flora, Cousin Matilda, Cousin Emmie. He complied, but
+there seemed a mockery in his tone.
+
+The girls, however, were kind-hearted by nature. Flora married and left
+home. Hadrian did very much as he pleased with Matilda and Emmie, though
+they had certain strictnesses. He grew up in the Pottery House and about
+the Pottery premises, went to an elementary school, and was invariably
+called Hadrian Rockley. He regarded Cousin Matilda and Cousin Emmie with
+a certain laconic indifference, was quiet and reticent in his ways. The
+girls called him sly, but that was unjust. He was merely cautious, and
+without frankness. His Uncle, Ted Rockley, understood him tacitly, their
+natures were somewhat akin. Hadrian and the elderly man had a real but
+unemotional regard for one another.
+
+When he was thirteen years old the boy was sent to a High School in the
+County town. He did not like it. His Cousin Matilda had longed to make a
+little gentleman of him, but he refused to be made. He would give a
+little contemptuous curve to his lip, and take on a shy, charity-boy
+grin, when refinement was thrust upon him. He played truant from the High
+School, sold his books, his cap with its badge, even his very scarf and
+pocket-handkerchief, to his school-fellows, and went raking off heaven
+knows where with the money. So he spent two very unsatisfactory years.
+
+When he was fifteen he announced that he wanted to leave England and go
+to the Colonies. He had kept touch with the Home. The Rockleys knew that,
+when Hadrian made a declaration, in his quiet, half-jeering manner, it
+was worse than useless to oppose him. So at last the boy departed, going
+to Canada under the protection of the Institution to which he had
+belonged. He said good-bye to the Rockleys without a word of thanks, and
+parted, it seemed, without a pang. Matilda and Emmie wept often to think
+of how he left them: even on their father's face a queer look came. But
+Hadrian wrote fairly regularly from Canada. He had entered some
+electricity works near Montreal, and was doing well.
+
+At last, however, the war came. In his turn, Hadrian joined up and came
+to Europe. The Rockleys saw nothing of him. They lived on, just the same,
+in the Pottery House. Ted Rockley was dying of a sort of dropsy, and in
+his heart he wanted to see the boy. When the armistice was signed,
+Hadrian had a long leave, and wrote that he was coming home to the
+Pottery House.
+
+The girls were terribly fluttered. To tell the truth, they were a little
+afraid of Hadrian. Matilda, tall and thin, was frail in her health, both
+girls were worn with nursing their father. To have Hadrian, a young man
+of twenty-one, in the house with them, after he had left them so coldly
+five years before, was a trying circumstance.
+
+They were in a flutter. Emmie persuaded her father to have his bed made
+finally in the morning-room downstairs, whilst his room upstairs was
+prepared for Hadrian. This was done, and preparations were going on for
+the arrival, when, at ten o'clock in the morning the young man suddenly
+turned up, quite unexpectedly. Cousin Emmie, with her hair bobbed up in
+absurd little bobs round her forehead, was busily polishing the
+stair-rods, while Cousin Matilda was in the kitchen washing the
+drawing-room ornaments in a lather, her sleeves rolled back on her thin
+arms, and her head tied up oddly and coquettishly in a duster.
+
+Cousin Matilda blushed deep with mortification when the self-possessed
+young man walked in with his kit-bag, and put his cap on the sewing
+machine. He was little and self-confident, with a curious neatness about
+him that still suggested the Charity Institution. His face was brown, he
+had a small moustache, he was vigorous enough in his smallness.
+
+'_Well_, is it Hadrian!' exclaimed Cousin Matilda, wringing the lather
+off her hand. 'We didn't expect you till tomorrow.'
+
+'I got off Monday night,' said Hadrian, glancing round the room.
+
+'Fancy!' said Cousin Matilda. Then, having dried her hands, she went
+forward, held out her hand, and said:
+
+'How are you?'
+
+'Quite well, thank you,' said Hadrian.
+
+'You're quite a man,' said Cousin Matilda.
+
+Hadrian glanced at her. She did not look her best: so thin, so
+large-nosed, with that pink-and-white checked duster tied round her head.
+She felt her disadvantage. But she had had a good deal of suffering and
+sorrow, she did not mind any more.
+
+The servant entered--one that did not know Hadrian.
+
+'Come and see my father,' said Cousin Matilda.
+
+In the hall they roused Cousin Emmie like a partridge from cover. She was
+on the stairs pushing the bright stair-rods into place. Instinctively her
+hand went to the little knobs, her front hair bobbed on her forehead.
+
+'Why!' she exclaimed, crossly. 'What have you come today for?'
+
+'I got off a day earlier,' said Hadrian, and his man's voice so deep and
+unexpected was like a blow to Cousin Emmie.
+
+'Well, you've caught us in the midst of it,' she said, with resentment.
+Then all three went into the middle room.
+
+Mr. Rockley was dressed--that is, he had on his trousers and socks--but
+he was resting on the bed, propped up just under the window, from whence
+he could see his beloved and resplendent garden, where tulips and
+apple-trees were ablaze. He did not look as ill as he was, for the water
+puffed him up, and his face kept its colour. His stomach was much
+swollen. He glanced round swiftly, turning his eyes without turning his
+head. He was the wreck of a handsome, well-built man.
+
+Seeing Hadrian, a queer, unwilling smile went over his face. The young
+man greeted him sheepishly.
+
+'You wouldn't make a life-guardsman,' he said. 'Do you want something to
+eat?'
+
+Hadrian looked round--as if for the meal.
+
+'I don't mind,' he said.
+
+'What shall you have--egg and bacon?' asked Emmie shortly.
+
+'Yes, I don't mind,' said Hadrian.
+
+The sisters went down to the kitchen, and sent the servant to finish the
+stairs.
+
+'Isn't he _altered_?' said Matilda, _sotto voce_.
+
+'Isn't he!' said Cousin Emmie. '_What_ a little man!'
+
+They both made a grimace, and laughed nervously.
+
+'Get the frying-pan,' said Emmie to Matilda.
+
+'But he's as cocky as ever,' said Matilda, narrowing her eyes and shaking
+her head knowingly, as she handed the frying-pan.
+
+'Mannie!' said Emmie sarcastically. Hadrian's new-fledged, cock-sure
+manliness evidently found no favour in her eyes.
+
+'Oh, he's not bad,' said Matilda. 'You don't want to be prejudiced
+against him.'
+
+I'm not prejudiced against him, I think he's all right for looks,' said
+Emmie, 'but there's too much of the little mannie about him.'
+
+'Fancy catching us like this,' said Matilda.
+
+'They've no thought for anything,' said Emmie with contempt. 'You go up
+and get dressed, our Matilda. I don't care about him. I can see to
+things, and you can talk to him. I shan't.'
+
+'He'll talk to my father,' said Matilda, meaningful.
+
+'_Sly--!_' exclaimed Emmie, with a grimace.
+
+The sisters believed that Hadrian had come hoping to get something out of
+their father--hoping for a legacy. And they were not at all sure he would
+not get it.
+
+Matilda went upstairs to change. She had thought it all out how she would
+receive Hadrian, and impress him. And he had caught her with her head
+tied up in a duster, and her thin arms in a basin of lather. But she did
+not care. She now dressed herself most scrupulously, carefully folded her
+long, beautiful, blonde hair, touched her pallor with a little rouge, and
+put her long string of exquisite crystal beads over her soft green dress.
+Now she looked elegant, like a heroine in a magazine illustration, and
+almost as unreal.
+
+She found Hadrian and her father talking away. The young man was short of
+speech as a rule, but he could find his tongue with his 'uncle'. They
+were both sipping a glass of brandy, and smoking, and chatting like a
+pair of old cronies. Hadrian was telling about Canada. He was going back
+there when his leave was up.
+
+'You wouldn't like to stop in England, then?' said Mr. Rockley.
+
+'No, I wouldn't stop in England,' said Hadrian.
+
+'How's that? There's plenty of electricians here,' said Mr. Rockley.
+
+'Yes. But there's too much difference between the men and the employers
+over here--too much of that for me,' said Hadrian.
+
+The sick man looked at him narrowly, with oddly smiling eyes.
+
+'That's it, is it?' he replied.
+
+Matilda heard and understood. 'So that's your big idea, is it, my little
+man,' she said to herself. She had always said of Hadrian that he had no
+proper _respect_ for anybody or anything, that he was sly and _common_.
+She went down to the kitchen for a _sotto voce_ confab with Emmie.
+
+'He thinks a rare lot of himself!' she whispered.
+
+'He's somebody, he is!' said Emmie with contempt.
+
+'He thinks there's too much difference between masters and men, over
+here,' said Matilda.
+
+'Is it any different in Canada?' asked Emmie.
+
+'Oh, yes--democratic,' replied Matilda, 'He thinks they're all on a level
+over there.'
+
+'Ay, well he's over here now,' said Emmie dryly, 'so he can keep his
+place.'
+
+As they talked they saw the young man sauntering down the garden, looking
+casually at the flowers. He had his hands in his pockets, and his
+soldier's cap neatly on his head. He looked quite at his ease, as if in
+possession. The two women, fluttered, watched him through the window.
+
+'We know what he's come for,' said Emmie, churlishly. Matilda looked a
+long time at the neat khaki figure. It had something of the charity-boy
+about it still; but now it was a man's figure, laconic, charged with
+plebeian energy. She thought of the derisive passion in his voice as he
+had declaimed against the propertied classes, to her father.
+
+'You don't know, Emmie. Perhaps he's not come for that,' she rebuked her
+sister. They were both thinking of the money.
+
+They were still watching the young soldier. He stood away at the bottom
+of the garden, with his back to them, his hands in his pockets, looking
+into the water of the willow pond. Matilda's dark-blue eyes had a
+strange, full look in them, the lids, with the faint blue veins showing,
+dropped rather low. She carried her head light and high, but she had a
+look of pain. The young man at the bottom of the garden turned and looked
+up the path. Perhaps he saw them through the window. Matilda moved into
+shadow.
+
+That afternoon their father seemed weak and ill. He was easily exhausted.
+The doctor came, and told Matilda that the sick man might die suddenly at
+any moment--but then he might not. They must be prepared.
+
+So the day passed, and the next. Hadrian made himself at home. He went
+about in the morning in his brownish jersey and his khaki trousers,
+collarless, his bare neck showing. He explored the pottery premises, as
+if he had some secret purpose in so doing, he talked with Mr. Rockley,
+when the sick man had strength. The two girls were always angry when the
+two men sat talking together like cronies. Yet it was chiefly a kind of
+politics they talked.
+
+On the second day after Hadrian's arrival, Matilda sat with her father in
+the evening. She was drawing a picture which she wanted to copy. It was
+very still, Hadrian was gone out somewhere, no one knew where, and Emmie
+was busy. Mr. Rockley reclined on his bed, looking out in silence over
+his evening-sunny garden.
+
+'If anything happens to me, Matilda,' he said, 'you won't sell this
+house--you'll stop here--'
+
+Matilda's eyes took their slightly haggard look as she stared at her
+father.
+
+'Well, we couldn't do anything else,' she said.
+
+'You don't know what you might do,' he said. 'Everything is left to you
+and Emmie, equally. You'do as you like with it--only don't sell this
+house, don't part with it.'
+
+'No,' she said.
+
+'And give Hadrian my watch and chain, and a hundred pounds out of what's
+in the bank--and help him if he ever wants helping. I haven't put his
+name in the will.'
+
+'Your watch and chain, and a hundred pounds--yes. But you'll be here when
+he goes back to Canada, father.'
+
+'You never know what'll happen,' said her father.
+
+Matilda sat and watched him, with her full, haggard eyes, for a long
+time, as if tranced. She saw that he knew he must go soon--she saw like a
+clairvoyant.
+
+Later on she told Emmie what her father had said about the watch and
+chain and the money.
+
+'What right has _he'--he_--meaning Hadrian--'to my father's watch and
+chain--what has it to do with him? Let him have the money, and get off,'
+said Emmie. She loved her father.
+
+That night Matilda sat late in her room. Her heart was anxious and
+breaking, her mind seemed entranced. She was too much entranced even to
+weep, and all the time she thought of her father, only her father. At
+last she felt she must go to him.
+
+It was near midnight. She went along the passage and to his room. There
+was a faint light from the moon outside. She listened at his door. Then
+she softly opened and entered. The room was faintly dark. She heard a
+movement on the bed.
+
+'Are you asleep?' she said softly, advancing to the side of the bed.
+
+'Are you asleep?' she repeated gently, as she stood at the side of the
+bed. And she reached her hand in the darkness to touch his forehead.
+Delicately, her fingers met the nose and the eyebrows, she laid her fine,
+delicate hand on his brow. It seemed fresh and smooth--very fresh and
+smooth. A sort of surprise stirred her, in her entranced state. But it
+could not waken her. Gently, she leaned over the bed and stirred her
+fingers over the low-growing hair on his brow.
+
+'Can't you sleep tonight?' she said.
+
+There was a quick stirring in the bed. 'Yes, I can,' a voice answered. It
+was Hadrian's voice. She started away. Instantly, she was wakened from
+her late-at-night trance. She remembered that her father was downstairs,
+that Hadrian had his room. She stood in the darkness as if stung.
+
+'It is you, Hadrian?' she said. 'I thought it was my father.' She was so
+startled, so shocked, that she could not move. The young man gave an
+uncomfortable laugh, and turned in his bed.
+
+At last she got out of the room. When she was back in her own room, in
+the light, and her door was closed, she stood holding up her hand that
+had touched him, as if it were hurt. She was almost too shocked, she
+could not endure.
+
+'Well,' said her calm and weary mind, 'it was only a mistake, why take
+any notice of it.'
+
+But she could not reason her feelings so easily. She suffered, feeling
+herself in a false position. Her right hand, which she had laid so gently
+on his face, on his fresh skin, ached now, as if it were really injured.
+She could not forgive Hadrian for the mistake: it made her dislike him
+deeply.
+
+Hadrian too slept badly. He had been awakened by the opening of the door,
+and had not realized what the question meant. But the soft, straying
+tenderness of her hand on his face startled something out of his soul. He
+was a charity boy, aloof and more or less at bay. The fragile
+exquisiteness of her caress startled him most, revealed unknown things to
+him.
+
+In the morning she could feel the consciousness in his eyes, when
+she came downstairs. She tried to bear herself as if nothing at all
+had happened, and she succeeded. She had the calm self-control,
+self-indifference, of one who has suffered and borne her suffering. She
+looked at him from her darkish, almost drugged blue eyes, she met the
+spark of consciousness in his eyes, and quenched it. And with her long,
+fine hand she put the sugar in his coffee.
+
+But she could not control him as she thought she could. He had a keen
+memory stinging his mind, a new set of sensations working in his
+consciousness. Something new was alert in him. At the back of his
+reticent, guarded mind he kept his secret alive and vivid. She was at his
+mercy, for he was unscrupulous, his standard was not her standard.
+
+He looked at her curiously. She was not beautiful, her nose was too
+large, her chin was too small, her neck was too thin. But her skin was
+clear and fine, she had a high-bred sensitiveness. This queer, brave,
+high-bred quality she shared with her father. The charity boy could see
+it in her tapering fingers, which were white and ringed. The same glamour
+that he knew in the elderly man he now saw in the woman. And he wanted to
+possess himself of it, he wanted to make himself master of it. As he went
+about through the old pottery-yard, his secretive mind schemed and
+worked. To be master of that strange soft delicacy such as he had felt in
+her hand upon his face,--this was what he set himself towards. He was
+secretly plotting.
+
+He watched Matilda as she went about, and she became aware of his
+attention, as of some shadow following her. But her pride made her ignore
+it. When he sauntered near her, his hands in his pockets, she received
+him with that same commonplace kindliness which mastered him more than
+any contempt. Her superior breeding seemed to control him. She made
+herself feel towards him exactly as she had always felt: he was a young
+boy who lived in the house with them, but was a stranger. Only, she dared
+not remember his face under her hand. When she remembered that, she was
+bewildered. Her hand had offended her, she wanted to cut it off. And she
+wanted, fiercely, to cut off the memory in him. She assumed she had done
+so.
+
+One day, when he sat talking with his 'uncle', he looked straight into
+the eyes of the sick man, and said:
+
+'But I shouldn't like to live and die here in Rawsley.'
+
+'No--well--you needn't,' said the sick man.
+
+'Do you think Cousin Matilda likes it?'
+
+'I should think so.'
+
+'I don't call it much of a life,' said the youth. 'How much older is she
+than me, Uncle?'
+
+The sick man looked at the young soldier.
+
+'A good bit,' he said.
+
+'Over thirty?' said Hadrian.
+
+'Well, not so much. She's thirty-two.'
+
+Hadrian considered a while.
+
+'She doesn't look it,' he said.
+
+Again the sick father looked at him.
+
+'Do you think she'd like to leave here?' said Hadrian.
+
+'Nay, I don't know,' replied the father, restive.
+
+Hadrian sat still, having his own thoughts. Then in a small, quiet voice,
+as if he were speaking from inside himself, he said:
+
+'I'd marry her if you wanted me to.'
+
+The sick man raised his eyes suddenly, and stared. He stared for a long
+time. The youth looked inscrutably out of the window.
+
+'_You!_' said the sick man, mocking, with some contempt. Hadrian turned
+and met his eyes. The two men had an inexplicable understanding.
+
+'If you wasn't against it,' said Hadrian.
+
+'Nay,' said the father, turning aside, 'I don't think I'm against it.
+I've never thought of it. But--But Emmie's the youngest.'
+
+He had flushed, and looked suddenly more alive. Secretly he loved the
+boy.
+
+'You might ask her,' said Hadrian.
+
+The elder man considered.
+
+'Hadn't you better ask her yourself?' he said.
+
+'She'd take more notice of you,' said Hadrian.
+
+They were both silent. Then Emmie came in.
+
+For two days Mr. Rockley was excited and thoughtful. Hadrian went about
+quietly, secretly, unquestioning. At last the father and daughter were
+alone together. It was very early morning, the father had been in much
+pain. As the pain abated, he lay still, thinking.
+
+'Matilda!' he said suddenly, looking at his daughter.
+
+'Yes, I'm here,' she said.
+
+'Ay! I want you to do something--'
+
+She rose in anticipation.
+
+'Nay, sit still. I want you to marry Hadrian--'
+
+She thought he was raving. She rose, bewildered and frightened.
+
+'Nay, sit you still, sit you still. You hear what I tell you.'
+
+'But you don't know what you're saying, father.'
+
+'Ay, I know well enough. I want you to marry Hadrian, I tell you.'
+
+She was dumbfounded. He was a man of few words.
+
+'You'll do what I tell you,' he said.
+
+She looked at him slowly.
+
+'What put such an idea in your mind?' she said proudly.
+
+'He did.'
+
+Matilda almost looked her father down, her pride was so offended.
+
+'Why, it's disgraceful,' she said.
+
+'Why?'
+
+She watched him slowly.
+
+'What do you ask me for?' she said. 'It's disgusting.'
+
+'The lad's sound enough,' he replied, testily.
+
+'You'd better tell him to clear out,' she said, coldly.
+
+He turned and looked out of the window. She sat flushed and erect for a
+long time. At length her father turned to her, looking really malevolent.
+
+'If you won't,' he said, 'you're a fool, and I'll make you pay for your
+foolishness, do you see?'
+
+Suddenly a cold fear gripped her. She could not believe her senses. She
+was terrified and bewildered. She stared at her father, believing him to
+be delirious, or mad, or drunk. What could she do?
+
+'I tell you,' he said. 'I'll send for Whittle tomorrow if you don't. You
+shall neither of you have anything of mine.'
+
+Whittle was the solicitor. She understood her father well enough: he
+would send for his solicitor, and make a will leaving all his property to
+Hadrian: neither she nor Emmie should have anything. It was too much. She
+rose and went out of the room, up to her own room, where she locked
+herself in.
+
+She did not come out for some hours. At last, late at night, she confided
+in Emmie.
+
+'The sliving demon, he wants the money,' said Emmie. 'My father's out of
+his mind.'
+
+The thought that Hadrian merely wanted the money was another blow to
+Matilda. She did not love the impossible youth--but she had not yet
+learned to think of him as a thing of evil. He now became hideous to her
+mind.
+
+Emmie had a little scene with her father next day.
+
+'You don't mean what you said to our Matilda yesterday, do you, father?'
+she asked aggressively.
+
+'Yes,' he replied.
+
+'What, that you'll alter your will?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'You won't,' said his angry daughter.
+
+But he looked at her with a malevolent little smile.
+
+'Annie!' he shouted. 'Annie!'
+
+He had still power to make his voice carry. The servant maid came in from
+the kitchen.
+
+'Put your things on, and go down to Whittle's office, and say I want to
+see Mr. Whittle as soon as he can, and will he bring a will-form.'
+
+The sick man lay back a little--he could not lie down. His daughter sat
+as if she had been struck. Then she left the room.
+
+Hadrian was pottering about in the garden. She went straight down to him.
+
+'Here,' she said. 'You'd better get off. You'd better take your things
+and go from here, quick.'
+
+Hadrian looked slowly at the infuriated girl.
+
+'Who says so?' he asked.
+
+'_We_ say so--get off, you've done enough mischief and damage.'
+
+'Does Uncle say so?'
+
+'Yes, he does.'
+
+'I'll go and ask him.'
+
+But like a fury Emmie barred his way.
+
+'No, you needn't. You needn't ask him nothing at all. We don't want you,
+so you can go.'
+
+'Uncle's boss here.'
+
+'A man that's dying, and you crawling round and working on him for his
+money!--you're not fit to live.'
+
+'Oh!' he said. 'Who says I'm working for his money?'
+
+'I say. But my father told our Matilda, and _she_ knows what you are.
+_She_ knows what you're after. So you might as well clear out, for all
+you'll get--guttersnipe!'
+
+He turned his back on her, to think. It had not occurred to him that they
+would think he was after the money. He _did_ want the money--badly. He
+badly wanted to be an employer himself, not one of the employed. But he
+knew, in his subtle, calculating way, that it was not for money he wanted
+Matilda. He wanted both the money and Matilda. But he told himself the
+two desires were separate, not one. He could not do with Matilda,
+_without_ the money. But he did not want her _for_ the money.
+
+When he got this clear in his mind, he sought for an opportunity to tell
+it her, lurking and watching. But she avoided him. In the evening the
+lawyer came. Mr. Rockley seemed to have a new access of strength--a will
+was drawn up, making the previous arrangements wholly conditional. The
+old will held good, if Matilda would consent to marry Hadrian. If she
+refused then at the end of six months the whole property passed to
+Hadrian.
+
+Mr. Rockley told this to the young man, with malevolent satisfaction. He
+seemed to have a strange desire, quite unreasonable, for revenge upon the
+women who had surrounded him for so long, and served him so carefully.
+
+'Tell her in front of me,' said Hadrian.
+
+So Mr. Rockley sent for his daughters.
+
+At last they came, pale, mute, stubborn. Matilda seemed to have retired
+far off, Emmie seemed like a fighter ready to fight to the death. The
+sick man reclined on the bed, his eyes bright, his puffed hand trembling.
+But his face had again some of its old, bright handsomeness. Hadrian sat
+quiet, a little aside: the indomitable, dangerous charity boy.
+
+'There's the will,' said their father, pointing them to the paper.
+
+The two women sat mute and immovable, they took no notice.
+
+'Either you marry Hadrian, or he has everything,' said the father with
+satisfaction.
+
+'Then let him have everything,' said Matilda boldly.
+
+'He's not! He's not!' cried Emmie fiercely. 'He's not going to have it.
+The guttersnipe!'
+
+An amused look came on her father's face.
+
+'You hear that, Hadrian,' he said.
+
+'I didn't offer to marry Cousin Matilda for the money,' said Hadrian,
+flushing and moving on his seat.
+
+Matilda looked at him slowly, with her dark-blue, drugged eyes. He seemed
+a strange little monster to her.
+
+'Why, you liar, you know you did,' cried Emmie.
+
+The sick man laughed. Matilda continued to gaze strangely at the young
+man.
+
+'She knows I didn't,' said Hadrian.
+
+He too had his courage, as a rat has indomitable courage in the end.
+Hadrian had some of the neatness, the reserve, the underground quality of
+the rat. But he had perhaps the ultimate courage, the most unquenchable
+courage of all.
+
+Emmie looked at her sister.
+
+'Oh, well,' she said. 'Matilda--don't bother. Let him have everything, we
+can look after ourselves.'
+
+'I know he'll take everything,' said Matilda, abstractedly.
+
+Hadrian did not answer. He knew in fact that if Matilda refused him he
+would take everything, and go off with it.
+
+'A clever little mannie--!' said Emmie, with a jeering grimace.
+
+The father laughed noiselessly to himself. But he was tired....
+
+'Go on, then,' he said. 'Go on, let me be quiet.'
+
+Emmie turned and looked at him.
+
+'You deserve what you've got,' she said to her father bluntly.
+
+'Go on,' he answered mildly. 'Go on.'
+
+Another night passed--a night nurse sat up with Mr. Rockley. Another day
+came. Hadrian was there as ever, in his woollen jersey and coarse khaki
+trousers and bare neck. Matilda went about, frail and distant, Emmie
+black-browed in spite of her blondness. They were all quiet, for they did
+not intend the mystified servant to learn anything.
+
+Mr. Rockley had very bad attacks of pain, he could not breathe. The end
+seemed near. They all went about quiet and stoical, all unyielding.
+Hadrian pondered within himself. If he did not marry Matilda he would go
+to Canada with twenty thousand pounds. This was itself a very
+satisfactory prospect. If Matilda consented he would have nothing--she
+would have her own money.
+
+Emmie was the one to act. She went off in search of the solicitor and
+brought him with her. There was an interview, and Whittle tried to
+frighten the youth into withdrawal--but without avail. The clergyman and
+relatives were summoned--but Hadrian stared at them and took no notice.
+It made him angry, however.
+
+He wanted to catch Matilda alone. Many days went by, and he was not
+successful: she avoided him. At last, lurking, he surprised her one day
+as she came to pick gooseberries, and he cut off her retreat. He came to
+the point at once.
+
+'You don't want me, then?' he said, in his subtle, insinuating voice.
+
+'I don't want to speak to you,' she said, averting her face.
+
+'You put your hand on me, though,' he said. 'You shouldn't have done
+that, and then I should never have thought of it. You shouldn't have
+touched me.'
+
+'If you were anything decent, you'd know that was a mistake, and forget
+it,' she said.
+
+'I know it was a mistake--but I shan't forget it. If you wake a man up,
+he can't go to sleep again because he's told to.'
+
+'If you had any decent feeling in you, you'd have gone away,' she
+replied.
+
+'I didn't want to,' he replied.
+
+She looked away into the distance. At last she asked:
+
+'What do you persecute me for, if it isn't for the money. I'm old enough
+to be your mother. In a way I've been your mother.'
+
+'Doesn't matter,' he said. 'You've been no mother to me. Let us marry and
+go out to Canada--you might as well--you've touched me.'
+
+She was white and trembling. Suddenly she flushed with anger.
+
+'It's so _indecent_,' she said.
+
+'How?' he retorted. 'You touched me.'
+
+But she walked away from him. She felt as if he had trapped her. He was
+angry and depressed, he felt again despised.
+
+That same evening she went into her father's room.
+
+'Yes,' she said suddenly. 'I'll marry him.'
+
+Her father looked up at her. He was in pain, and very ill.
+
+'You like him now, do you?' he said, with a faint smile.
+
+She looked down into his face, and saw death not far off. She turned and
+went coldly out of the room.
+
+The solicitor was sent for, preparations were hastily made. In all the
+interval Matilda did not speak to Hadrian, never answered him if he
+addressed her. He approached her in the morning.
+
+'You've come round to it, then?' he said, giving her a pleasant look from
+his twinkling, almost kindly eyes. She looked down at him and turned
+aside. She looked down on him both literally and figuratively. Still he
+persisted, and triumphed.
+
+Emmie raved and wept, the secret flew abroad. But Matilda was silent and
+unmoved, Hadrian was quiet and satisfied, and nipped with fear also. But
+he held out against his fear. Mr. Rockley was very ill, but unchanged.
+
+On the third day the marriage took place. Matilda and Hadrian drove
+straight home from the registrar, and went straight into the room of the
+dying man. His face lit up with a clear twinkling smile.
+
+'Hadrian--you've got her?' he said, a little hoarsely.
+
+'Yes,' said Hadrian, who was pale round the gills.
+
+'Ay, my lad, I'm glad you're mine,' replied the dying man. Then he turned
+his eyes closely on Matilda.
+
+'Let's look at you, Matilda,' he said. Then his voice went strange and
+unrecognizable. 'Kiss me,' he said.
+
+She stooped and kissed him. She had never kissed him before, not since
+she was a tiny child. But she was quiet, very still.
+
+'Kiss him,' the dying man said.
+
+Obediently, Matilda put forward her mouth and kissed the young husband.
+
+'That's right! That's right!' murmured the dying man.
+
+
+
+
+_Samson and Delilah_
+
+
+A man got down from the motor-omnibus that runs from Penzance to
+St Just-in-Penwith, and turned northwards, uphill towards the Polestar.
+It was only half past six, but already the stars were out, a cold little
+wind was blowing from the sea, and the crystalline, three-pulse flash of
+the lighthouse below the cliffs beat rhythmically in the first darkness.
+
+The man was alone. He went his way unhesitating, but looked from side to
+side with cautious curiosity. Tall, ruined power-houses of tin-mines
+loomed in the darkness from time to time, like remnants of some by-gone
+civilization. The lights of many miners' cottages scattered on the hilly
+darkness twinkled desolate in their disorder, yet twinkled with the
+lonely homeliness of the Celtic night.
+
+He tramped steadily on, always watchful with curiosity. He was a tall,
+well-built man, apparently in the prime of life. His shoulders were
+square and rather stiff, he leaned forwards a little as he went, from the
+hips, like a man who must stoop to lower his height. But he did not stoop
+his shoulders: he bent his straight back from the hips.
+
+Now and again short, stump, thick-legged figures of Cornish miners passed
+him, and he invariably gave them goodnight, as if to insist that he was
+on his own ground. He spoke with the west-Cornish intonation. And as he
+went along the dreary road, looking now at the lights of the dwellings on
+land, now at the lights away to sea, vessels veering round in sight of
+the Longships Lighthouse, the whole of the Atlantic Ocean in darkness and
+space between him and America, he seemed a little excited and pleased
+with himself, watchful, thrilled, veering along in a sense of mastery
+and of power in conflict.
+
+The houses began to close on the road, he was entering the straggling,
+formless, desolate mining village, that he knew of old. On the left was a
+little space set back from the road, and cosy lights of an inn. There it
+was. He peered up at the sign: 'The Tinners' Rest'. But he could not make
+out the name of the proprietor. He listened. There was excited talking
+and laughing, a woman's voice laughing shrilly among the men's.
+
+Stooping a little, he entered the warmly-lit bar. The lamp was burning, a
+buxom woman rose from the white-scrubbed deal table where the black and
+white and red cards were scattered, and several men, miners, lifted their
+faces from the game.
+
+The stranger went to the counter, averting his face. His cap was pulled
+down over his brow.
+
+'Good-evening!' said the landlady, in her rather ingratiating voice.
+
+'Good-evening. A glass of ale.'
+
+'A glass of ale,' repeated the landlady suavely. 'Cold night--but
+bright.'
+
+'Yes,' the man assented, laconically. Then he added, when nobody expected
+him to say any more: 'Seasonable weather.'
+
+'Quite seasonable, quite,' said the landlady. 'Thank you.'
+
+The man lifted his glass straight to his lips, and emptied it. He put it
+down again on the zinc counter with a click.
+
+'Let's have another,' he said.
+
+The woman drew the beer, and the man went away with his glass to the
+second table, near the fire. The woman, after a moment's hesitation, took
+her seat again at the table with the card-players. She had noticed the
+man: a big fine fellow, well dressed, a stranger.
+
+But he spoke with that Cornish-Yankee accent she accepted as the natural
+twang among the miners.
+
+The stranger put his foot on the fender and looked into the fire. He was
+handsome, well coloured, with well-drawn Cornish eyebrows, and the usual
+dark, bright, mindless Cornish eyes. He seemed abstracted in thought.
+Then he watched the card-party.
+
+The woman was buxom and healthy, with dark hair and small, quick brown
+eyes. She was bursting with life and vigour, the energy she threw into
+the game of cards excited all the men, they shouted, and laughed, and the
+woman held her breast, shrieking with laughter.
+
+'Oh, my, it'll be the death o' me,' she panted. 'Now, come on, Mr.
+Trevorrow, play fair. Play fair, I say, or I s'll put the cards down.'
+
+'Play fair! Why who's played unfair?' ejaculated Mr. Trevorrow. 'Do you
+mean t'accuse me, as I haven't played fair, Mrs. Nankervis?'
+
+'I do. I say it, and I mean it. Haven't you got the queen of spades? Now,
+come on, no dodging round me. I know you've got that queen, as well as I
+know my name's Alice.'
+
+'Well--if your name's Alice, you'll have to have it--'
+
+'Ay, now--what did I say? Did you ever see such a man? My word, but your
+missus must be easy took in, by the looks of things.'
+
+And off she went into peals of laughter. She was interrupted by the
+entrance of four men in khaki, a short, stumpy sergeant of middle age, a
+young corporal, and two young privates. The woman leaned back in her
+chair.
+
+'Oh, my!' she cried. 'If there isn't the boys back: looking perished, I
+believe--'
+
+'Perished, Ma!' exclaimed the sergeant. 'Not yet.'
+
+'Near enough,' said a young private, uncouthly.
+
+The woman got up.
+
+'I'm sure you are, my dears. You'll be wanting your suppers, I'll be
+bound.'
+
+'We could do with 'em.'
+
+'Let's have a wet first,' said the sergeant.
+
+The woman bustled about getting the drinks. The soldiers moved to the
+fire, spreading out their hands.
+
+'Have your suppers in here, will you?' she said. 'Or in the kitchen?'
+
+'Let's have it here,' said the sergeant. 'More cosier--_if_ you don't
+mind.'
+
+'You shall have it where you like, boys, where you like.'
+
+She disappeared. In a minute a girl of about sixteen came in. She was
+tall and fresh, with dark, young, expressionless eyes, and well-drawn
+brows, and the immature softness and mindlessness of the sensuous Celtic
+type.
+
+'Ho, Maryann! Evenin', Maryann! How's Maryann, now?' came the multiple
+greeting.
+
+She replied to everybody in a soft voice, a strange, soft _aplomb_ that
+was very attractive. And she moved round with rather mechanical,
+attractive movements, as if her thoughts were elsewhere. But she had
+always this dim far-awayness in her bearing: a sort of modesty. The
+strange man by the fire watched her curiously. There was an alert,
+inquisitive, mindless curiosity on his well-coloured face.
+
+'I'll have a bit of supper with you, if I might,' he said.
+
+She looked at him, with her clear, unreasoning eyes, just like the eyes
+of some non-human creature.
+
+'I'll ask mother,' she said. Her voice was soft-breathing, gently
+singsong.
+
+When she came in again:
+
+'Yes,' she said, almost whispering. 'What will you have?'
+
+'What have you got?' he said, looking up into her face.
+
+'There's cold meat--'
+
+'That's for me, then.'
+
+The stranger sat at the end of the table and ate with the tired, quiet
+soldiers. Now, the landlady was interested in him. Her brow was knit
+rather tense, there was a look of panic in her large, healthy face, but
+her small brown eyes were fixed most dangerously. She was a big woman,
+but her eyes were small and tense. She drew near the stranger. She wore a
+rather loud-patterned flannelette blouse, and a dark skirt.
+
+'What will you have to drink with your supper?' she asked, and there was
+a new, dangerous note in her voice.
+
+He moved uneasily.
+
+'Oh, I'll go on with ale.'
+
+She drew him another glass. Then she sat down on the bench at the table
+with him and the soldiers, and fixed him with her attention.
+
+'You've come from St Just, have you?' she said.
+
+He looked at her with those clear, dark, inscrutable Cornish eyes, and
+answered at length:
+
+'No, from Penzance.'
+
+'Penzance!--but you're not thinking of going back there tonight?'
+
+'No--no.'
+
+He still looked at her with those wide, clear eyes that seemed like very
+bright agate. Her anger began to rise. It was seen on her brow. Yet her
+voice was still suave and deprecating.
+
+'I _thought_ not--but you're not living in these parts, are you?'
+
+'No--no, I'm not living here.' He was always slow in answering, as if
+something intervened between him and any outside question.
+
+'Oh, I see,' she said. 'You've got relations down here.'
+
+Again he looked straight into her eyes, as if looking her into silence.
+
+'Yes,' he said.
+
+He did not say any more. She rose with a flounce. The anger was tight on
+her brow. There was no more laughing and card-playing that evening,
+though she kept up her motherly, suave, good-humoured way with the men.
+But they knew her, they were all afraid of her.
+
+The supper was finished, the table cleared, the stranger did not go. Two
+of the young soldiers went off to bed, with their cheery:
+
+'Good-night, Ma. Good-night, Maryann.'
+
+The stranger talked a little to the sergeant about the war, which was in
+its first year, about the new army, a fragment of which was quartered in
+this district, about America.
+
+The landlady darted looks at him from her small eyes, minute by minute
+the electric storm welled in her bosom, as still he did not go. She was
+quivering with suppressed, violent passion, something frightening and
+abnormal. She could not sit still for a moment. Her heavy form seemed to
+flash with sudden, involuntary movements as the minutes passed by, and
+still he sat there, and the tension on her heart grew unbearable. She
+watched the hands of the dock move on. Three of the soldiers had gone to
+bed, only the crop-headed, terrier-like old sergeant remained.
+
+The landlady sat behind the bar fidgeting spasmodically with the
+newspaper. She looked again at the clock. At last it was five minutes to
+ten.
+
+'Gentlemen--the enemy!' she said, in her diminished, furious voice.
+'Time, please. Time, my dears. And good-night all!'
+
+The men began to drop out, with a brief good-night. It was a minute to
+ten. The landlady rose.
+
+'Come,' she said. 'I'm shutting the door.'
+
+The last of the miners passed out. She stood, stout and menacing, holding
+the door. Still the stranger sat on by the fire, his black overcoat
+opened, smoking.
+
+'We're closed now, sir,' came the perilous, narrowed voice of the
+landlady.
+
+The little, dog-like, hard-headed sergeant touched the arm of the
+stranger.
+
+'Closing time,' he said.
+
+The stranger turned round in his seat, and his quick-moving, dark,
+jewel-like eyes went from the sergeant to the landlady.
+
+'I'm stopping here tonight,' he said, in his laconic Cornish-Yankee
+accent.
+
+The landlady seemed to tower. Her eyes lifted strangely, frightening.
+
+'Oh! indeed!' she cried.' Oh, indeed! And whose orders are those, may I
+ask?'
+
+He looked at her again.
+
+'My orders,' he said.
+
+Involuntarily she shut the door, and advanced like a great, dangerous
+bird. Her voice rose, there was a touch of hoarseness in it.
+
+'And what might _your_ orders be, if you please?' she cried. 'Who might
+_you_ be, to give orders, in the house?'
+
+He sat still, watching her.
+
+'You know who I am,' he said. 'At least, I know who you are.'
+
+'Oh, you do? Oh, do you? And who am _I_ then, if you'll be so good as to
+tell me?'
+
+He stared at her with his bright, dark eyes.
+
+'You're my Missis, you are,' he said. 'And you know it, as well as I do.'
+
+She started as if something had exploded in her.
+
+Her eyes lifted and flared madly.
+
+'_Do_ I know it, indeed!' she cried. 'I know no such thing! I know no
+such thing! Do you think a man's going to walk into this bar, and tell me
+off-hand I'm his Missis, and I'm going to believe him?--I say to you,
+whoever you may be, you're mistaken. I know myself for no Missis of
+yours, and I'll thank you to go out of this house, this minute, before I
+get those that will put you out.'
+
+The man rose to his feet, stretching his head towards her a little. He
+was a handsomely built Cornishman in the prime of life.
+
+'What you say, eh? You don't know me?' he said, in his sing-song voice,
+emotionless, but rather smothered and pressing: it reminded one of the
+girl's. 'I should know you anywhere, you see. I should! I shouldn't have
+to look twice to know you, you see. You see, now, don't you?'
+
+The woman was baffled.
+
+'So you may say,' she replied, staccato. 'So you may say. That's easy
+enough. My name's known, and respected, by most people for ten miles
+round. But I don't know _you_.'
+
+Her voice ran to sarcasm. 'I can't say I know _you_. You're a _perfect_
+stranger to me, and I don't believe I've ever set eyes on you before
+tonight.'
+
+Her voice was very flexible and sarcastic.
+
+'Yes, you have,' replied the man, in his reasonable way.' Yes, you have.
+Your name's my name, and that girl Maryann is my girl; she's my daughter.
+You're my Missis right enough. As sure as I'm Willie Nankervis.'
+
+He spoke as if it were an accepted fact. His face was handsome, with a
+strange, watchful alertness and a fundamental fixity of intention that
+maddened her.
+
+'You villain!' she cried. 'You villain, to come to this house and dare to
+speak to me. You villain, you down-right rascal!'
+
+He looked at her.
+
+'Ay,' he said, unmoved. 'All that.' He was uneasy before her. Only he was
+not afraid of her. There was something impenetrable about him, like his
+eyes, which were as bright as agate.
+
+She towered, and drew near to him menacingly.
+
+'You're going out of this house, aren't you?'--She stamped her foot in
+sudden madness. '_This minute!_'
+
+He watched her. He knew she wanted to strike him.
+
+'No,' he said, with suppressed emphasis. 'I've told you, I'm stopping
+here.'
+
+He was afraid of her personality, but it did not alter him. She wavered.
+Her small, tawny-brown eyes concentrated in a point of vivid, sightless
+fury, like a tiger's. The man was wincing, but he stood his ground. Then
+she bethought herself. She would gather her forces.
+
+'We'll see whether you're stopping here,' she said. And she turned, with
+a curious, frightening lifting of her eyes, and surged out of the room.
+The man, listening, heard her go upstairs, heard her tapping at a bedroom
+door, heard her saying: 'Do you mind coming down a minute, boys? I want
+you. I'm in trouble.'
+
+The man in the bar took off his cap and his black overcoat, and threw
+them on the seat behind him. His black hair was short and touched with
+grey at the temples. He wore a well-cut, well-fitting suit of dark grey,
+American in style, and a turn-down collar. He looked well-to-do, a fine,
+solid figure of a man. The rather rigid look of the shoulders came from
+his having had his collar-bone twice broken in the mines.
+
+The little terrier of a sergeant, in dirty khaki, looked at him
+furtively.
+
+'She's your Missis?' he asked, jerking his head in the direction of the
+departed woman.
+
+'Yes, she is,' barked the man. 'She's that, sure enough.'
+
+'Not seen her for a long time, haven't ye?'
+
+'Sixteen years come March month.'
+
+'Hm!'
+
+And the sergeant laconically resumed his smoking.
+
+The landlady was coming back, followed by the three young soldiers, who
+entered rather sheepishly, in trousers and shirt and stocking-feet. The
+woman stood histrionically at the end of the bar, and exclaimed:
+
+'That man refuses to leave the house, claims he's stopping the night
+here. You know very well I have no bed, don't you? And this house doesn't
+accommodate travellers. Yet he's going to stop in spite of all! But not
+while I've a drop of blood in my body, that I declare with my dying
+breath. And not if you men are worth the name of men, and will help a
+woman as has no one to help her.'
+
+Her eyes sparkled, her face was flushed pink. She was drawn up like an
+Amazon.
+
+The young soldiers did not quite know what to do. They looked at the man,
+they looked at the sergeant, one of them looked down and fastened his
+braces on the second button.
+
+'What say, sergeant?' asked one whose face twinkled for a little
+devilment.
+
+'Man says he's husband to Mrs. Nankervis,' said the sergeant.
+
+'He's no husband of mine. I declare I never set eyes on him before this
+night. It's a dirty trick, nothing else, it's a dirty trick.'
+
+'Why, you're a liar, saying you never set eyes on me before,' barked the
+man near the hearth. 'You're married to me, and that girl Maryann you had
+by me--well enough you know it.'
+
+The young soldiers looked on in delight, the sergeant smoked imperturbed.
+
+'Yes,' sang the landlady, slowly shaking her head in supreme sarcasm, 'it
+sounds very pretty, doesn't it? But you see we don't believe a word of
+it, and _how_ are you going to prove it?' She smiled nastily.
+
+The man watched in silence for a moment, then he said:
+
+'It wants no proof.'
+
+'Oh, yes, but it does! Oh, yes, but it does, sir, it wants a lot of
+proving!' sang the lady's sarcasm. 'We're not such gulls as all that, to
+swallow your words whole.'
+
+But he stood unmoved near the fire. She stood with one hand resting on
+the zinc-covered bar, the sergeant sat with legs crossed, smoking, on the
+seat halfway between them, the three young soldiers in their shirts and
+braces stood wavering in the gloom behind the bar. There was silence.
+
+'Do you know anything of the whereabouts of your husband, Mrs. Nankervis?
+Is he still living?' asked the sergeant, in his judicious fashion.
+
+Suddenly the landlady began to cry, great scalding tears, that left the
+young men aghast.
+
+'I know nothing of him,' she sobbed, feeling for her pocket handkerchief.
+'He left me when Maryann was a baby, went mining to America, and after
+about six months never wrote a line nor sent me a penny bit. I can't say
+whether he's alive or dead, the villain. All I've heard of him's to the
+bad--and I've heard nothing for years an' all, now.' She sobbed
+violently.
+
+The golden-skinned, handsome man near the fire watched her as she wept.
+He was frightened, he was troubled, he was bewildered, but none of his
+emotions altered him underneath.
+
+There was no sound in the room but the violent sobbing of the landlady.
+The men, one and all, were overcome.
+
+'Don't you think as you'd better go, for tonight?' said the sergeant to
+the man, with sweet reasonableness. 'You'd better leave it a bit, and
+arrange something between you. You can't have much claim on a woman, I
+should imagine, if it's how she says. And you've come down on her a bit
+too sudden-like.'
+
+The landlady sobbed heart-brokenly. The man watched her large breasts
+shaken. They seemed to cast a spell over his mind.
+
+'How I've treated her, that's no matter,' he replied. 'I've come back,
+and I'm going to stop in my own home--for a bit, anyhow. There you've got
+it.'
+
+'A dirty action,' said the sergeant, his face flushing dark. 'A dirty
+action, to come, after deserting a woman for that number of years, and
+want to force yourself on her! A dirty action--as isn't allowed by the
+law.'
+
+The landlady wiped her eyes.
+
+'Never you mind about law nor nothing,' cried the man, in a strange,
+strong voice. 'I'm not moving out of this public tonight.'
+
+The woman turned to the soldiers behind her, and said in a wheedling,
+sarcastic tone:
+
+'Are we going to stand it, boys?--Are we going to be done like this,
+Sergeant Thomas, by a scoundrel and a bully as has led a life beyond
+_mention_, in those American mining-camps, and then wants to come back
+and make havoc of a poor woman's life and savings, after having left her
+with a baby in arms to struggle as best she might? It's a crying shame if
+nobody will stand up for me--a crying shame--!'
+
+The soldiers and the little sergeant were bristling. The woman stooped
+and rummaged under the counter for a minute. Then, unseen to the man away
+near the fire, she threw out a plaited grass rope, such as is used for
+binding bales, and left it lying near the feet of the young soldiers, in
+the gloom at the back of the bar.
+
+Then she rose and fronted the situation.
+
+'Come now,' she said to the man, in a reasonable, coldly-coaxing tone,
+'put your coat on and leave us alone. Be a man, and not worse than a
+brute of a German. You can get a bed easy enough in St Just, and if
+you've nothing to pay for it sergeant would lend you a couple of
+shillings, I'm sure he would.'
+
+All eyes were fixed on the man. He was looking down at the woman like a
+creature spell-bound or possessed by some devil's own intention.
+
+'I've got money of my own,' he said. 'Don't you be frightened for your
+money, I've plenty of that, for the time.'
+
+'Well, then,' she coaxed, in a cold, almost sneering propitiation, 'put
+your coat on and go where you're wanted--be a _man_, not a brute of a
+German.'
+
+She had drawn quite near to him, in her challenging coaxing intentness.
+He looked down at her with his bewitched face.
+
+'No, I shan't,' he said. 'I shan't do no such thing. _You'll_ put me up
+for tonight.'
+
+'Shall I!' she cried. And suddenly she flung her arms round him, hung on
+to him with all her powerful weight, calling to the soldiers: 'Get the
+rope, boys, and fasten him up. Alfred--John, quick now--'
+
+The man reared, looked round with maddened eyes, and heaved his powerful
+body. But the woman was powerful also, and very heavy, and was clenched
+with the determination of death. Her face, with its exulting, horribly
+vindictive look, was turned up to him from his own breast; he reached
+back his head frantically, to get away from it. Meanwhile the young
+soldiers, after having watched this frightful Laocoon swaying for a
+moment, stirred, and the malicious one darted swiftly with the rope. It
+was tangled a little.
+
+'Give me the end here,' cried the sergeant.
+
+Meanwhile the big man heaved and struggled, swung the woman round against
+the seat and the table, in his convulsive effort to get free. But she
+pinned down his arms like a cuttlefish wreathed heavily upon him. And he
+heaved and swayed, and they crashed about the room, the soldiers hopping,
+the furniture bumping.
+
+The young soldier had got the rope once round, the brisk sergeant helping
+him. The woman sank heavily lower, they got the rope round several times.
+In the struggle the victim fell over against the table. The ropes
+tightened till they cut his arms. The woman clung to his knees. Another
+soldier ran in a flash of genius, and fastened the strange man's feet
+with the pair of braces. Seats had crashed over, the table was thrown
+against the wall, but the man was bound, his arms pinned against his
+sides, his feet tied. He lay half fallen, sunk against the table, still
+for a moment.
+
+The woman rose, and sank, faint, on to the seat against the wall. Her
+breast heaved, she could not speak, she thought she was going to die. The
+bound man lay against the overturned table, his coat all twisted and
+pulled up beneath the ropes, leaving the loins exposed. The soldiers
+stood around, a little dazed, but excited with the row.
+
+The man began to struggle again, heaving instinctively against the ropes,
+taking great, deep breaths. His face, with its golden skin, flushed dark
+and surcharged, he heaved again. The great veins in his neck stood out.
+But it was no good, he went relaxed. Then again, suddenly, he jerked his
+feet.
+
+'Another pair of braces, William,' cried the excited soldier. He threw
+himself on the legs of the bound man, and managed to fasten the knees.
+Then again there was stillness. They could hear the clock tick.
+
+The woman looked at the prostrate figure, the strong, straight limbs, the
+strong back bound in subjection, the wide-eyed face that reminded her of
+a calf tied in a sack in a cart, only its head stretched dumbly
+backwards. And she triumphed.
+
+The bound-up body began to struggle again. She watched fascinated the
+muscles working, the shoulders, the hips, the large, clean thighs. Even
+now he might break the ropes. She was afraid. But the lively young
+soldier sat on the shoulders of the bound man, and after a few perilous
+moments, there was stillness again.
+
+'Now,' said the judicious sergeant to the bound man, 'if we untie you,
+will you promise to go off and make no more trouble.'
+
+'You'll not untie him in here,' cried the woman. 'I wouldn't trust him as
+far as I could blow him.'
+
+There was silence.
+
+'We might carry him outside, and undo him there,' said the soldier. 'Then
+we could get the policeman, if he made any bother.'
+
+'Yes,' said the sergeant. 'We could do that.' Then again, in an altered,
+almost severe tone, to the prisoner. 'If we undo you outside, will you
+take your coat and go without creating any more disturbance?'
+
+But the prisoner would not answer, he only lay with wide, dark, bright,
+eyes, like a bound animal. There was a space of perplexed silence.
+
+'Well, then, do as you say,' said the woman irritably. 'Carry him out
+amongst you, and let us shut up the house.'
+
+They did so. Picking up the bound man, the four soldiers staggered
+clumsily into the silent square in front of the inn, the woman following
+with the cap and the overcoat. The young soldiers quickly unfastened the
+braces from the prisoner's legs, and they hopped indoors. They were in
+their stocking-feet, and outside the stars flashed cold. They stood in
+the doorway watching. The man lay quite still on the cold ground.
+
+'Now,' said the sergeant, in a subdued voice, 'I'll loosen the knot, and
+he can work himself free, if you go in, Missis.'
+
+She gave a last look at the dishevelled, bound man, as he sat on the
+ground. Then she went indoors, followed quickly by the sergeant. Then
+they were heard locking and barring the door.
+
+The man seated on the ground outside worked and strained at the rope. But
+it was not so easy to undo himself even now. So, with hands bound, making
+an effort, he got on his feet, and went and worked the cord against the
+rough edge of an old wall. The rope, being of a kind of plaited grass,
+soon frayed and broke, and he freed himself. He had various contusions.
+His arms were hurt and bruised from the bonds. He rubbed them slowly.
+Then he pulled his clothes straight, stooped, put on his cap, struggled
+into his overcoat, and walked away.
+
+The stars were very brilliant. Clear as crystal, the beam from the
+lighthouse under the cliffs struck rhythmically on the night. Dazed, the
+man walked along the road past the churchyard. Then he stood leaning up
+against a wall, for a long time.
+
+He was roused because his feet were so cold. So he pulled himself
+together, and turned again in the silent night, back towards the inn.
+
+The bar was in darkness. But there was a light in the kitchen. He
+hesitated. Then very quietly he tried the door.
+
+He was surprised to find it open. He entered, and quietly closed it
+behind him. Then he went down the step past the bar-counter, and through
+to the lighted doorway of the kitchen. There sat his wife, planted in
+front of the range, where a furze fire was burning. She sat in a chair
+full in front of the range, her knees wide apart on the fender. She
+looked over her shoulder at him as he entered, but she did not speak.
+Then she stared in the fire again.
+
+It was a small, narrow kitchen. He dropped his cap on the table that was
+covered with yellowish American cloth, and took a seat with his back to
+the wall, near the oven. His wife still sat with her knees apart, her
+feet on the steel fender and stared into the fire, motionless. Her skin
+was smooth and rosy in the firelight. Everything in the house was very
+clean and bright. The man sat silent, too, his head dropped. And thus
+they remained.
+
+It was a question who would speak first. The woman leaned forward and
+poked the ends of the sticks in between the bars of the range. He lifted
+his head and looked at her.
+
+'Others gone to bed, have they?' he asked.
+
+But she remained closed in silence.
+
+''S a cold night, out,' he said, as if to himself.
+
+And he laid his large, yet well-shapen workman's hand on the top of the
+stove, that was polished black and smooth as velvet. She would not look
+at him, yet she glanced out of the corners of her eyes.
+
+His eyes were fixed brightly on her, the pupils large and electric like
+those of a cat.
+
+'I should have picked you out among thousands,' he said. 'Though you're
+bigger than I'd have believed. Fine flesh you've made.'
+
+She was silent for some time. Then she turned in her chair upon him.
+
+'What do you think of yourself,' she said, 'coming back on me like this
+after over fifteen years? You don't think I've not heard of you, neither,
+in Butte City and elsewhere?'
+
+He was watching her with his clear, translucent, unchallenged eyes.
+
+'Yes,' he said. 'Chaps comes an' goes--I've heard tell of you from time
+to time.'
+
+She drew herself up.
+
+'And what lies have you heard about _me_?' she demanded superbly.
+
+'I dunno as I've heard any lies at all--'cept as you was getting on very
+well, like.'
+
+His voice ran warily and detached. Her anger stirred again in her
+violently. But she subdued it, because of the danger there was in him,
+and more, perhaps, because of the beauty of his head and his level drawn
+brows, which she could not bear to forfeit.
+
+'That's more than I can say of _you_,' she said. 'I've heard more harm
+than good about _you_.'
+
+'Ay, I dessay,' he said, looking in the fire. It was a long time since he
+had seen the furze burning, he said to himself. There was a silence,
+during which she watched his face.
+
+'Do you call yourself a _man_?' she said, more in contemptuous reproach
+than in anger. 'Leave a woman as you've left me, you don't care to
+what!--and then to turn up in _this_ fashion, without a word to say for
+yourself.'
+
+He stirred in his chair, planted his feet apart, and resting his arms on
+his knees, looked steadily into the fire, without answering. So near to
+her was his head, and the close black hair, she could scarcely refrain
+from starting away, as if it would bite her.
+
+'Do you call that the action of a _man_?' she repeated.
+
+'No,' he said, reaching and poking the bits of wood into the fire with
+his fingers. 'I didn't call it anything, as I know of. It's no good
+calling things by any names whatsoever, as I know of.'
+
+She watched him in his actions. There was a longer and longer pause
+between each speech, though neither knew it.
+
+'I _wonder_ what you think of yourself!' she exclaimed, with vexed
+emphasis. 'I _wonder_ what sort of a fellow you take yourself to be!' She
+was really perplexed as well as angry.
+
+'Well,' he said, lifting his head to look at her, 'I guess I'll answer
+for my own faults, if everybody else'll answer for theirs.'
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot as he lifted his face to her. She breathed
+heavily, averting her face, almost losing her self-control.
+
+'And what do you take _me_ to be?' she cried, in real helplessness.
+
+His face was lifted watching her, watching her soft, averted face, and
+the softly heaving mass of her breasts.
+
+'I take you,' he said, with that laconic truthfulness which exercised
+such power over her, 'to be the deuce of a fine woman--darn me if you're
+not as fine a built woman as I've seen, handsome with it as well. I
+shouldn't have expected you to put on such handsome flesh: 'struth I
+shouldn't.'
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot, as he watched her with those bright agate eyes,
+fixedly.
+
+'Been very handsome to _you_, for fifteen years, my sakes!' she replied.
+
+He made no answer to this, but sat with his bright, quick eyes upon her.
+
+Then he rose. She started involuntarily. But he only said, in his
+laconic, measured way:
+
+'It's warm in here now.'
+
+And he pulled off his overcoat, throwing it on the table. She sat as if
+slightly cowed, whilst he did so.
+
+'Them ropes has given my arms something, by Ga-ard,' he drawled, feeling
+his arms with his hands.
+
+Still she sat in her chair before him, slightly cowed.
+
+'You was sharp, wasn't you, to catch me like that, eh?' he smiled slowly.
+'By Ga-ard, you had me fixed proper, proper you had. Darn me, you fixed
+me up proper--proper, you did.'
+
+He leaned forwards in his chair towards her.
+
+'I don't think no worse of you for it, no, darned if I do. Fine pluck in
+a woman's what I admire. That I do, indeed.'
+
+She only gazed into the fire.
+
+'We fet from the start, we did. And, my word, you begin again quick the
+minute you see me, you did. Darn me, you was too sharp for me. A darn
+fine woman, puts up a darn good fight. Darn me if I could find a woman in
+all the darn States as could get me down like that. Wonderful fine woman
+you be, truth to say, at this minute.'
+
+She only sat glowering into the fire.
+
+'As grand a pluck as a man could wish to find in a woman, true as I'm
+here,' he said, reaching forward his hand and tentatively touching her
+between her full, warm breasts, quietly.
+
+She started, and seemed to shudder. But his hand insinuated itself
+between her breasts, as she continued to gaze in the fire.
+
+'And don't you think I've come back here a-begging,' he said. 'I've more
+than _one_ thousand pounds to my name, I have. And a bit of a fight for a
+how-de-do pleases me, that it do. But that doesn't mean as you're going
+to deny as you're my Missis....'
+
+
+
+
+_The Primrose Path_
+
+
+A young man came out of the Victoria station, looking undecidedly at
+the taxi-cabs, dark-red and black, pressing against the kerb under the
+glass-roof. Several men in greatcoats and brass buttons jerked themselves
+erect to catch his attention, at the same time keeping an eye on the
+other people as they filtered through the open doorways of the station.
+Berry, however, was occupied by one of the men, a big, burly fellow whose
+blue eyes glared back and whose red-brown moustache bristled in defiance.
+
+'Do you _want_ a cab, sir?' the man asked, in a half-mocking, challenging
+voice.
+
+Berry hesitated still.
+
+'Are you Daniel Sutton?' he asked.
+
+'Yes,' replied the other defiantly, with uneasy conscience.
+
+'Then you are my uncle,' said Berry.
+
+They were alike in colouring, and somewhat in features, but the taxi
+driver was a powerful, well-fleshed man who glared at the world
+aggressively, being really on the defensive against his own heart. His
+nephew, of the same height, was thin, well-dressed, quiet and indifferent
+in his manner. And yet they were obviously kin.
+
+'And who the devil are you?' asked the taxi driver.
+
+'I'm Daniel Berry,' replied the nephew.
+
+'Well, I'm damned--never saw you since you were a kid.'
+
+Rather awkwardly at this late hour the two shook hands.
+
+'How are you, lad?'
+
+'All right. I thought you were in Australia.'
+
+'Been back three months--bought a couple of these damned things'--he
+kicked the tyre of his taxi-cab in affectionate disgust. There was a
+moment's silence.
+
+'Oh, but I'm going back out there. I can't stand this cankering,
+rotten-hearted hell of a country any more; you want to come out to Sydney
+with me, lad. That's the place for you--beautiful place, oh, you could
+wish for nothing better. And money in it, too.--How's your mother?'
+
+'She died at Christmas,' said the young man.
+
+'Dead! What!--our Anna!' The big man's eyes stared, and he recoiled in
+fear. 'God, lad,' he said, 'that's three of 'em gone!'
+
+The two men looked away at the people passing along the pale grey
+pavements, under the wall of Trinity Church.
+
+'Well, strike me lucky!' said the taxi driver at last, out of breath.
+'She wor th' best o' th' bunch of 'em. I see nowt nor hear nowt from
+any of 'em--they're not worth it, I'll be damned if they are--our
+sermon-lapping Adela and Maud,' he looked scornfully at his nephew. 'But
+she was the best of 'em, our Anna was, that's a fact.'
+
+He was talking because he was afraid.
+
+'An' after a hard life like she'd had. How old was she, lad?'
+
+'Fifty-five.'
+
+'Fifty-five ...' He hesitated. Then, in a rather hushed voice, he asked
+the question that frightened him:
+
+'And what was it, then?'
+
+'Cancer.'
+
+'Cancer again, like Julia! I never knew there was cancer in our family.
+Oh, my good God, our poor Anna, after the life she'd had!--What, lad, do
+you see any God at the back of that?--I'm damned if I do.'
+
+He was glaring, very blue-eyed and fierce, at his nephew. Berry lifted
+his shoulders slightly.
+
+'God?' went on the taxi driver, in a curious intense tone, 'You've only
+to look at the folk in the street to know there's nothing keeps it going
+but gravitation. Look at 'em. Look at him!'--A mongrel-looking man was
+nosing past. 'Wouldn't _he_ murder you for your watch-chain, but that
+he's afraid of society. He's got it _in_ him.... Look at 'em.'
+
+Berry watched the towns-people go by, and, sensitively feeling his
+uncle's antipathy, it seemed he was watching a sort of _danse macabre_ of
+ugly criminals.
+
+'Did you ever see such a God-forsaken crew creeping about! It gives you
+the very horrors to look at 'em. I sit in this damned car and watch 'em
+till, I can tell you, I feel like running the cab amuck among 'em, and
+running myself to kingdom come--'
+
+Berry wondered at this outburst. He knew his uncle was the black-sheep,
+the youngest, the darling of his mother's family. He knew him to be at
+outs with respectability, mixing with the looser, sporting type, all
+betting and drinking and showing dogs and birds, and racing. As a critic
+of life, however, he did not know him. But the young man felt curiously
+understanding. 'He uses words like I do, he talks nearly as I talk,
+except that I shouldn't say those things. But I might feel like that, in
+myself, if I went a certain road.'
+
+'I've got to go to Watmore,' he said. 'Can you take me?'
+
+'When d'you want to go?' asked the uncle fiercely.
+
+'Now.'
+
+'Come on, then. What d'yer stand gassin' on th' causeway for?'
+
+The nephew took his seat beside the driver. The cab began to quiver, then
+it started forward with a whirr. The uncle, his hands and feet acting
+mechanically, kept his blue eyes fixed on the highroad into whose traffic
+the car was insinuating its way. Berry felt curiously as if he were
+sitting beside an older development of himself. His mind went back to his
+mother. She had been twenty years older than this brother of hers whom
+she had loved so dearly. 'He was one of the most affectionate little
+lads, and such a curly head! I could never have believed he would grow
+into the great, coarse bully he is--for he's nothing else. My father made
+a god of him--well, it's a good thing his father is dead. He got in with
+that sporting gang, that's what did it. Things were made too easy for
+him, and so he thought of no one but himself, and this is the result.'
+
+Not that 'Joky' Sutton was so very black a sheep. He had lived idly till
+he was eighteen, then had suddenly married a young, beautiful girl with
+clear brows and dark grey eyes, a factory girl. Having taken her to live
+with his parents he, lover of dogs and pigeons, went on to the staff
+of a sporting paper. But his wife was without uplift or warmth. Though
+they made money enough, their house was dark and cold and uninviting.
+He had two or three dogs, and the whole attic was turned into a great
+pigeon-house. He and his wife lived together roughly, with no warmth, no
+refinement, no touch of beauty anywhere, except that she was beautiful.
+He was a blustering, impetuous man, she was rather cold in her soul, did
+not care about anything very much, was rather capable and close with
+money. And she had a common accent in her speech. He outdid her a
+thousand times in coarse language, and yet that cold twang in her voice
+tortured him with shame that he stamped down in bullying and in becoming
+more violent in his own speech.
+
+Only his dogs adored him, and to them, and to his pigeons, he talked with
+rough, yet curiously tender caresses while they leaped and fluttered for
+joy.
+
+After he and his wife had been married for seven years a little girl was
+born to them, then later, another. But the husband and wife drew no
+nearer together. She had an affection for her children almost like a cool
+governess. He had an emotional man's fear of sentiment, which helped to
+nip his wife from putting out any shoots. He treated his children
+roughly, and pretended to think it a good job when one was adopted by a
+well-to-do maternal aunt. But in his soul he hated his wife that she
+could give away one of his children. For after her cool fashion, she
+loved him. With a chaos of a man such as he, she had no chance of being
+anything but cold and hard, poor thing. For she did love him.
+
+In the end he fell absurdly and violently in love with a rather
+sentimental young woman who read Browning. He made his wife an allowance
+and established a new mnage with the young lady, shortly after
+emigrating with her to Australia. Meanwhile his wife had gone to live
+with a publican, a widower, with whom she had had one of those curious,
+tacit understandings of which quiet women are capable, something like an
+arrangement for provision in the future.
+
+This was as much as the nephew knew. He sat beside his uncle, wondering
+how things stood at the present. They raced lightly out past the cemetery
+and along the boulevard, then turned into the rather grimy country. The
+mud flew out on either side, there was a fine mist of rain which blew in
+their faces. Berry covered himself up.
+
+In the lanes the high hedges shone black with rain. The silvery grey sky,
+faintly dappled, spread wide over the low, green land. The elder man
+glanced fiercely up the road, then turned his red face to his nephew.
+
+'And how're you going on, lad?' he said loudly. Berry noticed that his
+uncle was slightly uneasy of him. It made him also uncomfortable. The
+elder man had evidently something pressing on his soul.
+
+'Who are you living with in town?' asked the nephew. 'Have you gone back
+to Aunt Maud?'
+
+'No,' barked the uncle. 'She wouldn't have me. I offered to--I want
+to--but she wouldn't.'
+
+'You're alone, then?'
+
+'No, I'm not alone.'
+
+He turned and glared with his fierce blue eyes at his nephew, but said no
+more for some time. The car ran on through the mud, under the wet wall of
+the park.
+
+'That other devil tried to poison me,' suddenly shouted the elder man.
+'The one I went to Australia with.' At which, in spite of himself, the
+younger smiled in secret.
+
+'How was that?' he asked.
+
+'Wanted to get rid of me. She got in with another fellow on the
+ship.... By Jove, I was bad.'
+
+'Where?--on the ship?'
+
+'No,' bellowed the other. 'No. That was in Wellington, New Zealand. I was
+bad, and got lower an' lower--couldn't think what was up. I could hardly
+crawl about. As certain as I'm here, she was poisoning me, to get to th'
+other chap--I'm certain of it.'
+
+'And what did you do?'
+
+'I cleared out--went to Sydney--'
+
+'And left her?'
+
+'Yes, I thought begod, I'd better clear out if I wanted to live.'
+
+'And you were all right in Sydney?'
+
+'Better in no time--I _know_ she was putting poison in my coffee.'
+
+'Hm!'
+
+There was a glum silence. The driver stared at the road ahead, fixedly,
+managing the car as if it were a live thing. The nephew felt that his
+uncle was afraid, quite stupefied with fear, fear of life, of death, of
+himself.
+
+'You're in rooms, then?' asked the nephew.
+
+'No, I'm in a house of my own,' said the uncle defiantly, 'wi' th' best
+little woman in th' Midlands. She's a marvel.--Why don't you come an' see
+us?'
+
+'I will. Who is she?'
+
+'Oh, she's a good girl--a beautiful little thing. I was clean gone
+on her first time I saw her. An' she was on me. Her mother lives with
+us--respectable girl, none o' your....'
+
+'And how old is she?'
+
+'--how old is she?--she's twenty-one.'
+
+'Poor thing.'
+
+'_She's_ right enough.'
+
+'You'd marry her--getting a divorce--?'
+
+'I shall marry her.'
+
+There was a little antagonism between the two men.
+
+'Where's Aunt Maud?' asked the younger.
+
+'She's at the Railway Arms--we passed it, just against Rollin's Mill
+Crossing.... They sent me a note this morning to go an' see her when I
+can spare time. She's got consumption.'
+
+'Good Lord! Are you going?'
+
+'Yes--'
+
+But again Berry felt that his uncle was afraid.
+
+The young man got through his commission in the village, had a drink with
+his uncle at the inn, and the two were returning home. The elder man's
+subject of conversation was Australia. As they drew near the town they
+grew silent, thinking both of the public-house. At last they saw the
+gates of the railway crossing were closed before them.
+
+'Shan't you call?' asked Berry, jerking his head in the direction of the
+inn, which stood at the corner between two roads, its sign hanging under
+a bare horse-chestnut tree in front.
+
+'I might as well. Come in an' have a drink,' said the uncle.
+
+It had been raining all the morning, so shallow pools of water lay about.
+A brewer's wagon, with wet barrels and warm-smelling horses, stood near
+the door of the inn. Everywhere seemed silent, but for the rattle of
+trains at the crossing. The two men went uneasily up the steps and into
+the bar. The place was paddled with wet feet, empty. As the bar-man was
+heard approaching, the uncle asked, his usual bluster slightly hushed by
+fear:
+
+'What yer goin' ta have, lad? Same as last time?'
+
+A man entered, evidently the proprietor. He was good-looking, with a
+long, heavy face and quick, dark eyes. His glance at Sutton was swift, a
+start, a recognition, and a withdrawal, into heavy neutrality.
+
+'How are yer, Dan?' he said, scarcely troubling to speak.
+
+'Are yer, George?' replied Sutton, hanging back. 'My nephew, Dan Berry.
+Give us Red Seal, George.'
+
+The publican nodded to the younger man, and set the glasses on the bar.
+He pushed forward the two glasses, then leaned back in the dark corner
+behind the door, his arms folded, evidently preferring to get back from
+the watchful eyes of the nephew.
+
+'--'s luck,' said Sutton.
+
+The publican nodded in acknowledgement. Sutton and his nephew drank.
+
+'Why the hell don't you get that road mended in Cinder Hill--,' said
+Sutton fiercely, pushing back his driver's cap and showing his short-cut,
+bristling hair.
+
+'They can't find it in their hearts to pull it up,' replied the publican,
+laconically.
+
+'Find in their hearts! They want settin' in barrows an' runnin' up an'
+down it till they cried for mercy.'
+
+Sutton put down his glass. The publican renewed it with a sure hand, at
+ease in whatsoever he did. Then he leaned back against the bar. He wore
+no coat. He stood with arms folded, his chin on his chest, his long
+moustache hanging. His back was round and slack, so that the lower part
+of his abdomen stuck forward, though he was not stout. His cheek was
+healthy, brown-red, and he was muscular. Yet there was about him this
+physical slackness, a reluctance in his slow, sure movements. His eyes
+were keen under his dark brows, but reluctant also, as if he were
+gloomily apathetic.
+
+There was a halt. The publican evidently would say nothing. Berry looked
+at the mahogany bar-counter, slopped with beer, at the whisky-bottles on
+the shelves. Sutton, his cap pushed back, showing a white brow above a
+weather-reddened face, rubbed his cropped hair uneasily.
+
+The publican glanced round suddenly. It seemed that only his dark eyes
+moved.
+
+'Going up?' he asked.
+
+And something, perhaps his eyes, indicated the unseen bed-chamber.
+
+'Ay--that's what I came for,' replied Sutton, shifting nervously from one
+foot to the other. 'She's been asking for me?'
+
+'This morning,' replied the publican, neutral.
+
+Then he put up a flap of the bar, and turned away through the dark
+doorway behind. Sutton, pulling off his cap, showing a round,
+short-cropped head which now was ducked forward, followed after him, the
+buttons holding the strap of his great-coat behind glittering for a
+moment.
+
+They climbed the dark stairs, the husband placing his feet carefully,
+because of his big boots. Then he followed down the passage, trying
+vaguely to keep a grip on his bowels, which seemed to be melting away,
+and definitely wishing for a neat brandy. The publican opened a door.
+Sutton, big and burly in his great-coat, went past him.
+
+The bedroom seemed light and warm after the passage. There was a red
+eider-down on the bed. Then, making an effort, Sutton turned his eyes to
+see the sick woman. He met her eyes direct, dark, dilated. It was such a
+shock he almost started away. For a second he remained in torture, as if
+some invisible flame were playing on him to reduce his bones and fuse him
+down. Then he saw the sharp white edge of her jaw, and the black hair
+beside the hollow cheek. With a start he went towards the bed.
+
+'Hello, Maud!' he said. 'Why, what ye been doin'?'
+
+The publican stood at the window with his back to the bed. The husband,
+like one condemned but on the point of starting away, stood by the
+bedside staring in horror at his wife, whose dilated grey eyes, nearly
+all black now, watched him wearily, as if she were looking at something a
+long way off.
+
+Going exceedingly pale, he jerked up his head and stared at the wall over
+the pillows. There was a little coloured picture of a bird perched on a
+bell, and a nest among ivy leaves beneath. It appealed to him, made him
+wonder, roused a feeling of childish magic in him. They were wonderfully
+fresh, green ivy leaves, and nobody had seen the nest among them save
+him.
+
+Then suddenly he looked down again at the face on the bed, to try and
+recognize it. He knew the white brow and the beautiful clear eyebrows.
+That was his wife, with whom he had passed his youth, flesh of his flesh,
+his, himself. Then those tired eyes, which met his again from a long way
+off, disturbed him until he did not know where he was. Only the sunken
+cheeks, and the mouth that seemed to protrude now were foreign to him,
+and filled him with horror. It seemed he lost his identity. He was the
+young husband of the woman with the clear brows; he was the married man
+fighting with her whose eyes watched him, a little indifferently, from a
+long way off; and he was a child in horror of that protruding mouth.
+
+There came a crackling sound of her voice. He knew she had consumption of
+the throat, and braced himself hard to bear the noise.
+
+'What was it, Maud?' he asked in panic.
+
+Then the broken, crackling voice came again. He was too terrified of the
+sound of it to hear what was said. There was a pause.
+
+'You'll take Winnie?' the publican's voice interpreted from the window.
+
+'Don't you bother, Maud, I'll take her,' he said, stupefying his mind so
+as not to understand.
+
+He looked curiously round the room. It was not a bad bedroom, light and
+warm. There were many medicine bottles aggregated in a corner of the
+washstand--and a bottle of Three Star brandy, half full. And there were
+also photographs of strange people on the chest of drawers. It was not a
+bad room.
+
+Again he started as if he were shot. She was speaking. He bent down, but
+did not look at her.
+
+'Be good to her,' she whispered.
+
+When he realized her meaning, that he should be good to their child when
+the mother was gone, a blade went through his flesh.
+
+'I'll be good to her, Maud, don't you bother,' he said, beginning to feel
+shaky.
+
+He looked again at the picture of the bird. It perched cheerfully under a
+blue sky, with robust, jolly ivy leaves near. He was gathering his
+courage to depart. He looked down, but struggled hard not to take in the
+sight of his wife's face.
+
+'I s'll come again, Maud,' he said. 'I hope you'll go on all right. Is
+there anything as you want?'
+
+There was an almost imperceptible shake of the head from the sick woman,
+making his heart melt swiftly again. Then, dragging his limbs, he got out
+of the room and down the stairs.
+
+The landlord came after him.
+
+'I'll let you know if anything happens,' the publican said, still
+laconic, but with his eyes dark and swift.
+
+'Ay, a' right,' said Sutton blindly. He looked round for his cap, which
+he had all the time in his hand. Then he got out of doors.
+
+In a moment the uncle and nephew were in the car jolting on the level
+crossing. The elder man seemed as if something tight in his brain made
+him open his eyes wide, and stare. He held the steering wheel firmly. He
+knew he could steer accurately, to a hair's breadth. Glaring fixedly
+ahead, he let the car go, till it bounded over the uneven road. There
+were three coal-carts in a string. In an instant the car grazed past
+them, almost biting the kerb on the other side. Sutton aimed his car like
+a projectile, staring ahead. He did not want to know, to think, to
+realize, he wanted to be only the driver of that quick taxi.
+
+The town drew near, suddenly. There were allotment-gardens with
+dark-purple twiggy fruit-trees and wet alleys between the hedges. Then
+suddenly the streets of dwelling-houses whirled close, and the car was
+climbing the hill, with an angry whirr,--up--up--till they rode out on to
+the crest and could see the tram-cars, dark-red and yellow, threading
+their way round the corner below, and all the traffic roaring between the
+shops.
+
+'Got anywhere to go?' asked Sutton of his nephew.
+
+'I was going to see one or two people.'
+
+'Come an' have a bit o' dinner with us,' said the other.
+
+Berry knew that his uncle wanted to be distracted, so that he should not
+think nor realize. The big man was running hard away from the horror of
+realization.
+
+'All right,' Berry agreed.
+
+The car went quickly through the town. It ran up a long street nearly
+into the country again. Then it pulled up at a house that stood alone,
+below the road.
+
+'I s'll be back in ten minutes,' said the uncle.
+
+The car went on to the garage. Berry stood curiously at the top of the
+stone stairs that led from the highroad down to the level of the house,
+an old stone place. The garden was dilapidated. Broken fruit-trees
+leaned at a sharp angle down the steep bank. Right across the dim
+grey atmosphere, in a kind of valley on the edge of the town, new
+suburb-patches showed pinkish on the dark earth. It was a kind of
+unresolved borderland.
+
+Berry went down the steps. Through the broken black fence of the orchard,
+long grass showed yellow. The place seemed deserted. He knocked, then
+knocked again. An elderly woman appeared. She looked like a housekeeper.
+At first she said suspiciously that Mr. Sutton was not in.
+
+'My uncle just put me down. He'll be in in ten minutes,' replied the
+visitor.
+
+'Oh, are you the Mr. Berry who is related to him?' exclaimed the elderly
+woman. 'Come in--come in.'
+
+She was at once kindly and a little bit servile. The young man entered.
+It was an old house, rather dark, and sparsely furnished. The elderly
+woman sat nervously on the edge of one of the chairs in a drawing-room
+that looked as if it were furnished from dismal relics of dismal homes,
+and there was a little straggling attempt at conversation. Mrs. Greenwell
+was evidently a working class woman unused to service or to any
+formality.
+
+Presently she gathered up courage to invite her visitor into the
+dining-room. There from the table under the window rose a tall, slim girl
+with a cat in her arms. She was evidently a little more lady-like than
+was habitual to her, but she had a gentle, delicate, small nature. Her
+brown hair almost covered her ears, her dark lashes came down in shy
+awkwardness over her beautiful blue eyes. She shook hands in a frank way,
+yet she was shrinking. Evidently she was not sure how her position would
+affect her visitor. And yet she was assured in herself, shrinking and
+timid as she was.
+
+'She must be a good deal in love with him,' thought Berry.
+
+Both women glanced shamefacedly at the roughly laid table. Evidently they
+ate in a rather rough and ready fashion.
+
+Elaine--she had this poetic name--fingered her cat timidly, not knowing
+what to say or to do, unable even to ask her visitor to sit down. He
+noticed how her skirt hung almost flat on her hips. She was young, scarce
+developed, a long, slender thing. Her colouring was warm and exquisite.
+
+The elder woman bustled out to the kitchen. Berry fondled the terrier
+dogs that had come curiously to his heels, and glanced out of the window
+at the wet, deserted orchard.
+
+This room, too, was not well furnished, and rather dark. But there was a
+big red fire.
+
+'He always has fox terriers,' he said.
+
+'Yes,' she answered, showing her teeth in a smile.
+
+'Do you like them, too?'
+
+'Yes'--she glanced down at the dogs. 'I like Tam better than Sally--'
+
+Her speech always tailed off into an awkward silence.
+
+'We've been to see Aunt Maud,' said the nephew.
+
+Her eyes, blue and scared and shrinking, met his.
+
+'Dan had a letter,' he explained. 'She's very bad.'
+
+'Isn't it horrible!' she exclaimed, her face crumbling up with fear.
+
+The old woman, evidently a hard-used, rather down-trodden workman's wife,
+came in with two soup-plates. She glanced anxiously to see how her
+daughter was progressing with the visitor.
+
+'Mother, Dan's been to see Maud,' said Elaine, in a quiet voice full of
+fear and trouble.
+
+The old woman looked up anxiously, in question.
+
+'I think she wanted him to take the child. She's very bad, I believe,'
+explained Berry.
+
+'Oh, we should take Winnie!' cried Elaine. But both women seemed
+uncertain, wavering in their position. Already Berry could see that his
+uncle had bullied them, as he bullied everybody. But they were used to
+unpleasant men, and seemed to keep at a distance.
+
+'Will you have some soup?' asked the mother, humbly.
+
+She evidently did the work. The daughter was to be a lady, more or less,
+always dressed and nice for when Sutton came in.
+
+They heard him heavily running down the steps outside. The dogs got up.
+Elaine seemed to forget the visitor. It was as if she came into life. Yet
+she was nervous and afraid. The mother stood as if ready to exculpate
+herself.
+
+Sutton burst open the door. Big, blustering, wet in his immense grey
+coat, he came into the dining-room.
+
+'Hello!' he said to his nephew, 'making yourself at home?'
+
+'Oh, yes,' replied Berry.
+
+'Hello, Jack,' he said to the girl. 'Got owt to grizzle about?'
+
+'What for?' she asked, in a clear, half-challenging voice, that had that
+peculiar twang, almost petulant, so female and so attractive. Yet she was
+defiant like a boy.
+
+'It's a wonder if you haven't,' growled Sutton. And, with a really
+intimate movement, he stooped down and fondled his dogs, though paying no
+attention to them. Then he stood up, and remained with feet apart on the
+hearthrug, his head ducked forward, watching the girl. He seemed
+abstracted, as if he could only watch her. His great-coat hung open, so
+that she could see his figure, simple and human in the great husk of
+cloth. She stood nervously with her hands behind her, glancing at him,
+unable to see anything else. And he was scarcely conscious but of her.
+His eyes were still strained and staring, and as they followed the girl,
+when, long-limbed and languid, she moved away, it was as if he saw in her
+something impersonal, the female, not the woman.
+
+'Had your dinner?' he asked.
+
+'We were just going to have it,' she replied, with the same curious
+little vibration in her voice, like the twang of a string.
+
+The mother entered, bringing a saucepan from which she ladled soup into
+three plates.
+
+'Sit down, lad,' said Sutton. 'You sit down, Jack, an' give me mine
+here.'
+
+'Oh, aren't you coming to table?' she complained.
+
+'No, I tell you,' he snarled, almost pretending to be disagreeable. But
+she was slightly afraid even of the pretence, which pleased and relieved
+him. He stood on the hearthrug eating his soup noisily.
+
+'Aren't you going to take your coat off?' she said. 'It's filling the
+place full of steam.'
+
+He did not answer, but, with his head bent forward over the plate, he ate
+his soup hastily, to get it done with. When he put down his empty plate,
+she rose and went to him.
+
+'Do take your coat off, Dan,' she said, and she took hold of the breast
+of his coat, trying to push it back over his shoulder. But she could not.
+Only the stare in his eyes changed to a glare as her hand moved over his
+shoulder. He looked down into her eyes. She became pale, rather
+frightened-looking, and she turned her face away, and it was drawn
+slightly with love and fear and misery. She tried again to put off his
+coat, her thin wrists pulling at it. He stood solidly planted, and did
+not look at her, but stared straight in front. She was playing with
+passion, afraid of it, and really wretched because it left her, the
+person, out of count. Yet she continued. And there came into his bearing,
+into his eyes, the curious smile of passion, pushing away even the
+death-horror. It was life stronger than death in him. She stood close to
+his breast. Their eyes met, and she was carried away.
+
+'Take your coat off, Dan,' she said coaxingly, in a low tone meant for no
+one but him. And she slid her hands on his shoulder, and he yielded, so
+that the coat was pushed back. She had flushed, and her eyes had grown
+very bright. She got hold of the cuff of his coat. Gently, he eased
+himself, so that she drew it off. Then he stood in a thin suit, which
+revealed his vigorous, almost mature form.
+
+'What a weight!' she exclaimed, in a peculiar penetrating voice, as she
+went out hugging the overcoat. In a moment she came back.
+
+He stood still in the same position, a frown over his fiercely staring
+eyes. The pain, the fear, the horror in his breast were all burning away
+in the new, fiercest flame of passion.
+
+'Get your dinner,' he said roughly to her.
+
+'I've had all I want,' she said. 'You come an' have yours.'
+
+He looked at the table as if he found it difficult to see things.
+
+'I want no more,' he said.
+
+She stood close to his chest. She wanted to touch him and to comfort him.
+There was something about him now that fascinated her. Berry felt
+slightly ashamed that she seemed to ignore the presence of others in the
+room.
+
+The mother came in. She glanced at Sutton, standing planted on the
+hearthrug, his head ducked, the heavy frown hiding his eyes. There was a
+peculiar braced intensity about him that made the elder woman afraid.
+Suddenly he jerked his head round to his nephew.
+
+'Get on wi' your dinner, lad,' he said, and he went to the door. The
+dogs, which had continually lain down and got up again, uneasy, now rose
+and watched. The girl went after him, saying, clearly:
+
+'What did you want, Dan?'
+
+Her slim, quick figure was gone, the door was closed behind her.
+
+There was silence. The mother, still more slave-like in her movement, sat
+down in a low chair. Berry drank some beer.
+
+'That girl will leave him,' he said to himself. 'She'll hate him like
+poison. And serve him right. Then she'll go off with somebody else.'
+
+And she did.
+
+
+
+
+_The Horse Dealer's Daughter_
+
+
+'Well, Mabel, and what are you going to do with yourself?' asked Joe,
+with foolish flippancy. He felt quite safe himself. Without listening for
+an answer, he turned aside, worked a grain of tobacco to the tip of his
+tongue, and spat it out. He did not care about anything, since he felt
+safe himself.
+
+The three brothers and the sister sat round the desolate breakfast table,
+attempting some sort of desultory consultation. The morning's post had
+given the final tap to the family fortunes, and all was over. The dreary
+dining-room itself, with its heavy mahogany furniture, looked as if it
+were waiting to be done away with.
+
+But the consultation amounted to nothing. There was a strange air of
+ineffectuality about the three men, as they sprawled at table, smoking
+and reflecting vaguely on their own condition. The girl was alone, a
+rather short, sullen-looking young woman of twenty-seven. She did not
+share the same life as her brothers. She would have been good-looking,
+save for the impassive fixity of her face, 'bull-dog', as her brothers
+called it.
+
+There was a confused tramping of horses' feet outside. The three men all
+sprawled round in their chairs to watch. Beyond the dark holly-bushes
+that separated the strip of lawn from the highroad, they could see a
+cavalcade of shire horses swinging out of their own yard, being taken for
+exercise. This was the last time. These were the last horses that would
+go through their hands. The young men watched with critical, callous
+look. They were all frightened at the collapse of their lives, and the
+sense of disaster in which they were involved left them no inner freedom.
+
+Yet they were three fine, well-set fellows enough. Joe, the eldest, was a
+man of thirty-three, broad and handsome in a hot, flushed way. His face
+was red, he twisted his black moustache over a thick finger, his eyes
+were shallow and restless. He had a sensual way of uncovering his teeth
+when he laughed, and his bearing was stupid. Now he watched the horses
+with a glazed look of helplessness in his eyes, a certain stupor of
+downfall.
+
+The great draught-horses swung past. They were tied head to tail, four of
+them, and they heaved along to where a lane branched off from the
+highroad, planting their great hoofs floutingly in the fine black mud,
+swinging their great rounded haunches sumptuously, and trotting a few
+sudden steps as they were led into the lane, round the corner. Every
+movement showed a massive, slumbrous strength, and a stupidity which held
+them in subjection. The groom at the head looked back, jerking the
+leading rope. And the calvalcade moved out of sight up the lane, the tail
+of the last horse, bobbed up tight and stiff, held out taut from the
+swinging great haunches as they rocked behind the hedges in a motionlike
+sleep.
+
+Joe watched with glazed hopeless eyes. The horses were almost like his
+own body to him. He felt he was done for now. Luckily he was engaged to a
+woman as old as himself, and therefore her father, who was steward of a
+neighbouring estate, would provide him with a job. He would marry and go
+into harness. His life was over, he would be a subject animal now.
+
+He turned uneasily aside, the retreating steps of the horses echoing in
+his ears. Then, with foolish restlessness, he reached for the scraps of
+bacon-rind from the plates, and making a faint whistling sound, flung
+them to the terrier that lay against the fender. He watched the dog
+swallow them, and waited till the creature looked into his eyes. Then a
+faint grin came on his face, and in a high, foolish voice he said:
+
+'You won't get much more bacon, shall you, you little b----?'
+
+The dog faintly and dismally wagged its tail, then lowered his haunches,
+circled round, and lay down again.
+
+There was another helpless silence at the table. Joe sprawled uneasily in
+his seat, not willing to go till the family conclave was dissolved. Fred
+Henry, the second brother, was erect, clean-limbed, alert. He had watched
+the passing of the horses with more _sang-froid_. If he was an animal,
+like Joe, he was an animal which controls, not one which is controlled.
+He was master of any horse, and he carried himself with a well-tempered
+air of mastery. But he was not master of the situations of life. He
+pushed his coarse brown moustache upwards, off his lip, and glanced
+irritably at his sister, who sat impassive and inscrutable.
+
+'You'll go and stop with Lucy for a bit, shan't you?' he asked. The girl
+did not answer.
+
+'I don't see what else you can do,' persisted Fred Henry.
+
+'Go as a skivvy,' Joe interpolated laconically.
+
+The girl did not move a muscle.
+
+'If I was her, I should go in for training for a nurse,' said Malcolm,
+the youngest of them all. He was the baby of the family, a young man of
+twenty-two, with a fresh, jaunty _museau_.
+
+But Mabel did not take any notice of him. They had talked at her and
+round her for so many years, that she hardly heard them at all.
+
+The marble clock on the mantel-piece softly chimed the half-hour, the dog
+rose uneasily from the hearthrug and looked at the party at the breakfast
+table. But still they sat on in ineffectual conclave.
+
+'Oh, all right,' said Joe suddenly, _ propos_ of nothing. 'I'll get a
+move on.'
+
+He pushed back his chair, straddled his knees with a downward jerk, to
+get them free, in horsy fashion, and went to the fire. Still he did not
+go out of the room; he was curious to know what the others would do or
+say. He began to charge his pipe, looking down at the dog and saying, in
+a high, affected voice:
+
+'Going wi' me? Going wi' me are ter? Tha'rt goin' further than tha counts
+on just now, dost hear?'
+
+The dog faintly wagged its tail, the man stuck out his jaw and covered
+his pipe with his hands, and puffed intently, losing himself in the
+tobacco, looking down all the while at the dog with an absent brown eye.
+The dog looked up at him in mournful distrust. Joe stood with his knees
+stuck out, in real horsy fashion.
+
+'Have you had a letter from Lucy?' Fred Henry asked of his sister.
+
+'Last week,' came the neutral reply.
+
+'And what does she say?'
+
+There was no answer.
+
+'Does she _ask_ you to go and stop there?' persisted Fred Henry.
+
+'She says I can if I like.'
+
+'Well, then, you'd better. Tell her you'll come on Monday.'
+
+This was received in silence.
+
+'That's what you'll do then, is it?' said Fred Henry, in some
+exasperation.
+
+But she made no answer. There was a silence of futility and irritation in
+the room. Malcolm grinned fatuously.
+
+'You'll have to make up your mind between now and next Wednesday,' said
+Joe loudly, 'or else find yourself lodgings on the kerbstone.'
+
+The face of the young woman darkened, but she sat on immutable.
+
+'Here's Jack Fergusson!' exclaimed Malcolm, who was looking aimlessly out
+of the window.
+
+'Where?' exclaimed Joe, loudly.
+
+'Just gone past.'
+
+'Coming in?'
+
+Malcolm craned his neck to see the gate.
+
+'Yes,' he said.
+
+There was a silence. Mabel sat on like one condemned, at the head of the
+table. Then a whistle was heard from the kitchen. The dog got up and
+barked sharply. Joe opened the door and shouted:
+
+'Come on.'
+
+After a moment a young man entered. He was muffled up in overcoat and a
+purple woollen scarf, and his tweed cap, which he did not remove, was
+pulled down on his head. He was of medium height, his face was rather
+long and pale, his eyes looked tired.
+
+'Hello, Jack! Well, Jack!' exclaimed Malcolm and Joe. Fred Henry merely
+said, 'Jack.'
+
+'What's doing?' asked the newcomer, evidently addressing Fred Henry.
+
+'Same. We've got to be out by Wednesday.--Got a cold?'
+
+'I have--got it bad, too.'
+
+'Why don't you stop in?'
+
+'_Me_ stop in? When I can't stand on my legs, perhaps I shall have a
+chance.' The young man spoke huskily. He had a slight Scotch accent.
+
+'It's a knock-out, isn't it,' said Joe, boisterously, 'if a doctor goes
+round croaking with a cold. Looks bad for the patients, doesn't it?'
+
+The young doctor looked at him slowly.
+
+'Anything the matter with _you_, then?' he asked sarcastically.
+
+'Not as I know of. Damn your eyes, I hope not. Why?'
+
+'I thought you were very concerned about the patients, wondered if you
+might be one yourself.'
+
+'Damn it, no, I've never been patient to no flaming doctor, and hope I
+never shall be,' returned Joe.
+
+At this point Mabel rose from the table, and they all seemed to become
+aware of her existence. She began putting the dishes together. The young
+doctor looked at her, but did not address her. He had not greeted her.
+She went out of the room with the tray, her face impassive and unchanged.
+
+'When are you off then, all of you?' asked the doctor.
+
+'I'm catching the eleven-forty,' replied Malcolm. 'Are you goin' down wi'
+th' trap, Joe?'
+
+'Yes, I've told you I'm going down wi' th' trap, haven't I?'
+
+'We'd better be getting her in then.--So long, Jack, if I don't see you
+before I go,' said Malcolm, shaking hands.
+
+He went out, followed by Joe, who seemed to have his tail between his
+legs.
+
+'Well, this is the devil's own,' exclaimed the doctor, when he was left
+alone with Fred Henry. 'Going before Wednesday, are you?'
+
+'That's the orders,' replied the other.
+
+'Where, to Northampton?'
+
+'That's it.'
+
+'The devil!' exclaimed Fergusson, with quiet chagrin.
+
+And there was silence between the two.
+
+'All settled up, are you?' asked Fergusson.
+
+'About.'
+
+There was another pause.
+
+'Well, I shall miss yer, Freddy, boy,' said the young doctor.
+
+'And I shall miss thee, Jack,' returned the other.
+
+'Miss you like hell,' mused the doctor.
+
+Fred Henry turned aside. There was nothing to say. Mabel came in again,
+to finish clearing the table.
+
+'What are _you_ going to do, then, Miss Pervin?' asked Fergusson. 'Going
+to your sister's, are you?'
+
+Mabel looked at him with her steady, dangerous eyes, that always made him
+uncomfortable, unsettling his superficial ease.
+
+'No,' she said.
+
+'Well, what in the name of fortune _are_ you going to do? Say what you
+mean to do,' cried Fred Henry, with futile intensity.
+
+But she only averted her head, and continued her work. She folded the
+white table-cloth, and put on the chenille cloth.
+
+'The sulkiest bitch that ever trod!' muttered her brother.
+
+But she finished her task with perfectly impassive face, the young doctor
+watching her interestedly all the while. Then she went out.
+
+Fred Henry stared after her, clenching his lips, his blue eyes fixing in
+sharp antagonism, as he made a grimace of sour exasperation.
+
+'You could bray her into bits, and that's all you'd get out of her,' he
+said, in a small, narrowed tone.
+
+The doctor smiled faintly.
+
+'What's she _going_ to do, then?' he asked.
+
+'Strike me if I know!' returned the other.
+
+There was a pause. Then the doctor stirred.
+
+'I'll be seeing you tonight, shall I?' he said to his friend.
+
+'Ay--where's it to be? Are we going over to Jessdale?'
+
+'I don't know. I've got such a cold on me. I'll come round to the Moon
+and Stars, anyway.'
+
+'Let Lizzie and May miss their night for once, eh?'
+
+'That's it--if I feel as I do now.'
+
+'All's one--'
+
+The two young men went through the passage and down to the back door
+together. The house was large, but it was servantless now, and desolate.
+At the back was a small bricked house-yard, and beyond that a big square,
+gravelled fine and red, and having stables on two sides. Sloping, dank,
+winter-dark fields stretched away on the open sides.
+
+But the stables were empty. Joseph Pervin, the father of the family, had
+been a man of no education, who had become a fairly large horse dealer.
+The stables had been full of horses, there was a great turmoil and
+come-and-go of horses and of dealers and grooms. Then the kitchen was
+full of servants. But of late things had declined. The old man had
+married a second time, to retrieve his fortunes. Now he was dead and
+everything was gone to the dogs, there was nothing but debt and
+threatening.
+
+For months, Mabel had been servantless in the big house, keeping the home
+together in penury for her ineffectual brothers. She had kept house for
+ten years. But previously, it was with unstinted means. Then, however
+brutal and coarse everything was, the sense of money had kept her proud,
+confident. The men might be foul-mouthed, the women in the kitchen might
+have bad reputations, her brothers might have illegitimate children. But
+so long as there was money, the girl felt herself established, and
+brutally proud, reserved.
+
+No company came to the house, save dealers and coarse men. Mabel had no
+associates of her own sex, after her sister went away. But she did not
+mind. She went regularly to church, she attended to her father. And she
+lived in the memory of her mother, who had died when she was fourteen,
+and whom she had loved. She had loved her father, too, in a different
+way, depending upon him, and feeling secure in him, until at the age of
+fifty-four he married again. And then she had set hard against him. Now
+he had died and left them all hopelessly in debt.
+
+She had suffered badly during the period of poverty. Nothing, however,
+could shake the curious sullen, animal pride that dominated each member
+of the family. Now, for Mabel, the end had come. Still she would not cast
+about her. She would follow her own way just the same. She would always
+hold the keys of her own situation. Mindless and persistent, she endured
+from day to day. Why should she think? Why should she answer anybody? It
+was enough that this was the end, and there was no way out. She need not
+pass any more darkly along the main street of the small town, avoiding
+every eye. She need not demean herself any more, going into the shops and
+buying the cheapest food. This was at an end. She thought of nobody, not
+even of herself. Mindless and persistent, she seemed in a sort of ecstasy
+to be coming nearer to her fulfilment, her own glorification, approaching
+her dead mother, who was glorified.
+
+In the afternoon she took a little bag, with shears and sponge and a
+small scrubbing brush, and went out. It was a grey, wintry day, with
+saddened, dark-green fields and an atmosphere blackened by the smoke of
+foundries not far off. She went quickly, darkly along the causeway,
+heeding nobody, through the town to the churchyard.
+
+There she always felt secure, as if no one could see her, although as a
+matter of fact she was exposed to the stare of everyone who passed along
+under the churchyard wall. Nevertheless, once under the shadow of the
+great looming church, among the graves, she felt immune from the world,
+reserved within the thick churchyard wall as in another country.
+
+Carefully she clipped the grass from the grave, and arranged the
+pinky-white, small chrysanthemums in the tin cross. When this was done,
+she took an empty jar from a neighbouring grave, brought water, and
+carefully, most scrupulously sponged the marble headstone and the
+coping-stone.
+
+It gave her sincere satisfaction to do this. She felt in immediate
+contact with the world of her mother. She took minute pains, went through
+the park in a state bordering on pure happiness, as if in performing this
+task she came into a subtle, intimate connexion with her mother. For the
+life she followed here in the world was far less real than the world of
+death she inherited from her mother.
+
+The doctor's house was just by the church. Fergusson, being a mere hired
+assistant, was slave to the countryside. As he hurried now to attend to
+the outpatients in the surgery, glancing across the graveyard with his
+quick eye, he saw the girl at her task at the grave. She seemed so intent
+and remote, it was like looking into another world. Some mystical element
+was touched in him. He slowed down as he walked, watching her as if
+spell-bound.
+
+She lifted her eyes, feeling him looking. Their eyes met. And each looked
+again at once, each feeling, in some way, found out by the other. He
+lifted his cap and passed on down the road. There remained distinct in
+his consciousness, like a vision, the memory of her face, lifted from the
+tombstone in the churchyard, and looking at him with slow, large,
+portentous eyes. It _was_ portentous, her face. It seemed to mesmerize
+him. There was a heavy power in her eyes which laid hold of his whole
+being, as if he had drunk some powerful drug. He had been feeling weak
+and done before. Now the life came back into him, he felt delivered from
+his own fretted, daily self.
+
+He finished his duties at the surgery as quickly as might be, hastily
+filling up the bottles of the waiting people with cheap drugs. Then, in
+perpetual haste, he set off again to visit several cases in another part
+of his round, before teatime. At all times he preferred to walk, if he
+could, but particularly when he was not well. He fancied the motion
+restored him.
+
+The afternoon was falling. It was grey, deadened, and wintry, with a
+slow, moist, heavy coldness sinking in and deadening all the faculties.
+But why should he think or notice? He hastily climbed the hill and turned
+across the dark-green fields, following the black cinder-track. In the
+distance, across a shallow dip in the country, the small town was
+clustered like smouldering ash, a tower, a spire, a heap of low, raw,
+extinct houses. And on the nearest fringe of the town, sloping into the
+dip, was Oldmeadow, the Pervins' house. He could see the stables and the
+outbuildings distinctly, as they lay towards him on the slope. Well, he
+would not go there many more times! Another resource would be lost to
+him, another place gone: the only company he cared for in the alien, ugly
+little town he was losing. Nothing but work, drudgery, constant hastening
+from dwelling to dwelling among the colliers and the iron-workers. It
+wore him out, but at the same time he had a craving for it. It was a
+stimulant to him to be in the homes of the working people, moving as it
+were through the innermost body of their life. His nerves were excited
+and gratified. He could come so near, into the very lives of the rough,
+inarticulate, powerfully emotional men and women. He grumbled, he said he
+hated the hellish hole. But as a matter of fact it excited him, the
+contact with the rough, strongly-feeling people was a stimulant applied
+direct to his nerves.
+
+Below Oldmeadow, in the green, shallow, soddened hollow of fields, lay a
+square, deep pond. Roving across the landscape, the doctor's quick eye
+detected a figure in black passing through the gate of the field, down
+towards the pond. He looked again. It would be Mabel Pervin. His mind
+suddenly became alive and attentive.
+
+Why was she going down there? He pulled up on the path on the slope
+above, and stood staring. He could just make sure of the small black
+figure moving in the hollow of the failing day. He seemed to see her in
+the midst of such obscurity, that he was like a clairvoyant, seeing
+rather with the mind's eye than with ordinary sight. Yet he could see her
+positively enough, whilst he kept his eye attentive. He felt, if he
+looked away from her, in the thick, ugly falling dusk, he would lose her
+altogether.
+
+He followed her minutely as she moved, direct and intent, like something
+transmitted rather than stirring in voluntary activity, straight down the
+field towards the pond. There she stood on the bank for a moment. She
+never raised her head. Then she waded slowly into the water.
+
+He stood motionless as the small black figure walked slowly and
+deliberately towards the centre of the pond, very slowly, gradually
+moving deeper into the motionless water, and still moving forward as the
+water got up to her breast. Then he could see her no more in the dusk of
+the dead afternoon.
+
+'There!' he exclaimed. 'Would you believe it?'
+
+And he hastened straight down, running over the wet, soddened fields,
+pushing through the hedges, down into the depression of callous wintry
+obscurity. It took him several minutes to come to the pond. He stood on
+the bank, breathing heavily. He could see nothing. His eyes seemed to
+penetrate the dead water. Yes, perhaps that was the dark shadow of her
+black clothing beneath the surface of the water.
+
+He slowly ventured into the pond. The bottom was deep, soft clay, he sank
+in, and the water clasped dead cold round his legs. As he stirred he
+could smell the cold, rotten clay that fouled up into the water. It was
+objectionable in his lungs. Still, repelled and yet not heeding, he moved
+deeper into the pond. The cold water rose over his thighs, over his
+loins, upon his abdomen. The lower part of his body was all sunk in the
+hideous cold element. And the bottom was so deeply soft and uncertain, he
+was afraid of pitching with his mouth underneath. He could not swim, and
+was afraid.
+
+He crouched a little, spreading his hands under the water and moving them
+round, trying to feel for her. The dead cold pond swayed upon his chest.
+He moved again, a little deeper, and again, with his hands underneath, he
+felt all around under the water. And he touched her clothing. But it
+evaded his fingers. He made a desperate effort to grasp it.
+
+And so doing he lost his balance and went under, horribly, suffocating in
+the foul earthy water, struggling madly for a few moments. At last, after
+what seemed an eternity, he got his footing, rose again into the air and
+looked around. He gasped, and knew he was in the world. Then he looked at
+the water. She had risen near him. He grasped her clothing, and drawing
+her nearer, turned to take his way to land again.
+
+He went very slowly, carefully, absorbed in the slow progress. He rose
+higher, climbing out of the pond. The water was now only about his legs;
+he was thankful, full of relief to be out of the clutches of the pond. He
+lifted her and staggered on to the bank, out of the horror of wet, grey
+clay.
+
+He laid her down on the bank. She was quite unconscious and running with
+water. He made the water come from her mouth, he worked to restore her.
+He did not have to work very long before he could feel the breathing
+begin again in her; she was breathing naturally. He worked a little
+longer. He could feel her live beneath his hands; she was coming back. He
+wiped her face, wrapped her in his overcoat, looked round into the dim,
+dark-grey world, then lifted her and staggered down the bank and across
+the fields.
+
+It seemed an unthinkably long way, and his burden so heavy he felt he
+would never get to the house. But at last he was in the stable-yard, and
+then in the house-yard. He opened the door and went into the house. In
+the kitchen he laid her down on the hearthrug, and called. The house was
+empty. But the fire was burning in the grate.
+
+Then again he kneeled to attend to her. She was breathing regularly, her
+eyes were wide open and as if conscious, but there seemed something
+missing in her look. She was conscious in herself, but unconscious of her
+surroundings.
+
+He ran upstairs, took blankets from a bed, and put them before the fire
+to warm. Then he removed her saturated, earthy-smelling clothing, rubbed
+her dry with a towel, and wrapped her naked in the blankets. Then he went
+into the dining-room, to look for spirits. There was a little whisky. He
+drank a gulp himself, and put some into her mouth.
+
+The effect was instantaneous. She looked full into his face, as if she
+had been seeing him for some time, and yet had only just become conscious
+of him.
+
+'Dr. Fergusson?' she said.
+
+'What?' he answered.
+
+He was divesting himself of his coat, intending to find some dry clothing
+upstairs. He could not bear the smell of the dead, clayey water, and he
+was mortally afraid for his own health.
+
+'What did I do?' she asked.
+
+'Walked into the pond,' he replied. He had begun to shudder like one
+sick, and could hardly attend to her. Her eyes remained full on him, he
+seemed to be going dark in his mind, looking back at her helplessly. The
+shuddering became quieter in him, his life came back in him, dark and
+unknowing, but strong again.
+
+'Was I out of my mind?' she asked, while her eyes were fixed on him all
+the time.
+
+'Maybe, for the moment,' he replied. He felt quiet, because his strength
+had come back. The strange fretful strain had left him.
+
+'Am I out of my mind now?' she asked.
+
+'Are you?' he reflected a moment. 'No,' he answered truthfully, 'I don't
+see that you are.' He turned his face aside. He was afraid now, because
+he felt dazed, and felt dimly that her power was stronger than his, in
+this issue. And she continued to look at him fixedly all the time. 'Can
+you tell me where I shall find some dry things to put on?' he asked.
+
+'Did you dive into the pond for me?' she asked.
+
+'No,' he answered. 'I walked in. But I went in overhead as well.'
+
+There was silence for a moment. He hesitated. He very much wanted to go
+upstairs to get into dry clothing. But there was another desire in him.
+And she seemed to hold him. His will seemed to have gone to sleep, and
+left him, standing there slack before her. But he felt warm inside
+himself. He did not shudder at all, though his clothes were sodden on
+him.
+
+'Why did you?' she asked.
+
+'Because I didn't want you to do such a foolish thing,' he said.
+
+'It wasn't foolish,' she said, still gazing at him as she lay on the
+floor, with a sofa cushion under her head. 'It was the right thing to do.
+_I_ knew best, then.'
+
+'I'll go and shift these wet things,' he said. But still he had not the
+power to move out of her presence, until she sent him. It was as if she
+had the life of his body in her hands, and he could not extricate
+himself. Or perhaps he did not want to.
+
+Suddenly she sat up. Then she became aware of her own immediate
+condition. She felt the blankets about her, she knew her own limbs. For a
+moment it seemed as if her reason were going. She looked round, with wild
+eye, as if seeking something. He stood still with fear. She saw her
+clothing lying scattered.
+
+'Who undressed me?' she asked, her eyes resting full and inevitable on
+his face.
+
+'I did,' he replied, 'to bring you round.'
+
+For some moments she sat and gazed at him awfully, her lips parted.
+
+'Do you love me then?' she asked.
+
+He only stood and stared at her, fascinated. His soul seemed to melt.
+
+She shuffled forward on her knees, and put her arms round him, round his
+legs, as he stood there, pressing her breasts against his knees and
+thighs, clutching him with strange, convulsive certainty, pressing his
+thighs against her, drawing him to her face, her throat, as she looked up
+at him with flaring, humble eyes, of transfiguration, triumphant in first
+possession.
+
+'You love me,' she murmured, in strange transport, yearning and
+triumphant and confident. 'You love me. I know you love me, I know.'
+
+And she was passionately kissing his knees, through the wet clothing,
+passionately and indiscriminately kissing his knees, his legs, as if
+unaware of every thing.
+
+He looked down at the tangled wet hair, the wild, bare, animal shoulders.
+He was amazed, bewildered, and afraid. He had never thought of loving
+her. He had never wanted to love her. When he rescued her and restored
+her, he was a doctor, and she was a patient. He had had no single
+personal thought of her. Nay, this introduction of the personal element
+was very distasteful to him, a violation of his professional honour. It
+was horrible to have her there embracing his knees. It was horrible. He
+revolted from it, violently. And yet--and yet--he had not the power to
+break away.
+
+She looked at him again, with the same supplication of powerful love, and
+that same transcendent, frightening light of triumph. In view of the
+delicate flame which seemed to come from her face like a light, he was
+powerless. And yet he had never intended to love her. He had never
+intended. And something stubborn in him could not give way.
+
+'You love me,' she repeated, in a murmur of deep, rhapsodic assurance.
+'You love me.'
+
+Her hands were drawing him, drawing him down to her. He was afraid, even
+a little horrified. For he had, really, no intention of loving her. Yet
+her hands were drawing him towards her. He put out his hand quickly to
+steady himself, and grasped her bare shoulder. A flame seemed to burn the
+hand that grasped her soft shoulder. He had no intention of loving her:
+his whole will was against his yielding. It was horrible. And yet
+wonderful was the touch of her shoulders, beautiful the shining of her
+face. Was she perhaps mad? He had a horror of yielding to her. Yet
+something in him ached also.
+
+He had been staring away at the door, away from her. But his hand
+remained on her shoulder. She had gone suddenly very still. He looked
+down at her. Her eyes were now wide with fear, with doubt, the light was
+dying from her face, a shadow of terrible greyness was returning. He
+could not bear the touch of her eyes' question upon him, and the look of
+death behind the question.
+
+With an inward groan he gave way, and let his heart yield towards her. A
+sudden gentle smile came on his face. And her eyes, which never left his
+face, slowly, slowly filled with tears. He watched the strange water rise
+in her eyes, like some slow fountain coming up. And his heart seemed to
+burn and melt away in his breast.
+
+He could not bear to look at her any more. He dropped on his knees and
+caught her head with his arms and pressed her face against his throat.
+She was very still. His heart, which seemed to have broken, was burning
+with a kind of agony in his breast. And he felt her slow, hot tears
+wetting his throat. But he could not move.
+
+He felt the hot tears wet his neck and the hollows of his neck, and he
+remained motionless, suspended through one of man's eternities. Only now
+it had become indispensable to him to have her face pressed close to him;
+he could never let her go again. He could never let her head go away from
+the close clutch of his arm. He wanted to remain like that for ever, with
+his heart hurting him in a pain that was also life to him. Without
+knowing, he was looking down on her damp, soft brown hair.
+
+Then, as it were suddenly, he smelt the horrid stagnant smell of that
+water. And at the same moment she drew away from him and looked at him.
+Her eyes were wistful and unfathomable. He was afraid of them, and he
+fell to kissing her, not knowing what he was doing. He wanted her eyes
+not to have that terrible, wistful, unfathomable look.
+
+When she turned her face to him again, a faint delicate flush was
+glowing, and there was again dawning that terrible shining of joy in her
+eyes, which really terrified him, and yet which he now wanted to see,
+because he feared the look of doubt still more.
+
+'You love me?' she said, rather faltering.
+
+'Yes.' The word cost him a painful effort. Not because it wasn't true.
+But because it was too newly true, the _saying_ seemed to tear open again
+his newly-torn heart. And he hardly wanted it to be true, even now.
+
+She lifted her face to him, and he bent forward and kissed her on the
+mouth, gently, with the one kiss that is an eternal pledge. And as he
+kissed her his heart strained again in his breast. He never intended to
+love her. But now it was over. He had crossed over the gulf to her, and
+all that he had left behind had shrivelled and become void.
+
+After the kiss, her eyes again slowly filled with tears. She sat still,
+away from him, with her face drooped aside, and her hands folded in her
+lap. The tears fell very slowly. There was complete silence. He too sat
+there motionless and silent on the hearthrug. The strange pain of his
+heart that was broken seemed to consume him. That he should love her?
+That this was love! That he should be ripped open in this way!--Him, a
+doctor!--How they would all jeer if they knew!--It was agony to him to
+think they might know.
+
+In the curious naked pain of the thought he looked again to her. She was
+sitting there drooped into a muse. He saw a tear fall, and his heart
+flared hot. He saw for the first time that one of her shoulders was quite
+uncovered, one arm bare, he could see one of her small breasts; dimly,
+because it had become almost dark in the room.
+
+'Why are you crying?' he asked, in an altered voice.
+
+She looked up at him, and behind her tears the consciousness of her
+situation for the first time brought a dark look of shame to her eyes.
+
+'I'm not crying, really,' she said, watching him half frightened.
+
+He reached his hand, and softly closed it on her bare arm.
+
+'I love you! I love you!' he said in a soft, low vibrating voice, unlike
+himself.
+
+She shrank, and dropped her head. The soft, penetrating grip of his hand
+on her arm distressed her. She looked up at him.
+
+'I want to go,' she said. 'I want to go and get you some dry things.'
+
+'Why?' he said. 'I'm all right.'
+
+'But I want to go,' she said. 'And I want you to change your things.'
+
+He released her arm, and she wrapped herself in the blanket, looking at
+him rather frightened. And still she did not rise.
+
+'Kiss me,' she said wistfully.
+
+He kissed her, but briefly, half in anger.
+
+Then, after a second, she rose nervously, all mixed up in the blanket. He
+watched her in her confusion, as she tried to extricate herself and wrap
+herself up so that she could walk. He watched her relentlessly, as she
+knew. And as she went, the blanket trailing, and as he saw a glimpse of
+her feet and her white leg, he tried to remember her as she was when he
+had wrapped her in the blanket. But then he didn't want to remember,
+because she had been nothing to him then, and his nature revolted from
+remembering her as she was when she was nothing to him.
+
+A tumbling, muffled noise from within the dark house startled him. Then
+he heard her voice:--'There are clothes.' He rose and went to the foot of
+the stairs, and gathered up the garments she had thrown down. Then he
+came back to the fire, to rub himself down and dress. He grinned at his
+own appearance when he had finished.
+
+The fire was sinking, so he put on coal. The house was now quite dark,
+save for the light of a street-lamp that shone in faintly from beyond the
+holly trees. He lit the gas with matches he found on the mantel-piece.
+Then he emptied the pockets of his own clothes, and threw all his wet
+things in a heap into the scullery. After which he gathered up her sodden
+clothes, gently, and put them in a separate heap on the copper-top in the
+scullery.
+
+It was six o'clock on the clock. His own watch had stopped. He ought to
+go back to the surgery. He waited, and still she did not come down. So he
+went to the foot of the stairs and called:
+
+'I shall have to go.'
+
+Almost immediately he heard her coming down. She had on her best dress
+of black voile, and her hair was tidy, but still damp. She looked at
+him--and in spite of herself, smiled.
+
+'I don't like you in those clothes,' she said.
+
+'Do I look a sight?' he answered.
+
+They were shy of one another.
+
+'I'll make you some tea,' she said.
+
+'No, I must go.'
+
+'Must you?' And she looked at him again with the wide, strained, doubtful
+eyes. And again, from the pain of his breast, he knew how he loved her.
+He went and bent to kiss her, gently, passionately, with his heart's
+painful kiss.
+
+'And my hair smells so horrible,' she murmured in distraction. 'And I'm
+so awful, I'm so awful! Oh, no, I'm too awful.' And she broke into
+bitter, heart-broken sobbing. 'You can't want to love me, I'm horrible.'
+
+'Don't be silly, don't be silly,' he said, trying to comfort her, kissing
+her, holding her in his arms. 'I want you, I want to marry you, we're
+going to be married, quickly, quickly--to-morrow if I can.'
+
+But she only sobbed terribly, and cried:
+
+'I feel awful. I feel awful. I feel I'm horrible to you.'
+
+'No, I want you, I want you,' was all he answered, blindly, with that
+terrible intonation which frightened her almost more than her horror lest
+he should _not_ want her.
+
+
+
+
+_Fanny And Annie_
+
+
+Flame-lurid his face as he turned among the throng of flame-lit and dark
+faces upon the platform. In the light of the furnace she caught sight of
+his drifting countenance, like a piece of floating fire. And the
+nostalgia, the doom of homecoming went through her veins like a drug. His
+eternal face, flame-lit now! The pulse and darkness of red fire from the
+furnace towers in the sky, lighting the desultory, industrial crowd on
+the wayside station, lit him and went out.
+
+Of course he did not see her. Flame-lit and unseeing! Always the same,
+with his meeting eyebrows, his common cap, and his red-and-black scarf
+knotted round his throat. Not even a collar to meet her! The flames had
+sunk, there was shadow.
+
+She opened the door of her grimy, branch-line carriage, and began to get
+down her bags. The porter was nowhere, of course, but there was Harry,
+obscure, on the outer edge of the little crowd, missing her, of course.
+
+'Here! Harry!' she called, waving her umbrella in the twilight. He
+hurried forward.
+
+'Tha's come, has ter?' he said, in a sort of cheerful welcome. She got
+down, rather flustered, and gave him a peck of a kiss.
+
+'Two suit-cases!' she said.
+
+Her soul groaned within her, as he clambered into the carriage after her
+bags. Up shot the fire in the twilight sky, from the great furnace behind
+the station. She felt the red flame go across her face. She had come
+back, she had come back for good. And her spirit groaned dismally. She
+doubted if she could bear it.
+
+There, on the sordid little station under the furnaces, she stood, tall
+and distinguished, in her well-made coat and skirt and her broad grey
+velour hat. She held her umbrella, her bead chatelaine, and a little
+leather case in her grey-gloved hands, while Harry staggered out of the
+ugly little train with her bags.
+
+'There's a trunk at the back,' she said in her bright voice. But she was
+not feeling bright. The twin black cones of the iron foundry blasted
+their sky-high fires into the night. The whole scene was lurid. The train
+waited cheerfully. It would wait another ten minutes. She knew it. It was
+all so deadly familiar.
+
+Let us confess it at once. She was a lady's maid, thirty years old, come
+back to marry her first-love, a foundry worker: after having kept him
+dangling, off and on, for a dozen years. Why had she come back? Did she
+love him? No. She didn't pretend to. She had loved her brilliant and
+ambitious cousin, who had jilted her, and who had died. She had had other
+affairs which had come to nothing. So here she was, come back suddenly to
+marry her first-love, who had waited--or remained single--all these
+years.
+
+'Won't a porter carry those?' she said, as Harry strode with his
+workman's stride down the platform towards the guard's van.
+
+'I can manage,' he said.
+
+And with her umbrella, her chatelaine, and her little leather case, she
+followed him.
+
+The trunk was there.
+
+'We'll get Heather's greengrocer's cart to fetch it up,' he said.
+
+'Isn't there a cab?' said Fanny, knowing dismally enough that there
+wasn't.
+
+'I'll just put it aside o' the penny-in-the-slot, and Heather's
+greengrocers'll fetch it about half past eight,' he said.
+
+He seized the box by its two handles and staggered with it across the
+level-crossing, bumping his legs against it as he waddled. Then he
+dropped it by the red sweet-meats machine.
+
+'Will it be safe there?' she said.
+
+'Ay--safe as houses,' he answered. He returned for the two bags. Thus
+laden, they started to plod up the hill, under the great long black
+building of the foundry. She walked beside him--workman of workmen he
+was, trudging with that luggage. The red lights flared over the deepening
+darkness. From the foundry came the horrible, slow clang, clang, clang of
+iron, a great noise, with an interval just long enough to make it
+unendurable.
+
+Compare this with the arrival at Gloucester: the carriage for her
+mistress, the dog-cart for herself with the luggage; the drive out past
+the river, the pleasant trees of the carriage-approach; and herself
+sitting beside Arthur, everybody so polite to her.
+
+She had come home--for good! Her heart nearly stopped beating as she
+trudged up that hideous and interminable hill, beside the laden figure.
+What a come-down! What a come-down! She could not take it with her usual
+bright cheerfulness. She knew it all too well. It is easy to bear up
+against the unusual, but the deadly familiarity of an old stale past!
+
+He dumped the bags down under a lamp-post, for a rest. There they stood,
+the two of them, in the lamplight. Passers-by stared at her, and gave
+good-night to Harry. Her they hardly knew, she had become a stranger.
+
+'They're too heavy for you, let me carry one,' she said.
+
+'They begin to weigh a bit by the time you've gone a mile,' he answered.
+
+'Let me carry the little one,' she insisted.
+
+'Tha can ha'e it for a minute, if ter's a mind,' he said, handing over
+the valise.
+
+And thus they arrived in the streets of shops of the little ugly town on
+top of the hill. How everybody stared at her; my word, how they stared!
+And the cinema was just going in, and the queues were tailing down the
+road to the corner. And everybody took full stock of her. 'Night, Harry!'
+shouted the fellows, in an interested voice.
+
+However, they arrived at her aunt's--a little sweet-shop in a side
+street. They 'pinged' the door-bell, and her aunt came running forward
+out of the kitchen.
+
+'There you are, child! Dying for a cup of tea, I'm sure. How are you?'
+
+Fanny's aunt kissed her, and it was all Fanny could do to refrain from
+bursting into tears, she felt so low. Perhaps it was her tea she wanted.
+
+'You've had a drag with that luggage,' said Fanny's aunt to Harry.
+
+'Ay--I'm not sorry to put it down,' he said, looking at his hand which
+was crushed and cramped by the bag handle.
+
+Then he departed to see about Heather's greengrocery cart.
+
+When Fanny sat at tea, her aunt, a grey-haired, fair-faced little woman,
+looked at her with an admiring heart, feeling bitterly sore for her. For
+Fanny was beautiful: tall, erect, finely coloured, with her delicately
+arched nose, her rich brown hair, her large lustrous grey eyes. A
+passionate woman--a woman to be afraid of. So proud, so inwardly violent!
+She came of a violent race.
+
+It needed a woman to sympathize with her. Men had not the courage. Poor
+Fanny! She was such a lady, and so straight and magnificent. And yet
+everything seemed to do her down. Every time she seemed to be doomed to
+humiliation and disappointment, this handsome, brilliantly sensitive
+woman, with her nervous, overwrought laugh.
+
+'So you've really come back, child?' said her aunt.
+
+'I really have, Aunt,' said Fanny.
+
+'Poor Harry! I'm not sure, you know, Fanny, that you're not taking a bit
+of an advantage of him.'
+
+'Oh, Aunt, he's waited so long, he may as well have what he's waited
+for.' Fanny laughed grimly.
+
+'Yes, child, he's waited so long, that I'm not sure it isn't a bit hard
+on him. You know, I _like_ him, Fanny--though as you know quite well, I
+don't think he's good enough for you. And I think he thinks so himself,
+poor fellow.'
+
+'Don't you be so sure of that, Aunt. Harry is common, but he's not
+humble. He wouldn't think the Queen was any too good for him, if he'd a
+mind to her.'
+
+'Well--It's as well if he has a proper opinion of himself.'
+
+'It depends what you call proper,' said Fanny. 'But he's got his good
+points--'
+
+'Oh, he's a nice fellow, and I like him, I do like him. Only, as I tell
+you, he's not good enough for you.'
+
+'I've made up my mind, Aunt,' said Fanny, grimly.
+
+'Yes,' mused the aunt. 'They say all things come to him who waits--'
+
+'More than he's bargained for, eh, Aunt?' laughed Fanny rather bitterly.
+
+The poor aunt, this bitterness grieved her for her niece.
+
+They were interrupted by the ping of the shop-bell, and Harry's call of
+'Right!' But as he did not come in at once, Fanny, feeling solicitous for
+him presumably at the moment, rose and went into the shop. She saw a cart
+outside, and went to the door.
+
+And the moment she stood in the doorway, she heard a woman's common
+vituperative voice crying from the darkness of the opposite side of the
+road:
+
+'Tha'rt theer, ar ter? I'll shame thee, Mester. I'll shame thee, see if I
+dunna.'
+
+Startled, Fanny stared across the darkness, and saw a woman in a black
+bonnet go under one of the lamps up the side street.
+
+Harry and Bill Heather had dragged the trunk off the little dray, and she
+retreated before them as they came up the shop step with it.
+
+'Wheer shalt ha'e it?' asked Harry.
+
+'Best take it upstairs,' said Fanny.
+
+She went up first to light the gas.
+
+When Heather had gone, and Harry was sitting down having tea and pork
+pie, Fanny asked:
+
+'Who was that woman shouting?'
+
+'Nay, I canna tell thee. To somebody, Is'd think,' replied Harry. Fanny
+looked at him, but asked no more.
+
+He was a fair-haired fellow of thirty-two, with a fair moustache. He was
+broad in his speech, and looked like a foundry-hand, which he was. But
+women always liked him. There was something of a mother's lad about
+him--something warm and playful and really sensitive.
+
+He had his attractions even for Fanny. What she rebelled against so
+bitterly was that he had no sort of ambition. He was a moulder, but of
+very commonplace skill. He was thirty-two years old, and hadn't saved
+twenty pounds. She would have to provide the money for the home. He
+didn't care. He just didn't care. He had no initiative at all. He had no
+vices--no obvious ones. But he was just indifferent, spending as he went,
+and not caring. Yet he did not look happy. She remembered his face in the
+fire-glow: something haunted, abstracted about it. As he sat there eating
+his pork pie, bulging his cheek out, she felt he was like a doom to her.
+And she raged against the doom of him. It wasn't that he was gross. His
+way was common, almost on purpose. But he himself wasn't really common.
+For instance, his food was not particularly important to him, he was not
+greedy. He had a charm, too, particularly for women, with his blondness
+and his sensitiveness and his way of making a woman feel that she was a
+higher being. But Fanny knew him, knew the peculiar obstinate limitedness
+of him, that would nearly send her mad.
+
+He stayed till about half past nine. She went to the door with him.
+
+'When are you coming up?' he said, jerking his head in the direction,
+presumably, of his own home.
+
+'I'll come tomorrow afternoon,' she said brightly. Between Fanny and Mrs.
+Goodall, his mother, there was naturally no love lost.
+
+Again she gave him an awkward little kiss, and said good-night.
+
+'You can't wonder, you know, child, if he doesn't seem so very keen,'
+said her aunt. 'It's your own fault.'
+
+'Oh, Aunt, I couldn't stand him when he was keen. I can do with him a lot
+better as he is.'
+
+The two women sat and talked far into the night. They understood each
+other. The aunt, too, had married as Fanny was marrying: a man who was no
+companion to her, a violent man, brother of Fanny's father. He was dead,
+Fanny's father was dead.
+
+Poor Aunt Lizzie, she cried woefully over her bright niece, when she had
+gone to bed.
+
+Fanny paid the promised visit to his people the next afternoon. Mrs.
+Goodall was a large woman with smooth-parted hair, a common, obstinate
+woman, who had spoiled her four lads and her one vixen of a married
+daughter. She was one of those old-fashioned powerful natures that
+couldn't do with looks or education or any form of showing off. She
+fairly hated the sound of correct English. She _thee'd_ and _tha'd_ her
+prospective daughter-in-law, and said:
+
+'I'm none as ormin' as I look, seest ta.'
+
+Fanny did not think her prospective mother-in-law looked at all orming,
+so the speech was unnecessary.
+
+'I towd him mysen,' said Mrs. Goodall, ''Er's held back all this long,
+let 'er stop as 'er is. 'E'd none ha' had thee for _my_ tellin'--tha
+hears. No, 'e's a fool, an' I know it. I says to him, 'Tha looks a man,
+doesn't ter, at thy age, goin' an' openin' to her when ter hears her
+scrat' at th' gate, after she's done gallivantin' round wherever she'd a
+mind. That looks rare an' soft.' But it's no use o' any talking: he
+answered that letter o' thine and made his own bad bargain.'
+
+But in spite of the old woman's anger, she was also flattered at Fanny's
+coming back to Harry. For Mrs. Goodall was impressed by Fanny--a woman of
+her own match. And more than this, everybody knew that Fanny's Aunt Kate
+had left her two hundred pounds: this apart from the girl's savings.
+
+So there was high tea in Princes Street when Harry came home black from
+work, and a rather acrid odour of cordiality, the vixen Jinny darting in
+to say vulgar things. Of course Jinny lived in a house whose garden end
+joined the paternal garden. They were a clan who stuck together, these
+Goodalls.
+
+It was arranged that Fanny should come to tea again on the Sunday, and
+the wedding was discussed. It should take place in a fortnight's time at
+Morley Chapel. Morley was a hamlet on the edge of the real country, and
+in its little Congregational Chapel Fanny and Harry had first met.
+
+What a creature of habit he was! He was still in the choir of Morley
+Chapel--not very regular. He belonged just because he had a tenor voice,
+and enjoyed singing. Indeed his solos were only spoilt to local fame
+because when he sang he handled his aitches so hopelessly.
+
+'And I saw 'eaven hopened
+And be'old, a wite 'orse-'
+
+This was one of Harry's classics, only surpassed by the fine outburst of
+his heaving:
+
+'Hangels--hever bright an' fair-'
+
+It was a pity, but it was inalterable. He had a good voice, and he sang
+with a certain lacerating fire, but his pronunciation made it all funny.
+And nothing could alter him.
+
+So he was never heard save at cheap concerts and in the little, poorer
+chapels. The others scoffed.
+
+Now the month was September, and Sunday was Harvest Festival at Morley
+Chapel, and Harry was singing solos. So that Fanny was to go to afternoon
+service, and come home to a grand spread of Sunday tea with him. Poor
+Fanny! One of the most wonderful afternoons had been a Sunday afternoon
+service, with her cousin Luther at her side, Harvest Festival in Morley
+Chapel. Harry had sung solos then--ten years ago. She remembered his pale
+blue tie, and the purple asters and the great vegetable marrows in which
+he was framed, and her cousin Luther at her side, young, clever, come
+down from London, where he was getting on well, learning his Latin and
+his French and German so brilliantly.
+
+However, once again it was Harvest Festival at Morley Chapel, and once
+again, as ten years before, a soft, exquisite September day, with the
+last roses pink in the cottage gardens, the last dahlias crimson, the
+last sunflowers yellow. And again the little old chapel was a bower, with
+its famous sheaves of corn and corn-plaited pillars, its great bunches of
+grapes, dangling like tassels from the pulpit corners, its marrows and
+potatoes and pears and apples and damsons, its purple asters and yellow
+Japanese sunflowers. Just as before, the red dahlias round the pillars
+were dropping, weak-headed among the oats. The place was crowded and hot,
+the plates of tomatoes seemed balanced perilously on the gallery front,
+the Rev. Enderby was weirder than ever to look at, so long and emaciated
+and hairless.
+
+The Rev. Enderby, probably forewarned, came and shook hands with her and
+welcomed her, in his broad northern, melancholy singsong before he
+mounted the pulpit. Fanny was handsome in a gauzy dress and a beautiful
+lace hat. Being a little late, she sat in a chair in the side-aisle
+wedged in, right in front of the chapel. Harry was in the gallery above,
+and she could only see him from the eyes upwards. She noticed again how
+his eyebrows met, blond and not very marked, over his nose. He was
+attractive too: physically lovable, very. If only--if only her _pride_
+had not suffered! She felt he dragged her down.
+
+'Come, ye thankful people come,
+Raise the song of harvest-home.
+All is safely gathered in
+Ere the winter storms begin--'
+
+Even the hymn was a falsehood, as the season had been wet, and half the
+crops were still out, and in a poor way.
+
+Poor Fanny! She sang little, and looked beautiful through that
+inappropriate hymn. Above her stood Harry--mercifully in a dark suit and
+dark tie, looking almost handsome. And his lacerating, pure tenor sounded
+well, when the words were drowned in the general commotion. Brilliant she
+looked, and brilliant she felt, for she was hot and angrily miserable and
+inflamed with a sort of fatal despair. Because there was about him a
+physical attraction which she really hated, but which she could not
+escape from. He was the first man who had ever kissed her. And his
+kisses, even while she rebelled from them, had lived in her blood and
+sent roots down into her soul. After all this time she had come back to
+them. And her soul groaned, for she felt dragged down, dragged down to
+earth, as a bird which some dog has got down in the dust. She knew her
+life would be unhappy. She knew that what she was doing was fatal. Yet it
+was her doom. She had to come back to him.
+
+He had to sing two solos this afternoon: one before the 'address' from
+the pulpit and one after. Fanny looked at him, and wondered he was not
+too shy to stand up there in front of all the people. But no, he was not
+shy. He had even a kind of assurance on his face as he looked down from
+the choir gallery at her: the assurance of a common man deliberately
+entrenched in his commonness. Oh, such a rage went through her veins as
+she saw the air of triumph, laconic, indifferent triumph which sat so
+obstinately and recklessly on his eyelids as he looked down at her. Ah,
+she despised him! But there he stood up in that choir gallery like
+Balaam's ass in front of her, and she could not get beyond him. A certain
+winsomeness also about him. A certain physical winsomeness, and as if his
+flesh were new and lovely to touch. The thorn of desire rankled bitterly
+in her heart.
+
+He, it goes without saying, sang like a canary this particular afternoon,
+with a certain defiant passion which pleasantly crisped the blood of the
+congregation. Fanny felt the crisp flames go through her veins as she
+listened. Even the curious loud-mouthed vernacular had a certain
+fascination. But, oh, also, it was so repugnant. He would triumph over
+her, obstinately he would drag her right back into the common people: a
+doom, a vulgar doom.
+
+The second performance was an anthem, in which Harry sang the solo parts.
+It was clumsy, but beautiful, with lovely words.
+
+'They that sow in tears shall reap in joy,
+He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed
+Shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
+him--'
+
+'Shall doubtless come, Shall doubtless come--' softly intoned the
+altos--'Bringing his she-e-eaves with him,' the trebles flourished
+brightly, and then again began the half-wistful solo:
+
+'They that sow in tears shall reap in joy--'
+
+Yes, it was effective and moving.
+
+But at the moment when Harry's voice sank carelessly down to his close,
+and the choir, standing behind him, were opening their mouths for the
+final triumphant outburst, a shouting female voice rose up from the body
+of the congregation. The organ gave one startled trump, and went silent;
+the choir stood transfixed.
+
+'You look well standing there, singing in God's holy house,' came the
+loud, angry female shout. Everybody turned electrified. A stoutish,
+red-faced woman in a black bonnet was standing up denouncing the soloist.
+Almost fainting with shock, the congregation realized it. 'You look well,
+don't you, standing there singing solos in God's holy house, you,
+Goodall. But I said I'd shame you. You look well, bringing your young
+woman here with you, don't you? I'll let her know who she's dealing
+with. A scamp as won't take the consequences of what he's done.' The
+hard-faced, frenzied woman turned in the direction of Fanny. '_That's_
+what Harry Goodall is, if you want to know.'
+
+And she sat down again in her seat. Fanny, startled like all the rest,
+had turned to look. She had gone white, and then a burning red, under the
+attack. She knew the woman: a Mrs. Nixon, a devil of a woman, who beat
+her pathetic, drunken, red-nosed second husband, Bob, and her two lanky
+daughters, grown-up as they were. A notorious character. Fanny turned
+round again, and sat motionless as eternity in her seat.
+
+There was a minute of perfect silence and suspense. The audience was
+open-mouthed and dumb; the choir stood like Lot's wife; and Harry, with
+his music-sheet, stood there uplifted, looking down with a dumb sort of
+indifference on Mrs. Nixon, his face nave and faintly mocking. Mrs.
+Nixon sat defiant in her seat, braving them all.
+
+Then a rustle, like a wood when the wind suddenly catches the leaves.
+And then the tall, weird minister got to his feet, and in his strong,
+bell-like, beautiful voice--the only beautiful thing about him--he said
+with infinite mournful pathos:
+
+'Let us unite in singing the last hymn on the hymn-sheet; the last hymn
+on the hymn-sheet, number eleven.
+
+'Fair waved the golden corn,
+In Canaan's pleasant land.'
+
+The organ tuned up promptly. During the hymn the offertory was taken. And
+after the hymn, the prayer.
+
+Mr. Enderby came from Northumberland. Like Harry, he had never been able
+to conquer his accent, which was very broad. He was a little simple, one
+of God's fools, perhaps, an odd bachelor soul, emotional, ugly, but very
+gentle.
+
+'And if, O our dear Lord, beloved Jesus, there should fall a shadow of
+sin upon our harvest, we leave it to Thee to judge, for Thou art judge.
+We lift our spirits and our sorrow, Jesus, to Thee, and our mouths are
+dumb. O, Lord, keep us from forward speech, restrain us from foolish
+words and thoughts, we pray Thee, Lord Jesus, who knowest all and judgest
+all.'
+
+Thus the minister said in his sad, resonant voice, washed his hands
+before the Lord. Fanny bent forward open-eyed during the prayer. She
+could see the roundish head of Harry, also bent forward. His face was
+inscrutable and expressionless. The shock left her bewildered. Anger
+perhaps was her dominating emotion.
+
+The audience began to rustle to its feet, to ooze slowly and excitedly
+out of the chapel, looking with wildly-interested eyes at Fanny, at Mrs.
+Nixon, and at Harry. Mrs. Nixon, shortish, stood defiant in her pew,
+facing the aisle, as if announcing that, without rolling her sleeves up,
+she was ready for anybody. Fanny sat quite still. Luckily the people did
+not have to pass her. And Harry, with red ears, was making his way
+sheepishly out of the gallery. The loud noise of the organ covered all
+the downstairs commotion of exit.
+
+The minister sat silent and inscrutable in his pulpit, rather like a
+death's-head, while the congregation filed out. When the last lingerers
+had unwillingly departed, craning their necks to stare at the still
+seated Fanny, he rose, stalked in his hooked fashion down the little
+country chapel and fastened the door. Then he returned and sat down by
+the silent young woman.
+
+'This is most unfortunate, most unfortunate!' he moaned. 'I am so sorry,
+I am so sorry, indeed, indeed, ah, indeed!' he sighed himself to a close.
+
+'It's a sudden surprise, that's one thing,' said Fanny brightly.
+
+'Yes--yes--indeed. Yes, a surprise, yes. I don't know the woman, I don't
+know her.'
+
+'I know her,' said Fanny. 'She's a bad one.'
+
+'Well! Well!' said the minister. 'I don't know her. I don't understand. I
+don't understand at all. But it is to be regretted, it is very much to be
+regretted. I am very sorry.'
+
+Fanny was watching the vestry door. The gallery stairs communicated with
+the vestry, not with the body of the chapel. She knew the choir members
+had been peeping for information.
+
+At last Harry came--rather sheepishly--with his hat in his hand.
+
+'Well!' said Fanny, rising to her feet.
+
+'We've had a bit of an extra,' said Harry.
+
+'I should think so,' said Fanny.
+
+'A most unfortunate circumstance--a most _unfortunate_ circumstance. Do
+you understand it, Harry? I don't understand it at all.'
+
+'Ah, I understand it. The daughter's goin' to have a childt, an' 'er lays
+it on to me.'
+
+'And has she no occasion to?' asked Fanny, rather censorious.
+
+'It's no more mine than it is some other chap's,' said Harry, looking
+aside.
+
+There was a moment of pause.
+
+'Which girl is it?' asked Fanny.
+
+'Annie--the young one--'
+
+There followed another silence.
+
+'I don't think I know them, do I?' asked the minister.
+
+'I shouldn't think so. Their name's Nixon--mother married old Bob for her
+second husband. She's a tanger--'s driven the gel to what she is. They
+live in Manners Road.'
+
+'Why, what's amiss with the girl?' asked Fanny sharply. 'She was all
+right when I knew her.'
+
+'Ay--she's all right. But she's always in an' out o' th' pubs, wi' th'
+fellows,' said Harry.
+
+'A nice thing!' said Fanny.
+
+Harry glanced towards the door. He wanted to get out.
+
+'Most distressing, indeed!' The minister slowly shook his head.
+
+'What about tonight, Mr. Enderby?' asked Harry, in rather a small voice.
+'Shall you want me?'
+
+Mr. Enderby looked up painedly, and put his hand to his brow. He studied
+Harry for some time, vacantly. There was the faintest sort of a
+resemblance between the two men.
+
+'Yes,' he said. 'Yes, I think. I think we must take no notice, and cause
+as little remark as possible.'
+
+Fanny hesitated. Then she said to Harry.
+
+'But _will_ you come?'
+
+He looked at her.
+
+'Ay, I s'll come,' he said.
+
+Then he turned to Mr. Enderby.
+
+'Well, good-afternoon, Mr. Enderby,' he said.
+
+'Good-afternoon, Harry, good-afternoon,' replied the mournful minister.
+Fanny followed Harry to the door, and for some time they walked in
+silence through the late afternoon.
+
+'And it's yours as much as anybody else's?' she said.
+
+'Ay,' he answered shortly.
+
+And they went without another word, for the long mile or so, till they
+came to the corner of the street where Harry lived. Fanny hesitated.
+Should she go on to her aunt's? Should she? It would mean leaving all
+this, for ever. Harry stood silent.
+
+Some obstinacy made her turn with him along the road to his own home.
+When they entered the house-place, the whole family was there, mother and
+father and Jinny, with Jinny's husband and children and Harry's two
+brothers.
+
+'You've been having yours ears warmed, they tell me,' said Mrs. Goodall
+grimly.
+
+'Who telled thee?' asked Harry shortly.
+
+'Maggie and Luke's both been in.'
+
+'You look well, don't you!' said interfering Jinny.
+
+Harry went and hung his hat up, without replying.
+
+'Come upstairs and take your hat off,' said Mrs. Goodall to Fanny, almost
+kindly. It would have annoyed her very much if Fanny had dropped her son
+at this moment.
+
+'What's 'er say, then?' asked the father secretly of Harry, jerking his
+head in the direction of the stairs whence Fanny had disappeared.
+
+'Nowt yet,' said Harry.
+
+'Serve you right if she chucks you now,' said Jinny. 'I'll bet it's right
+about Annie Nixon an' you.'
+
+'Tha bets so much,' said Harry.
+
+'Yi--but you can't deny it,' said Jinny.
+
+'I can if I've a mind.'
+
+His father looked at him inquiringly.
+
+'It's no more mine than it is Bill Bower's, or Ted Slaney's, or six or
+seven on 'em,' said Harry to his father.
+
+And the father nodded silently.
+
+'That'll not get you out of it, in court,' said Jinny.
+
+Upstairs Fanny evaded all the thrusts made by his mother, and did not
+declare her hand. She tidied her hair, washed her hands, and put the
+tiniest bit of powder on her face, for coolness, there in front of Mrs.
+Goodall's indignant gaze. It was like a declaration of independence. But
+the old woman said nothing.
+
+They came down to Sunday tea, with sardines and tinned salmon and tinned
+peaches, besides tarts and cakes. The chatter was general. It concerned
+the Nixon family and the scandal.
+
+'Oh, she's a foul-mouthed woman,' said Jinny of Mrs. Nixon. 'She may well
+talk about God's holy house, _she_ had. It's first time she's set foot in
+it, ever since she dropped off from being converted. She's a devil and
+she always was one. Can't you remember how she treated Bob's children,
+mother, when we lived down in the Buildings? I can remember when I was a
+little girl she used to bathe them in the yard, in the cold, so that
+they shouldn't splash the house. She'd half kill them if they made a
+mark on the floor, and the language she'd use! And one Saturday I can
+remember Garry, that was Bob's own girl, she ran off when her stepmother
+was going to bathe her--ran off without a rag of clothes on--can you
+remember, mother? And she hid in Smedley's closes--it was the time of
+mowing-grass--and nobody could find her. She hid out there all night,
+didn't she, mother? Nobody could find her. My word, there was a talk.
+They found her on Sunday morning--'
+
+'Fred Coutts threatened to break every bone in the woman's body, if she
+touched the children again,' put in the father.
+
+'Anyhow, they frightened her,' said Jinny. 'But she was nearly as bad
+with her own two. And anybody can see that she's driven old Bob till he's
+gone soft.'
+
+'Ah, soft as mush,' said Jack Goodall. ''E'd never addle a week's wage,
+nor yet a day's if th' chaps didn't make it up to him.'
+
+'My word, if he didn't bring her a week's wage, she'd pull his head off,'
+said Jinny.
+
+'But a clean woman, and respectable, except for her foul mouth,' said
+Mrs. Goodall. 'Keeps to herself like a bull-dog. Never lets anybody come
+near the house, and neighbours with nobody.'
+
+'Wanted it thrashed out of her,' said Mr. Goodall, a silent, evasive sort
+of man.
+
+'Where Bob gets the money for his drink from is a mystery,' said Jinny.
+
+'Chaps treats him,' said Harry.
+
+'Well, he's got the pair of frightenedest rabbit-eyes you'd wish to see,'
+said Jinny.
+
+'Ay, with a drunken man's murder in them, _I_ think,' said Mrs. Goodall.
+
+So the talk went on after tea, till it was practically time to start off
+to chapel again.
+
+'You'll have to be getting ready, Fanny,' said Mrs. Goodall.
+
+'I'm not going tonight,' said Fanny abruptly. And there was a sudden halt
+in the family. 'I'll stop with _you_ tonight, Mother,' she added.
+
+'Best you had, my gel,' said Mrs. Goodall, flattered and assured.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: England, My England
+
+Author: D.H. Lawrence
+
+Posting Date: August 18, 2011 [EBook #8914]
+Release Date: September, 2005
+[This file was first posted on August 24, 2003]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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+ ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+
+ BY
+ D. H. LAWRENCE
+
+
+
+
+_Contents_
+
+ENGLAND, MY ENGLAND
+
+TICKETS, PLEASE
+
+THE BLIND MAN
+
+MONKEY NUTS
+
+WINTRY PEACOCK
+
+YOU TOUCHED ME
+
+SAMSON AND DELILAH
+
+THE PRIMROSE PATH
+
+THE HORSE DEALER'S DAUGHTER
+
+FANNY AND ANNIE
+
+
+
+
+_England, My England_
+
+
+He was working on the edge of the common, beyond the small brook that ran
+in the dip at the bottom of the garden, carrying the garden path in
+continuation from the plank bridge on to the common. He had cut the rough
+turf and bracken, leaving the grey, dryish soil bare. But he was worried
+because he could not get the path straight, there was a pleat between his
+brows. He had set up his sticks, and taken the sights between the big
+pine trees, but for some reason everything seemed wrong. He looked again,
+straining his keen blue eyes, that had a touch of the Viking in them,
+through the shadowy pine trees as through a doorway, at the green-grassed
+garden-path rising from the shadow of alders by the log bridge up to the
+sunlit flowers. Tall white and purple columbines, and the butt-end of the
+old Hampshire cottage that crouched near the earth amid flowers,
+blossoming in the bit of shaggy wildness round about.
+
+There was a sound of children's voices calling and talking: high,
+childish, girlish voices, slightly didactic and tinged with domineering:
+'If you don't come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where there are
+snakes.' And nobody had the _sangfroid_ to reply: 'Run then, little
+fool.' It was always, 'No, darling. Very well, darling. In a moment,
+darling. Darling, you _must_ be patient.'
+
+His heart was hard with disillusion: a continual gnawing and resistance.
+But he worked on. What was there to do but submit!
+
+The sunlight blazed down upon the earth, there was a vividness of flamy
+vegetation, of fierce seclusion amid the savage peace of the commons.
+Strange how the savage England lingers in patches: as here, amid these
+shaggy gorse commons, and marshy, snake infested places near the foot of
+the south downs. The spirit of place lingering on primeval, as when the
+Saxons came, so long ago.
+
+Ah, how he had loved it! The green garden path, the tufts of flowers,
+purple and white columbines, and great oriental red poppies with their
+black chaps and mulleins tall and yellow, this flamy garden which had
+been a garden for a thousand years, scooped out in the little hollow
+among the snake-infested commons. He had made it flame with flowers, in a
+sun cup under its hedges and trees. So old, so old a place! And yet he
+had re-created it.
+
+The timbered cottage with its sloping, cloak-like roof was old and
+forgotten. It belonged to the old England of hamlets and yeomen. Lost
+all alone on the edge of the common, at the end of a wide, grassy,
+briar-entangled lane shaded with oak, it had never known the world of
+today. Not till Egbert came with his bride. And he had come to fill it
+with flowers.
+
+The house was ancient and very uncomfortable. But he did not want to
+alter it. Ah, marvellous to sit there in the wide, black, time-old
+chimney, at night when the wind roared overhead, and the wood which he
+had chopped himself sputtered on the hearth! Himself on one side the
+angle, and Winifred on the other.
+
+Ah, how he had wanted her: Winifred! She was young and beautiful and
+strong with life, like a flame in sunshine. She moved with a slow grace
+of energy like a blossoming, red-flowered bush in motion. She, too,
+seemed to come out of the old England, ruddy, strong, with a certain
+crude, passionate quiescence and a hawthorn robustness. And he, he was
+tall and slim and agile, like an English archer with his long supple legs
+and fine movements. Her hair was nut-brown and all in energic curls and
+tendrils. Her eyes were nut-brown, too, like a robin's for brightness.
+And he was white-skinned with fine, silky hair that had darkened from
+fair, and a slightly arched nose of an old country family. They were a
+beautiful couple.
+
+The house was Winifred's. Her father was a man of energy, too. He had
+come from the north poor. Now he was moderately rich. He had bought this
+fair stretch of inexpensive land, down in Hampshire. Not far from the
+tiny church of the almost extinct hamlet stood his own house, a
+commodious old farmhouse standing back from the road across a bare
+grassed yard. On one side of this quadrangle was the long, long barn or
+shed which he had made into a cottage for his youngest daughter
+Priscilla. One saw little blue-and-white check curtains at the long
+windows, and inside, overhead, the grand old timbers of the high-pitched
+shed. This was Prissy's house. Fifty yards away was the pretty little new
+cottage which he had built for his daughter Magdalen, with the vegetable
+garden stretching away to the oak copse. And then away beyond the lawns
+and rose trees of the house-garden went the track across a shaggy, wild
+grass space, towards the ridge of tall black pines that grew on a
+dyke-bank, through the pines and above the sloping little bog, under the
+wide, desolate oak trees, till there was Winifred's cottage crouching
+unexpectedly in front, so much alone, and so primitive.
+
+It was Winifred's own house, and the gardens and the bit of common and
+the boggy slope were hers: her tiny domain. She had married just at the
+time when her father had bought the estate, about ten years before the
+war, so she had been able to come to Egbert with this for a marriage
+portion. And who was more delighted, he or she, it would be hard to say.
+She was only twenty at the time, and he was only twenty-one. He had about
+a hundred and fifty pounds a year of his own--and nothing else but his
+very considerable personal attractions. He had no profession: he earned
+nothing. But he talked of literature and music, he had a passion for
+old folk-music, collecting folk-songs and folk-dances, studying the
+Morris-dance and the old customs. Of course in time he would make money
+in these ways.
+
+Meanwhile youth and health and passion and promise. Winifred's father was
+always generous: but still, he was a man from the north with a hard head
+and a hard skin too, having received a good many knocks. At home he kept
+the hard head out of sight, and played at poetry and romance with his
+literary wife and his sturdy, passionate girls. He was a man of courage,
+not given to complaining, bearing his burdens by himself. No, he did not
+let the world intrude far into his home. He had a delicate, sensitive
+wife whose poetry won some fame in the narrow world of letters. He
+himself, with his tough old barbarian fighting spirit, had an almost
+child-like delight in verse, in sweet poetry, and in the delightful game
+of a cultured home. His blood was strong even to coarseness. But that
+only made the home more vigorous, more robust and Christmassy. There was
+always a touch of Christmas about him, now he was well off. If there was
+poetry after dinner, there were also chocolates and nuts, and good little
+out-of-the-way things to be munching.
+
+Well then, into this family came Egbert. He was made of quite a different
+paste. The girls and the father were strong-limbed, thick-blooded people,
+true English, as holly-trees and hawthorn are English. Their culture was
+grafted on to them, as one might perhaps graft a common pink rose on to a
+thornstem. It flowered oddly enough, but it did not alter their blood.
+
+And Egbert was a born rose. The age-long breeding had left him with a
+delightful spontaneous passion. He was not clever, nor even 'literary'.
+No, but the intonation of his voice, and the movement of his supple,
+handsome body, and the fine texture of his flesh and his hair, the slight
+arch of his nose, the quickness of his blue eyes would easily take the
+place of poetry. Winifred loved him, loved him, this southerner, as a
+higher being. A _higher_ being, mind you. Not a deeper. And as for him,
+he loved her in passion with every fibre of him. She was the very warm
+stuff of life to him.
+
+Wonderful then, those days at Crockham Cottage, the first days, all alone
+save for the woman who came to work in the mornings. Marvellous days,
+when she had all his tall, supple, fine-fleshed youth to herself, for
+herself, and he had her like a ruddy fire into which he could cast
+himself for rejuvenation. Ah, that it might never end, this passion, this
+marriage! The flame of their two bodies burnt again into that old
+cottage, that was haunted already by so much by-gone, physical desire.
+You could not be in the dark room for an hour without the influences
+coming over you. The hot blood-desire of by-gone yeomen, there in this
+old den where they had lusted and bred for so many generations. The
+silent house, dark, with thick, timbered walls and the big black
+chimney-place, and the sense of secrecy. Dark, with low, little windows,
+sunk into the earth. Dark, like a lair where strong beasts had lurked and
+mated, lonely at night and lonely by day, left to themselves and their
+own intensity for so many generations. It seemed to cast a spell on the
+two young people. They became different. There was a curious secret glow
+about them, a certain slumbering flame hard to understand, that enveloped
+them both. They too felt that they did not belong to the London world any
+more. Crockham had changed their blood: the sense of the snakes that
+lived and slept even in their own garden, in the sun, so that he, going
+forward with the spade, would see a curious coiled brownish pile on the
+black soil, which suddenly would start up, hiss, and dazzle rapidly away,
+hissing. One day Winifred heard the strangest scream from the flower-bed
+under the low window of the living room: ah, the strangest scream, like
+the very soul of the dark past crying aloud. She ran out, and saw a long
+brown snake on the flower-bed, and in its flat mouth the one hind leg of
+a frog was striving to escape, and screaming its strange, tiny, bellowing
+scream. She looked at the snake, and from its sullen flat head it looked
+at her, obstinately. She gave a cry, and it released the frog and slid
+angrily away.
+
+That was Crockham. The spear of modern invention had not passed through
+it, and it lay there secret, primitive, savage as when the Saxons first
+came. And Egbert and she were caught there, caught out of the world.
+
+He was not idle, nor was she. There were plenty of things to be done, the
+house to be put into final repair after the workmen had gone, cushions
+and curtains to sew, the paths to make, the water to fetch and attend to,
+and then the slope of the deep-soiled, neglected garden to level, to
+terrace with little terraces and paths, and to fill with flowers. He
+worked away, in his shirt-sleeves, worked all day intermittently doing
+this thing and the other. And she, quiet and rich in herself, seeing him
+stooping and labouring away by himself, would come to help him, to be
+near him. He of course was an amateur--a born amateur. He worked so hard,
+and did so little, and nothing he ever did would hold together for long.
+If he terraced the garden, he held up the earth with a couple of long
+narrow planks that soon began to bend with the pressure from behind, and
+would not need many years to rot through and break and let the soil
+slither all down again in a heap towards the stream-bed. But there you
+are. He had not been brought up to come to grips with anything, and he
+thought it would do. Nay, he did not think there was anything else except
+little temporary contrivances possible, he who had such a passion for his
+old enduring cottage, and for the old enduring things of the bygone
+England. Curious that the sense of permanency in the past had such a hold
+over him, whilst in the present he was all amateurish and sketchy.
+
+Winifred could not criticize him. Town-bred, everything seemed to her
+splendid, and the very digging and shovelling itself seemed romantic. But
+neither Egbert nor she yet realized the difference between work and
+romance.
+
+Godfrey Marshall, her father, was at first perfectly pleased with the
+menage down at Crockham Cottage. He thought Egbert was wonderful, the
+many things he accomplished, and he was gratified by the glow of physical
+passion between the two young people. To the man who in London still
+worked hard to keep steady his modest fortune, the thought of this young
+couple digging away and loving one another down at Crockham Cottage,
+buried deep among the commons and marshes, near the pale-showing bulk of
+the downs, was like a chapter of living romance. And they drew the
+sustenance for their fire of passion from him, from the old man. It was
+he who fed their flame. He triumphed secretly in the thought. And it was
+to her father that Winifred still turned, as the one source of all surety
+and life and support. She loved Egbert with passion. But behind her was
+the power of her father. It was the power of her father she referred to,
+whenever she needed to refer. It never occurred to her to refer to
+Egbert, if she were in difficulty or doubt. No, in all the _serious_
+matters she depended on her father.
+
+For Egbert had no intention of coming to grips with life. He had no
+ambition whatsoever. He came from a decent family, from a pleasant
+country home, from delightful surroundings. He should, of course, have
+had a profession. He should have studied law or entered business in some
+way. But no--that fatal three pounds a week would keep him from starving
+as long as he lived, and he did not want to give himself into bondage. It
+was not that he was idle. He was always doing something, in his
+amateurish way. But he had no desire to give himself to the world, and
+still less had he any desire to fight his way in the world. No, no, the
+world wasn't worth it. He wanted to ignore it, to go his own way apart,
+like a casual pilgrim down the forsaken sidetracks. He loved his wife,
+his cottage and garden. He would make his life there, as a sort of
+epicurean hermit. He loved the past, the old music and dances and customs
+of old England. He would try and live in the spirit of these, not in the
+spirit of the world of business.
+
+But often Winifred's father called her to London: for he loved to have
+his children round him. So Egbert and she must have a tiny flat in town,
+and the young couple must transfer themselves from time to time from the
+country to the city. In town Egbert had plenty of friends, of the same
+ineffectual sort as himself, tampering with the arts, literature,
+painting, sculpture, music. He was not bored.
+
+Three pounds a week, however, would not pay for all this. Winifred's
+father paid. He liked paying. He made her only a very small allowance,
+but he often gave her ten pounds--or gave Egbert ten pounds. So they both
+looked on the old man as the mainstay. Egbert didn't mind being
+patronized and paid for. Only when he felt the family was a little _too_
+condescending, on account of money, he began to get huffy.
+
+Then of course children came: a lovely little blonde daughter with a head
+of thistle-down. Everybody adored the child. It was the first exquisite
+blonde thing that had come into the family, a little mite with the white,
+slim, beautiful limbs of its father, and as it grew up the dancing,
+dainty movement of a wild little daisy-spirit. No wonder the Marshalls
+all loved the child: they called her Joyce. They themselves had their own
+grace, but it was slow, rather heavy. They had everyone of them strong,
+heavy limbs and darkish skins, and they were short in stature. And now
+they had for one of their own this light little cowslip child. She was
+like a little poem in herself.
+
+But nevertheless, she brought a new difficulty. Winifred must have a
+nurse for her. Yes, yes, there must be a nurse. It was the family decree.
+Who was to pay for the nurse? The grandfather--seeing the father himself
+earned no money. Yes, the grandfather would pay, as he had paid all the
+lying-in expenses. There came a slight sense of money-strain. Egbert was
+living on his father-in-law.
+
+After the child was born, it was never quite the same between him and
+Winifred. The difference was at first hardly perceptible. But it was
+there. In the first place Winifred had a new centre of interest. She was
+not going to adore her child. But she had what the modern mother so often
+has in the place of spontaneous love: a profound sense of duty towards
+her child. Winifred appreciated her darling little girl, and felt a deep
+sense of duty towards her. Strange, that this sense of duty should go
+deeper than the love for her husband. But so it was. And so it often is.
+The responsibility of motherhood was the prime responsibility in
+Winifred's heart: the responsibility of wifehood came a long way second.
+
+Her child seemed to link her up again in a circuit with her own family.
+Her father and mother, herself, and her child, that was the human trinity
+for her. Her husband--? Yes, she loved him still. But that was like play.
+She had an almost barbaric sense of duty and of family. Till she married,
+her first human duty had been towards her father: he was the pillar, the
+source of life, the everlasting support. Now another link was added to
+the chain of duty: her father, herself, and her child.
+
+Egbert was out of it. Without anything happening, he was gradually,
+unconsciously excluded from the circle. His wife still loved him,
+physically. But, but--he was _almost_ the unnecessary party in the
+affair. He could not complain of Winifred. She still did her duty towards
+him. She still had a physical passion for him, that physical passion on
+which he had put all his life and soul. But--but--
+
+It was for a long while an ever-recurring _but_. And then, after the
+second child, another blonde, winsome touching little thing, not so proud
+and flame-like as Joyce--after Annabel came, then Egbert began truly to
+realize how it was. His wife still loved him. But--and now the but had
+grown enormous--her physical love for him was of secondary importance to
+her. It became ever less important. After all, she had had it, this
+physical passion, for two years now. It was not this that one lived from.
+No, no--something sterner, realer.
+
+She began to resent her own passion for Egbert--just a little she began
+to despise it. For after all there he was, he was charming, he was
+lovable, he was terribly desirable. But--but--oh, the awful looming cloud
+of that _but!_--he did not stand firm in the landscape of her life like a
+tower of strength, like a great pillar of significance. No, he was like a
+cat one has about the house, which will one day disappear and leave no
+trace. He was like a flower in the garden, trembling in the wind of life,
+and then gone, leaving nothing to show. As an adjunct, as an accessory,
+he was perfect. Many a woman would have adored to have him about her all
+her life, the most beautiful and desirable of all her possessions. But
+Winifred belonged to another school.
+
+The years went by, and instead of coming more to grips with life, he
+relaxed more. He was of a subtle, sensitive, passionate nature. But he
+simply _would_ not give himself to what Winifred called life, _Work_. No,
+he would not go into the world and work for money. No, he just would not.
+If Winifred liked to live beyond their small income--well, it was her
+look-out.
+
+And Winifred did not really want him to go out into the world to work for
+money. Money became, alas, a word like a firebrand between them, setting
+them both aflame with anger. But that is because we must talk in symbols.
+Winifred did not really care about money. She did not care whether he
+earned or did not earn anything. Only she knew she was dependent on her
+father for three-fourths of the money spent for herself and her children,
+that she let that be the _casus belli_, the drawn weapon between herself
+and Egbert.
+
+What did she want--what did she want? Her mother once said to her, with
+that characteristic touch of irony: 'Well, dear, if it is your fate to
+consider the lilies, that toil not, neither do they spin, that is one
+destiny among many others, and perhaps not so unpleasant as most. Why do
+you take it amiss, my child?'
+
+The mother was subtler than her children, they very rarely knew how to
+answer her. So Winifred was only more confused. It was not a question of
+lilies. At least, if it were a question of lilies, then her children were
+the little blossoms. They at least _grew_. Doesn't Jesus say: 'Consider
+the lilies _how they grow_.' Good then, she had her growing babies. But
+as for that other tall, handsome flower of a father of theirs, he was
+full grown already, so she did not want to spend her life considering him
+in the flower of his days.
+
+No, it was not that he didn't earn money. It was not that he was idle. He
+was _not_ idle. He was always doing something, always working away, down
+at Crockham, doing little jobs. But, oh dear, the little jobs--the garden
+paths--the gorgeous flowers--the chairs to mend, old chairs to mend!
+
+It was that he stood for nothing. If he had done something
+unsuccessfully, and _lost_ what money they had! If he had but striven
+with something. Nay, even if he had been wicked, a waster, she would have
+been more free. She would have had something to resist, at least. A
+waster stands for something, really. He says: 'No, I will not aid and
+abet society in this business of increase and hanging together, I will
+upset the apple-cart as much as I can, in my small way.' Or else he says:
+'No, I will _not_ bother about others. If I have lusts, they are my own,
+and I prefer them to other people's virtues.' So, a waster, a scamp,
+takes a sort of stand. He exposes himself to opposition and final
+castigation: at any rate in story-books.
+
+But Egbert! What are you to do with a man like Egbert? He had no vices.
+He was really kind, nay generous. And he was not weak. If he had been
+weak Winifred could have been kind to him. But he did not even give her
+that consolation. He was not weak, and he did not want her consolation or
+her kindness. No, thank you. He was of a fine passionate temper, and of a
+rarer steel than she. He knew it, and she knew it. Hence she was only the
+more baffled and maddened, poor thing. He, the higher, the finer, in his
+way the stronger, played with his garden, and his old folk-songs and
+Morris-dances, just played, and let her support the pillars of the future
+on her own heart.
+
+And he began to get bitter, and a wicked look began to come on his face.
+He did not give in to her; not he. There were seven devils inside his
+long, slim, white body. He was healthy, full of restrained life. Yes,
+even he himself had to lock up his own vivid life inside himself, now she
+would not take it from him. Or rather, now that she only took it
+occasionally. For she had to yield at times. She loved him so, she
+desired him so, he was so exquisite to her, the fine creature that he
+was, finer than herself. Yes, with a groan she had to give in to her own
+unquenched passion for him. And he came to her then--ah, terrible, ah,
+wonderful, sometimes she wondered how either of them could live after the
+terror of the passion that swept between them. It was to her as if pure
+lightning, flash after flash, went through every fibre of her, till
+extinction came.
+
+But it is the fate of human beings to live on. And it is the fate of
+clouds that seem nothing but bits of vapour slowly to pile up, to pile up
+and fill the heavens and blacken the sun entirely.
+
+So it was. The love came back, the lightning of passion flashed
+tremendously between them. And there was blue sky and gorgeousness for a
+little while. And then, as inevitably, as inevitably, slowly the clouds
+began to edge up again above the horizon, slowly, slowly to lurk about
+the heavens, throwing an occasional cold and hateful shadow: slowly,
+slowly to congregate, to fill the empyrean space.
+
+And as the years passed, the lightning cleared the sky more and more
+rarely, less and less the blue showed. Gradually the grey lid sank down
+upon them, as if it would be permanent.
+
+Why didn't Egbert do something, then? Why didn't he come to grips with
+life? Why wasn't he like Winifred's father, a pillar of society, even if
+a slender, exquisite column? Why didn't he go into harness of some sort?
+Why didn't he take _some_ direction?
+
+Well, you can bring an ass to the water, but you cannot make him drink.
+The world was the water and Egbert was the ass. And he wasn't having any.
+He couldn't: he just couldn't. Since necessity did not force him to work
+for his bread and butter, he would not work for work's sake. You can't
+make the columbine flowers nod in January, nor make the cuckoo sing in
+England at Christmas. Why? It isn't his season. He doesn't want to. Nay,
+he _can't_ want to.
+
+And there it was with Egbert. He couldn't link up with the world's work,
+because the basic desire was absent from him. Nay, at the bottom of him
+he had an even stronger desire: to hold aloof. To hold aloof. To do
+nobody any damage. But to hold aloof. It was not his season.
+
+Perhaps he should not have married and had children. But you can't stop
+the waters flowing.
+
+Which held true for Winifred, too. She was not made to endure aloof. Her
+family tree was a robust vegetation that had to be stirring and
+believing. In one direction or another her life _had_ to go. In her own
+home she had known nothing of this diffidence which she found in Egbert,
+and which she could not understand, and which threw her into such dismay.
+What was she to do, what was she to do, in face of this terrible
+diffidence?
+
+It was all so different in her own home. Her father may have had his own
+misgivings, but he kept them to himself. Perhaps he had no very profound
+belief in this world of ours, this society which we have elaborated with
+so much effort, only to find ourselves elaborated to death at last. But
+Godfrey Marshall was of tough, rough fibre, not without a vein of
+healthy cunning through it all. It was for him a question of winning
+through, and leaving the rest to heaven. Without having many illusions
+to grace him, he still _did_ believe in heaven. In a dark and
+unquestioning way, he had a sort of faith: an acrid faith like the sap of
+some not-to-be-exterminated tree. Just a blind acrid faith as sap is
+blind and acrid, and yet pushes on in growth and in faith. Perhaps he was
+unscrupulous, but only as a striving tree is unscrupulous, pushing its
+single way in a jungle of others.
+
+In the end, it is only this robust, sap-like faith which keeps man going.
+He may live on for many generations inside the shelter of the social
+establishment which he has erected for himself, as pear-trees and currant
+bushes would go on bearing fruit for many seasons, inside a walled
+garden, even if the race of man were suddenly exterminated. But bit by
+bit the wall-fruit-trees would gradually pull down the very walls that
+sustained them. Bit by bit every establishment collapses, unless it is
+renewed or restored by living hands, all the while.
+
+Egbert could not bring himself to any more of this restoring or renewing
+business. He was not aware of the fact: but awareness doesn't help much,
+anyhow. He just couldn't. He had the stoic and epicurean quality of his
+old, fine breeding. His father-in-law, however, though he was not one bit
+more of a fool than Egbert, realized that since we are here we may as
+well live. And so he applied himself to his own tiny section of the
+social work, and to doing the best for his family, and to leaving the
+rest to the ultimate will of heaven. A certain robustness of blood made
+him able to go on. But sometimes even from him spurted a sudden gall of
+bitterness against the world and its make-up. And yet--he had his own
+will-to-succeed, and this carried him through. He refused to ask himself
+what the success would amount to. It amounted to the estate down in
+Hampshire, and his children lacking for nothing, and himself of some
+importance in the world: and _basta!--Basta! Basta!_
+
+Nevertheless do not let us imagine that he was a common pusher. He was
+not. He knew as well as Egbert what disillusion meant. Perhaps in his
+soul he had the same estimation of success. But he had a certain acrid
+courage, and a certain will-to-power. In his own small circle he would
+emanate power, the single power of his own blind self. With all his
+spoiling of his children, he was still the father of the old English
+type. He was too wise to make laws and to domineer in the abstract. But
+he had kept, and all honour to him, a certain primitive dominion over the
+souls of his children, the old, almost magic prestige of paternity. There
+it was, still burning in him, the old smoky torch or paternal godhead.
+
+And in the sacred glare of this torch his children had been brought up.
+He had given the girls every liberty, at last. But he had never really
+let them go beyond his power. And they, venturing out into the hard white
+light of our fatherless world, learned to see with the eyes of the world.
+They learned to criticize their father, even, from some effulgence of
+worldly white light, to see him as inferior. But this was all very well
+in the head. The moment they forgot their tricks of criticism, the old
+red glow of his authority came over them again. He was not to be
+quenched.
+
+Let the psycho-analyst talk about father complex. It is just a word
+invented. Here was a man who had kept alive the old red flame of
+fatherhood, fatherhood that had even the right to sacrifice the child to
+God, like Isaac. Fatherhood that had life-and-death authority over the
+children: a great natural power. And till his children could be brought
+under some other great authority as girls; or could arrive at manhood and
+become themselves centres of the same power, continuing the same male
+mystery as men; until such time, willy-nilly, Godfrey Marshall would keep
+his children.
+
+It had seemed as if he might lose Winifred. Winifred had _adored_ her
+husband, and looked up to him as to something wonderful. Perhaps she had
+expected in him another great authority, a male authority greater, finer
+than her father's. For having once known the glow of male power, she
+would not easily turn to the cold white light of feminine independence.
+She would hunger, hunger all her life for the warmth and shelter of true
+male strength.
+
+And hunger she might, for Egbert's power lay in the abnegation of power.
+He was himself the living negative of power. Even of responsibility. For
+the negation of power at last means the negation of responsibility. As
+far as these things went, he would confine himself to himself. He would
+try to confine his own _influence_ even to himself. He would try, as far
+as possible, to abstain from influencing his children by assuming any
+responsibility for them. 'A little child shall lead them--' His child
+should lead, then. He would try not to make it go in any direction
+whatever. He would abstain from influencing it. Liberty!--
+
+Poor Winifred was like a fish out of water in this liberty, gasping for
+the denser element which should contain her. Till her child came. And
+then she knew that she must be responsible for it, that she must have
+authority over it.
+
+But here Egbert silently and negatively stepped in. Silently, negatively,
+but fatally he neutralized her authority over her children.
+
+There was a third little girl born. And after this Winifred wanted no
+more children. Her soul was turning to salt.
+
+So she had charge of the children, they were her responsibility. The
+money for them had come from her father. She would do her very best for
+them, and have command over their life and death. But no! Egbert would
+not take the responsibility. He would not even provide the money. But he
+would not let her have her way. Her dark, silent, passionate authority he
+would not allow. It was a battle between them, the battle between liberty
+and the old blood-power. And of course he won. The little girls loved him
+and adored him. 'Daddy! Daddy!' They could do as they liked with him.
+Their mother would have ruled them. She would have ruled them
+passionately, with indulgence, with the old dark magic of parental
+authority, something looming and unquestioned and, after all, divine: if
+we believe in divine authority. The Marshalls did, being Catholic.
+
+And Egbert, he turned her old dark, Catholic blood-authority into a sort
+of tyranny. He would not leave her her children. He stole them from her,
+and yet without assuming responsibility for them. He stole them from her,
+in emotion and spirit, and left her only to command their behaviour. A
+thankless lot for a mother. And her children adored him, adored him,
+little knowing the empty bitterness they were preparing for themselves
+when they too grew up to have husbands: husbands such as Egbert, adorable
+and null.
+
+Joyce, the eldest, was still his favourite. She was now a quicksilver
+little thing of six years old. Barbara, the youngest, was a toddler of
+two years. They spent most of their time down at Crockham, because he
+wanted to be there. And even Winifred loved the place really. But now, in
+her frustrated and blinded state, it was full of menace for her children.
+The adders, the poison-berries, the brook, the marsh, the water that
+might not be pure--one thing and another. From mother and nurse it was a
+guerilla gunfire of commands, and blithe, quicksilver disobedience from
+the three blonde, never-still little girls. Behind the girls was the
+father, against mother and nurse. And so it was.
+
+'If you don't come quick, nurse, I shall run out there to where there are
+snakes.'
+
+'Joyce, you _must_ be patient. I'm just changing Annabel.'
+
+There you are. There it was: always the same. Working away on the common
+across the brook he heard it. And he worked on, just the same.
+
+Suddenly he heard a shriek, and he flung the spade from him and started
+for the bridge, looking up like a startled deer. Ah, there was
+Winifred--Joyce had hurt herself. He went on up the garden.
+
+'What is it?'
+
+The child was still screaming--now it was--'Daddy! Daddy! Oh--oh, Daddy!'
+And the mother was saying:
+
+'Don't be frightened, darling. Let mother look.'
+
+But the child only cried:
+
+'Oh, Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!'
+
+She was terrified by the sight of the blood running from her own knee.
+Winifred crouched down, with her child of six in her lap, to examine the
+knee. Egbert bent over also.
+
+'Don't make such a noise, Joyce,' he said irritably. 'How did she do it?'
+
+'She fell on that sickle thing which you left lying about after cutting
+the grass,' said Winifred, looking into his face with bitter accusation
+as he bent near.
+
+He had taken his handkerchief and tied it round the knee. Then he lifted
+the still sobbing child in his arms, and carried her into the house and
+upstairs to her bed. In his arms she became quiet. But his heart was
+burning with pain and with guilt. He had left the sickle there lying on
+the edge of the grass, and so his first-born child whom he loved so
+dearly had come to hurt. But then it was an accident--it was an accident.
+Why should he feel guilty? It would probably be nothing, better in two or
+three days. Why take it to heart, why worry? He put it aside.
+
+The child lay on the bed in her little summer frock, her face very white
+now after the shock, Nurse had come carrying the youngest child: and
+little Annabel stood holding her skirt. Winifred, terribly serious and
+wooden-seeming, was bending over the knee, from which she had taken his
+blood-soaked handkerchief. Egbert bent forward, too, keeping more
+_sangfroid_ in his face than in his heart. Winifred went all of a lump of
+seriousness, so he had to keep some reserve. The child moaned and
+whimpered.
+
+The knee was still bleeding profusely--it was a deep cut right in the
+joint.
+
+'You'd better go for the doctor, Egbert,' said Winifred bitterly.
+
+'Oh, no! Oh, no!' cried Joyce in a panic.
+
+'Joyce, my darling, don't cry!' said Winifred, suddenly catching the
+little girl to her breast in a strange tragic anguish, the _Mater
+Dolorata_. Even the child was frightened into silence. Egbert looked at
+the tragic figure of his wife with the child at her breast, and turned
+away. Only Annabel started suddenly to cry: 'Joycey, Joycey, don't have
+your leg bleeding!'
+
+Egbert rode four miles to the village for the doctor. He could not help
+feeling that Winifred was laying it on rather. Surely the knee itself
+wasn't hurt! Surely not. It was only a surface cut.
+
+The doctor was out. Egbert left the message and came cycling swiftly
+home, his heart pinched with anxiety. He dropped sweating off his bicycle
+and went into the house, looking rather small, like a man who is at
+fault. Winifred was upstairs sitting by Joyce, who was looking pale and
+important in bed, and was eating some tapioca pudding. The pale, small,
+scared face of his child went to Egbert's heart.
+
+'Doctor Wing was out. He'll be here about half past two,' said Egbert.
+
+'I don't want him to come,' whimpered Joyce.
+
+'Joyce, dear, you must be patient and quiet,' said Winifred. 'He won't
+hurt you. But he will tell us what to do to make your knee better
+quickly. That is why he must come.'
+
+Winifred always explained carefully to her little girls: and it always
+took the words off their lips for the moment.
+
+'Does it bleed yet?' said Egbert.
+
+Winifred moved the bedclothes carefully aside.
+
+'I think not,' she said.
+
+Egbert stooped also to look.
+
+'No, it doesn't,' she said. Then he stood up with a relieved look on his
+face. He turned to the child.
+
+'Eat your pudding, Joyce,' he said. 'It won't be anything. You've only
+got to keep still for a few days.'
+
+'You haven't had your dinner, have you, Daddy?'
+
+'Not yet.'
+
+'Nurse will give it to you,' said Winifred.
+
+'You'll be all right, Joyce,' he said, smiling to the child and pushing
+the blonde hair off her brow. She smiled back winsomely into his face.
+
+He went downstairs and ate his meal alone. Nurse served him. She liked
+waiting on him. All women liked him and liked to do things for him.
+
+The doctor came--a fat country practitioner, pleasant and kind.
+
+'What, little girl, been tumbling down, have you? There's a thing to be
+doing, for a smart little lady like you! What! And cutting your knee!
+Tut-tut-tut! That _wasn't_ clever of you, now was it? Never mind, never
+mind, soon be better. Let us look at it. Won't hurt you. Not the least in
+life. Bring a bowl with a little warm water, nurse. Soon have it all
+right again, soon have it all right.'
+
+Joyce smiled at him with a pale smile of faint superiority. This was
+_not_ the way in which she was used to being talked to.
+
+He bent down, carefully looking at the little, thin, wounded knee of the
+child. Egbert bent over him.
+
+'Oh, dear, oh, dear! Quite a deep little cut. Nasty little cut. Nasty
+little cut. But, never mind. Never mind, little lady. We'll soon have it
+better. Soon have it better, little lady. What's your name?'
+
+'My name is Joyce,' said the child distinctly.
+
+'Oh, really!' he replied. 'Oh, really! Well, that's a fine name too, in
+my opinion. Joyce, eh?--And how old might Miss Joyce be? Can she tell me
+that?'
+
+'I'm six,' said the child, slightly amused and very condescending.
+
+'Six! There now. Add up and count as far as six, can you? Well, that's a
+clever little girl, a clever little girl. And if she has to drink a
+spoonful of medicine, she won't make a murmur, I'll be bound. Not like
+_some_ little girls. What? Eh?'
+
+'I take it if mother wishes me to,' said Joyce.
+
+'Ah, there now! That's the style! That's what I like to hear from a
+little lady in bed because she's cut her knee. That's the style--'
+
+The comfortable and prolix doctor dressed and bandaged the knee and
+recommended bed and a light diet for the little lady. He thought
+a week or a fortnight would put it right. No bones or ligatures
+damaged--fortunately. Only a flesh cut. He would come again in a day or
+two.
+
+So Joyce was reassured and stayed in bed and had all her toys up. Her
+father often played with her. The doctor came the third day. He was
+fairly pleased with the knee. It was healing. It was healing--yes--yes.
+Let the child continue in bed. He came again after a day or two. Winifred
+was a trifle uneasy. The wound seemed to be healing on the top, but it
+hurt the child too much. It didn't look quite right. She said so to
+Egbert.
+
+'Egbert, I'm sure Joyce's knee isn't healing properly.'
+
+'I think it is,' he said. 'I think it's all right.'
+
+'I'd rather Doctor Wing came again--I don't feel satisfied.'
+
+'Aren't you trying to imagine it worse than it really is?'
+
+'You would say so, of course. But I shall write a post-card to Doctor
+Wing now.'
+
+The doctor came next day. He examined the knee. Yes, there was
+inflammation. Yes, there _might_ be a little septic poisoning--there
+might. There might. Was the child feverish?
+
+So a fortnight passed by, and the child _was_ feverish, and the knee was
+more inflamed and grew worse and was painful, painful. She cried in the
+night, and her mother had to sit up with her. Egbert still insisted it
+was nothing, really--it would pass. But in his heart he was anxious.
+
+Winifred wrote again to her father. On Saturday the elderly man appeared.
+And no sooner did Winifred see the thick, rather short figure in its grey
+suit than a great yearning came over her.
+
+'Father, I'm not satisfied with Joyce. I'm not satisfied with Doctor
+Wing.'
+
+'Well, Winnie, dear, if you're not satisfied we must have further advice,
+that is all.'
+
+The sturdy, powerful, elderly man went upstairs, his voice sounding
+rather grating through the house, as if it cut upon the tense atmosphere.
+
+'How are you, Joyce, darling?' he said to the child. 'Does your knee hurt
+you? Does it hurt you, dear?'
+
+'It does sometimes.' The child was shy of him, cold towards him.
+
+'Well, dear, I'm sorry for that. I hope you try to bear it, and not
+trouble mother too much.'
+
+There was no answer. He looked at the knee. It was red and stiff.
+
+'Of course,' he said, 'I think we must have another doctor's opinion. And
+if we're going to have it, we had better have it at once. Egbert, do you
+think you might cycle in to Bingham for Doctor Wayne? I found him very
+satisfactory for Winnie's mother.'
+
+'I can go if you think it necessary,' said Egbert.
+
+'Certainly I think it necessary. Even if there if nothing, we can have
+peace of mind. Certainly I think it necessary. I should like Doctor Wayne
+to come this evening if possible.'
+
+So Egbert set off on his bicycle through the wind, like a boy sent on an
+errand, leaving his father-in-law a pillar of assurance, with Winifred.
+
+Doctor Wayne came, and looked grave. Yes, the knee was certainly taking
+the wrong way. The child might be lame for life.
+
+Up went the fire and fear and anger in every heart. Doctor Wayne came
+again the next day for a proper examination. And, yes, the knee had
+really taken bad ways. It should be X-rayed. It was very important.
+
+Godfrey Marshall walked up and down the lane with the doctor, beside the
+standing motor-car: up and down, up and down in one of those
+consultations of which he had had so many in his life.
+
+As a result he came indoors to Winifred.
+
+'Well, Winnie, dear, the best thing to do is to take Joyce up to London,
+to a nursing home where she can have proper treatment. Of course this
+knee has been allowed to go wrong. And apparently there is a risk that
+the child may even lose her leg. What do you think, dear? You agree to
+our taking her up to town and putting her under the best care?'
+
+'Oh, father, you _know_ I would do anything on earth for her.'
+
+'I know you would, Winnie darling. The pity is that there has been this
+unfortunate delay already. I can't think what Doctor Wing was doing.
+Apparently the child is in danger of losing her leg. Well then, if you
+will have everything ready, we will take her up to town tomorrow. I will
+order the large car from Denley's to be here at ten. Egbert, will you
+take a telegram at once to Doctor Jackson? It is a small nursing home for
+children and for surgical cases, not far from Baker Street. I'm sure
+Joyce will be all right there.'
+
+'Oh, father, can't I nurse her myself!'
+
+'Well, darling, if she is to have proper treatment, she had best be in a
+home. The X-ray treatment, and the electric treatment, and whatever is
+necessary.'
+
+'It will cost a great deal--' said Winifred.
+
+'We can't think of cost, if the child's leg is in danger--or even her
+life. No use speaking of cost,' said the elder man impatiently.
+
+And so it was. Poor Joyce, stretched out on a bed in the big closed
+motor-car--the mother sitting by her head, the grandfather in his short
+grey beard and a bowler hat, sitting by her feet, thick, and implacable
+in his responsibility--they rolled slowly away from Crockham, and from
+Egbert who stood there bareheaded and a little ignominious, left behind.
+He was to shut up the house and bring the rest of the family back to
+town, by train, the next day.
+
+Followed a dark and bitter time. The poor child. The poor, poor child,
+how she suffered, an agony and a long crucifixion in that nursing home.
+It was a bitter six weeks which changed the soul of Winifred for ever. As
+she sat by the bed of her poor, tortured little child, tortured with the
+agony of the knee, and the still worse agony of these diabolic, but
+perhaps necessary modern treatments, she felt her heart killed and going
+cold in her breast. Her little Joyce, her frail, brave, wonderful, little
+Joyce, frail and small and pale as a white flower! Ah, how had she,
+Winifred, dared to be so wicked, so wicked, so careless, so sensual.
+
+'Let my heart die! Let my woman's heart of flesh die! Saviour, let my
+heart die. And save my child. Let my heart die from the world and from
+the flesh. Oh, destroy my heart that is so wayward. Let my heart of pride
+die. Let my heart die.'
+
+So she prayed beside the bed of her child. And like the Mother with the
+seven swords in her breast, slowly her heart of pride and passion died in
+her breast, bleeding away. Slowly it died, bleeding away, and she turned
+to the Church for comfort, to Jesus, to the Mother of God, but most of
+all, to that great and enduring institution, the Roman Catholic Church.
+She withdrew into the shadow of the Church. She was a mother with three
+children. But in her soul she died, her heart of pride and passion and
+desire bled to death, her soul belonged to her church, her body belonged
+to her duty as a mother.
+
+Her duty as a wife did not enter. As a wife she had no sense of duty:
+only a certain bitterness towards the man with whom she had known such
+sensuality and distraction. She was purely the _Mater Dolorata_. To the
+man she was closed as a tomb.
+
+Egbert came to see his child. But Winifred seemed to be always seated
+there, like the tomb of his manhood and his fatherhood. Poor Winifred:
+she was still young, still strong and ruddy and beautiful like a ruddy
+hard flower of the field. Strange--her ruddy, healthy face, so sombre,
+and her strong, heavy, full-blooded body, so still. She, a nun! Never.
+And yet the gates of her heart and soul had shut in his face with a slow,
+resonant clang, shutting him out for ever. There was no need for her to
+go into a convent. Her will had done it.
+
+And between this young mother and this young father lay the crippled
+child, like a bit of pale silk floss on the pillow, and a little white
+pain-quenched face. He could not bear it. He just could not bear it. He
+turned aside. There was nothing to do but to turn aside. He turned aside,
+and went hither and thither, desultory. He was still attractive and
+desirable. But there was a little frown between his brow as if he had
+been cleft there with a hatchet: cleft right in, for ever, and that was
+the stigma.
+
+The child's leg was saved: but the knee was locked stiff. The fear now
+was lest the lower leg should wither, or cease to grow. There must be
+long-continued massage and treatment, daily treatment, even when the
+child left the nursing home. And the whole of the expense was borne by
+the grandfather.
+
+Egbert now had no real home. Winifred with the children and nurse was
+tied to the little flat in London. He could not live there: he could not
+contain himself. The cottage was shut-up--or lent to friends. He went
+down sometimes to work in his garden and keep the place in order. Then
+with the empty house around him at night, all the empty rooms, he felt
+his heart go wicked. The sense of frustration and futility, like some
+slow, torpid snake, slowly bit right through his heart. Futility,
+futility: the horrible marsh-poison went through his veins and killed
+him.
+
+As he worked in the garden in the silence of day he would listen for a
+sound. No sound. No sound of Winifred from the dark inside of the
+cottage: no sound of children's voices from the air, from the common,
+from the near distance. No sound, nothing but the old dark marsh-venomous
+atmosphere of the place. So he worked spasmodically through the day, and
+at night made a fire and cooked some food alone.
+
+He was alone. He himself cleaned the cottage and made his bed. But his
+mending he did not do. His shirts were slit on the shoulders, when he had
+been working, and the white flesh showed through. He would feel the air
+and the spots of rain on his exposed flesh. And he would look again
+across the common, where the dark, tufted gorse was dying to seed, and
+the bits of cat-heather were coming pink in tufts, like a sprinkling of
+sacrificial blood.
+
+His heart went back to the savage old spirit of the place: the desire
+for old gods, old, lost passions, the passion of the cold-blooded,
+darting snakes that hissed and shot away from him, the mystery of
+blood-sacrifices, all the lost, intense sensations of the primeval people
+of the place, whose passions seethed in the air still, from those long
+days before the Romans came. The seethe of a lost, dark passion in the
+air. The presence of unseen snakes.
+
+A queer, baffled, half-wicked look came on his face. He could not
+stay long at the cottage. Suddenly he must swing on to his bicycle and
+go--anywhere. Anywhere, away from the place. He would stay a few days
+with his mother in the old home. His mother adored him and grieved as a
+mother would. But the little, baffled, half-wicked smile curled on his
+face, and he swung away from his mother's solicitude as from everything
+else.
+
+Always moving on--from place to place, friend to friend: and always
+swinging away from sympathy. As soon as sympathy, like a soft hand, was
+reached out to touch him, away he swerved, instinctively, as a harmless
+snake swerves and swerves and swerves away from an outstretched hand.
+Away he must go. And periodically he went back to Winifred.
+
+He was terrible to her now, like a temptation. She had devoted herself to
+her children and her church. Joyce was once more on her feet; but, alas!
+lame, with iron supports to her leg, and a little crutch. It was strange
+how she had grown into a long, pallid, wild little thing. Strange that
+the pain had not made her soft and docile, but had brought out a wild,
+almost maenad temper in the child. She was seven, and long and white and
+thin, but by no means subdued. Her blonde hair was darkening. She still
+had long sufferings to face, and, in her own childish consciousness, the
+stigma of her lameness to bear.
+
+And she bore it. An almost maenad courage seemed to possess her, as if
+she were a long, thin, young weapon of life. She acknowledged all her
+mother's care. She would stand by her mother for ever. But some of her
+father's fine-tempered desperation flashed in her.
+
+When Egbert saw his little girl limping horribly--not only limping but
+lurching horribly in crippled, childish way, his heart again hardened
+with chagrin, like steel that is tempered again. There was a tacit
+understanding between him and his little girl: not what we would call
+love, but a weapon-like kinship. There was a tiny touch of irony in his
+manner towards her, contrasting sharply with Winifred's heavy, unleavened
+solicitude and care. The child flickered back to him with an answering
+little smile of irony and recklessness: an odd flippancy which made
+Winifred only the more sombre and earnest.
+
+The Marshalls took endless thought and trouble for the child, searching
+out every means to save her limb and her active freedom. They spared no
+effort and no money, they spared no strength of will. With all their
+slow, heavy power of will they willed that Joyce should save her liberty
+of movement, should win back her wild, free grace. Even if it took a long
+time to recover, it should be recovered.
+
+So the situation stood. And Joyce submitted, week after week, month after
+month to the tyranny and pain of the treatment. She acknowledged the
+honourable effort on her behalf. But her flamy reckless spirit was her
+father's. It was he who had all the glamour for her. He and she were like
+members of some forbidden secret society who know one another but may not
+recognize one another. Knowledge they had in common, the same secret of
+life, the father and the child. But the child stayed in the camp of her
+mother, honourably, and the father wandered outside like Ishmael, only
+coming sometimes to sit in the home for an hour or two, an evening or two
+beside the camp fire, like Ishmael, in a curious silence and tension,
+with the mocking answer of the desert speaking out of his silence, and
+annulling the whole convention of the domestic home.
+
+His presence was almost an anguish to Winifred. She prayed against it.
+That little cleft between his brow, that flickering, wicked, little smile
+that seemed to haunt his face, and above all, the triumphant loneliness,
+the Ishmael quality. And then the erectness of his supple body, like a
+symbol. The very way he stood, so quiet, so insidious, like an erect,
+supple symbol of life, the living body, confronting her downcast soul,
+was torture to her. He was like a supple living idol moving before her
+eyes, and she felt if she watched him she was damned.
+
+And he came and made himself at home in her little home. When he was
+there, moving in his own quiet way, she felt as if the whole great law of
+sacrifice, by which she had elected to live, were annulled. He annulled
+by his very presence the laws of her life. And what did he substitute?
+Ah, against that question she hardened herself in recoil.
+
+It was awful to her to have to have him about--moving about in his
+shirt-sleeves, speaking in his tenor, throaty voice to the children.
+Annabel simply adored him, and he teased the little girl. The baby,
+Barbara, was not sure of him. She had been born a stranger to him. But
+even the nurse, when she saw his white shoulder of flesh through the
+slits of his torn shirt, thought it a shame.
+
+Winifred felt it was only another weapon of his against her.
+
+'You have other shirts--why do you wear that old one that is all torn,
+Egbert?' she said.
+
+'I may as well wear it out,' he said subtly.
+
+He knew she would not offer to mend it for him. She _could_ not. And no,
+she would not. Had she not her own gods to honour? And could she betray
+them, submitting to his Baal and Ashtaroth? And it was terrible to her,
+his unsheathed presence, that seemed to annul her and her faith, like
+another revelation. Like a gleaming idol evoked against her, a vivid
+life-idol that might triumph.
+
+He came and he went--and she persisted. And then the great war broke out.
+He was a man who could not go to the dogs. He could not dissipate
+himself. He was pure-bred in his Englishness, and even when he would have
+killed to be vicious, he could not.
+
+So when the war broke out his whole instinct was against it: against war.
+He had not the faintest desire to overcome any foreigners or to help in
+their death. He had no conception of Imperial England, and Rule Britannia
+was just a joke to him. He was a pure-blooded Englishman, perfect in his
+race, and when he was truly himself he could no more have been aggressive
+on the score of his Englishness than a rose can be aggressive on the
+score of its rosiness.
+
+No, he had no desire to defy Germany and to exalt England. The
+distinction between German and English was not for him the distinction
+between good and bad. It was the distinction between blue water-flowers
+and red or white bush-blossoms: just difference. The difference between
+the wild boar and the wild bear. And a man was good or bad according to
+his nature, not according to his nationality.
+
+Egbert was well-bred, and this was part of his natural understanding. It
+was merely unnatural to him to hate a nation _en bloc_. Certain
+individuals he disliked, and others he liked, and the mass he knew
+nothing about. Certain deeds he disliked, certain deeds seemed natural to
+him, and about most deeds he had no particular feeling.
+
+He had, however, the one deepest pure-bred instinct. He recoiled
+inevitably from having his feelings dictated to him by the mass feeling.
+His feelings were his own, his understanding was his own, and he would
+never go back on either, willingly. Shall a man become inferior to his
+own true knowledge and self, just because the mob expects it of him?
+
+What Egbert felt subtly and without question, his father-in-law felt also
+in a rough, more combative way. Different as the two men were, they were
+two real Englishmen, and their instincts were almost the same.
+
+And Godfrey Marshall had the world to reckon with. There was German
+military aggression, and the English non-military idea of liberty and the
+'conquests of peace'--meaning industrialism. Even if the choice between
+militarism and industrialism were a choice of evils, the elderly man
+asserted his choice of the latter, perforce. He whose soul was quick with
+the instinct of power.
+
+Egbert just refused to reckon with the world. He just refused even to
+decide between German militarism and British industrialism. He chose
+neither. As for atrocities, he despised the people who committed them as
+inferior criminal types. There was nothing national about crime.
+
+And yet, war! War! Just war! Not right or wrong, but just war itself.
+Should he join? Should he give himself over to war? The question was in
+his mind for some weeks. Not because he thought England was right and
+Germany wrong. Probably Germany was wrong, but he refused to make a
+choice. Not because he felt inspired. No. But just--war.
+
+The deterrent was, the giving himself over into the power of other men,
+and into the power of the mob-spirit of a democratic army. Should he give
+himself over? Should he make over his own life and body to the control of
+something which he _knew_ was inferior, in spirit, to his own self?
+Should he commit himself into the power of an inferior control? Should
+he? Should he betray himself?
+
+He was going to put himself into the power of his inferiors, and he knew
+it. He was going to subjugate himself. He was going to be ordered about
+by petty _canaille_ of non-commissioned officers--and even commissioned
+officers. He who was born and bred free. Should he do it?
+
+He went to his wife, to speak to her.
+
+'Shall I join up, Winifred?'
+
+She was silent. Her instinct also was dead against it. And yet a certain
+profound resentment made her answer:
+
+'You have three children dependent on you. I don't know whether you have
+thought of that.'
+
+It was still only the third month of the war, and the old pre-war ideas
+were still alive.
+
+'Of course. But it won't make much difference to them. I shall be earning
+a shilling a day, at least.'
+
+'You'd better speak to father, I think,' she replied heavily.
+
+Egbert went to his father-in-law. The elderly man's heart was full of
+resentment.
+
+'I should say,' he said rather sourly, 'it is the best thing you could
+do.'
+
+Egbert went and joined up immediately, as a private soldier. He was
+drafted into the light artillery.
+
+Winifred now had a new duty towards him: the duty of a wife towards a
+husband who is himself performing his duty towards the world. She loved
+him still. She would always love him, as far as earthly love went. But it
+was duty she now lived by. When he came back to her in khaki, a soldier,
+she submitted to him as a wife. It was her duty. But to his passion she
+could never again fully submit. Something prevented her, for ever: even
+her own deepest choice.
+
+He went back again to camp. It did not suit him to be a modern soldier.
+In the thick, gritty, hideous khaki his subtle physique was extinguished
+as if he had been killed. In the ugly intimacy of the camp his
+thoroughbred sensibilities were just degraded. But he had chosen, so he
+accepted. An ugly little look came on to his face, of a man who has
+accepted his own degradation.
+
+In the early spring Winifred went down to Crockham to be there when
+primroses were out, and the tassels hanging on the hazel-bushes. She felt
+something like a reconciliation towards Egbert, now he was a prisoner in
+camp most of his days. Joyce was wild with delight at seeing the garden
+and the common again, after the eight or nine months of London and
+misery. She was still lame. She still had the irons up her leg. But she
+lurched about with a wild, crippled agility.
+
+Egbert came for a week-end, in his gritty, thick, sand-paper khaki and
+puttees and the hideous cap. Nay, he looked terrible. And on his face a
+slightly impure look, a little sore on his lip, as if he had eaten too
+much or drunk too much or let his blood become a little unclean. He was
+almost uglily healthy, with the camp life. It did not suit him.
+
+Winifred waited for him in a little passion of duty and sacrifice,
+willing to serve the soldier, if not the man. It only made him feel a
+little more ugly inside. The week-end was torment to him: the memory of
+the camp, the knowledge of the life he led there; even the sight of his
+own legs in that abhorrent khaki. He felt as if the hideous cloth went
+into his blood and made it gritty and dirty. Then Winifred so ready to
+serve the _soldier_, when she repudiated the man. And this made the grit
+worse between his teeth. And the children running around playing and
+calling in the rather mincing fashion of children who have nurses and
+governesses and literature in the family. And Joyce so lame! It had all
+become unreal to him, after the camp. It only set his soul on edge. He
+left at dawn on the Monday morning, glad to get back to the realness and
+vulgarity of the camp.
+
+Winifred would never meet him again at the cottage--only in London, where
+the world was with them. But sometimes he came alone to Crockham perhaps
+when friends were staying there. And then he would work awhile in his
+garden. This summer still it would flame with blue anchusas and big red
+poppies, the mulleins would sway their soft, downy erections in the air:
+he loved mulleins: and the honeysuckle would stream out scent like
+memory, when the owl was whooing. Then he sat by the fire with the
+friends and with Winifred's sisters, and they sang the folk-songs. He put
+on thin civilian clothes and his charm and his beauty and the supple
+dominancy of his body glowed out again. But Winifred was not there.
+
+At the end of the summer he went to Flanders, into action. He seemed
+already to have gone out of life, beyond the pale of life. He hardly
+remembered his life any more, being like a man who is going to take a
+jump from a height, and is only looking to where he must land.
+
+He was twice slightly wounded, in two months. But not enough to put him
+off duty for more than a day or two. They were retiring again, holding
+the enemy back. He was in the rear--three machine-guns. The country was
+all pleasant, war had not yet trampled it. Only the air seemed shattered,
+and the land awaiting death. It was a small, unimportant action in which
+he was engaged.
+
+The guns were stationed on a little bushy hillock just outside a village.
+But occasionally, it was difficult to say from which direction, came the
+sharp crackle of rifle-fire, and beyond, the far-off thud of cannon. The
+afternoon was wintry and cold.
+
+A lieutenant stood on a little iron platform at the top of the ladders,
+taking the sights and giving the aim, calling in a high, tense,
+mechanical voice. Out of the sky came the sharp cry of the directions,
+then the warning numbers, then 'Fire!' The shot went, the piston of the
+gun sprang back, there was a sharp explosion, and a very faint film of
+smoke in the air. Then the other two guns fired, and there was a lull.
+The officer was uncertain of the enemy's position. The thick clump of
+horse-chestnut trees below was without change. Only in the far distance
+the sound of heavy firing continued, so far off as to give a sense of
+peace.
+
+The gorse bushes on either hand were dark, but a few sparks of flowers
+showed yellow. He noticed them almost unconsciously as he waited, in the
+lull. He was in his shirt-sleeves, and the air came chill on his arms.
+Again his shirt was slit on the shoulders, and the flesh showed through.
+He was dirty and unkempt. But his face was quiet. So many things go out
+of consciousness before we come to the end of consciousness.
+
+Before him, below, was the highroad, running between high banks of grass
+and gorse. He saw the whitish muddy tracks and deep scores in the road,
+where the part of the regiment had retired. Now all was still. Sounds
+that came, came from the outside. The place where he stood was still
+silent, chill, serene: the white church among the trees beyond seemed
+like a thought only.
+
+He moved into a lightning-like mechanical response at the sharp cry from
+the officer overhead. Mechanism, the pure mechanical action of obedience
+at the guns. Pure mechanical action at the guns. It left the soul
+unburdened, brooding in dark nakedness. In the end, the soul is alone,
+brooding on the face of the uncreated flux, as a bird on a dark sea.
+
+Nothing could be seen but the road, and a crucifix knocked slanting and
+the dark, autumnal fields and woods. There appeared three horsemen on a
+little eminence, very small, on the crest of a ploughed field. They were
+our own men. Of the enemy, nothing.
+
+The lull continued. Then suddenly came sharp orders, and a new direction
+of the guns, and an intense, exciting activity. Yet at the centre the
+soul remained dark and aloof, alone.
+
+But even so, it was the soul that heard the new sound: the new, deep
+'papp!' of a gun that seemed to touch right upon the soul. He kept up the
+rapid activity at the machine-gun, sweating. But in his soul was the echo
+of the new, deep sound, deeper than life.
+
+And in confirmation came the awful faint whistling of a shell, advancing
+almost suddenly into a piercing, tearing shriek that would tear through
+the membrane of life. He heard it in his ears, but he heard it also in
+his soul, in tension. There was relief when the thing had swung by and
+struck, away beyond. He heard the hoarseness of its explosion, and the
+voice of the soldier calling to the horses. But he did not turn round to
+look. He only noticed a twig of holly with red berries fall like a gift
+on to the road below.
+
+Not this time, not this time. Whither thou goest I will go. Did he say it
+to the shell, or to whom? Whither thou goest I will go. Then, the faint
+whistling of another shell dawned, and his blood became small and still
+to receive it. It drew nearer, like some horrible blast of wind; his
+blood lost consciousness. But in the second of suspension he saw the
+heavy shell swoop to earth, into the rocky bushes on the right, and earth
+and stones poured up into the sky. It was as if he heard no sound. The
+earth and stones and fragments of bush fell to earth again, and there was
+the same unchanging peace. The Germans had got the aim.
+
+Would they move now? Would they retire? Yes. The officer was giving the
+last lightning-rapid orders to fire before withdrawing. A shell passed
+unnoticed in the rapidity of action. And then, into the silence, into the
+suspense where the soul brooded, finally crashed a noise and a darkness
+and a moment's flaming agony and horror. Ah, he had seen the dark bird
+flying towards him, flying home this time. In one instant life and
+eternity went up in a conflagration of agony, then there was a weight of
+darkness.
+
+When faintly something began to struggle in the darkness, a consciousness
+of himself, he was aware of a great load and a clanging sound. To have
+known the moment of death! And to be forced, before dying, to review it.
+So, fate, even in death.
+
+There was a resounding of pain. It seemed to sound from the outside of
+his consciousness: like a loud bell clanging very near. Yet he knew it
+was himself. He must associate himself with it. After a lapse and a new
+effort, he identified a pain in his head, a large pain that clanged and
+resounded. So far he could identify himself with himself. Then there was
+a lapse.
+
+After a time he seemed to wake up again, and waking, to know that he was
+at the front, and that he was killed. He did not open his eyes. Light was
+not yet his. The clanging pain in his head rang out the rest of his
+consciousness. So he lapsed away from consciousness, in unutterable sick
+abandon of life.
+
+Bit by bit, like a doom came the necessity to know. He was hit in the
+head. It was only a vague surmise at first. But in the swinging of the
+pendulum of pain, swinging ever nearer and nearer, to touch him into an
+agony of consciousness and a consciousness of agony, gradually the
+knowledge emerged--he must be hit in the head--hit on the left brow; if
+so, there would be blood--was there blood?--could he feel blood in his
+left eye? Then the clanging seemed to burst the membrane of his brain,
+like death-madness.
+
+Was there blood on his face? Was hot blood flowing? Or was it dry blood
+congealing down his cheek? It took him hours even to ask the question:
+time being no more than an agony in darkness, without measurement.
+
+A long time after he had opened his eyes he realized he was seeing
+something--something, something, but the effort to recall what was too
+great. No, no; no recall!
+
+Were they the stars in the dark sky? Was it possible it was stars in the
+dark sky? Stars? The world? Ah, no, he could not know it! Stars and the
+world were gone for him, he closed his eyes. No stars, no sky, no world.
+No, No! The thick darkness of blood alone. It should be one great lapse
+into the thick darkness of blood in agony.
+
+Death, oh, death! The world all blood, and the blood all writhing with
+death. The soul like the tiniest little light out on a dark sea, the sea
+of blood. And the light guttering, beating, pulsing in a windless storm,
+wishing it could go out, yet unable.
+
+There had been life. There had been Winifred and his children. But the
+frail death-agony effort to catch at straws of memory, straws of life
+from the past, brought on too great a nausea. No, No! No Winifred, no
+children. No world, no people. Better the agony of dissolution ahead than
+the nausea of the effort backwards. Better the terrible work should go
+forward, the dissolving into the black sea of death, in the extremity of
+dissolution, than that there should be any reaching back towards life. To
+forget! To forget! Utterly, utterly to forget, in the great forgetting of
+death. To break the core and the unit of life, and to lapse out on the
+great darkness. Only that. To break the clue, and mingle and commingle
+with the one darkness, without afterwards or forwards. Let the black sea
+of death itself solve the problem of futurity. Let the will of man break
+and give up.
+
+What was that? A light! A terrible light! Was it figures? Was it legs of
+a horse colossal--colossal above him: huge, huge?
+
+The Germans heard a slight noise, and started. Then, in the glare of a
+light-bomb, by the side of the heap of earth thrown up by the shell, they
+saw the dead face.
+
+
+
+
+_Tickets, Please_
+
+
+There is in the Midlands a single-line tramway system which boldly
+leaves the county town and plunges off into the black, industrial
+countryside, up hill and down dale, through the long ugly villages of
+workmen's houses, over canals and railways, past churches perched high
+and nobly over the smoke and shadows, through stark, grimy cold little
+market-places, tilting away in a rush past cinemas and shops down to the
+hollow where the collieries are, then up again, past a little rural
+church, under the ash trees, on in a rush to the terminus, the last
+little ugly place of industry, the cold little town that shivers on the
+edge of the wild, gloomy country beyond. There the green and creamy
+coloured tram-car seems to pause and purr with curious satisfaction. But
+in a few minutes--the clock on the turret of the Co-operative Wholesale
+Society's Shops gives the time--away it starts once more on the
+adventure. Again there are the reckless swoops downhill, bouncing the
+loops: again the chilly wait in the hill-top market-place: again the
+breathless slithering round the precipitous drop under the church: again
+the patient halts at the loops, waiting for the outcoming car: so on and
+on, for two long hours, till at last the city looms beyond the fat
+gas-works, the narrow factories draw near, we are in the sordid streets
+of the great town, once more we sidle to a standstill at our terminus,
+abashed by the great crimson and cream-coloured city cars, but still
+perky, jaunty, somewhat dare-devil, green as a jaunty sprig of parsley
+out of a black colliery garden.
+
+To ride on these cars is always an adventure. Since we are in war-time,
+the drivers are men unfit for active service: cripples and hunchbacks.
+So they have the spirit of the devil in them. The ride becomes a
+steeple-chase. Hurray! we have leapt in a clear jump over the canal
+bridges--now for the four-lane corner. With a shriek and a trail of
+sparks we are clear again. To be sure, a tram often leaps the rails--but
+what matter! It sits in a ditch till other trams come to haul it out. It
+is quite common for a car, packed with one solid mass of living people,
+to come to a dead halt in the midst of unbroken blackness, the heart of
+nowhere on a dark night, and for the driver and the girl conductor to
+call, 'All get off--car's on fire!' Instead, however, of rushing out in a
+panic, the passengers stolidly reply: 'Get on--get on! We're not coming
+out. We're stopping where we are. Push on, George.' So till flames
+actually appear.
+
+The reason for this reluctance to dismount is that the nights are
+howlingly cold, black, and windswept, and a car is a haven of refuge.
+From village to village the miners travel, for a change of cinema, of
+girl, of pub. The trams are desperately packed. Who is going to risk
+himself in the black gulf outside, to wait perhaps an hour for another
+tram, then to see the forlorn notice 'Depot Only', because there is
+something wrong! Or to greet a unit of three bright cars all so tight
+with people that they sail past with a howl of derision. Trams that pass
+in the night.
+
+This, the most dangerous tram-service in England, as the authorities
+themselves declare, with pride, is entirely conducted by girls, and
+driven by rash young men, a little crippled, or by delicate young men,
+who creep forward in terror. The girls are fearless young hussies. In
+their ugly blue uniform, skirts up to their knees, shapeless old
+peaked caps on their heads, they have all the _sang-froid_ of an old
+non-commissioned officer. With a tram packed with howling colliers,
+roaring hymns downstairs and a sort of antiphony of obscenities upstairs,
+the lasses are perfectly at their ease. They pounce on the youths who try
+to evade their ticket-machine. They push off the men at the end of their
+distance. They are not going to be done in the eye--not they. They fear
+nobody--and everybody fears them.
+
+'Hello, Annie!'
+
+'Hello, Ted!'
+
+'Oh, mind my corn, Miss Stone. It's my belief you've got a heart of
+stone, for you've trod on it again.'
+
+'You should keep it in your pocket,' replies Miss Stone, and she goes
+sturdily upstairs in her high boots.
+
+'Tickets, please.'
+
+She is peremptory, suspicious, and ready to hit first. She can hold her
+own against ten thousand. The step of that tram-car is her Thermopylae.
+
+Therefore, there is a certain wild romance aboard these cars--and in the
+sturdy bosom of Annie herself. The time for soft romance is in the
+morning, between ten o'clock and one, when things are rather slack: that
+is, except market-day and Saturday. Thus Annie has time to look about
+her. Then she often hops off her car and into a shop where she has spied
+something, while the driver chats in the main road. There is very good
+feeling between the girls and the drivers. Are they not companions in
+peril, shipments aboard this careering vessel of a tram-car, for ever
+rocking on the waves of a stormy land?
+
+Then, also, during the easy hours, the inspectors are most in evidence.
+For some reason, everybody employed in this tram-service is young: there
+are no grey heads. It would not do. Therefore the inspectors are of the
+right age, and one, the chief, is also good-looking. See him stand on a
+wet, gloomy morning, in his long oil-skin, his peaked cap well down over
+his eyes, waiting to board a car. His face is ruddy, his small brown
+moustache is weathered, he has a faint impudent smile. Fairly tall and
+agile, even in his waterproof, he springs aboard a car and greets Annie.
+
+'Hello, Annie! Keeping the wet out?'
+
+'Trying to.'
+
+There are only two people in the car. Inspecting is soon over. Then for a
+long and impudent chat on the foot-board, a good, easy, twelve-mile chat.
+
+The inspector's name is John Thomas Raynor--always called John Thomas,
+except sometimes, in malice, Coddy. His face sets in fury when he is
+addressed, from a distance, with this abbreviation. There is considerable
+scandal about John Thomas in half a dozen villages. He flirts with the
+girl conductors in the morning, and walks out with them in the dark
+night, when they leave their tram-car at the depot. Of course, the girls
+quit the service frequently. Then he flirts and walks out with the
+newcomer: always providing she is sufficiently attractive, and that she
+will consent to walk. It is remarkable, however, that most of the girls
+are quite comely, they are all young, and this roving life aboard the car
+gives them a sailor's dash and recklessness. What matter how they behave
+when the ship is in port. Tomorrow they will be aboard again.
+
+Annie, however, was something of a Tartar, and her sharp tongue had kept
+John Thomas at arm's length for many months. Perhaps, therefore, she
+liked him all the more: for he always came up smiling, with impudence.
+She watched him vanquish one girl, then another. She could tell by the
+movement of his mouth and eyes, when he flirted with her in the morning,
+that he had been walking out with this lass, or the other, the night
+before. A fine cock-of-the-walk he was. She could sum him up pretty well.
+
+In this subtle antagonism they knew each other like old friends, they
+were as shrewd with one another almost as man and wife. But Annie had
+always kept him sufficiently at arm's length. Besides, she had a boy of
+her own.
+
+The Statutes fair, however, came in November, at Bestwood. It happened
+that Annie had the Monday night off. It was a drizzling ugly night, yet
+she dressed herself up and went to the fair ground. She was alone, but
+she expected soon to find a pal of some sort.
+
+The roundabouts were veering round and grinding out their music, the side
+shows were making as much commotion as possible. In the coco-nut shies
+there were no coco-nuts, but artificial war-time substitutes, which the
+lads declared were fastened into the irons. There was a sad decline in
+brilliance and luxury. None the less, the ground was muddy as ever, there
+was the same crush, the press of faces lighted up by the flares and the
+electric lights, the same smell of naphtha and a few fried potatoes, and
+of electricity.
+
+Who should be the first to greet Miss Annie on the showground but John
+Thomas? He had a black overcoat buttoned up to his chin, and a tweed cap
+pulled down over his brows, his face between was ruddy and smiling and
+handy as ever. She knew so well the way his mouth moved.
+
+She was very glad to have a 'boy'. To be at the Statutes without a fellow
+was no fun. Instantly, like the gallant he was, he took her on the
+dragons, grim-toothed, round-about switchbacks. It was not nearly so
+exciting as a tram-car actually. But, then, to be seated in a shaking,
+green dragon, uplifted above the sea of bubble faces, careering in a
+rickety fashion in the lower heavens, whilst John Thomas leaned over her,
+his cigarette in his mouth, was after all the right style. She was a
+plump, quick, alive little creature. So she was quite excited and happy.
+
+John Thomas made her stay on for the next round. And therefore she could
+hardly for shame repulse him when he put his arm round her and drew her a
+little nearer to him, in a very warm and cuddly manner. Besides, he was
+fairly discreet, he kept his movement as hidden as possible. She looked
+down, and saw that his red, clean hand was out of sight of the crowd. And
+they knew each other so well. So they warmed up to the fair.
+
+After the dragons they went on the horses. John Thomas paid each time, so
+she could but be complaisant. He, of course, sat astride on the outer
+horse--named 'Black Bess'--and she sat sideways, towards him, on the
+inner horse--named 'Wildfire'. But of course John Thomas was not going to
+sit discreetly on 'Black Bess', holding the brass bar. Round they spun
+and heaved, in the light. And round he swung on his wooden steed,
+flinging one leg across her mount, and perilously tipping up and down,
+across the space, half lying back, laughing at her. He was perfectly
+happy; she was afraid her hat was on one side, but she was excited.
+
+He threw quoits on a table, and won for her two large, pale-blue
+hat-pins. And then, hearing the noise of the cinemas, announcing another
+performance, they climbed the boards and went in.
+
+Of course, during these performances pitch darkness falls from time to
+time, when the machine goes wrong. Then there is a wild whooping, and a
+loud smacking of simulated kisses. In these moments John Thomas drew
+Annie towards him. After all, he had a wonderfully warm, cosy way of
+holding a girl with his arm, he seemed to make such a nice fit. And,
+after all, it was pleasant to be so held: so very comforting and cosy and
+nice. He leaned over her and she felt his breath on her hair; she knew he
+wanted to kiss her on the lips. And, after all, he was so warm and she
+fitted in to him so softly. After all, she wanted him to touch her lips.
+
+But the light sprang up; she also started electrically, and put her hat
+straight. He left his arm lying nonchalantly behind her. Well, it was
+fun, it was exciting to be at the Statutes with John Thomas.
+
+When the cinema was over they went for a walk across the dark, damp
+fields. He had all the arts of love-making. He was especially good at
+holding a girl, when he sat with her on a stile in the black, drizzling
+darkness. He seemed to be holding her in space, against his own warmth
+and gratification. And his kisses were soft and slow and searching.
+
+So Annie walked out with John Thomas, though she kept her own boy
+dangling in the distance. Some of the tram-girls chose to be huffy. But
+there, you must take things as you find them, in this life.
+
+There was no mistake about it, Annie liked John Thomas a good deal. She
+felt so rich and warm in herself whenever he was near. And John Thomas
+really liked Annie, more than usual. The soft, melting way in which she
+could flow into a fellow, as if she melted into his very bones, was
+something rare and good. He fully appreciated this.
+
+But with a developing acquaintance there began a developing intimacy.
+Annie wanted to consider him a person, a man; she wanted to take an
+intelligent interest in him, and to have an intelligent response. She did
+not want a mere nocturnal presence, which was what he was so far. And she
+prided herself that he could not leave her.
+
+Here she made a mistake. John Thomas intended to remain a nocturnal
+presence; he had no idea of becoming an all-round individual to her. When
+she started to take an intelligent interest in him and his life and his
+character, he sheered off. He hated intelligent interest. And he knew
+that the only way to stop it was to avoid it. The possessive female was
+aroused in Annie. So he left her.
+
+It is no use saying she was not surprised. She was at first startled,
+thrown out of her count. For she had been so _very_ sure of holding him.
+For a while she was staggered, and everything became uncertain to her.
+Then she wept with fury, indignation, desolation, and misery. Then she
+had a spasm of despair. And then, when he came, still impudently, on to
+her car, still familiar, but letting her see by the movement of his head
+that he had gone away to somebody else for the time being, and was
+enjoying pastures new, then she determined to have her own back.
+
+She had a very shrewd idea what girls John Thomas had taken out. She went
+to Nora Purdy. Nora was a tall, rather pale, but well-built girl, with
+beautiful yellow hair. She was rather secretive.
+
+'Hey!' said Annie, accosting her; then softly, 'Who's John Thomas on with
+now?'
+
+'I don't know,' said Nora.
+
+'Why tha does,' said Annie, ironically lapsing into dialect. 'Tha knows
+as well as I do.'
+
+'Well, I do, then,' said Nora. 'It isn't me, so don't bother.'
+
+'It's Cissy Meakin, isn't it?'
+
+'It is, for all I know.'
+
+'Hasn't he got a face on him!' said Annie. 'I don't half like his cheek.
+I could knock him off the foot-board when he comes round at me.'
+
+'He'll get dropped-on one of these days,' said Nora.
+
+'Ay, he will, when somebody makes up their mind to drop it on him. I
+should like to see him taken down a peg or two, shouldn't you?'
+
+'I shouldn't mind,' said Nora.
+
+'You've got quite as much cause to as I have,' said Annie. 'But we'll
+drop on him one of these days, my girl. What? Don't you want to?'
+
+'I don't mind,' said Nora.
+
+But as a matter of fact, Nora was much more vindictive than Annie.
+
+One by one Annie went the round of the old flames. It so happened that
+Cissy Meakin left the tramway service in quite a short time. Her mother
+made her leave. Then John Thomas was on the _qui-vive_. He cast his eyes
+over his old flock. And his eyes lighted on Annie. He thought she would
+be safe now. Besides, he liked her.
+
+She arranged to walk home with him on Sunday night. It so happened that
+her car would be in the depot at half past nine: the last car would come
+in at 10.15. So John Thomas was to wait for her there.
+
+At the depot the girls had a little waiting-room of their own. It was
+quite rough, but cosy, with a fire and an oven and a mirror, and table
+and wooden chairs. The half dozen girls who knew John Thomas only too
+well had arranged to take service this Sunday afternoon. So, as the cars
+began to come in, early, the girls dropped into the waiting-room. And
+instead of hurrying off home, they sat around the fire and had a cup of
+tea. Outside was the darkness and lawlessness of wartime.
+
+John Thomas came on the car after Annie, at about a quarter to ten. He
+poked his head easily into the girls' waiting-room.
+
+'Prayer-meeting?' he asked.
+
+'Ay,' said Laura Sharp. 'Ladies only.'
+
+'That's me!' said John Thomas. It was one of his favourite exclamations.
+
+'Shut the door, boy,' said Muriel Baggaley.
+
+'On which side of me?' said John Thomas.
+
+'Which tha likes,' said Polly Birkin.
+
+He had come in and closed the door behind him. The girls moved in their
+circle, to make a place for him near the fire. He took off his great-coat
+and pushed back his hat.
+
+'Who handles the teapot?' he said.
+
+Nora Purdy silently poured him out a cup of tea.
+
+'Want a bit o' my bread and drippin'?' said Muriel Baggaley to him.
+
+'Ay, give us a bit.'
+
+And he began to eat his piece of bread.
+
+'There's no place like home, girls,' he said.
+
+They all looked at him as he uttered this piece of impudence. He seemed
+to be sunning himself in the presence of so many damsels.
+
+'Especially if you're not afraid to go home in the dark,' said Laura
+Sharp.
+
+'Me! By myself I am.'
+
+They sat till they heard the last tram come in. In a few minutes Emma
+Houselay entered.
+
+'Come on, my old duck!' cried Polly Birkin.
+
+'It _is_ perishing,' said Emma, holding her fingers to the fire.
+
+'But--I'm afraid to, go home in, the dark,' sang Laura Sharp, the tune
+having got into her mind.
+
+'Who're you going with tonight, John Thomas?' asked Muriel Baggaley,
+coolly.
+
+'Tonight?' said John Thomas. 'Oh, I'm going home by myself tonight--all
+on my lonely-O.'
+
+'That's me!' said Nora Purdy, using his own ejaculation.
+
+The girls laughed shrilly.
+
+'Me as well, Nora,' said John Thomas.
+
+'Don't know what you mean,' said Laura.
+
+'Yes, I'm toddling,' said he, rising and reaching for his overcoat.
+
+'Nay,' said Polly. 'We're all here waiting for you.'
+
+'We've got to be up in good time in the morning,' he said, in the
+benevolent official manner.
+
+They all laughed.
+
+'Nay,' said Muriel. 'Don't leave us all lonely, John Thomas. Take one!'
+
+'I'll take the lot, if you like,' he responded gallantly.
+
+'That you won't either,' said Muriel, 'Two's company; seven's too much of
+a good thing.'
+
+'Nay--take one,' said Laura. 'Fair and square, all above board, and say
+which.'
+
+'Ay,' cried Annie, speaking for the first time. 'Pick, John Thomas; let's
+hear thee.'
+
+'Nay,' he said. 'I'm going home quiet tonight. Feeling good, for once.'
+
+'Whereabouts?' said Annie. 'Take a good 'un, then. But tha's got to take
+one of us!'
+
+'Nay, how can I take one,' he said, laughing uneasily. 'I don't want to
+make enemies.'
+
+'You'd only make _one_' said Annie.
+
+'The chosen _one_,' added Laura.
+
+'Oh, my! Who said girls!' exclaimed John Thomas, again turning, as if to
+escape. 'Well--good-night.'
+
+'Nay, you've got to make your pick,' said Muriel. 'Turn your face to the
+wall, and say which one touches you. Go on--we shall only just touch your
+back--one of us. Go on--turn your face to the wall, and don't look, and
+say which one touches you.'
+
+He was uneasy, mistrusting them. Yet he had not the courage to break
+away. They pushed him to a wall and stood him there with his face to it.
+Behind his back they all grimaced, tittering. He looked so comical. He
+looked around uneasily.
+
+'Go on!' he cried.
+
+'You're looking--you're looking!' they shouted.
+
+He turned his head away. And suddenly, with a movement like a swift cat,
+Annie went forward and fetched him a box on the side of the head that
+sent his cap flying and himself staggering. He started round.
+
+But at Annie's signal they all flew at him, slapping him, pinching him,
+pulling his hair, though more in fun than in spite or anger. He, however,
+saw red. His blue eyes flamed with strange fear as well as fury, and he
+butted through the girls to the door. It was locked. He wrenched at it.
+Roused, alert, the girls stood round and looked at him. He faced them, at
+bay. At that moment they were rather horrifying to him, as they stood in
+their short uniforms. He was distinctly afraid.
+
+'Come on, John Thomas! Come on! Choose!' said Annie.
+
+'What are you after? Open the door,' he said.
+
+'We shan't--not till you've chosen!' said Muriel.
+
+'Chosen what?' he said.
+
+'Chosen the one you're going to marry,' she replied.
+
+He hesitated a moment.
+
+'Open the blasted door,' he said, 'and get back to your senses.' He spoke
+with official authority.
+
+'You've got to choose!' cried the girls.
+
+'Come on!' cried Annie, looking him in the eye.' Come on! Come on!'
+
+He went forward, rather vaguely. She had taken off her belt, and swinging
+it, she fetched him a sharp blow over the head with the buckle end. He
+sprang and seized her. But immediately the other girls rushed upon him,
+pulling and tearing and beating him. Their blood was now thoroughly up.
+He was their sport now. They were going to have their own back, out of
+him. Strange, wild creatures, they hung on him and rushed at him to bear
+him down. His tunic was torn right up the back, Nora had hold at the back
+of his collar, and was actually strangling him. Luckily the button burst.
+He struggled in a wild frenzy of fury and terror, almost mad terror. His
+tunic was simply torn off his back, his shirt-sleeves were torn away, his
+arms were naked. The girls rushed at him, clenched their hands on him and
+pulled at him: or they rushed at him and pushed him, butted him with all
+their might: or they struck him wild blows. He ducked and cringed and
+struck sideways. They became more intense.
+
+At last he was down. They rushed on him, kneeling on him. He had neither
+breath nor strength to move. His face was bleeding with a long scratch,
+his brow was bruised.
+
+Annie knelt on him, the other girls knelt and hung on to him. Their faces
+were flushed, their hair wild, their eyes were all glittering strangely.
+He lay at last quite still, with face averted, as an animal lies when it
+is defeated and at the mercy of the captor. Sometimes his eye glanced
+back at the wild faces of the girls. His breast rose heavily, his wrists
+were torn.
+
+'Now, then, my fellow!' gasped Annie at length. 'Now then--now--'
+
+At the sound of her terrifying, cold triumph, he suddenly started to
+struggle as an animal might, but the girls threw themselves upon him with
+unnatural strength and power, forcing him down.
+
+'Yes--now, then!' gasped Annie at length.
+
+And there was a dead silence, in which the thud of heart-beating was to
+be heard. It was a suspense of pure silence in every soul.
+
+'Now you know where you are,' said Annie.
+
+The sight of his white, bare arm maddened the girls. He lay in a kind of
+trance of fear and antagonism. They felt themselves filled with
+supernatural strength.
+
+Suddenly Polly started to laugh--to giggle wildly--helplessly--and Emma
+and Muriel joined in. But Annie and Nora and Laura remained the same,
+tense, watchful, with gleaming eyes. He winced away from these eyes.
+
+'Yes,' said Annie, in a curious low tone, secret and deadly. 'Yes! You've
+got it now! You know what you've done, don't you? You know what you've
+done.'
+
+He made no sound nor sign, but lay with bright, averted eyes, and
+averted, bleeding face.
+
+'You ought to be _killed_, that's what you ought,' said Annie, tensely.
+'You ought to be _killed_.' And there was a terrifying lust in her voice.
+
+Polly was ceasing to laugh, and giving long-drawn Oh-h-hs and sighs as
+she came to herself.
+
+'He's got to choose,' she said vaguely.
+
+'Oh, yes, he has,' said Laura, with vindictive decision.
+
+'Do you hear--do you hear?' said Annie. And with a sharp movement, that
+made him wince, she turned his face to her.
+
+'Do you hear?' she repeated, shaking him.
+
+But he was quite dumb. She fetched him a sharp slap on the face. He
+started, and his eyes widened. Then his face darkened with defiance,
+after all.
+
+'Do you hear?' she repeated.
+
+He only looked at her with hostile eyes.
+
+'Speak!' she said, putting her face devilishly near his.
+
+'What?' he said, almost overcome.
+
+'You've got to _choose_!' she cried, as if it were some terrible menace,
+and as if it hurt her that she could not exact more.
+
+'What?' he said, in fear.
+
+'Choose your girl, Coddy. You've got to choose her now. And you'll get
+your neck broken if you play any more of your tricks, my boy. You're
+settled now.'
+
+There was a pause. Again he averted his face. He was cunning in his
+overthrow. He did not give in to them really--no, not if they tore him to
+bits.
+
+'All right, then,' he said, 'I choose Annie.' His voice was strange and
+full of malice. Annie let go of him as if he had been a hot coal.
+
+'He's chosen Annie!' said the girls in chorus.
+
+'Me!' cried Annie. She was still kneeling, but away from him. He was
+still lying prostrate, with averted face. The girls grouped uneasily
+around.
+
+'Me!' repeated Annie, with a terrible bitter accent.
+
+Then she got up, drawing away from him with strange disgust and
+bitterness.
+
+'I wouldn't touch him,' she said.
+
+But her face quivered with a kind of agony, she seemed as if she would
+fall. The other girls turned aside. He remained lying on the floor, with
+his torn clothes and bleeding, averted face.
+
+'Oh, if he's chosen--' said Polly.
+
+'I don't want him--he can choose again,' said Annie, with the same rather
+bitter hopelessness.
+
+'Get up,' said Polly, lifting his shoulder. 'Get up.'
+
+He rose slowly, a strange, ragged, dazed creature. The girls eyed him
+from a distance, curiously, furtively, dangerously.
+
+'Who wants him?' cried Laura, roughly.
+
+'Nobody,' they answered, with contempt. Yet each one of them waited for
+him to look at her, hoped he would look at her. All except Annie, and
+something was broken in her.
+
+He, however, kept his face closed and averted from them all. There was a
+silence of the end. He picked up the torn pieces of his tunic, without
+knowing what to do with them. The girls stood about uneasily, flushed,
+panting, tidying their hair and their dress unconsciously, and watching
+him. He looked at none of them. He espied his cap in a corner, and went
+and picked it up. He put it on his head, and one of the girls burst into
+a shrill, hysteric laugh at the sight he presented. He, however, took no
+heed, but went straight to where his overcoat hung on a peg. The girls
+moved away from contact with him as if he had been an electric wire. He
+put on his coat and buttoned it down. Then he rolled his tunic-rags into
+a bundle, and stood before the locked door, dumbly.
+
+'Open the door, somebody,' said Laura.
+
+'Annie's got the key,' said one.
+
+Annie silently offered the key to the girls. Nora unlocked the door.
+
+'Tit for tat, old man,' she said. 'Show yourself a man, and don't bear a
+grudge.'
+
+But without a word or sign he had opened the door and gone, his face
+closed, his head dropped.
+
+'That'll learn him,' said Laura.
+
+'Coddy!' said Nora.
+
+'Shut up, for God's sake!' cried Annie fiercely, as if in torture.
+
+'Well, I'm about ready to go, Polly. Look sharp!' said Muriel.
+
+The girls were all anxious to be off. They were tidying themselves
+hurriedly, with mute, stupefied faces.
+
+
+
+
+_The Blind Man_
+
+
+Isabel Pervin was listening for two sounds--for the sound of wheels on
+the drive outside and for the noise of her husband's footsteps in the
+hall. Her dearest and oldest friend, a man who seemed almost
+indispensable to her living, would drive up in the rainy dusk of the
+closing November day. The trap had gone to fetch him from the station.
+And her husband, who had been blinded in Flanders, and who had a
+disfiguring mark on his brow, would be coming in from the outhouses.
+
+He had been home for a year now. He was totally blind. Yet they had been
+very happy. The Grange was Maurice's own place. The back was a farmstead,
+and the Wernhams, who occupied the rear premises, acted as farmers.
+Isabel lived with her husband in the handsome rooms in front. She and he
+had been almost entirely alone together since he was wounded. They talked
+and sang and read together in a wonderful and unspeakable intimacy. Then
+she reviewed books for a Scottish newspaper, carrying on her old
+interest, and he occupied himself a good deal with the farm. Sightless,
+he could still discuss everything with Wernham, and he could also do a
+good deal of work about the place--menial work, it is true, but it gave
+him satisfaction. He milked the cows, carried in the pails, turned the
+separator, attended to the pigs and horses. Life was still very full and
+strangely serene for the blind man, peaceful with the almost
+incomprehensible peace of immediate contact in darkness. With his wife he
+had a whole world, rich and real and invisible.
+
+They were newly and remotely happy. He did not even regret the loss of
+his sight in these times of dark, palpable joy. A certain exultance
+swelled his soul.
+
+But as time wore on, sometimes the rich glamour would leave them.
+Sometimes, after months of this intensity, a sense of burden overcame
+Isabel, a weariness, a terrible _ennui_, in that silent house approached
+between a colonnade of tall-shafted pines. Then she felt she would go
+mad, for she could not bear it. And sometimes he had devastating fits of
+depression, which seemed to lay waste his whole being. It was worse than
+depression--a black misery, when his own life was a torture to him, and
+when his presence was unbearable to his wife. The dread went down to the
+roots of her soul as these black days recurred. In a kind of panic she
+tried to wrap herself up still further in her husband. She forced the old
+spontaneous cheerfulness and joy to continue. But the effort it cost her
+was almost too much. She knew she could not keep it up. She felt she
+would scream with the strain, and would give anything, anything, to
+escape. She longed to possess her husband utterly; it gave her inordinate
+joy to have him entirely to herself. And yet, when again he was gone in a
+black and massive misery, she could not bear him, she could not bear
+herself; she wished she could be snatched away off the earth altogether,
+anything rather than live at this cost.
+
+Dazed, she schemed for a way out. She invited friends, she tried to give
+him some further connexion with the outer world. But it was no good.
+After all their joy and suffering, after their dark, great year of
+blindness and solitude and unspeakable nearness, other people seemed to
+them both shallow, prattling, rather impertinent. Shallow prattle seemed
+presumptuous. He became impatient and irritated, she was wearied. And so
+they lapsed into their solitude again. For they preferred it.
+
+But now, in a few weeks' time, her second baby would be born. The first
+had died, an infant, when her husband first went out to France. She
+looked with joy and relief to the coming of the second. It would be her
+salvation. But also she felt some anxiety. She was thirty years old, her
+husband was a year younger. They both wanted the child very much. Yet she
+could not help feeling afraid. She had her husband on her hands, a
+terrible joy to her, and a terrifying burden. The child would occupy her
+love and attention. And then, what of Maurice? What would he do? If only
+she could feel that he, too, would be at peace and happy when the child
+came! She did so want to luxuriate in a rich, physical satisfaction of
+maternity. But the man, what would he do? How could she provide for him,
+how avert those shattering black moods of his, which destroyed them both?
+
+She sighed with fear. But at this time Bertie Reid wrote to Isabel. He
+was her old friend, a second or third cousin, a Scotchman, as she was a
+Scotchwoman. They had been brought up near to one another, and all her
+life he had been her friend, like a brother, but better than her own
+brothers. She loved him--though not in the marrying sense. There was a
+sort of kinship between them, an affinity. They understood one another
+instinctively. But Isabel would never have thought of marrying Bertie. It
+would have seemed like marrying in her own family.
+
+Bertie was a barrister and a man of letters, a Scotchman of the
+intellectual type, quick, ironical, sentimental, and on his knees before
+the woman he adored but did not want to marry. Maurice Pervin was
+different. He came of a good old country family--the Grange was not a
+very great distance from Oxford. He was passionate, sensitive, perhaps
+over-sensitive, wincing--a big fellow with heavy limbs and a forehead
+that flushed painfully. For his mind was slow, as if drugged by the
+strong provincial blood that beat in his veins. He was very sensitive to
+his own mental slowness, his feelings being quick and acute. So that he
+was just the opposite to Bertie, whose mind was much quicker than his
+emotions, which were not so very fine.
+
+From the first the two men did not like each other. Isabel felt that they
+_ought_ to get on together. But they did not. She felt that if only each
+could have the clue to the other there would be such a rare understanding
+between them. It did not come off, however. Bertie adopted a slightly
+ironical attitude, very offensive to Maurice, who returned the Scotch
+irony with English resentment, a resentment which deepened sometimes into
+stupid hatred.
+
+This was a little puzzling to Isabel. However, she accepted it in the
+course of things. Men were made freakish and unreasonable. Therefore,
+when Maurice was going out to France for the second time, she felt that,
+for her husband's sake, she must discontinue her friendship with Bertie.
+She wrote to the barrister to this effect. Bertram Reid simply replied
+that in this, as in all other matters, he must obey her wishes, if these
+were indeed her wishes.
+
+For nearly two years nothing had passed between the two friends. Isabel
+rather gloried in the fact; she had no compunction. She had one great
+article of faith, which was, that husband and wife should be so important
+to one another, that the rest of the world simply did not count. She and
+Maurice were husband and wife. They loved one another. They would have
+children. Then let everybody and everything else fade into insignificance
+outside this connubial felicity. She professed herself quite happy and
+ready to receive Maurice's friends. She was happy and ready: the happy
+wife, the ready woman in possession. Without knowing why, the friends
+retired abashed and came no more. Maurice, of course, took as much
+satisfaction in this connubial absorption as Isabel did.
+
+He shared in Isabel's literary activities, she cultivated a real interest
+in agriculture and cattle-raising. For she, being at heart perhaps an
+emotional enthusiast, always cultivated the practical side of life, and
+prided herself on her mastery of practical affairs. Thus the husband and
+wife had spent the five years of their married life. The last had been
+one of blindness and unspeakable intimacy. And now Isabel felt a great
+indifference coming over her, a sort of lethargy. She wanted to be
+allowed to bear her child in peace, to nod by the fire and drift vaguely,
+physically, from day to day. Maurice was like an ominous thunder-cloud.
+She had to keep waking up to remember him.
+
+When a little note came from Bertie, asking if he were to put up a
+tombstone to their dead friendship, and speaking of the real pain he felt
+on account of her husband's loss of sight, she felt a pang, a fluttering
+agitation of re-awakening. And she read the letter to Maurice.
+
+'Ask him to come down,' he said.
+
+'Ask Bertie to come here!' she re-echoed.
+
+'Yes--if he wants to.'
+
+Isabel paused for a few moments.
+
+'I know he wants to--he'd only be too glad,' she replied. 'But what about
+you, Maurice? How would you like it?'
+
+'I should like it.'
+
+'Well--in that case--But I thought you didn't care for him--'
+
+'Oh, I don't know. I might think differently of him now,' the blind man
+replied. It was rather abstruse to Isabel.
+
+'Well, dear,' she said, 'if you're quite sure--'
+
+'I'm sure enough. Let him come,' said Maurice.
+
+So Bertie was coming, coming this evening, in the November rain and
+darkness. Isabel was agitated, racked with her old restlessness and
+indecision. She had always suffered from this pain of doubt, just an
+agonizing sense of uncertainty. It had begun to pass off, in the lethargy
+of maternity. Now it returned, and she resented it. She struggled as
+usual to maintain her calm, composed, friendly bearing, a sort of mask
+she wore over all her body.
+
+A woman had lighted a tall lamp beside the table, and spread the cloth.
+The long dining-room was dim, with its elegant but rather severe pieces
+of old furniture. Only the round table glowed softly under the light. It
+had a rich, beautiful effect. The white cloth glistened and dropped its
+heavy, pointed lace corners almost to the carpet, the china was old and
+handsome, creamy-yellow, with a blotched pattern of harsh red and deep
+blue, the cups large and bell-shaped, the teapot gallant. Isabel looked
+at it with superficial appreciation.
+
+Her nerves were hurting her. She looked automatically again at the high,
+uncurtained windows. In the last dusk she could just perceive outside a
+huge fir-tree swaying its boughs: it was as if she thought it rather
+than saw it. The rain came flying on the window panes. Ah, why had she
+no peace? These two men, why did they tear at her? Why did they not
+come--why was there this suspense?
+
+She sat in a lassitude that was really suspense and irritation. Maurice,
+at least, might come in--there was nothing to keep him out. She rose to
+her feet. Catching sight of her reflection in a mirror, she glanced at
+herself with a slight smile of recognition, as if she were an old friend
+to herself. Her face was oval and calm, her nose a little arched. Her
+neck made a beautiful line down to her shoulder. With hair knotted
+loosely behind, she had something of a warm, maternal look. Thinking this
+of herself, she arched her eyebrows and her rather heavy eyelids, with a
+little flicker of a smile, and for a moment her grey eyes looked amused
+and wicked, a little sardonic, out of her transfigured Madonna face.
+
+Then, resuming her air of womanly patience--she was really fatally
+self-determined--she went with a little jerk towards the door. Her eyes
+were slightly reddened.
+
+She passed down the wide hall, and through a door at the end. Then she
+was in the farm premises. The scent of dairy, and of farm-kitchen, and of
+farm-yard and of leather almost overcame her: but particularly the scent
+of dairy. They had been scalding out the pans. The flagged passage in
+front of her was dark, puddled and wet. Light came out from the open
+kitchen door. She went forward and stood in the doorway. The farm-people
+were at tea, seated at a little distance from her, round a long, narrow
+table, in the centre of which stood a white lamp. Ruddy faces, ruddy
+hands holding food, red mouths working, heads bent over the tea-cups:
+men, land-girls, boys: it was tea-time, feeding-time. Some faces caught
+sight of her. Mrs. Wernham, going round behind the chairs with a large
+black teapot, halting slightly in her walk, was not aware of her for a
+moment. Then she turned suddenly.
+
+'Oh, is it Madam!' she exclaimed. 'Come in, then, come in! We're at tea.'
+And she dragged forward a chair.
+
+'No, I won't come in,' said Isabel, 'I'm afraid I interrupt your meal.'
+
+'No--no--not likely, Madam, not likely.'
+
+'Hasn't Mr. Pervin come in, do you know?'
+
+'I'm sure I couldn't say! Missed him, have you, Madam?'
+
+'No, I only wanted him to come in,' laughed Isabel, as if shyly.
+
+'Wanted him, did ye? Get you, boy--get up, now--'
+
+Mrs. Wernham knocked one of the boys on the shoulder. He began to scrape
+to his feet, chewing largely.
+
+'I believe he's in top stable,' said another face from the table.
+
+'Ah! No, don't get up. I'm going myself,' said Isabel.
+
+'Don't you go out of a dirty night like this. Let the lad go. Get along
+wi' ye, boy,' said Mrs. Wernham.
+
+'No, no,' said Isabel, with a decision that was always obeyed. 'Go on
+with your tea, Tom. I'd like to go across to the stable, Mrs. Wernham.'
+
+'Did ever you hear tell!' exclaimed the woman.
+
+'Isn't the trap late?' asked Isabel.
+
+'Why, no,' said Mrs. Wernham, peering into the distance at the tall, dim
+clock. 'No, Madam--we can give it another quarter or twenty minutes yet,
+good--yes, every bit of a quarter.'
+
+'Ah! It seems late when darkness falls so early,' said Isabel.
+
+'It do, that it do. Bother the days, that they draw in so,' answered Mrs.
+Wernham.' Proper miserable!'
+
+'They are,' said Isabel, withdrawing.
+
+She pulled on her overshoes, wrapped a large tartan shawl around her, put
+on a man's felt hat, and ventured out along the causeways of the first
+yard. It was very dark. The wind was roaring in the great elms behind the
+outhouses. When she came to the second yard the darkness seemed deeper.
+She was unsure of her footing. She wished she had brought a lantern. Rain
+blew against her. Half she liked it, half she felt unwilling to battle.
+
+She reached at last the just visible door of the stable. There was no
+sign of a light anywhere. Opening the upper half, she looked in: into a
+simple well of darkness. The smell of horses, and ammonia, and of warmth
+was startling to her, in that full night. She listened with all her ears,
+but could hear nothing save the night, and the stirring of a horse.
+
+'Maurice!' she called, softly and musically, though she was afraid.
+'Maurice--are you there?'
+
+Nothing came from the darkness. She knew the rain and wind blew in upon
+the horses, the hot animal life. Feeling it wrong, she entered the
+stable, and drew the lower half of the door shut, holding the upper part
+close. She did not stir, because she was aware of the presence of the
+dark hindquarters of the horses, though she could not see them, and she
+was afraid. Something wild stirred in her heart.
+
+She listened intensely. Then she heard a small noise in the distance--far
+away, it seemed--the chink of a pan, and a man's voice speaking a brief
+word. It would be Maurice, in the other part of the stable. She stood
+motionless, waiting for him to come through the partition door. The
+horses were so terrifyingly near to her, in the invisible.
+
+The loud jarring of the inner door-latch made her start; the door was
+opened. She could hear and feel her husband entering and invisibly
+passing among the horses near to her, in darkness as they were, actively
+intermingled. The rather low sound of his voice as he spoke to the horses
+came velvety to her nerves. How near he was, and how invisible! The
+darkness seemed to be in a strange swirl of violent life, just upon her.
+She turned giddy.
+
+Her presence of mind made her call, quietly and musically:
+
+'Maurice! Maurice--dea-ar!'
+
+'Yes,' he answered. 'Isabel?'
+
+She saw nothing, and the sound of his voice seemed to touch her.
+
+'Hello!' she answered cheerfully, straining her eyes to see him. He was
+still busy, attending to the horses near her, but she saw only darkness.
+It made her almost desperate.
+
+'Won't you come in, dear?' she said.
+
+'Yes, I'm coming. Just half a minute. _Stand over--now_! Trap's not come,
+has it?'
+
+'Not yet,' said Isabel.
+
+His voice was pleasant and ordinary, but it had a slight suggestion of
+the stable to her. She wished he would come away. Whilst he was so
+utterly invisible she was afraid of him.
+
+'How's the time?' he asked.
+
+'Not yet six,' she replied. She disliked to answer into the dark.
+Presently he came very near to her, and she retreated out of doors.
+
+'The weather blows in here,' he said, coming steadily forward, feeling
+for the doors. She shrank away. At last she could dimly see him.
+
+'Bertie won't have much of a drive,' he said, as he closed the doors.
+
+'He won't indeed!' said Isabel calmly, watching the dark shape at the
+door.
+
+'Give me your arm, dear,' she said.
+
+She pressed his arm close to her, as she went. But she longed to see him,
+to look at him. She was nervous. He walked erect, with face rather
+lifted, but with a curious tentative movement of his powerful, muscular
+legs. She could feel the clever, careful, strong contact of his feet with
+the earth, as she balanced against him. For a moment he was a tower of
+darkness to her, as if he rose out of the earth.
+
+In the house-passage he wavered, and went cautiously, with a curious look
+of silence about him as he felt for the bench. Then he sat down heavily.
+He was a man with rather sloping shoulders, but with heavy limbs,
+powerful legs that seemed to know the earth. His head was small, usually
+carried high and light. As he bent down to unfasten his gaiters and boots
+he did not look blind. His hair was brown and crisp, his hands were
+large, reddish, intelligent, the veins stood out in the wrists; and his
+thighs and knees seemed massive. When he stood up his face and neck were
+surcharged with blood, the veins stood out on his temples. She did not
+look at his blindness.
+
+Isabel was always glad when they had passed through the dividing door
+into their own regions of repose and beauty. She was a little afraid of
+him, out there in the animal grossness of the back. His bearing also
+changed, as he smelt the familiar, indefinable odour that pervaded his
+wife's surroundings, a delicate, refined scent, very faintly spicy.
+Perhaps it came from the pot-pourri bowls.
+
+He stood at the foot of the stairs, arrested, listening. She watched him,
+and her heart sickened. He seemed to be listening to fate.
+
+'He's not here yet,' he said. 'I'll go up and change.'
+
+'Maurice,' she said, 'you're not wishing he wouldn't come, are you?'
+
+'I couldn't quite say,' he answered. 'I feel myself rather on the _qui
+vive_.'
+
+'I can see you are,' she answered. And she reached up and kissed his
+cheek. She saw his mouth relax into a slow smile.
+
+'What are you laughing at?' she said roguishly.
+
+'You consoling me,' he answered.
+
+'Nay,' she answered. 'Why should I console you? You know we love each
+other--you know _how_ married we are! What does anything else matter?'
+
+'Nothing at all, my dear.'
+
+He felt for her face, and touched it, smiling.
+
+'_You're_ all right, aren't you?' he asked, anxiously.
+
+'I'm wonderfully all right, love,' she answered. 'It's you I am a little
+troubled about, at times.'
+
+'Why me?' he said, touching her cheeks delicately with the tips of his
+fingers. The touch had an almost hypnotizing effect on her.
+
+He went away upstairs. She saw him mount into the darkness, unseeing and
+unchanging. He did not know that the lamps on the upper corridor were
+unlighted. He went on into the darkness with unchanging step. She heard
+him in the bathroom.
+
+Pervin moved about almost unconsciously in his familiar surroundings,
+dark though everything was. He seemed to know the presence of objects
+before he touched them. It was a pleasure to him to rock thus through a
+world of things, carried on the flood in a sort of blood-prescience. He
+did not think much or trouble much. So long as he kept this sheer
+immediacy of blood-contact with the substantial world he was happy, he
+wanted no intervention of visual consciousness. In this state there was a
+certain rich positivity, bordering sometimes on rapture. Life seemed to
+move in him like a tide lapping, and advancing, enveloping all things
+darkly. It was a pleasure to stretch forth the hand and meet the unseen
+object, clasp it, and possess it in pure contact. He did not try to
+remember, to visualize. He did not want to. The new way of consciousness
+substituted itself in him.
+
+The rich suffusion of this state generally kept him happy, reaching its
+culmination in the consuming passion for his wife. But at times the flow
+would seem to be checked and thrown back. Then it would beat inside him
+like a tangled sea, and he was tortured in the shattered chaos of his own
+blood. He grew to dread this arrest, this throw-back, this chaos inside
+himself, when he seemed merely at the mercy of his own powerful and
+conflicting elements. How to get some measure of control or surety, this
+was the question. And when the question rose maddening in him, he would
+clench his fists as if he would _compel_ the whole universe to submit to
+him. But it was in vain. He could not even compel himself.
+
+Tonight, however, he was still serene, though little tremors of
+unreasonable exasperation ran through him. He had to handle the razor
+very carefully, as he shaved, for it was not at one with him, he was
+afraid of it. His hearing also was too much sharpened. He heard the woman
+lighting the lamps on the corridor, and attending to the fire in the
+visitor's room. And then, as he went to his room he heard the trap
+arrive. Then came Isabel's voice, lifted and calling, like a bell
+ringing:
+
+'Is it you, Bertie? Have you come?'
+
+And a man's voice answered out of the wind:
+
+'Hello, Isabell There you are.'
+
+'Have you had a miserable drive? I'm so sorry we couldn't send a closed
+carriage. I can't see you at all, you know.'
+
+'I'm coming. No, I liked the drive--it was like Perthshire. Well, how are
+you? You're looking fit as ever, as far as I can see.'
+
+'Oh, yes,' said Isabel. 'I'm wonderfully well. How are you? Rather thin,
+I think--'
+
+'Worked to death--everybody's old cry. But I'm all right, Ciss. How's
+Pervin?--isn't he here?'
+
+'Oh, yes, he's upstairs changing. Yes, he's awfully well. Take off your
+wet things; I'll send them to be dried.'
+
+'And how are you both, in spirits? He doesn't fret?'
+
+'No--no, not at all. No, on the contrary, really. We've been wonderfully
+happy, incredibly. It's more than I can understand--so wonderful: the
+nearness, and the peace--'
+
+'Ah! Well, that's awfully good news--'
+
+They moved away. Pervin heard no more. But a childish sense of desolation
+had come over him, as he heard their brisk voices. He seemed shut
+out--like a child that is left out. He was aimless and excluded, he did
+not know what to do with himself. The helpless desolation came over him.
+He fumbled nervously as he dressed himself, in a state almost of
+childishness. He disliked the Scotch accent in Bertie's speech, and the
+slight response it found on Isabel's tongue. He disliked the slight purr
+of complacency in the Scottish speech. He disliked intensely the glib way
+in which Isabel spoke of their happiness and nearness. It made him
+recoil. He was fretful and beside himself like a child, he had almost a
+childish nostalgia to be included in the life circle. And at the same
+time he was a man, dark and powerful and infuriated by his own weakness.
+By some fatal flaw, he could not be by himself, he had to depend on the
+support of another. And this very dependence enraged him. He hated Bertie
+Reid, and at the same time he knew the hatred was nonsense, he knew it
+was the outcome of his own weakness.
+
+He went downstairs. Isabel was alone in the dining-room. She watched him
+enter, head erect, his feet tentative. He looked so strong-blooded and
+healthy, and, at the same time, cancelled. Cancelled--that was the word
+that flew across her mind. Perhaps it was his scars suggested it.
+
+'You heard Bertie come, Maurice?' she said.
+
+'Yes--isn't he here?'
+
+'He's in his room. He looks very thin and worn.'
+
+'I suppose he works himself to death.'
+
+A woman came in with a tray--and after a few minutes Bertie came down. He
+was a little dark man, with a very big forehead, thin, wispy hair, and
+sad, large eyes. His expression was inordinately sad--almost funny. He
+had odd, short legs.
+
+Isabel watched him hesitate under the door, and glance nervously at her
+husband. Pervin heard him and turned.
+
+'Here you are, now,' said Isabel. 'Come, let us eat.'
+
+Bertie went across to Maurice.
+
+'How are you, Pervin,' he said, as he advanced.
+
+The blind man stuck his hand out into space, and Bertie took it.
+
+'Very fit. Glad you've come,' said Maurice.
+
+Isabel glanced at them, and glanced away, as if she could not bear to see
+them.
+
+'Come,' she said. 'Come to table. Aren't you both awfully hungry? I am,
+tremendously.'
+
+'I'm afraid you waited for me,' said Bertie, as they sat down.
+
+Maurice had a curious monolithic way of sitting in a chair, erect and
+distant. Isabel's heart always beat when she caught sight of him thus.
+
+'No,' she replied to Bertie. 'We're very little later than usual. We're
+having a sort of high tea, not dinner. Do you mind? It gives us such a
+nice long evening, uninterrupted.'
+
+'I like it,' said Bertie.
+
+Maurice was feeling, with curious little movements, almost like a cat
+kneading her bed, for his place, his knife and fork, his napkin. He was
+getting the whole geography of his cover into his consciousness. He sat
+erect and inscrutable, remote-seeming Bertie watched the static figure of
+the blind man, the delicate tactile discernment of the large, ruddy
+hands, and the curious mindless silence of the brow, above the scar. With
+difficulty he looked away, and without knowing what he did, picked up a
+little crystal bowl of violets from the table, and held them to his nose.
+
+'They are sweet-scented,' he said. 'Where do they come from?'
+
+'From the garden--under the windows,' said Isabel.
+
+'So late in the year--and so fragrant! Do you remember the violets under
+Aunt Bell's south wall?'
+
+The two friends looked at each other and exchanged a smile, Isabel's eyes
+lighting up.
+
+'Don't I?' she replied. '_Wasn't_ she queer!'
+
+'A curious old girl,' laughed Bertie. 'There's a streak of freakishness
+in the family, Isabel.'
+
+'Ah--but not in you and me, Bertie,' said Isabel. 'Give them to Maurice,
+will you?' she added, as Bertie was putting down the flowers. 'Have you
+smelled the violets, dear? Do!--they are so scented.'
+
+Maurice held out his hand, and Bertie placed the tiny bowl against his
+large, warm-looking fingers. Maurice's hand closed over the thin white
+fingers of the barrister. Bertie carefully extricated himself. Then the
+two watched the blind man smelling the violets. He bent his head and
+seemed to be thinking. Isabel waited.
+
+'Aren't they sweet, Maurice?' she said at last, anxiously.
+
+'Very,' he said. And he held out the bowl. Bertie took it. Both he and
+Isabel were a little afraid, and deeply disturbed.
+
+The meal continued. Isabel and Bertie chatted spasmodically. The blind
+man was silent. He touched his food repeatedly, with quick, delicate
+touches of his knife-point, then cut irregular bits. He could not bear to
+be helped. Both Isabel and Bertie suffered: Isabel wondered why. She did
+not suffer when she was alone with Maurice. Bertie made her conscious of
+a strangeness.
+
+After the meal the three drew their chairs to the fire, and sat down to
+talk. The decanters were put on a table near at hand. Isabel knocked the
+logs on the fire, and clouds of brilliant sparks went up the chimney.
+Bertie noticed a slight weariness in her bearing.
+
+'You will be glad when your child comes now, Isabel?' he said.
+
+She looked up to him with a quick wan smile.
+
+'Yes, I shall be glad,' she answered. 'It begins to seem long. Yes, I
+shall be very glad. So will you, Maurice, won't you?' she added.
+
+'Yes, I shall,' replied her husband.
+
+'We are both looking forward so much to having it,' she said.
+
+'Yes, of course,' said Bertie.
+
+He was a bachelor, three or four years older than Isabel. He lived in
+beautiful rooms overlooking the river, guarded by a faithful Scottish
+man-servant. And he had his friends among the fair sex--not lovers,
+friends. So long as he could avoid any danger of courtship or marriage,
+he adored a few good women with constant and unfailing homage, and he was
+chivalrously fond of quite a number. But if they seemed to encroach on
+him, he withdrew and detested them.
+
+Isabel knew him very well, knew his beautiful constancy, and kindness,
+also his incurable weakness, which made him unable ever to enter into
+close contact of any sort. He was ashamed of himself, because he could
+not marry, could not approach women physically. He wanted to do so. But
+he could not. At the centre of him he was afraid, helplessly and even
+brutally afraid. He had given up hope, had ceased to expect any more that
+he could escape his own weakness. Hence he was a brilliant and successful
+barrister, also _litterateur_ of high repute, a rich man, and a great
+social success. At the centre he felt himself neuter, nothing.
+
+Isabel knew him well. She despised him even while she admired him. She
+looked at his sad face, his little short legs, and felt contempt of him.
+She looked at his dark grey eyes, with their uncanny, almost childlike
+intuition, and she loved him. He understood amazingly--but she had no
+fear of his understanding. As a man she patronized him.
+
+And she turned to the impassive, silent figure of her husband. He sat
+leaning back, with folded arms, and face a little uptilted. His knees
+were straight and massive. She sighed, picked up the poker, and again
+began to prod the fire, to rouse the clouds of soft, brilliant sparks.
+
+'Isabel tells me,' Bertie began suddenly, 'that you have not suffered
+unbearably from the loss of sight.'
+
+Maurice straightened himself to attend, but kept his arms folded.
+
+'No,' he said, 'not unbearably. Now and again one struggles against it,
+you know. But there are compensations.'
+
+'They say it is much worse to be stone deaf,' said Isabel.
+
+'I believe it is,' said Bertie. 'Are there compensations?' he added, to
+Maurice.
+
+'Yes. You cease to bother about a great many things.' Again Maurice
+stretched his figure, stretched the strong muscles of his back, and
+leaned backwards, with uplifted face.
+
+'And that is a relief,' said Bertie. 'But what is there in place of the
+bothering? What replaces the activity?'
+
+There was a pause. At length the blind man replied, as out of a
+negligent, unattentive thinking:
+
+'Oh, I don't know. There's a good deal when you're not active.'
+
+'Is there?' said Bertie. 'What, exactly? It always seems to me that when
+there is no thought and no action, there is nothing.'
+
+Again Maurice was slow in replying.
+
+'There is something,' he replied. 'I couldn't tell you what it is.'
+
+And the talk lapsed once more, Isabel and Bertie chatting gossip and
+reminiscence, the blind man silent.
+
+At length Maurice rose restlessly, a big, obtrusive figure. He felt tight
+and hampered. He wanted to go away.
+
+'Do you mind,' he said, 'if I go and speak to Wernham?'
+
+'No--go along, dear,' said Isabel.
+
+And he went out. A silence came over the two friends. At length Bertie
+said:
+
+'Nevertheless, it is a great deprivation, Cissie.'
+
+'It is, Bertie. I know it is.'
+
+'Something lacking all the time,' said Bertie.
+
+'Yes, I know. And yet--and yet--Maurice is right. There is something
+else, something _there_, which you never knew was there, and which you
+can't express.'
+
+'What is there?' asked Bertie.
+
+'I don't know--it's awfully hard to define it--but something
+strong and immediate. There's something strange in Maurice's
+presence--indefinable--but I couldn't do without it. I agree that it
+seems to put one's mind to sleep. But when we're alone I miss nothing; it
+seems awfully rich, almost splendid, you know.'
+
+'I'm afraid I don't follow,' said Bertie.
+
+They talked desultorily. The wind blew loudly outside, rain chattered on
+the window-panes, making a sharp, drum-sound, because of the closed,
+mellow-golden shutters inside. The logs burned slowly, with hot, almost
+invisible small flames. Bertie seemed uneasy, there were dark circles
+round his eyes. Isabel, rich with her approaching maternity, leaned
+looking into the fire. Her hair curled in odd, loose strands, very
+pleasing to the man. But she had a curious feeling of old woe in her
+heart, old, timeless night-woe.
+
+'I suppose we're all deficient somewhere,' said Bertie.
+
+'I suppose so,' said Isabel wearily.
+
+'Damned, sooner or later.'
+
+'I don't know,' she said, rousing herself. 'I feel quite all right, you
+know. The child coming seems to make me indifferent to everything, just
+placid. I can't feel that there's anything to trouble about, you know.'
+
+'A good thing, I should say,' he replied slowly.
+
+'Well, there it is. I suppose it's just Nature. If only I felt I needn't
+trouble about Maurice, I should be perfectly content--'
+
+'But you feel you must trouble about him?'
+
+'Well--I don't know--' She even resented this much effort.
+
+The evening passed slowly. Isabel looked at the clock. 'I say,' she said.
+'It's nearly ten o'clock. Where can Maurice be? I'm sure they're all in
+bed at the back. Excuse me a moment.'
+
+She went out, returning almost immediately.
+
+'It's all shut up and in darkness,' she said. 'I wonder where he is. He
+must have gone out to the farm--'
+
+Bertie looked at her.
+
+'I suppose he'll come in,' he said.
+
+'I suppose so,' she said. 'But it's unusual for him to be out now.'
+
+'Would you like me to go out and see?'
+
+'Well--if you wouldn't mind. I'd go, but--' She did not want to make the
+physical effort.
+
+Bertie put on an old overcoat and took a lantern. He went out from the
+side door. He shrank from the wet and roaring night. Such weather had a
+nervous effect on him: too much moisture everywhere made him feel almost
+imbecile. Unwilling, he went through it all. A dog barked violently at
+him. He peered in all the buildings. At last, as he opened the upper door
+of a sort of intermediate barn, he heard a grinding noise, and looking
+in, holding up his lantern, saw Maurice, in his shirt-sleeves, standing
+listening, holding the handle of a turnip-pulper. He had been pulping
+sweet roots, a pile of which lay dimly heaped in a corner behind him.
+
+'That you, Wernham?' said Maurice, listening.
+
+'No, it's me,' said Bertie.
+
+A large, half-wild grey cat was rubbing at Maurice's leg. The blind
+man stooped to rub its sides. Bertie watched the scene, then
+unconsciously entered and shut the door behind him, He was in a high sort
+of barn-place, from which, right and left, ran off the corridors in front
+of the stalled cattle. He watched the slow, stooping motion of the other
+man, as he caressed the great cat.
+
+Maurice straightened himself.
+
+'You came to look for me?' he said.
+
+'Isabel was a little uneasy,' said Bertie.
+
+'I'll come in. I like messing about doing these jobs.'
+
+The cat had reared her sinister, feline length against his leg, clawing
+at his thigh affectionately. He lifted her claws out of his flesh.
+
+'I hope I'm not in your way at all at the Grange here,' said Bertie,
+rather shy and stiff.
+
+'My way? No, not a bit. I'm glad Isabel has somebody to talk to. I'm
+afraid it's I who am in the way. I know I'm not very lively company.
+Isabel's all right, don't you think? She's not unhappy, is she?'
+
+'I don't think so.'
+
+'What does she say?'
+
+'She says she's very content--only a little troubled about you.'
+
+'Why me?'
+
+'Perhaps afraid that you might brood,' said Bertie, cautiously.
+
+'She needn't be afraid of that.' He continued to caress the flattened
+grey head of the cat with his fingers. 'What I am a bit afraid of,' he
+resumed, 'is that she'll find me a dead weight, always alone with me down
+here.'
+
+'I don't think you need think that,' said Bertie, though this was what he
+feared himself.
+
+'I don't know,' said Maurice. 'Sometimes I feel it isn't fair that she's
+saddled with me.' Then he dropped his voice curiously. 'I say,' he asked,
+secretly struggling, 'is my face much disfigured? Do you mind telling
+me?'
+
+'There is the scar,' said Bertie, wondering. 'Yes, it is a disfigurement.
+But more pitiable than shocking.'
+
+'A pretty bad scar, though,' said Maurice.
+
+'Oh, yes.'
+
+There was a pause.
+
+'Sometimes I feel I am horrible,' said Maurice, in a low voice, talking
+as if to himself. And Bertie actually felt a quiver of horror.
+
+'That's nonsense,' he said.
+
+Maurice again straightened himself, leaving the cat.
+
+'There's no telling,' he said. Then again, in an odd tone, he added: 'I
+don't really know you, do I?'
+
+'Probably not,' said Bertie.
+
+'Do you mind if I touch you?'
+
+The lawyer shrank away instinctively. And yet, out of very philanthropy,
+he said, in a small voice: 'Not at all.'
+
+But he suffered as the blind man stretched out a strong, naked hand to
+him. Maurice accidentally knocked off Bertie's hat.
+
+'I thought you were taller,' he said, starting. Then he laid his hand on
+Bertie Reid's head, closing the dome of the skull in a soft, firm grasp,
+gathering it, as it were; then, shifting his grasp and softly closing
+again, with a fine, close pressure, till he had covered the skull and the
+face of the smaller man, tracing the brows, and touching the full, closed
+eyes, touching the small nose and the nostrils, the rough, short
+moustache, the mouth, the rather strong chin. The hand of the blind man
+grasped the shoulder, the arm, the hand of the other man. He seemed to
+take him, in the soft, travelling grasp.
+
+'You seem young,' he said quietly, at last.
+
+The lawyer stood almost annihilated, unable to answer.
+
+'Your head seems tender, as if you were young,' Maurice repeated. 'So do
+your hands. Touch my eyes, will you?--touch my scar.'
+
+Now Bertie quivered with revulsion. Yet he was under the power of the
+blind man, as if hypnotized. He lifted his hand, and laid the fingers
+on the scar, on the scarred eyes. Maurice suddenly covered them with
+his own hand, pressed the fingers of the other man upon his disfigured
+eye-sockets, trembling in every fibre, and rocking slightly, slowly, from
+side to side. He remained thus for a minute or more, whilst Bertie stood
+as if in a swoon, unconscious, imprisoned.
+
+Then suddenly Maurice removed the hand of the other man from his brow,
+and stood holding it in his own.
+
+'Oh, my God' he said, 'we shall know each other now, shan't we? We shall
+know each other now.'
+
+Bertie could not answer. He gazed mute and terror-struck, overcome by his
+own weakness. He knew he could not answer. He had an unreasonable fear,
+lest the other man should suddenly destroy him. Whereas Maurice was
+actually filled with hot, poignant love, the passion of friendship.
+Perhaps it was this very passion of friendship which Bertie shrank from
+most.
+
+'We're all right together now, aren't we?' said Maurice. 'It's all right
+now, as long as we live, so far as we're concerned?'
+
+'Yes,' said Bertie, trying by any means to escape.
+
+Maurice stood with head lifted, as if listening. The new delicate
+fulfilment of mortal friendship had come as a revelation and surprise to
+him, something exquisite and unhoped-for. He seemed to be listening to
+hear if it were real.
+
+Then he turned for his coat.
+
+'Come,' he said, 'we'll go to Isabel.'
+
+Bertie took the lantern and opened the door. The cat disappeared. The two
+men went in silence along the causeways. Isabel, as they came, thought
+their footsteps sounded strange. She looked up pathetically and anxiously
+for their entrance. There seemed a curious elation about Maurice. Bertie
+was haggard, with sunken eyes.
+
+'What is it?' she asked.
+
+'We've become friends,' said Maurice, standing with his feet apart, like
+a strange colossus.
+
+'Friends!' re-echoed Isabel. And she looked again at Bertie. He met her
+eyes with a furtive, haggard look; his eyes were as if glazed with
+misery.
+
+'I'm so glad,' she said, in sheer perplexity.
+
+'Yes,' said Maurice.
+
+He was indeed so glad. Isabel took his hand with both hers, and held it
+fast.
+
+'You'll be happier now, dear,' she said.
+
+But she was watching Bertie. She knew that he had one desire--to escape
+from this intimacy, this friendship, which had been thrust upon him. He
+could not bear it that he had been touched by the blind man, his insane
+reserve broken in. He was like a mollusk whose shell is broken.
+
+
+
+
+_MONKEY NUTS_
+
+
+At first Joe thought the job O.K. He was loading hay on the trucks, along
+with Albert, the corporal. The two men were pleasantly billeted in a
+cottage not far from the station: they were their own masters, for Joe
+never thought of Albert as a master. And the little sidings of the tiny
+village station was as pleasant a place as you could wish for. On one
+side, beyond the line, stretched the woods: on the other, the near side,
+across a green smooth field red houses were dotted among flowering apple
+trees. The weather being sunny, work being easy, Albert, a real good pal,
+what life could be better! After Flanders, it was heaven itself.
+
+Albert, the corporal, was a clean-shaven, shrewd-looking fellow of about
+forty. He seemed to think his one aim in life was to be full of fun and
+nonsense. In repose, his face looked a little withered, old. He was a
+very good pal to Joe, steady, decent and grave under all his 'mischief';
+for his mischief was only his laborious way of skirting his own _ennui_.
+
+Joe was much younger than Albert--only twenty-three. He was a tallish,
+quiet youth, pleasant looking. He was of a slightly better class than his
+corporal, more personable. Careful about his appearance, he shaved every
+day. 'I haven't got much of a face,' said Albert. 'If I was to shave
+every day like you, Joe, I should have none.'
+
+There was plenty of life in the little goods-yard: three porter youths,
+a continual come and go of farm wagons bringing hay, wagons with timber
+from the woods, coal carts loading at the trucks. The black coal seemed
+to make the place sleepier, hotter. Round the big white gate the
+station-master's children played and his white chickens walked, whilst
+the stationmaster himself, a young man getting too fat, helped his wife
+to peg out the washing on the clothes line in the meadow.
+
+The great boat-shaped wagons came up from Playcross with the hay. At
+first the farm-men waggoned it. On the third day one of the land-girls
+appeared with the first load, drawing to a standstill easily at the head
+of her two great horses. She was a buxom girl, young, in linen overalls
+and gaiters. Her face was ruddy, she had large blue eyes.
+
+'Now that's the waggoner for us, boys,' said the corporal loudly.
+
+'Whoa!' she said to her horses; and then to the corporal: 'Which boys do
+you mean?'
+
+'We are the pick of the bunch. That's Joe, my pal. Don't you let on that
+my name's Albert,' said the corporal to his private. 'I'm the corporal.'
+
+'And I'm Miss Stokes,' said the land-girl coolly, 'if that's all the boys
+you are.'
+
+'You know you couldn't want more, Miss Stokes,' said Albert politely.
+Joe, who was bare-headed, whose grey flannel sleeves were rolled up to
+the elbow, and whose shirt was open at the breast, looked modestly aside
+as if he had no part in the affair.
+
+'Are you on this job regular, then?' said the corporal to Miss Stokes.
+
+'I don't know for sure,' she said, pushing a piece of hair under her hat,
+and attending to her splendid horses.
+
+'Oh, make it a certainty,' said Albert.
+
+She did not reply. She turned and looked over the two men coolly. She was
+pretty, moderately blonde, with crisp hair, a good skin, and large blue
+eyes. She was strong, too, and the work went on leisurely and easily.
+
+'Now!' said the corporal, stopping as usual to look round, 'pleasant
+company makes work a pleasure--don't hurry it, boys.' He stood on the
+truck surveying the world. That was one of his great and absorbing
+occupations: to stand and look out on things in general. Joe, also
+standing on the truck, also turned round to look what was to be seen. But
+he could not become blankly absorbed, as Albert could.
+
+Miss Stokes watched the two men from under her broad felt hat. She had
+seen hundreds of Alberts, khaki soldiers standing in loose attitudes,
+absorbed in watching nothing in particular. She had seen also a good many
+Joes, quiet, good-looking young soldiers with half-averted faces. But
+there was something in the turn of Joe's head, and something in his
+quiet, tender-looking form, young and fresh--which attracted her eye. As
+she watched him closely from below, he turned as if he felt her, and his
+dark-blue eye met her straight, light-blue gaze. He faltered and turned
+aside again and looked as if he were going to fall off the truck. A
+slight flush mounted under the girl's full, ruddy face. She liked him.
+
+Always, after this, when she came into the sidings with her team, it was
+Joe she looked for. She acknowledged to herself that she was sweet on
+him. But Albert did all the talking. He was so full of fun and nonsense.
+Joe was a very shy bird, very brief and remote in his answers. Miss
+Stokes was driven to indulge in repartee with Albert, but she fixed her
+magnetic attention on the younger fellow. Joe would talk with Albert, and
+laugh at his jokes. But Miss Stokes could get little out of him. She had
+to depend on her silent forces. They were more effective than might be
+imagined.
+
+Suddenly, on Saturday afternoon, at about two o'clock, Joe received a
+bolt from the blue--a telegram: 'Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today.
+M.S.' He knew at once who M.S. was. His heart melted, he felt weak as if
+he had had a blow.
+
+'What's the trouble, boy?' asked Albert anxiously.
+
+'No--no trouble--it's to meet somebody.' Joe lifted his dark-blue eyes in
+confusion towards his corporal.
+
+'Meet somebody!' repeated the corporal, watching his young pal with keen
+blue eyes. 'It's all right, then; nothing wrong?'
+
+'No--nothing wrong. I'm not going,' said Joe.
+
+Albert was old and shrewd enough to see that nothing more should be said
+before the housewife. He also saw that Joe did not want to take him into
+confidence. So he held his peace, though he was piqued.
+
+The two soldiers went into town, smartened up. Albert knew a fair
+number of the boys round about; there would be plenty of gossip in the
+market-place, plenty of lounging in groups on the Bath Road, watching the
+Saturday evening shoppers. Then a modest drink or two, and the movies.
+They passed an agreeable, casual, nothing-in-particular evening, with
+which Joe was quite satisfied. He thought of Belbury Station, and of
+M.S. waiting there. He had not the faintest intention of meeting her. And
+he had not the faintest intention of telling Albert.
+
+And yet, when the two men were in their bedroom, half undressed, Joe
+suddenly held out the telegram to his corporal, saying: 'What d'you think
+of that?'
+
+Albert was just unbuttoning his braces. He desisted, took the telegram
+form, and turned towards the candle to read it.
+
+'_Meet me Belbury Station 6.00 p.m. today. M.S._,' he read, _sotto voce_.
+His face took on its fun-and-nonsense look.
+
+'Who's M.S.?' he asked, looking shrewdly at Joe.
+
+'You know as well as I do,' said Joe, non-committal.
+
+'M.S.,' repeated Albert. 'Blamed if I know, boy. Is it a woman?'
+
+The conversation was carried on in tiny voices, for fear of disturbing
+the householders.
+
+'I don't know,' said Joe, turning. He looked full at Albert, the two men
+looked straight into each other's eyes. There was a lurking grin in each
+of them.
+
+'Well, I'm--_blamed_!' said Albert at last, throwing the telegram down
+emphatically on the bed.
+
+'Wha-at?' said Joe, grinning rather sheepishly, his eyes clouded none the
+less.
+
+Albert sat on the bed and proceeded to undress, nodding his head with
+mock gravity all the while. Joe watched him foolishly.
+
+'What?' he repeated faintly.
+
+Albert looked up at him with a knowing look.
+
+'If that isn't coming it quick, boy!' he said. 'What the blazes! What ha'
+you bin doing?'
+
+'Nothing!' said Joe.
+
+Albert slowly shook his head as he sat on the side of the bed.
+
+'Don't happen to me when I've bin doin' nothing,' he said. And he
+proceeded to pull off his stockings.
+
+Joe turned away, looking at himself in the mirror as he unbuttoned his
+tunic.
+
+'You didn't want to keep the appointment?' Albert asked, in a changed
+voice, from the bedside.
+
+Joe did not answer for a moment. Then he said:
+
+'I made no appointment.'
+
+'I'm not saying you did, boy. Don't be nasty about it. I mean you didn't
+want to answer the--unknown person's summons--shall I put it that way?'
+
+'No,' said Joe.
+
+'What was the deterring motive?' asked Albert, who was now lying on his
+back in bed.
+
+'Oh,' said Joe, suddenly looking round rather haughtily. 'I didn't want
+to.' He had a well-balanced head, and could take on a sudden distant
+bearing.
+
+'Didn't want to--didn't cotton on, like. Well--_they be artful, the
+women_--' he mimicked his landlord. 'Come on into bed, boy. Don't loiter
+about as if you'd lost something.'
+
+Albert turned over, to sleep.
+
+On Monday Miss Stokes turned up as usual, striding beside her team. Her
+'whoa!' was resonant and challenging, she looked up at the truck as her
+steeds came to a standstill. Joe had turned aside, and had his face
+averted from her. She glanced him over--save for his slender succulent
+tenderness she would have despised him. She sized him up in a steady
+look. Then she turned to Albert, who was looking down at her and smiling
+in his mischievous turn. She knew his aspects by now. She looked straight
+back at him, though her eyes were hot. He saluted her.
+
+'Beautiful morning, Miss Stokes.'
+
+'Very!' she replied.
+
+'Handsome is as handsome looks,' said Albert.
+
+Which produced no response.
+
+'Now, Joe, come on here,' said the corporal. 'Don't keep the ladies
+waiting--it's the sign of a weak heart.'
+
+Joe turned, and the work began. Nothing more was said for the time being.
+As the week went on all parties became more comfortable. Joe remained
+silent, averted, neutral, a little on his dignity. Miss Stokes was
+off-hand and masterful. Albert was full of mischief.
+
+The great theme was a circus, which was coming to the market town on the
+following Saturday.
+
+'You'll go to the circus, Miss Stokes?' said Albert.
+
+'I may go. Are you going?'
+
+'Certainly. Give us the pleasure of escorting you.'
+
+'No, thanks.'
+
+'That's what I call a flat refusal--what, Joe? You don't mean that you
+have no liking for our company, Miss Stokes?'
+
+'Oh, I don't know,' said Miss Stokes. 'How many are there of you?'
+
+'Only me and Joe.'
+
+'Oh, is that all?' she said, satirically.
+
+Albert was a little nonplussed.
+
+'Isn't that enough for you?' he asked.
+
+'Too many by half,' blurted out Joe, jeeringly, in a sudden fit of
+uncouth rudeness that made both the others stare.
+
+'Oh, I'll stand out of the way, boy, if that's it,' said Albert to Joe.
+Then he turned mischievously to Miss Stokes. 'He wants to know what M.
+stands for,' he said, confidentially.
+
+'Monkeys,' she replied, turning to her horses.
+
+'What's M.S.?' said Albert.
+
+'Monkey nuts,' she retorted, leading off her team.
+
+Albert looked after her a little discomfited. Joe had flushed dark, and
+cursed Albert in his heart.
+
+On the Saturday afternoon the two soldiers took the train into town. They
+would have to walk home. They had tea at six o'clock, and lounged about
+till half past seven. The circus was in a meadow near the river--a great
+red-and-white striped tent. Caravans stood at the side. A great crowd of
+people was gathered round the ticket-caravan.
+
+Inside the tent the lamps were lighted, shining on a ring of faces, a
+great circular bank of faces round the green grassy centre. Along with
+some comrades, the two soldiers packed themselves on a thin plank seat,
+rather high. They were delighted with the flaring lights, the wild
+effect. But the circus performance did not affect them deeply. They
+admired the lady in black velvet with rose-purple legs who leapt so
+neatly on to the galloping horse; they watched the feats of strength and
+laughed at the clown. But they felt a little patronizing, they missed the
+sensational drama of the cinema.
+
+Half-way through the performance Joe was electrified to see the face of
+Miss Stokes not very far from him. There she was, in her khaki and her
+felt hat, as usual; he pretended not to see her. She was laughing at the
+clown; she also pretended not to see him. It was a blow to him, and it
+made him angry. He would not even mention it to Albert. Least said,
+soonest mended. He liked to believe she had not seen him. But he knew,
+fatally, that she had.
+
+When they came out it was nearly eleven o'clock; a lovely night, with a
+moon and tall, dark, noble trees: a magnificent May night. Joe and Albert
+laughed and chaffed with the boys. Joe looked round frequently to see if
+he were safe from Miss Stokes. It seemed so.
+
+But there were six miles to walk home. At last the two soldiers set off,
+swinging their canes. The road was white between tall hedges, other
+stragglers were passing out of the town towards the villages; the air was
+full of pleased excitement.
+
+They were drawing near to the village when they saw a dark figure ahead.
+Joe's heart sank with pure fear. It was a figure wheeling a bicycle; a
+land girl; Miss Stokes. Albert was ready with his nonsense. Miss Stokes
+had a puncture.
+
+'Let me wheel the rattler,' said Albert.
+
+'Thank you,' said Miss Stokes. 'You _are_ kind.'
+
+'Oh, I'd be kinder than that, if you'd show me how,' said Albert.
+
+'Are you sure?' said Miss Stokes.
+
+'Doubt my words?' said Albert. 'That's cruel of you, Miss Stokes.'
+
+Miss Stokes walked between them, close to Joe.
+
+'Have you been to the circus?' she asked him.
+
+'Yes,' he replied, mildly.
+
+'Have _you_ been?' Albert asked her.
+
+'Yes. I didn't see you,' she replied.
+
+'What!--you say so! Didn't see us! Didn't think us worth looking at,'
+began Albert. 'Aren't I as handsome as the clown, now? And you didn't as
+much as glance in our direction? I call it a downright oversight.'
+
+'I never _saw_ you,' reiterated Miss Stokes. 'I didn't know you saw me.'
+
+'That makes it worse,' said Albert.
+
+The road passed through a belt of dark pine-wood. The village, and the
+branch road, was very near. Miss Stokes put out her fingers and felt for
+Joe's hand as it swung at his side. To say he was staggered is to put it
+mildly. Yet he allowed her softly to clasp his fingers for a few moments.
+But he was a mortified youth.
+
+At the cross-road they stopped--Miss Stokes should turn off. She had
+another mile to go.
+
+'You'll let us see you home,' said Albert.
+
+'Do me a kindness,' she said. 'Put my bike in your shed, and take it to
+Baker's on Monday, will you?'
+
+'I'll sit up all night and mend it for you, if you like.'
+
+'No thanks. And Joe and I'll walk on.'
+
+'Oh--ho! Oh--ho!' sang Albert. 'Joe! Joe! What do you say to that, now,
+boy? Aren't you in luck's way. And I get the bloomin' old bike for my
+pal. Consider it again, Miss Stokes.'
+
+Joe turned aside his face, and did not speak.
+
+'Oh, well! I wheel the grid, do I? I leave you, boy--'
+
+'I'm not keen on going any further,' barked out Joe, in an uncouth voice.
+'She hain't my choice.'
+
+The girl stood silent, and watched the two men.
+
+'There now!' said Albert. 'Think o' that! If it was _me_ now--' But he
+was uncomfortable. 'Well, Miss Stokes, have me,' he added.
+
+Miss Stokes stood quite still, neither moved nor spoke. And so the three
+remained for some time at the lane end. At last Joe began kicking the
+ground--then he suddenly lifted his face. At that moment Miss Stokes was
+at his side. She put her arm delicately round his waist.
+
+'Seems I'm the one extra, don't you think?' Albert inquired of the high
+bland moon.
+
+Joe had dropped his head and did not answer. Miss Stokes stood with her
+arm lightly round his waist. Albert bowed, saluted, and bade good-night.
+He walked away, leaving the two standing.
+
+Miss Stokes put a light pressure on Joe's waist, and drew him down the
+road. They walked in silence. The night was full of scent--wild cherry,
+the first bluebells. Still they walked in silence. A nightingale was
+singing. They approached nearer and nearer, till they stood close by his
+dark bush. The powerful notes sounded from the cover, almost like flashes
+of light--then the interval of silence--then the moaning notes, almost
+like a dog faintly howling, followed by the long, rich trill, and
+flashing notes. Then a short silence again.
+
+Miss Stokes turned at last to Joe. She looked up at him, and in the
+moonlight he saw her faintly smiling. He felt maddened, but helpless. Her
+arm was round his waist, she drew him closely to her with a soft pressure
+that made all his bones rotten.
+
+Meanwhile Albert was waiting at home. He put on his overcoat, for the
+fire was out, and he had had malarial fever. He looked fitfully at the
+_Daily Mirror_ and the _Daily Sketch_, but he saw nothing. It seemed a
+long time. He began to yawn widely, even to nod. At last Joe came in.
+
+Albert looked at him keenly. The young man's brow was black, his face
+sullen.
+
+'All right, boy?' asked Albert.
+
+Joe merely grunted for a reply. There was nothing more to be got out of
+him. So they went to bed.
+
+Next day Joe was silent, sullen. Albert could make nothing of him. He
+proposed a walk after tea.
+
+'I'm going somewhere,' said Joe.
+
+'Where--Monkey nuts?' asked the corporal. But Joe's brow only became
+darker.
+
+So the days went by. Almost every evening Joe went off alone, returning
+late. He was sullen, taciturn and had a hang-dog look, a curious way of
+dropping his head and looking dangerously from under his brows. And he
+and Albert did not get on so well any more with one another. For all his
+fun and nonsense, Albert was really irritable, soon made angry. And Joe's
+stand-offish sulkiness and complete lack of confidence riled him, got on
+his nerves. His fun and nonsense took a biting, sarcastic turn, at which
+Joe's eyes glittered occasionally, though the young man turned unheeding
+aside. Then again Joe would be full of odd, whimsical fun, outshining
+Albert himself.
+
+Miss Stokes still came to the station with the wain: Monkey-nuts,
+Albert called her, though not to her face. For she was very clear and
+good-looking, almost she seemed to gleam. And Albert was a tiny bit
+afraid of her. She very rarely addressed Joe whilst the hay-loading was
+going on, and that young man always turned his back to her. He seemed
+thinner, and his limber figure looked more slouching. But still it had
+the tender, attractive appearance, especially from behind. His tanned
+face, a little thinned and darkened, took a handsome, slightly sinister
+look.
+
+'Come on, Joe!' the corporal urged sharply one day. 'What're you doing,
+boy? Looking for beetles on the bank?'
+
+Joe turned round swiftly, almost menacing, to work.
+
+'He's a different fellow these days, Miss Stokes,' said Albert to the
+young woman. 'What's got him? Is it Monkey nuts that don't suit him, do
+you think?'
+
+'Choked with chaff, more like,' she retorted. 'It's as bad as feeding a
+threshing machine, to have to listen to some folks.'
+
+'As bad as what?' said Albert. 'You don't mean me, do you, Miss Stokes?'
+
+'No,' she cried. 'I don't mean you.'
+
+Joe's face became dark red during these sallies, but he said nothing. He
+would eye the young woman curiously, as she swung so easily at the work,
+and he had some of the look of a dog which is going to bite.
+
+Albert, with his nerves on edge, began to find the strain rather severe.
+The next Saturday evening, when Joe came in more black-browed than ever,
+he watched him, determined to have it out with him.
+
+When the boy went upstairs to bed, the corporal followed him. He closed
+the door behind him carefully, sat on the bed and watched the younger man
+undressing. And for once he spoke in a natural voice, neither chaffing
+nor commanding.
+
+'What's gone wrong, boy?'
+
+Joe stopped a moment as if he had been shot. Then he went on unwinding
+his puttees, and did not answer or look up.
+
+'You can hear, can't you?' said Albert, nettled.
+
+'Yes, I can hear,' said Joe, stooping over his puttees till his face was
+purple.
+
+'Then why don't you answer?'
+
+Joe sat up. He gave a long, sideways look at the corporal. Then he lifted
+his eyes and stared at a crack in the ceiling.
+
+The corporal watched these movements shrewdly.
+
+'And _then_ what?' he asked, ironically.
+
+Again Joe turned and stared him in the face. The corporal smiled very
+slightly, but kindly.
+
+'There'll be murder done one of these days,' said Joe, in a quiet,
+unimpassioned voice.
+
+'So long as it's by daylight--' replied Albert. Then he went over, sat
+down by Joe, put his hand on his shoulder affectionately, and continued,
+'What is it, boy? What's gone wrong? You can trust me, can't you?'
+
+Joe turned and looked curiously at the face so near to his.
+
+'It's nothing, that's all,' he said laconically.
+
+Albert frowned.
+
+'Then who's going to be murdered?--and who's going to do the
+murdering?--me or you--which is it, boy?' He smiled gently at the stupid
+youth, looking straight at him all the while, into his eyes. Gradually
+the stupid, hunted, glowering look died out of Joe's eyes. He turned his
+head aside, gently, as one rousing from a spell.
+
+'I don't want her,' he said, with fierce resentment.
+
+'Then you needn't have her,' said Albert. 'What do you go for, boy?'
+
+But it wasn't as simple as all that. Joe made no remark.
+
+'She's a smart-looking girl. What's wrong with her, my boy? I should have
+thought you were a lucky chap, myself.'
+
+'I don't want 'er,' Joe barked, with ferocity and resentment.
+
+'Then tell her so and have done,' said Albert. He waited awhile. There
+was no response. 'Why don't you?' he added.
+
+'Because I don't,' confessed Joe, sulkily.
+
+Albert pondered--rubbed his head.
+
+'You're too soft-hearted, that's where it is, boy. You want your mettle
+dipping in cold water, to temper it. You're too soft-hearted--'
+
+He laid his arm affectionately across the shoulders of the younger man.
+Joe seemed to yield a little towards him.
+
+'When are you going to see her again?' Albert asked. For a long time
+there was no answer.
+
+'When is it, boy?' persisted the softened voice of the corporal.
+
+'Tomorrow,' confessed Joe.
+
+'Then let me go,' said Albert. 'Let me go, will you?'
+
+The morrow was Sunday, a sunny day, but a cold evening. The sky was grey,
+the new foliage very green, but the air was chill and depressing. Albert
+walked briskly down the white road towards Beeley. He crossed a larch
+plantation, and followed a narrow by-road, where blue speedwell flowers
+fell from the banks into the dust. He walked swinging his cane, with
+mixed sensations. Then having gone a certain length, he turned and began
+to walk in the opposite direction.
+
+So he saw a young woman approaching him. She was wearing a wide hat of
+grey straw, and a loose, swinging dress of nigger-grey velvet. She walked
+with slow inevitability. Albert faltered a little as he approached her.
+Then he saluted her, and his roguish, slightly withered skin flushed. She
+was staring straight into his face.
+
+He fell in by her side, saying impudently:
+
+'Not so nice for a walk as it was, is it?'
+
+She only stared at him. He looked back at her.
+
+'You've seen me before, you know,' he said, grinning slightly. 'Perhaps
+you never noticed me. Oh, I'm quite nice looking, in a quiet way, you
+know. What--?'
+
+But Miss Stokes did not speak: she only stared with large, icy blue eyes
+at him. He became self-conscious, lifted up his chin, walked with his
+nose in the air, and whistled at random. So they went down the quiet,
+deserted grey lane. He was whistling the air: 'I'm Gilbert, the filbert,
+the colonel of the nuts.'
+
+At last she found her voice:
+
+'Where's Joe?'
+
+'He thought you'd like a change: they say variety's the salt of
+life--that's why I'm mostly in pickle.'
+
+'Where is he?'
+
+'Am I my brother's keeper? He's gone his own ways.'
+
+'Where?'
+
+'Nay, how am I to know? Not so far but he'll be back for supper.'
+
+She stopped in the middle of the lane. He stopped facing her.
+
+'Where's Joe?' she asked.
+
+He struck a careless attitude, looked down the road this way and that,
+lifted his eyebrows, pushed his khaki cap on one side, and answered:
+
+'He is not conducting the service tonight: he asked me if I'd officiate.'
+
+'Why hasn't he come?'
+
+'Didn't want to, I expect. I wanted to.'
+
+She stared him up and down, and he felt uncomfortable in his spine, but
+maintained his air of nonchalance. Then she turned slowly on her heel,
+and started to walk back. The corporal went at her side.
+
+'You're not going back, are you?' he pleaded. 'Why, me and you, we should
+get on like a house on fire.'
+
+She took no heed, but walked on. He went uncomfortably at her side,
+making his funny remarks from time to time. But she was as if stone deaf.
+He glanced at her, and to his dismay saw the tears running down her
+cheeks. He stopped suddenly, and pushed back his cap.
+
+'I say, you know--' he began.
+
+But she was walking on like an automaton, and he had to hurry after her.
+
+She never spoke to him. At the gate of her farm she walked straight in,
+as if he were not there. He watched her disappear. Then he turned on his
+heel, cursing silently, puzzled, lifting off his cap to scratch his head.
+
+That night, when they were in bed, he remarked: 'Say, Joe, boy; strikes
+me you're well-off without Monkey nuts. Gord love us, beans ain't in it.'
+
+So they slept in amity. But they waited with some anxiety for the morrow.
+
+It was a cold morning, a grey sky shifting in a cold wind, and
+threatening rain. They watched the wagon come up the road and through the
+yard gates. Miss Stokes was with her team as usual; her 'Whoa!' rang out
+like a war-whoop.
+
+She faced up at the truck where the two men stood.
+
+'Joe!' she called, to the averted figure which stood up in the wind.
+
+'What?' he turned unwillingly.
+
+She made a queer movement, lifting her head slightly in a sipping,
+half-inviting, half-commanding gesture. And Joe was crouching already to
+jump off the truck to obey her, when Albert put his hand on his shoulder.
+
+'Half a minute, boy! Where are you off? Work's work, and nuts is nuts.
+You stop here.'
+
+Joe slowly straightened himself.
+
+'Joe!' came the woman's clear call from below.
+
+Again Joe looked at her. But Albert's hand was on his shoulder, detaining
+him. He stood half averted, with his tail between his legs.
+
+'Take your hand off him, you!' said Miss Stokes.
+
+'Yes, Major,' retorted Albert satirically.
+
+She stood and watched.
+
+'Joe!' Her voice rang for the third time.
+
+Joe turned and looked at her, and a slow, jeering smile gathered on his
+face.
+
+'Monkey nuts!' he replied, in a tone mocking her call.
+
+She turned white--dead white. The men thought she would fall. Albert
+began yelling to the porters up the line to come and help with the load.
+He could yell like any non-commissioned officer upon occasion.
+
+Some way or other the wagon was unloaded, the girl was gone. Joe and his
+corporal looked at one another and smiled slowly. But they had a weight
+on their minds, they were afraid.
+
+They were reassured, however, when they found that Miss Stokes came no
+more with the hay. As far as they were concerned, she had vanished into
+oblivion. And Joe felt more relieved even than he had felt when he heard
+the firing cease, after the news had come that the armistice was signed.
+
+
+
+
+WINTRY PEACOCK
+
+
+There was thin, crisp snow on the ground, the sky was blue, the wind very
+cold, the air clear. Farmers were just turning out the cows for an hour
+or so in the midday, and the smell of cow-sheds was unendurable as I
+entered Tible. I noticed the ash-twigs up in the sky were pale and
+luminous, passing into the blue. And then I saw the peacocks. There they
+were in the road before me, three of them, and tailless, brown, speckled
+birds, with dark-blue necks and ragged crests. They stepped archly over
+the filigree snow, and their bodies moved with slow motion, like small,
+light, flat-bottomed boats. I admired them, they were curious. Then a
+gust of wind caught them, heeled them over as if they were three frail
+boats opening their feathers like ragged sails. They hopped and skipped
+with discomfort, to get out of the draught of the wind. And then, in the
+lee of the walls, they resumed their arch, wintry motion, light and
+unballasted now their tails were gone, indifferent. They were indifferent
+to my presence. I might have touched them. They turned off to the shelter
+of an open shed.
+
+As I passed the end of the upper house, I saw a young woman just coming
+out of the back door. I had spoken to her in the summer. She recognized
+me at once, and waved to me. She was carrying a pail, wearing a white
+apron that was longer than her preposterously short skirt, and she had on
+the cotton bonnet. I took off my hat to her and was going on. But she put
+down her pail and darted with a swift, furtive movement after me.
+
+'Do you mind waiting a minute?' she said. 'I'll be out in a minute.'
+
+She gave me a slight, odd smile, and ran back. Her face was long and
+sallow and her nose rather red. But her gloomy black eyes softened
+caressively to me for a moment, with that momentary humility which makes
+a man lord of the earth.
+
+I stood in the road, looking at the fluffy, dark-red young cattle that
+mooed and seemed to bark at me. They seemed happy, frisky cattle, a
+little impudent, and either determined to go back into the warm shed, or
+determined not to go back, I could not decide which.
+
+Presently the woman came forward again, her head rather ducked. But she
+looked up at me and smiled, with that odd, immediate intimacy, something
+witch-like and impossible.
+
+'Sorry to keep you waiting,' she said. 'Shall we stand in this
+cart-shed--it will be more out of the wind.'
+
+So we stood among the shafts of the open cart-shed that faced the road.
+Then she looked down at the ground, a little sideways, and I noticed a
+small black frown on her brows. She seemed to brood for a moment. Then
+she looked straight into my eyes, so that I blinked and wanted to turn my
+face aside. She was searching me for something and her look was too near.
+The frown was still on her keen, sallow brow.
+
+'Can you speak French?' she asked me abruptly.
+
+'More or less,' I replied.
+
+'I was supposed to learn it at school,' she said. 'But I don't know a
+word.' She ducked her head and laughed, with a slightly ugly grimace and
+a rolling of her black eyes.
+
+'No good keeping your mind full of scraps,' I answered.
+
+But she had turned aside her sallow, long face, and did not hear what I
+said. Suddenly again she looked at me. She was searching. And at the same
+time she smiled at me, and her eyes looked softly, darkly, with infinite
+trustful humility into mine. I was being cajoled.
+
+'Would you mind reading a letter for me, in French,' she said, her face
+immediately black and bitter-looking. She glanced at me, frowning.
+
+'Not at all,' I said.
+
+'It's a letter to my husband,' she said, still scrutinizing.
+
+I looked at her, and didn't quite realize. She looked too far into me, my
+wits were gone. She glanced round. Then she looked at me shrewdly. She
+drew a letter from her pocket, and handed it to me. It was addressed from
+France to Lance-Corporal Goyte, at Tible. I took out the letter and began
+to read it, as mere words. '_Mon cher Alfred_'--it might have been a bit
+of a torn newspaper. So I followed the script: the trite phrases of a
+letter from a French-speaking girl to an English soldier. 'I think of you
+always, always. Do you think sometimes of me?' And then I vaguely
+realized that I was reading a man's private correspondence. And yet, how
+could one consider these trivial, facile French phrases private! Nothing
+more trite and vulgar in the world, than such a love-letter--no newspaper
+more obvious.
+
+Therefore I read with a callous heart the effusions of the Belgian
+damsel. But then I gathered my attention. For the letter went on, '_Notre
+cher petit bebe_--our dear little baby was born a week ago. Almost I
+died, knowing you were far away, and perhaps forgetting the fruit of our
+perfect love. But the child comforted me. He has the smiling eyes and
+virile air of his English father. I pray to the Mother of Jesus to send
+me the dear father of my child, that I may see him with my child in his
+arms, and that we may be united in holy family love. Ah, my Alfred, can I
+tell you how I miss you, how I weep for you. My thoughts are with you
+always, I think of nothing but you, I live for nothing but you and our
+dear baby. If you do not come back to me soon, I shall die, and our child
+will die. But no, you cannot come back to me. But I can come to you, come
+to England with our child. If you do not wish to present me to your good
+mother and father, you can meet me in some town, some city, for I shall
+be so frightened to be alone in England with my child, and no one to take
+care of us. Yet I must come to you, I must bring my child, my little
+Alfred to his father, the big, beautiful Alfred that I love so much. Oh,
+write and tell me where I shall come. I have some money, I am not a
+penniless creature. I have money for myself and my dear baby--'
+
+I read to the end. It was signed: 'Your very happy and still more unhappy
+Elise.' I suppose I must have been smiling.
+
+'I can see it makes you laugh,' said Mrs. Goyte, sardonically. I looked
+up at her.
+
+'It's a love-letter, I know that,' she said. 'There's too many "Alfreds"
+in it.'
+
+'One too many,' I said.
+
+'Oh, yes--And what does she say--Eliza? We know her name's Eliza, that's
+another thing.' She grimaced a little, looking up at me with a mocking
+laugh.
+
+'Where did you get this letter?' I said.
+
+'Postman gave it me last week.'
+
+'And is your husband at home?'
+
+'I expect him home tonight. He's been wounded, you know, and we've been
+applying for him home. He was home about six weeks ago--he's been in
+Scotland since then. Oh, he was wounded in the leg. Yes, he's all right,
+a great strapping fellow. But he's lame, he limps a bit. He expects he'll
+get his discharge--but I don't think he will. We married? We've been
+married six years--and he joined up the first day of the war. Oh, he
+thought he'd like the life. He'd been through the South African War. No,
+he was sick of it, fed up. I'm living with his father and mother--I've no
+home of my own now. My people had a big farm--over a thousand acres--in
+Oxfordshire. Not like here--no. Oh, they're very good to me, his father
+and mother. Oh, yes, they couldn't be better. They think more of me than
+of their own daughters. But it's not like being in a place of your own,
+is it? You can't _really_ do as you like. No, there's only me and his
+father and mother at home. Before the war? Oh, he was anything. He's had
+a good education--but he liked the farming better. Then he was a
+chauffeur. That's how he knew French. He was driving a gentleman in
+France for a long time--'
+
+At this point the peacocks came round the corner on a puff of wind.
+
+'Hello, Joey!' she called, and one of the birds came forward, on delicate
+legs. Its grey speckled back was very elegant, it rolled its full,
+dark-blue neck as it moved to her. She crouched down. 'Joey, dear,' she
+said, in an odd, saturnine caressive voice, 'you're bound to find me,
+aren't you?' She put her face forward, and the bird rolled his neck,
+almost touching her face with his beak, as if kissing her.
+
+'He loves you,' I said.
+
+She twisted her face up at me with a laugh.
+
+'Yes,' she said, 'he loves me, Joey does,'--then, to the bird--'and I
+love Joey, don't I. I _do_ love Joey.' And she smoothed his feathers for
+a moment. Then she rose, saying: 'He's an affectionate bird.'
+
+I smiled at the roll of her 'bir-rrd'.
+
+'Oh, yes, he is,' she protested. 'He came with me from my home seven
+years ago. Those others are his descendants--but they're not like
+Joey--_are they, dee-urr?_' Her voice rose at the end with a witch-like
+cry.
+
+Then she forgot the birds in the cart-shed and turned to business again.
+
+'Won't you read that letter?' she said. 'Read it, so that I know what it
+says.'
+
+'It's rather behind his back,' I said.
+
+'Oh, never mind him,' she cried. 'He's been behind my back long
+enough--all these four years. If he never did no worse things behind my
+back than I do behind his, he wouldn't have cause to grumble. You read me
+what it says.'
+
+Now I felt a distinct reluctance to do as she bid, and yet I began--'My
+dear Alfred.'
+
+'I guessed that much,' she said. 'Eliza's dear Alfred.' She laughed. 'How
+do you say it in French? _Eliza?_'
+
+I told her, and she repeated the name with great contempt--_Elise_.
+
+'Go on,' she said. 'You're not reading.'
+
+So I began--'I have been thinking of you sometimes--have you been
+thinking of me?'--
+
+'Of several others as well, beside her, I'll wager,' said Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'Probably not,' said I, and continued. 'A dear little baby was born here
+a week ago. Ah, can I tell you my feelings when I take my darling little
+brother into my arms--'
+
+'I'll bet it's _his_,' cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'No,' I said. 'It's her mother's.'
+
+'Don't you believe it,' she cried. 'It's a blind. You mark, it's her own
+right enough--and his.'
+
+'No,' I said, 'it's her mother's.' 'He has sweet smiling eyes, but not
+like your beautiful English eyes--'
+
+She suddenly struck her hand on her skirt with a wild motion, and bent
+down, doubled with laughter. Then she rose and covered her face with her
+hand.
+
+'I'm forced to laugh at the beautiful English eyes,' she said.
+
+'Aren't his eyes beautiful?' I asked.
+
+'Oh, yes--_very!_ Go on!--_Joey, dear, dee-urr, Joey!_'--this to the
+peacock.
+
+--'Er--We miss you very much. We all miss you. We wish you were here to
+see the darling baby. Ah, Alfred, how happy we were when you stayed with
+us. We all loved you so much. My mother will call the baby Alfred so that
+we shall never forget you--'
+
+'Of course it's his right enough,' cried Mrs. Goyte.
+
+'No,' I said. 'It's the mother's.' Er--'My mother is very well. My father
+came home yesterday--on leave. He is delighted with his son, my little
+brother, and wishes to have him named after you, because you were so good
+to us all in that terrible time, which I shall never forget. I must weep
+now when I think of it. Well, you are far away in England, and perhaps I
+shall never see you again. How did you find your dear mother and father?
+I am so happy that your wound is better, and that you can nearly walk--'
+
+'How did he find his dear _wife!_' cried Mrs. Goyte. 'He never told her
+he had one. Think of taking the poor girl in like that!'
+
+'We are so pleased when you write to us. Yet now you are in England you
+will forget the family you served so well--'
+
+'A bit too well--eh, _Joey!_' cried the wife.
+
+'If it had not been for you we should not be alive now, to grieve and to
+rejoice in this life, that is so hard for us. But we have recovered some
+of our losses, and no longer feel the burden of poverty. The little
+Alfred is a great comfort to me. I hold him to my breast and think of the
+big, good Alfred, and I weep to think that those times of suffering were
+perhaps the times of a great happiness that is gone for ever.'
+
+'Oh, but isn't it a shame, to take a poor girl in like that!' cried Mrs.
+Goyte. 'Never to let on that he was married, and raise her hopes--I call
+it beastly, I do.'
+
+'You don't know,' I said. 'You know how anxious women are to fall in
+love, wife or no wife. How could he help it, if she was determined to
+fall in love with him?'
+
+'He could have helped it if he'd wanted.'
+
+'Well,' I said, 'we aren't all heroes.'
+
+'Oh, but that's different! The big, good Alfred!--did ever you hear such
+tommy-rot in your life! Go on--what does she say at the end?'
+
+'Er--We shall be pleased to hear of your life in England. We all send
+many kind regards to your good parents. I wish you all happiness for your
+future days. Your very affectionate and ever-grateful Elise.'
+
+There was silence for a moment, during which Mrs. Goyte remained with her
+head dropped, sinister and abstracted. Suddenly she lifted her face, and
+her eyes flashed.
+
+'Oh, but I call it beastly, I call it mean, to take a girl in like that.'
+
+'Nay,' I said. 'Probably he hasn't taken her in at all. Do you think
+those French girls are such poor innocent things? I guess she's a great
+deal more downy than he.'
+
+'Oh, he's one of the biggest fools that ever walked,' she cried.
+
+'There you are!' said I.
+
+'But it's his child right enough,' she said.
+
+'I don't think so,' said I.
+
+'I'm sure of it.'
+
+'Oh, well,' I said, 'if you prefer to think that way.'
+
+'What other reason has she for writing like that--'
+
+I went out into the road and looked at the cattle.
+
+'Who is this driving the cows?' I said. She too came out.
+
+'It's the boy from the next farm,' she said.
+
+'Oh, well,' said I, 'those Belgian girls! You never know where their
+letters will end. And, after all, it's his affair--you needn't bother.'
+
+'Oh--!' she cried, with rough scorn--'it's not _me_ that bothers. But
+it's the nasty meanness of it--me writing him such loving letters'--she
+put her hand before her face and laughed malevolently--'and sending him
+parcels all the time. You bet he fed that gurrl on my parcels--I know he
+did. It's just like him. I'll bet they laughed together over my letters.
+I bet anything they did--'
+
+'Nay,' said I. 'He'd burn your letters for fear they'd give him away.'
+
+There was a black look on her yellow face. Suddenly a voice was heard
+calling. She poked her head out of the shed, and answered coolly:
+
+'All right!' Then turning to me: 'That's his mother looking after me.'
+
+She laughed into my face, witch-like, and we turned down the road.
+
+When I awoke, the morning after this episode, I found the house darkened
+with deep, soft snow, which had blown against the large west windows,
+covering them with a screen. I went outside, and saw the valley all white
+and ghastly below me, the trees beneath black and thin looking like wire,
+the rock-faces dark between the glistening shroud, and the sky above
+sombre, heavy, yellowish-dark, much too heavy for this world below of
+hollow bluey whiteness figured with black. I felt I was in a valley of
+the dead. And I sensed I was a prisoner, for the snow was everywhere
+deep, and drifted in places. So all the morning I remained indoors,
+looking up the drive at the shrubs so heavily plumed with snow, at the
+gateposts raised high with a foot or more of extra whiteness. Or I looked
+down into the white-and-black valley that was utterly motionless and
+beyond life, a hollow sarcophagus.
+
+Nothing stirred the whole day--no plume fell off the shrubs, the valley
+was as abstracted as a grove of death. I looked over at the tiny,
+half-buried farms away on the bare uplands beyond the valley hollow, and
+I thought of Tible in the snow, of the black witch-like little Mrs.
+Goyte. And the snow seemed to lay me bare to influences I wanted to
+escape.
+
+In the faint glow of the half-clear light that came about four o'clock in
+the afternoon, I was roused to see a motion in the snow away below, near
+where the thorn trees stood very black and dwarfed, like a little savage
+group, in the dismal white. I watched closely. Yes, there was a flapping
+and a struggle--a big bird, it must be, labouring in the snow. I
+wondered. Our biggest birds, in the valley, were the large hawks that
+often hung flickering opposite my windows, level with me, but high above
+some prey on the steep valleyside. This was much too big for a hawk--too
+big for any known bird. I searched in my mind for the largest English
+wild birds, geese, buzzards.
+
+Still it laboured and strove, then was still, a dark spot, then struggled
+again. I went out of the house and down the steep slope, at risk of
+breaking my leg between the rocks. I knew the ground so well--and yet I
+got well shaken before I drew near the thorn-trees.
+
+Yes, it was a bird. It was Joey. It was the grey-brown peacock with a
+blue neck. He was snow-wet and spent.
+
+'Joey--Joey, de-urr!' I said, staggering unevenly towards him. He looked
+so pathetic, rowing and struggling in the snow, too spent to rise, his
+blue neck stretching out and lying sometimes on the snow, his eye closing
+and opening quickly, his crest all battered.
+
+'Joey dee-uur! Dee-urr!' I said caressingly to him. And at last he lay
+still, blinking, in the surged and furrowed snow, whilst I came near and
+touched him, stroked him, gathered him under my arm. He stretched his
+long, wetted neck away from me as I held him, none the less he was quiet
+in my arm, too tired, perhaps, to struggle. Still he held his poor,
+crested head away from me, and seemed sometimes to droop, to wilt, as if
+he might suddenly die.
+
+He was not so heavy as I expected, yet it was a struggle to get up to the
+house with him again. We set him down, not too near the fire, and gently
+wiped him with cloths. He submitted, only now and then stretched his soft
+neck away from us, avoiding us helplessly. Then we set warm food by him.
+I _put_ it to his beak, tried to make him eat. But he ignored it. He
+seemed to be ignorant of what we were doing, recoiled inside himself
+inexplicably. So we put him in a basket with cloths, and left him
+crouching oblivious. His food we put near him. The blinds were drawn, the
+house was warm, it was night. Sometimes he stirred, but mostly he huddled
+still, leaning his queer crested head on one side. He touched no food,
+and took no heed of sounds or movements. We talked of brandy or
+stimulants. But I realized we had best leave him alone.
+
+In the night, however, we heard him thumping about. I got up anxiously
+with a candle. He had eaten some food, and scattered more, making a mess.
+And he was perched on the back of a heavy arm-chair. So I concluded he
+was recovered, or recovering.
+
+The next day was clear, and the snow had frozen, so I decided to carry
+him back to Tible. He consented, after various flappings, to sit in a big
+fish-bag with his battered head peeping out with wild uneasiness. And so
+I set off with him, slithering down into the valley, making good progress
+down in the pale shadow beside the rushing waters, then climbing
+painfully up the arrested white valleyside, plumed with clusters of young
+pine trees, into the paler white radiance of the snowy, upper regions,
+where the wind cut fine. Joey seemed to watch all the time with wide
+anxious, unseeing eye, brilliant and inscrutable. As I drew near to Tible
+township he stirred violently in the bag, though I do not know if he had
+recognized the place. Then, as I came to the sheds, he looked sharply
+from side to side, and stretched his neck out long. I was a little afraid
+of him. He gave a loud, vehement yell, opening his sinister beak, and I
+stood still, looking at him as he struggled in the bag, shaken myself by
+his struggles, yet not thinking to release him.
+
+Mrs. Goyte came darting past the end of the house, her head sticking
+forward in sharp scrutiny. She saw me, and came forward.
+
+'Have you got Joey?' she cried sharply, as if I were a thief.
+
+I opened the bag, and he flopped out, flapping as if he hated the touch
+of the snow now. She gathered him up, and put her lips to his beak. She
+was flushed and handsome, her eyes bright, her hair slack, thick, but
+more witch-like than ever. She did not speak.
+
+She had been followed by a grey-haired woman with a round, rather sallow
+face and a slightly hostile bearing.
+
+'Did you bring him with you, then?' she asked sharply. I answered that I
+had rescued him the previous evening.
+
+From the background slowly approached a slender man with a grey moustache
+and large patches on his trousers.
+
+'You've got'im back 'gain, ah see,' he said to his daughter-in-law. His
+wife explained how I had found Joey.
+
+'Ah,' went on the grey man. 'It wor our Alfred scared him off, back your
+life. He must'a flyed ower t'valley. Tha ma' thank thy stars as 'e wor
+fun, Maggie. 'E'd a bin froze. They a bit nesh, you know,' he concluded
+to me.
+
+'They are,' I answered. 'This isn't their country.'
+
+'No, it isna,' replied Mr. Goyte. He spoke very slowly and deliberately,
+quietly, as if the soft pedal were always down in his voice. He looked at
+his daughter-in-law as she crouched, flushed and dark, before the
+peacock, which would lay its long blue neck for a moment along her lap.
+In spite of his grey moustache and thin grey hair, the elderly man had a
+face young and almost delicate, like a young man's. His blue eyes
+twinkled with some inscrutable source of pleasure, his skin was fine and
+tender, his nose delicately arched. His grey hair being slightly ruffled,
+he had a debonair look, as of a youth who is in love.
+
+'We mun tell 'im it's come,' he said slowly, and turning he called:
+'Alfred--Alfred! Wheer's ter gotten to?'
+
+Then he turned again to the group.
+
+'Get up then, Maggie, lass, get up wi' thee. Tha ma'es too much o'
+th'bod.'
+
+A young man approached, wearing rough khaki and kneebreeches. He was
+Danish looking, broad at the loins.
+
+'I's come back then,' said the father to the son; 'leastwise, he's bin
+browt back, flyed ower the Griff Low.'
+
+The son looked at me. He had a devil-may-care bearing, his cap on one
+side, his hands stuck in the front pockets of his breeches. But he said
+nothing.
+
+'Shall you come in a minute, Master,' said the elderly woman, to me.
+
+'Ay, come in an' ha'e a cup o' tea or summat. You'll do wi' summat,
+carrin' that bod. Come on, Maggie wench, let's go in.'
+
+So we went indoors, into the rather stuffy, overcrowded living-room, that
+was too cosy, and too warm. The son followed last, standing in the
+doorway. The father talked to me.
+
+Maggie put out the tea-cups. The mother went into the dairy again.
+
+'Tha'lt rouse thysen up a bit again, now, Maggie,' the father-in-law
+said--and then to me: ''ers not bin very bright sin' Alfred came whoam,
+an' the bod flyed awee. 'E come whoam a Wednesday night, Alfred did. But
+ay, you knowed, didna yer. Ay, 'e comed 'a Wednesday--an' I reckon there
+wor a bit of a to-do between 'em, worn't there, Maggie?'
+
+He twinkled maliciously to his daughter-in-law, who was flushed,
+brilliant and handsome.
+
+'Oh, be quiet, father. You're wound up, by the sound of you,' she said to
+him, as if crossly. But she could never be cross with him.
+
+''Ers got 'er colour back this mornin',' continued the father-in-law
+slowly. 'It's bin heavy weather wi' 'er this last two days. Ay--'er's bin
+northeast sin 'er seed you a Wednesday.'
+
+'Father, do stop talking. You'd wear the leg off an iron pot. I can't
+think where you've found your tongue, all of a sudden,' said Maggie, with
+caressive sharpness.
+
+'Ah've found it wheer I lost it. Aren't goin' ter come in an' sit thee
+down, Alfred?'
+
+But Alfred turned and disappeared.
+
+''E's got th' monkey on 'is back ower this letter job,' said the father
+secretly to me. 'Mother, 'er knows nowt about it. Lot o' tom-foolery,
+isn't it? Ay! What's good o' makkin' a peck o' trouble over what's far
+enough off, an' ned niver come no nigher. No--not a smite o' use. That's
+what I tell 'er. 'Er should ta'e no notice on't. Ty, what can y' expect.'
+
+The mother came in again, and the talk became general. Maggie flashed her
+eyes at me from time to time, complacent and satisfied, moving among the
+men. I paid her little compliments, which she did not seem to hear. She
+attended to me with a kind of sinister, witch-like graciousness, her dark
+head ducked between her shoulders, at once humble and powerful. She was
+happy as a child attending to her father-in-law and to me. But there was
+something ominous between her eyebrows, as if a dark moth were settled
+there--and something ominous in her bent, hulking bearing.
+
+She sat on a low stool by the fire, near her father-in-law. Her head was
+dropped, she seemed in a state of abstraction. From time to time she
+would suddenly recover, and look up at us, laughing and chatting. Then
+she would forget again. Yet in her hulked black forgetting she seemed
+very near to us.
+
+The door having been opened, the peacock came slowly in, prancing calmly.
+He went near to her and crouched down, coiling his blue neck. She glanced
+at him, but almost as if she did not observe him. The bird sat silent,
+seeming to sleep, and the woman also sat hulked and silent, seemingly
+oblivious. Then once more there was a heavy step, and Alfred entered. He
+looked at his wife, and he looked at the peacock crouching by her. He
+stood large in the doorway, his hands stuck in front of him, in his
+breeches pockets. Nobody spoke. He turned on his heel and went out again.
+
+I rose also to go. Maggie started as if coming to herself.
+
+'Must you go?' she asked, rising and coming near to me, standing in front
+of me, twisting her head sideways and looking up at me. 'Can't you stop a
+bit longer? We can all be cosy today, there's nothing to do outdoors.'
+And she laughed, showing her teeth oddly. She had a long chin.
+
+I said I must go. The peacock uncoiled and coiled again his long blue
+neck, as he lay on the hearth. Maggie still stood close in front of me,
+so that I was acutely aware of my waistcoat buttons.
+
+'Oh, well,' she said, 'you'll come again, won't you? Do come again.'
+
+I promised.
+
+'Come to tea one day--yes, do!'
+
+I promised--one day.
+
+The moment I went out of her presence I ceased utterly to exist for
+her--as utterly as I ceased to exist for Joey. With her curious
+abstractedness she forgot me again immediately. I knew it as I left her.
+Yet she seemed almost in physical contact with me while I was with her.
+
+The sky was all pallid again, yellowish. When I went out there was no
+sun; the snow was blue and cold. I hurried away down the hill, musing on
+Maggie. The road made a loop down the sharp face of the slope. As I went
+crunching over the laborious snow I became aware of a figure striding
+down the steep scarp to intercept me. It was a man with his hands in
+front of him, half stuck in his breeches pockets, and his shoulders
+square--a real farmer of the hills; Alfred, of course. He waited for me
+by the stone fence.
+
+'Excuse me,' he said as I came up.
+
+I came to a halt in front of him and looked into his sullen blue eyes. He
+had a certain odd haughtiness on his brows. But his blue eyes stared
+insolently at me.
+
+'Do you know anything about a letter--in French--that my wife opened--a
+letter of mine--?'
+
+'Yes,' said I. 'She asked me to read it to her.'
+
+He looked square at me. He did not know exactly how to feel.
+
+'What was there in it?' he asked.
+
+'Why?' I said. 'Don't you know?'
+
+'She makes out she's burnt it,' he said.
+
+'Without showing it you?' I asked.
+
+He nodded slightly. He seemed to be meditating as to what line of action
+he should take. He wanted to know the contents of the letter: he must
+know: and therefore he must ask me, for evidently his wife had taunted
+him. At the same time, no doubt, he would like to wreak untold vengeance
+on my unfortunate person. So he eyed me, and I eyed him, and neither of
+us spoke. He did not want to repeat his request to me. And yet I only
+looked at him, and considered.
+
+Suddenly he threw back his head and glanced down the valley. Then he
+changed his position--he was a horse-soldier. Then he looked at me
+confidentially.
+
+'She burnt the blasted thing before I saw it,' he said.
+
+'Well,' I answered slowly, 'she doesn't know herself what was in it.'
+
+He continued to watch me narrowly. I grinned to myself.
+
+'I didn't like to read her out what there was in it,' I continued.
+
+He suddenly flushed so that the veins in his neck stood out, and he
+stirred again uncomfortably.
+
+'The Belgian girl said her baby had been born a week ago, and that they
+were going to call it Alfred,' I told him.
+
+He met my eyes. I was grinning. He began to grin, too.
+
+'Good luck to her,' he said.
+
+'Best of luck,' said I.
+
+'And what did you tell _her_?' he asked.
+
+'That the baby belonged to the old mother--that it was brother to your
+girl, who was writing to you as a friend of the family.'
+
+He stood smiling, with the long, subtle malice of a farmer.
+
+'And did she take it in?' he asked.
+
+'As much as she took anything else.'
+
+He stood grinning fixedly. Then he broke into a short laugh.
+
+'Good for _her_' he exclaimed cryptically.
+
+And then he laughed aloud once more, evidently feeling he had won a big
+move in his contest with his wife.
+
+'What about the other woman?' I asked.
+
+'Who?'
+
+'Elise.'
+
+'Oh'--he shifted uneasily--'she was all right--'
+
+'You'll be getting back to her,' I said.
+
+He looked at me. Then he made a grimace with his mouth.
+
+'Not me,' he said. 'Back your life it's a plant.'
+
+'You don't think the _cher petit bebe_ is a little Alfred?'
+
+'It might be,' he said.
+
+'Only might?'
+
+'Yes--an' there's lots of mites in a pound of cheese.' He laughed
+boisterously but uneasily.
+
+'What did she say, exactly?' he asked.
+
+I began to repeat, as well as I could, the phrases of the letter:
+
+'_Mon cher Alfred--Figure-toi comme je suis desolee_--'
+
+He listened with some confusion. When I had finished all I could
+remember, he said:
+
+'They know how to pitch you out a letter, those Belgian lasses.'
+
+'Practice,' said I.
+
+'They get plenty,' he said.
+
+There was a pause.
+
+'Oh, well,' he said. 'I've never got that letter, anyhow.'
+
+The wind blew fine and keen, in the sunshine, across the snow. I blew my
+nose and prepared to depart.
+
+'And _she_ doesn't know anything?' he continued, jerking his head up the
+hill in the direction of Tible.
+
+'She knows nothing but what I've said--that is, if she really burnt the
+letter.'
+
+'I believe she burnt it,' he said, 'for spite. She's a little devil, she
+is. But I shall have it out with her.' His jaw was stubborn and sullen.
+Then suddenly he turned to me with a new note.
+
+'Why?' he said. 'Why didn't you wring that b---- peacock's neck-that
+b---- Joey?'
+
+'Why?' I said. 'What for?'
+
+'I hate the brute,' he said. 'I had a shot at him--'
+
+I laughed. He stood and mused.
+
+'Poor little Elise,' he murmured.
+
+'Was she small--_petite_?' I asked. He jerked up his head.
+
+'No,' he said. 'Rather tall.'
+
+'Taller than your wife, I suppose.'
+
+Again he looked into my eyes. And then once more he went into a loud
+burst of laughter that made the still, snow-deserted valley clap again.
+
+'God, it's a knockout!' he said, thoroughly amused. Then he stood at
+ease, one foot out, his hands in his breeches pockets, in front of him,
+his head thrown back, a handsome figure of a man.
+
+'But I'll do that blasted Joey in--' he mused.
+
+I ran down the hill, shouting with laughter.
+
+
+
+
+_You Touched Me_
+
+
+The Pottery House was a square, ugly, brick house girt in by the wall
+that enclosed the whole grounds of the pottery itself. To be sure, a
+privet hedge partly masked the house and its ground from the pottery-yard
+and works: but only partly. Through the hedge could be seen the desolate
+yard, and the many-windowed, factory-like pottery, over the hedge could
+be seen the chimneys and the outhouses. But inside the hedge, a pleasant
+garden and lawn sloped down to a willow pool, which had once supplied the
+works.
+
+The Pottery itself was now closed, the great doors of the yard
+permanently shut. No more the great crates with yellow straw showing
+through, stood in stacks by the packing shed. No more the drays drawn by
+great horses rolled down the hill with a high load. No more the
+pottery-lasses in their clay-coloured overalls, their faces and hair
+splashed with grey fine mud, shrieked and larked with the men. All that
+was over.
+
+'We like it much better--oh, much better--quieter,' said Matilda Rockley.
+
+'Oh, yes,' assented Emmie Rockley, her sister.
+
+'I'm sure you do,' agreed the visitor.
+
+But whether the two Rockley girls really liked it better, or whether they
+only imagined they did, is a question. Certainly their lives were much
+more grey and dreary now that the grey clay had ceased to spatter its mud
+and silt its dust over the premises. They did not quite realize how they
+missed the shrieking, shouting lasses, whom they had known all their
+lives and disliked so much.
+
+Matilda and Emmie were already old maids. In a thorough industrial
+district, it is not easy for the girls who have expectations above the
+common to find husbands. The ugly industrial town was full of men, young
+men who were ready to marry. But they were all colliers or pottery-hands,
+mere workmen. The Rockley girls would have about ten thousand pounds each
+when their father died: ten thousand pounds' worth of profitable
+house-property. It was not to be sneezed at: they felt so themselves, and
+refrained from sneezing away such a fortune on any mere member of the
+proletariat. Consequently, bank-clerks or nonconformist clergymen or even
+school-teachers having failed to come forward, Matilda had begun to give
+up all idea of ever leaving the Pottery House.
+
+Matilda was a tall, thin, graceful fair girl, with a rather large nose.
+She was the Mary to Emmie's Martha: that is, Matilda loved painting and
+music, and read a good many novels, whilst Emmie looked after the
+house-keeping. Emmie was shorter, plumper than her sister, and she had no
+accomplishments. She looked up to Matilda, whose mind was naturally
+refined and sensible.
+
+In their quiet, melancholy way, the two girls were happy. Their mother
+was dead. Their father was ill also. He was an intelligent man who had
+had some education, but preferred to remain as if he were one with the
+rest of the working people. He had a passion for music and played the
+violin pretty well. But now he was getting old, he was very ill, dying of
+a kidney disease. He had been rather a heavy whisky-drinker.
+
+This quiet household, with one servant-maid, lived on year after year in
+the Pottery House. Friends came in, the girls went out, the father drank
+himself more and more ill. Outside in the street there was a continual
+racket of the colliers and their dogs and children. But inside the
+pottery wall was a deserted quiet.
+
+In all this ointment there was one little fly. Ted Rockley, the father of
+the girls, had had four daughters, and no son. As his girls grew, he felt
+angry at finding himself always in a house-hold of women. He went off to
+London and adopted a boy out of a Charity Institution. Emmie was fourteen
+years old, and Matilda sixteen, when their father arrived home with his
+prodigy, the boy of six, Hadrian.
+
+Hadrian was just an ordinary boy from a Charity Home, with ordinary
+brownish hair and ordinary bluish eyes and of ordinary rather cockney
+speech. The Rockley girls--there were three at home at the time of his
+arrival--had resented his being sprung on them. He, with his watchful,
+charity-institution instinct, knew this at once. Though he was only six
+years old, Hadrian had a subtle, jeering look on his face when he
+regarded the three young women. They insisted he should address them as
+Cousin: Cousin Flora, Cousin Matilda, Cousin Emmie. He complied, but
+there seemed a mockery in his tone.
+
+The girls, however, were kind-hearted by nature. Flora married and left
+home. Hadrian did very much as he pleased with Matilda and Emmie, though
+they had certain strictnesses. He grew up in the Pottery House and about
+the Pottery premises, went to an elementary school, and was invariably
+called Hadrian Rockley. He regarded Cousin Matilda and Cousin Emmie with
+a certain laconic indifference, was quiet and reticent in his ways. The
+girls called him sly, but that was unjust. He was merely cautious, and
+without frankness. His Uncle, Ted Rockley, understood him tacitly, their
+natures were somewhat akin. Hadrian and the elderly man had a real but
+unemotional regard for one another.
+
+When he was thirteen years old the boy was sent to a High School in the
+County town. He did not like it. His Cousin Matilda had longed to make a
+little gentleman of him, but he refused to be made. He would give a
+little contemptuous curve to his lip, and take on a shy, charity-boy
+grin, when refinement was thrust upon him. He played truant from the High
+School, sold his books, his cap with its badge, even his very scarf and
+pocket-handkerchief, to his school-fellows, and went raking off heaven
+knows where with the money. So he spent two very unsatisfactory years.
+
+When he was fifteen he announced that he wanted to leave England and go
+to the Colonies. He had kept touch with the Home. The Rockleys knew that,
+when Hadrian made a declaration, in his quiet, half-jeering manner, it
+was worse than useless to oppose him. So at last the boy departed, going
+to Canada under the protection of the Institution to which he had
+belonged. He said good-bye to the Rockleys without a word of thanks, and
+parted, it seemed, without a pang. Matilda and Emmie wept often to think
+of how he left them: even on their father's face a queer look came. But
+Hadrian wrote fairly regularly from Canada. He had entered some
+electricity works near Montreal, and was doing well.
+
+At last, however, the war came. In his turn, Hadrian joined up and came
+to Europe. The Rockleys saw nothing of him. They lived on, just the same,
+in the Pottery House. Ted Rockley was dying of a sort of dropsy, and in
+his heart he wanted to see the boy. When the armistice was signed,
+Hadrian had a long leave, and wrote that he was coming home to the
+Pottery House.
+
+The girls were terribly fluttered. To tell the truth, they were a little
+afraid of Hadrian. Matilda, tall and thin, was frail in her health, both
+girls were worn with nursing their father. To have Hadrian, a young man
+of twenty-one, in the house with them, after he had left them so coldly
+five years before, was a trying circumstance.
+
+They were in a flutter. Emmie persuaded her father to have his bed made
+finally in the morning-room downstairs, whilst his room upstairs was
+prepared for Hadrian. This was done, and preparations were going on for
+the arrival, when, at ten o'clock in the morning the young man suddenly
+turned up, quite unexpectedly. Cousin Emmie, with her hair bobbed up in
+absurd little bobs round her forehead, was busily polishing the
+stair-rods, while Cousin Matilda was in the kitchen washing the
+drawing-room ornaments in a lather, her sleeves rolled back on her thin
+arms, and her head tied up oddly and coquettishly in a duster.
+
+Cousin Matilda blushed deep with mortification when the self-possessed
+young man walked in with his kit-bag, and put his cap on the sewing
+machine. He was little and self-confident, with a curious neatness about
+him that still suggested the Charity Institution. His face was brown, he
+had a small moustache, he was vigorous enough in his smallness.
+
+'_Well_, is it Hadrian!' exclaimed Cousin Matilda, wringing the lather
+off her hand. 'We didn't expect you till tomorrow.'
+
+'I got off Monday night,' said Hadrian, glancing round the room.
+
+'Fancy!' said Cousin Matilda. Then, having dried her hands, she went
+forward, held out her hand, and said:
+
+'How are you?'
+
+'Quite well, thank you,' said Hadrian.
+
+'You're quite a man,' said Cousin Matilda.
+
+Hadrian glanced at her. She did not look her best: so thin, so
+large-nosed, with that pink-and-white checked duster tied round her head.
+She felt her disadvantage. But she had had a good deal of suffering and
+sorrow, she did not mind any more.
+
+The servant entered--one that did not know Hadrian.
+
+'Come and see my father,' said Cousin Matilda.
+
+In the hall they roused Cousin Emmie like a partridge from cover. She was
+on the stairs pushing the bright stair-rods into place. Instinctively her
+hand went to the little knobs, her front hair bobbed on her forehead.
+
+'Why!' she exclaimed, crossly. 'What have you come today for?'
+
+'I got off a day earlier,' said Hadrian, and his man's voice so deep and
+unexpected was like a blow to Cousin Emmie.
+
+'Well, you've caught us in the midst of it,' she said, with resentment.
+Then all three went into the middle room.
+
+Mr. Rockley was dressed--that is, he had on his trousers and socks--but
+he was resting on the bed, propped up just under the window, from whence
+he could see his beloved and resplendent garden, where tulips and
+apple-trees were ablaze. He did not look as ill as he was, for the water
+puffed him up, and his face kept its colour. His stomach was much
+swollen. He glanced round swiftly, turning his eyes without turning his
+head. He was the wreck of a handsome, well-built man.
+
+Seeing Hadrian, a queer, unwilling smile went over his face. The young
+man greeted him sheepishly.
+
+'You wouldn't make a life-guardsman,' he said. 'Do you want something to
+eat?'
+
+Hadrian looked round--as if for the meal.
+
+'I don't mind,' he said.
+
+'What shall you have--egg and bacon?' asked Emmie shortly.
+
+'Yes, I don't mind,' said Hadrian.
+
+The sisters went down to the kitchen, and sent the servant to finish the
+stairs.
+
+'Isn't he _altered_?' said Matilda, _sotto voce_.
+
+'Isn't he!' said Cousin Emmie. '_What_ a little man!'
+
+They both made a grimace, and laughed nervously.
+
+'Get the frying-pan,' said Emmie to Matilda.
+
+'But he's as cocky as ever,' said Matilda, narrowing her eyes and shaking
+her head knowingly, as she handed the frying-pan.
+
+'Mannie!' said Emmie sarcastically. Hadrian's new-fledged, cock-sure
+manliness evidently found no favour in her eyes.
+
+'Oh, he's not bad,' said Matilda. 'You don't want to be prejudiced
+against him.'
+
+I'm not prejudiced against him, I think he's all right for looks,' said
+Emmie, 'but there's too much of the little mannie about him.'
+
+'Fancy catching us like this,' said Matilda.
+
+'They've no thought for anything,' said Emmie with contempt. 'You go up
+and get dressed, our Matilda. I don't care about him. I can see to
+things, and you can talk to him. I shan't.'
+
+'He'll talk to my father,' said Matilda, meaningful.
+
+'_Sly--!_' exclaimed Emmie, with a grimace.
+
+The sisters believed that Hadrian had come hoping to get something out of
+their father--hoping for a legacy. And they were not at all sure he would
+not get it.
+
+Matilda went upstairs to change. She had thought it all out how she would
+receive Hadrian, and impress him. And he had caught her with her head
+tied up in a duster, and her thin arms in a basin of lather. But she did
+not care. She now dressed herself most scrupulously, carefully folded her
+long, beautiful, blonde hair, touched her pallor with a little rouge, and
+put her long string of exquisite crystal beads over her soft green dress.
+Now she looked elegant, like a heroine in a magazine illustration, and
+almost as unreal.
+
+She found Hadrian and her father talking away. The young man was short of
+speech as a rule, but he could find his tongue with his 'uncle'. They
+were both sipping a glass of brandy, and smoking, and chatting like a
+pair of old cronies. Hadrian was telling about Canada. He was going back
+there when his leave was up.
+
+'You wouldn't like to stop in England, then?' said Mr. Rockley.
+
+'No, I wouldn't stop in England,' said Hadrian.
+
+'How's that? There's plenty of electricians here,' said Mr. Rockley.
+
+'Yes. But there's too much difference between the men and the employers
+over here--too much of that for me,' said Hadrian.
+
+The sick man looked at him narrowly, with oddly smiling eyes.
+
+'That's it, is it?' he replied.
+
+Matilda heard and understood. 'So that's your big idea, is it, my little
+man,' she said to herself. She had always said of Hadrian that he had no
+proper _respect_ for anybody or anything, that he was sly and _common_.
+She went down to the kitchen for a _sotto voce_ confab with Emmie.
+
+'He thinks a rare lot of himself!' she whispered.
+
+'He's somebody, he is!' said Emmie with contempt.
+
+'He thinks there's too much difference between masters and men, over
+here,' said Matilda.
+
+'Is it any different in Canada?' asked Emmie.
+
+'Oh, yes--democratic,' replied Matilda, 'He thinks they're all on a level
+over there.'
+
+'Ay, well he's over here now,' said Emmie dryly, 'so he can keep his
+place.'
+
+As they talked they saw the young man sauntering down the garden, looking
+casually at the flowers. He had his hands in his pockets, and his
+soldier's cap neatly on his head. He looked quite at his ease, as if in
+possession. The two women, fluttered, watched him through the window.
+
+'We know what he's come for,' said Emmie, churlishly. Matilda looked a
+long time at the neat khaki figure. It had something of the charity-boy
+about it still; but now it was a man's figure, laconic, charged with
+plebeian energy. She thought of the derisive passion in his voice as he
+had declaimed against the propertied classes, to her father.
+
+'You don't know, Emmie. Perhaps he's not come for that,' she rebuked her
+sister. They were both thinking of the money.
+
+They were still watching the young soldier. He stood away at the bottom
+of the garden, with his back to them, his hands in his pockets, looking
+into the water of the willow pond. Matilda's dark-blue eyes had a
+strange, full look in them, the lids, with the faint blue veins showing,
+dropped rather low. She carried her head light and high, but she had a
+look of pain. The young man at the bottom of the garden turned and looked
+up the path. Perhaps he saw them through the window. Matilda moved into
+shadow.
+
+That afternoon their father seemed weak and ill. He was easily exhausted.
+The doctor came, and told Matilda that the sick man might die suddenly at
+any moment--but then he might not. They must be prepared.
+
+So the day passed, and the next. Hadrian made himself at home. He went
+about in the morning in his brownish jersey and his khaki trousers,
+collarless, his bare neck showing. He explored the pottery premises, as
+if he had some secret purpose in so doing, he talked with Mr. Rockley,
+when the sick man had strength. The two girls were always angry when the
+two men sat talking together like cronies. Yet it was chiefly a kind of
+politics they talked.
+
+On the second day after Hadrian's arrival, Matilda sat with her father in
+the evening. She was drawing a picture which she wanted to copy. It was
+very still, Hadrian was gone out somewhere, no one knew where, and Emmie
+was busy. Mr. Rockley reclined on his bed, looking out in silence over
+his evening-sunny garden.
+
+'If anything happens to me, Matilda,' he said, 'you won't sell this
+house--you'll stop here--'
+
+Matilda's eyes took their slightly haggard look as she stared at her
+father.
+
+'Well, we couldn't do anything else,' she said.
+
+'You don't know what you might do,' he said. 'Everything is left to you
+and Emmie, equally. You'do as you like with it--only don't sell this
+house, don't part with it.'
+
+'No,' she said.
+
+'And give Hadrian my watch and chain, and a hundred pounds out of what's
+in the bank--and help him if he ever wants helping. I haven't put his
+name in the will.'
+
+'Your watch and chain, and a hundred pounds--yes. But you'll be here when
+he goes back to Canada, father.'
+
+'You never know what'll happen,' said her father.
+
+Matilda sat and watched him, with her full, haggard eyes, for a long
+time, as if tranced. She saw that he knew he must go soon--she saw like a
+clairvoyant.
+
+Later on she told Emmie what her father had said about the watch and
+chain and the money.
+
+'What right has _he'--he_--meaning Hadrian--'to my father's watch and
+chain--what has it to do with him? Let him have the money, and get off,'
+said Emmie. She loved her father.
+
+That night Matilda sat late in her room. Her heart was anxious and
+breaking, her mind seemed entranced. She was too much entranced even to
+weep, and all the time she thought of her father, only her father. At
+last she felt she must go to him.
+
+It was near midnight. She went along the passage and to his room. There
+was a faint light from the moon outside. She listened at his door. Then
+she softly opened and entered. The room was faintly dark. She heard a
+movement on the bed.
+
+'Are you asleep?' she said softly, advancing to the side of the bed.
+
+'Are you asleep?' she repeated gently, as she stood at the side of the
+bed. And she reached her hand in the darkness to touch his forehead.
+Delicately, her fingers met the nose and the eyebrows, she laid her fine,
+delicate hand on his brow. It seemed fresh and smooth--very fresh and
+smooth. A sort of surprise stirred her, in her entranced state. But it
+could not waken her. Gently, she leaned over the bed and stirred her
+fingers over the low-growing hair on his brow.
+
+'Can't you sleep tonight?' she said.
+
+There was a quick stirring in the bed. 'Yes, I can,' a voice answered. It
+was Hadrian's voice. She started away. Instantly, she was wakened from
+her late-at-night trance. She remembered that her father was downstairs,
+that Hadrian had his room. She stood in the darkness as if stung.
+
+'It is you, Hadrian?' she said. 'I thought it was my father.' She was so
+startled, so shocked, that she could not move. The young man gave an
+uncomfortable laugh, and turned in his bed.
+
+At last she got out of the room. When she was back in her own room, in
+the light, and her door was closed, she stood holding up her hand that
+had touched him, as if it were hurt. She was almost too shocked, she
+could not endure.
+
+'Well,' said her calm and weary mind, 'it was only a mistake, why take
+any notice of it.'
+
+But she could not reason her feelings so easily. She suffered, feeling
+herself in a false position. Her right hand, which she had laid so gently
+on his face, on his fresh skin, ached now, as if it were really injured.
+She could not forgive Hadrian for the mistake: it made her dislike him
+deeply.
+
+Hadrian too slept badly. He had been awakened by the opening of the door,
+and had not realized what the question meant. But the soft, straying
+tenderness of her hand on his face startled something out of his soul. He
+was a charity boy, aloof and more or less at bay. The fragile
+exquisiteness of her caress startled him most, revealed unknown things to
+him.
+
+In the morning she could feel the consciousness in his eyes, when
+she came downstairs. She tried to bear herself as if nothing at all
+had happened, and she succeeded. She had the calm self-control,
+self-indifference, of one who has suffered and borne her suffering. She
+looked at him from her darkish, almost drugged blue eyes, she met the
+spark of consciousness in his eyes, and quenched it. And with her long,
+fine hand she put the sugar in his coffee.
+
+But she could not control him as she thought she could. He had a keen
+memory stinging his mind, a new set of sensations working in his
+consciousness. Something new was alert in him. At the back of his
+reticent, guarded mind he kept his secret alive and vivid. She was at his
+mercy, for he was unscrupulous, his standard was not her standard.
+
+He looked at her curiously. She was not beautiful, her nose was too
+large, her chin was too small, her neck was too thin. But her skin was
+clear and fine, she had a high-bred sensitiveness. This queer, brave,
+high-bred quality she shared with her father. The charity boy could see
+it in her tapering fingers, which were white and ringed. The same glamour
+that he knew in the elderly man he now saw in the woman. And he wanted to
+possess himself of it, he wanted to make himself master of it. As he went
+about through the old pottery-yard, his secretive mind schemed and
+worked. To be master of that strange soft delicacy such as he had felt in
+her hand upon his face,--this was what he set himself towards. He was
+secretly plotting.
+
+He watched Matilda as she went about, and she became aware of his
+attention, as of some shadow following her. But her pride made her ignore
+it. When he sauntered near her, his hands in his pockets, she received
+him with that same commonplace kindliness which mastered him more than
+any contempt. Her superior breeding seemed to control him. She made
+herself feel towards him exactly as she had always felt: he was a young
+boy who lived in the house with them, but was a stranger. Only, she dared
+not remember his face under her hand. When she remembered that, she was
+bewildered. Her hand had offended her, she wanted to cut it off. And she
+wanted, fiercely, to cut off the memory in him. She assumed she had done
+so.
+
+One day, when he sat talking with his 'uncle', he looked straight into
+the eyes of the sick man, and said:
+
+'But I shouldn't like to live and die here in Rawsley.'
+
+'No--well--you needn't,' said the sick man.
+
+'Do you think Cousin Matilda likes it?'
+
+'I should think so.'
+
+'I don't call it much of a life,' said the youth. 'How much older is she
+than me, Uncle?'
+
+The sick man looked at the young soldier.
+
+'A good bit,' he said.
+
+'Over thirty?' said Hadrian.
+
+'Well, not so much. She's thirty-two.'
+
+Hadrian considered a while.
+
+'She doesn't look it,' he said.
+
+Again the sick father looked at him.
+
+'Do you think she'd like to leave here?' said Hadrian.
+
+'Nay, I don't know,' replied the father, restive.
+
+Hadrian sat still, having his own thoughts. Then in a small, quiet voice,
+as if he were speaking from inside himself, he said:
+
+'I'd marry her if you wanted me to.'
+
+The sick man raised his eyes suddenly, and stared. He stared for a long
+time. The youth looked inscrutably out of the window.
+
+'_You!_' said the sick man, mocking, with some contempt. Hadrian turned
+and met his eyes. The two men had an inexplicable understanding.
+
+'If you wasn't against it,' said Hadrian.
+
+'Nay,' said the father, turning aside, 'I don't think I'm against it.
+I've never thought of it. But--But Emmie's the youngest.'
+
+He had flushed, and looked suddenly more alive. Secretly he loved the
+boy.
+
+'You might ask her,' said Hadrian.
+
+The elder man considered.
+
+'Hadn't you better ask her yourself?' he said.
+
+'She'd take more notice of you,' said Hadrian.
+
+They were both silent. Then Emmie came in.
+
+For two days Mr. Rockley was excited and thoughtful. Hadrian went about
+quietly, secretly, unquestioning. At last the father and daughter were
+alone together. It was very early morning, the father had been in much
+pain. As the pain abated, he lay still, thinking.
+
+'Matilda!' he said suddenly, looking at his daughter.
+
+'Yes, I'm here,' she said.
+
+'Ay! I want you to do something--'
+
+She rose in anticipation.
+
+'Nay, sit still. I want you to marry Hadrian--'
+
+She thought he was raving. She rose, bewildered and frightened.
+
+'Nay, sit you still, sit you still. You hear what I tell you.'
+
+'But you don't know what you're saying, father.'
+
+'Ay, I know well enough. I want you to marry Hadrian, I tell you.'
+
+She was dumbfounded. He was a man of few words.
+
+'You'll do what I tell you,' he said.
+
+She looked at him slowly.
+
+'What put such an idea in your mind?' she said proudly.
+
+'He did.'
+
+Matilda almost looked her father down, her pride was so offended.
+
+'Why, it's disgraceful,' she said.
+
+'Why?'
+
+She watched him slowly.
+
+'What do you ask me for?' she said. 'It's disgusting.'
+
+'The lad's sound enough,' he replied, testily.
+
+'You'd better tell him to clear out,' she said, coldly.
+
+He turned and looked out of the window. She sat flushed and erect for a
+long time. At length her father turned to her, looking really malevolent.
+
+'If you won't,' he said, 'you're a fool, and I'll make you pay for your
+foolishness, do you see?'
+
+Suddenly a cold fear gripped her. She could not believe her senses. She
+was terrified and bewildered. She stared at her father, believing him to
+be delirious, or mad, or drunk. What could she do?
+
+'I tell you,' he said. 'I'll send for Whittle tomorrow if you don't. You
+shall neither of you have anything of mine.'
+
+Whittle was the solicitor. She understood her father well enough: he
+would send for his solicitor, and make a will leaving all his property to
+Hadrian: neither she nor Emmie should have anything. It was too much. She
+rose and went out of the room, up to her own room, where she locked
+herself in.
+
+She did not come out for some hours. At last, late at night, she confided
+in Emmie.
+
+'The sliving demon, he wants the money,' said Emmie. 'My father's out of
+his mind.'
+
+The thought that Hadrian merely wanted the money was another blow to
+Matilda. She did not love the impossible youth--but she had not yet
+learned to think of him as a thing of evil. He now became hideous to her
+mind.
+
+Emmie had a little scene with her father next day.
+
+'You don't mean what you said to our Matilda yesterday, do you, father?'
+she asked aggressively.
+
+'Yes,' he replied.
+
+'What, that you'll alter your will?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'You won't,' said his angry daughter.
+
+But he looked at her with a malevolent little smile.
+
+'Annie!' he shouted. 'Annie!'
+
+He had still power to make his voice carry. The servant maid came in from
+the kitchen.
+
+'Put your things on, and go down to Whittle's office, and say I want to
+see Mr. Whittle as soon as he can, and will he bring a will-form.'
+
+The sick man lay back a little--he could not lie down. His daughter sat
+as if she had been struck. Then she left the room.
+
+Hadrian was pottering about in the garden. She went straight down to him.
+
+'Here,' she said. 'You'd better get off. You'd better take your things
+and go from here, quick.'
+
+Hadrian looked slowly at the infuriated girl.
+
+'Who says so?' he asked.
+
+'_We_ say so--get off, you've done enough mischief and damage.'
+
+'Does Uncle say so?'
+
+'Yes, he does.'
+
+'I'll go and ask him.'
+
+But like a fury Emmie barred his way.
+
+'No, you needn't. You needn't ask him nothing at all. We don't want you,
+so you can go.'
+
+'Uncle's boss here.'
+
+'A man that's dying, and you crawling round and working on him for his
+money!--you're not fit to live.'
+
+'Oh!' he said. 'Who says I'm working for his money?'
+
+'I say. But my father told our Matilda, and _she_ knows what you are.
+_She_ knows what you're after. So you might as well clear out, for all
+you'll get--guttersnipe!'
+
+He turned his back on her, to think. It had not occurred to him that they
+would think he was after the money. He _did_ want the money--badly. He
+badly wanted to be an employer himself, not one of the employed. But he
+knew, in his subtle, calculating way, that it was not for money he wanted
+Matilda. He wanted both the money and Matilda. But he told himself the
+two desires were separate, not one. He could not do with Matilda,
+_without_ the money. But he did not want her _for_ the money.
+
+When he got this clear in his mind, he sought for an opportunity to tell
+it her, lurking and watching. But she avoided him. In the evening the
+lawyer came. Mr. Rockley seemed to have a new access of strength--a will
+was drawn up, making the previous arrangements wholly conditional. The
+old will held good, if Matilda would consent to marry Hadrian. If she
+refused then at the end of six months the whole property passed to
+Hadrian.
+
+Mr. Rockley told this to the young man, with malevolent satisfaction. He
+seemed to have a strange desire, quite unreasonable, for revenge upon the
+women who had surrounded him for so long, and served him so carefully.
+
+'Tell her in front of me,' said Hadrian.
+
+So Mr. Rockley sent for his daughters.
+
+At last they came, pale, mute, stubborn. Matilda seemed to have retired
+far off, Emmie seemed like a fighter ready to fight to the death. The
+sick man reclined on the bed, his eyes bright, his puffed hand trembling.
+But his face had again some of its old, bright handsomeness. Hadrian sat
+quiet, a little aside: the indomitable, dangerous charity boy.
+
+'There's the will,' said their father, pointing them to the paper.
+
+The two women sat mute and immovable, they took no notice.
+
+'Either you marry Hadrian, or he has everything,' said the father with
+satisfaction.
+
+'Then let him have everything,' said Matilda boldly.
+
+'He's not! He's not!' cried Emmie fiercely. 'He's not going to have it.
+The guttersnipe!'
+
+An amused look came on her father's face.
+
+'You hear that, Hadrian,' he said.
+
+'I didn't offer to marry Cousin Matilda for the money,' said Hadrian,
+flushing and moving on his seat.
+
+Matilda looked at him slowly, with her dark-blue, drugged eyes. He seemed
+a strange little monster to her.
+
+'Why, you liar, you know you did,' cried Emmie.
+
+The sick man laughed. Matilda continued to gaze strangely at the young
+man.
+
+'She knows I didn't,' said Hadrian.
+
+He too had his courage, as a rat has indomitable courage in the end.
+Hadrian had some of the neatness, the reserve, the underground quality of
+the rat. But he had perhaps the ultimate courage, the most unquenchable
+courage of all.
+
+Emmie looked at her sister.
+
+'Oh, well,' she said. 'Matilda--don't bother. Let him have everything, we
+can look after ourselves.'
+
+'I know he'll take everything,' said Matilda, abstractedly.
+
+Hadrian did not answer. He knew in fact that if Matilda refused him he
+would take everything, and go off with it.
+
+'A clever little mannie--!' said Emmie, with a jeering grimace.
+
+The father laughed noiselessly to himself. But he was tired....
+
+'Go on, then,' he said. 'Go on, let me be quiet.'
+
+Emmie turned and looked at him.
+
+'You deserve what you've got,' she said to her father bluntly.
+
+'Go on,' he answered mildly. 'Go on.'
+
+Another night passed--a night nurse sat up with Mr. Rockley. Another day
+came. Hadrian was there as ever, in his woollen jersey and coarse khaki
+trousers and bare neck. Matilda went about, frail and distant, Emmie
+black-browed in spite of her blondness. They were all quiet, for they did
+not intend the mystified servant to learn anything.
+
+Mr. Rockley had very bad attacks of pain, he could not breathe. The end
+seemed near. They all went about quiet and stoical, all unyielding.
+Hadrian pondered within himself. If he did not marry Matilda he would go
+to Canada with twenty thousand pounds. This was itself a very
+satisfactory prospect. If Matilda consented he would have nothing--she
+would have her own money.
+
+Emmie was the one to act. She went off in search of the solicitor and
+brought him with her. There was an interview, and Whittle tried to
+frighten the youth into withdrawal--but without avail. The clergyman and
+relatives were summoned--but Hadrian stared at them and took no notice.
+It made him angry, however.
+
+He wanted to catch Matilda alone. Many days went by, and he was not
+successful: she avoided him. At last, lurking, he surprised her one day
+as she came to pick gooseberries, and he cut off her retreat. He came to
+the point at once.
+
+'You don't want me, then?' he said, in his subtle, insinuating voice.
+
+'I don't want to speak to you,' she said, averting her face.
+
+'You put your hand on me, though,' he said. 'You shouldn't have done
+that, and then I should never have thought of it. You shouldn't have
+touched me.'
+
+'If you were anything decent, you'd know that was a mistake, and forget
+it,' she said.
+
+'I know it was a mistake--but I shan't forget it. If you wake a man up,
+he can't go to sleep again because he's told to.'
+
+'If you had any decent feeling in you, you'd have gone away,' she
+replied.
+
+'I didn't want to,' he replied.
+
+She looked away into the distance. At last she asked:
+
+'What do you persecute me for, if it isn't for the money. I'm old enough
+to be your mother. In a way I've been your mother.'
+
+'Doesn't matter,' he said. 'You've been no mother to me. Let us marry and
+go out to Canada--you might as well--you've touched me.'
+
+She was white and trembling. Suddenly she flushed with anger.
+
+'It's so _indecent_,' she said.
+
+'How?' he retorted. 'You touched me.'
+
+But she walked away from him. She felt as if he had trapped her. He was
+angry and depressed, he felt again despised.
+
+That same evening she went into her father's room.
+
+'Yes,' she said suddenly. 'I'll marry him.'
+
+Her father looked up at her. He was in pain, and very ill.
+
+'You like him now, do you?' he said, with a faint smile.
+
+She looked down into his face, and saw death not far off. She turned and
+went coldly out of the room.
+
+The solicitor was sent for, preparations were hastily made. In all the
+interval Matilda did not speak to Hadrian, never answered him if he
+addressed her. He approached her in the morning.
+
+'You've come round to it, then?' he said, giving her a pleasant look from
+his twinkling, almost kindly eyes. She looked down at him and turned
+aside. She looked down on him both literally and figuratively. Still he
+persisted, and triumphed.
+
+Emmie raved and wept, the secret flew abroad. But Matilda was silent and
+unmoved, Hadrian was quiet and satisfied, and nipped with fear also. But
+he held out against his fear. Mr. Rockley was very ill, but unchanged.
+
+On the third day the marriage took place. Matilda and Hadrian drove
+straight home from the registrar, and went straight into the room of the
+dying man. His face lit up with a clear twinkling smile.
+
+'Hadrian--you've got her?' he said, a little hoarsely.
+
+'Yes,' said Hadrian, who was pale round the gills.
+
+'Ay, my lad, I'm glad you're mine,' replied the dying man. Then he turned
+his eyes closely on Matilda.
+
+'Let's look at you, Matilda,' he said. Then his voice went strange and
+unrecognizable. 'Kiss me,' he said.
+
+She stooped and kissed him. She had never kissed him before, not since
+she was a tiny child. But she was quiet, very still.
+
+'Kiss him,' the dying man said.
+
+Obediently, Matilda put forward her mouth and kissed the young husband.
+
+'That's right! That's right!' murmured the dying man.
+
+
+
+
+_Samson and Delilah_
+
+
+A man got down from the motor-omnibus that runs from Penzance to
+St Just-in-Penwith, and turned northwards, uphill towards the Polestar.
+It was only half past six, but already the stars were out, a cold little
+wind was blowing from the sea, and the crystalline, three-pulse flash of
+the lighthouse below the cliffs beat rhythmically in the first darkness.
+
+The man was alone. He went his way unhesitating, but looked from side to
+side with cautious curiosity. Tall, ruined power-houses of tin-mines
+loomed in the darkness from time to time, like remnants of some by-gone
+civilization. The lights of many miners' cottages scattered on the hilly
+darkness twinkled desolate in their disorder, yet twinkled with the
+lonely homeliness of the Celtic night.
+
+He tramped steadily on, always watchful with curiosity. He was a tall,
+well-built man, apparently in the prime of life. His shoulders were
+square and rather stiff, he leaned forwards a little as he went, from the
+hips, like a man who must stoop to lower his height. But he did not stoop
+his shoulders: he bent his straight back from the hips.
+
+Now and again short, stump, thick-legged figures of Cornish miners passed
+him, and he invariably gave them goodnight, as if to insist that he was
+on his own ground. He spoke with the west-Cornish intonation. And as he
+went along the dreary road, looking now at the lights of the dwellings on
+land, now at the lights away to sea, vessels veering round in sight of
+the Longships Lighthouse, the whole of the Atlantic Ocean in darkness and
+space between him and America, he seemed a little excited and pleased
+with himself, watchful, thrilled, veering along in a sense of mastery
+and of power in conflict.
+
+The houses began to close on the road, he was entering the straggling,
+formless, desolate mining village, that he knew of old. On the left was a
+little space set back from the road, and cosy lights of an inn. There it
+was. He peered up at the sign: 'The Tinners' Rest'. But he could not make
+out the name of the proprietor. He listened. There was excited talking
+and laughing, a woman's voice laughing shrilly among the men's.
+
+Stooping a little, he entered the warmly-lit bar. The lamp was burning, a
+buxom woman rose from the white-scrubbed deal table where the black and
+white and red cards were scattered, and several men, miners, lifted their
+faces from the game.
+
+The stranger went to the counter, averting his face. His cap was pulled
+down over his brow.
+
+'Good-evening!' said the landlady, in her rather ingratiating voice.
+
+'Good-evening. A glass of ale.'
+
+'A glass of ale,' repeated the landlady suavely. 'Cold night--but
+bright.'
+
+'Yes,' the man assented, laconically. Then he added, when nobody expected
+him to say any more: 'Seasonable weather.'
+
+'Quite seasonable, quite,' said the landlady. 'Thank you.'
+
+The man lifted his glass straight to his lips, and emptied it. He put it
+down again on the zinc counter with a click.
+
+'Let's have another,' he said.
+
+The woman drew the beer, and the man went away with his glass to the
+second table, near the fire. The woman, after a moment's hesitation, took
+her seat again at the table with the card-players. She had noticed the
+man: a big fine fellow, well dressed, a stranger.
+
+But he spoke with that Cornish-Yankee accent she accepted as the natural
+twang among the miners.
+
+The stranger put his foot on the fender and looked into the fire. He was
+handsome, well coloured, with well-drawn Cornish eyebrows, and the usual
+dark, bright, mindless Cornish eyes. He seemed abstracted in thought.
+Then he watched the card-party.
+
+The woman was buxom and healthy, with dark hair and small, quick brown
+eyes. She was bursting with life and vigour, the energy she threw into
+the game of cards excited all the men, they shouted, and laughed, and the
+woman held her breast, shrieking with laughter.
+
+'Oh, my, it'll be the death o' me,' she panted. 'Now, come on, Mr.
+Trevorrow, play fair. Play fair, I say, or I s'll put the cards down.'
+
+'Play fair! Why who's played unfair?' ejaculated Mr. Trevorrow. 'Do you
+mean t'accuse me, as I haven't played fair, Mrs. Nankervis?'
+
+'I do. I say it, and I mean it. Haven't you got the queen of spades? Now,
+come on, no dodging round me. I know you've got that queen, as well as I
+know my name's Alice.'
+
+'Well--if your name's Alice, you'll have to have it--'
+
+'Ay, now--what did I say? Did you ever see such a man? My word, but your
+missus must be easy took in, by the looks of things.'
+
+And off she went into peals of laughter. She was interrupted by the
+entrance of four men in khaki, a short, stumpy sergeant of middle age, a
+young corporal, and two young privates. The woman leaned back in her
+chair.
+
+'Oh, my!' she cried. 'If there isn't the boys back: looking perished, I
+believe--'
+
+'Perished, Ma!' exclaimed the sergeant. 'Not yet.'
+
+'Near enough,' said a young private, uncouthly.
+
+The woman got up.
+
+'I'm sure you are, my dears. You'll be wanting your suppers, I'll be
+bound.'
+
+'We could do with 'em.'
+
+'Let's have a wet first,' said the sergeant.
+
+The woman bustled about getting the drinks. The soldiers moved to the
+fire, spreading out their hands.
+
+'Have your suppers in here, will you?' she said. 'Or in the kitchen?'
+
+'Let's have it here,' said the sergeant. 'More cosier--_if_ you don't
+mind.'
+
+'You shall have it where you like, boys, where you like.'
+
+She disappeared. In a minute a girl of about sixteen came in. She was
+tall and fresh, with dark, young, expressionless eyes, and well-drawn
+brows, and the immature softness and mindlessness of the sensuous Celtic
+type.
+
+'Ho, Maryann! Evenin', Maryann! How's Maryann, now?' came the multiple
+greeting.
+
+She replied to everybody in a soft voice, a strange, soft _aplomb_ that
+was very attractive. And she moved round with rather mechanical,
+attractive movements, as if her thoughts were elsewhere. But she had
+always this dim far-awayness in her bearing: a sort of modesty. The
+strange man by the fire watched her curiously. There was an alert,
+inquisitive, mindless curiosity on his well-coloured face.
+
+'I'll have a bit of supper with you, if I might,' he said.
+
+She looked at him, with her clear, unreasoning eyes, just like the eyes
+of some non-human creature.
+
+'I'll ask mother,' she said. Her voice was soft-breathing, gently
+singsong.
+
+When she came in again:
+
+'Yes,' she said, almost whispering. 'What will you have?'
+
+'What have you got?' he said, looking up into her face.
+
+'There's cold meat--'
+
+'That's for me, then.'
+
+The stranger sat at the end of the table and ate with the tired, quiet
+soldiers. Now, the landlady was interested in him. Her brow was knit
+rather tense, there was a look of panic in her large, healthy face, but
+her small brown eyes were fixed most dangerously. She was a big woman,
+but her eyes were small and tense. She drew near the stranger. She wore a
+rather loud-patterned flannelette blouse, and a dark skirt.
+
+'What will you have to drink with your supper?' she asked, and there was
+a new, dangerous note in her voice.
+
+He moved uneasily.
+
+'Oh, I'll go on with ale.'
+
+She drew him another glass. Then she sat down on the bench at the table
+with him and the soldiers, and fixed him with her attention.
+
+'You've come from St Just, have you?' she said.
+
+He looked at her with those clear, dark, inscrutable Cornish eyes, and
+answered at length:
+
+'No, from Penzance.'
+
+'Penzance!--but you're not thinking of going back there tonight?'
+
+'No--no.'
+
+He still looked at her with those wide, clear eyes that seemed like very
+bright agate. Her anger began to rise. It was seen on her brow. Yet her
+voice was still suave and deprecating.
+
+'I _thought_ not--but you're not living in these parts, are you?'
+
+'No--no, I'm not living here.' He was always slow in answering, as if
+something intervened between him and any outside question.
+
+'Oh, I see,' she said. 'You've got relations down here.'
+
+Again he looked straight into her eyes, as if looking her into silence.
+
+'Yes,' he said.
+
+He did not say any more. She rose with a flounce. The anger was tight on
+her brow. There was no more laughing and card-playing that evening,
+though she kept up her motherly, suave, good-humoured way with the men.
+But they knew her, they were all afraid of her.
+
+The supper was finished, the table cleared, the stranger did not go. Two
+of the young soldiers went off to bed, with their cheery:
+
+'Good-night, Ma. Good-night, Maryann.'
+
+The stranger talked a little to the sergeant about the war, which was in
+its first year, about the new army, a fragment of which was quartered in
+this district, about America.
+
+The landlady darted looks at him from her small eyes, minute by minute
+the electric storm welled in her bosom, as still he did not go. She was
+quivering with suppressed, violent passion, something frightening and
+abnormal. She could not sit still for a moment. Her heavy form seemed to
+flash with sudden, involuntary movements as the minutes passed by, and
+still he sat there, and the tension on her heart grew unbearable. She
+watched the hands of the dock move on. Three of the soldiers had gone to
+bed, only the crop-headed, terrier-like old sergeant remained.
+
+The landlady sat behind the bar fidgeting spasmodically with the
+newspaper. She looked again at the clock. At last it was five minutes to
+ten.
+
+'Gentlemen--the enemy!' she said, in her diminished, furious voice.
+'Time, please. Time, my dears. And good-night all!'
+
+The men began to drop out, with a brief good-night. It was a minute to
+ten. The landlady rose.
+
+'Come,' she said. 'I'm shutting the door.'
+
+The last of the miners passed out. She stood, stout and menacing, holding
+the door. Still the stranger sat on by the fire, his black overcoat
+opened, smoking.
+
+'We're closed now, sir,' came the perilous, narrowed voice of the
+landlady.
+
+The little, dog-like, hard-headed sergeant touched the arm of the
+stranger.
+
+'Closing time,' he said.
+
+The stranger turned round in his seat, and his quick-moving, dark,
+jewel-like eyes went from the sergeant to the landlady.
+
+'I'm stopping here tonight,' he said, in his laconic Cornish-Yankee
+accent.
+
+The landlady seemed to tower. Her eyes lifted strangely, frightening.
+
+'Oh! indeed!' she cried.' Oh, indeed! And whose orders are those, may I
+ask?'
+
+He looked at her again.
+
+'My orders,' he said.
+
+Involuntarily she shut the door, and advanced like a great, dangerous
+bird. Her voice rose, there was a touch of hoarseness in it.
+
+'And what might _your_ orders be, if you please?' she cried. 'Who might
+_you_ be, to give orders, in the house?'
+
+He sat still, watching her.
+
+'You know who I am,' he said. 'At least, I know who you are.'
+
+'Oh, you do? Oh, do you? And who am _I_ then, if you'll be so good as to
+tell me?'
+
+He stared at her with his bright, dark eyes.
+
+'You're my Missis, you are,' he said. 'And you know it, as well as I do.'
+
+She started as if something had exploded in her.
+
+Her eyes lifted and flared madly.
+
+'_Do_ I know it, indeed!' she cried. 'I know no such thing! I know no
+such thing! Do you think a man's going to walk into this bar, and tell me
+off-hand I'm his Missis, and I'm going to believe him?--I say to you,
+whoever you may be, you're mistaken. I know myself for no Missis of
+yours, and I'll thank you to go out of this house, this minute, before I
+get those that will put you out.'
+
+The man rose to his feet, stretching his head towards her a little. He
+was a handsomely built Cornishman in the prime of life.
+
+'What you say, eh? You don't know me?' he said, in his sing-song voice,
+emotionless, but rather smothered and pressing: it reminded one of the
+girl's. 'I should know you anywhere, you see. I should! I shouldn't have
+to look twice to know you, you see. You see, now, don't you?'
+
+The woman was baffled.
+
+'So you may say,' she replied, staccato. 'So you may say. That's easy
+enough. My name's known, and respected, by most people for ten miles
+round. But I don't know _you_.'
+
+Her voice ran to sarcasm. 'I can't say I know _you_. You're a _perfect_
+stranger to me, and I don't believe I've ever set eyes on you before
+tonight.'
+
+Her voice was very flexible and sarcastic.
+
+'Yes, you have,' replied the man, in his reasonable way.' Yes, you have.
+Your name's my name, and that girl Maryann is my girl; she's my daughter.
+You're my Missis right enough. As sure as I'm Willie Nankervis.'
+
+He spoke as if it were an accepted fact. His face was handsome, with a
+strange, watchful alertness and a fundamental fixity of intention that
+maddened her.
+
+'You villain!' she cried. 'You villain, to come to this house and dare to
+speak to me. You villain, you down-right rascal!'
+
+He looked at her.
+
+'Ay,' he said, unmoved. 'All that.' He was uneasy before her. Only he was
+not afraid of her. There was something impenetrable about him, like his
+eyes, which were as bright as agate.
+
+She towered, and drew near to him menacingly.
+
+'You're going out of this house, aren't you?'--She stamped her foot in
+sudden madness. '_This minute!_'
+
+He watched her. He knew she wanted to strike him.
+
+'No,' he said, with suppressed emphasis. 'I've told you, I'm stopping
+here.'
+
+He was afraid of her personality, but it did not alter him. She wavered.
+Her small, tawny-brown eyes concentrated in a point of vivid, sightless
+fury, like a tiger's. The man was wincing, but he stood his ground. Then
+she bethought herself. She would gather her forces.
+
+'We'll see whether you're stopping here,' she said. And she turned, with
+a curious, frightening lifting of her eyes, and surged out of the room.
+The man, listening, heard her go upstairs, heard her tapping at a bedroom
+door, heard her saying: 'Do you mind coming down a minute, boys? I want
+you. I'm in trouble.'
+
+The man in the bar took off his cap and his black overcoat, and threw
+them on the seat behind him. His black hair was short and touched with
+grey at the temples. He wore a well-cut, well-fitting suit of dark grey,
+American in style, and a turn-down collar. He looked well-to-do, a fine,
+solid figure of a man. The rather rigid look of the shoulders came from
+his having had his collar-bone twice broken in the mines.
+
+The little terrier of a sergeant, in dirty khaki, looked at him
+furtively.
+
+'She's your Missis?' he asked, jerking his head in the direction of the
+departed woman.
+
+'Yes, she is,' barked the man. 'She's that, sure enough.'
+
+'Not seen her for a long time, haven't ye?'
+
+'Sixteen years come March month.'
+
+'Hm!'
+
+And the sergeant laconically resumed his smoking.
+
+The landlady was coming back, followed by the three young soldiers, who
+entered rather sheepishly, in trousers and shirt and stocking-feet. The
+woman stood histrionically at the end of the bar, and exclaimed:
+
+'That man refuses to leave the house, claims he's stopping the night
+here. You know very well I have no bed, don't you? And this house doesn't
+accommodate travellers. Yet he's going to stop in spite of all! But not
+while I've a drop of blood in my body, that I declare with my dying
+breath. And not if you men are worth the name of men, and will help a
+woman as has no one to help her.'
+
+Her eyes sparkled, her face was flushed pink. She was drawn up like an
+Amazon.
+
+The young soldiers did not quite know what to do. They looked at the man,
+they looked at the sergeant, one of them looked down and fastened his
+braces on the second button.
+
+'What say, sergeant?' asked one whose face twinkled for a little
+devilment.
+
+'Man says he's husband to Mrs. Nankervis,' said the sergeant.
+
+'He's no husband of mine. I declare I never set eyes on him before this
+night. It's a dirty trick, nothing else, it's a dirty trick.'
+
+'Why, you're a liar, saying you never set eyes on me before,' barked the
+man near the hearth. 'You're married to me, and that girl Maryann you had
+by me--well enough you know it.'
+
+The young soldiers looked on in delight, the sergeant smoked imperturbed.
+
+'Yes,' sang the landlady, slowly shaking her head in supreme sarcasm, 'it
+sounds very pretty, doesn't it? But you see we don't believe a word of
+it, and _how_ are you going to prove it?' She smiled nastily.
+
+The man watched in silence for a moment, then he said:
+
+'It wants no proof.'
+
+'Oh, yes, but it does! Oh, yes, but it does, sir, it wants a lot of
+proving!' sang the lady's sarcasm. 'We're not such gulls as all that, to
+swallow your words whole.'
+
+But he stood unmoved near the fire. She stood with one hand resting on
+the zinc-covered bar, the sergeant sat with legs crossed, smoking, on the
+seat halfway between them, the three young soldiers in their shirts and
+braces stood wavering in the gloom behind the bar. There was silence.
+
+'Do you know anything of the whereabouts of your husband, Mrs. Nankervis?
+Is he still living?' asked the sergeant, in his judicious fashion.
+
+Suddenly the landlady began to cry, great scalding tears, that left the
+young men aghast.
+
+'I know nothing of him,' she sobbed, feeling for her pocket handkerchief.
+'He left me when Maryann was a baby, went mining to America, and after
+about six months never wrote a line nor sent me a penny bit. I can't say
+whether he's alive or dead, the villain. All I've heard of him's to the
+bad--and I've heard nothing for years an' all, now.' She sobbed
+violently.
+
+The golden-skinned, handsome man near the fire watched her as she wept.
+He was frightened, he was troubled, he was bewildered, but none of his
+emotions altered him underneath.
+
+There was no sound in the room but the violent sobbing of the landlady.
+The men, one and all, were overcome.
+
+'Don't you think as you'd better go, for tonight?' said the sergeant to
+the man, with sweet reasonableness. 'You'd better leave it a bit, and
+arrange something between you. You can't have much claim on a woman, I
+should imagine, if it's how she says. And you've come down on her a bit
+too sudden-like.'
+
+The landlady sobbed heart-brokenly. The man watched her large breasts
+shaken. They seemed to cast a spell over his mind.
+
+'How I've treated her, that's no matter,' he replied. 'I've come back,
+and I'm going to stop in my own home--for a bit, anyhow. There you've got
+it.'
+
+'A dirty action,' said the sergeant, his face flushing dark. 'A dirty
+action, to come, after deserting a woman for that number of years, and
+want to force yourself on her! A dirty action--as isn't allowed by the
+law.'
+
+The landlady wiped her eyes.
+
+'Never you mind about law nor nothing,' cried the man, in a strange,
+strong voice. 'I'm not moving out of this public tonight.'
+
+The woman turned to the soldiers behind her, and said in a wheedling,
+sarcastic tone:
+
+'Are we going to stand it, boys?--Are we going to be done like this,
+Sergeant Thomas, by a scoundrel and a bully as has led a life beyond
+_mention_, in those American mining-camps, and then wants to come back
+and make havoc of a poor woman's life and savings, after having left her
+with a baby in arms to struggle as best she might? It's a crying shame if
+nobody will stand up for me--a crying shame--!'
+
+The soldiers and the little sergeant were bristling. The woman stooped
+and rummaged under the counter for a minute. Then, unseen to the man away
+near the fire, she threw out a plaited grass rope, such as is used for
+binding bales, and left it lying near the feet of the young soldiers, in
+the gloom at the back of the bar.
+
+Then she rose and fronted the situation.
+
+'Come now,' she said to the man, in a reasonable, coldly-coaxing tone,
+'put your coat on and leave us alone. Be a man, and not worse than a
+brute of a German. You can get a bed easy enough in St Just, and if
+you've nothing to pay for it sergeant would lend you a couple of
+shillings, I'm sure he would.'
+
+All eyes were fixed on the man. He was looking down at the woman like a
+creature spell-bound or possessed by some devil's own intention.
+
+'I've got money of my own,' he said. 'Don't you be frightened for your
+money, I've plenty of that, for the time.'
+
+'Well, then,' she coaxed, in a cold, almost sneering propitiation, 'put
+your coat on and go where you're wanted--be a _man_, not a brute of a
+German.'
+
+She had drawn quite near to him, in her challenging coaxing intentness.
+He looked down at her with his bewitched face.
+
+'No, I shan't,' he said. 'I shan't do no such thing. _You'll_ put me up
+for tonight.'
+
+'Shall I!' she cried. And suddenly she flung her arms round him, hung on
+to him with all her powerful weight, calling to the soldiers: 'Get the
+rope, boys, and fasten him up. Alfred--John, quick now--'
+
+The man reared, looked round with maddened eyes, and heaved his powerful
+body. But the woman was powerful also, and very heavy, and was clenched
+with the determination of death. Her face, with its exulting, horribly
+vindictive look, was turned up to him from his own breast; he reached
+back his head frantically, to get away from it. Meanwhile the young
+soldiers, after having watched this frightful Laocoon swaying for a
+moment, stirred, and the malicious one darted swiftly with the rope. It
+was tangled a little.
+
+'Give me the end here,' cried the sergeant.
+
+Meanwhile the big man heaved and struggled, swung the woman round against
+the seat and the table, in his convulsive effort to get free. But she
+pinned down his arms like a cuttlefish wreathed heavily upon him. And he
+heaved and swayed, and they crashed about the room, the soldiers hopping,
+the furniture bumping.
+
+The young soldier had got the rope once round, the brisk sergeant helping
+him. The woman sank heavily lower, they got the rope round several times.
+In the struggle the victim fell over against the table. The ropes
+tightened till they cut his arms. The woman clung to his knees. Another
+soldier ran in a flash of genius, and fastened the strange man's feet
+with the pair of braces. Seats had crashed over, the table was thrown
+against the wall, but the man was bound, his arms pinned against his
+sides, his feet tied. He lay half fallen, sunk against the table, still
+for a moment.
+
+The woman rose, and sank, faint, on to the seat against the wall. Her
+breast heaved, she could not speak, she thought she was going to die. The
+bound man lay against the overturned table, his coat all twisted and
+pulled up beneath the ropes, leaving the loins exposed. The soldiers
+stood around, a little dazed, but excited with the row.
+
+The man began to struggle again, heaving instinctively against the ropes,
+taking great, deep breaths. His face, with its golden skin, flushed dark
+and surcharged, he heaved again. The great veins in his neck stood out.
+But it was no good, he went relaxed. Then again, suddenly, he jerked his
+feet.
+
+'Another pair of braces, William,' cried the excited soldier. He threw
+himself on the legs of the bound man, and managed to fasten the knees.
+Then again there was stillness. They could hear the clock tick.
+
+The woman looked at the prostrate figure, the strong, straight limbs, the
+strong back bound in subjection, the wide-eyed face that reminded her of
+a calf tied in a sack in a cart, only its head stretched dumbly
+backwards. And she triumphed.
+
+The bound-up body began to struggle again. She watched fascinated the
+muscles working, the shoulders, the hips, the large, clean thighs. Even
+now he might break the ropes. She was afraid. But the lively young
+soldier sat on the shoulders of the bound man, and after a few perilous
+moments, there was stillness again.
+
+'Now,' said the judicious sergeant to the bound man, 'if we untie you,
+will you promise to go off and make no more trouble.'
+
+'You'll not untie him in here,' cried the woman. 'I wouldn't trust him as
+far as I could blow him.'
+
+There was silence.
+
+'We might carry him outside, and undo him there,' said the soldier. 'Then
+we could get the policeman, if he made any bother.'
+
+'Yes,' said the sergeant. 'We could do that.' Then again, in an altered,
+almost severe tone, to the prisoner. 'If we undo you outside, will you
+take your coat and go without creating any more disturbance?'
+
+But the prisoner would not answer, he only lay with wide, dark, bright,
+eyes, like a bound animal. There was a space of perplexed silence.
+
+'Well, then, do as you say,' said the woman irritably. 'Carry him out
+amongst you, and let us shut up the house.'
+
+They did so. Picking up the bound man, the four soldiers staggered
+clumsily into the silent square in front of the inn, the woman following
+with the cap and the overcoat. The young soldiers quickly unfastened the
+braces from the prisoner's legs, and they hopped indoors. They were in
+their stocking-feet, and outside the stars flashed cold. They stood in
+the doorway watching. The man lay quite still on the cold ground.
+
+'Now,' said the sergeant, in a subdued voice, 'I'll loosen the knot, and
+he can work himself free, if you go in, Missis.'
+
+She gave a last look at the dishevelled, bound man, as he sat on the
+ground. Then she went indoors, followed quickly by the sergeant. Then
+they were heard locking and barring the door.
+
+The man seated on the ground outside worked and strained at the rope. But
+it was not so easy to undo himself even now. So, with hands bound, making
+an effort, he got on his feet, and went and worked the cord against the
+rough edge of an old wall. The rope, being of a kind of plaited grass,
+soon frayed and broke, and he freed himself. He had various contusions.
+His arms were hurt and bruised from the bonds. He rubbed them slowly.
+Then he pulled his clothes straight, stooped, put on his cap, struggled
+into his overcoat, and walked away.
+
+The stars were very brilliant. Clear as crystal, the beam from the
+lighthouse under the cliffs struck rhythmically on the night. Dazed, the
+man walked along the road past the churchyard. Then he stood leaning up
+against a wall, for a long time.
+
+He was roused because his feet were so cold. So he pulled himself
+together, and turned again in the silent night, back towards the inn.
+
+The bar was in darkness. But there was a light in the kitchen. He
+hesitated. Then very quietly he tried the door.
+
+He was surprised to find it open. He entered, and quietly closed it
+behind him. Then he went down the step past the bar-counter, and through
+to the lighted doorway of the kitchen. There sat his wife, planted in
+front of the range, where a furze fire was burning. She sat in a chair
+full in front of the range, her knees wide apart on the fender. She
+looked over her shoulder at him as he entered, but she did not speak.
+Then she stared in the fire again.
+
+It was a small, narrow kitchen. He dropped his cap on the table that was
+covered with yellowish American cloth, and took a seat with his back to
+the wall, near the oven. His wife still sat with her knees apart, her
+feet on the steel fender and stared into the fire, motionless. Her skin
+was smooth and rosy in the firelight. Everything in the house was very
+clean and bright. The man sat silent, too, his head dropped. And thus
+they remained.
+
+It was a question who would speak first. The woman leaned forward and
+poked the ends of the sticks in between the bars of the range. He lifted
+his head and looked at her.
+
+'Others gone to bed, have they?' he asked.
+
+But she remained closed in silence.
+
+''S a cold night, out,' he said, as if to himself.
+
+And he laid his large, yet well-shapen workman's hand on the top of the
+stove, that was polished black and smooth as velvet. She would not look
+at him, yet she glanced out of the corners of her eyes.
+
+His eyes were fixed brightly on her, the pupils large and electric like
+those of a cat.
+
+'I should have picked you out among thousands,' he said. 'Though you're
+bigger than I'd have believed. Fine flesh you've made.'
+
+She was silent for some time. Then she turned in her chair upon him.
+
+'What do you think of yourself,' she said, 'coming back on me like this
+after over fifteen years? You don't think I've not heard of you, neither,
+in Butte City and elsewhere?'
+
+He was watching her with his clear, translucent, unchallenged eyes.
+
+'Yes,' he said. 'Chaps comes an' goes--I've heard tell of you from time
+to time.'
+
+She drew herself up.
+
+'And what lies have you heard about _me_?' she demanded superbly.
+
+'I dunno as I've heard any lies at all--'cept as you was getting on very
+well, like.'
+
+His voice ran warily and detached. Her anger stirred again in her
+violently. But she subdued it, because of the danger there was in him,
+and more, perhaps, because of the beauty of his head and his level drawn
+brows, which she could not bear to forfeit.
+
+'That's more than I can say of _you_,' she said. 'I've heard more harm
+than good about _you_.'
+
+'Ay, I dessay,' he said, looking in the fire. It was a long time since he
+had seen the furze burning, he said to himself. There was a silence,
+during which she watched his face.
+
+'Do you call yourself a _man_?' she said, more in contemptuous reproach
+than in anger. 'Leave a woman as you've left me, you don't care to
+what!--and then to turn up in _this_ fashion, without a word to say for
+yourself.'
+
+He stirred in his chair, planted his feet apart, and resting his arms on
+his knees, looked steadily into the fire, without answering. So near to
+her was his head, and the close black hair, she could scarcely refrain
+from starting away, as if it would bite her.
+
+'Do you call that the action of a _man_?' she repeated.
+
+'No,' he said, reaching and poking the bits of wood into the fire with
+his fingers. 'I didn't call it anything, as I know of. It's no good
+calling things by any names whatsoever, as I know of.'
+
+She watched him in his actions. There was a longer and longer pause
+between each speech, though neither knew it.
+
+'I _wonder_ what you think of yourself!' she exclaimed, with vexed
+emphasis. 'I _wonder_ what sort of a fellow you take yourself to be!' She
+was really perplexed as well as angry.
+
+'Well,' he said, lifting his head to look at her, 'I guess I'll answer
+for my own faults, if everybody else'll answer for theirs.'
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot as he lifted his face to her. She breathed
+heavily, averting her face, almost losing her self-control.
+
+'And what do you take _me_ to be?' she cried, in real helplessness.
+
+His face was lifted watching her, watching her soft, averted face, and
+the softly heaving mass of her breasts.
+
+'I take you,' he said, with that laconic truthfulness which exercised
+such power over her, 'to be the deuce of a fine woman--darn me if you're
+not as fine a built woman as I've seen, handsome with it as well. I
+shouldn't have expected you to put on such handsome flesh: 'struth I
+shouldn't.'
+
+Her heart beat fiery hot, as he watched her with those bright agate eyes,
+fixedly.
+
+'Been very handsome to _you_, for fifteen years, my sakes!' she replied.
+
+He made no answer to this, but sat with his bright, quick eyes upon her.
+
+Then he rose. She started involuntarily. But he only said, in his
+laconic, measured way:
+
+'It's warm in here now.'
+
+And he pulled off his overcoat, throwing it on the table. She sat as if
+slightly cowed, whilst he did so.
+
+'Them ropes has given my arms something, by Ga-ard,' he drawled, feeling
+his arms with his hands.
+
+Still she sat in her chair before him, slightly cowed.
+
+'You was sharp, wasn't you, to catch me like that, eh?' he smiled slowly.
+'By Ga-ard, you had me fixed proper, proper you had. Darn me, you fixed
+me up proper--proper, you did.'
+
+He leaned forwards in his chair towards her.
+
+'I don't think no worse of you for it, no, darned if I do. Fine pluck in
+a woman's what I admire. That I do, indeed.'
+
+She only gazed into the fire.
+
+'We fet from the start, we did. And, my word, you begin again quick the
+minute you see me, you did. Darn me, you was too sharp for me. A darn
+fine woman, puts up a darn good fight. Darn me if I could find a woman in
+all the darn States as could get me down like that. Wonderful fine woman
+you be, truth to say, at this minute.'
+
+She only sat glowering into the fire.
+
+'As grand a pluck as a man could wish to find in a woman, true as I'm
+here,' he said, reaching forward his hand and tentatively touching her
+between her full, warm breasts, quietly.
+
+She started, and seemed to shudder. But his hand insinuated itself
+between her breasts, as she continued to gaze in the fire.
+
+'And don't you think I've come back here a-begging,' he said. 'I've more
+than _one_ thousand pounds to my name, I have. And a bit of a fight for a
+how-de-do pleases me, that it do. But that doesn't mean as you're going
+to deny as you're my Missis....'
+
+
+
+
+_The Primrose Path_
+
+
+A young man came out of the Victoria station, looking undecidedly at
+the taxi-cabs, dark-red and black, pressing against the kerb under the
+glass-roof. Several men in greatcoats and brass buttons jerked themselves
+erect to catch his attention, at the same time keeping an eye on the
+other people as they filtered through the open doorways of the station.
+Berry, however, was occupied by one of the men, a big, burly fellow whose
+blue eyes glared back and whose red-brown moustache bristled in defiance.
+
+'Do you _want_ a cab, sir?' the man asked, in a half-mocking, challenging
+voice.
+
+Berry hesitated still.
+
+'Are you Daniel Sutton?' he asked.
+
+'Yes,' replied the other defiantly, with uneasy conscience.
+
+'Then you are my uncle,' said Berry.
+
+They were alike in colouring, and somewhat in features, but the taxi
+driver was a powerful, well-fleshed man who glared at the world
+aggressively, being really on the defensive against his own heart. His
+nephew, of the same height, was thin, well-dressed, quiet and indifferent
+in his manner. And yet they were obviously kin.
+
+'And who the devil are you?' asked the taxi driver.
+
+'I'm Daniel Berry,' replied the nephew.
+
+'Well, I'm damned--never saw you since you were a kid.'
+
+Rather awkwardly at this late hour the two shook hands.
+
+'How are you, lad?'
+
+'All right. I thought you were in Australia.'
+
+'Been back three months--bought a couple of these damned things'--he
+kicked the tyre of his taxi-cab in affectionate disgust. There was a
+moment's silence.
+
+'Oh, but I'm going back out there. I can't stand this cankering,
+rotten-hearted hell of a country any more; you want to come out to Sydney
+with me, lad. That's the place for you--beautiful place, oh, you could
+wish for nothing better. And money in it, too.--How's your mother?'
+
+'She died at Christmas,' said the young man.
+
+'Dead! What!--our Anna!' The big man's eyes stared, and he recoiled in
+fear. 'God, lad,' he said, 'that's three of 'em gone!'
+
+The two men looked away at the people passing along the pale grey
+pavements, under the wall of Trinity Church.
+
+'Well, strike me lucky!' said the taxi driver at last, out of breath.
+'She wor th' best o' th' bunch of 'em. I see nowt nor hear nowt from
+any of 'em--they're not worth it, I'll be damned if they are--our
+sermon-lapping Adela and Maud,' he looked scornfully at his nephew. 'But
+she was the best of 'em, our Anna was, that's a fact.'
+
+He was talking because he was afraid.
+
+'An' after a hard life like she'd had. How old was she, lad?'
+
+'Fifty-five.'
+
+'Fifty-five ...' He hesitated. Then, in a rather hushed voice, he asked
+the question that frightened him:
+
+'And what was it, then?'
+
+'Cancer.'
+
+'Cancer again, like Julia! I never knew there was cancer in our family.
+Oh, my good God, our poor Anna, after the life she'd had!--What, lad, do
+you see any God at the back of that?--I'm damned if I do.'
+
+He was glaring, very blue-eyed and fierce, at his nephew. Berry lifted
+his shoulders slightly.
+
+'God?' went on the taxi driver, in a curious intense tone, 'You've only
+to look at the folk in the street to know there's nothing keeps it going
+but gravitation. Look at 'em. Look at him!'--A mongrel-looking man was
+nosing past. 'Wouldn't _he_ murder you for your watch-chain, but that
+he's afraid of society. He's got it _in_ him.... Look at 'em.'
+
+Berry watched the towns-people go by, and, sensitively feeling his
+uncle's antipathy, it seemed he was watching a sort of _danse macabre_ of
+ugly criminals.
+
+'Did you ever see such a God-forsaken crew creeping about! It gives you
+the very horrors to look at 'em. I sit in this damned car and watch 'em
+till, I can tell you, I feel like running the cab amuck among 'em, and
+running myself to kingdom come--'
+
+Berry wondered at this outburst. He knew his uncle was the black-sheep,
+the youngest, the darling of his mother's family. He knew him to be at
+outs with respectability, mixing with the looser, sporting type, all
+betting and drinking and showing dogs and birds, and racing. As a critic
+of life, however, he did not know him. But the young man felt curiously
+understanding. 'He uses words like I do, he talks nearly as I talk,
+except that I shouldn't say those things. But I might feel like that, in
+myself, if I went a certain road.'
+
+'I've got to go to Watmore,' he said. 'Can you take me?'
+
+'When d'you want to go?' asked the uncle fiercely.
+
+'Now.'
+
+'Come on, then. What d'yer stand gassin' on th' causeway for?'
+
+The nephew took his seat beside the driver. The cab began to quiver, then
+it started forward with a whirr. The uncle, his hands and feet acting
+mechanically, kept his blue eyes fixed on the highroad into whose traffic
+the car was insinuating its way. Berry felt curiously as if he were
+sitting beside an older development of himself. His mind went back to his
+mother. She had been twenty years older than this brother of hers whom
+she had loved so dearly. 'He was one of the most affectionate little
+lads, and such a curly head! I could never have believed he would grow
+into the great, coarse bully he is--for he's nothing else. My father made
+a god of him--well, it's a good thing his father is dead. He got in with
+that sporting gang, that's what did it. Things were made too easy for
+him, and so he thought of no one but himself, and this is the result.'
+
+Not that 'Joky' Sutton was so very black a sheep. He had lived idly till
+he was eighteen, then had suddenly married a young, beautiful girl with
+clear brows and dark grey eyes, a factory girl. Having taken her to live
+with his parents he, lover of dogs and pigeons, went on to the staff
+of a sporting paper. But his wife was without uplift or warmth. Though
+they made money enough, their house was dark and cold and uninviting.
+He had two or three dogs, and the whole attic was turned into a great
+pigeon-house. He and his wife lived together roughly, with no warmth, no
+refinement, no touch of beauty anywhere, except that she was beautiful.
+He was a blustering, impetuous man, she was rather cold in her soul, did
+not care about anything very much, was rather capable and close with
+money. And she had a common accent in her speech. He outdid her a
+thousand times in coarse language, and yet that cold twang in her voice
+tortured him with shame that he stamped down in bullying and in becoming
+more violent in his own speech.
+
+Only his dogs adored him, and to them, and to his pigeons, he talked with
+rough, yet curiously tender caresses while they leaped and fluttered for
+joy.
+
+After he and his wife had been married for seven years a little girl was
+born to them, then later, another. But the husband and wife drew no
+nearer together. She had an affection for her children almost like a cool
+governess. He had an emotional man's fear of sentiment, which helped to
+nip his wife from putting out any shoots. He treated his children
+roughly, and pretended to think it a good job when one was adopted by a
+well-to-do maternal aunt. But in his soul he hated his wife that she
+could give away one of his children. For after her cool fashion, she
+loved him. With a chaos of a man such as he, she had no chance of being
+anything but cold and hard, poor thing. For she did love him.
+
+In the end he fell absurdly and violently in love with a rather
+sentimental young woman who read Browning. He made his wife an allowance
+and established a new menage with the young lady, shortly after
+emigrating with her to Australia. Meanwhile his wife had gone to live
+with a publican, a widower, with whom she had had one of those curious,
+tacit understandings of which quiet women are capable, something like an
+arrangement for provision in the future.
+
+This was as much as the nephew knew. He sat beside his uncle, wondering
+how things stood at the present. They raced lightly out past the cemetery
+and along the boulevard, then turned into the rather grimy country. The
+mud flew out on either side, there was a fine mist of rain which blew in
+their faces. Berry covered himself up.
+
+In the lanes the high hedges shone black with rain. The silvery grey sky,
+faintly dappled, spread wide over the low, green land. The elder man
+glanced fiercely up the road, then turned his red face to his nephew.
+
+'And how're you going on, lad?' he said loudly. Berry noticed that his
+uncle was slightly uneasy of him. It made him also uncomfortable. The
+elder man had evidently something pressing on his soul.
+
+'Who are you living with in town?' asked the nephew. 'Have you gone back
+to Aunt Maud?'
+
+'No,' barked the uncle. 'She wouldn't have me. I offered to--I want
+to--but she wouldn't.'
+
+'You're alone, then?'
+
+'No, I'm not alone.'
+
+He turned and glared with his fierce blue eyes at his nephew, but said no
+more for some time. The car ran on through the mud, under the wet wall of
+the park.
+
+'That other devil tried to poison me,' suddenly shouted the elder man.
+'The one I went to Australia with.' At which, in spite of himself, the
+younger smiled in secret.
+
+'How was that?' he asked.
+
+'Wanted to get rid of me. She got in with another fellow on the
+ship.... By Jove, I was bad.'
+
+'Where?--on the ship?'
+
+'No,' bellowed the other. 'No. That was in Wellington, New Zealand. I was
+bad, and got lower an' lower--couldn't think what was up. I could hardly
+crawl about. As certain as I'm here, she was poisoning me, to get to th'
+other chap--I'm certain of it.'
+
+'And what did you do?'
+
+'I cleared out--went to Sydney--'
+
+'And left her?'
+
+'Yes, I thought begod, I'd better clear out if I wanted to live.'
+
+'And you were all right in Sydney?'
+
+'Better in no time--I _know_ she was putting poison in my coffee.'
+
+'Hm!'
+
+There was a glum silence. The driver stared at the road ahead, fixedly,
+managing the car as if it were a live thing. The nephew felt that his
+uncle was afraid, quite stupefied with fear, fear of life, of death, of
+himself.
+
+'You're in rooms, then?' asked the nephew.
+
+'No, I'm in a house of my own,' said the uncle defiantly, 'wi' th' best
+little woman in th' Midlands. She's a marvel.--Why don't you come an' see
+us?'
+
+'I will. Who is she?'
+
+'Oh, she's a good girl--a beautiful little thing. I was clean gone
+on her first time I saw her. An' she was on me. Her mother lives with
+us--respectable girl, none o' your....'
+
+'And how old is she?'
+
+'--how old is she?--she's twenty-one.'
+
+'Poor thing.'
+
+'_She's_ right enough.'
+
+'You'd marry her--getting a divorce--?'
+
+'I shall marry her.'
+
+There was a little antagonism between the two men.
+
+'Where's Aunt Maud?' asked the younger.
+
+'She's at the Railway Arms--we passed it, just against Rollin's Mill
+Crossing.... They sent me a note this morning to go an' see her when I
+can spare time. She's got consumption.'
+
+'Good Lord! Are you going?'
+
+'Yes--'
+
+But again Berry felt that his uncle was afraid.
+
+The young man got through his commission in the village, had a drink with
+his uncle at the inn, and the two were returning home. The elder man's
+subject of conversation was Australia. As they drew near the town they
+grew silent, thinking both of the public-house. At last they saw the
+gates of the railway crossing were closed before them.
+
+'Shan't you call?' asked Berry, jerking his head in the direction of the
+inn, which stood at the corner between two roads, its sign hanging under
+a bare horse-chestnut tree in front.
+
+'I might as well. Come in an' have a drink,' said the uncle.
+
+It had been raining all the morning, so shallow pools of water lay about.
+A brewer's wagon, with wet barrels and warm-smelling horses, stood near
+the door of the inn. Everywhere seemed silent, but for the rattle of
+trains at the crossing. The two men went uneasily up the steps and into
+the bar. The place was paddled with wet feet, empty. As the bar-man was
+heard approaching, the uncle asked, his usual bluster slightly hushed by
+fear:
+
+'What yer goin' ta have, lad? Same as last time?'
+
+A man entered, evidently the proprietor. He was good-looking, with a
+long, heavy face and quick, dark eyes. His glance at Sutton was swift, a
+start, a recognition, and a withdrawal, into heavy neutrality.
+
+'How are yer, Dan?' he said, scarcely troubling to speak.
+
+'Are yer, George?' replied Sutton, hanging back. 'My nephew, Dan Berry.
+Give us Red Seal, George.'
+
+The publican nodded to the younger man, and set the glasses on the bar.
+He pushed forward the two glasses, then leaned back in the dark corner
+behind the door, his arms folded, evidently preferring to get back from
+the watchful eyes of the nephew.
+
+'--'s luck,' said Sutton.
+
+The publican nodded in acknowledgement. Sutton and his nephew drank.
+
+'Why the hell don't you get that road mended in Cinder Hill--,' said
+Sutton fiercely, pushing back his driver's cap and showing his short-cut,
+bristling hair.
+
+'They can't find it in their hearts to pull it up,' replied the publican,
+laconically.
+
+'Find in their hearts! They want settin' in barrows an' runnin' up an'
+down it till they cried for mercy.'
+
+Sutton put down his glass. The publican renewed it with a sure hand, at
+ease in whatsoever he did. Then he leaned back against the bar. He wore
+no coat. He stood with arms folded, his chin on his chest, his long
+moustache hanging. His back was round and slack, so that the lower part
+of his abdomen stuck forward, though he was not stout. His cheek was
+healthy, brown-red, and he was muscular. Yet there was about him this
+physical slackness, a reluctance in his slow, sure movements. His eyes
+were keen under his dark brows, but reluctant also, as if he were
+gloomily apathetic.
+
+There was a halt. The publican evidently would say nothing. Berry looked
+at the mahogany bar-counter, slopped with beer, at the whisky-bottles on
+the shelves. Sutton, his cap pushed back, showing a white brow above a
+weather-reddened face, rubbed his cropped hair uneasily.
+
+The publican glanced round suddenly. It seemed that only his dark eyes
+moved.
+
+'Going up?' he asked.
+
+And something, perhaps his eyes, indicated the unseen bed-chamber.
+
+'Ay--that's what I came for,' replied Sutton, shifting nervously from one
+foot to the other. 'She's been asking for me?'
+
+'This morning,' replied the publican, neutral.
+
+Then he put up a flap of the bar, and turned away through the dark
+doorway behind. Sutton, pulling off his cap, showing a round,
+short-cropped head which now was ducked forward, followed after him, the
+buttons holding the strap of his great-coat behind glittering for a
+moment.
+
+They climbed the dark stairs, the husband placing his feet carefully,
+because of his big boots. Then he followed down the passage, trying
+vaguely to keep a grip on his bowels, which seemed to be melting away,
+and definitely wishing for a neat brandy. The publican opened a door.
+Sutton, big and burly in his great-coat, went past him.
+
+The bedroom seemed light and warm after the passage. There was a red
+eider-down on the bed. Then, making an effort, Sutton turned his eyes to
+see the sick woman. He met her eyes direct, dark, dilated. It was such a
+shock he almost started away. For a second he remained in torture, as if
+some invisible flame were playing on him to reduce his bones and fuse him
+down. Then he saw the sharp white edge of her jaw, and the black hair
+beside the hollow cheek. With a start he went towards the bed.
+
+'Hello, Maud!' he said. 'Why, what ye been doin'?'
+
+The publican stood at the window with his back to the bed. The husband,
+like one condemned but on the point of starting away, stood by the
+bedside staring in horror at his wife, whose dilated grey eyes, nearly
+all black now, watched him wearily, as if she were looking at something a
+long way off.
+
+Going exceedingly pale, he jerked up his head and stared at the wall over
+the pillows. There was a little coloured picture of a bird perched on a
+bell, and a nest among ivy leaves beneath. It appealed to him, made him
+wonder, roused a feeling of childish magic in him. They were wonderfully
+fresh, green ivy leaves, and nobody had seen the nest among them save
+him.
+
+Then suddenly he looked down again at the face on the bed, to try and
+recognize it. He knew the white brow and the beautiful clear eyebrows.
+That was his wife, with whom he had passed his youth, flesh of his flesh,
+his, himself. Then those tired eyes, which met his again from a long way
+off, disturbed him until he did not know where he was. Only the sunken
+cheeks, and the mouth that seemed to protrude now were foreign to him,
+and filled him with horror. It seemed he lost his identity. He was the
+young husband of the woman with the clear brows; he was the married man
+fighting with her whose eyes watched him, a little indifferently, from a
+long way off; and he was a child in horror of that protruding mouth.
+
+There came a crackling sound of her voice. He knew she had consumption of
+the throat, and braced himself hard to bear the noise.
+
+'What was it, Maud?' he asked in panic.
+
+Then the broken, crackling voice came again. He was too terrified of the
+sound of it to hear what was said. There was a pause.
+
+'You'll take Winnie?' the publican's voice interpreted from the window.
+
+'Don't you bother, Maud, I'll take her,' he said, stupefying his mind so
+as not to understand.
+
+He looked curiously round the room. It was not a bad bedroom, light and
+warm. There were many medicine bottles aggregated in a corner of the
+washstand--and a bottle of Three Star brandy, half full. And there were
+also photographs of strange people on the chest of drawers. It was not a
+bad room.
+
+Again he started as if he were shot. She was speaking. He bent down, but
+did not look at her.
+
+'Be good to her,' she whispered.
+
+When he realized her meaning, that he should be good to their child when
+the mother was gone, a blade went through his flesh.
+
+'I'll be good to her, Maud, don't you bother,' he said, beginning to feel
+shaky.
+
+He looked again at the picture of the bird. It perched cheerfully under a
+blue sky, with robust, jolly ivy leaves near. He was gathering his
+courage to depart. He looked down, but struggled hard not to take in the
+sight of his wife's face.
+
+'I s'll come again, Maud,' he said. 'I hope you'll go on all right. Is
+there anything as you want?'
+
+There was an almost imperceptible shake of the head from the sick woman,
+making his heart melt swiftly again. Then, dragging his limbs, he got out
+of the room and down the stairs.
+
+The landlord came after him.
+
+'I'll let you know if anything happens,' the publican said, still
+laconic, but with his eyes dark and swift.
+
+'Ay, a' right,' said Sutton blindly. He looked round for his cap, which
+he had all the time in his hand. Then he got out of doors.
+
+In a moment the uncle and nephew were in the car jolting on the level
+crossing. The elder man seemed as if something tight in his brain made
+him open his eyes wide, and stare. He held the steering wheel firmly. He
+knew he could steer accurately, to a hair's breadth. Glaring fixedly
+ahead, he let the car go, till it bounded over the uneven road. There
+were three coal-carts in a string. In an instant the car grazed past
+them, almost biting the kerb on the other side. Sutton aimed his car like
+a projectile, staring ahead. He did not want to know, to think, to
+realize, he wanted to be only the driver of that quick taxi.
+
+The town drew near, suddenly. There were allotment-gardens with
+dark-purple twiggy fruit-trees and wet alleys between the hedges. Then
+suddenly the streets of dwelling-houses whirled close, and the car was
+climbing the hill, with an angry whirr,--up--up--till they rode out on to
+the crest and could see the tram-cars, dark-red and yellow, threading
+their way round the corner below, and all the traffic roaring between the
+shops.
+
+'Got anywhere to go?' asked Sutton of his nephew.
+
+'I was going to see one or two people.'
+
+'Come an' have a bit o' dinner with us,' said the other.
+
+Berry knew that his uncle wanted to be distracted, so that he should not
+think nor realize. The big man was running hard away from the horror of
+realization.
+
+'All right,' Berry agreed.
+
+The car went quickly through the town. It ran up a long street nearly
+into the country again. Then it pulled up at a house that stood alone,
+below the road.
+
+'I s'll be back in ten minutes,' said the uncle.
+
+The car went on to the garage. Berry stood curiously at the top of the
+stone stairs that led from the highroad down to the level of the house,
+an old stone place. The garden was dilapidated. Broken fruit-trees
+leaned at a sharp angle down the steep bank. Right across the dim
+grey atmosphere, in a kind of valley on the edge of the town, new
+suburb-patches showed pinkish on the dark earth. It was a kind of
+unresolved borderland.
+
+Berry went down the steps. Through the broken black fence of the orchard,
+long grass showed yellow. The place seemed deserted. He knocked, then
+knocked again. An elderly woman appeared. She looked like a housekeeper.
+At first she said suspiciously that Mr. Sutton was not in.
+
+'My uncle just put me down. He'll be in in ten minutes,' replied the
+visitor.
+
+'Oh, are you the Mr. Berry who is related to him?' exclaimed the elderly
+woman. 'Come in--come in.'
+
+She was at once kindly and a little bit servile. The young man entered.
+It was an old house, rather dark, and sparsely furnished. The elderly
+woman sat nervously on the edge of one of the chairs in a drawing-room
+that looked as if it were furnished from dismal relics of dismal homes,
+and there was a little straggling attempt at conversation. Mrs. Greenwell
+was evidently a working class woman unused to service or to any
+formality.
+
+Presently she gathered up courage to invite her visitor into the
+dining-room. There from the table under the window rose a tall, slim girl
+with a cat in her arms. She was evidently a little more lady-like than
+was habitual to her, but she had a gentle, delicate, small nature. Her
+brown hair almost covered her ears, her dark lashes came down in shy
+awkwardness over her beautiful blue eyes. She shook hands in a frank way,
+yet she was shrinking. Evidently she was not sure how her position would
+affect her visitor. And yet she was assured in herself, shrinking and
+timid as she was.
+
+'She must be a good deal in love with him,' thought Berry.
+
+Both women glanced shamefacedly at the roughly laid table. Evidently they
+ate in a rather rough and ready fashion.
+
+Elaine--she had this poetic name--fingered her cat timidly, not knowing
+what to say or to do, unable even to ask her visitor to sit down. He
+noticed how her skirt hung almost flat on her hips. She was young, scarce
+developed, a long, slender thing. Her colouring was warm and exquisite.
+
+The elder woman bustled out to the kitchen. Berry fondled the terrier
+dogs that had come curiously to his heels, and glanced out of the window
+at the wet, deserted orchard.
+
+This room, too, was not well furnished, and rather dark. But there was a
+big red fire.
+
+'He always has fox terriers,' he said.
+
+'Yes,' she answered, showing her teeth in a smile.
+
+'Do you like them, too?'
+
+'Yes'--she glanced down at the dogs. 'I like Tam better than Sally--'
+
+Her speech always tailed off into an awkward silence.
+
+'We've been to see Aunt Maud,' said the nephew.
+
+Her eyes, blue and scared and shrinking, met his.
+
+'Dan had a letter,' he explained. 'She's very bad.'
+
+'Isn't it horrible!' she exclaimed, her face crumbling up with fear.
+
+The old woman, evidently a hard-used, rather down-trodden workman's wife,
+came in with two soup-plates. She glanced anxiously to see how her
+daughter was progressing with the visitor.
+
+'Mother, Dan's been to see Maud,' said Elaine, in a quiet voice full of
+fear and trouble.
+
+The old woman looked up anxiously, in question.
+
+'I think she wanted him to take the child. She's very bad, I believe,'
+explained Berry.
+
+'Oh, we should take Winnie!' cried Elaine. But both women seemed
+uncertain, wavering in their position. Already Berry could see that his
+uncle had bullied them, as he bullied everybody. But they were used to
+unpleasant men, and seemed to keep at a distance.
+
+'Will you have some soup?' asked the mother, humbly.
+
+She evidently did the work. The daughter was to be a lady, more or less,
+always dressed and nice for when Sutton came in.
+
+They heard him heavily running down the steps outside. The dogs got up.
+Elaine seemed to forget the visitor. It was as if she came into life. Yet
+she was nervous and afraid. The mother stood as if ready to exculpate
+herself.
+
+Sutton burst open the door. Big, blustering, wet in his immense grey
+coat, he came into the dining-room.
+
+'Hello!' he said to his nephew, 'making yourself at home?'
+
+'Oh, yes,' replied Berry.
+
+'Hello, Jack,' he said to the girl. 'Got owt to grizzle about?'
+
+'What for?' she asked, in a clear, half-challenging voice, that had that
+peculiar twang, almost petulant, so female and so attractive. Yet she was
+defiant like a boy.
+
+'It's a wonder if you haven't,' growled Sutton. And, with a really
+intimate movement, he stooped down and fondled his dogs, though paying no
+attention to them. Then he stood up, and remained with feet apart on the
+hearthrug, his head ducked forward, watching the girl. He seemed
+abstracted, as if he could only watch her. His great-coat hung open, so
+that she could see his figure, simple and human in the great husk of
+cloth. She stood nervously with her hands behind her, glancing at him,
+unable to see anything else. And he was scarcely conscious but of her.
+His eyes were still strained and staring, and as they followed the girl,
+when, long-limbed and languid, she moved away, it was as if he saw in her
+something impersonal, the female, not the woman.
+
+'Had your dinner?' he asked.
+
+'We were just going to have it,' she replied, with the same curious
+little vibration in her voice, like the twang of a string.
+
+The mother entered, bringing a saucepan from which she ladled soup into
+three plates.
+
+'Sit down, lad,' said Sutton. 'You sit down, Jack, an' give me mine
+here.'
+
+'Oh, aren't you coming to table?' she complained.
+
+'No, I tell you,' he snarled, almost pretending to be disagreeable. But
+she was slightly afraid even of the pretence, which pleased and relieved
+him. He stood on the hearthrug eating his soup noisily.
+
+'Aren't you going to take your coat off?' she said. 'It's filling the
+place full of steam.'
+
+He did not answer, but, with his head bent forward over the plate, he ate
+his soup hastily, to get it done with. When he put down his empty plate,
+she rose and went to him.
+
+'Do take your coat off, Dan,' she said, and she took hold of the breast
+of his coat, trying to push it back over his shoulder. But she could not.
+Only the stare in his eyes changed to a glare as her hand moved over his
+shoulder. He looked down into her eyes. She became pale, rather
+frightened-looking, and she turned her face away, and it was drawn
+slightly with love and fear and misery. She tried again to put off his
+coat, her thin wrists pulling at it. He stood solidly planted, and did
+not look at her, but stared straight in front. She was playing with
+passion, afraid of it, and really wretched because it left her, the
+person, out of count. Yet she continued. And there came into his bearing,
+into his eyes, the curious smile of passion, pushing away even the
+death-horror. It was life stronger than death in him. She stood close to
+his breast. Their eyes met, and she was carried away.
+
+'Take your coat off, Dan,' she said coaxingly, in a low tone meant for no
+one but him. And she slid her hands on his shoulder, and he yielded, so
+that the coat was pushed back. She had flushed, and her eyes had grown
+very bright. She got hold of the cuff of his coat. Gently, he eased
+himself, so that she drew it off. Then he stood in a thin suit, which
+revealed his vigorous, almost mature form.
+
+'What a weight!' she exclaimed, in a peculiar penetrating voice, as she
+went out hugging the overcoat. In a moment she came back.
+
+He stood still in the same position, a frown over his fiercely staring
+eyes. The pain, the fear, the horror in his breast were all burning away
+in the new, fiercest flame of passion.
+
+'Get your dinner,' he said roughly to her.
+
+'I've had all I want,' she said. 'You come an' have yours.'
+
+He looked at the table as if he found it difficult to see things.
+
+'I want no more,' he said.
+
+She stood close to his chest. She wanted to touch him and to comfort him.
+There was something about him now that fascinated her. Berry felt
+slightly ashamed that she seemed to ignore the presence of others in the
+room.
+
+The mother came in. She glanced at Sutton, standing planted on the
+hearthrug, his head ducked, the heavy frown hiding his eyes. There was a
+peculiar braced intensity about him that made the elder woman afraid.
+Suddenly he jerked his head round to his nephew.
+
+'Get on wi' your dinner, lad,' he said, and he went to the door. The
+dogs, which had continually lain down and got up again, uneasy, now rose
+and watched. The girl went after him, saying, clearly:
+
+'What did you want, Dan?'
+
+Her slim, quick figure was gone, the door was closed behind her.
+
+There was silence. The mother, still more slave-like in her movement, sat
+down in a low chair. Berry drank some beer.
+
+'That girl will leave him,' he said to himself. 'She'll hate him like
+poison. And serve him right. Then she'll go off with somebody else.'
+
+And she did.
+
+
+
+
+_The Horse Dealer's Daughter_
+
+
+'Well, Mabel, and what are you going to do with yourself?' asked Joe,
+with foolish flippancy. He felt quite safe himself. Without listening for
+an answer, he turned aside, worked a grain of tobacco to the tip of his
+tongue, and spat it out. He did not care about anything, since he felt
+safe himself.
+
+The three brothers and the sister sat round the desolate breakfast table,
+attempting some sort of desultory consultation. The morning's post had
+given the final tap to the family fortunes, and all was over. The dreary
+dining-room itself, with its heavy mahogany furniture, looked as if it
+were waiting to be done away with.
+
+But the consultation amounted to nothing. There was a strange air of
+ineffectuality about the three men, as they sprawled at table, smoking
+and reflecting vaguely on their own condition. The girl was alone, a
+rather short, sullen-looking young woman of twenty-seven. She did not
+share the same life as her brothers. She would have been good-looking,
+save for the impassive fixity of her face, 'bull-dog', as her brothers
+called it.
+
+There was a confused tramping of horses' feet outside. The three men all
+sprawled round in their chairs to watch. Beyond the dark holly-bushes
+that separated the strip of lawn from the highroad, they could see a
+cavalcade of shire horses swinging out of their own yard, being taken for
+exercise. This was the last time. These were the last horses that would
+go through their hands. The young men watched with critical, callous
+look. They were all frightened at the collapse of their lives, and the
+sense of disaster in which they were involved left them no inner freedom.
+
+Yet they were three fine, well-set fellows enough. Joe, the eldest, was a
+man of thirty-three, broad and handsome in a hot, flushed way. His face
+was red, he twisted his black moustache over a thick finger, his eyes
+were shallow and restless. He had a sensual way of uncovering his teeth
+when he laughed, and his bearing was stupid. Now he watched the horses
+with a glazed look of helplessness in his eyes, a certain stupor of
+downfall.
+
+The great draught-horses swung past. They were tied head to tail, four of
+them, and they heaved along to where a lane branched off from the
+highroad, planting their great hoofs floutingly in the fine black mud,
+swinging their great rounded haunches sumptuously, and trotting a few
+sudden steps as they were led into the lane, round the corner. Every
+movement showed a massive, slumbrous strength, and a stupidity which held
+them in subjection. The groom at the head looked back, jerking the
+leading rope. And the calvalcade moved out of sight up the lane, the tail
+of the last horse, bobbed up tight and stiff, held out taut from the
+swinging great haunches as they rocked behind the hedges in a motionlike
+sleep.
+
+Joe watched with glazed hopeless eyes. The horses were almost like his
+own body to him. He felt he was done for now. Luckily he was engaged to a
+woman as old as himself, and therefore her father, who was steward of a
+neighbouring estate, would provide him with a job. He would marry and go
+into harness. His life was over, he would be a subject animal now.
+
+He turned uneasily aside, the retreating steps of the horses echoing in
+his ears. Then, with foolish restlessness, he reached for the scraps of
+bacon-rind from the plates, and making a faint whistling sound, flung
+them to the terrier that lay against the fender. He watched the dog
+swallow them, and waited till the creature looked into his eyes. Then a
+faint grin came on his face, and in a high, foolish voice he said:
+
+'You won't get much more bacon, shall you, you little b----?'
+
+The dog faintly and dismally wagged its tail, then lowered his haunches,
+circled round, and lay down again.
+
+There was another helpless silence at the table. Joe sprawled uneasily in
+his seat, not willing to go till the family conclave was dissolved. Fred
+Henry, the second brother, was erect, clean-limbed, alert. He had watched
+the passing of the horses with more _sang-froid_. If he was an animal,
+like Joe, he was an animal which controls, not one which is controlled.
+He was master of any horse, and he carried himself with a well-tempered
+air of mastery. But he was not master of the situations of life. He
+pushed his coarse brown moustache upwards, off his lip, and glanced
+irritably at his sister, who sat impassive and inscrutable.
+
+'You'll go and stop with Lucy for a bit, shan't you?' he asked. The girl
+did not answer.
+
+'I don't see what else you can do,' persisted Fred Henry.
+
+'Go as a skivvy,' Joe interpolated laconically.
+
+The girl did not move a muscle.
+
+'If I was her, I should go in for training for a nurse,' said Malcolm,
+the youngest of them all. He was the baby of the family, a young man of
+twenty-two, with a fresh, jaunty _museau_.
+
+But Mabel did not take any notice of him. They had talked at her and
+round her for so many years, that she hardly heard them at all.
+
+The marble clock on the mantel-piece softly chimed the half-hour, the dog
+rose uneasily from the hearthrug and looked at the party at the breakfast
+table. But still they sat on in ineffectual conclave.
+
+'Oh, all right,' said Joe suddenly, _a propos_ of nothing. 'I'll get a
+move on.'
+
+He pushed back his chair, straddled his knees with a downward jerk, to
+get them free, in horsy fashion, and went to the fire. Still he did not
+go out of the room; he was curious to know what the others would do or
+say. He began to charge his pipe, looking down at the dog and saying, in
+a high, affected voice:
+
+'Going wi' me? Going wi' me are ter? Tha'rt goin' further than tha counts
+on just now, dost hear?'
+
+The dog faintly wagged its tail, the man stuck out his jaw and covered
+his pipe with his hands, and puffed intently, losing himself in the
+tobacco, looking down all the while at the dog with an absent brown eye.
+The dog looked up at him in mournful distrust. Joe stood with his knees
+stuck out, in real horsy fashion.
+
+'Have you had a letter from Lucy?' Fred Henry asked of his sister.
+
+'Last week,' came the neutral reply.
+
+'And what does she say?'
+
+There was no answer.
+
+'Does she _ask_ you to go and stop there?' persisted Fred Henry.
+
+'She says I can if I like.'
+
+'Well, then, you'd better. Tell her you'll come on Monday.'
+
+This was received in silence.
+
+'That's what you'll do then, is it?' said Fred Henry, in some
+exasperation.
+
+But she made no answer. There was a silence of futility and irritation in
+the room. Malcolm grinned fatuously.
+
+'You'll have to make up your mind between now and next Wednesday,' said
+Joe loudly, 'or else find yourself lodgings on the kerbstone.'
+
+The face of the young woman darkened, but she sat on immutable.
+
+'Here's Jack Fergusson!' exclaimed Malcolm, who was looking aimlessly out
+of the window.
+
+'Where?' exclaimed Joe, loudly.
+
+'Just gone past.'
+
+'Coming in?'
+
+Malcolm craned his neck to see the gate.
+
+'Yes,' he said.
+
+There was a silence. Mabel sat on like one condemned, at the head of the
+table. Then a whistle was heard from the kitchen. The dog got up and
+barked sharply. Joe opened the door and shouted:
+
+'Come on.'
+
+After a moment a young man entered. He was muffled up in overcoat and a
+purple woollen scarf, and his tweed cap, which he did not remove, was
+pulled down on his head. He was of medium height, his face was rather
+long and pale, his eyes looked tired.
+
+'Hello, Jack! Well, Jack!' exclaimed Malcolm and Joe. Fred Henry merely
+said, 'Jack.'
+
+'What's doing?' asked the newcomer, evidently addressing Fred Henry.
+
+'Same. We've got to be out by Wednesday.--Got a cold?'
+
+'I have--got it bad, too.'
+
+'Why don't you stop in?'
+
+'_Me_ stop in? When I can't stand on my legs, perhaps I shall have a
+chance.' The young man spoke huskily. He had a slight Scotch accent.
+
+'It's a knock-out, isn't it,' said Joe, boisterously, 'if a doctor goes
+round croaking with a cold. Looks bad for the patients, doesn't it?'
+
+The young doctor looked at him slowly.
+
+'Anything the matter with _you_, then?' he asked sarcastically.
+
+'Not as I know of. Damn your eyes, I hope not. Why?'
+
+'I thought you were very concerned about the patients, wondered if you
+might be one yourself.'
+
+'Damn it, no, I've never been patient to no flaming doctor, and hope I
+never shall be,' returned Joe.
+
+At this point Mabel rose from the table, and they all seemed to become
+aware of her existence. She began putting the dishes together. The young
+doctor looked at her, but did not address her. He had not greeted her.
+She went out of the room with the tray, her face impassive and unchanged.
+
+'When are you off then, all of you?' asked the doctor.
+
+'I'm catching the eleven-forty,' replied Malcolm. 'Are you goin' down wi'
+th' trap, Joe?'
+
+'Yes, I've told you I'm going down wi' th' trap, haven't I?'
+
+'We'd better be getting her in then.--So long, Jack, if I don't see you
+before I go,' said Malcolm, shaking hands.
+
+He went out, followed by Joe, who seemed to have his tail between his
+legs.
+
+'Well, this is the devil's own,' exclaimed the doctor, when he was left
+alone with Fred Henry. 'Going before Wednesday, are you?'
+
+'That's the orders,' replied the other.
+
+'Where, to Northampton?'
+
+'That's it.'
+
+'The devil!' exclaimed Fergusson, with quiet chagrin.
+
+And there was silence between the two.
+
+'All settled up, are you?' asked Fergusson.
+
+'About.'
+
+There was another pause.
+
+'Well, I shall miss yer, Freddy, boy,' said the young doctor.
+
+'And I shall miss thee, Jack,' returned the other.
+
+'Miss you like hell,' mused the doctor.
+
+Fred Henry turned aside. There was nothing to say. Mabel came in again,
+to finish clearing the table.
+
+'What are _you_ going to do, then, Miss Pervin?' asked Fergusson. 'Going
+to your sister's, are you?'
+
+Mabel looked at him with her steady, dangerous eyes, that always made him
+uncomfortable, unsettling his superficial ease.
+
+'No,' she said.
+
+'Well, what in the name of fortune _are_ you going to do? Say what you
+mean to do,' cried Fred Henry, with futile intensity.
+
+But she only averted her head, and continued her work. She folded the
+white table-cloth, and put on the chenille cloth.
+
+'The sulkiest bitch that ever trod!' muttered her brother.
+
+But she finished her task with perfectly impassive face, the young doctor
+watching her interestedly all the while. Then she went out.
+
+Fred Henry stared after her, clenching his lips, his blue eyes fixing in
+sharp antagonism, as he made a grimace of sour exasperation.
+
+'You could bray her into bits, and that's all you'd get out of her,' he
+said, in a small, narrowed tone.
+
+The doctor smiled faintly.
+
+'What's she _going_ to do, then?' he asked.
+
+'Strike me if I know!' returned the other.
+
+There was a pause. Then the doctor stirred.
+
+'I'll be seeing you tonight, shall I?' he said to his friend.
+
+'Ay--where's it to be? Are we going over to Jessdale?'
+
+'I don't know. I've got such a cold on me. I'll come round to the Moon
+and Stars, anyway.'
+
+'Let Lizzie and May miss their night for once, eh?'
+
+'That's it--if I feel as I do now.'
+
+'All's one--'
+
+The two young men went through the passage and down to the back door
+together. The house was large, but it was servantless now, and desolate.
+At the back was a small bricked house-yard, and beyond that a big square,
+gravelled fine and red, and having stables on two sides. Sloping, dank,
+winter-dark fields stretched away on the open sides.
+
+But the stables were empty. Joseph Pervin, the father of the family, had
+been a man of no education, who had become a fairly large horse dealer.
+The stables had been full of horses, there was a great turmoil and
+come-and-go of horses and of dealers and grooms. Then the kitchen was
+full of servants. But of late things had declined. The old man had
+married a second time, to retrieve his fortunes. Now he was dead and
+everything was gone to the dogs, there was nothing but debt and
+threatening.
+
+For months, Mabel had been servantless in the big house, keeping the home
+together in penury for her ineffectual brothers. She had kept house for
+ten years. But previously, it was with unstinted means. Then, however
+brutal and coarse everything was, the sense of money had kept her proud,
+confident. The men might be foul-mouthed, the women in the kitchen might
+have bad reputations, her brothers might have illegitimate children. But
+so long as there was money, the girl felt herself established, and
+brutally proud, reserved.
+
+No company came to the house, save dealers and coarse men. Mabel had no
+associates of her own sex, after her sister went away. But she did not
+mind. She went regularly to church, she attended to her father. And she
+lived in the memory of her mother, who had died when she was fourteen,
+and whom she had loved. She had loved her father, too, in a different
+way, depending upon him, and feeling secure in him, until at the age of
+fifty-four he married again. And then she had set hard against him. Now
+he had died and left them all hopelessly in debt.
+
+She had suffered badly during the period of poverty. Nothing, however,
+could shake the curious sullen, animal pride that dominated each member
+of the family. Now, for Mabel, the end had come. Still she would not cast
+about her. She would follow her own way just the same. She would always
+hold the keys of her own situation. Mindless and persistent, she endured
+from day to day. Why should she think? Why should she answer anybody? It
+was enough that this was the end, and there was no way out. She need not
+pass any more darkly along the main street of the small town, avoiding
+every eye. She need not demean herself any more, going into the shops and
+buying the cheapest food. This was at an end. She thought of nobody, not
+even of herself. Mindless and persistent, she seemed in a sort of ecstasy
+to be coming nearer to her fulfilment, her own glorification, approaching
+her dead mother, who was glorified.
+
+In the afternoon she took a little bag, with shears and sponge and a
+small scrubbing brush, and went out. It was a grey, wintry day, with
+saddened, dark-green fields and an atmosphere blackened by the smoke of
+foundries not far off. She went quickly, darkly along the causeway,
+heeding nobody, through the town to the churchyard.
+
+There she always felt secure, as if no one could see her, although as a
+matter of fact she was exposed to the stare of everyone who passed along
+under the churchyard wall. Nevertheless, once under the shadow of the
+great looming church, among the graves, she felt immune from the world,
+reserved within the thick churchyard wall as in another country.
+
+Carefully she clipped the grass from the grave, and arranged the
+pinky-white, small chrysanthemums in the tin cross. When this was done,
+she took an empty jar from a neighbouring grave, brought water, and
+carefully, most scrupulously sponged the marble headstone and the
+coping-stone.
+
+It gave her sincere satisfaction to do this. She felt in immediate
+contact with the world of her mother. She took minute pains, went through
+the park in a state bordering on pure happiness, as if in performing this
+task she came into a subtle, intimate connexion with her mother. For the
+life she followed here in the world was far less real than the world of
+death she inherited from her mother.
+
+The doctor's house was just by the church. Fergusson, being a mere hired
+assistant, was slave to the countryside. As he hurried now to attend to
+the outpatients in the surgery, glancing across the graveyard with his
+quick eye, he saw the girl at her task at the grave. She seemed so intent
+and remote, it was like looking into another world. Some mystical element
+was touched in him. He slowed down as he walked, watching her as if
+spell-bound.
+
+She lifted her eyes, feeling him looking. Their eyes met. And each looked
+again at once, each feeling, in some way, found out by the other. He
+lifted his cap and passed on down the road. There remained distinct in
+his consciousness, like a vision, the memory of her face, lifted from the
+tombstone in the churchyard, and looking at him with slow, large,
+portentous eyes. It _was_ portentous, her face. It seemed to mesmerize
+him. There was a heavy power in her eyes which laid hold of his whole
+being, as if he had drunk some powerful drug. He had been feeling weak
+and done before. Now the life came back into him, he felt delivered from
+his own fretted, daily self.
+
+He finished his duties at the surgery as quickly as might be, hastily
+filling up the bottles of the waiting people with cheap drugs. Then, in
+perpetual haste, he set off again to visit several cases in another part
+of his round, before teatime. At all times he preferred to walk, if he
+could, but particularly when he was not well. He fancied the motion
+restored him.
+
+The afternoon was falling. It was grey, deadened, and wintry, with a
+slow, moist, heavy coldness sinking in and deadening all the faculties.
+But why should he think or notice? He hastily climbed the hill and turned
+across the dark-green fields, following the black cinder-track. In the
+distance, across a shallow dip in the country, the small town was
+clustered like smouldering ash, a tower, a spire, a heap of low, raw,
+extinct houses. And on the nearest fringe of the town, sloping into the
+dip, was Oldmeadow, the Pervins' house. He could see the stables and the
+outbuildings distinctly, as they lay towards him on the slope. Well, he
+would not go there many more times! Another resource would be lost to
+him, another place gone: the only company he cared for in the alien, ugly
+little town he was losing. Nothing but work, drudgery, constant hastening
+from dwelling to dwelling among the colliers and the iron-workers. It
+wore him out, but at the same time he had a craving for it. It was a
+stimulant to him to be in the homes of the working people, moving as it
+were through the innermost body of their life. His nerves were excited
+and gratified. He could come so near, into the very lives of the rough,
+inarticulate, powerfully emotional men and women. He grumbled, he said he
+hated the hellish hole. But as a matter of fact it excited him, the
+contact with the rough, strongly-feeling people was a stimulant applied
+direct to his nerves.
+
+Below Oldmeadow, in the green, shallow, soddened hollow of fields, lay a
+square, deep pond. Roving across the landscape, the doctor's quick eye
+detected a figure in black passing through the gate of the field, down
+towards the pond. He looked again. It would be Mabel Pervin. His mind
+suddenly became alive and attentive.
+
+Why was she going down there? He pulled up on the path on the slope
+above, and stood staring. He could just make sure of the small black
+figure moving in the hollow of the failing day. He seemed to see her in
+the midst of such obscurity, that he was like a clairvoyant, seeing
+rather with the mind's eye than with ordinary sight. Yet he could see her
+positively enough, whilst he kept his eye attentive. He felt, if he
+looked away from her, in the thick, ugly falling dusk, he would lose her
+altogether.
+
+He followed her minutely as she moved, direct and intent, like something
+transmitted rather than stirring in voluntary activity, straight down the
+field towards the pond. There she stood on the bank for a moment. She
+never raised her head. Then she waded slowly into the water.
+
+He stood motionless as the small black figure walked slowly and
+deliberately towards the centre of the pond, very slowly, gradually
+moving deeper into the motionless water, and still moving forward as the
+water got up to her breast. Then he could see her no more in the dusk of
+the dead afternoon.
+
+'There!' he exclaimed. 'Would you believe it?'
+
+And he hastened straight down, running over the wet, soddened fields,
+pushing through the hedges, down into the depression of callous wintry
+obscurity. It took him several minutes to come to the pond. He stood on
+the bank, breathing heavily. He could see nothing. His eyes seemed to
+penetrate the dead water. Yes, perhaps that was the dark shadow of her
+black clothing beneath the surface of the water.
+
+He slowly ventured into the pond. The bottom was deep, soft clay, he sank
+in, and the water clasped dead cold round his legs. As he stirred he
+could smell the cold, rotten clay that fouled up into the water. It was
+objectionable in his lungs. Still, repelled and yet not heeding, he moved
+deeper into the pond. The cold water rose over his thighs, over his
+loins, upon his abdomen. The lower part of his body was all sunk in the
+hideous cold element. And the bottom was so deeply soft and uncertain, he
+was afraid of pitching with his mouth underneath. He could not swim, and
+was afraid.
+
+He crouched a little, spreading his hands under the water and moving them
+round, trying to feel for her. The dead cold pond swayed upon his chest.
+He moved again, a little deeper, and again, with his hands underneath, he
+felt all around under the water. And he touched her clothing. But it
+evaded his fingers. He made a desperate effort to grasp it.
+
+And so doing he lost his balance and went under, horribly, suffocating in
+the foul earthy water, struggling madly for a few moments. At last, after
+what seemed an eternity, he got his footing, rose again into the air and
+looked around. He gasped, and knew he was in the world. Then he looked at
+the water. She had risen near him. He grasped her clothing, and drawing
+her nearer, turned to take his way to land again.
+
+He went very slowly, carefully, absorbed in the slow progress. He rose
+higher, climbing out of the pond. The water was now only about his legs;
+he was thankful, full of relief to be out of the clutches of the pond. He
+lifted her and staggered on to the bank, out of the horror of wet, grey
+clay.
+
+He laid her down on the bank. She was quite unconscious and running with
+water. He made the water come from her mouth, he worked to restore her.
+He did not have to work very long before he could feel the breathing
+begin again in her; she was breathing naturally. He worked a little
+longer. He could feel her live beneath his hands; she was coming back. He
+wiped her face, wrapped her in his overcoat, looked round into the dim,
+dark-grey world, then lifted her and staggered down the bank and across
+the fields.
+
+It seemed an unthinkably long way, and his burden so heavy he felt he
+would never get to the house. But at last he was in the stable-yard, and
+then in the house-yard. He opened the door and went into the house. In
+the kitchen he laid her down on the hearthrug, and called. The house was
+empty. But the fire was burning in the grate.
+
+Then again he kneeled to attend to her. She was breathing regularly, her
+eyes were wide open and as if conscious, but there seemed something
+missing in her look. She was conscious in herself, but unconscious of her
+surroundings.
+
+He ran upstairs, took blankets from a bed, and put them before the fire
+to warm. Then he removed her saturated, earthy-smelling clothing, rubbed
+her dry with a towel, and wrapped her naked in the blankets. Then he went
+into the dining-room, to look for spirits. There was a little whisky. He
+drank a gulp himself, and put some into her mouth.
+
+The effect was instantaneous. She looked full into his face, as if she
+had been seeing him for some time, and yet had only just become conscious
+of him.
+
+'Dr. Fergusson?' she said.
+
+'What?' he answered.
+
+He was divesting himself of his coat, intending to find some dry clothing
+upstairs. He could not bear the smell of the dead, clayey water, and he
+was mortally afraid for his own health.
+
+'What did I do?' she asked.
+
+'Walked into the pond,' he replied. He had begun to shudder like one
+sick, and could hardly attend to her. Her eyes remained full on him, he
+seemed to be going dark in his mind, looking back at her helplessly. The
+shuddering became quieter in him, his life came back in him, dark and
+unknowing, but strong again.
+
+'Was I out of my mind?' she asked, while her eyes were fixed on him all
+the time.
+
+'Maybe, for the moment,' he replied. He felt quiet, because his strength
+had come back. The strange fretful strain had left him.
+
+'Am I out of my mind now?' she asked.
+
+'Are you?' he reflected a moment. 'No,' he answered truthfully, 'I don't
+see that you are.' He turned his face aside. He was afraid now, because
+he felt dazed, and felt dimly that her power was stronger than his, in
+this issue. And she continued to look at him fixedly all the time. 'Can
+you tell me where I shall find some dry things to put on?' he asked.
+
+'Did you dive into the pond for me?' she asked.
+
+'No,' he answered. 'I walked in. But I went in overhead as well.'
+
+There was silence for a moment. He hesitated. He very much wanted to go
+upstairs to get into dry clothing. But there was another desire in him.
+And she seemed to hold him. His will seemed to have gone to sleep, and
+left him, standing there slack before her. But he felt warm inside
+himself. He did not shudder at all, though his clothes were sodden on
+him.
+
+'Why did you?' she asked.
+
+'Because I didn't want you to do such a foolish thing,' he said.
+
+'It wasn't foolish,' she said, still gazing at him as she lay on the
+floor, with a sofa cushion under her head. 'It was the right thing to do.
+_I_ knew best, then.'
+
+'I'll go and shift these wet things,' he said. But still he had not the
+power to move out of her presence, until she sent him. It was as if she
+had the life of his body in her hands, and he could not extricate
+himself. Or perhaps he did not want to.
+
+Suddenly she sat up. Then she became aware of her own immediate
+condition. She felt the blankets about her, she knew her own limbs. For a
+moment it seemed as if her reason were going. She looked round, with wild
+eye, as if seeking something. He stood still with fear. She saw her
+clothing lying scattered.
+
+'Who undressed me?' she asked, her eyes resting full and inevitable on
+his face.
+
+'I did,' he replied, 'to bring you round.'
+
+For some moments she sat and gazed at him awfully, her lips parted.
+
+'Do you love me then?' she asked.
+
+He only stood and stared at her, fascinated. His soul seemed to melt.
+
+She shuffled forward on her knees, and put her arms round him, round his
+legs, as he stood there, pressing her breasts against his knees and
+thighs, clutching him with strange, convulsive certainty, pressing his
+thighs against her, drawing him to her face, her throat, as she looked up
+at him with flaring, humble eyes, of transfiguration, triumphant in first
+possession.
+
+'You love me,' she murmured, in strange transport, yearning and
+triumphant and confident. 'You love me. I know you love me, I know.'
+
+And she was passionately kissing his knees, through the wet clothing,
+passionately and indiscriminately kissing his knees, his legs, as if
+unaware of every thing.
+
+He looked down at the tangled wet hair, the wild, bare, animal shoulders.
+He was amazed, bewildered, and afraid. He had never thought of loving
+her. He had never wanted to love her. When he rescued her and restored
+her, he was a doctor, and she was a patient. He had had no single
+personal thought of her. Nay, this introduction of the personal element
+was very distasteful to him, a violation of his professional honour. It
+was horrible to have her there embracing his knees. It was horrible. He
+revolted from it, violently. And yet--and yet--he had not the power to
+break away.
+
+She looked at him again, with the same supplication of powerful love, and
+that same transcendent, frightening light of triumph. In view of the
+delicate flame which seemed to come from her face like a light, he was
+powerless. And yet he had never intended to love her. He had never
+intended. And something stubborn in him could not give way.
+
+'You love me,' she repeated, in a murmur of deep, rhapsodic assurance.
+'You love me.'
+
+Her hands were drawing him, drawing him down to her. He was afraid, even
+a little horrified. For he had, really, no intention of loving her. Yet
+her hands were drawing him towards her. He put out his hand quickly to
+steady himself, and grasped her bare shoulder. A flame seemed to burn the
+hand that grasped her soft shoulder. He had no intention of loving her:
+his whole will was against his yielding. It was horrible. And yet
+wonderful was the touch of her shoulders, beautiful the shining of her
+face. Was she perhaps mad? He had a horror of yielding to her. Yet
+something in him ached also.
+
+He had been staring away at the door, away from her. But his hand
+remained on her shoulder. She had gone suddenly very still. He looked
+down at her. Her eyes were now wide with fear, with doubt, the light was
+dying from her face, a shadow of terrible greyness was returning. He
+could not bear the touch of her eyes' question upon him, and the look of
+death behind the question.
+
+With an inward groan he gave way, and let his heart yield towards her. A
+sudden gentle smile came on his face. And her eyes, which never left his
+face, slowly, slowly filled with tears. He watched the strange water rise
+in her eyes, like some slow fountain coming up. And his heart seemed to
+burn and melt away in his breast.
+
+He could not bear to look at her any more. He dropped on his knees and
+caught her head with his arms and pressed her face against his throat.
+She was very still. His heart, which seemed to have broken, was burning
+with a kind of agony in his breast. And he felt her slow, hot tears
+wetting his throat. But he could not move.
+
+He felt the hot tears wet his neck and the hollows of his neck, and he
+remained motionless, suspended through one of man's eternities. Only now
+it had become indispensable to him to have her face pressed close to him;
+he could never let her go again. He could never let her head go away from
+the close clutch of his arm. He wanted to remain like that for ever, with
+his heart hurting him in a pain that was also life to him. Without
+knowing, he was looking down on her damp, soft brown hair.
+
+Then, as it were suddenly, he smelt the horrid stagnant smell of that
+water. And at the same moment she drew away from him and looked at him.
+Her eyes were wistful and unfathomable. He was afraid of them, and he
+fell to kissing her, not knowing what he was doing. He wanted her eyes
+not to have that terrible, wistful, unfathomable look.
+
+When she turned her face to him again, a faint delicate flush was
+glowing, and there was again dawning that terrible shining of joy in her
+eyes, which really terrified him, and yet which he now wanted to see,
+because he feared the look of doubt still more.
+
+'You love me?' she said, rather faltering.
+
+'Yes.' The word cost him a painful effort. Not because it wasn't true.
+But because it was too newly true, the _saying_ seemed to tear open again
+his newly-torn heart. And he hardly wanted it to be true, even now.
+
+She lifted her face to him, and he bent forward and kissed her on the
+mouth, gently, with the one kiss that is an eternal pledge. And as he
+kissed her his heart strained again in his breast. He never intended to
+love her. But now it was over. He had crossed over the gulf to her, and
+all that he had left behind had shrivelled and become void.
+
+After the kiss, her eyes again slowly filled with tears. She sat still,
+away from him, with her face drooped aside, and her hands folded in her
+lap. The tears fell very slowly. There was complete silence. He too sat
+there motionless and silent on the hearthrug. The strange pain of his
+heart that was broken seemed to consume him. That he should love her?
+That this was love! That he should be ripped open in this way!--Him, a
+doctor!--How they would all jeer if they knew!--It was agony to him to
+think they might know.
+
+In the curious naked pain of the thought he looked again to her. She was
+sitting there drooped into a muse. He saw a tear fall, and his heart
+flared hot. He saw for the first time that one of her shoulders was quite
+uncovered, one arm bare, he could see one of her small breasts; dimly,
+because it had become almost dark in the room.
+
+'Why are you crying?' he asked, in an altered voice.
+
+She looked up at him, and behind her tears the consciousness of her
+situation for the first time brought a dark look of shame to her eyes.
+
+'I'm not crying, really,' she said, watching him half frightened.
+
+He reached his hand, and softly closed it on her bare arm.
+
+'I love you! I love you!' he said in a soft, low vibrating voice, unlike
+himself.
+
+She shrank, and dropped her head. The soft, penetrating grip of his hand
+on her arm distressed her. She looked up at him.
+
+'I want to go,' she said. 'I want to go and get you some dry things.'
+
+'Why?' he said. 'I'm all right.'
+
+'But I want to go,' she said. 'And I want you to change your things.'
+
+He released her arm, and she wrapped herself in the blanket, looking at
+him rather frightened. And still she did not rise.
+
+'Kiss me,' she said wistfully.
+
+He kissed her, but briefly, half in anger.
+
+Then, after a second, she rose nervously, all mixed up in the blanket. He
+watched her in her confusion, as she tried to extricate herself and wrap
+herself up so that she could walk. He watched her relentlessly, as she
+knew. And as she went, the blanket trailing, and as he saw a glimpse of
+her feet and her white leg, he tried to remember her as she was when he
+had wrapped her in the blanket. But then he didn't want to remember,
+because she had been nothing to him then, and his nature revolted from
+remembering her as she was when she was nothing to him.
+
+A tumbling, muffled noise from within the dark house startled him. Then
+he heard her voice:--'There are clothes.' He rose and went to the foot of
+the stairs, and gathered up the garments she had thrown down. Then he
+came back to the fire, to rub himself down and dress. He grinned at his
+own appearance when he had finished.
+
+The fire was sinking, so he put on coal. The house was now quite dark,
+save for the light of a street-lamp that shone in faintly from beyond the
+holly trees. He lit the gas with matches he found on the mantel-piece.
+Then he emptied the pockets of his own clothes, and threw all his wet
+things in a heap into the scullery. After which he gathered up her sodden
+clothes, gently, and put them in a separate heap on the copper-top in the
+scullery.
+
+It was six o'clock on the clock. His own watch had stopped. He ought to
+go back to the surgery. He waited, and still she did not come down. So he
+went to the foot of the stairs and called:
+
+'I shall have to go.'
+
+Almost immediately he heard her coming down. She had on her best dress
+of black voile, and her hair was tidy, but still damp. She looked at
+him--and in spite of herself, smiled.
+
+'I don't like you in those clothes,' she said.
+
+'Do I look a sight?' he answered.
+
+They were shy of one another.
+
+'I'll make you some tea,' she said.
+
+'No, I must go.'
+
+'Must you?' And she looked at him again with the wide, strained, doubtful
+eyes. And again, from the pain of his breast, he knew how he loved her.
+He went and bent to kiss her, gently, passionately, with his heart's
+painful kiss.
+
+'And my hair smells so horrible,' she murmured in distraction. 'And I'm
+so awful, I'm so awful! Oh, no, I'm too awful.' And she broke into
+bitter, heart-broken sobbing. 'You can't want to love me, I'm horrible.'
+
+'Don't be silly, don't be silly,' he said, trying to comfort her, kissing
+her, holding her in his arms. 'I want you, I want to marry you, we're
+going to be married, quickly, quickly--to-morrow if I can.'
+
+But she only sobbed terribly, and cried:
+
+'I feel awful. I feel awful. I feel I'm horrible to you.'
+
+'No, I want you, I want you,' was all he answered, blindly, with that
+terrible intonation which frightened her almost more than her horror lest
+he should _not_ want her.
+
+
+
+
+_Fanny And Annie_
+
+
+Flame-lurid his face as he turned among the throng of flame-lit and dark
+faces upon the platform. In the light of the furnace she caught sight of
+his drifting countenance, like a piece of floating fire. And the
+nostalgia, the doom of homecoming went through her veins like a drug. His
+eternal face, flame-lit now! The pulse and darkness of red fire from the
+furnace towers in the sky, lighting the desultory, industrial crowd on
+the wayside station, lit him and went out.
+
+Of course he did not see her. Flame-lit and unseeing! Always the same,
+with his meeting eyebrows, his common cap, and his red-and-black scarf
+knotted round his throat. Not even a collar to meet her! The flames had
+sunk, there was shadow.
+
+She opened the door of her grimy, branch-line carriage, and began to get
+down her bags. The porter was nowhere, of course, but there was Harry,
+obscure, on the outer edge of the little crowd, missing her, of course.
+
+'Here! Harry!' she called, waving her umbrella in the twilight. He
+hurried forward.
+
+'Tha's come, has ter?' he said, in a sort of cheerful welcome. She got
+down, rather flustered, and gave him a peck of a kiss.
+
+'Two suit-cases!' she said.
+
+Her soul groaned within her, as he clambered into the carriage after her
+bags. Up shot the fire in the twilight sky, from the great furnace behind
+the station. She felt the red flame go across her face. She had come
+back, she had come back for good. And her spirit groaned dismally. She
+doubted if she could bear it.
+
+There, on the sordid little station under the furnaces, she stood, tall
+and distinguished, in her well-made coat and skirt and her broad grey
+velour hat. She held her umbrella, her bead chatelaine, and a little
+leather case in her grey-gloved hands, while Harry staggered out of the
+ugly little train with her bags.
+
+'There's a trunk at the back,' she said in her bright voice. But she was
+not feeling bright. The twin black cones of the iron foundry blasted
+their sky-high fires into the night. The whole scene was lurid. The train
+waited cheerfully. It would wait another ten minutes. She knew it. It was
+all so deadly familiar.
+
+Let us confess it at once. She was a lady's maid, thirty years old, come
+back to marry her first-love, a foundry worker: after having kept him
+dangling, off and on, for a dozen years. Why had she come back? Did she
+love him? No. She didn't pretend to. She had loved her brilliant and
+ambitious cousin, who had jilted her, and who had died. She had had other
+affairs which had come to nothing. So here she was, come back suddenly to
+marry her first-love, who had waited--or remained single--all these
+years.
+
+'Won't a porter carry those?' she said, as Harry strode with his
+workman's stride down the platform towards the guard's van.
+
+'I can manage,' he said.
+
+And with her umbrella, her chatelaine, and her little leather case, she
+followed him.
+
+The trunk was there.
+
+'We'll get Heather's greengrocer's cart to fetch it up,' he said.
+
+'Isn't there a cab?' said Fanny, knowing dismally enough that there
+wasn't.
+
+'I'll just put it aside o' the penny-in-the-slot, and Heather's
+greengrocers'll fetch it about half past eight,' he said.
+
+He seized the box by its two handles and staggered with it across the
+level-crossing, bumping his legs against it as he waddled. Then he
+dropped it by the red sweet-meats machine.
+
+'Will it be safe there?' she said.
+
+'Ay--safe as houses,' he answered. He returned for the two bags. Thus
+laden, they started to plod up the hill, under the great long black
+building of the foundry. She walked beside him--workman of workmen he
+was, trudging with that luggage. The red lights flared over the deepening
+darkness. From the foundry came the horrible, slow clang, clang, clang of
+iron, a great noise, with an interval just long enough to make it
+unendurable.
+
+Compare this with the arrival at Gloucester: the carriage for her
+mistress, the dog-cart for herself with the luggage; the drive out past
+the river, the pleasant trees of the carriage-approach; and herself
+sitting beside Arthur, everybody so polite to her.
+
+She had come home--for good! Her heart nearly stopped beating as she
+trudged up that hideous and interminable hill, beside the laden figure.
+What a come-down! What a come-down! She could not take it with her usual
+bright cheerfulness. She knew it all too well. It is easy to bear up
+against the unusual, but the deadly familiarity of an old stale past!
+
+He dumped the bags down under a lamp-post, for a rest. There they stood,
+the two of them, in the lamplight. Passers-by stared at her, and gave
+good-night to Harry. Her they hardly knew, she had become a stranger.
+
+'They're too heavy for you, let me carry one,' she said.
+
+'They begin to weigh a bit by the time you've gone a mile,' he answered.
+
+'Let me carry the little one,' she insisted.
+
+'Tha can ha'e it for a minute, if ter's a mind,' he said, handing over
+the valise.
+
+And thus they arrived in the streets of shops of the little ugly town on
+top of the hill. How everybody stared at her; my word, how they stared!
+And the cinema was just going in, and the queues were tailing down the
+road to the corner. And everybody took full stock of her. 'Night, Harry!'
+shouted the fellows, in an interested voice.
+
+However, they arrived at her aunt's--a little sweet-shop in a side
+street. They 'pinged' the door-bell, and her aunt came running forward
+out of the kitchen.
+
+'There you are, child! Dying for a cup of tea, I'm sure. How are you?'
+
+Fanny's aunt kissed her, and it was all Fanny could do to refrain from
+bursting into tears, she felt so low. Perhaps it was her tea she wanted.
+
+'You've had a drag with that luggage,' said Fanny's aunt to Harry.
+
+'Ay--I'm not sorry to put it down,' he said, looking at his hand which
+was crushed and cramped by the bag handle.
+
+Then he departed to see about Heather's greengrocery cart.
+
+When Fanny sat at tea, her aunt, a grey-haired, fair-faced little woman,
+looked at her with an admiring heart, feeling bitterly sore for her. For
+Fanny was beautiful: tall, erect, finely coloured, with her delicately
+arched nose, her rich brown hair, her large lustrous grey eyes. A
+passionate woman--a woman to be afraid of. So proud, so inwardly violent!
+She came of a violent race.
+
+It needed a woman to sympathize with her. Men had not the courage. Poor
+Fanny! She was such a lady, and so straight and magnificent. And yet
+everything seemed to do her down. Every time she seemed to be doomed to
+humiliation and disappointment, this handsome, brilliantly sensitive
+woman, with her nervous, overwrought laugh.
+
+'So you've really come back, child?' said her aunt.
+
+'I really have, Aunt,' said Fanny.
+
+'Poor Harry! I'm not sure, you know, Fanny, that you're not taking a bit
+of an advantage of him.'
+
+'Oh, Aunt, he's waited so long, he may as well have what he's waited
+for.' Fanny laughed grimly.
+
+'Yes, child, he's waited so long, that I'm not sure it isn't a bit hard
+on him. You know, I _like_ him, Fanny--though as you know quite well, I
+don't think he's good enough for you. And I think he thinks so himself,
+poor fellow.'
+
+'Don't you be so sure of that, Aunt. Harry is common, but he's not
+humble. He wouldn't think the Queen was any too good for him, if he'd a
+mind to her.'
+
+'Well--It's as well if he has a proper opinion of himself.'
+
+'It depends what you call proper,' said Fanny. 'But he's got his good
+points--'
+
+'Oh, he's a nice fellow, and I like him, I do like him. Only, as I tell
+you, he's not good enough for you.'
+
+'I've made up my mind, Aunt,' said Fanny, grimly.
+
+'Yes,' mused the aunt. 'They say all things come to him who waits--'
+
+'More than he's bargained for, eh, Aunt?' laughed Fanny rather bitterly.
+
+The poor aunt, this bitterness grieved her for her niece.
+
+They were interrupted by the ping of the shop-bell, and Harry's call of
+'Right!' But as he did not come in at once, Fanny, feeling solicitous for
+him presumably at the moment, rose and went into the shop. She saw a cart
+outside, and went to the door.
+
+And the moment she stood in the doorway, she heard a woman's common
+vituperative voice crying from the darkness of the opposite side of the
+road:
+
+'Tha'rt theer, ar ter? I'll shame thee, Mester. I'll shame thee, see if I
+dunna.'
+
+Startled, Fanny stared across the darkness, and saw a woman in a black
+bonnet go under one of the lamps up the side street.
+
+Harry and Bill Heather had dragged the trunk off the little dray, and she
+retreated before them as they came up the shop step with it.
+
+'Wheer shalt ha'e it?' asked Harry.
+
+'Best take it upstairs,' said Fanny.
+
+She went up first to light the gas.
+
+When Heather had gone, and Harry was sitting down having tea and pork
+pie, Fanny asked:
+
+'Who was that woman shouting?'
+
+'Nay, I canna tell thee. To somebody, Is'd think,' replied Harry. Fanny
+looked at him, but asked no more.
+
+He was a fair-haired fellow of thirty-two, with a fair moustache. He was
+broad in his speech, and looked like a foundry-hand, which he was. But
+women always liked him. There was something of a mother's lad about
+him--something warm and playful and really sensitive.
+
+He had his attractions even for Fanny. What she rebelled against so
+bitterly was that he had no sort of ambition. He was a moulder, but of
+very commonplace skill. He was thirty-two years old, and hadn't saved
+twenty pounds. She would have to provide the money for the home. He
+didn't care. He just didn't care. He had no initiative at all. He had no
+vices--no obvious ones. But he was just indifferent, spending as he went,
+and not caring. Yet he did not look happy. She remembered his face in the
+fire-glow: something haunted, abstracted about it. As he sat there eating
+his pork pie, bulging his cheek out, she felt he was like a doom to her.
+And she raged against the doom of him. It wasn't that he was gross. His
+way was common, almost on purpose. But he himself wasn't really common.
+For instance, his food was not particularly important to him, he was not
+greedy. He had a charm, too, particularly for women, with his blondness
+and his sensitiveness and his way of making a woman feel that she was a
+higher being. But Fanny knew him, knew the peculiar obstinate limitedness
+of him, that would nearly send her mad.
+
+He stayed till about half past nine. She went to the door with him.
+
+'When are you coming up?' he said, jerking his head in the direction,
+presumably, of his own home.
+
+'I'll come tomorrow afternoon,' she said brightly. Between Fanny and Mrs.
+Goodall, his mother, there was naturally no love lost.
+
+Again she gave him an awkward little kiss, and said good-night.
+
+'You can't wonder, you know, child, if he doesn't seem so very keen,'
+said her aunt. 'It's your own fault.'
+
+'Oh, Aunt, I couldn't stand him when he was keen. I can do with him a lot
+better as he is.'
+
+The two women sat and talked far into the night. They understood each
+other. The aunt, too, had married as Fanny was marrying: a man who was no
+companion to her, a violent man, brother of Fanny's father. He was dead,
+Fanny's father was dead.
+
+Poor Aunt Lizzie, she cried woefully over her bright niece, when she had
+gone to bed.
+
+Fanny paid the promised visit to his people the next afternoon. Mrs.
+Goodall was a large woman with smooth-parted hair, a common, obstinate
+woman, who had spoiled her four lads and her one vixen of a married
+daughter. She was one of those old-fashioned powerful natures that
+couldn't do with looks or education or any form of showing off. She
+fairly hated the sound of correct English. She _thee'd_ and _tha'd_ her
+prospective daughter-in-law, and said:
+
+'I'm none as ormin' as I look, seest ta.'
+
+Fanny did not think her prospective mother-in-law looked at all orming,
+so the speech was unnecessary.
+
+'I towd him mysen,' said Mrs. Goodall, ''Er's held back all this long,
+let 'er stop as 'er is. 'E'd none ha' had thee for _my_ tellin'--tha
+hears. No, 'e's a fool, an' I know it. I says to him, 'Tha looks a man,
+doesn't ter, at thy age, goin' an' openin' to her when ter hears her
+scrat' at th' gate, after she's done gallivantin' round wherever she'd a
+mind. That looks rare an' soft.' But it's no use o' any talking: he
+answered that letter o' thine and made his own bad bargain.'
+
+But in spite of the old woman's anger, she was also flattered at Fanny's
+coming back to Harry. For Mrs. Goodall was impressed by Fanny--a woman of
+her own match. And more than this, everybody knew that Fanny's Aunt Kate
+had left her two hundred pounds: this apart from the girl's savings.
+
+So there was high tea in Princes Street when Harry came home black from
+work, and a rather acrid odour of cordiality, the vixen Jinny darting in
+to say vulgar things. Of course Jinny lived in a house whose garden end
+joined the paternal garden. They were a clan who stuck together, these
+Goodalls.
+
+It was arranged that Fanny should come to tea again on the Sunday, and
+the wedding was discussed. It should take place in a fortnight's time at
+Morley Chapel. Morley was a hamlet on the edge of the real country, and
+in its little Congregational Chapel Fanny and Harry had first met.
+
+What a creature of habit he was! He was still in the choir of Morley
+Chapel--not very regular. He belonged just because he had a tenor voice,
+and enjoyed singing. Indeed his solos were only spoilt to local fame
+because when he sang he handled his aitches so hopelessly.
+
+'And I saw 'eaven hopened
+And be'old, a wite 'orse-'
+
+This was one of Harry's classics, only surpassed by the fine outburst of
+his heaving:
+
+'Hangels--hever bright an' fair-'
+
+It was a pity, but it was inalterable. He had a good voice, and he sang
+with a certain lacerating fire, but his pronunciation made it all funny.
+And nothing could alter him.
+
+So he was never heard save at cheap concerts and in the little, poorer
+chapels. The others scoffed.
+
+Now the month was September, and Sunday was Harvest Festival at Morley
+Chapel, and Harry was singing solos. So that Fanny was to go to afternoon
+service, and come home to a grand spread of Sunday tea with him. Poor
+Fanny! One of the most wonderful afternoons had been a Sunday afternoon
+service, with her cousin Luther at her side, Harvest Festival in Morley
+Chapel. Harry had sung solos then--ten years ago. She remembered his pale
+blue tie, and the purple asters and the great vegetable marrows in which
+he was framed, and her cousin Luther at her side, young, clever, come
+down from London, where he was getting on well, learning his Latin and
+his French and German so brilliantly.
+
+However, once again it was Harvest Festival at Morley Chapel, and once
+again, as ten years before, a soft, exquisite September day, with the
+last roses pink in the cottage gardens, the last dahlias crimson, the
+last sunflowers yellow. And again the little old chapel was a bower, with
+its famous sheaves of corn and corn-plaited pillars, its great bunches of
+grapes, dangling like tassels from the pulpit corners, its marrows and
+potatoes and pears and apples and damsons, its purple asters and yellow
+Japanese sunflowers. Just as before, the red dahlias round the pillars
+were dropping, weak-headed among the oats. The place was crowded and hot,
+the plates of tomatoes seemed balanced perilously on the gallery front,
+the Rev. Enderby was weirder than ever to look at, so long and emaciated
+and hairless.
+
+The Rev. Enderby, probably forewarned, came and shook hands with her and
+welcomed her, in his broad northern, melancholy singsong before he
+mounted the pulpit. Fanny was handsome in a gauzy dress and a beautiful
+lace hat. Being a little late, she sat in a chair in the side-aisle
+wedged in, right in front of the chapel. Harry was in the gallery above,
+and she could only see him from the eyes upwards. She noticed again how
+his eyebrows met, blond and not very marked, over his nose. He was
+attractive too: physically lovable, very. If only--if only her _pride_
+had not suffered! She felt he dragged her down.
+
+'Come, ye thankful people come,
+Raise the song of harvest-home.
+All is safely gathered in
+Ere the winter storms begin--'
+
+Even the hymn was a falsehood, as the season had been wet, and half the
+crops were still out, and in a poor way.
+
+Poor Fanny! She sang little, and looked beautiful through that
+inappropriate hymn. Above her stood Harry--mercifully in a dark suit and
+dark tie, looking almost handsome. And his lacerating, pure tenor sounded
+well, when the words were drowned in the general commotion. Brilliant she
+looked, and brilliant she felt, for she was hot and angrily miserable and
+inflamed with a sort of fatal despair. Because there was about him a
+physical attraction which she really hated, but which she could not
+escape from. He was the first man who had ever kissed her. And his
+kisses, even while she rebelled from them, had lived in her blood and
+sent roots down into her soul. After all this time she had come back to
+them. And her soul groaned, for she felt dragged down, dragged down to
+earth, as a bird which some dog has got down in the dust. She knew her
+life would be unhappy. She knew that what she was doing was fatal. Yet it
+was her doom. She had to come back to him.
+
+He had to sing two solos this afternoon: one before the 'address' from
+the pulpit and one after. Fanny looked at him, and wondered he was not
+too shy to stand up there in front of all the people. But no, he was not
+shy. He had even a kind of assurance on his face as he looked down from
+the choir gallery at her: the assurance of a common man deliberately
+entrenched in his commonness. Oh, such a rage went through her veins as
+she saw the air of triumph, laconic, indifferent triumph which sat so
+obstinately and recklessly on his eyelids as he looked down at her. Ah,
+she despised him! But there he stood up in that choir gallery like
+Balaam's ass in front of her, and she could not get beyond him. A certain
+winsomeness also about him. A certain physical winsomeness, and as if his
+flesh were new and lovely to touch. The thorn of desire rankled bitterly
+in her heart.
+
+He, it goes without saying, sang like a canary this particular afternoon,
+with a certain defiant passion which pleasantly crisped the blood of the
+congregation. Fanny felt the crisp flames go through her veins as she
+listened. Even the curious loud-mouthed vernacular had a certain
+fascination. But, oh, also, it was so repugnant. He would triumph over
+her, obstinately he would drag her right back into the common people: a
+doom, a vulgar doom.
+
+The second performance was an anthem, in which Harry sang the solo parts.
+It was clumsy, but beautiful, with lovely words.
+
+'They that sow in tears shall reap in joy,
+He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed
+Shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
+him--'
+
+'Shall doubtless come, Shall doubtless come--' softly intoned the
+altos--'Bringing his she-e-eaves with him,' the trebles flourished
+brightly, and then again began the half-wistful solo:
+
+'They that sow in tears shall reap in joy--'
+
+Yes, it was effective and moving.
+
+But at the moment when Harry's voice sank carelessly down to his close,
+and the choir, standing behind him, were opening their mouths for the
+final triumphant outburst, a shouting female voice rose up from the body
+of the congregation. The organ gave one startled trump, and went silent;
+the choir stood transfixed.
+
+'You look well standing there, singing in God's holy house,' came the
+loud, angry female shout. Everybody turned electrified. A stoutish,
+red-faced woman in a black bonnet was standing up denouncing the soloist.
+Almost fainting with shock, the congregation realized it. 'You look well,
+don't you, standing there singing solos in God's holy house, you,
+Goodall. But I said I'd shame you. You look well, bringing your young
+woman here with you, don't you? I'll let her know who she's dealing
+with. A scamp as won't take the consequences of what he's done.' The
+hard-faced, frenzied woman turned in the direction of Fanny. '_That's_
+what Harry Goodall is, if you want to know.'
+
+And she sat down again in her seat. Fanny, startled like all the rest,
+had turned to look. She had gone white, and then a burning red, under the
+attack. She knew the woman: a Mrs. Nixon, a devil of a woman, who beat
+her pathetic, drunken, red-nosed second husband, Bob, and her two lanky
+daughters, grown-up as they were. A notorious character. Fanny turned
+round again, and sat motionless as eternity in her seat.
+
+There was a minute of perfect silence and suspense. The audience was
+open-mouthed and dumb; the choir stood like Lot's wife; and Harry, with
+his music-sheet, stood there uplifted, looking down with a dumb sort of
+indifference on Mrs. Nixon, his face naive and faintly mocking. Mrs.
+Nixon sat defiant in her seat, braving them all.
+
+Then a rustle, like a wood when the wind suddenly catches the leaves.
+And then the tall, weird minister got to his feet, and in his strong,
+bell-like, beautiful voice--the only beautiful thing about him--he said
+with infinite mournful pathos:
+
+'Let us unite in singing the last hymn on the hymn-sheet; the last hymn
+on the hymn-sheet, number eleven.
+
+'Fair waved the golden corn,
+In Canaan's pleasant land.'
+
+The organ tuned up promptly. During the hymn the offertory was taken. And
+after the hymn, the prayer.
+
+Mr. Enderby came from Northumberland. Like Harry, he had never been able
+to conquer his accent, which was very broad. He was a little simple, one
+of God's fools, perhaps, an odd bachelor soul, emotional, ugly, but very
+gentle.
+
+'And if, O our dear Lord, beloved Jesus, there should fall a shadow of
+sin upon our harvest, we leave it to Thee to judge, for Thou art judge.
+We lift our spirits and our sorrow, Jesus, to Thee, and our mouths are
+dumb. O, Lord, keep us from forward speech, restrain us from foolish
+words and thoughts, we pray Thee, Lord Jesus, who knowest all and judgest
+all.'
+
+Thus the minister said in his sad, resonant voice, washed his hands
+before the Lord. Fanny bent forward open-eyed during the prayer. She
+could see the roundish head of Harry, also bent forward. His face was
+inscrutable and expressionless. The shock left her bewildered. Anger
+perhaps was her dominating emotion.
+
+The audience began to rustle to its feet, to ooze slowly and excitedly
+out of the chapel, looking with wildly-interested eyes at Fanny, at Mrs.
+Nixon, and at Harry. Mrs. Nixon, shortish, stood defiant in her pew,
+facing the aisle, as if announcing that, without rolling her sleeves up,
+she was ready for anybody. Fanny sat quite still. Luckily the people did
+not have to pass her. And Harry, with red ears, was making his way
+sheepishly out of the gallery. The loud noise of the organ covered all
+the downstairs commotion of exit.
+
+The minister sat silent and inscrutable in his pulpit, rather like a
+death's-head, while the congregation filed out. When the last lingerers
+had unwillingly departed, craning their necks to stare at the still
+seated Fanny, he rose, stalked in his hooked fashion down the little
+country chapel and fastened the door. Then he returned and sat down by
+the silent young woman.
+
+'This is most unfortunate, most unfortunate!' he moaned. 'I am so sorry,
+I am so sorry, indeed, indeed, ah, indeed!' he sighed himself to a close.
+
+'It's a sudden surprise, that's one thing,' said Fanny brightly.
+
+'Yes--yes--indeed. Yes, a surprise, yes. I don't know the woman, I don't
+know her.'
+
+'I know her,' said Fanny. 'She's a bad one.'
+
+'Well! Well!' said the minister. 'I don't know her. I don't understand. I
+don't understand at all. But it is to be regretted, it is very much to be
+regretted. I am very sorry.'
+
+Fanny was watching the vestry door. The gallery stairs communicated with
+the vestry, not with the body of the chapel. She knew the choir members
+had been peeping for information.
+
+At last Harry came--rather sheepishly--with his hat in his hand.
+
+'Well!' said Fanny, rising to her feet.
+
+'We've had a bit of an extra,' said Harry.
+
+'I should think so,' said Fanny.
+
+'A most unfortunate circumstance--a most _unfortunate_ circumstance. Do
+you understand it, Harry? I don't understand it at all.'
+
+'Ah, I understand it. The daughter's goin' to have a childt, an' 'er lays
+it on to me.'
+
+'And has she no occasion to?' asked Fanny, rather censorious.
+
+'It's no more mine than it is some other chap's,' said Harry, looking
+aside.
+
+There was a moment of pause.
+
+'Which girl is it?' asked Fanny.
+
+'Annie--the young one--'
+
+There followed another silence.
+
+'I don't think I know them, do I?' asked the minister.
+
+'I shouldn't think so. Their name's Nixon--mother married old Bob for her
+second husband. She's a tanger--'s driven the gel to what she is. They
+live in Manners Road.'
+
+'Why, what's amiss with the girl?' asked Fanny sharply. 'She was all
+right when I knew her.'
+
+'Ay--she's all right. But she's always in an' out o' th' pubs, wi' th'
+fellows,' said Harry.
+
+'A nice thing!' said Fanny.
+
+Harry glanced towards the door. He wanted to get out.
+
+'Most distressing, indeed!' The minister slowly shook his head.
+
+'What about tonight, Mr. Enderby?' asked Harry, in rather a small voice.
+'Shall you want me?'
+
+Mr. Enderby looked up painedly, and put his hand to his brow. He studied
+Harry for some time, vacantly. There was the faintest sort of a
+resemblance between the two men.
+
+'Yes,' he said. 'Yes, I think. I think we must take no notice, and cause
+as little remark as possible.'
+
+Fanny hesitated. Then she said to Harry.
+
+'But _will_ you come?'
+
+He looked at her.
+
+'Ay, I s'll come,' he said.
+
+Then he turned to Mr. Enderby.
+
+'Well, good-afternoon, Mr. Enderby,' he said.
+
+'Good-afternoon, Harry, good-afternoon,' replied the mournful minister.
+Fanny followed Harry to the door, and for some time they walked in
+silence through the late afternoon.
+
+'And it's yours as much as anybody else's?' she said.
+
+'Ay,' he answered shortly.
+
+And they went without another word, for the long mile or so, till they
+came to the corner of the street where Harry lived. Fanny hesitated.
+Should she go on to her aunt's? Should she? It would mean leaving all
+this, for ever. Harry stood silent.
+
+Some obstinacy made her turn with him along the road to his own home.
+When they entered the house-place, the whole family was there, mother and
+father and Jinny, with Jinny's husband and children and Harry's two
+brothers.
+
+'You've been having yours ears warmed, they tell me,' said Mrs. Goodall
+grimly.
+
+'Who telled thee?' asked Harry shortly.
+
+'Maggie and Luke's both been in.'
+
+'You look well, don't you!' said interfering Jinny.
+
+Harry went and hung his hat up, without replying.
+
+'Come upstairs and take your hat off,' said Mrs. Goodall to Fanny, almost
+kindly. It would have annoyed her very much if Fanny had dropped her son
+at this moment.
+
+'What's 'er say, then?' asked the father secretly of Harry, jerking his
+head in the direction of the stairs whence Fanny had disappeared.
+
+'Nowt yet,' said Harry.
+
+'Serve you right if she chucks you now,' said Jinny. 'I'll bet it's right
+about Annie Nixon an' you.'
+
+'Tha bets so much,' said Harry.
+
+'Yi--but you can't deny it,' said Jinny.
+
+'I can if I've a mind.'
+
+His father looked at him inquiringly.
+
+'It's no more mine than it is Bill Bower's, or Ted Slaney's, or six or
+seven on 'em,' said Harry to his father.
+
+And the father nodded silently.
+
+'That'll not get you out of it, in court,' said Jinny.
+
+Upstairs Fanny evaded all the thrusts made by his mother, and did not
+declare her hand. She tidied her hair, washed her hands, and put the
+tiniest bit of powder on her face, for coolness, there in front of Mrs.
+Goodall's indignant gaze. It was like a declaration of independence. But
+the old woman said nothing.
+
+They came down to Sunday tea, with sardines and tinned salmon and tinned
+peaches, besides tarts and cakes. The chatter was general. It concerned
+the Nixon family and the scandal.
+
+'Oh, she's a foul-mouthed woman,' said Jinny of Mrs. Nixon. 'She may well
+talk about God's holy house, _she_ had. It's first time she's set foot in
+it, ever since she dropped off from being converted. She's a devil and
+she always was one. Can't you remember how she treated Bob's children,
+mother, when we lived down in the Buildings? I can remember when I was a
+little girl she used to bathe them in the yard, in the cold, so that
+they shouldn't splash the house. She'd half kill them if they made a
+mark on the floor, and the language she'd use! And one Saturday I can
+remember Garry, that was Bob's own girl, she ran off when her stepmother
+was going to bathe her--ran off without a rag of clothes on--can you
+remember, mother? And she hid in Smedley's closes--it was the time of
+mowing-grass--and nobody could find her. She hid out there all night,
+didn't she, mother? Nobody could find her. My word, there was a talk.
+They found her on Sunday morning--'
+
+'Fred Coutts threatened to break every bone in the woman's body, if she
+touched the children again,' put in the father.
+
+'Anyhow, they frightened her,' said Jinny. 'But she was nearly as bad
+with her own two. And anybody can see that she's driven old Bob till he's
+gone soft.'
+
+'Ah, soft as mush,' said Jack Goodall. ''E'd never addle a week's wage,
+nor yet a day's if th' chaps didn't make it up to him.'
+
+'My word, if he didn't bring her a week's wage, she'd pull his head off,'
+said Jinny.
+
+'But a clean woman, and respectable, except for her foul mouth,' said
+Mrs. Goodall. 'Keeps to herself like a bull-dog. Never lets anybody come
+near the house, and neighbours with nobody.'
+
+'Wanted it thrashed out of her,' said Mr. Goodall, a silent, evasive sort
+of man.
+
+'Where Bob gets the money for his drink from is a mystery,' said Jinny.
+
+'Chaps treats him,' said Harry.
+
+'Well, he's got the pair of frightenedest rabbit-eyes you'd wish to see,'
+said Jinny.
+
+'Ay, with a drunken man's murder in them, _I_ think,' said Mrs. Goodall.
+
+So the talk went on after tea, till it was practically time to start off
+to chapel again.
+
+'You'll have to be getting ready, Fanny,' said Mrs. Goodall.
+
+'I'm not going tonight,' said Fanny abruptly. And there was a sudden halt
+in the family. 'I'll stop with _you_ tonight, Mother,' she added.
+
+'Best you had, my gel,' said Mrs. Goodall, flattered and assured.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of England, My England, by D.H. Lawrence
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