Aldous Huxley's
CROME
YELLOW
__________________
CHAPTER I
Along this particular stretch of line no express had
ever passed. All the trains - the few that
there were - stopped at all the stations.
Denis knew the names of those stations by heart. Bole, Tritton, Spavin Delawarr, Knipswich for
Timpany,
They were
snorting out of
Oh, this
journey! It was two hours cut clean out
of his life; two hours in which he might have done so much, so much - written
the perfect poem, for example, or read the one illuminating book. Instead of which - his gorge rose at the
smell of the dusty cushions against which he was leaning.
Two
hours. One hundred and twenty minutes.
Anything might be done in that time.
Anything. Nothing. Oh, he had had hundreds of hours, and what
had he done with them? Wasted them,
spilt the precious minutes as though his reservoir were inexhaustible. Denis groaned in the spirit, condemned
himself utterly with all his works. What
right had he to sit in the sunshine, to occupy corner seats in third-class
carriages, to be alive? None, none,
none.
Misery and
a nameless nostalgic distress possessed him.
He was twenty-three, and oh! so agonizingly conscious of the fact.
The train
came bumpingly to a halt. Here was
Camlet at last. Denis jumped up, crammed
his hat over his eyes, deranged his pile of baggage, leaned out of the window
and shouted for a porter, seized a bag in either hand, and had to put them down
again in order to open the door. When at
last he had safely bundled himself and his baggage on to the platform, he ran
up the train towards the van.
'A bicycle,
a bicycle!' he said breathlessly to the guard.
He felt himself a man of action.
The guard paid no attention, but continued methodically to hand out, one
by one, the packages labelled to Camlet.
'A bicycle!' Denis repeated. 'A
green machine, cross-framed, name of Stone. S-T-O-N-E.'
'All in
good time, sir,' said the guard soothingly.
He was a large, stately man with a naval beard. One pictured him at home, drinking tea,
surrounded by a numerous family. It was
in that tone that he must have spoken to his children when they were
tiresome. 'All in good time, sir.' Denis's man of action collapsed, punctured.
He left his
luggage to be called for later, and pushed off on his bicycle. He always took his bicycle when he went into
the country. It was part of the theory
of exercise. One day one would get up at
six o'clock and pedal away to Kenilworth, or Stratford-on-Avon - anywhere. And within a radius of twenty miles there
were always Norman churches and Tudor mansions to be seen in the course of an
afternoon's excursion. Somehow they
never did get seen, and that one fine morning one really might get up at six.
Once at the
top of the long hill which led up from Camlet station, he felt his spirits
mounting. The world, he found, was
good. The far-away blue hills, the
harvests whitening on the slopes of the ridge along which his road led him, the
treeless skylines that changed as he moved - yes, they were all good. He was overcome by the beauty of those deeply
embayed combes, scooped in the flanks of the ridge beneath him. Curves, curves: he repeated the word slowly,
trying as he did so to find some term in which to give expression to his
appreciation. Curves - no, that was inadequate.
He made a gesture with his hand, as though to scoop the achieved
expression out of the air, and almost fell off his bicycle. What was the word to describe the curves of
those little valleys? They were as fine
as the lines of a human body, they were informed with the subtlety of art....
Galbe. That was a good word; but it was French. Le galbe évasé de ses hanches: had one
ever read a French novel in which the phrase didn't occur? Some day he would compile a dictionary for
the use of novelists. Galbe, gonflé,
goulu: parfum, peau, pervers, potelé, pudeur: vertu, volupté.
But he
really must find that word. Curves,
curves.... Those little valleys had the lines of a cup moulded round a woman's
breast; they seemed the dinted imprints of some huge divine body that had
rested on these hills. Cumbrous
locutions, these; but through them he seemed to be getting nearer to what he
wanted. Dinted, dimpled, wimpled - his
mind wandered down echoing corridors of assonance and alliteration ever further
and further from the point. He was
enamoured with the beauty of words.
Becoming
once more aware of the outer world, he found himself on the crest of a
descent. The road plunged down, steep
and straight, into a considerable valley.
There, on the opposite slope, a little higher up the valley, stood
Crome, his destination. He put on his
brakes; this view of Crome was pleasant to linger over. The façade with its three projecting towers
rose precipitously from among the dark trees of the garden. The house basked in full sunlight; the old
brick rosily glowed. How ripe and rich
it was, how superbly mellow! And at the
same time, how austere! The hill was
becoming steeper and steeper; he was gaining speed in spite of his brakes. He loosed his grip of the levers, and in a
moment was rushing headlong down. Five
minutes later he was passing through the gate of the great courtyard. The front door stood hospitably open. He left his bicycle leaning against the wall
and walked in. He would take them by
surprise.
CHAPTER II
He took nobody by surprise; there was nobody to
take. All was quiet; Denis wandered from
room to empty room, looking with pleasure at the familiar pictures and
furniture, at all the little untidy signs of life that lay scattered here and
there. He was rather glad that they were
all out; it was amusing to wander through the house as though one were
exploring a dead, deserted Pompeii. What
sort of life would the excavator reconstruct from these remains; how would he
people these empty chambers? There was a
long gallery, with its rows of respectable and (though, of course, one couldn't
publicly admit it) rather boring Italian primitives, its Chinese sculptures,
its unobtrusive, dateless furniture.
There was the panelled drawing-room, where the huge chintz-covered
armchairs stood, oases of comfort among the austere flesh-mortifying
antiques. There was the morning-room,
with its pale lemon walls, its painted Venetian chairs and rococo tables, its
mirrors, its modern pictures. There was
the library, cool, spacious, and dark, book-lined from floor to ceiling, rich
in portentous folios. There was the
dining-room, solidly, portwinely English, with its great mahogany table, its
eighteenth-century chairs and sideboard, its eighteenth-century pictures -
family portraits, meticulous animal paintings.
What could one reconstruct from such data? There was much of Henry Wimbush in the long
gallery and the library, something of Anne, perhaps, in the morning-room. That was all.
Among the accumulations of ten generations the living had left but few
traces.
Lying on
the table in the morning-room he saw his own book of poems. What tact! He
picked it up and opened it. It was what
the reviewers call 'a slim volume.' He
read at hazard:
'... But silence and the topless dark
Vault in the lights of Luna Park
And Blackpool from the nightly gloom
Hollows a bright tumultuous tomb.'
He put it down again, shook his head, and sighed. 'What genius I had then!' he reflected,
echoing the aged Swift. It was nearly
six months since the book had been published; he was glad to think he would
never write anything of the same sort again.
Who could have been reading it, he wondered? Anne, perhaps; he liked to think so. Perhaps, too, she had at last recognized
herself in the Hamadryad of the poplar sapling; the slim Hamadryad whose
movements were like the swaying of a young tree in the wind. 'The Woman who was a Tree' was what he had
called the poem. He had given her the
book when it came out, hoping that the poem would tell her what he hadn't dared
to say. She had never referred to it.
He shut his
eyes and saw a vision of her in a red velvet cloak, swaying into the little
restaurant where they sometimes dined together in
It occurred
to him that perhaps his hostess might be in her boudoir. It was a possibility; he would go and
see. Mrs Wimbush's boudoir was in the
central tower on the garden front. A
little staircase corkscrewed up to it from the hall. Denis mounted, tapped at the door. 'Come in.'
Ah, she was there; he had rather hoped she wouldn't be. He opened the door.
Priscilla
Wimbush was lying on the sofa. A
blotting-pad rested on her knees and she was thoughtfully sucking the end of a
silver pencil.
'Hullo,'
she said, looking up. 'I'd forgotten you
were coming.'
'Well, here
I am, I'm afraid,' said Denis deprecatingly.
'I'm awfully sorry.'
Mrs Wimbush
laughed. Her voice, her laughter, were
deep and masculine. Everything about her
was manly. She had a large, square, middle-aged
face, with a massive projecting nose and little greenish eyes, the whole
surmounted by a lofty and elaborate coiffure of a curiously improbable shade of
orange. Looking at her, Denis always
thought of Wilkie Bard at the cantatrice.
'That's why I'm going to
Sing in op'ra, sing in op'ra,
Sing in op-pop-pop-pop-popera.'
Today she was wearing a purple silk dress with a high
collar and a row of pearls. The costume,
so richly dowagerish, so suggestive of the Royal Family, made her look more than
ever like something on the Halls.
'What have
you been doing all this time?' she asked.
'Well,'
said Denis, and he hesitated, almost voluptuously. He had a tremendously amusing account of
London and its doings all ripe and ready in his mind. It would be a pleasure to give it
utterance. 'To begin with,' he said ...
But he was
too late. Mrs Wimbush's question had
been what the grammarians call rhetorical; it asked for no answer. It was a little conversational flourish, a
gambit in the polite game.
'You find
me busy at my horoscopes,' she said, without even being aware that she had
interrupted him.
A little
pained, Denis decided to reserve his story for more receptive ears. He contented himself, by way of revenge, with
saying 'Oh?' rather icily.
'Did I tell
you how I won four hundred on the Grand National this year?'
'Yes,' he
replied, still frigid and monosyllabic.
She must have told him at least six times.
'Wonderful,
isn't it? Everything is in the
Stars. In the Old Days, before I had the
Stars to help me, I used to loose thousands.
Now' - she paused an instant - 'well, look at that four hundred on the
Grand National. That's the Stars.'
Denis would
have liked to hear more about the Old Days.
But he was too discreet and, still more, too shy to ask. There had been something of a bust up; that
was all he knew. Old Priscilla - not so
old then, of course, and sprightlier - had lost a great deal of money, dropped
it in handfuls and hatfuls on every racecourse in the country. She had gambled too. The number of thousands varied in the
different legends, but all put it high.
Henry Wimbush was forced to sell some of his Primitives - a Taddeo da
Poggibonsi, an Amico di Taddeo, and four or five nameless Sienese - to the
Americans. There was a crisis. For the first time in his life Henry asserted
himself, and with good effect, it seemed.
Priscilla's
gay and gadding existence had come to an abrupt end. Nowadays she spent almost all her time at
Crome, cultivating a rather ill-defined malady.
For consolation she dallied with New Thought and the Occult. Her passion for racing still possessed her,
and Henry, was who a kind-hearted fellow at bottom, allowed her forty pounds a
month betting money. Most of Priscilla's
days were spent in casting the horoscopes of horses, and she invested her money
scientifically, as the Stars dictated. She betted on football too, and had a
large notebook in which she registered the horoscopes of all the players in all
the teams of the League. The process of
balancing the horoscopes of two elevens one against the other was a very
delicate and difficult one. A match
between the Spurs and the Villa entailed a conflict in the heavens so vast and
so complicated that it was not to be wondered at if she sometimes made a mistake
about the outcome.
'Such a
pity you don't believe in these things, Denis, such a pity,' said Mrs Wimbush
in her deep, distant voice.
'I can't
say I feel it so.'
'Ah, that's
because you don't know what it's like to have faith. You've no idea how amusing and exciting life
becomes when you do believe. All that
happens means something; nothing you do is every insignificant. It makes life so jolly, you know. Here am I at Crome. Dull as ditchwater, you'd think; but no, I
don't find it so. I don't regret the Old
Days a bit. I have the Stars ...' She
picked up the sheet of paper that was lying on the blotting-pad. 'Inman's horoscope,' she explained. '(I thought I'd like to have a little fling
on the billiards championship this autumn.)
I have the Infinite to keep in tune with,' she waved her hand. 'And then there's the next world and all the
spirits, and one's Aura, and Mrs Eddy and saying you're not ill, and the
Christian Mysteries and Mrs Besant. It's
all splendid. One's never dull for a
moment. I can't think how I used to get
on before - in the Old Days. Pleasure? -
running about, that's all it was; just running about. Lunch, tea, dinner, theatre, supper, every
day. It was fun, of course, while it
lasted. But there wasn't much left of it
afterwards. There's rather a good thing
about that in Barbecue-Smith's new book.
Where is it?'
She sat up
and reached for a book that was lying on the little table by the head of the
sofa.
'Do you
know him, by the way?' she asked.
'Who?'
'Mr
Barbecue-Smith.'
Denis knew
of him vaguely. Barbecue-Smith was a
name in the Sunday papers. He wrote
about the Conduct of Life. He might even
be the author of What a Young Girl Ought to Know.
'No, not
personally,' he said.
'I've
invited him for next weekend.' She
turned over the pages of the book.
'Here's the passage I was thinking of.
I marked it. I always mark the
things I like.'
Holding the
book almost at arm's length, for she was somewhat long-sighted, and making
suitable gestures with her free hand, she began to read, slowly, dramatically.
'"What
are thousand pound fur coats, what are quarter million incomes?"' She looked up from the page with a histrionic
movement of the head; her orange coiffure nodded portentously. Denis looked at it, fascinated. What it the Real Thing and henna, he
wondered, or was it one of those Complete Transformations one sees in the
advertisements?
'"What
are Thrones and Sceptres?"'
The orange
Transformation - yes it must be a Transformation - bobbed up again.
'"What
are the gaieties of the Rich, the splendours of the Powerful, what is the pride
of the Great, what are the gaudy pleasures of High Society?"'
The voice,
which had risen in tone, questioningly, from sentence to sentence, dropped
suddenly and boomed reply.
'"They
are nothing. Vanity, fluff, dandelion
seed in the wind, thin vapours of fever.
The things that matter happen in the heart. Seen things are sweet, but those unseen are a
thousand times more significant. It is
the Unseen that counts in Life."'
Mrs Wimbush
lowered the book. 'Beautiful, isn't it?'
she said.
Denis
preferred not to hazard an opinion, but uttered a non-committal 'H'm.'
'Ah, it's a
fine book this, a beautiful book,' said Priscilla, as she let the pages flick
back, one by one, from under her thumb.
'And here's the passage about the Lotus Pool. He compares the Soul to a Lotus Pool, you
know.' She held up the book again and
read. '"A friend of mine has a
Lotus Pool in his garden. It lies in a
little dell embowered with wild roses and eglantine, among which the
nightingale pours forth its amorous descant all the summer long. Within the pool the Lotuses blossom, and the
birds of the air come to drink and bathe themselves in its crystal waters..."
Ah, and that reminds me,' Priscilla exclaimed, shutting the book with a clap
and uttering her big profound laugh - 'that reminds me of the things that have
been going on in our bathing-pool since you were here last. We gave the village people leave to come and
bathe here in the evenings. You've no
idea of the things that happened.'
She leaned
forward, speaking in a confidential whisper; every now and then she uttered a
deep gurgle of laughter. '... mixed
bathing ... saw them out of my window ... sent for a pair of field-glasses to
make sure ... no doubt of it....' The
laughter broke out again. Denis laughed
too. Barbecue-Smith was tossed on the
floor.
'It's time
we went to see if tea's ready,' said Priscilla.
She hoisted herself up from the sofa and went swishing off across the
room, striding beneath the trailing silk.
Denis followed her, faintly humming to himself:
'That's why I'm going to
Sing in op'ra, sing in op'ra,
Sing in op-pop-pop-pop-popera.'
And then the little twiddly
bit of accompaniment at the end: 'ra-ra.'
CHAPTER III
The terrace in front of the house was a long narrow
strip of turf, bound along its outer edge by a graceful stone balustrade. Two little summerhouses of brick stood at
either end. Below the house the ground
sloped very steeply away, and the terrace was a remarkably high one; from the
balusters to the sloping lawn beneath was a drop of thirty feet. Seen from below, the high unbroken terrace
wall, built like the house itself of brick, had the almost menacing aspect of a
fortification - a castle bastion, from whose parapet one looked out across airy
depths to distances level with the eye.
Below, in the foreground, hedged in by solid masses of sculptured yew
trees, lay the stone-brimmed swimming-pool.
Beyond it stretched the park, with its massive elms, its green expanses
of grass, and, at the bottom of the valley, the gleam of the narrow river. On the farther side of the stream the land
rose again in a long slope, chequered with cultivation. Looking up the valley, to the right, one saw
a line of blue, far-off hills.
The
tea-table had been planted in the shade of one of the little summerhouses, and
the rest of the party was already assembled about it when Denis and Priscilla
made their appearance. Henry Wimbush had
begun to pour out the tea. He was one of
those ageless, unchanging men on the farther side of fifty, who might be
thirty, who might be anything. In all
those years his pale, rather handsome face had never grown any older; it was
like the pale grey bowler hat which he always wore, winter and summer -
unageing, calm, serenely without expression.
Next him,
but separated from him and from the rest of the world by the almost
impenetrable barriers of her deafness, sat Jenny Mullion. She was perhaps thirty, had a tilted nose and
a pink-and-white complexion, and wore her brown hair plaited and coiled in two
lateral buns over her ears. In the
secret tower of her deafness she sat apart, looking down at the world through
sharply piercing eyes. What did she
think of men and women and things? That
was something that Denis had never been able to discover. In her enigmatic remoteness Jenny was a
little disquieting. Even now some
interior joke seemed to be amusing her, for she was smiling to herself, and her
brown eyes were like very bright round marbles.
On his
other side the serious, moon-like innocence of Mary Bracegirdle's face shone
pink and childish. She was nearly
twenty-three, but one wouldn't have guessed it.
Her short hair, clipped like a page's, hung in a bell of elastic gold
about her cheeks. She had large blue
china eyes, whose expression was one of ingenuous and often puzzled
earnestness.
Next to
Mary a small gaunt man was sitting, rigid and erect in his chair. In appearance Mr Scogan was like one of those
extinct bird-lizards of the Tertiary.
His nose was beaked, his dark eye had the shining quickness of a
robin's. But there was nothing soft or
gracious or feathery about him. The skin
of his wrinkled brown face had a dry and scaly look; his hands were the hands
of a crocodile. His movements were
marked by the lizard's disconcertingly abrupt clockwork speed; his speech was
thin, fluty and dry. Henry Wimbush's
schoolfellow and exact contemporary, Mr Scogan looked far older and, at the
same time, far more youthfully alive than did that gentle aristocrat with the
face like a grey bowler.
Mr Scogan might look like an extinct saurian, but Gombauld
was altogether and essentially human. In
the old-fashioned natural histories of the 'thirties [i.e. eighteen thirties.] he might have figured in a steel engraving as a type
of Homo Sapiens - an honour which at that time commonly fell to Lord
Byron. Indeed, with more hair and less
collar, Gombauld would have been completely Byronic - more than Byronic, even,
for Gombauld was of Provençal descent, a black-haired young corsair of thirty,
with flashing teeth and luminous large dark eyes. Denis looked at him enviously. He was jealous of his talent: if only he
wrote verse as well as Gombauld painted pictures! Still more, at the moment, he envied Gombauld
his looks, his vitality, his easy confidence of manner. Was it surprising that Anne should like
him? Like him? - it might even be
something worse, Denis reflected bitterly, as he walked at Priscilla's side
down the long grass terrace.
Between
Gombauld and Mr Scogan a very much lowered deck-chair presented its back to the
new arrivals as they advanced towards the tea-table. Gombauld was leaning over it; his face moved
vivaciously; he smiled, he laughed, he made quick gestures with his hands. From the depths of the chair came up a sound
of soft, lazy laughter. Denis started as
he heard it. That laughter - how well he
knew it! What emotions it evoked in
him! He quickened his pace.
In her low
deck-chair Anne was nearer to lying than to sitting. Her long, slender body reposed in an attitude
of listless and indolent grace. Within
its setting of light brown hair her face had a pretty regularity that was
almost doll-like. And indeed there were
moments when she seemed nothing more than a doll; when the oval face, with its
long-lashed, pale blue eyes, expressed nothing; when it was no more than a lazy
mask of wax. She was Henry Wimbush's own
niece; that bowler-like countenance was one of the Wimbush heirlooms; it ran in
the family, appearing in its female members as a blank doll-face. But across this dollish mask, like a gay
melody dancing over an unchanging fundamental bass, passed Anne's other
inheritance - quick laughter, light ironic amusement, and the changing
expressions of many moods. She was
smiling now as Denis looked down at her: her cat's smile, he called it, for no
very good reason. The mouth was
compressed, and on either side of it two tiny wrinkles had formed themselves in
her cheeks. An infinity of slightly
malicious amusement lurked in those little folds, in the puckers about the
half-closed eyes, in the eyes themselves, bright and laughing between the
narrowed lids.
The
preliminary greetings spoken, Denis found an empty chair between Gombauld and
Jenny and sat down.
'How are
you, Jenny?' he shouted at her.
Jenny
nodded and smiled in mysterious silence, as though the subject of her health
were a secret that could not be publicly divulged.
'How's
London been since I went away?' Anne inquired from the depth of her chair.
The moment
had come; the tremendously amusing narrative was waiting for utterance. 'Well,' said Denis, smiling happily, 'to
begin with ...'
'Has
Priscilla told you of our great antiquarian find?' Henry Wimbush leaned forward; the most
promising of buds was nipped.
'To begin
with,' said Denis desperately, 'there was the Ballet ...'
'Last
week,' Mr Wimbush went on softly and implacably, 'we dug up fifty yards of
oaken drainpipes; just tree trunks with a hole bored through the middle. Very
interesting indeed. Whether they were
laid down by the monks in the fifteenth century, or whether ...'
Denis
listened gloomily. 'Extraordinary!' he
said, when Mr Wimbush had finished; 'quite extraordinary!' He helped himself to another slice of cake. He didn't even want to tell his tale about
London now; he was damped.
For some
time past Mary's grave blue eyes had been fixed upon him. 'What have you been writing lately?' she
asked. It would be nice to have a little
literary conversation.
'Oh, verse
and prose,' said Denis - 'just verse and prose.'
'Prose?' Mr Scogan pounced alarmingly on the
word. 'You've been writing prose?'
'Yes.'
'Not a
novel?'
'Yes.'
'My poor
Denis!' exclaimed Mr Scogan. 'What
about?'
Denis felt
rather uncomfortable. 'Oh, about the usual
things, you know.'
'Of
course,' Mr Scogan groaned. 'I'll
describe the plot for you. Little Percy,
the hero, was never good at games, but he was always clever. He passes through the usual public school and
the usual university and comes to London, where he lives among the
artists. He is bowed down with
melancholy thought; he carries the whole weight of the universe upon his
shoulders. He writes a novel of dazzling
brilliance; he dabbles delicately in Armour and disappears, at the end of the
book, into the luminous Future.'
Denis
blushed scarlet. Mr Scogan had described
the plan of his novel with an accuracy that was appalling. He made an effort to laugh. 'You're entirely wrong,' he said. 'My novel is not in the least like
that.' It was a heroic lie. Luckily, he reflected, only two chapters were
written. He would tear them up that very
evening when he unpacked.
Mr Scogan
paid no attention to his denial, but went on: 'Why will you young men continue
to write about things that are so entirely uninteresting as the mentality of
adolescents and artists? Professional
anthropologists might find it interesting to turn sometimes from the beliefs of
the Black-fellow to the philosophical preoccupations of the undergraduate. But you can't expect an ordinary adult man,
like myself, to be much moved by the story of his spiritual troubles. And after all, even in England, even in
Germany and Russia, there are more adults than adolescents. As for the artist, he is preoccupied with
problems that are so utterly unlike those of the ordinary adult man - problems
of pure aesthetics which don't so much as present themselves to people like
myself - that a description of his mental processes is as boring to the
ordinary reader as a piece of pure mathematics.
A serious book about artists regarded as artists is unreadable; and a
book about artists regarded as lovers, husbands, dipsomaniacs, heroes, and the
like is really not worth writing about.
Jean-Christophe is the stock artist of literature, just as Professor Radium
of Comic Cuts is its stock man of science.'
'I'm sorry
to hear I'm as uninteresting as all that,' said Gombauld.
'Not at
all, my dear Gombauld,' Mr Scogan hastened to explain. 'As a lover or a dipsomaniac, I've no doubt
of you're being a most fascinating specimen.
But as a combiner of forms, you must honestly admit it, you're a bore.'
'I entirely
disagree with you,' exclaimed Mary. She
was somehow always out of breath when she talked, and her speech was punctuated
by little gasps. 'I've known a great
many artists, and I've always found their mentality very interesting. Especially in
'Ah, but
then you're an exception, Mary, you're an exception,' said Mr Scogan. 'You are a femme supérieure.'
A flush of
pleasure turned Mary's face into a harvest moon.
CHAPTER IV
Denis woke up next morning to find the sun shining,
the sky serene. He decided to wear white
flannel trousers - white flannel trousers and a black jacket, with a silk shirt
and his new peach-coloured tie. And what
shoes? White was the obvious choice, but
there was something rather pleasing about the notion of black patent
leather. He lay in bed for several
minutes considering the problem.
Before he
went down - patent leather was his final choice - he looked at himself
critically in the glass. His hair might
have been more golden, he reflected. As
it was, its yellowness had the hint of a greenish tinge in it. But his forehead was good. His forehead made up in height what his chin
lacked in prominence. His nose might
have been longer, but it would pass. His
eyes might have been blue and not green.
But his coat was very well cut and, discreetly padded, made him seem
robuster than he actually was. His legs,
in their white casing, were long and elegant.
Satisfied, he descended the stairs.
Most of the party had already finished their breakfast. He found himself alone with Jenny.
'I hope you
slept well,' he said.
'Yes, isn't
it lovely?' Jenny replied, giving two rapid little nods. 'But we have such awful thunderstorms last
week.'
Parallel
straight lines, Denis reflected, meet only at infinity. He might talk for ever of care-charmer sleep and
she of meteorology till the end of time.
Did one ever establish contact with anyone? We are all parallel straight
lines. Jenny was only a little more
parallel than most.
'They are
very alarming, these thunderstorms,' he said, helping himself to porridge. 'Don't you think so? Or are you above being frightened?'
'No. I always go to bed in a storm. One is so much safer lying down.'
'Why?'
'Because,'
said Jenny, making a descriptive gesture, 'because lightning goes downwards and
not flat ways. When you're lying down
you're out of the current.'
'That's
very ingenious.'
'It's
true.'
There was a
silence. Denis finished his porridge and
helped himself to bacon. For lack of
anything better to say, and because Mr Scogan's absurd phrase was for some
reason running in his head, he turned to Jenny and asked:
'Do you
consider yourself a femme supérieure?'
He had to repeat the question several times before Jenny got the hang of
it.
'No,' she
said rather indignantly, when at last she heard what Denis was saying. 'Certainly not. Has anyone been suggesting that I am?'
'No,' said
Denis. 'Mr Scogan told Mary she was
one.'
'Did
he?' Jenny lowered her voice. 'Shall I tell you what I think of that
man? I think he's slightly sinister.'
Having made
this pronouncement, she entered the ivory tower of her deafness and closed the
door. Denis could not induce her to say
anything more, could not induce her even to listen. She just smiled at him, smiled and
occasionally nodded.
Denis went
out on to the terrace to smoke his after-breakfast pipe and to read his morning
paper. An hour later, when Anne came
down, she found him still reading. By
this time he had got to the Court Circular and the Forthcoming Weddings. He got up to meet her as she approached, a Hamadryad
in white muslin, across the grass.
'Why,
Denis,' she exclaimed, 'you look perfectly sweet in your white trousers.'
Denis was
dreadfully taken aback. There was no
possible retort. 'You speak as though I
were a child in a new frock,' he said, with a show of irritation.
'But that's
how I feel about you, Denis dear.'
'Then you
oughtn't to.'
'But I
can't help it. I'm so much older than
you.'
'I like
that,' he said. 'Four years older.'
'And if you
do look perfectly sweet in your white trousers, why shouldn't I say so? And why did you put them on, if you didn't
think you were going to look sweet in them?'
'Let's go
into the garden,' said Denis. He was put
out; the conversation had taken such a preposterous and unexpected turn. He had planned a very different opening, in
which he was to lead off with, 'You look adorable this morning,' or something
of the kind, and she was to answer, 'Do I?' and then there was to be a pregnant
silence. And now she had got in first
with the trousers. It was provoking; his
pride was hurt.
That part
of the garden that sloped down from the foot of the terrace to the pool had a
beauty which did depend on colour so much as on forms. It was as beautiful by moonlight as in the
sun. The silver of water, the dark
shapes of yew and ilex trees remained, at all hours and seasons, the dominant
features of the scene. It was a
landscape in black and white. For colour
there was the flower-garden; it lay to one side of the pool, separated from it
by a huge Babylonian wall of yews. You
passed through a tunnel in the hedge, you opened a wicket in a wall, and you
found yourself, startlingly and suddenly, in the world of colour. The July borders blazed and flared under the
sun. Within its high brick walls the
garden was like a great tank of warmth and perfume and colour.
Denis held
open the little iron gate for his companion.
'It's like passing from a cloister into an Oriental palace,' he said,
and took a deep breath of the warm, flower-scented air. '"In fragrant volleys they let fly ...”
How does it go?
'"Well shot, ye firemen! O how sweet
And round your equal fires do meet;
Whose shrill report no ear can tell,
But echoes to the eye and smell ..."'
'You have a
bad habit of quoting,' said Anne. 'As I
never know the context or author, I find it humiliating.'
Denis
apologized. 'It's the fault of one's
education. Things somehow seem more real
and vivid when can apply somebody's else's ready-made phrase about them. And then there are lots of lovely names and
words - Monophysite, Iamblichus, Pompanazzi; you bring them out triumphantly,
and feel you've clinched the argument with the mere magical sound of them. That's what comes of the higher education.'
'You may regret
your education,' said Anne; 'I'm ashamed of my lack of it. Look at those sunflowers! Aren't they magnificent?'
'Dark faces
and golden crowns - they're kings in Ethiopia.
And I like the way the tits cling to the flowers and pick out the seeds,
while the other loutish birds, grubbing dirtily for their food, look up in envy
from the ground. Do they look up in
envy? That's the literary touch, I'm
afraid. Education again. It always comes back to that.' He was silent.
Anne had
sat down on a bench that stood in the shade of an old apple tree. 'I'm listening,' she said.
He did not
sit down, but walked backwards and forwards in front of the bench,
gesticulating a little as he talked.
'Books,' he said - 'books. One
reads so many, and one sees so few people and so little of the world. Great thick books and the universe and the
mind and ethics. You've no idea how many
there are. I must have ready twenty or
thirty tons of them in the last five years.
Twenty tons of ratiocination.
Weighted with that, one's pushed out into the world.'
He went on
walking up and down. His voice rose,
fell, was silent a moment, and then talked on.
He moved his hands, sometimes he waved his arms. Anne looked and listened quietly, as though
she were at a lecture. He was a nice
boy, and today he looked charming - charming!
One entered
the world, Denis pursued, having ready-made ideas about everything. One had a philosophy and tried to make life
fit into it. One should have lived first
and then made one's philosophy to fit life.... Life, facts, things were
horribly complicated; ideas, even the most difficult of them, deceptive
simple. In the world of ideas everything
was clear; in life all was obscure, embroiled.
Was it surprising that one was miserable, horribly unhappy? Denis came to a halt in front of the bench,
and as he asked this last question he stretched out his arms and stood for an
instant in an attitude of crucifixion, then let them fall again to his sides.
'My poor
Denis!' Anne was touched. He was really too pathetic as he stood there
in front of her in his white flannel trousers.
'But does one suffer about these things?' It seems very extraordinary.'
'You're
like Scogan,' cried Denis bitterly. 'You
regard me as a specimen for an anthropologist.
Well, I suppose I am.'
'No, no,'
she protested, and drew in her skirt with a gesture that indicated that he was
to sit down beside her. He sat
down. 'Why can't you just take things
for granted and as they come?' she asked.
'It's so much simpler.'
'Of course
it is,' said Denis. 'But it's a lesson
to be learnt gradually. There are the
twenty tons of ratiocination to be got rid of first.'
'I've
always taken things as they come,' said Anne.
'It seems so obvious. One enjoys
the pleasant things, avoids the nasty ones.
There's nothing more to be said.'
'Nothing -
for you. But, then, you were born a
pagan; I am trying laboriously to make myself one. I can take nothing for granted, I can enjoy
nothing as it comes along. Beauty, pleasure,
art, women - I have to invent an excuse, a justification for everything's that
delightful. Otherwise I can't enjoy it
with an easy conscience. I make up a
little story about beauty and pretend that it has something to do with truth
and goodness. I have to say that art is
the process by which one reconstructs the divine reality out of chaos. Pleasure is one of the mystical roads to
union with the infinite - the ecstasies of drinking, dancing, love-making. As for women, I am perpetually assuring
myself that they're the broad highway to divinity. And to think that I'm only just beginning to
see through the silliness of the whole thing!
It's incredible to me that anyone should have escaped these horrors.'
'It's still
more incredible to me,' said Anne, 'that anyone should have been a victim of
them. I should like to see myself
believing that men are the highway to divinity.' The amused malice of her smile planted two little
folds on either side of her mouth, and through their half-closed lids her eyes
shone with laughter. 'What you need,
Denis, is a nice plump young wife, a fixed income, and a little congenial but
regular work.'
'What I
need is you.' That was what he ought to
have retorted, that was what he wanted passionately to say. He could not say it. His desire fought against his shyness. 'What I need is you.' Mentally he shouted the words, but not a
sound issued from his lips. He looked at
her despairingly. Couldn't she see what
was going on inside him? Couldn't she
understand? 'What I need is you.' He would say it, he would - he would.
'I think I
shall go and bathe,' said Anne. 'It's so
hot.' The opportunity had passed.
CHAPTER V
Mr Wimbush had taken them to see the sights of the
Home Farm, and now they were all standing, all six of them - Henry Wimbush, Mr
Scogan, Denis, Gombauld, Anne, and Mary - by the low wall of the piggery,
looking into one of the sties.
'This is a
good sow,' said Henry Wimbush. 'She had
a litter of fourteen.'
'Fourteen?'
Mary echoed incredulously. She turned
astonished blue eyes towards Mr Wimbush, then let them fall on to the seething
mass of élan vital that fermented in the sty.
An immense
sow reposed on her side in the middle of the pen. Her round, black belly, fringed with a double
line of dugs, presented itself to the assault of an army of small,
brownish-black swine. With a frantic
greed they tugged at their mother's flank.
The old sow stirred sometimes uneasily or uttered a little grunt of
pain. One small pig, the runt, the
weakling of the litter, had been unable to secure a place at the banquet. Squealing shrilly, he ran backwards and
forwards, trying to push in among his stronger brothers or even to climb over
their tight little black backs towards the maternal reservoir.
'There are
fourteen,' said Mary. 'You're quite
right. I counted. It's extraordinary.'
'The sow
next door,' Mr Wimbush went on, 'has done very badly. She only had five in her litter. I shall give her another chance. If she does no better next time, I shall fat her
up and kill her. There's the boar,' he
pointed towards a farther sty. 'Fine old
beast, isn't he? But he's getting past
his prime. He'll have to go too.'
'How
cruel!' Anne exclaimed.
'But how
practical, how eminently realistic!' said Mr Scogan. 'In this farm we have a model of sound
paternal government. Make them breed,
make them work, and when they're past working or breeding or begetting,
slaughter them.'
'Farming
seems to be mostly indecency and cruelty,' said Anne.
With the
ferrule of his walking-stick Denis began to scratch the boar's long bristly
back. The animal moved a little so as to
bring himself within easier range of the instrument that evoked in him such
delicious sensations; then he stood stock still, softly grunting his contentment. The mud of years flaked off his sides in a
grey powdery scurf.
'What a
please it is,' said Denis, 'to do somebody a kindness. I believe I enjoy scratching this pig quite
as much as he enjoys being scratched. If
only one could always be kind with so little expense of trouble....'
A gate
slammed; there was a sound of heavy footsteps.
'Morning,
Rowley!' said Henry Wimbush.
'Morning,
sir,' old Rowley answered. He was the
most venerable of the labourers on the farm - a tall, solid man, still unbent, with
grey side-whiskers and a steep, dignified profile. Grave, weighty in his manner, splendidly
respectable, Rowley had the air of a great English statesman of the
mid-nineteenth century. He halted on the
outskirts of the group, and for a moment they all looked at the pigs in a
silence that was only broken by the sound of grunting or the squelch of a sharp
hoof in the mire. Rowley turned at last,
slowly and ponderously and nobly, as he did everything, and addressed himself
to Henry Wimbush.
'Look at them,
sir,' he said, with a motion of his hand towards the wallowing swine. 'Rightly is they called pigs.'
'Rightly
indeed,' Mr Wimbush agreed.
'I am
abashed by that man,' said Mr Scogan, as old Rowley plodded off slowly and with
dignity. 'What wisdom, what judgment,
what a sense of values! "Rightly
are they called swine." Yes. And I wish I could, with as much justice,
say, "Rightly are we called men."'
They walked
on towards the cowsheds and the stables of the cart-horses. Five white geese, taking the air this fine
morning, even as they were doing, met them in the way. They hesitated, cackled; then, converting
their lifted necks into rigid, horizontal snakes, they rushed off in disorder,
hissing horribly as they went. Red
calves paddled in the dung and mud of a spacious yard. In another enclosure stood the bull,, massive
as a locomotive. He was a very calm
bull, and his face wore an expression of melancholy stupidity. He gazed with reddish-brown eyes at his
visitors, chewed thoughtfully at the tangible memories of an earlier meal,
swallowed and regurgitated, chewed again.
His tail lashed savagely from side to side; it seemed to have nothing to
do with his impassive bulk. Between his
short horns was a triangle of red curls, short and dense.
'Splendid
animal,' said Henry Wimbush. 'Pedigree
stock. But he's getting a little old,
like the boar.'
'Fat him up
and slaughter him,' Mr Scogan pronounced, with a delicate old-maidish precision
of utterance.
'Couldn't
you give the animals a little holiday from producing children?' asked
Anne. 'I'm sorry for the poor things.'
Mr Wimbush
shook his head. 'Personally,' he said,
'I rather like seeing fourteen pigs grow where only one grew before. The spectacle of so much crude life is
refreshing.'
'I'm glad
to hear you say so,' Gombauld broke in warmly.
'Lot's of life: that's what we want.
I like pullulation; everything ought to increase and multiply as hard as
it can.'
Gombauld
grey lyrical. Everybody ought to have
children - Anne ought to have them, Mary ought to have them - dozens and
dozens. He emphasized his point by
thumping with his walking-stick on the bull's leather flanks. Mr Scogan ought to pass on his intelligence
to little Scogans, and Denis to little Denises.
The bull turned his head to see what was happening, regarded the
drumming stick for several seconds, then turned back again satisfied, it
seemed, that nothing was happening.
Sterility was odious, unnatural, a sin against life. Life, life, and still more life. The ribs of the placid bull resounded.
Standing
with his back against the farmyard pump, a little apart, Denis examined the
group. Gombauld, passionate and
vivacious, was its centre. The others
stood round, listening - Henry Wimbush, calm and polite beneath his grey
bowler; Mary, with parted lips and eyes that shone with the indignation of a
convinced birth-controller. Anne looked
on through half-shut eyes, smiling; and beside her stood Mr Scogan, bolt
upright in an attitude of metallic rigidity that contrasted strangely with that
fluid grace of hers which even in stillness suggested a soft movement.
Gombauld
ceased talking, and Mary, flushed and outraged, opened her mouth to refute
him. But she was too slow. Before she could utter a word Mr Scogan's
fluty voice had pronounced the opening phrases of a discourse. There was no hope of getting so much as a
word in edgeways; Mary had perforce to resign herself.
'Even your
eloquence, my dear Gombauld,' he was saying - 'even your eloquence must prove
inadequate to reconvert the world to a belief in the delights of mere
multiplication. With the gramophone, the
cinema, and the automatic pistol, the goddess of Applied Science has presented
the world with another gift, more precious even than these - the means of dissociating
love from propagation. Eros, for those
who wish it, is now an entirely free god; his deplorable associations with
Lucina may be broken at will. In the
course of the next few centuries, who knows? the world may see a more complete
severance. I look forward to it
optimistically. Where the great Erasmus
Darwin and Miss Anna Seward, Swan of Lichfield, experimented - and, for all
their scientific ardour, failed - our descendants will experiment and succeed. An impersonal generation will take the place
of Nature's hideous system. In vast
state incubators, rows upon rows of gravid bottles will supply the world with
the population it requires. The family
system will disappear; society, sapped at its very base, will have to find new
foundations; and Eros, beautifully and irresponsibly free, will flit like a gay
butterfly from flower to flower through a sunlit world.'
'It sounds
lovely,' said Anne.
'The
distant future always does.'
Mary's
china blue eyes, more serious and more astonished than ever, were fixed on Mr
Scogan. 'Bottles?' she said. 'Do you really think so? Bottles....'
CHAPTER VI
Mr Barbecue-Smith arrived in time for tea on Saturday
afternoon. He was a short and corpulent
man, with a very large head and no neck.
In his earlier middle age he had been distressed by this absence of
neck, but was comforted by reading in Balzac's Louis Lambert that all
the world's great men have been marked by the same peculiarity, and for a
simple and obvious reason: Greatness is nothing more nor less than the
harmonious functioning of the faculties of the head and heart; the shorter the
neck, the more closely these two organs approach one another; argal ...
It was convincing.
Mr
Barbecue-Smith belonged to the old school of journalists. He sported a leonine head with a
greyish-black mane of oddly unappetizing hair brushed back from a broad but low
forehead. And somehow he always seemed
slightly, ever so slightly, soiled. In
younger days he had gaily called himself a Bohemian. He did so no longer. He was a teacher now, a kind of prophet. Some of his books of comfort and spiritual
teaching were in their hundred and twentieth thousand.
Priscilla
received him with every mark of esteem.
He had never been to Crome before; she showed him round the house. Mr Barbecue-Smith was full of admiration.
'So quaint,
so old-world,' he kept repeating. He had
a rich, rather unctuous voice.
Priscilla
praised his latest book. 'Splendid, I
thought it was,' she said in her large, jolly way.
'I'm happy
to think you found it a comfort,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'Oh,
trememdously! And the bit about the
Lotus Pool - I thought that so beautiful.'
'I knew you
would like that. It came to me, you
know, from without.' He waved his hand
to indicate the astral world.
They went
out into the garden for tea. Mr
Barbecue-Smith was duly introduced.
'Mr Stone
is a writer too,' said Priscilla, as she introduced Denis.
'Indeed!' Mr Barbecue-Smith smiled benignly, and
looking up at Denis with an expression of Olympian condescension, 'And what
sort of things do you write?'
Denis was
furious, and, to make matters worse, he felt himself blushing hotly. Had Priscilla no sense of proportion? She was putting them in the same category -
Barbecue-Smith and himself. They were
both writers, they both used pen and ink.
To Mr Barbecue-Smith's question he answered, 'Oh, nothing much,
nothing,' and looked away.
'Mr Stone
is one of our younger poets.' It was
Anne's voice. He scowled at her, and she
smiled back exasperatingly.
'Excellent,
excellent,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith, and he squeezed Denis's arm
encouragingly. 'The Bard's is a noble
calling.'
As soon as
tea was over Mr Barbecue-Smith excused himself; he had to do some writing
before dinner. Priscilla quite
understood. The prophet retired to his
chamber.
Mr
Barbecue-Smith came down to the drawing-room at ten to eight. He was in a good humour, and, as he descended
the stairs, he smiled to himself and rubbed his large white hands together. In the drawing-room someone was playing
softly and ramblingly on the piano. He
wondered who it could be. One of the
young ladies, perhaps. But no, it was
only Denis, who got up hurriedly, and with some embarrassment, as he came into
the room.
'Do go on,
do go on,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith. 'I am
very fond of music.'
'Then I
couldn't possibly go on,' Denis replied.
'I only make noises.'
There was a
silence. Mr Barbecue-Smith stood with
his back to the hearth, warming himself at the memory of last winter's
fires. He could not control his interior
satisfaction, but still went on smiling to himself. At last he turned to Denis.
'You
write,' he asked, 'don't you?'
'Well, yes
- a little, you know.'
'How many
words do you find you can write in an hour?'
'I don't
think I've ever counted.'
'Oh, you
ought to, you ought to. It's most
important.'
Denis
exercised his memory. 'When I'm in good
form,' he said, 'I fancy I do a twelve-hundred word review in about four
hours. But sometimes it takes me much
longer.'
Mr
Barbecue-Smith nodded. 'Yes, three
hundred words an hour at your best.' He
walked out into the middle of the room, turned round on his heels, and
confronted Denis again. 'Guess how many
words I wrote this evening between five and half-past seven.'
'I can't
imagine.'
'No, but you
must guess. Between five and half-past
seven - that's two and a half hours.'
'Twelve
hundred words,' Denis hazarded.
'No, no,
no.' Mr Barbecue-Smith's expanded face
shone with gaiety. 'Try again.'
'Fifteen
hundred.'
'No.'
'I give it
up,' said Denis. He found he couldn't
summon up much interest in Mr Barbecue-Smith's writing.
'Well, I'll
tell you. Three thousand eight hundred.'
Denis
opened his eyes. 'You must get a lot
done in a day,' he said.
Mr Barbecue-Smith
suddenly became extremely confidential.
He pulled up a stool to the side of Denis's armchair, sat down on it,
and began to talk softly and rapidly.
'Listen to
me,' he said, laying his hand on Denis's sleeve. 'You want to make your living by writing;
you're young, you're inexperienced. Let
me give you a little sound advice.'
What was
the fellow going to do? Denis wondered: give him an introduction to the editor
of John o' London's Weekly, or to tell him where he could sell a light
middle for seven guineas? Mr
Barbecue-Smith patted his arm several times and went on.
'The secret
of writing,' he said, breathing it into the young man's ear - 'the secret of
writing is Inspiration.'
Denis
looked at him in astonishment.
'Inspiration
...' Mr Barbecue-Smith repeated.
'You mean
the native wood-note business?'
Mr
Barbecue-Smith nodded.
'Oh, then I
entirely agree with you,' said Denis.
'But what if one hasn't got Inspiration?'
'That was
precisely the question I was waiting for,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith. 'You ask me what one should do if one hasn't
got Inspiration. I answer: you have
Inspiration; everyone has Inspiration.
It's simply a question of getting it to function.'
The clock
struck eight. There was no sign of any
of the other guests; everybody was always late at Crome. Mr Barbecue-Smith went on.
'That's my
secret,' he said. 'I give it to you
freely.' (Denis made a suitably grateful
murmur and grimace.) 'I'll help you to
find your Inspiration, because I don't like to see a nice, steady young man
like you exhausting his vitality and wasting the best years of his life in a
grinding intellectual labour that could be completely obviated by
Inspiration. I did it myself, so I know
what it's like. Up till the time I was
thirty-eight I was a writer like you - a writer without Inspiration. All I wrote I squeezed out of myself by sheer
hard work. Why, in those days I was
never able to do more than sixty-five words an hour, and what's more, I often
didn't sell what I wrote.' He
sighed. 'We artists,' he said
parenthetically, 'we intellectuals aren't much appreciated here in
England.' Denis wondered if there was
any method, consistent, of course, with politeness, by which he could
dissociated himself from Mr Barbecue-Smith's 'we'. There was none; and besides, it was too late
now, for Mr Barbecue-Smith was once more pursuing the tenor of his discourse.
'At
thirty-eight I was a poor, struggling, tired, overworked, unknown
journalist. Now, at fifty ...' He paused modestly and made a little gesture,
moving his fat hands outwards, away from one another, and expanding his fingers
as though in demonstration. He was
exhibiting himself. Denis thought of
that advertisement in Nestlé's milk - the two cats on the wall, under the moon,
one black and thin, the other white, sleek, and fat. Before Inspiration and after.
'Inspiration
has made the difference,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith solemnly. 'It came quite suddenly - like a gentle dew
from heaven.' He lifted his hand and let
it fall back on to his knee to indicate the descent of the dew. 'It was one evening. I was writing my first book about the Conduct
of Life - Humble Heroisms. You
may have read it; it has been a comfort - at least I hope and think so - a
comfort to many thousands. I was in the middle
of the second chapter, and I was stuck.
Fatigue, overwork - I had only written a hundred words in the last hour,
and I could get no further. I sat biting
the end of my pen and looking at the electric light, which hung above my table,
a little above and in front of me.' He
indicated the position of the lamp with elaborate care. 'Have you ever looked at a bright light
intently for a long time?' he asked, turning to Denis. Denis didn't think he had. 'You can hypnotize yourself that way,' Mr
Barbecue-Smith went on.
The gong
sounded in a terrific crescendo from the hall.
Still no sign of the others.
Denis was horribly hungry.
'That's
what happened to me,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'I was hypnotized. I lost
consciousness like that.' He snapped his
fingers. 'When I came to, I found that
it was past midnight, and I had written four thousand words. Four thousand,' he repeated, opening his
mouth very wide on the ou of thousand.
'Inspiration had come to me.'
'What a
very extraordinary thing,' said Denis.
'I was
afraid of it at first. It didn't seem to
me natural. I didn't feel, somehow, that
it was quite right, quite fair, I might almost say, to produce a literary
composition unconsciously. Besides, I
was afraid I might have written nonsense.'
'And had
you written nonsense?' Denis asked.
'Certainly
not,' Mr Barbecue-Smith replied, with a trace of annoyance. 'Certainly not. It was admirable. Just a few spelling mistakes and slips, such
as there generally are in automatic writing.
But the style, the thought - all the essentials were admirable. After that, Inspiration came to me
regularly. I wrote the whole of Humble
Heroisms like that. It was a great
success, and so has everything been that I have written since.' He leaned forward and jabbed at Denis with
his finger. 'That's my secret,' he said,
'and that's how you could write too, if you tried - without effort, fluently,
well.'
'But how?'
asked Denis, trying not to show how deeply he had been insulted by that final
'well.'
'By
cultivating your Inspiration, by getting into touch with your
Subconscious. Have you ever read my
little book, Pipelines to the Infinite?'
Denis had
to confess that that was, precisely, one of the few, perhaps the only one, of
Mr Barbecue-Smith's works he had not read.
'Never
mind, never mind,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith.
'It's just a little book about the Connection of the Subconscious with
the Infinite. Get into touch with the
Subconscious and you are in touch with the Universe. Inspiration, in fact. You follow me?'
'Perfectly,
perfectly,' said Denis. 'But don't you
find that the Universe sometimes sends you very irrelevant messages?'
'I don't
allow it to,' Mr Barbecue-Smith replied.
'I canalize it. I bring it down
through pipes to work the turbines of my conscious mind.'
'Like
Niagara,' Denis suggested. Some of Mr
Barbecue-Smith's remarks sounded strangely like quotations - quotations from
his own works, no doubt.
'Precisely. Like Niagara.
And this is how I do it.' He
leaned forward, and with a raised forefinger marked his points as he made them,
beating time, as it were, to his discourse.
'Before I go off into my trance, I concentrate on the subject I wish to
be inspired about. Let us say I am
writing about the humble heroisms; for ten minutes before I go into the trance
I think of nothing but orphans supporting their little brothers and sisters, of
dull work well and patiently done, and I focus my mind on such great
philosophical truths as the purification and uplifting of the soul by
suffering, and the alchemical transformation of leaden evil into golden
good.' (Denis again hung up his little
festoon of quotation marks.) 'Then I pop
off. Two or three hours later I wake up
again, and find that inspiration has done its work. Thousands of words, comforting, uplifting
words, lie before me. I type them out
neatly on my machine and they are ready for the printer.'
'It all
sounds wonderfully simple,' said Denis.
'It
is. All the great and splendid and
divine things of life are wonderfully simple.'
(Quotation marks again.) 'When I
have to do my aphorisms,' Mr Barbecue-Smith continued, 'I prelude my trance by
turning over the pages of any Dictionary of Quotations or Shakespeare Calendar
that comes to hand. That sets the key,
so to speak; that ensures that the Universe shall come flowing in, not in a
continuous rush, but in aphorismic drops.
You see the idea?'
Denis
nodded. Mr Barbecue-Smith put his hand
in his pocket and pulled out a notebook.
'I did a few in the train today,' he said, turning over the pages. 'Just dropped off into a trance in a corner
of my carriage. I find the train very
conducive to good work. Here they
are.' He cleared his throat and read:
'The
Mountain Road may be steep, but the air is pure up there, and it is from the
Summit that one gets the view.'
'The Things
that Really Matter happen in the Heart.'
It was curious, Denis reflected, the way the Infinite
sometimes repeated itself.
'Seeing
is Believing. Yes, but Believing is also
Seeing. If I believe in God, I see God,
even in the things that seem to be evil.'
Mr Barbecue-Smith looked up from his notebook. 'That last one,' he said, 'is particularly
subtle and beautiful, don't you think?
Without Inspiration I could never had hit on that.' He re-read the apophthegm with a slower and
more solemn utterance. 'Straight from
the Infinite,' he commented reflectively, then addressed himself to the next
aphorism.
'The
flame of a candle gives Light, but it also Burns.'
Puzzled wrinkles appeared on Mr Barbecue-Smith's
forehead. 'I don't exactly know what
that means,' he said. 'It's very
gnomic. One could apply it, of course,
to the Higher Education - illuminating, but provoking the Lower Classes to
discontent and revolution. Yes, I suppose
that's what it is. But it's gnomic, it's
gnomic.' He rubbed his chin
thoughtfully. The gong sounded again,
clamorously, it seemed imploringly: dinner was growing cold. It roused Mr Barbecue-Smith from
meditation. He turned to Denis.
'You
understand me now when I advise you to cultivate your Inspiration. Let your Subconscious work for you; turn on
the Niagara of the Infinite.'
There was
the sound of feet on the stairs. Mr
Barbecue-Smith got up, laid his hand for an instant on Denis's shoulder, and
said:
'No more
now. Another time. And remember, I rely absolutely on your
discretion in this matter. There are
intimate, sacred things that one doesn't wish to be generally known.'
'Of
course,' said Denis. 'I quite
understand.'
CHAPTER VII
At Crome all the beds were ancient hereditary pieces
of furniture. Huge beds, like
four-masted ships, with furled sails of shining coloured stuff. Beds carved and inlaid, beds painted and
gilded. Beds of walnut and oak, of rare
exotic woods. Beds of every date and
fashion from the time of Sir Ferdinando, who built the house, to the time of
his namesake in the late eighteenth century, the last of the family, but all of
them grandiose, magnificent.
The finest
of all was now Anne's bed. Sir Julius,
son to Sir Ferdinando, had had it made in Venice against his wife's first
lying-in. Early seicento Venice
had expended all its extravagant art in the making of it. The body of the bed was like a great square
sarcophagus. Clustering roses were
carved in high relief on its wooden panels, and lucious putti wallowed
among the roses. On the black groundwork
of the panels the carved reliefs were gilded and burnished. The golden roses twined in spirals up the
four pillar-like posts, and cherubs, seated at the top of each column,
supported a wooden canopy fretted with the same carved flowers.
Anne was
reading in bed. Two candles stood on the
little table beside her. In their rich
light her face, her bare arm and shoulder took on warm hues and a sort of
peach-like quality of surface. Here and
there in the canopy above her carved golden petals shone brightly among
profound shadows, and the soft light, falling on the sculptured panel of the
bed, broke restlessly among the intricate roses, lingered in a broad caress on
the blown cheeks, the dimpled bellies,
the tight, absurd little posteriors of the sprawling putti.
There was a discreet tap at the door. She looked up. 'Come in, come in.' A face, round and childish within its sleek bell
of golden hair, peered round the opening door.
More childish-looking still, a suit of mauve pyjamas made its entrance.
It was
Mary. 'I thought I'd just look in for a
moment to say goodnight,' she said, and sat down on the edge of the bed.
Anne closed
her book. 'That was very sweet of you.'
'What are
you reading?' She looked at the
book. 'Rather second-rate, isn't
it?' The tone in which Mary pronounced
the word 'second-rate' implied an almost infinite denigration. She was accustomed in London to associate
only with first-rate people who liked first-rate things, and she knew that
there were very, very few first-rate things in the world, and that those were
mostly French.
'Well, I'm
afraid I like it,' said Anne. There was
nothing more to be said. The silence
that followed was a rather uncomfortable one.
Mary fiddled uneasily with the bottom button of her pyjama jacket. Leaning back on her mound of heaped-up
pillows, Anne waited and wondered what was coming.
'I'm so
awfully afraid of repressions,' said Mary at last, bursting suddenly and
surprisingly into speech. She pronounced
the words on the tail-end of an expiring breath, and had to gasp for new air
almost before the phrase was finished.
'What's
there to be depressed about?'
'I said repressions,
not depressions.'
'Oh,
repressions; I see,' said Anne. 'But
repressions of what?'
Mary had to
explain. 'The natural instincts of sex
...' she began didactically. But Anne
cut her short.
'Yes,
yes. Perfectly. I understand.
Repressions; old maids and all the rest.
But what about them?'
'That's
just it,' said Mary. 'I'm afraid of
them. It's always dangerous to repress
one's instincts. I'm beginning to detect
in myself symptoms like the ones you read of in the books. I constantly dream that I'm climbing up
ladders. It's most disquieting. The symptoms are only too clear.'
'Are they?'
'One may
become a nymphomaniac if one's not careful.
You've no idea how serious these repressions are if you don't get rid of
them in time.'
'It sounds
too awful,' said Anne. 'But I don't see
that I can do anything to help you.'
'I thought
I'd just like to talk it over with you.'
'Why, of
course; I'm only too happy, Mary darling.'
Mary
coughed and drew a deep breath. 'I
presume,' she began sententiously, 'I presume we may take for granted that an
intelligent young woman of twenty-three who has lived in civilized society in
the twentieth-century has no prejudices.'
'Well, I
confess I still have a few.'
'But not
about repressions.'
'No, not
many about repressions; that's true.'
'Or,
rather, about getting rid of repressions.'
'Exactly.'
'So much
for our fundamental postulate,' said Mary.
Solemnity was expressed in every feature of her round young face,
radiated from her large blue eyes. 'We
come next to the desirability of possessing experience. I hope we are agreed that knowledge is
desirable and that ignorance is undesirable.'
Obedient as
one of those complaisant disciples from whom Socrates could get whatever answer
he chose, Anne gave her assent to this proposition.
'And we are
equally agreed, I hope, that marriage is what it is.'
'It is.'
'Good!'
said Mary. 'And repressions being what
they are ...'
'Exactly.'
'There
would therefore seem to be only one conclusion.'
'But I knew
that,' Anne exclaimed, 'before you began.'
'Yes, but
now it's been proved,' said Mary. 'One
must do things logically. The question
is now ...'
'But where
does the question come in? You've
reached your only possible conclusion - logically, which is more than I could
have done. All that remains is to impart
the information to someone like you - someone you like really rather a lot,
someone you're in love with, if I may express myself so baldly.'
'But that's
just where the question comes in,' Mary exclaimed. 'I'm not in love with anybody.'
'Then, if I
were you, I should wait till you are.'
'But I
can't go on dreaming night after night that I'm falling down a well. It's too dangerous.'
'Well, if
it really is too dangerous, then of course you must do something about
it; you must find somebody else.'
'But
who?' A thoughtful frown puckered Mar's
brow. 'It must be somebody intelligent,
somebody with intellectual interests that I can share. And it must be somebody with a proper respect
for women, somebody's who prepared to talk seriously about his work and his
ideas and about my work and my ideas. It
isn't, as you see, at all easy to find the right person.'
'Well,'
said Anne, 'there are three unattached and intelligent men in the house at the
present time. There's Mr Scogan, to
begin with; but perhaps he's rather too much of a genuine antique. And there are Gombauld and Denis. Shall we say that the choice is limited to
the last two?'
Mary
nodded. 'I think we had better,' she
said, and then hesitated, with a certain air of embarrassment.
'What is
it?'
'I was
wondering,' said Mary, with a gasp, 'whether they really were unattached. I thought that perhaps you might ... you
might ...'
'It was
very nice of you to think of me, Mary darling,' said Anne, smiling the tight
cat's smile. 'But as far as I'm
concerned, they are both entirely unattached.'
'I'm very
glad of that,' said Mary, looking relieved.
'We are now confronted with the question: Which of the two?'
'I can give
no advice. It's a matter for your
taste.'
'It's not a
matter of my taste,' Mary pronounced, 'but of their merits. We must weigh them and consider them
carefully and dispassionately.'
'You must
do the weighing yourself,' said Anne; there was still the trace of a smile at
the corners of her mouth and round the half-closed eyes. 'I won't run the risk of advising you
wrongly.'
'Gombauld
as more talent,' Mary began, 'but he is less civilized than Denis.' Mary's pronunciation of 'civilized' gave the
word a special and additional significance.
She uttered it meticulously, in the very front of her mouth, hissing
delicately on the opening sibilant. So
few people were civilized, and they, like the first-rate works of art, were
mostly French. 'Civilization is most
important, don't you think?'
Anne held
up her hand. 'I won't advise,' she
said. 'You must make the decision.'
'Gombauld's
family,' Mary went on reflectively, 'comes from Marseilles. Rather a dangerous heredity, when one thinks
of the Latin attitude towards women. But
then, I sometimes wonder whether Denis is altogether serious-minded, whether he
isn't rather a dilettante. It's very
difficult. What do you think?'
'I'm not
listening,' said Anne. 'I refuse to take
any responsibility.'
Mary
sighed. 'Well,' she said, 'I think I had
better go to bed and think about it.'
'Carefully
and dispassionately,' said Anne.
At the door
Mary turned round. 'Goodnight,' she
said, and wondered as she said the words why Anne was smiling in that curious
way. It was probably nothing, she
reflected. Anne often smiled for no
apparent reason; it was probably just a habit.
'I hope I shan't dream of falling down wells again tonight,' she added.
'Ladders
are worse,' said Anne.
Mary
nodded. 'Yes, ladders are much graver.'
CHAPTER VIII
Breakfast on Sunday morning was an hour later than on
weekdays, and Priscilla, who usually made no public appearance before luncheon,
honoured it by her presence. Dressed in
black silk, with a ruby cross as well as her customary string of pearls round her
neck, she presided. An enormous Sunday
paper concealed all but the extreme pinnacle of her coiffure from the outer
world.
'I see
Surrey has won,' she said, with her mouth full, 'by four wickets. The sun is in Leo: that would account for
it!'
'Splendid
game, cricket,' remarked Mr Barbecue-Smith heartily to no one in particular;
'so thoroughly English.'
Jenny, who
was sitting next to him, woke up suddenly with a start. 'What?' she said. 'What?'
'So
English,' repeated Mr Barbecue-Smith.
Jenny looked
at him, surprised. 'English? Of course I am.'
He was
beginning to explain, when Mrs Wimbush veiled her Sunday paper, and appeared, a
square, mauve-powdered face in the midst of orange splendours. 'I see there's a new series of articles on
the next world just beginning,' she said to Mr Barbecue-Smith. 'This one's called "Summer Land and
Gehenna."'
'Summer
Land,' echoed Mr Barbecue-Smith, closing his eyes. '
Mary had
taken the seat next to Denis's. After a
night of careful consideration she had decided on Denis. He might have less talent than Gombauld, he
might be a little lacking in seriousness, but somehow he was safer.
'Are you
writing much poetry here in the country?' she asked, with a bright gravity.
'None,'
said Denis curtly. 'I haven't brought my
typewriter.'
'But do you
mean to say you can't write without a typewriter?'
Denis shook
his head. He hated talking at breakfast,
and, besides, he wanted to hear what Mr Scogan was saying at the other end of
the table.
'... My
scheme for dealing with the Church,' Mr Scogan was saying, 'is beautifully
simple. At the present time the Anglican
clergy wear their collars the wrong way round.
I would compel them to wear, not only their collars, but all their
clothes, turned back to front - coat, waistcoat, trousers, boots - so that
every clergyman should present to the world a smooth façade, unbroken by stud,
button, or lace. The enforcement of such
a livery would act as a wholesome deterrent to those intending to enter the
Church. At the same time, it would
enormously enhance, what Archbishop Laud so rightly insisted on, the
"beauty of holiness" in the few incorrigibles who could not be
deterred.'
'In hell,
it seems,' said Priscilla, reading in her Sunday paper, 'the children amuse
themselves by flaying lambs alive.'
Ah, but,
dear lady, that's only a symbol,' exclaimed Mr Barbecue-Smith, 'a material
symbol of a h-piritual truth. Lambs
signify ...'
'Then there
are military uniforms,' Mr Scogan went on.
'When scarlet and pipeclay were abandoned for khaki, there were some who
trembled for the future of war. But
then, finding how elegant the new tunic was, how closely it clipped the waist,
how voluptuously, with the lateral bustles of the pockets, it exaggerated the
hips; when they realized the brilliant potentialities of breeches and
top-boots, they were reassured. Abolish
these military elegances, standardize a uniform of sackcloth and mackintosh,
you will very soon find that ...'
'Is anyone
coming to church with me this morning?' asked Henry Wimbush. No one responded. He baited his bare invitation. 'I read the lessons, you know. And there's Mr Bodiham. His sermons are sometimes worth hearing.'
'Thank you,
thank you,' said Mr Barbecue-Smith. 'I
for one prefer to worship in the infinite church of Nature. How does our Shakespeare put it? "Sermons in books, stones in the running
brooks."' He waved his arm in a
fine gesture towards the window, and even as he did so he became vaguely, but
nonetheless insistently, nonetheless uncomfortably aware that something had
gone wrong with the quotation. Something
- what could it be? Sermons? Stones?
Books?
CHAPTER IX
Mr Bodiham was sitting in his study at the Rectory. The nineteenth-century Gothic windows, narrow
and pointed, admitted the light grudgingly; in spite of the brilliant July
weather, the room was sombre. Brown
varnished bookshelves lined the walls, filled with row upon row of those thick,
heavy theological works which the second-hand booksellers generously sell by
weight. The mantelpiece, the overmantel,
a towering structure of spindly pillars and little shelves, were brown and
varnished. The writing-desk was brown
and varnished. So were the chairs, so
was the door. A dark red-brown carpet
with patterns covered the floor.
Everything was brown in the room, and there was a curious brownish
smell.
In the
midst of this brown gloom Mr Bodiham sat at his desk. He was the man in the Iron Mask. A grey metallic face with iron cheekbones and
a narrow iron brow; irons folds, hard and unchanging, ran perpendicularly down
his cheeks; his nose was the iron beak of some thin, delicate bird of
rapine. He had brown eyes, set in
sockets rimmed with iron; round them the skin was dark, as though it had been
charred. Dense wiry hair covered his
skull; it had been black, it was turning grey.
His ears were very small and fine.
His jaws, his chin, his upper lip were dark, iron-dark, where he had
shaved. His voice, when he spoke and
especially when he raised it in preaching, was harsh, like the grating of iron
hinges when a seldom-used door is opened.
It was
nearly half-past twelve. He had just
come back from church, hoarse and weary with preaching. He preached with fury, with passion, an iron
man beating with a flail upon the souls of his congregation. But the souls of the faithful at Crome were
made of india-rubber, solid rubber; the flail rebounded. They were used to Mr Bodiham at Crome. The flail thumped on india-rubber, and as
often as not the rubber slept.
That
morning he had preached, as he had often preached before, on the nature of
God. He had tried to make them
understand about God, what a fearful thing it is to fall into His hands. God - they thought of something soft and
merciful. They blinded themselves to
facts; still more, they blinded themselves to the Bible. The passengers on the Titanic sang
'Nearer my God to Thee' as the ship was going down. Did they realize what they were asking to be
brought nearer to? A white fire of
righteousness, an angry fire....
When
Savonarola preached, men sobbed and groaned aloud. Nothing broke the polite silence with which
Crome listened to Mr Bodiham - only an occasional cough and sometimes the sound
of heavy breathing. In the front pew sat
Henry Wimbush, calm, well-bred, beautifully dressed. There were times when Mr Bodiham wanted to
jump down from the pulpit and shake him into life, - times when he would have
liked to beat and kill his whole congregation.
He sat at
his desk dejectedly. Outside the Gothic
windows the earth was warm and marvellously calm. Everything was as it had always been. And yet, and yet ... It was nearly four years
now since he had preached that sermon on Matthew xxiv.7: 'For nation shall rise
up against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and
pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.' It was nearly four years. He had had the sermon printed; it was so
terribly, so vitally important that all the world should know what he had to
say. A copy of the little pamphlet lay
on his desk - eight small grey pages, printed by a fount of type that had grown
blunt, like an old dog's teeth, by the endless champing and champing of the
press. He opened it and began to read it
yet once again.
'"For
nation shall rise up against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there
shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places."
'Nineteen
centuries have elapsed since Our Lord gave utterance to those words, and not a
single one of them has been without wars, plagues, famines, and
earthquakes. Mighty empires have crashed
in ruin to the ground, diseases have unpeopled half the globe, there have been
vast natural cataclysms in which thousands have been overwhelmed by flood and
fire and whirlwind. Time and again, in
the course of these nineteen centuries, such things have happened, but they
have not brought Christ back to earth.
They were "signs of the times" inasmuch as they were signs of
God's wrath against the chronic wickedness of mankind, but they were not signs
of the times in connection with the Second Coming.
'If earnest
Christians have regarded the present was as a true sign of the Lord's
approaching return, it is not merely because it happens to be a great war
involving the lives of millions of people, not merely because famine is
tightening its grip on every country in Europe, not merely because disease of
every kind, from syphilis to spotted fever, is rife among the warring nations;
no, it is not for these reasons that we regard this war as a true Sign of the
Times, but because in its origin and its progress it is marked by certain
characteristics which seem to connect it almost beyond a doubt with the
predictions in Christian Prophecy relating to the Second Coming of the Lord.
'Let me
enumerate the features of the present war which most clearly suggest that it is
a Sign foretelling the near approach of the Second Advent. Our Lord said that "this Gospel of the
Kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and
then shall the end come." Although
it would be presumptuous for us to say what degree of evangelization will be
regarded by God as sufficient, we may at least confidently hope that a century
of unflagging missionary work has brought the fulfilment of this condition at
any rate near. True, the larger number
of the world's inhabitants have remained deaf to the preaching of the true
religion; but that does not vitiate the fact that the Gospel has been
preached "for a witness" to all unbelievers from the Papist to the
Zulu. The responsibility for the
continued prevalence of unbelief lies, not with the preachers, but with those
preached to.
'Again, it
has been generally recognized that "the drying up of the waters of the
great river Euphrates," mentioned in the sixteenth chapter of Revelations,
refers to the decay and extinction of Turkish power, and is a sign of the near
approaching end of the world as we know it.
The capture of Jerusalem and the successes in Mesopotamia are great
strides forward in the destruction of the Ottoman Empire; though it must be
admitted that the Gallipoli episode proved that the Turk still possesses a
"notable horn" of strength.
Historically speaking, this drying up of Ottoman power has been going on
for the past century; the last two years have witnesses a great acceleration of
the process, and there can be no doubt that complete desiccation is within
sight.
'Closely
following on the words concerning the drying up of
'Let us
examine the facts. In history, exactly
as in St John's Gospel, the world war is immediately preceded by the drying up
of Euphrates, or the decay of Turkish power.
This fact alone would be enough to connect the present conflict with the
Armageddon of Revelations and therefore to point to the near approach of the
Second Advent. But further evidence of
an even more solid and convincing nature can be adduced.
'Armageddon
is brought about by the activities of three unclean spirits, as it were toads,
which come out of the mouths of the Dragon, the Beast, and the False
Prophet. If we can identify these three
powers of evil much light will clearly be thrown on the whole question.
'The
Dragon, the Beast, and the False Prophet can all be identified in history. Satan, who can only work through human
agency, has used these three powers in the long war against Christ which has
filled the last nineteen centuries with religious strife. The Dragon, it has been sufficiently
established, is pagan Rome, and the spirit issuing from its mouth is the spirit
of Infidelity. The Beast, alternatively
symbolized as Woman, is undoubtedly the Papal power, and Popery is the spirit
which it spews forth. There is only one
power which answers to the description of the False Prophet, the wolf in
sheep's clothing, the agent of the devil working in the guise of the Lamb, and
that power is the so-called "Society of Jesus." The spirit that issues from the mouth of the
False Prophet is the spirit of False Morality.
'We may
assume, then, that the three evil spirits are Infidelity, Popery, and False
Morality. Have these three influences
been the real cause of the present conflict?
The answer is clear.
'The spirit
of Infidelity is the very spirit of German criticism. The Higher Criticism, as it is mockingly
called, denies the possibility of miracles, prediction, and real inspiration,
and attempts to account for the Bible as a natural development. Slowly but surely, during the last eighty
years, the spirit of Infidelity has been robbing the Germans of their Bible and
their faith, so that Germany is today a nation of unbelievers. Higher Criticism has thus made the war
possible; for it would be absolutely impossible for any Christian nation to wage
war as Germany is waging it.
'We come
next tot he spirit of Popery, whose influence in causing the war was quite as
great as that of Infidelity, though not, perhaps, so immediately obvious. Since the Franco-Prussian War the Papal power
has steadily declined in France, while in Germany it has steadily
increased. Today France is an anti-papal
state, while Germany possesses a powerful Roman Catholic minority. Two papally controlled states, Germany and
Austria, are at war with six anti-papal states - England, France, Italy,
Russia, Serbia, and Portugal. Belgium
is, of course, a thoroughly papal state, and there can be little doubt that the
presence on the Allies' side of an element so essentially hostile has done much
to hamper the righteous cause and is responsible for our comparative ill-success. That the spirit of Popery is behind the war
is thus seen clearly enough in the grouping of the opposed powers, while the
rebellion in the Roman Catholic parts of Ireland has merely confirmed a
conclusion already obvious to any unbiased mind.
'The spirit
of False Morality has played as great a part in this war as the two other evil
spirits. The Scrap of Paper incident is
the nearest and most obvious example of Germany's adherence to this essentially
unchristian or Jesuitical morality. The
end is German world-power, and in the attainment of this end, any means are
justifiable. It is the true principle of
Jesuitry applied to international politics.
'The
identification is now complete. As was predicted
in Revelations, the three evil spirits have gone forth just as the decay of the
Ottoman power was nearing completion, and have joined together to make the
world war. The warning, "Behold, I
come as a thief," is therefore meant for the present period - for you and
me and all the world. This war will lead
on inevitably to the war of Armageddon, and will only be brought to an end by
the Lord's personal return.
'And when
He returns, what will happen? Those who
are in Christ, St John tells us, will be called to the Supper of the Lamb. Those who are found fighting against Him will
be called to the Supper of the Great God - that grim banquet where they shall
not feast, but be feasted on.
"For," as St John says, "I saw an angel standing in the
sun; and he cried in a loud voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the
midst of heaven, Come and gather yourselves together unto the supper of the
Great God; that ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of captains, and
the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses, and of them that sit on them,
and the flesh of all men, both free and bond, both small and great." All the enemies of Christ will be slain with
the sword of him that sits upon the horse, "and all the fowls will be
filled with their flesh." That is
the Supper of the Great God.
'It may be
soon or it may, as men reckon time, be long; but sooner or later, inevitably,
the Lord will come and deliver the world from its present troubles. And woe unto them who are called, not to the
Supper of the Lamb, but to the Supper of the Great God. They will realize then, but too late, that
God is a God of Wrath as well as a God of Forgiveness. The God who sent bears to devour the mockers
of Elisha, the God who smote the Egyptians for their stubborn wickedness, will
assuredly smite them too, unless they make haste to repent. But perhaps it is already too late. Who knows but that tomorrow, in a moment
even, Christ may be upon us unawares, like a thief? In a little while, who knows? the angel
standing in the sun may be summoning the ravens and vultures from their
crannies in the rocks to feed upon the putrefying flesh of the millions of
unrighteous whom God's wrath has destroyed.
Be ready, then; the coming of the Lord is at hand. May it be for all of you an object of hope,
not a moment to be looked forward to with terror and trembling.' [The sermon attributed to 'Mr Bodiham' is a
reproduction of the substance of an Address, given by the Rev. E.H. Horne, in A.D.
1916, to a meeting of clergy, and then published. It is now reprinted as an Appendix in a small
book by him, entitled THE SIGNIFICANCE OF AIR WAR (Marshall, Morgan &
Scott).]
Mr Bodiham
closed the little pamphlet and leaned back in his chair. The argument was sound, absolutely
compelling; and yet - it was four years since he had preached that sermon; four
years, and England was at peace, the sun shone, the people of Crome were as
wicked and indifferent as ever - more so, indeed, if that were possible. If only he could understand, if the heavens
would but make a sign! But his
questionings remained unanswered. Seated
there in his brown varnished chair under the Ruskinian window, he could have
screamed aloud. He gripped the arms of
his chair - gripping, gripping for control.
The knuckles of his hands whitened; he bit his lip. In a few seconds he was able to relax the
tension; he began to rebuke himself for his rebellious impatience.
Four years,
he reflected; what were four years, after all?
It must inevitably take a long time for Armageddon to ripen, to yeast
itself up. The episode of 1914 had been
a preliminary skirmish. And as for the
war having come to an end - why, that, of course, was illusory. It was still going on, smouldering away in Silesia,
in Ireland, in Anatolia; the discontent in Egypt and India was preparing the
way, perhaps, for a great extension of the slaughter among the heathen
peoples. The Chinese boycott of Japan,
and the rivalries of that country and America in the Pacific, might be breeding
a great new war in the East. The
prospect, Mr Bodiham tried to assure himself, was hopeful; the real, the
genuine Armageddon might soon begin, and then, like a thief in the night ...
But, in spite of all his comfortable reasoning, he remained unhappy,
dissatisfied. Four years ago he had been
so confident; God's intention seemed then so plain. And now?
Now, he did well to be angry. And
now he suffered too.
Sudden and
silent as a phantom Mrs Bodiham appeared, gliding noiselessly across the
room. Above her black dress her face was
pale with an opaque whiteness, her eyes were pale as water in a glass, and her
strawy hair was almost colourless. She
held a large envelope in her hand.
'This came
for you by the post,' she said softly.
The
envelope was unsealed. Mechanically Mr
Bodiham tore it open. It contained a
pamphlet, larger than his own and more elegant in appearance. 'The House of Sheeny, Clerical Outfitters,
Soutane
in best black merino. Ready to wear; in
all sizes.
Clerical
frock-coats. From nine guineas. A dressy garment, tailored by our own
experienced ecclesiastical cutters.
Half-tone illustrations represented young curates, some
dapper, some Rugbeian and muscular, some with ascetic faces and large ecstatic
eyes, dressed in jackets, in frock-coats, in surplices, in clerical evening
dress, in black Norfolk suitings.
A large
assortment of chasubles.
Rope
girdles.
Sheeny's
Special Skirt Cassocks. Tied by a string
about the waist.... When worn under a surplice presents an appearance
indistinguishable from that of a complete cassock.... Recommended for summer
wear and hot climates.
With a gesture of horror and disgust Mr Bodiham threw
the catalogue into the wastepaper basket.
Mrs Bodiham looked at him; her pale, glaucous eyes reflected his action
without comment.
'The
village,' she said in her quiet voice, 'the village grows worse and worse every
day.'
'What has
happened now?' asked Mr Bodiham, feeling suddenly very weary.
'I'll tell
you.' She pulled up a brown varnished
chair and sat down. In the village of
Crome, it seemed, Sodom and Gomorrah had come to a second birth.
CHAPTER X
Denis did not dance, but when ragtime came squirting
of the pianola in gushes of treacle and hot perfume, in jets of Bengal light,
then things began to dance inside him.
Little black nigger corpuscles jigged and drummed in his arteries. He became a cage of movement, a walking palais
de danse. It was very uncomfortable,
like the preliminary symptoms of a disease.
He sat in one of the window seats, glumly pretending to read.
At the
pianola, Henry Wimbush, smoking a long cigar through a tunnelled pillar of
amber, trod out the shattering dance music with serene patience. Locked together, Gombauld and Anne moved with
a harmoniousness that made them seem a single creature, two-headed and
four-legged. Mr Scogan, solemnly
buffoonish, shuffled round the room with Mary.
Jenny sat in the shadow behind the piano, scribbling, it seemed, in a
big red notebook. In armchairs by the
fireplace, Priscilla and Mr Barbecue-Smith discussed higher things, without,
apparently, being disturbed by the noise of the Lower Plane.
'Optimism,'
said Mr Barbecue-Smith, with a tone of finality, speaking through strains of
the 'Wild, Wild Women' - 'optimism is the opening out of the soul towards the
light; it is an expansion towards and into God, it is a h-piritual
self-unification with the Infinite.'
'How true!'
sighed Priscilla, nodding the baleful splendours of her coiffure.
'Pessimism,
on the other hand, is the contraction of the soul towards darkness; it is a
focusing of the self upon a point in the Lower Plane; it is a h-piritual
slavery to mere facts, to gross physical phenomena.'
'They're
making a wild man of me.' The refrain
sang itself over in Denis's mind. Yes,
they were; damn them! A wild man, but
not wild enough; that was the trouble.
Wild inside; raging, writhing - yes, 'writhing' was the word, writhing
with desire. But outwardly he was
hopelessly tame; outwardly - baa, baa, baa.
There they
were, Anne and Gombauld, moving together as though they were a single supple
creature. The beast with two backs. And he sat in a corner, pretending to read,
pretending he didn't want to dance, pretending he rather despised dancing. Why?
It was the baa-baa business again.
Why was he
born with a different face? Why was
he? Gombauld had a face of brass - one
of those old, brazen rams that thumped against the walls of cities till they
fell. He was born with a different face
- a woolly face.
The music
stopped. The single harmonious creature
broke in two. Flushed, a little
breathless, Anne swayed across the room to the pianola, laid her hand on Mr
Wimbush's shoulder.
'A waltz
this time, please, Uncle Henry,' she said.
'A waltz,'
he repeated, and turned to the cabinet where the rolls were kept. He trod off the old role and trod on the new,
a slave at the mill, uncomplaining and beautifully well-bred. 'Rum; Tum; Rum-ti-ti; Tum-ti-ti....' The
melody wallowed oozily along, like a ship moving forward over a sleek and oily
swell. The four-legged creature, more
graceful, more harmonious in its movements than ever, slid across the
floor. Oh, why was he born with a
different face?
'What are
you reading?'
He looked
up, startled. It was Mary. She had broken from the uncomfortable embrace
of Mr Scogan, who had now seized on Jenny for his victim.
'What are
you reading?'
'I don't
know,' said Denis truthfully. He looked
at the title page; the book was called The Stock Breeder's Vade Mercum.
'I think
you are so sensible to sit and read quietly,' said Mary, fixing him with her
china eyes. 'I don't know why one
dances. It's so boring.'
Denis made
no reply; she exacerbated him. From the
armchair by the fireplace he heard Priscilla's deep voice.
'Tell me,
Mr Barbecue-Smith - you know all about science, I know -' A deprecating noise
came from Mr Barbecue-Smith's chair.
'This Einstein theory. It seems
to upset the whole starry universe. It
makes me so worried about my horoscopes.
You see ...'
Mary
renewed her attack. 'Which of the
contemporary poets do you like best?' she asked. Denis was filled with fury. Why couldn't this pest of a girl leave him
alone? He wanted to listen to the
horrible music, to watch them dancing - oh, with what grace, as though they had
been made for one another! - to savour his misery in peace. And she came and put him through this absurd
catechism! She was like 'Mangold's
Questions': 'What are the three diseases of wheat? - 'Which of the contemporary
poets do you like best?'
'Blight,
Mildew, and Smut,' he replied, with the laconicism of one who is absolutely
certain of his own mind.
It was
several hours before Denis managed to go to sleep that night. Vague but agonizing miseries possessed his
mind. It was not only Anne who made him
miserable; he was wretched about himself, the future, life in general, the
universe. 'This adolescence business,'
he repeated to himself every now and then, 'is horribly boring.' But the fact that he knew his disease did not
help him to cure it.
After
kicking all the clothes off the bed, he got up and sought relief in
composition. He wanted to imprison his
nameless misery in words. At the end of
an hour, nine more or less complete lines emerged from among the blots and
scratchings.
'I do not know what I desire
When summer nights are dark and still,
When the wind's many-voicèd quire
Sleeps among the muffled branches.
I long and know not what I will:
And not a sound of life or laughter stances
Time's black and silent flow.
I do not know what I desire,
I do not know.'
He read it through aloud; then threw the scribbled
sheet into the wastepaper basket and got into bed again. In a very few minutes he was asleep.
CHAPTER XI
Mr Barbecue-Smith was gone. The motor had whirled him away to the
station; a faint smell of burning oil commemorated his recent departure. A considerable detachment had come into the
courtyard to speed him on his way; and now they were walking back, round the
side of the house, towards the terrace and the garden. They walked in silence; nobody had yet
ventured to comment on the departed guest.
'Well?'
said Anne, at last, turning with raised inquiring eyebrows to Denis. 'Well?'
It was time for someone to begin.
Denis
declined the invitation; he passed it on to Mr Scogan. 'Well?' he said.
Mr Scogan
did not respond; he only repeated the question, 'Well?'
It was left
for Henry Wimbush to make a pronouncement.
'A very agreeable adjunct to the weekend,' he said. His tone was obituary.
They had
descended, without paying much attention where they were going, the steep
yew-walk that went down, under the flank of the terrace, to the pool. The house towered above them, immensely tall,
with the whole height of the built-up terrace added to its own seventy feet of
brick façade. The perpendicular lines of
the three towers soared up, uninterrupted, enhancing the impression of height
until it became overwhelming. They
paused at the edge of the pool to look back.
'The man
who built this house knew his business,' said Denis. 'He was an architect.'
'Was he?'
said Henry Wimbush reflectively. 'I
doubt it. The builder of this house was
Sir Ferdinando Lapith, who flourished during the reign of Elizabeth. He inherited the estate from his father, to
whom it had been granted at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries; for
Crome was originally a cloister of monks and this swimming-pool their fishpond. Sir Ferdinando was not content merely to
adapt the old monastic buildings to his own purposes; but using them as a stone
quarry for his barns and byres and outhouses, he built for himself a grand new
house of brick - the house you see now.'
He waved his
hand in the direction of the house and was silent. Severe, imposing, almost menacing, Crome
loomed down on them.
'The great
thing about Crome,' said Mr Scogan, seizing the opportunity to speak, 'is the
fact that it's so unmistakably and aggressively a work of art. It makes no compromise with nature, but
affronts it and rebels against it. It
has no likeness to Shelley's tower, in the "Epipsychidion," which, if
I remember rightly -
'"Seems not now a work of human art,
But as it were titanic, in the heart
Of earth having assumed its form and grown
Out of the mountain, from the living stone,
Lifting itself in caverns light and high."
No, no; there isn't any nonsense of that sort about
Crome. That the hovels of the peasantry
should look as though they had grown out of the earth, to which their inmates
are attached, is right, no doubt, and suitable.
But the house of an intelligent, civilized, and sophisticated man should
never seem to have sprouted from the clods.
It should rather be an expression of his grand unnatural remoteness from
the cloddish life. Since the days of
William Morris that's a fact which we in England have been unable to
comprehend. Civilized and sophisticated
men have solemnly played at being peasants.
Hence quaintness, arts and crafts, cottage architecture, and all the
rest of it. In the suburbs of our cities
you may see, reduplicated in endless rows, studiedly quaint imitations and
adaptations of the village hovel.
Poverty, ignorance, and a limited range of materials produced the hovel,
which possesses undoubtedly, in suitable surroundings, its own "as it were
titanic" charm. We now employ our
wealth, our technical knowledge, our rich variety of materials for the purpose
of building millions of imitation hovels in totally unsuitable
surroundings. Could imbecility go
further?'
Henry
Wimbush took up the thread of his interrupted discourse. 'All that you say, my dear Scogan,' he began,
'is certainly very just, very true. But
whether Sir Ferdinando shared your views about architecture or if, indeed, he
had any views about architecture at all, I very much doubt. In building this house, Sir Ferdinando was,
as a matter of fact, preoccupied by only one thought - the proper placing of
his privies. Sanitation was the one
great interest of his life. In 1573 he
even published, on this subject, a little book - now extremely scarce - called,
Certaine Priuy Counsels by One of Her Maiestie's Most Honourable Priuv
Counsel, F.L. Knight, in which the whole matter is treated with great
learning and elegance. His guiding
principle in arranging the sanitation of a house was to secure that the
greatest possible distance should separate the privy from the sewage arrangements. Hence it followed inevitably that the privies
were to be placed at the top of the house, being connected by vertical shafts
with pits or channels in the ground. It
must not be thought that Sir Ferdinando was moved only by material and merely
sanitary considerations; for the placing of his privies in an exalted position
he had also certain excellent spiritual reasons. For, he argues in the third chapter of his Priuy
Counsels, the necessities of nature are so base and brutish that in obeying
them we are apt to forget that we are the noblest creatures of the
universe. To counteract these degrading
effects he advised that the privy should be in every house the room nearest to
heaven, that it should be well provided with windows commanding an extensive
and noble prospect, and that the walls of the chamber should be lined with
bookshelves containing all the ripest products of human wisdom, such as the
Proverbs of Solomon, Boëthius's Consolations of Philosophy, the
apophthegms of Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, the Enchiridion of
Erasmus, and all other works, ancient or modern, which testify to the nobility
of the human soul. In Crome he was able
to put his theories into practice. At
the top of each of the three projecting towers he placed a privy. From these a shaft went down the whole height
of the house, that is to say, more than seventy feet, through the cellars, and
into a series of conduits provided with flowing water tunnelled in the ground
on a level with the base of the raised terrace.
These conduits emptied themselves into the stream several hundred yards
below the fishpond. The total depth of
the shafts from the top of the towers to their subterranean conduits was a
hundred and two feet. The eighteenth
century, with its passion for modernization, swept away these monuments of
sanitary ingenuity. Were it not for
tradition and the explicit account of them left by Sir Ferdinando, we should be
unaware that these noble privies had ever existed. We should even suppose that Sir Ferdinando
built this house after this strange and splendid model for merely aesthetic
reasons.'
The
contemplation of the glories of the past always evoked in Henry Wimbush a
certain enthusiasm. Under the grey
bowler his face worked and glowed as he spoke.
The thought of these vanished privies moved him profoundly. He ceased to speak; the light gradually died
out of his face, and it became once more the replica of the grave, polite hat
which shaded it. There was a long
silence; the same gently melancholy thoughts seemed to possess the mind of each
of them. Permanence, transience - Sir
Ferdinando and his privies were gone, Crome still stood. How brightly the sun shone and how inevitable
was death! The ways of God were strange;
the ways of man were stranger still....
'It does
one's heart good,' exclaimed Mr Scogan at last, 'to hear of these fantastic
English aristocrats. To have a theory
about privies and to build an immense and splendid house in order to put it
into practice - it's magnificent, beautiful!
I like to think of them all: the eccentric milords rolling across
Mr Scogan
paused, looked up once more at the towering house, then murmured the word,
'Eccentricity,' two or three times.
'Eccentricity....
It's the justification of all aristocracies.
It justifies leisured classes and inherited wealth and privilege and
endowments and all the other injustices of that sort. If you're to do anything reasonable in this
world, you must have a class of people who are secure, safe from public
opinion, safe from poverty, leisured, not compelled to waste their time in the
imbecile routines that go by the name of Honest Work. You must have a class of which the members
can think and, within the obvious limits, do what they please. You must have a class in which people who
have eccentricities can indulge them and in which eccentricity in general will
be tolerated and understood. That's the
important thing about an aristocracy.
Not only is it eccentric itself - often grandiosely so; it also
tolerates and even encourages eccentricity in others. The eccentricities of the artist and the
newfangled thinker don't inspire it with that fear, loathing, and disgust which
the burgesses instinctively feel towards them.
It is a sort of Red Indian Reservation planted in the midst of a vast
horde of Poor Whites - colonials at that.
Within its boundaries wild men disport themselves - often, it must be
admitted, a little grossly, a little too flamboyantly; and when kindred spirits
are born outside the pale it offers them some sort of refuge from the hatred
which the Poor Whites, en bons bourgeois, lavish on anything that is
wild or out of the ordinary. After the
social revolution there will be no Reservations; the Redskins will be drowned
in the great sea of Poor Whites. What
then? Will they suffer you to go on
writing villanelles, my good Denis? Will
you, unhappy Henry, be allowed to live in this house of the splendid privies,
to continue your quiet delving in the mines of futile knowledge? Will Anne ...'
'And you,'
said Anne, interrupting him, 'will you be allowed to go on talking?'
'You may
rest assured,' Mr Scogan replied, 'that I shall not. I shall have some Honest Work to do.'
CHAPTER XII
'Blight, Mildew, and Smut....' Mary was puzzled and
distressed. Perhaps her ears had played
her false. Perhaps what he had really
said was, 'Squire, Binyon, and Shanks,' or 'Childe, Blunden, and Earp,' or even
'Abercrombie, Drinkwater, and Rabindranath Tagore.' Perhaps.
But then her ears never did play her false. 'Blight, Mildew, and Smut.' The impression was distinct and
ineffaceable. 'Blight, Mildew ...' she
was forced to the conclusion, reluctantly, that Denis had indeed pronounced
those improbable words. He had
deliberately repelled her attempt to open a serious discussion. That was horrible. A man who would not talk seriously to a woman
just because she was a woman - oh, impossible!
Egeria or nothing. Perhaps
Gombauld would be more satisfactory.
True, his meridional heredity was a little disquieting; but at least he
was a serious worker, and it was with his work that she would associate
herself. And Denis? After all, what was Denis? A dilettante, an amateur....
Gombauld
had annexed for his painting-room a little disused granary that stood by itself
in a green close beyond the farmyard. It
was a square brick building with a peaked roof and little windows set high up
in each of its walls. A ladder of four
rungs led up to the door; for the granary was perched above the ground, and out
of reach of the rats, on four massive toadstools of grey stone. Within, there lingered a faint smell of dust
and cobwebs; and the narrow shaft of sunlight that came slanting in at every
hour of the day through one of the little windows was always alive with silvery
motes. Here Gombauld worked, with a kind
of concentrated ferocity, during six or seven hours of each day. He was pursuing something new, something
terrific, if only he could catch it.
During the last
eight years, nearly half of which had been spent in the process of winning the
war, he had worked his way industriously through cubism. Now he had come out on the other side. He had begun by painting a formalized nature;
then, little by little, he had risen from nature into the world of pure form,
till in the end he was painting nothing but his own thoughts, externalized in
the abstract geometrical forms of the mind's devising. He found the process arduous and
exhilarating. And then, quite suddenly,
he grew dissatisfied; he felt himself cramped and confined within intolerably
narrow limitations. He was humiliated to
find how few and crude and uninteresting were the forms he could invent; the
inventions of nature were without number, inconceivably subtle and
elaborate. He had done with cubism. He was out on the other side. But the cubist discipline preserved him from
falling into excesses of nature worship.
He took from nature its rich, subtle, elaborate forms, but his aim was
always to work them into a whole that should have the thrilling simplicity and
formality of an idea; to combine prodigious realism with prodigious
simplification. Memories of Caravaggio's
portentous achievements haunted him.
Forms of a breathing, living reality emerged from darkness, built
themselves up into compositions as luminously simple and single as a
mathematical idea. He thought of the
'Call of Matthew,' of 'Peter Crucified,' of the 'Lute Players,' of 'Magdalen.' He had the secret, that astonishing ruffian,
he had the secret! And now Gombauld was
after it, in hot pursuit. Yes, it would
be something terrific, if only he could catch it.
For a long
time an idea had been stirring and spreading yeastily, in his mind. He had made a portfolio full of studies, he
had drawn a cartoon; and now the idea was taking shape on canvas. A man fallen from a horse. The huge animal, a gaunt white cart-horse,
filled the upper half of the picture with its great body. Its head, lowered towards the ground, was in
shadow; the immense bony body was what arrested the eye, the body and the legs,
which came down on either side of the picture like the pillars of an arch. On the ground, between the legs of the
towering beast, lay the foreshortened figure of a man, the head in the extreme
foreground, the arms flung wide to right and left. A white, relentless light poured down from a
point in the right foreground. The
beast, the fallen man, were sharply illuminated; round them, beyond and behind
them, was the night. They were alone in
the darkness, a universe in themselves.
The horse's body filled the upper part of the picture; the legs, the
great hoofs, frozen to stillness in the midst of their trampling, limited it on
either side. And beneath lay the man,
his foreshortened face at the focal point in the centre, his arms outstretched
towards the sides of the picture. Under
the arch of the horse's belly, between his legs, they eye looked through into
an intense darkness; below, the space was closed in by the figure of the
prostrate man. A central gulf of
darkness surrounded by luminous forms....
The picture
was more than half finished. Gombauld
had been at work all the morning on the figure of the man, and now he was
taking a rest - the time to smoke a cigarette.
Tilting back his chair till it touched the wall, he looked thoughtfully
at his canvas. He was pleased, and at
the same time he was desolated. In
itself, the thing was good; he knew it.
But that something he was after, that something that would be so
terrific if only he could catch it - had he caught it? Would he ever catch it?
Three
little taps - rat, tat, tat! Surprised,
Gombauld turned his eyes towards the door.
Nobody ever disturbed him while he was at work; it was one of the
unwritten laws. 'Come in!' he
called. The door, which was ajar, swung
open, revealing, from the waist upwards, the form of Mary. She had only dared to mount half-way up the
ladder. If he didn't want her, retreat
would be easier and more dignified than if she climbed to the top.
'May I come
in?' she asked.
'Certainly.'
She skipped
up the remaining two rungs and was over the threshold in an instant. 'A letter came for you by the second post,'
she said. 'I thought it might be
important, so I brought it out to you.'
Her eyes, her childish face were luminously candid as she handed him the
letter. There had never been a flimsier
pretext.
Gombauld
looked at the envelope and put it in his pocket unopened. 'Luckily,' he said, 'it isn't at all
important. Thanks very much all the
same.'
There was a
silence; Mary felt a little uncomfortable.
'May I have a look at what you've been painting?' she had the courage to
say at last.
Gombauld
had only half smoked his cigarette; in any case he wouldn't begin work again
till he had finished. He would give her
the five minutes that separated him from the bitter end. 'This is the best place to see it from,' he
said.
Mary looked
at the picture for some time without saying anything. Indeed, she didn't know what to say; she was
taken aback, she was at a loss. She had
expected a cubist masterpiece, and here was a picture of a man and a horse, not
only recognizable as such, but even aggressively in drawing. Trompe-l'œil - there was no other word
to describe the delineation of that foreshortened figure under the trampling
feet of the horse. What was she to
think, what was she to say? Her
orientations were gone. One could admire
representationalism in the Old Masters.
Obviously. But in a modern
...? At eighteen she might have done
so. But now, after five years of
schooling among the best judges, her instinctive reaction to a contemporary
piece of representation was contempt - an outburst of laughing
disparagement. What could Gombauld be up
to? She had felt so safe in admiring his
work before. But now - she didn't know
what to think. It was very difficult,
very difficult.
'There's
rather a lot of chiaroscuro, isn't there?' she ventured at last, and inwardly
congratulated herself on having found a critical formula so gentle and at the
same time so penetrating.
'There is,'
Gombauld agreed.
Mary was
pleased; he accepted her criticism; it was a serious discussion. She put her head on one side and screwed up
her eyes. 'I think it's awfully fine,'
she said. 'But of course it's a little
too ... too ... trompe l'œil for my taste.' She looked at Gombauld, who made no response,
but continued to smoke, gazing meditatively all the time at his picture. Mary went on gaspingly, 'When I was in
Gombauld
dropped his cigarette end and trod on it.
'Tschuplitski's finished painting,' he said. 'I've finished my cigarette. But I'm going on painting.' And, advancing towards her, he put his arm
round her shoulders and turned her round, away from the picture.
Mary looked
up at him; her hair swung back, a soundless bell of gold. Her eyes were serene; she smiled. So the moment had come. His arm was round her. He moved slowly, almost imperceptibly, and
she moved with him. It was a peripatetic
embracement. 'Do you agree with him?'
she repeated. The moment might have
come, but she would not cease to be intellectual, serious.
'I don't
know. I shall have to think about
it.' Gombauld loosened his embrace, his
hand dropped from her shoulder. 'Be
careful going down the ladder,' he added solicitously.
Mary looked
round, startled. They were in front of
the open door. She remained standing
there for a moment in bewilderment. The
hand that had rested on her shoulder made itself felt lower down her back; it
administered three or four kindly little smacks. Replying automatically to its stimulus, she
moved forward.
'Be careful
going down the ladder,' said Gombauld once more.
She was
careful. The door closed behind her and
she was alone in the little green close.
She walked slowly back through the farmyard; she was pensive.
CHAPTER XIII
Henry Wimbush brought down with him to dinner a budget
of printed sheets loosely bound together in a cardboard portfolio.
'Today,' he
said, exhibiting it with a certain solemnity, 'today I have finished the
printing of my History of Crome.
I helped to set up the type of the last page this evening.'
'The famous
History?' cried Anne. The writing and
the printing of this Magnum Opus had been going on as long as she could
remember. All her childhood long Uncle
Henry's History had been a vague and fabulous thing, often heard of and never
seen.
'It has
taken me nearly thirty years,' said Mr Wimbush.
'Twenty-five years of writing and nearly four of printing. And now it's finished - the whole chronicle,
from Sir Ferdinando Lapith's birth to the death of my father William Wimbush -
more than three centuries and a half: a history of Crome, written at Crome, and
printed at Crome by my own press.'
'Shall we
be allowed to read it now it's finished?' asked Denis.
Mr Wimbush
nodded. 'Certainly,' he said. 'And I hope you will not find it
uninteresting,' he added modestly. 'Our
muniment room is particularly rich in ancient records, and I have some
genuinely new light to throw on the introduction of the three-pronged fork.'
'And the
people?' asked Gombauld. 'Sir Ferdinando
and the rest of them - were they amusing?
Were there any crimes or tragedies in the family?'
'Let me
see.' Henry Wimbush rubbed his chin
thoughtfully. 'I can only think of two
suicides, one violent death, four or perhaps five broken hearts, and half a
dozen little blots on the scutcheon in the way of misalliances, seductions,
natural children, and the like. No, on
the whole, it's a placid and uneventful record.'
'The
Wimbushes and the Lapiths were always an unadventurous, respectable crew,' said
Priscilla, with a note of scorn in her voice.
'If I were to write my family history now! Why, it would be one long continuous blot
from beginning to end.' She laughed
jovially, and helped herself to another glass of wine.
'If I were
to write mine,' Mr Scogan remarked, 'it wouldn't exist. After the second generation we Scogans are
lost in the mists of antiquity.'
'After
dinner,' said Henry Wimbush, a little piqued by his wife's disparaging comment
on the masters of Crome, 'I'll read you an episode from my History that will
make you admit that even the Lapiths, in their own respectable way, had their
tragedies and strange adventures.'
'I'm glad
to hear it,' said Priscilla.
'Glad to
hear what?' asked Jenny, emerging suddenly from her private interior world like
a cuckoo from a clock. She received an
explanation, smiled, nodded, cuckooed a last 'I see,' and popped back, clapping
shut the door behind her.
Dinner was
eaten; the party had adjourned to the drawing-room.
'Now,' said
Henry Wimbush, pulling up a chair to the lamp.
He put on his round pince-nez, rimmed with tortoiseshell, and began
cautiously to turn over the pages of his loose and still fragmentary book. He found his place at last. 'Shall I begin?' he asked, looking up.
'Do,' said
Priscilla, yawning.
In the
midst of an attentive silence Mr Wimbush gave a little preliminary cough and
started to read.
'The infant
who was destined to become the fourth baronet of the name of Lapith was born in
the year 1740. He was a very small baby,
weighing not more than three pounds at birth, but from the first he was sturdy
and healthy. In honour of his maternal
grandfather, Sir Hercules Occam of Bishop's Occam, he was christened
Hercules. His mother, like many other
mothers, kept a notebook, in which his progress from month to month was
recorded. He walked at ten months, and
before his second year was out he weighed but twenty-four pounds, and at six,
though he could read and write perfectly and showed a remarkable aptitude for
music, he was no larger and heavier than a well-grown child of two. Meanwhile, his mother had borne two other
children, a boy and a girl, one of whom died of croup during infancy, while the
other was carried off by smallpox before it reached the age of five. Hercules remained the only surviving child.
'On his
twelfth birthday Hercules was still only three feet and two inches in
height. His head, which was very
handsome and nobly shaped, was too big for his body, but otherwise he was exquisitely
proportioned and, for his size, of great strength and agility. His parents, in the hope of making him grow,
consulted all the most eminent physicians of the time. Their various prescriptions were followed to
the letter, but in vain. One ordered a
very plentiful meat diet; another exercise; a third constructed a little rack,
modelled on those employed by the Holy Inquisition, on which young Hercules was
stretched, with excruciating torments, for half an hour every morning and
evening. In the course of the next three
years Hercules gained perhaps two inches.
After that his growth stopped completely, and he remained for the rest
of his life a pigmy of three feet and four inches. His father, who had built the most
extravagant hopes upon his son, planning for him in his imagination a military
career equal to that of
'Hercules
thus found himself at the age of twenty-one alone in the world, and master of a
considerable fortune, including the estate and mansion of Crome. The beauty and intelligence of his childhood
had survived into his manly age, and, but for his dwarfish stature, he would
have taken his place among the handsomest and most accomplished young men of
his time. He was well read in Greek and
Latin authors, as well as in all the moderns of any merit who had written in
English, French, or Italian. He had a
good ear for music, and was no indifferent performer on the violin, which he
used to play like a bass viol, seated on a chair with the instrument between
his legs. To the music of the
harpsichord and clavichord he was extremely partial, but the smallness of his
hands made it impossible for him ever to perform upon these instruments. He had a small ivory flute made for him, on
which, whenever he was melancholy, he used to play a simple country air or jig,
affirming that this rustic music had more power to clear and raise the spirits
than the most artificial productions of the masters. From an early age he practised the composition
of poetry, but, though conscious of his great powers in this art, he would
never publish any specimen of his writing.
"My stature," he would say, "is reflected in my verses;
if the public were to read them it would not be because I am a poet, but because
I am a dwarf." Several MS books of
Sir Hercules's poems survive. A single
specimen will suffice to illustrate his qualities as a poet.
"In ancient days, while yet the world was young,
Ere Abram fed his flocks or Homer sang;
When blacksmith Tubal tamed creative fire,
And Jabal dwelt in tents and Jubal struck his lyre;
Flesh grown corrupt brought forth a monstrous birth
And obscene giants trod the shrinking earth,
Till God, impatient of their sinful brood,
Gave rein to wrath and drown'd them in the Flood.
Teeming again, repeopled Tellus bore
The lubber Hero and the Man of War;
Huge towers of Brawn, topp'd with an empty Skull,
Witlessly bold, heroically dull.
Long ages pass'd and Man grown more refin'd,
Slighter in muscle but of vaster Mind,
Smiled at his grandsire's broadsword, bow and bill,
And learn'd to wield the Pencil and the Quill.
The glowing canvas and the written page
Immortaliz'd his name from age to age,
His name
embalzon'd on Fame's temple wall;
For Art grew great as Humankind grew small.
Thus man's long progress step by step we trace;
The Giant dies, the hero takes his place;
The Giant vile, the dull heroic Block:
At one we shudder and at one we mock.
Man last appears. In him the Soul's pure flame
Burns brightlier in a not inord'nate frame.
Of old when Heroes fought and Giants swarmed,
Men were huge mounds of matter scarce inform'd;
Wearied by leavening so vast a mass,
The spirit slept and all the mind was crass.
The smaller carcase of these later days
Is soon inform'd' the Soul unwearied plays
And like a Pharos darts abroad her mental rays.
But can we think that Providence will stay
Man's footsteps here upon the upward way?
Mankind in understanding and in grace
Advanc'd so far beyond the Giant's race?
Hence impious thought! Still led by GOD'S own Hand,
Mankind proceeds towards the Promised Land.
A time will come (prophetic, I descry
Remoter dawns along the gloomy sky),
When happy mortals of a Golden Age
Will backward turn the dark historic page,
And in our vaunted race of Men behold
A form as gross, a Mind as dead and cold,
As we in Giants see, in warriors of old.
A time will come, wherein the soul shall be
From all superfluous matter wholly free:
When the light body, agile as a fawn's,
Shall sport with grace along the velvet lawns.
Nature's most delicate and final birth,
Mankind perfected shall possess the earth.
But ah, not yet! For still the Giants' race,
Huge, though diminish'd, tramps the Earth's fair face;
Gross and repulsive, yet perversely proud,
Men of their imperfections boast aloud.
Vain of their bulk, of all they still retain
Of giant ugliness absurdly vain;
At all that's small they point their stupid scorn
And, monsters, think themselves divinely born.
Sad is the Fate of those, ah, sad indeed,
The rare precursors of the nobler breed!
Who come man's golden glory to foretell,
But pointing Heav'nwards live themselves in Hell.
'As soon as
he came into the estate, Sir Hercules set about remodelling his household. For though by no means ashamed of his
deformity - indeed, if we may judge from the poem quoted above, he regarded
himself as being in many ways superior to the ordinary race of man - he found
the presence of full-grown men and women embarrassing. Realizing, too, that he must abandon all
ambitions in the great world, he determined to retire absolutely from it and to
create, as it were, at Crome a private world of his own, in which all should be
proportionable to himself. Accordingly,
he discharged all the old servants of the house and replaced them gradually, as
he was able to find suitable successors, by others of dwarfish stature. In the course of a few years he had assembled
about himself a numerous household, no member of which was above four feet high
and the smallest among them scarcely two feet six inches. His father's dogs, such as setters, mastiffs,
greyhounds, and a pack of beagles, he sold or gave away as too large and too
boisterous for his house, replacing them by pugs and King Charles spaniels and
whatever other breeds of dog were the smallest.
His father's stable was also sold.
For his own use, whether riding or driving, he had six black Shetland
ponies, with four very choice piebald animals of New Forest breed.
'Having
thus settled his household entirely to his own satisfaction, it only remained
for him to find some suitable companion with whom to share this paradise. Sir Hercules had a susceptible heart, and had
more than once, between the ages of sixteen and twenty, felt what it was to
love. But here his deformity had been a
source of the most bitter humiliation, for, having once dared to declare
himself to a young lady of his choice, he had been received with laughter. On his persisting, she had picked him up and
shaken him like an importunate child, telling him to run away and plague her no
more. The story soon got about - indeed,
the young lady herself used to tell it as a particularly pleasant anecdote -
and the taunts and mockery it occasioned were a source of the most acute
distress to Hercules. From the poems
written at this period we gather that he meditated taking his own life. In course of time, however, he lived down
this humiliation; but never again, though he often fell in love, and that very
passionately, did he dare to make any advances to those in whom he was
interested. After coming to the estate
and finding that he was in a position to create his own world as he desired it,
he saw that, if he was to have a wife - which he very much desired, being of an
affectionate and, indeed, amorous temper - he must choose her as he had chosen
his servants - from among the race of dwarfs.
But to find a suitable wife was, he found, a matter of some difficulty;
for he would marry none who was not distinguished by beauty and gentle
birth. The dwarfish daughter of Lord
Bemboro he refused on the ground that besides being a pigmy she was
hunchbacked; while another young lady, an orphan belonging to a very good
family in Hampshire, was rejected by him because her face, like that of so many
dwarfs, was wizened and repulsive.
Finally, when he was almost despairing of success, he heard from a
reliable source that Count Titimalo, a Venetian nobleman, possessed a daughter
of exquisite beauty and great accomplishments, who was but three feet in
height. Setting out at once for Venice,
he went immediately on his arrival to pay his respects to the count, whom he
found living with his wife and five children in a very mean apartment in one of
the poorer quarters of the town. Indeed,
the count was so far reduced in his circumstances that he was even then
negotiating (so it was rumoured) with a travelling company of clowns and acrobats,
who had had the misfortune to lose their performing dwarf, for the sale of his
diminutive daughter Filomena. Sir
Hercules arrived in time to save her from this untoward fate, for he was so
much charmed by Filomena's grace and beauty, that at the end of three days'
courtship he made her a formal offer of marriage, which was accepted by her no
less joyfully than by her father, who perceived in an English son-in-law a rich
and unfailing source of revenue. After
an unostentatious marriage, at which the English ambassador acted as one of the
witnesses, Sir Hercules and his bride returned by sea to England, where they
settled down, as it proved, to a life of uneventful happiness.
'Crome and
its household of dwarfs delighted Filomena, who felt herself now for the first
time to be a free woman living among her equals in a friendly world. She had many tastes in common with her
husband, especially that of music. She
had a beautiful voice, of a power surprising in one so small, and could touch A
in alto without effort. Accompanied by
her husband on his fine Cremona fiddle, which he played, as we have noted
before, as one plays a bass viol, she would sing all the liveliest and
tenderest airs from the operas and cantatas of her native country. Seated together at the harpsichord, they
found that they could with their four hands play all the music written for two
hands of ordinary size, a circumstance which gave Sir Hercules unfailing
pleasure.
'When they
were not making music or reading together, which they often did, both in
English and Italian, they spent their time in healthful outdoor exercises,
sometimes rowing in a little boat on the lake, but more often riding or
driving, occupations in which, because they were entirely new to her, Filomena
especially delighted. When she had
become a perfectly proficient rider, Filomena and her husband used often to go
hunting in the park, at that time very much more extensive than it is now. They hunted not foxes nor hares, but rabbits,
using a pack of about thirty black and fawn-coloured pugs, a kind of dog which,
when not overfed, can course a rabbit as well as any of the smaller
breeds. Four dwarf grooms, dressed in
scarlet liveries and mounted on white Exmoor ponies, hunted the pack, while
their master and mistress, in green habits, followed either on the black
Shetlands or on the piebald New Forest ponies.
A picture of the whole hunt - dogs, horses, grooms, and masters - was
painted by William Stubbs, whose work Sir Hercules admired so much that he
invited him, though a man of ordinary stature, to come and stay at the mansion
for the purpose of executing this picture.
Stubbs likewise painted a portrait of Sir Hercules and his lady driving
in their green enamelled calash drawn by four black Shetlands. Sir Hercules wears a plum-coloured velvet
coat and white breeches; Filomena is dressed in flowered muslin and a very
large hat with pink feathers. The two
figures in their gay carriage stand out sharply against a dark background of
trees; but to the left of the picture the trees fall away and disappear, so that
the four black ponies are seen against a pale and strangely lurid sky that has
the golden-brown colour of thunder-clouds lighted up by the sun.
'In this
way four years passed happily by. At the
end of that time Filomena found herself great with child. Sir Hercules was overjoyed. "If God is good," he wrote in his
daybook, "the name of Lapith will be preserved and our rarer and more
delicate race transmitted through the generations until in the fullness of time
the world shall recognize the superiority of those beings whom now it uses to
make mock of." One his wife's being
brought to bed of a son he wrote a poem to the same effect. The child was christened Ferdinando in memory
of the builder of the house.
'With the
passage of the months a certain sense of disquiet began to invade the minds of
Sir Hercules and his lady. For the child
was growing with an extraordinary rapidity.
At a year he weighed as much as Hercules had weighed when he was
three. "Ferdinando goes crescendo,"
wrote Filomena in her diary. "It
seems not natural." At eighteen
months the baby was almost as tall as their smallest jockey, who was a man of
thirty-six. Could it be that Ferdinando
was destined to become a man of the normal, gigantic dimensions? It was a thought to which neither of his
parents dared yet give open utterance, but in the secrecy of their respective
diaries they brooded over it in terror and dismay.
'On his
third birthday Ferdinando was taller than his mother and not more than a couple
of inches short of his father's height.
"Today for the first time," wrote Sir Hercules, "we
discussed the situation. The hideous
truth can be concealed no longer: Ferdinando is not one of us. On this, his third birthday, a day when we
should have been rejoicing at the health, the strength, and beauty of our
child, we wept together over the ruin of our happiness. God give us strength to bear this
cross."
'At the age
of eight Ferdinando was so large and so exuberantly healthy that his parents
decided, though reluctantly, to send him to school. He was packed off to Eton at the beginning of
the next half. A profound peace settled
upon the house. Ferdinando returned for
the summer holidays larger and stronger than ever. One day he knocked down the butler and broke
his arm. "He is rough,
inconsiderate, unamenable to persuasion," wrote his father. "The only
thing that will teach her manners is corporal chastisement." Ferdinando, who at this age was already
seventeen inches taller than his father, received no corporal chastisement.
'One summer
holidays about three years later Ferdinando returned to Crome accompanied by a
very large mastiff dog. He had bought it
from an old man at Windsor who found the beast too expensive to feed. It was a savage, unreliable animal; hardly
had it entered the house when it attacked one of Sir Hercules's favourite pugs,
seizing the creature in its jaws and shaking it till it was nearly dead. Extremely put out by this occurrence, Sir Hercules
ordered that the beast should be chained-up in the stable-yard. Ferdinando sullenly answered that the dog was
his, and he would keep it where he pleased.
His father, growing angry, bade him take the animal out of the house at
once, on pain of his utmost displeasure.
Ferdinando refused to move. His
mother at this moment coming into the room, the dog flew at her, knocked her
down, and in a twinkling had very severely mauled her arm and shoulder; in
another instant it must have infallibly have had her by the throat, had not Sir
Hercules drawn his sword and stabbed the animal to the heart. Turning on his son, he ordered him to leave
the room immediately, as being unfit to remain in the same place with the
mother whom he had nearly murdered. So
awe-inspiring was the spectacle of Sir Hercules standing with one foot on the
carcase of the gigantic dog, his sword drawn and still bloody, so commanding
were his voice, his gestures, and the expression of his face, that Ferdinando
slunk out of the room in terror and behaved himself for all the rest of the
vacation in an entirely exemplary fashion.
His mother soon recovered from the bites of the mastiff, but the effect
on her mind of this adventure was ineradicable; from that time forth she lived
always among imaginary terrors.
'The two
years which Ferdinando spent on the Continent, making the Grand Tour, were a
period of happy repose for his parents.
But even now the thought of the future haunted them; nor were they able
to solace themselves with all the diversions of their younger days. The Lady Filomena had lost her voice and Sir
Hercules was grown too rheumatical to play the violin. He, it is true, still rode after his pugs,
but his wife felt herself too old and, since the episode of the mastiff, too nervous
for such sports. At most, to please her
husband, she would follow the hunt at a distance in a little gig drawn by the
safest and oldest of the Shetlands.
'The day
fixed for Ferdinando's return came round.
Filomena, sick with vague dreads and presentiments, retired to her
chamber and her bed. Sir Hercules
received his son alone. A giant in a
brown travelling-suit entered the room.
"Welcome home, my son," said Sir Hercules in a voice that
trembled a little.
'"I
hope I see you well, sir."
Ferdinando bent down to shake hands, then straightened himself up
again. The top of his father's head
reached to the level of his hip.
'Ferdinando
had not come alone. Two friends of his
own age accompanied him, and each of the young men had brought a servant. Not for thirty years had Crome been desecrated
by the presence of so many members of the common race of men. Sir Hercules was appalled and indignant, but
the laws of hospitality had to be obeyed.
He received the young gentlemen with grave politeness and sent the
servants to the kitchen, with orders that they should be well cared for.
'The old
family dining-table was dragged out into the light and dusted (Sir Hercules and
his lady were accustomed to dine at a small table twenty inches high). Simon, the aged butler, who could only just
look over the edge of the big table, was helped at supper by the three servants
brought by Ferdinando and his guests.
'Sir
Hercules presided, and with his usual grace supported a conversation on the
pleasures of foreign travel, the beauties of art and nature to be met with
abroad, the opera at Venice, the singing of the orphans in the churches of the
same city, and on other topics of a similar nature. The young men were not particularly attentive
to his discourses; they were occupied in watching the efforts of the butler to
change the plates and replenish the glasses.
They covered their laughter by violent and repeated fits of coughing or
choking. Sir Hercules affected not to
notice, but changed the subject of the conversation to sport. Upon this one of the young men asked whether
it was true, as he had heard, that he used to hunt the rabbit with a pack of
pug dogs. Sir Hercules replied that it
was, and proceeded to describe the chase in some detail. The young men roared with laughter.
'When
supper was over, Sir Hercules climbed down from his chair and, giving as his
excuse that he must see how his lady did, bade them goodnight. The sound of laughter followed him up the
stairs. Filomena was not asleep; she had
been lying on her bed listening to the sound of enormous laughter and the tread
of strangely heavy feet on the stairs and along the corridors. Sir Hercules drew a chair to her bedside and
sat there for a long time in silence, holding his wife's hand and sometimes
gently squeezing it. At about ten o'clock
they were startled by a violent noise.
There was a breaking of glass, a stamping of feet, with an outburst of
shouts and laughter. The uproar
continuing for several minutes, Sir Hercules rose to his feet and, in spite of
his wife's entreaties, prepared to go and see what was happening. There was no light on the staircase, and Sir
Hercules groped his way down cautiously, lowering himself from stair to stair
and standing for a moment on each tread before adventuring on a new step. The noise was louder here; the shouting
articulated itself into recognizable words and phrases. A line of light was visible under the
dining-room door. Sir Hercules tiptoed
across the hall towards it. Just as he approached the door there was another
terrific crash of breaking glass and jangled metal. What could they be doing? Standing on tiptoe he managed to look through
the keyhole. In the middle of the ravaged
table old Simon, the butler, so primed with drink that he could scarcely keep
his balance, was dancing a jig. His feet
crunched and tinkled among the broken glass, and his shoes were wet with spilt
wine. The three young men sat round,
thumping the table with their hands or with the empty wine bottles, shouting
and laughing encouragement. The three
servants leaning against the wall laughed too.
Ferdinando suddenly threw a handful of walnuts at the dancer's head,
which so dazed and surprised the little man that he staggered and fell down on
his back, upsetting a decanter and several glasses. They raised him up, gave him some brandy to
drink, thumped him on the back. The old
man smiled and hiccoughed.
"Tomorrow," said Ferdinando, "we'll have a concerted
ballet of the whole household."
"With father Hercules wearing his club and lion-skin," added
one of his companions, and all three roared with laughter.
'Sir
Hercules would look and listen no further.
He crossed the hall once more and began to climb the stairs, lifting his
knees painfully high at each degree.
This was the end; there was no place for him now in the world, no place
for him and Ferdinando together.
'His wife
was still awake; to her questioning glance he answered, "They are making
mock of old Simon. Tomorrow it will be
our turn." They were silent for a
time.
'At last
Filomena said, "I do not want to see tomorrow."
'"It
is better not," said Sir Hercules.
Going into his closet he wrote in his day-book a full and particular
account of all the events of the evening.
While he was engaged in this task he rang for a servant and ordered hot
water and a bath to be made ready for him at eleven o'clock. When he had finished writing he went into his
wife's room, and preparing a dose of opium twenty times as strong as that which
she was accustomed to take when she could not sleep, he brought it to her, saying,
"Here is your sleeping-draught."
'Filomena
took the glass and lay for a little time, but did not drink immediately. The tears came into her eyes. "Do you remember the songs we used to
sing, sitting out there sulla terrazza in summertime?" She began signing softly in her ghost of a
cracked voice a few bars from Stradella's "Amor, amor, non dormir
piu." "And you playing on
the violin. It seems such a short time
ago, and yet so long, long, long. Addio,
amore. A rivederti." She drank off the draught and, lying back on
the pillow, closed her eyes. Sir
Hercules kissed her hand and tiptoed away, as though he were afraid of waking
her. He returned to his closet, and
having recorded his wife's last words to him, he poured into his bath the water
that had been brought up in accordance with his orders. The water being too hot for him to get into
the bath at once, he took down from the shelf his copy of Suetonius. He wished to read how Seneca had died. He opened the book at random. "But dwarfs," he read, "he
held in abhorrence as being lusus naturae and of evil omen." He winced as though he had been struck. This same Augustus, he remembered, had
exhibited in the amphitheatre a young man called Lucius, of good family, who
was not quite two feet in height and weighed seventeen pounds, but had a
stentorian voice. He turned over the
pages. Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius,
Nero: it was a tale of growing horror.
"Seneca his preceptor, he forced to kill himself." And there was Petronius, who had called his friends
about him at the last, bidding them talk to him, not of the consolations of
philosophy, but of love and gallantry, while the life was ebbing away through
his opened veins. Dipping his pen once
more in the ink he wrote on the last page of his diary: "He died a Roman
death." Then, putting the toes of
one foot into the water and finding that it was not too hot, he threw off his
dressing-gown and, taking a razor in his hand, sat down in the bath. With one deep cut he severed the artery in
his left wrist, then lay back and composed his mind to meditation. The blood oozed out, floating through the
water in dissolving wreaths and spirals.
In a little while the whole bath was tinged with pink. The colour deepened; Sir Hercules felt
himself mastered by an invincible drowsiness; he was sinking from vague dream
to dream. Soon he was sound asleep. There was not much blood in his small body.'
CHAPTER XIV
For their after-luncheon coffee the party generally
adjourned to the library. Its windows
looked east, and at this hour of the day it was the coolest place in the whole
house. It was a large room, fitted,
during the eighteenth century, with white painted shelves of an elegant design. In the middle of one wall a door, ingeniously
upholstered with rows of dummy books, gave access to a deep cupboard, where,
among a pile of letter-files and old newspapers, the mummy-case of an Egyptian
lady, brought back by the second Sir Ferdinando on his return from the Grand
Tour, mouldered in the darkness. From
ten yards away and at a first glance, one might almost have mistaken this
secret door for a section of shelving filled with genuine books. Coffee-cup in hand, Mr Scogan was standing in
front of the dummy bookshelf. Between
the sips he discoursed.
'The bottom
shelf,' he was saying, 'is taken up by an Encyclopaedia in fourteen
volumes. Useful, but a little dull, as
is also Caprimulge's Dictionary of the Finnish Language. The Bibliographical Dictionary
looks much more promising. Biography
of Men who were Born Great, Biography of Men who Achieved Greatness, Biography
of Men who had Greatness Thrust upon Them, and Biography of Men who were
Never Great at All. Then there are
ten volumes of Thom's Works and Wanderings, while the Wild Goose
Chase, a Novel, by an anonymous author, fills no less than six. But what's this, what's this?' Mr Scogan stood on tiptoe and peered up. 'Seven volumes of the Tales of
Knockespotch. The Tales of
Knockespotch,' he repeated. 'Ah, my
dear Henry,' he said, turning round, 'these are your best books. I would willingly give all the rest of your
library for them.'
The happy
possessor of a multitude of first editions, Mr Wimbush could afford to smile
indulgently.
'Is it
possible,' Mr Scogan went on, 'that they possess nothing more than a back and a
title?' He opened the cupboard door and
peeped inside, as though he hoped to find the rest of the books behind it. 'Phooh!' he said, and shut the door again. 'It smells of dust and mildew. How symbolical! One comes to the great masterpieces of the
past, expecting some miraculous illumination, and one finds, on opening them,
only darkness and dust and a faint smell of decay. After all, what is reading but a vice, like
drink or venery or any other form of excessive self-indulgence? One reads to tickle and amuse one's mind; one
reads, above all, to prevent oneself thinking.
Still - the Tales of Knockespotch ...'
He paused,
and thoughtfully drummed with his fingers on the backs of the non-existent,
unattainable books.
'But I disagree
with you about reading,' said Mary.
'About serious reading, I mean.'
'Quite
right, Mary, quite right,' Mr Scogan answered.
'I had forgotten there were any serious people in the room.'
'I like the
idea of the Biographies,' said Denis.
'There's room for us all within the scheme; it's comprehensive.'
'Yes, the
Biographies are good, the Biographies are excellent,' Mr Scogan agreed. 'I imagine them written in a very elegant
Regency style - Brighton Pavilion in words - perhaps by the great Dr Lemprière
himself. You know his classical
dictionary? Ah!' Mr Scogan raised his hand and let it limply
fall again in a gesture which implied that words failed him. 'Read his
biography of Helen; read how Jupiter, disguised as a swan, was "enabled to
avail himself of his situation" vis-à-vis Leda. And to think that he may have, must have
written these biographies of the Great!
What a work, Henry! And, owing to
the idiotic arrangement of your library, it can't be read.'
'I prefer
the Wild Goose Chase,' said Anne.
'A novel in six volumes - it must be restful.'
'Restful,'
Mr Scogan repeated. 'You've hit on the
right word. A Wild Goose Chase is
sound, but a bit old-fashioned - pictures of clerical life in the fifties,
[ i.e. eighteen-fifties.] you know; specimens of the landed gentry; peasants
for pathos and comedy; and in the background, always the picturesque beauties
of nature soberly described. All very
good and solid, but, like certain puddings, just a little dull. Personally, I like much better the notion of Thom's
Works and Wanderings. The eccentric
Mr Thom of Thom's Hill. Old Tom Thom, as
his intimates used to call him. He spent
ten years in Tibet organizing the clarified butter industry on modern European
lines, and was able to retire at thirty-six with a handsome fortune. The rest of his life he devoted to travel and
ratiocination; here is the result.' Mr
Scogan tapped the dummy books. 'And now
we come to the Tales of Knockespotch.
What a masterpiece and what a great man!
Knockespotch knew how to write fiction.
Ah, Denis, if you could only read Knockespotch you wouldn't be writing a
novel about the wearisome development of a young man's character, you wouldn't
be describing in endless, fastidious detail, cultured life in Chelsea and
Bloomsbury and Hampstead. You would be
trying to write a readable book. But
then, alas! owing to the peculiar arrangement of our host's library, you never
will read Knockespotch.'
'Nobody
could regret the fact more than I do,' said Denis.
'It was
Knockespotch,' Mr Scogan continued, 'the great Knockespotch, who delivered us
from the dreary tyranny of the realistic novel.
My life, Knockespotch said, is not so long that I can afford to spend
precious hours writing or reading descriptions of middle-class interiors. He said again, "I am tired of seeing the
human mind bogged in a social plenum; I prefer to paint it in a vacuum, freely
and sportively bombinating.'
'I say,'
said Gombauld, 'Knockespotch was a little obscure sometimes, wasn't he?'
'He was,'
Mr Scogan replied, 'and with intention.
It made him seem even profounder than he actually was. But it was only in his aphorisms that he was
so dark and oracular. In his Tales he
was always luminous. Oh, those Tales -
those Tales! How shall I describe
them? Fabulous characters shoot across
his pages like gaily dressed performers on the trapeze. There are extraordinary adventures and still
more extraordinary speculations.
Intelligences and emotions, relieved of all the imbecile preoccupations
of civilized life, move in intricate and subtle dances, crossing and
recrossing, advancing, retreating, impinging.
An immense erudition and an immense fancy go hand in hand. All the ideas of the present and of the past,
on every possible subject, bob up among the Tales, smile gravely or grimace a
caricature of themselves, then disappear to make place for something new. The verbal surface of his writing is rich and
fantastically diversified. The wit is
incessant. The ...'
'But
couldn't you give us a specimen?' Denis broke in - 'a concrete example?'
'Alas!' Mr
Scogan replied. 'Knockespotch's great
book is like the sword Excalibur. It
remains stuck fast in this door, awaiting the coming of a writer with genius
enough to draw it forth. I am not even a
writer, I am not so much as qualified to attempt the task. The extraction of Knockespotch from his
wooden prison I leave, my dear Denis, to you.'
'Thank
you,' said Denis.
CHAPTER XV
'In the time of the amiable Brantôme,' Mr Scogan was
saying, 'every debutante at the French Court was invited to dine at the King's
table, where she was served with wine in a handsome silver cup of Italian
workmanship. It was no ordinary cup,
this goblet of the debutantes; for, inside, it had been more curiously and
ingeniously engraved with a series of very lively amorous scenes. With each draught that the young lady
swallowed these engravings became increasingly visible, and the Court looked on
with interest, every time she put her nose in the cup, to see whether she
blushed at what the ebbing wine revealed.
If the debutante blushed, they laughed at her for her innocence; if she
did not, she was laughed at for being too knowing.'
'Do you
propose,' asked Anne, 'that the custom should be revived at Buckingham Palace?'
'I do not,'
said Mr Scogan. 'I merely quoted the
anecdote as an illustration of the customs, so genially frank, of the sixteenth
century. I might have quoted other
anecdotes to show that the customs of the seventeenth and eighteenth, of the
fifteenth and fourteenth centuries, and indeed of every other century, from the
time of Hammurabi onward, were equally genial and equally frank. The only century in which customs were not
characterized by the same cheerful openness was the nineteenth, of blessed
memory. It was the astonishing
exception. And yet, with what one must
suppose was a deliberate disregard of history, it looked upon its horribly
pregnant silences as normal and natural and right; the frankness of the previous
fifteen or twenty thousand years was considered abnormal and perverse. It was a curious phenomenon.'
'I entirely
agree.' Mary panted with excitement in her effort to bring out what she had to
say. 'Havelock Ellis says ...'
Mr Scogan,
like a policeman arresting the flow of traffic, held up his hand. 'He does; I know. And that brings me to my next point: the
nature of the reaction.'
'Havelock
Ellis ...'
'The
reaction, when it came - and we may say roughly that it set in a little before
the beginning of this century - the reaction was to openness, but not to the
same openness as had reigned in the earlier ages. It was to a scientific openness, not to the
jovial frankness of the past, that we returned.
The whole question of Amour became a terribly serious one. Earnest young men wrote in the public prints
that from this time forth it would be impossible ever again to make a joke of
any sexual matter. Professors wrote
thick books in which sex was sterilized and dissected. It has become customary for serious young
women, like Mary, to discuss, with philosophic calm, matters of which the
merest hint would have sufficed to throw the youth of the sixties into a
delirium of amorous excitement. It is
all very estimable, no doubt. But still'
- Mr Scogan sighed - 'I for one should like to see, mingled with this
scientific ardour, a little more of the jovial spirit of Rabelais and Chaucer.'
'I entirely
disagree with you,' said Mary. 'Sex
isn't a laughing matter; it's serious.'
'Perhaps,' answered
Mr Scogan, 'perhaps I'm an obscene old man, for I must confess that I cannot
always regard it as wholly serious.'
'But I tell
you ...' began Mary furiously. Her face
had flushed with excitement. Her cheeks
were the cheeks of a great ripe peach.
'Indeed,'
Mr Scogan continued, 'it seems to me one of the few permanently and everlasting
amusing subjects that exist. Amour is
the one human activity of any importance in which laughter and pleasure
preponderate, if ever so slightly, over misery and pain.'
'I entirely
disagree,' said Mary. There was a
silence.
Anne looked
at her watch. 'Nearly a quarter to
eight,' she said. 'I wonder when Ivor
will turn up.' She got up from her
deck-chair and, leaning her elbows on the balustrade of the terrace, looked out
over the valley and towards the farther hills.
Under the level evening light the architecture of the land revealed
itself. The deep shadows, the bright
contrasting lights gave the hills a new solidarity. Irregularities of the surface, unsuspected
before, were picked out with light and shade.
The grass, the corn, the foliage of trees were stippled with intricate
shadows. The surface of things had taken
on a marvellous enrichment.
'Look!'
said Anne suddenly, and pointed. On the
opposite side of the valley, at the crest of the ridge, a cloud of dust flushed
by the sunlight to rosy gold was moving rapidly along the skyline. 'It's Ivor.
One can tell by the speed.'
The dust
cloud descended into the valley and was lost.
A horn with the voice of a sea-lion made itself heard, approaching. A minute later Ivor came leaping round the
corner of the house. His hair waved in
the wind of his own speed; he laughed as he saw them.
'Anne
darling,' he cried, and embraced her, embraced Mary, very nearly embraced Mr
Scogan. 'Well, here I am. I've come with incredulous speed.' Ivor's vocabulary was rich, but a little
erratic. 'I'm not late for dinner, am
I?' He hoisted himself up on to the
balustrade, and sat there, kicking his heels.
With one arm he embraced a large stone flowerpot, leaning his head
sideways against its hard and lichenous flanks in an attitude of trustful
affection. He had brown, wavy hair, and
his eyes were of a very brilliant, pale, improbable blue. His head was narrow, his face thin and rather
long, his nose aquiline. In old age -
though it was difficult to image Ivor old - he might grow to have an Iron Ducal
grimness. But now, at twenty-six, it was
not the structure of his face that impressed one; it was its expression. That was charming and vivacious, and his
smile was an irradiation. He was for
ever moving, restlessly and rapidly, but with an engaging gracefulness. His frail and slender body seemed to be fed
by a spring of inexhaustible energy.
'No, you're
not late.'
'You're in
time to answer a question,' said Mr Scogan.
'We were arguing whether Armour were a serious matter or no. What do you think? Is it serious?'
'Serious?'
echoed Ivor. 'Most certainly.'
'I told you
so,' cried Mary triumphantly.
'But in
what sense serious?' Mr Scogan asked.
'I mean as
an occupation. One can go on with it
without ever getting bored.'
'I see,'
said Mr Scogan. 'Perfectly.'
'One can
occupy oneself with it,' Ivor continued, 'always and everywhere. Women are always wonderfully the same. Shapes vary a little, that's all. In Spain' - with his free hand he described a
series of ample curves - 'one can't pass them on the stairs. In England' - he put the tip of his
forefinger against the tip of his thumb and, lowering his hand, drew out this
circle into an imaginary cylinder - 'in England they're tubular. But their sentiments are always the
same. At least, I've always found it
so.'
'I'm
delighted to hear it,' said Mr Scogan.
CHAPTER XVI
The ladies had left the room and the port was
circulating. Mr Scogan filled his glass,
passed on the decanter, and, leaning back in his chair, looked about him for a
moment in silence. The conversation
rippled idly round him, but he disregarded it; he was smiling at some private
joke. Gombauld noticed his smile.
'What's
amusing you?' he asked.
'I was just
looking at you all, sitting round this table,' said Mr Scogan.
'Are we as
comic as all that?'
'Not at
all,' Mr Scogan answered politely. 'I
was merely amused by my own speculations.'
'And what
were they?'
'The
idlest, the most academic of speculations.
I was looking at you one by one and trying to imagine which of the first
Caesars you would each resemble, if you were given the opportunity of behaving
like a Caesar. The Caesars are one of my
touchstones,' Mr Scogan explained. 'They
are characters functioning, so to speak, in the void. They are human beings developed to their
logical conclusions. Hence their
unequalled value as a touchstone, a standard.
When I meet someone for the first time, I ask myself this question:
Given the Caesarean environment, which of the Caesars would this person
resemble - Julius, Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero? I take each trait of character, each mental
and emotional bias, each little oddity, and magnify them a thousand times. The resulting image gives me his Caesarean
formula.'
'And which
of the Caesars do you resemble?' asked Gombauld.
'I am
potentially all of them,' Mr Scogan replied, 'all - with the possible exception
of Claudius, who was much too stupid to be a development of anything in my
character. The seeds of Julius's courage
and compelling energy, of Augustus's prudence, of the libidinousness and
cruelty of Tiberius, of Caligula's folly, of Nero's artistic genius and enormous
vanity, are all within me. Given the
opportunities, I might have been something fabulous. But circumstances were against me. I was born and brought up in a country
rectory; I passed my youth doing a great deal of utterly senseless hard work
for a very little money. The result is
that now, in middle age, I am the poor thing that I am. But perhaps it is as well. Perhaps, too, it's as well that Denis hasn't
been permitted to flower into a little Nero, and that Ivor remains only
potentially a Caligula. Yes, it's better
so, no doubt. But it would have been
more amusing, as a spectacle, if they had had the chance to develop,
untrammelled, the full horror of their potentialities. It would have been pleasant and interesting
to watch their tics and foibles and little vices swelling and burgeoning and
blossoming into enormous and fantastic flowers of cruelty and pride and
lewdness and avarice. The Caesarean
environment makes the Caesar, as the special food and the queenly cell make the
queen bee. We differ from the bees
insofar that, given the proper food, they can be sure of making a queen every
time. With us there is no such
certainty; out of every ten men placed in the Caesarean environment one will be
temperamentally good, or intelligent, or great.
The rest will blossom into Caesars; he will not. Seventy or eighty years ago simple-minded
people, reading the exploits of the Bourbons in South Italy, cried out in
amazement: To think that such things should be happening in the nineteenth
century! And a few years since we too
were astonished to find that in our still more astonishing twentieth century,
unhappy blackamoors on the Congo and the Amazon were being treated as English
serfs were treated in the time of Stephen.
Today we are no longer surprised at these things. The Black and Tans harry Ireland, the Poles
maltreat the Silesians, the bold Fascisti slaughter their poorer countrymen: we
take it all for granted. Since the way
we wonder at nothing. We have created a
Caesarean environment and a host of little Caesars has sprung up. What could be more natural?'
Mr Scogan
drank off what was left of his port and refilled the glass.
'At this
very moment,' he went on, 'the most frightful horrors are taking place in every
corner of the world. People are being
crushed, slashed, disembowelled, mangled; their dead bodies rot and their eyes
decay with the rest. Screams of pain and
fear go pulsing through the air at the rate of eleven hundred feet per second. After travelling for three seconds they are
perfectly inaudible. These are
distressing facts;; but do we enjoy life any the less because of them? Most certainly we do not. We feel sympathy, no doubt; we represent to
ourselves imaginatively the sufferings of nations and individuals and we
deplore them. But, after all, what are
sympathy and imagination? Precious
little, unless the person for whom we feel sympathy happens to be closely
involved in our affections; and event hen they don't go very far. And a good thing too; for if one had an
imagination vivid enough and a sympathy sufficiently sensitive really to
comprehend and to feel the sufferings of other people, one would never have a
moment's peace of mind. A really
sympathetic race would not so much as know the meaning of happiness. But luckily, as I've already said, we aren't
a sympathetic race. At the beginning of
the war I used to think I really suffered, through imagination and sympathy,
with those who physically suffered. But
after a month or two I had to admit that, honestly, I didn't. And yet I think I have a more vivid
imagination than most. One is always
alone in suffering; the fact is depressing when one happens to be the sufferer,
but it makes pleasure possible for the rest of the world.'
'There was
a pause. Henry Wimbush pushed back his
chair.
'I think
perhaps we ought to go and join the ladies,' he said.
'So do I,'
said Ivor, jumping up with alacrity. He
turned to Mr Scogan. 'Fortunately,' he
said, 'we can share our pleasures. We
are not always condemned to be happy alone.'
CHAPTER XVII
Ivor brought his hands down with a bang on to the
final chord of his rhapsody. There was
just a hint of that triumphant harmony that the seventh had been struck along
with the octave by the thumb of the left hand; but the general effect of
splendid noise emerged clearly enough.
Small details matter little so long as the general effect is good. And, besides, that hint of the seventh was
decidedly modern. He turned round in his
seat and tossed the hair back out of his eyes.
'There,' he
said. 'That's the best I can do for you,
I'm afraid.'
Murmurs of
applause and gratitude were heard, and Mary, her large china eyes fixed on the
performer, cried out aloud, 'Wonderful!' and gasped for new breath as though
she were suffocating.
Nature and fortune
had vied with one another in heaping on Ivor Lombard all their choicest
gifts. He had wealth and he was
perfectly independent. He was good
looking, possessed an irresistible charm of manner, and was the hero of more
amorous successes than he could well remember.
His accomplishments were extraordinary for their number and
variety. He had a beautiful untrained
tenor voice; he could improvise, with a startling brilliance, rapidly and
loudly, on the piano. He was a good
amateur medium and telepathist, and had a considerable first-hand knowledge of
the next world. He could write rhymed
verses with an extraordinary rapidity.
For painting symbolical pictures he had a dashing style, and if the
drawing was sometimes a little weak, the colour was always pyrotechnical. He excelled in amateur theatricals and, when
occasion offered, he could cook with genius.
He resembled Shakespeare in knowing little Latin and less Greek. For a mind like his, education seemed
supererogatory. Training would only have
destroyed his natural aptitudes.
'Let's go
out into the garden,' Ivor suggested.
'It's a wonderful night.'
'Thank
you,' said Mr Scogan, 'but I for one prefer these still more wonderful
armchairs.' His pipe had begun to bubble
oozily every time he pulled at it. He
was perfectly happy.
Henry
Wimbush was also happy. He looked for a
moment over his pince-nez in Ivor's direction and then, without saying
anything, returned to the grimy little sixteenth-century account books which
were now his favourite reading. He knew
more about Sir Ferdinando's household expenses than about his own.
The outdoor
party, enrolled under Ivor's banner, consisted of Anne, Mary, Denis, and,
rather unexpectedly, Jenny. Outside it
was warm and dark; there was no moon.
They walked up and down the terrace, and Ivor sang a Neapolitan song:
'Stretti, stretti' - close, close - with something about the little Spanish
girl to follow. The atmosphere began to
palpitate. Ivor put his arm round Anne's
waist, dropped his head sideways on to her shoulder, and in that position
walked on, singing as he walked. It
seemed the easiest, the most natural, thing in the world. Denis wondered why he had never done it. He hated Ivor.
'Let's go
down to the pool,' said Ivor. He disengaged
his embrace and turned round to shepherd his little flock. They made their way along the side of the
house to the entrance of the yew-tree walk that led down to the lower garden. Between the blank precipitous wall of the
house and the tall yew trees the path was a chasm of impenetrable gloom. Somewhere there were steps down to the right,
a gap in the yew hedge. Denis, who
headed the party, groped his way cautiously; in this darkness, one had an
irrational fear of yawning precipices, of horrible spiked obstructions. Suddenly from behind him he heard a shrill,
startled, 'Oh!' and then a sharp, dry concussion that might have been the sound
of a slap. After that, Jenny's voice was
heard pronouncing, 'I am going back to the house.' Her tone was decided, and even as she
pronounced the words she was melting away into the darkness. The incident, whatever it had been, was
closed. Denis resumed his forward
groping. From somewhere behind, Ivor
began to sing again, softly:
'Phillis plus avare que tendre,
Ne gagnant rien à refuser,
Un jour exigea à Silvandre
Trente moutons pour un baiser.'
The melody dropped and climbed again with a kind of
easy languor; the warm darkness seemed to pulse like blood about them.
'Le lendemain, nouvelle affaire:
Pour le berger, le troc fut bon ...'
'Here are
the steps,' cried Denis. He guided his
companions over the danger, and in a moment they had the turf of the yew-tree
walk under their feet. It was lighter
here, or at least it was just perceptibly less dark; for the yew walk was wider
than the path that had led them under the lea of the house. Looking up, they could see between the high
black hedges a strip of sky and a few stars.
'Car il obtint de la bergère ...'
went on Ivor, and then interrupted himself to shout,
'I'm going to run down,' and he was off, full speed, down the invisible slope,
singing unevenly as he went:
'Trente baisers pour un mouton.'
The others followed.
Denis shambled in the rear, vainly exhorting everyone to caution: the
slope was steep, one might break one's neck.
What was wrong with these people, he wondered? They had become like young kittens after a
dose of cat-nip. He himself felt a
certain kittenishness sporting within him; but it was, like all his emotions,
rather a theoretical feeling; it did not overmasteringly seek to express itself
in a practical demonstration of kittenishness.
'Be
careful,' he shouted once more, and hardly were the words out of his mouth
when, thump! there was the sound of a heavy fall in front of him, followed by
the long 'F-f-f-f-f' of a breath indrawn with pain and afterwards by a very
sincere, 'Oo-ooh!' Denis was almost
pleased; he had told them so, the idiots, and they wouldn't listen. He trotted down the slope towards the unseen
sufferer.
Mary came
down the hill like a runaway steam-engine.
It was tremendously exciting, this blind rush through the dark; she felt
she would never stop. But the ground
grew level beneath her feet, her speed insensibly slackened, and suddenly she
was caught by an extended arm and brought to an abrupt halt.
'Well,'
said Ivor as he tightened his embrace, 'you're caught now, Anne.'
She made an
effort to release herself. 'It's not
Anne. It's Mary.'
Ivor burst
into a peal of amused laughter. 'So it is!'
he exclaimed. 'I seem to be making
nothing but floaters this evening. I've
already made one with Jenny.' He laughed
again, and there was something so jolly about his laughter that Mary could not
help laughing too. He did not remove his
encircling arm, and somehow it was all so amusing and natural that Mary made no
further attempt to escape from it. They
walked along by the side of the pool, interlaced. Mary was too short for him to be able, with
any comfort, to lay his head on her shoulder.
He rubbed his cheek, caressed and caressing, against the thick, sleek
mass of her hair. In a little while he
began to sing again; the night trembled amorously to the sound of his
voice. When he had finished he kissed
her. Anne or Mary: Mary or Anne. It didn't seem to make much difference which
it was. There were differences in
detail, of course; but the general effect was the same; and, after all, the
general effect was the important thing.
Denis made
his way down the hill.
'Any damage
done?' he called out.
'Is that
you, Denis?' I've hurt my ankle so - and
my knee, and my hand. I'm all in
pieces.'
'My poor
Anne,' he said. 'But then,' he couldn't
help adding, 'it was silly to start running downhill in the dark.'
'Ass!' she
retorted in a tone of tearful irritation; 'of course it was.'
He sat down
beside her on the grass, and found himself breathing the faint, delicious
atmosphere of perfume that she carried always with her.
'Light a
match,' she commanded. 'I want to look
at my wounds.'
He felt in
his pockets for the matchbox. The light
spurted and then grew steady. Magically,
a little universe had been created, a world of colours and forms - Anne's face,
the shimmering orange of her dress, her white, bare arms, a patch of green turf
- and round about a darkness that had become solid and utterly blind. Anne held out her hands; both were green and
earthy with her fall, and the left exhibited two or three red abrasions.
'Not so
bad,' she said. But Denis was terribly
distressed, and his emotion was intensified when, looking up at her face, he
saw that the trace of tears, involuntary tears of pain, lingered on her
eyelashes. He pulled out his
handkerchief and began to wipe away the dirt from the wounded hand. The match went out; it was not worth while to
light another. Anne allowed herself to
be attended to, meekly and gratefully.
'Thank you,' she said, when he had finished cleaning and bandaging her
hand; and there was something in her tone that made him feel that she had lost
her superiority over him, that she was younger than he, had become, suddenly,
almost a child. He felt tremendously
large and protective. The feeling was so
strong that instinctively he put his arm about her. She drew closer, leaned against him, and so
they sat in silence. Then, from below,
soft but wonderfully clear through the still darkness, they heard the sound of
Ivor's singing. He was going on with his
half-finished song:
'Le lendemain Phillis plus tendre,
Ne voulant déplaire au berger,
Fut trop heureuse de lui rendre
Trente moutons pour un baiser.'
There was a rather prolonged pause. It was as though time were being allowed for
the giving and receiving of a few of those thirty kisses. Then the voice sang on:
'Le lendemain Phillis peu sage
Aurait donné moutons et chien
Pour un baiser que le volage
A Lisette donnait pour rien.'
The last note died away into an uninterrupted silence.
'Are you
better?' Denis whispered. 'Are you
comfortable like this?'
She nodded
a Yes to both questions.
'Trente moutons
pour un baiser.' The sheep, the woolly
mutton - baa, baa, baa...? Or the
shepherd? Yes, decidedly, he felt
himself to be the shepherd now. He was
the master, the protector. A wave of
courage swelled through him, warm as wine.
He turned his head, and began to kiss her face, at first rather
randomly, then, with more precision, on the mouth.
Anne
averted her head; he kissed the ear, the smooth nape that this movement
presented him. 'No,' she protested; 'no,
Denis.'
'Why not?'
'It spoils
our friendship, and that was so jolly.'
'Bosh!'
said Denis.
She tried
to explain. 'Can't you see,' she said,
'it isn't ... it isn't our stunt at all.'
It was true. Somehow she had
never thought of Denis in the light of a man who might make love; she had never
so much as conceived the possibilities of an amorous relationship with
him. He was so absurdly young, so ... so
... she couldn't find the adjective, but she knew what she meant.
'Why isn't
it our stunt?' asked Denis. 'And, by the
way, that's a horrible and inappropriate expression.'
'Because it
isn't.'
'But if I
say it is?'
'It makes
no difference. I say it isn't.'
'I shall
make you say it is.'
'All right,
Denis. But you must do it another
time. I must go and get my ankle into
hot water. It's beginning to swell.'
Reasons of
health could not be gainsaid. Denis got
up reluctantly, and helped his companion to her feet. She took a cautious step. 'Ooh!'
She halted and leaned heavily on his arm.
'I'll carry
you,' Denis offered. He had never tried
to carry a woman, but on the cinema it always looked an easy piece of heroism.
'You
couldn't,' said Anne.
'Of course
I can.' He felt larger and more
protective than ever. 'Put your arms
round my neck,' he ordered. She did so
and, stooping, he picked her up under the knees and lifted her from the
ground. Good heavens, what a
weight! He took five staggering steps up
the slope, then almost lost his equilibrium, and had to deposit his burden
suddenly, with something of a bump.
Anne was
shaking with laughter. 'I said you
couldn't, my poor Denis.'
'I can,'
said Denis, without conviction. 'I'll
try again.'
'It's
perfectly sweet of you to offer, but I'd rather walk, thanks.' She laid her hand on his shoulder and, thus
supported, began to limp slowly up the hill.
'My poor
Denis!' she repeated, and laughed again.
Humiliated, he was silent. It
seemed incredible that, only two minutes ago, he should have been holding her
in his embrace, kissing her.
Incredible. She was helpless
then, a child. Now she had regained all
her superiority; she was once more the far-off being, desired and
unassailable. Why had he been such a
fool as to suggest that carrying stunt?
He reached the house in a state of the profoundest depression.
He helped
Anne upstairs, left her in the hands of a maid, and came down again to the
drawing-room. He was surprised to find
them all sitting just where he had left them.
He had expected that, somehow, everything would be quite different - it
seemed such a prodigious time since he went away. All silent and all damned, he reflected, as
he looked at them. Mr Scogan's pipe
still wheezed; that was the only sound.
Henry Wimbush was still deep in his account books; he had just made the
discovery that Sir Ferdinando was in the habit of eating oysters the whole
summer through, regardless of the absence of the justifying R. Gombauld, in horn-rimmed spectacles, was
reading. Jenny was mysteriously
scribbling in her red notebook. And,
seated in her favourite armchair at the corner of the hearth, Priscilla was
looking through a pile of drawings. One
by one she held them out at arm's length and, throwing back her mountainous
orange head, looked long and attentively through half-closed eyelids. She wore a pale sea-green dress; on the slope
of her mauve-powdered décolletage diamonds twinkled. An immensely long cigarette-holder projected
at an angle from her face. Diamonds were
embedded in her high-piled coiffure; they glittered every time she moved. It was a batch of Ivor's drawings - sketches
of Spirit Life, made in the course of tranced tours through the other
world. On the back of each sheet
descriptive titles were written: 'Portrait of an Angel, 15th March '20; 'Astral
Beings at Play, 3rd December '19; 'A Party of Souls on their Way to a Higher
Sphere, 21st May '21.' Before examining
the drawing on the obverse of each sheet, she turned it over the read the
title. Try as she could - and she tried
hard - Priscilla had never seen a vision or succeeded in establishing any
communication with the Spirit World. She
had to be content with the reported experiences of others.
'What have
you done with the rest of your party?' she asked, looking up as Denis entered
the room.
He
explained. Anne had gone to bed, Ivor
and Mary were still in the garden. He
selected a book and a comfortable chair, and tried, as far as the disturbed
state of his mind would permit him, to compose himself for an evening's
reading. The lamplight was utterly
serene; there was no movement save the stir of Priscilla among her papers. All silent and all damned, Denis repeated to
himself, all silent and all damned....
It was
nearly an hour later when Ivor and Mary made their appearance.
'We waited
to see the moon rise,' said Ivor.
'It was gibbous,
you know,' Mary explained, very technical and scientific.
'It was so
beautiful down in the garden! The trees,
the scent of the flowers, the stars ...' Ivor waved his arms. 'And when the moon came up, it was really too
much. It made me burst into tears.' He sat down at the piano and opened the lid.
'There were
a great many meteorites,' said Mary to anyone who would listen. 'The earth must just be coming into the
summer shower of them. In July and
August ...'
But Ivor
had already begun to strike the keys. He
played the garden, the stars, the scent of flowers, the rising moon. He even put in a nightingale that was not
there. Mary looked on and listened with
parted lips. The others pursued their
occupations, without appearing to be seriously disturbed. On this very July day, exactly three hundred
and fifty years ago, Sir Ferdinando had eaten seven dozen oysters. The discovery of this fact gave Henry Wimbush
a peculiar pleasure. He had a natural
piety which made him delight in the celebration of memorial feasts. The three hundredth and fiftieth anniversary
of the seven dozen oysters.... He wished he had known before dinner; he would
have ordered champagne.
On her way
to bed Mary paid a call. The light was
out in Anne's room, but she was not yet asleep.
'Why didn't
you come down to the garden with us?' Mary asked.
'I fell
down and twisted my ankle. Denis helped
me home.'
Mary was
full of sympathy. Inwardly, too, she was
relieved to find Anne's non-appearance so simply accounted for. She had been vaguely suspicious, down there
in the garden - suspicious of what, she hardly knew; but there had seemed to be
something a little louche in the way she had suddenly found herself
alone with Ivor. Not that she minded, of
course; far from it. But she didn't like
the idea that perhaps she was the victim of a put-up job.
'I do hope
you'll be better tomorrow,' she said, and she commiserated with Anne on all she
had missed - the garden, the stars, the scent of flowers, the meteorites
through whose summer shower the earth was now passing, the rising moon and its
gibbosity. And then they had had such
interesting conversation. What
about? About almost everything. Nature, art, science, poetry, the stars,
spiritualism, the relations of the sexes, music, religion. Ivor, she thought, had an interesting mind.
The two
young ladies parted affectionately.
CHAPTER XVIII
The nearest Roman Catholic Church was upwards of
twenty miles away. Ivor, who was
punctilious in his devotions, came down early to breakfast and had his car at
the door, ready to start, by a quarter to ten.
It was a smart, expensive-looking machine, enamelled a pure lemon yellow
and upholstered in emerald green leather.
There were two seats - three if you squeezed tightly enough - and their
occupants were protected from wind, dust and weather by a glazed sedan that
rose, an elegant eighteenth-century hump, from the midst of the body of the
car.
Mary had
never been to a Roman Catholic service, thought it would be an interesting
experience, and, when the car moved off through the great gates of the
courtyard, she was occupying the spare seat in the sedan. The sea-lion horn roared, faintlier,
faintlier, and they were gone.
In the
parish church of Crome Mr Bodiham preached on I Kings vi. 18: 'And the cedar of
the house within was carved with knops' - a sermon of immediate local
interest. For the past two years the
problem of the War Memorial had exercised the minds of all those in Crome who
had enough leisure, or mental energy, or party spirit to think of such
things. Henry Wimbush was all for a
library - a library of local literature, stocked with county histories, old
maps of the district, monographs on the local antiquities, dialect dictionaries,
handbooks of the local geology and natural history. He liked to think of the villagers, inspired
by such reading, making up parties of a Sunday afternoon to look for fossils
and flint arrowheads. The villagers themselves
favoured the idea of a memorial reservoir and water supply. But the busiest and most articulate party
followed Mr Bodiham in demanding something religious in character - a second
lich-gate, for example, a stained-glass window, a monument of marble, or, if
possible, all three. So far, however,
nothing had been done, partly because the memorial committee had never been
able to agree, partly for the more cogent reason that too little money had been
subscribed to carry out any of the proposed schemes. Every three or four months Mr Bodiham
preached a sermon on the subject. His last
had been delivered in March; it was high time that his congregation had a fresh
reminder.
'And the
cedar of the house within was carved with knops.'
Mr Bodiham
touched lightly on Solomon's temple.
From thence he passed to temples and churches in general. What were the characteristics of these
buildings dedicated to God? Obviously,
the fact of their, from a human point of view, complete uselessness. They were unpractical buildings 'carved with
knops.' Solomon might have built a
library - indeed, what could be more to the taste of the world's wisest
man? He might have dug a reservoir -
what more useful in a parched city like Jerusalem? He did neither; he built a house all carved
with knops, useless and unpractical.
Why? Because he was dedicating
the work to God. There had been much
talk in Crome about the proposed War Memorial.
A War Memorial was, in its very nature, a work dedicated to God. It was a token of thankfulness that the first
stage in the culminating world-war had been crowned by the triumph of
righteousness; it was at the same time a visibly embodied supplication that God
might not long delay the Advent which alone could bring the final peace. A library, a reservoir? Mr Bodiham scornfully and indignantly
condemned the idea. These were works
dedicated to man, not to God. As a War
Memorial they were totally unsuitable. A
lich-gate had been suggested. This was
an object which answered perfectly to the definition of a War Memorial: a
useless work dedicated to God and carved with knops. One lich-gate, it was true, already
existed. But nothing would be easier
than to make a second entrance into the churchyard; and a second entrance would
need a second gate. Other suggestions
had been made. Stained-glass windows, a
monument of marble. Both these were
admirable, especially the latter. It was
high time that the War Memorial was erected.
It might soon be too late. At any
moment, like a thief in the night, God might come. Meanwhile a difficulty stood in the way. Funds were inadequate. All should subscribe according to their
means. Those who had lost relations in
the war might reasonably be expected to subscribe a sum equal to that which
they would have had to pay in funeral expenses if the relative had died while
at home. Further delay was
disastrous. The War Memorial must be
built at once. He appealed to the
patriotism and the Christian sentiments of all his hearers.
Henry
Wimbush walked home thinking of the books he would present to the War Memorial
Library, if ever it came into existence.
He took the path through the fields; it was pleasanter than the
road. At the first stile a group of
village boys, loutish young fellows all dressed in the hideous ill-fitting
black which makes a funeral of every English Sunday and holiday, were
assembled, drearily guffawing as they smoked their cigarettes. They made way for Henry Wimbush, touching
their caps as he passed. He returned
their salute; his bowler and face were one in their unruffled gravity.
In Sir
Ferdinando's time, he reflected, in the time of his son, Sir Julius, these
young men would have had their Sunday diversions even at Crome, remote and
rustic Crome. There would have been
archery, skittles, dancing - social amusements in which they would have
partaken as members of a conscious community.
Now they had nothing, nothing except Mr Bodiham's forbidding Boys' Club
and the rare dances and concerts organized by himself. Boredom or the urban pleasures of the county
metropolis were the alternatives that presented themselves to these poor
youths. Country pleasures were no more;
they had been stamped out by the Puritans.
In
Manningham's Diary for 1600 there was a queer passage, he remembered, a very
queer passage. Certain magistrates in
Berkshire, Puritan magistrates, had had wind of a scandal. One moonlit summer night they had ridden out
with their posse and there, among the hills, they had come upon a
company of men and women, dancing, stark naked, among the sheep-cotes. The magistrates and their men had ridden
their horses into the crowd. How
self-conscious the poor people must suddenly have felt, how helpless without
their clothes against armed and booted horsemen! The dancers are arrested, whipped, gaoled,
set in the stocks; the moonlight dance is never danced again. What old, earthly, Panic rite came to
existence here? he wondered. Who knows?
- perhaps their ancestors had danced like this in the moonlight ages before
Adam and Eve were so much as thought of.
He liked to think so. And now it
was no more. These weary young men, if
they wanted to dance, would have to bicycle six miles to the town. The country was desolate, without life of its
own, without indigenous pleasures. The
pious magistrates had snuffed out for ever a little happy flame that had burned
from the beginning of time.
'And as on Tullia's tomb one lamp burned clear,
Unchanged for fifteen hundred year ...'
He repeated the lines to himself, and was desolated to
think of all the murdered past.
CHAPTER XIX
Henry Wimbush's long cigar burned aromatically. The History of Crome lay on his knee;
slowly he turned over the pages.
'I can't
decide what episode to read you tonight,' he said thoughtfully. 'Sir Ferdinando's voyages are not without
interest. Then, of course, there's his
son, Sir Julius. It was he who suffered
from the delusion that his perspiration engendered flies; it drove him finally
to suicide. Or there's Sir Cyprian.' He turned the pages more rapidly. 'Or Sir Henry. Or Sir George.... No, I'm inclined to think I
won't read about any of these.'
'But you
must read something,' insisted Mr Scogan, taking his pipe out of his mouth.
'I think I
shall read about my grandfather,' said Henry Wimbush, 'and the events that led
up to his marriage with the eldest daughter of the last Sir Ferdinando.'
'Good,'
said Mr Scogan. 'We are listening.'
'Before I
begin reading,' said Henry Wimbush, looking up from the book and taking off his
pince-nez which he had just fitted to his nose - 'before I begin, I must say a
few preliminary words about Sir Ferdinando, the last of the Lapiths. At the death of the virtuous and unfortunate
Sir Hercules, Ferdinando found himself in possession of the family fortune, not
a little increased by his father's temperance and thrift; he applied himself
forthwith to the task of spending it, which he did in an ample and jovial
fashion. By the time he was forty he had
eaten and, above all, drunk and loved away about half his capital, and would infallibly
have soon got rid of the rest in the same manner, if he had not had the good
fortune to become so madly enamoured of the Rector's daughter as to make a
proposal of marriage. The young lady
accepted him, and in less than a year had become the absolute mistress of Crome
and her husband. An extraordinary
reformation made itself apparent in Sir Ferdinando's character. He grew regular and economical in his habits;
he even became temperate, rarely drinking more than a bottle and a half of port
at a sitting. The waning fortune of the
Lapiths began once more to wax, and that in despite of the hard times (for Sir
Ferdinando married in 1809 in the height of the Napoleonic Wars.) A prosperous and dignified old age, cheered
by the spectacle of his children's growth and happiness - for Lady Lapith had
already borne him three daughters, and there seemed no good reason why she
should not bear many more of them, and sons as well - a patriarchal decline
into the family vault, seemed now to be Sir Ferdinando's enviable destiny. But Providence willed otherwise. To Napoleon, cause already of such infinite
mischief, was due, though perhaps indirectly, the untimely and violent death
which put a period to this reformed existence.
'Sir
Ferdinando, who was above all things a patriot, had adopted, from the earliest
days of the conflict with the French, his own peculiar method of celebrating
our victories. When the happy news
reached London, it was his custom to purchase immediately a large store of
liquor and, taking a place on whichever of the outgoing coaches he happened to
light on first, to drive through the country proclaiming the good news to all
he met on the road and dispensing it, along with the liquor, at every
stopping-place to all who cared to listen or drink. Thus, after the Nile, he had driven as far as
Edinburgh; and later, when the coaches, wreathed with laurel for triumph, with
cypress for mourning, were setting out with the news of Nelson's victory and
death, he sat through all a chilly October night in the box of the Norwich Meteor
with a nautical keg of rum on his knees and two cases of old brandy under the
seat. This genial custom was one of the
many habits which he abandoned on his marriage.
The victories in the Peninsula, the retreat from Moscow, Leipzig, and
the abdication of the tyrant all went uncelebrated. It so happened, however, that in the summer
of 1815 Sir Ferdinando was staying for a few weeks in the capital. There had been a succession of anxious,
doubtful days; then came the glorious news of Waterloo. It was too much for Sir Ferdinando; his
joyous youth awoke again within him. He
hurried to his wine merchant and bought a dozen bottles of 1760 brandy. The Bath coach was on the point of starting;
he bribed his way on to the box and, seated in glory beside the driver, proclaimed
aloud the downfall of the Corsican bandit and passed about the warm liquid
joy. They clattered through Uxbridge,
Slough, Maidenhead. Sleeping Reading was
awakened by the great news. At Didcot
one of the ostlers was so much overcome by patriotic emotions and the 1760
brandy that he found it impossible to do up the buckles of the harness. The night began to grow chilly, and Sir
Ferdinando found that it was not enough to take a nip at every stage: to keep
up his vital warmth he was compelled to drink between the stages as well. They were approaching Swindon. The coach was travelling at a dizzy speed -
six miles in the last half-hour - when, without having manifested the slightest
premonitory symptom of unsteadiness, Sir Ferdinando suddenly topped sideways
off his seat and fell, head foremost, into the road. An unpleasant jolt awakened the slumbering
passengers. The coach was brought to a
standstill; the guard ran back with a light.
He found Sir Ferdinando still alive, but unconscious; blood was oozing
from his mouth. The back wheels of the
coach had passed over his body, breaking most of his ribs and both arms. His skull was fractured in two places. They picked him up, but he was dead before
they reached the next stage. So perished
Sir Ferdinando, a victim to his own patriotism.
Lady Lapith did not marry again, but determined to devote the rest of
her life to the well-being of her three children - Georgiana, now five years
old, and Emmeline and Caroline, twins of two.'
Henry
Wimbush paused, and once more put on his pince-nez. 'So much by way of introduction,' he
said. 'Now I can begin to read about my
grandfather.'
'One
moment,' said Mr Scogan, 'till I've refilled my pipe.'
Mr Wimbush
waited. Seated apart in a corner of the
room, Ivor was showing Mary his sketches of Spirit Life. They spoke together in whispers.
Mr Scogan
had lighted his pipe again. 'Fire away,'
he said.
Henry
Wimbush fired away.
'It was in
the spring of 1833 that my grandfather, George Wimbush, first made the acquaintance
of the "three lovely Lapiths," as they were always called. He was then a young man of twenty-two, with
curly yellow hair and a smooth pink face that was the mirror of his youthful
and ingenuous mind. He had been educated
at Harrow and Christ Church, he enjoyed hunting and all other field sports,
and, though his circumstances were comfortable to the verge of affluence, his
pleasures were temperate and innocent.
His father, an East Indian merchant, had destined him for a political
career, and had gone to considerable expense in acquiring a pleasant little
Cornish borough as a twenty-first birthday gift for his son. He was justly indignant when, on the very eve
of George's majority, the Reform Bill of 1832 swept the borough out of
existence. The inauguration of George's
political career had to be postponed. At
the time he got to know the lovely Lapiths he was waiting; he was not at all
impatient.
'The lovely
Lapiths did not fail to impress him.
Georgiana, the eldest, with her black ringlets, her flashing eyes, her
noble aquiline profile, her swan-like neck, and sloping shoulders, was
orientally dazzling; and the twins, with their delicately turned-up noses,
their blue eyes, and chestnut hair, were an identical pair of ravishingly
English charmers.
'Their
conversation at this first meeting proved, however, to be so forbidding that,
but for the invincible attraction exercised by their beauty, George would never
have had the courage to follow up the acquaintance. The twins, looking up their noses at him with
an air of languid superiority, asked him what he thought of the latest French
poetry and whether he liked the Indiana of George Sand. But what was almost worse was the question
with which Georgiana opened her conversation with him. "In music," she asked, leaning
forward and fixing him with her large dark eyes, "are you a classicist or
a transcendentalist?" George did
not lose his presence of mind. He had
enough appreciation of music to know that he hated anything classical, and so,
with a promptitude which did him credit, he replied, "I am a
transcendentalist." Georgiana
smiled bewitchingly. "I am
glad," she said; "so am I. You
went to hear Paganini last week, of course.
'The Prayer of Moses' - ah!"
She closed her eyes. "Do you
know anything more transcendental than that?" "No," said George, "I
don't." He hesitated, was about to
go on speaking, and then decided that after all it would be wiser not to say -
what was in fact true - that he had enjoyed above all Paganini's Farmyard
Imitations. The man had made his fiddle
bray like an ass, cluck like a hen, grunt, squeal, bark, neigh, quack, bellow,
and growl; that last item, in George's estimation, had almost compensated for
the tediousness of the rest of the concert.
He smiled with pleasure at the thought of it. Yes, decidedly, he was no classicist in
music; he was a thoroughgoing transcendentalist.
'George
followed up this first introduction by paying a call on the young ladies and
their mother, who occupied, during the season, a small but elegant house in the
neighbourhood of Berkeley Square. Lady
Lapith made a few discreet inquiries, and having found that George's financial
position, character, and family were all passably good, she asked him to dine. She hoped and expected that her daughters
would all marry into the peerage; but, being a prudent woman, she knew it was
advisable to prepare for all contingencies.
George Wimbush, she thought, would make an excellent second string for
one of the twins.
'At this
first dinner, George's partner was Emmerline.
They talked of Nature. Emmerline
protested that to her high mountains were a feeling and the hum of human cities
torture. George agreed that the country
was very agreeable, but held that London during the season also had its charms. He noticed with surprise and a certain
solicitous distress that Miss Emmeline's appetite was poor, that it didn't, in
fact, exist. Two spoonfuls of soup, a
morsel of fish, no bird, no meat, and three grapes - that was her whole
dinner. He looked from time to time at
her two sisters; Georgiana and Caroline seemed to be quite as abstemious. They waved away whatever was offered them
with an expression of delicate disgust, shutting their eyes and averting their
faces from the proffered dish, as though the lemon sole, the duck, the loin of
veal, the trifle, were objects revolting to the sight and smell. George, who thought the dinner capital,
ventured to comment on the sisters' lack of appetite.
'"Pray,
don't talk to me of eating," said Emmerline, drooping like a sensitive
plant. "We find it so coarse, so
unspiritual, my sisters and I. One can't
think of one's soul while one is eating."
'George
agreed; one couldn't. "But one must
live," he said.
'"Alas!"
Emmerline sighed. "One must. Death is very beautiful, don't you
think?" She broke a corner off a
piece of toast and began to nibble at it languidly. "But since, as you say, one must live
...” She made a little gesture of resignation.
"Luckily a very little suffices to keep one alive." She put down her corner of toast half eaten.
'George
regarded her with some surprise. She was
pale, but she looked extraordinarily healthy, he thought; so did her
sisters. Perhaps if you were really
spiritual you needed less food. He,
clearly, was not spiritual.
'After this
he saw them frequently. They all liked
him, from Lady Lapith downwards. True,
he was not very romantic or poetical; but he was such a pleasant,
unpretentious, kind-hearted young man, that one couldn't help liking him. For his part, he thought them wonderful,
wonderful, especially Georgiana. He
enveloped them all in a warm, protective affection. For they needed protection; they were
altogether too frail, too spiritual for this world. They never ate, they were always pale, they
often complained of fever, they talked much and lovingly of death, they
frequently swooned. Georgiana was the
most ethereal of all; of the three she ate least, swooned most often, talked
most of death, and was the palest - with a pallor that was so startling as to
appear positively artificial. At any
moment, it seemed, she might loose her precarious hold on this material world
and become all spirit. To George the
thought was a continual agony. If she
were to die ...
'She
contrived, however, to live through the season, and that in spite of the
numerous balls, routs, and other parties of pleasure which, in company with the
rest of the lovely trio, she never failed to attend. In the middle of July the whole household
moved down to the country. George was
invited to spend the month of August at Crome.
'The
house-party was distinguished; in the list of visitors figured the names of two
marriageable young men of title. George
had hoped that country air, repose, and natural surroundings might have
restored to the three sisters their appetites and the roses of their
cheeks. He was mistaken. For dinner, the first evening, Georgiana ate
only an olive, two or three salted almonds, and half a peach. She was as pale as ever. During the meal she spoke of love.
'"True
love," she said, "being infinite and eternal, can only be consummated
in eternity. Indiana and Sir Rodolphe
celebrated the mystic wedding of their souls by jumping into Niagara. Love is incompatible with life. The wish of two people who truly love one
another is not to live together but to die together."
'"Come,
come, my dear," said Lady Lapith, stout and practical. "What would become of the next
generation, pray, if all the world acted on your principles?"
'"Mamma!
..." Georgiana protested, and dropped her eyes.
'"In
my young days," Lady Lapith went on, "I should have been laughed out
of countenance if I'd said a thing like that.
But then in my young days souls weren't as fashionable as they are now
and we didn't think death was at all poetical.
It was just unpleasant."
'"Mamma!
..." Emmeline and Caroline implored
in unison.
'"In
my young days -” Lady Lapith was launched into her subject; nothing, it seemed,
could stop her now. "In my young
days, if you didn't eat, people told you you needed a dose of rhubarb. Nowadays ..."
'There was
a cry; Georgiana had swooned sideways on to Lord Timpany's shoulder. It was a desperate expedient; but it was
successful. Lady Lapith was stopped.
'The days
passed in an uneventful round of pleasures.
Of all the gay party George alone was unhappy. Lord Timpany was paying his court to
Georgiana, and it was clear that he was not unfavourable received. George looked on, and his soul was a hell of
jealousy and despair. The boisterous
company of the young men became intolerable to him; he shrank from them,
seeking gloom and solitude. One morning,
having broken away from them on some vague pretext, he returned to the house
alone. The young men were bathing in the
pool below; their cries and laughter floated up to him, making the quiet house
seem lonelier and more silent. The
lovely sisters and their mamma still kept their chambers; they did not
customarily make their appearance till luncheon, so that the male guests had
the morning to themselves. George sat
down in the hall and abandoned himself to thought.
'At any
moment she might die; at any moment she might become Lady Timpany. It was terrible, terrible. If she died, then he would die too; he would
go to seek her beyond the grave. If she
became Lady Timpany ... ah, then! the
solution of the problem would not be so simple.
If she became Lady Timpany: it was a horrible thought. But then suppose she were in love with
Timpany - though it seemed incredible that anyone could be in love with Timpany
- suppose her life depended on Timpany, suppose she couldn't live without
him? He was fumbling his way along this
clueless labyrinth of suppositions when the clock struck twelve. On the last stroke, like an automaton
released by the turning clockwork, a little maid, holding a large covered tray,
popped out of the door that led from the kitchen regions into the hall. From his deep armchair George watched her
(himself, it was evident, unobserved) with an idle curiosity. She pattered across the room and came to a
halt in front of what seemed a blank expanse of panelling. She reached out her hand and, to George's
extreme astonishment, a little door swung open, revealing the foot of a winding
staircase. Turning sideways in order to
get her tray through the narrow opening, the little maid darted in with a rapid
crab-like motion. The door closed behind
her with a click. A minute later it
opened again and the maid, without her tray, hurried back across the hall and
disappeared in the direction of the kitchen.
George tried to recompose his thoughts, but an invincible curiosity drew
his mind towards the hidden door, the staircase, the little maid. It was in vain he told himself that the
matter was none of his business, that to explore the secrets of that surprising
door, that mysterious staircase within, would be a piece of unforgivable
rudeness and indiscretion. It was in
vain; for five minutes he struggled heroically with his curiosity, but at the
end of that time he found himself standing in front of the innocent sheet of panelling
through which the little maid had disappeared.
A glance sufficed to show him the position of the secret door - secret,
he perceived, only to those who looked with a careless eye. It was just an ordinary door let in flush
with the panelling. No latch nor handle
betrayed its position, but an unobtrusive catch sunk in the wood invited the
thumb. George was astonished that he had
not noticed it before; now he had seen it, it was so obvious, almost as obvious
as the cupboard door in the library with its lines of imitation shelves and its
dummy books. He pulled back the catch
and peeped inside. The staircase, of
which the degrees were made not of stone but of blocks of ancient oak, wound up
and out of sight. A slit-like window
admitted the daylight; he was at the foot of the central tower, and the little
window looked out over the terrace; they were still shouting and splashing in
the pool below.
'George
closed the door and went back to his seat.
But his curiosity was not satisfied.
Indeed, this partial satisfaction had but whetted its appetite. Where did the staircase lead? What was the errand of the little maid? It was no business of his, he kept repeating
- no business of his. He tried to read,
but his attention wandered. A
quarter-past twelve sounded on the harmonious clock. Suddenly determined, George rose, crossed the
room, opened the hidden door, and began to ascend the stairs. He passed the first window, corkscrewed
round, and came to another. He paused
for a moment to look out; his heart beat uncomfortably, as though he were
affronting some unknown danger. What he
was doing, he told himself, was extremely ungentlemanly, horribly
underbred. He tiptoed onward and
upward. One turn more, then half a turn,
and a door confronted him. He halted
before it, listened; he could hear no sound.
Putting his eye to the keyhole, he saw nothing but a stretch of white
sunlit wall. Emboldened, he turned the
handle and stepped across the threshold.
There he halted, petrified by what he saw, mutely gaping.
'In the
middle of a pleasantly sunny little room - "it is now Priscilla's
boudoir," Mr Wimbush remarked parenthetically - stood a small circular
table of mahogany. Crystal, porcelain,
and silver, - all the shining apparatus of an elegant meal - were mirrored in
its polished depths. The carcase of a
cold chicken, a bowl of fruit, a great ham, deeply gashed to its heart of
tenderest white and pink, the brown cannonball of a cold plum-pudding, a
slender Hock bottle, and a decanter of claret jostled one another for a place
on this festive board. And round the
table sat the three sisters, the three lovely Lapiths - eating!
'At
George's sudden entrance they had all looked towards the door, and now they
sat, petrified by the same astonishment which kept George fixed and
staring. Georgiana, who sat immediately
facing the door, gazed at him with dark, enormous eyes. Between the thumb and forefinger of her right
hand she was holding a drumstick of the dismembered chicken; her little finger,
elegantly crooked, stood apart from the rest of her hand. Her mouth was open, but the drumstick had
never reached its destination; it remained, suspended, frozen, in mid-air. The other two sisters had turned round to
look at the intruder. Caroline still
grasped her knife and fork; Emmerline's fingers were round the stem of her
claret glass. For what seemed a very
long time, George and the three sisters stared at one another in silence. They were a group of statues. Then suddenly there was movement. Georgiana dropped her chicken bone,
Caroline's knife and fork clattered on her plate. The movement propagated itself, grew more
decisive; Emmerline sprang to her feet, uttering a cry. The wave of panic reached George; he turned
and, mumbling something unintelligible as he went, rushed out of the room and
down the winding stairs. He came to a
standstill in the hall, and there, all by himself in the quiet house, he began
to laugh.
'At
luncheon it was noticed that the sisters ate a little more than usual. Georgiana toyed with some French beans and a
spoonful of calves'-foot jelly. "I
feel a little stronger today," she said to Lord Timpany, when he
congratulated her on this increase of appetite; "a little more material,"
she added, with a nervous laugh. Looking
up, she caught George's eye; a blush suffused her cheeks and she looked hastily
away.
'In the
garden that afternoon they found themselves for a moment alone.
'"You
won't tell anyone, George? Promise you
won't tell anyone," she implored.
"It would make us look so ridiculous. And besides, eating is unspiritual,
isn't it? Say you won't tell
anyone."
'"I
will," said George brutally.
"I'll tell everyone unless ..."
'"It's
blackmail."
'"I
don't care," said George. "I'll
give you twenty-four hours to decide."
'Lady
Lapith was disappointed, of course; she had hoped for better things - for
Timpany and a coronet. But George, after
all, wasn't so bad. They were married at
the New Year.
'My poor
grandfather!' Mr Wimbush added, as he closed his book and put away his
pince-nez. 'Whenever I read in the
papers about oppressed nationalities, I think of him.' He relighted his cigar. "It was a maternal government, highly
centralized, and there were no representative institutions.'
Henry
Wimbush ceased speaking. In the silence
that ensued Ivor's whispered commentary on the spirit sketches once more became
audible. Priscilla, who had been dozing,
suddenly woke up.
'What?' she
said in the startled tones of one newly returned to consciousness; 'what?'
Jenny
caught the words. She looked up, smiled,
nodded reassuringly. 'It's about a ham,'
she said.
'What's
about a ham?'
'What Henry
has been reading.' She closed the red
notebook lying on her knees and slipped a rubber band round it. 'I'm going to bed,' she announced, and got
up.
'So am I,'
said Anne, yawning. But she lacked the
energy to rise from her armchair.
The night
was hot and oppressive. Round the open
windows the curtains hung unmoving.
Ivor, fanning himself with the portrait of an Astral Being, looked out
into the darkness and drew a breath.
'The air's
like wool,' he declared.
'It will
get cooler after midnight,' said Henry Wimbush, and cautiously added,
'perhaps.'
'I shan't
sleep, I know.'
Priscilla
turned her head in his direction; the monumental coiffure nodded exorbitantly
at her slighted movement. 'You must make
an effort,' she said. 'When I can't
sleep, I concentrate my will: I say, "I will sleep, I am
asleep!" And pop! off I go. That's the power of thought.'
'But does
it work on stuffy nights?' Ivor inquired.
'I simply cannot sleep on a stuffy night.'
'Not can
I,' said Mary, 'except out of doors.'
'Out of
doors! What a wonderful idea!' In the end they decided to sleep on the
towers - Mary on the western tower, Ivor on the eastern. There was a flat expanse of leads on each of
the towers, and you could get a mattress through the trapdoors that opened on
to them. Under the stars, under the
gibbous moon, assuredly they would sleep.
The mattresses were hauled up, sheets and blankets were spread, and an
hour later the two insomniacs, each on his separate tower, were crying their
goodnights across the dividing gulf.
On Mary the
sleep-compelling charm of the open air did not work with its expected
magic. Even through the mattress one
could not fail to be aware that the leads were extremely hard. Then there were noises: the owls screeched
tirelessly, and once, roused by some unknown terror, all the geese of the
farmyard burst into a sudden frenzy of cackling. The stars and the gibbous moon demanded to be
looked at, and when one meteorite had streaked across the sky, you could not
help waiting, open-eyed and alert, for the next. Time passed; the moon climbed higher and
higher in the sky. Mary felt less sleepy
than she had when she first came out.
She sat up and looked over the parapet.
Had Ivor been able to sleep? she wondered. And as though in answer to her mental
question, from behind the chimney-stack at the far end of the roof a white form
noiselessly emerged - a form that, in the moonlight, was recognizably
Ivor's. Spreading his arms to right and
left, like a tightrope dancer, he began to walk forward along the roof-tree of
the house. He swayed terrifyingly as he
advanced. Mary looked on speechlessly;
perhaps he was walking in his sleep!
Suppose he were to wake up suddenly, now! If she spoke or moved, it might mean his
death. She dared look no more, but sank
back on her pillows. She listened
intently. For what seemed an immensely
long time there was no sound. Then there
was a patter of feet on the tiles, followed by a scrabbling noise and a
whispered 'Damn!' And suddenly Ivor's
head and shoulders appeared above the parapet.
One leg followed, then the other.
He was on the leads. Mary
pretended to wake up with a start.
'Oh!' she
said. 'What are you doing here?'
'I couldn't
sleep,' he explained, 'so I came along to see if you couldn't. One gets bored by oneself on a tower. Don't you find it so?'
It was
light before five. Long, narrow clouds
barred the east, their edges bright with orange fire. The sky was pale and watery. With the mournful scream of a soul in pain, a
monstrous peacock, flying heavily up from below, alighted on the parapet of the
tower. Ivor and Mary started broad
awake.
'Catch
him!' cried Ivor, jumping up. 'We'll
have a feather.' The frightened peacock
ran up and down the parapet in an absurd distress, curtseying and bobbing and
clucking; his long tail swung ponderously back and forth as he launched himself
upon the air and turned again. Then with
a flap and swish he launched himself up the air and sailed magnificently
eastward, with a recovered dignity. But
he had left a trophy. Ivor had his
feather, a long-lashed eye of purple and green, of blue and gold. He handed it to his companion.
'An angel's
feather,' he said.
Mary looked
at it for a moment, gravely and intently.
Her purple pyjamas clothed her with an ampleness that hid the lines of
her body; she looked like some large, comfortable, unjointed toy, a sort of
Teddy bear - but a Teddy bear with an angel's head, pink cheeks, and hair like
a bell of gold. An angel's face, the
feather of an angel's wing.... Somehow the whole atmosphere of this sunrise was
rather angelic.
'It's
extraordinary to think of sexual selection,' she said at last, looking up from
her contemplation of the miraculous feather.
'Extraordinary!'
Ivor echoed. 'I select you, you select
me. What luck!'
He put his
arm round her shoulders and they stood looking eastward. The first sunlight had begun to warm and
colour the pale light of the dawn. Mauve
pyjamas and white pyjamas; they were a young and charming couple. The rising sun touched their faces. It was all extremely symbolic; but then, if
you choose to think so, nothing in this world is not symbolical. Profound and beautiful truth!'
'I must be
getting back to my tower,' said Ivor at last.
'Already?'
'I'm afraid
so. The varletry will soon be up and
about.'
'Ivor....' There was a prolonged and silent farewell.
'And now,'
said Ivor, 'I repeat my tightrope stunt.'
Mary threw
her arms round his neck. 'You mustn't,
Ivor. It's dangerous. Please.'
He had to
yield at last to her entreaties. 'All
right,' he said, 'I'll go down through the house and up at the other end.'
He vanished
through the trapdoor into the darkness that still lurked within the shuttered
house. A minute later he had reappeared
on the farther tower; he waved his hand, and then sank down, out of sight,
behind the parapet. From below, in the
house, came the thin wasp-like buzzing of an alarm-clock. He had gone back just in time.
CHAPTER XX
Ivor was gone.
Lounging behind the windscreen in his yellow sedan, he was whirling
across rural England. Social and amorous
engagements of the most urgent character called him from hall to baronial hall,
from castle to castle, from Elizabethan manor-house to Georgian mansion, over
the whole expanse of the kingdom. Today
in Somerset, tomorrow in Warwickshire, on Saturday in the West Riding, by
Tuesday morning in Argyll - Ivor never rested.
The whole summer through, from the beginning of July till the end of
September, he devoted himself to his engagements; he was a martyr to them. In the autumn he went back to London for a
holiday. Crome had been a little
incident, an evanescent bubble on the stream of his life; it belonged already
to the past. By teatime he would be at
Gobley, and there would be Zenobia's welcoming smile. And on Thursday morning - but that was a
long, long way ahead. He would think of
Thursday morning when Thursday morning arrived.
Meanwhile there was Gobley, meanwhile Zenobia.
In the
visitors' book at Crome Ivor had left, according to his invariable custom in
these cases, a poem. He had improvised
it magisterially in the ten minutes preceding his departure. Denis and Mr Scogan strolled back together
from the gates of the courtyard, whence they had bidden their last farewells;
on the writing-table in the hall they found the visitors' book open, and Ivor's
composition scarcely dry. Mr Scogan read
it aloud:
'The magic of those immemorial kings,
Who webbed enchantment on the bowls of night,
Sleeps in the soul of all created things;
In the blue sea, th'Acroceraunian height,
In the eyed butterfly's auricular wings
And orgied visions of the anchorite;
In all that singing flies and flying sings,
In rain, in pain, in delicate delight.
But much more magic, much more cogent spells
Weave here their wizardries about my soul.
Crome calls me like the voice of vesperal bells,
Haunts like a ghostly-peopled necropole.
Fate tears me hence. Hard fate! since far from Crome
My soul must weep, remembering its Home.'
'Very nice
and tasteful and tactful,' said Mr Scogan, when he had finished. 'I am only troubled by the butterfly's
auricular wings. You had a first-hand
knowledge of the workings of a poet's mind, Denis; perhaps you cane explain.'
'What could
be simpler,' said Denis. 'It's a
beautiful word, and Ivor wanted to say that the wings were golden.'
'You make
it luminously clear.'
'One
suffers so much,' Denis went on, 'from the fact that beautiful words don't
always mean what they ought to mean.
Recently, for example, I had a whole poem ruined, just because the word
"carminative" didn't mean what it ought to have meant. Carminative - it's admirable, isn't it?'
'Admirable,'
Mr Scogan agreed. 'And what does it
mean?'
'It's a
word I've treasured from my earliest infancy,' said Denis, 'treasured and
loved. They used to give me cinnamon
when I had a cold - quite useless, but not disagreeable. One poured it drop by drop out of narrow
bottles, a golden liquor, fierce and fiery.
On the label was a list of its virtues, and among other things it was
described as being in the highest degree carminative. I adored the word. "Isn't it carminative?" I used to
say to myself when I'd taken my dose. It
seemed so wonderfully to describe that sensation of internal warmth, that glow,
that - what shall I call it? - physical self-satisfaction which followed the
drinking of cinnamon. Later, when I
discovered alcohol, "carminative" described for me that similar, but
nobler, more spiritual glow which wine evokes not only in the body but in the
soul as well. The carminative virtues of
burgundy, of rum, of old brandy, of Lacryma Christi, of Marsala, of Aleatico,
of stout, of gin, of champagne, of claret, of the raw new wine of this year's
Tuscan vintage - I compared them. I
classified them. Marsala is rosily,
downily carminative; gin pricks and refreshes while it warms. I had a whole table of carmination
values. And now' - Denis spread out his
hands, palm upwards, despairingly - 'Now I know what carminative really means.'
'Well, what
does it mean?' asked Mr Scogan, a little impatiently.
'Carminative,'
said Denis, lingering lovingly over the syllables, 'carminative. I imagined vaguely that it had something to
do with carmen-carminis, still more vaguely with caro-carnis, and
its derivatives, like carnival and carnation.
Carminative - there was the idea of singing and the idea of flesh,
rose-coloured and warm, with a suggestion of the jollities of mi-Carême and the
masked holidays of Venice. Carminative -
the warmth, the glow, the interior ripeness were all in the word. Instead of which ...'
'Do come to
the point, my dear Denis,' protested Mr Scogan.
'Do come to the point.'
'Well, I
wrote a poem the other day,' said Denis; 'I wrote a poem about the effects of
love.'
'Others
have done the same before you,' said Mr Scogan.
'There is no need to be ashamed.'
'I was
putting forward the notion,' Denis went on, 'that the effects of love were
often similar to the effects of wine, that Eros would intoxicate as well as
Bacchus. Love, for example, is
essentially carminative. It gives one
the sense of warmth, the glow.
"And passion
carminative as wine ..."
was what I wrote.
Not only was the line elegantly sonorous; it was also, I flattered
myself, very aptly and compendiously expressive. Everything was in the word carminative - a
detailed, exact foreground, an immense, indefinite hinterland of suggestion.
"And
passion carminative as wine ..."
I was not ill-pleased.
And then suddenly it occurred to me that I had never actually looked up
the word in a dictionary. Carminative
had grown up with me from the days of the cinnamon bottle. It had always been taken for granted. Carminative: for the word was as rich in
content as some tremendous, elaborate work of art; it was a complete landscape with
figures.
"And
passion carminative as wine ..."
It was the first time I had ever committed the word to
writing, and all at once I felt I would like lexicographical authority for
it. A small English-German dictionary
was all I had at hand. I turned up C,
ca, car, carm. There it was:
"Carminative: windtreibend."
Windtreibend!' he repeated.
Mr Scogan laughed. Denis shook
his head. 'Ah,' he said, 'for me it was
no laughing matter. For me it marked the
end of a chapter, the death of something young and precious. There were the years - years of childhood and
innocence - when I had believed that carminative meant - well,
carminative. And now, before me lies the
rest of my life - a day, perhaps, ten years, half a century, when I shall know
that carminative means windtreibend.
"Plus ne suis ce que j'ai été
Et ne le saurai jamais être."
It is a realization that makes one rather melancholy.'
'Carminative,'
said Mr Scogan thoughtfully.
'Carminative,'
Denis repeated, and they were silent for a time. 'Words,' said Denis at last, 'words - I
wonder if you can realize how much I love them.
You are too much preoccupied with mere things and ideas and people to
understand the full beauty of words.
Your mind is not a literary mind.
The spectacle of Mr Gladstone finding thirty-four rhymes to the name
"Margot" seems to you rather pathetic than anything else. Mallarmés' envelopes with their versified
addresses leave you cold, unless they leave you pitiful; you can't see that
"Apte à ne point te cabrer, hue!
Poste, et j'ajouterai, dia!
Si tu ne fuis onze-bis Rue
Balzac, chez cet Heredia,"
is a little miracle.
'You're
right,' said Mr Scogan. 'I can't.'
'You don't
feel it to be magical?'
'No.'
'That's the
test for the literary mind,' said Denis; 'the feeling of magic, the sense that
words have power. The technical, verbal
part of literature is simply a development of magic. Words are man's first and most grandiose
invention. With language, he created a
whole new universe; what wonder if he loved words and attributed power to them!
With fitted, harmonious words the magicians summoned rabbits out of empty hats
and spirits from the elements. Their
descendants, the literary men, still go on with the process, morticing their
verbal formulas together and, before the power of the finished spell, trembling
with delight and awe. Rabbits out of
empty hats? No, their spells are more
subtly powerful, for they evoke emotions out of empty minds. Formulated by their art, the most insipid
statements become enormously significant.
For example, I proffer the constatation, "Black ladders lack
bladders." A self-evident truth,
one on which it would not have been worth while to insist, had I chosen to
formulate it in such words as "Black fire-escapes have no bladders,"
or "Les échelles noires manquent de vessie." But since I put it as I do, "Black
ladders lack bladders," it becomes, for all its self-evidence,
significant, unforgettable, moving. The
creation by word-power of something out of nothing - what is that but magic? And, I may add, what is that but literature? Half the world's greatest poetry is simply
"Les échelles noires manquent de vessie," translated into magic
significance as "Black ladders lack bladders." And you can't appreciate words. I'm sorry for you.'
'A mental
carminative,' said Mr Scogan reflectively.
'That's what you need.'
CHAPTER XXI
Perched on its four stone mushrooms, the little
granary stood two or three feet above the grass of the green close. Beneath it there was a perpetual shade and a
damp growth of long, luxuriant grasses.
Here, in the shadow, in the green dampness, a family of white ducks had
sought shelter from the afternoon sun.
Some stood, preening themselves, some reposed with their long bellies
pressed to the ground, as though the cool grass were water. Little social noises burst fitfully forth,
and from time to time some pointed tail would execute a brilliant Lisztian
tremolo. Suddenly their jovial repose
was shattered. A prodigious thump shook
the wooden flooring above their heads; the whole granary trembled, little fragments
of dirt and crumbled wood rained down among them. With a loud, continuous quacking the ducks
rushed out from beneath this nameless menace, and did not stay their flight
till they were safely in the farmyard.
'Don't lose
your temper,' Anne was saying. 'Listen!
You've frightened the ducks. Poor dears!
no wonder.' She was sitting sideways in
a low, wooden chair. Her right elbow
rested on the back of the chair and she supported her cheek on her hand. Her long, slender body drooped into curves of
a lazy grace. She was smiling, and she
looked at Gombauld through half-closed eyes.
'Damn you!'
Gombauld repeated, and stamped his foot again.
He glared at her round the half-finished portrait on the easel.
'Poor
ducks!' Anne repeated. The sound of their
quacking was faint in the distance; it was inaudible.
'Can't you
see you make me lose my time?' he asked.
'I can't work with you dangling about distractingly like this.'
'You'd lose
less time if you stopped talking and stamping your feet and did a little
painting for a change. After all, what
am I dangling about for, except to be painted?'
Gombauld
made a noise like a growl. 'You're
awful,' he said, with conviction. 'Why
do you ask me to come and stay here? Why
do you tell me you'd like me to paint your portrait?'
'For the
simple reasons that I like you - at least, when you're in a good temper - and
that I think you're a good painter.'
'For the
simple reason' - Gombauld mimicked her voice - 'that you want me to make love
to you and, when I do, to have the amusement of running away.'
Anne threw
back her head and laughed. 'So you think
it amuses me to have to evade your advances!
So like a man! If only you knew
how gross and awful and boring men are when they try to make love and you don't
want them to make love! If you could
only see yourselves through our eyes!'
Gombauld
picked up his palette and brushes and attacked his canvas with the ardour of
irritation. 'I suppose you'll be saying
next that you didn't start the game, that it was I who made the first advances,
and that you were the innocent victim who sat still and never did anything that
could invite or allure me on.'
'So like a
man again!' said Anne. 'It's always the
same old story about the woman tempting the man. The woman lures, fascinates, invites; and man
- noble man, innocent man - falls a victim.
Mr poor Gombauld! Surely you're
not going to sing that old song again.
It's so unintelligent, and I always thought you were a man of sense.'
'Thanks,'
said Gombauld.
'Be a little
objective,' Anne went on. 'Can't you see
that you're simply externalizing your own emotions? That's what you men are always doing; it's so
barbarously naïve. You feel one of your
loose desires for some woman, and because you desire her strongly you
immediately accuse her of luring you on, of deliberately provoking and inviting
the desire. You have the mentality of
savages. You must just as well say that
a plate of strawberries and cream deliberately lures you on to feel
greedy. In nine-nine cases out of a
hundred women are as passive and innocent as the strawberries and cream.'
'Well, all
I can say is that this must be the hundredth case,' said Gombauld, without
looking up.
Anne
shrugged her shoulders and gave vent to a sigh.
'I'm at a loss to know whether you're more silly or more rude.'
After
painting for a little time in silence Gombauld began to speak again. 'And then there's Denis,' he said, renewing
the conversation as though it had only just been broken off. 'You're playing the same game with him. Why can't you leave that wretched young man
in peace?'
Anne
flushed with a sudden and uncontrollable anger.
'It's perfectly untrue about Denis,' she said indignantly. 'I never dreamt of playing what you
beautifully call the same game with him.'
Recovering her calm, she added in her ordinary cooing voice and with her
exacerbating smile, 'You've become very protective towards poor Denis all of a
sudden.'
'I have,'
Gombauld replied, with a gravity that was somehow a little too solemn. 'I don't like to see a young man ...'
'... being
whirled along the road to ruin,' said Anne, continuing his sentence for
him. 'I admire your sentiments and,
believe me, I share them.'
She was
curiously irritated at what Gombauld had said about Denis. It happened to be so completely untrue. Gombauld might have some slight ground for
his reproaches. But Denis - no, she had
never flirted with Denis. Poor boy! He was very sweet. She became somewhat pensive.
Gombauld
painted on with fury. The restlessness
of an unsatisfied desire, which, before, had distracted his mind, making work
impossible, seemed now to have converted itself into a kind of feverish
energy. When it was finished, he told
himself, the portrait would be diabolic.
He was painting her in the pose she had naturally adopted at the first
sitting. Seated sideways, her elbow on
the back of the chair, her head and shoulders turned at an angle from the rest
of her body, towards the front, she had fallen into an attitude of indolent
abandonment. He had emphasized the lazy
curves of her body; the lines sagged as they crossed the canvas, the grace of
the painted figure seemed to be melting into a kind of soft decay. The hand that lay along the knee was as limp
as a glove. He was at work on the face
now; it had begun to emerge on the canvas, doll-like in its regularity and
listlessness. It was Anne's face - but
her face as it would be, utterly unillumined by the inward lights of thought
and emotion. It was the lazy,
expressionless mask which was sometimes her face. The portrait was terribly like; and at the
same time it was the most malicious of lies.
Yes, it would be diabolic when it was finished, Gombauld decided; he
wondered what she would think of it.
CHAPTER XXII
For the sake of peace and quiet Denis had retired
earlier on this same afternoon to his bedroom.
He wanted to work, but the hour was a drowsy one, and lunch, so recently
eaten, weighed heavily on body and mind.
The meridian demon was upon him; he was possessed by that bored and
hopeless post-prandial melancholy which the coenobites of old knew and feared
under the name of 'accidie.' He felt,
like Ernest Dowson, 'a little weary.' He
was in the mood to write something rather exquisite and gentle and quietist in
tone; something a little droopy and at the same time - how should he put it? -
a little infinite. He thought of Anne,
of love hopeless and unattainable.
Perhaps that was the ideal kind of love, the hopeless kind - the quiet,
theoretical kind of love. In this sad
mood of repletion he could well believe it.
He began to write. One elegant
quatrain flowed from beneath his pen:
'A brooding love which is at most
The stealth of moonbeams when they slide,
Evoking colour's bloodless ghost,
O'er some scarce-breathing breast or side ...'
when his attention was attracted by a sound from
outside. He looked down from his window;
there they were, Anne and Gombauld, talking, laughing together. They crossed the courtyard in front, and
passed out of sight through the gate in the right-hand wall. That was the way to the green close and the
granary; she was going to sit for him again.
His pleasantly depressing melancholy was dissipated by a puff of violent
emotion; angrily he threw his quatrain into the wastepaper basket and ran
downstairs. 'The stealth of moonbeams,'
indeed!
In the hall
he saw Mr Scogan; the man seemed to be lying in wait. Denis tried to escape, but in vain. Mr Scogan's eye glittered like the eye of the
Ancient Mariner.
'Not so fast,'
he said, stretching out a small saurian hand with pointed nails - 'not so
fast. I was just going down to the
flower garden to take the sun. We'll go
together.'
Denis
abandoned himself; Mr Scogan put on his hat and they went out arm in arm. On the shaven turf of the terrace Henry
Wimbush and Mary were playing a solemn game of bowls. They descended by the yew-tree walk. It was here, thought Denis, here that Anne
had fallen, here that he had kissed her, here - and he blushed with
retrospective shame at the memory - here that he had tried to carry her and
failed. Life was awful!
'Sanity!'
said Mr Scogan, suddenly breaking a long silence. 'Sanity - that's what's wrong with me and
that's what will be wrong with you, my dear Denis, when you're old enough to be
sane or insane. In a sane world I should
be a great man; as things are, in this curious establishment, I am nothing at
all; to all intents and purposes I don't exist.
I am just Vox et praeterea nihil.'
Denis made
no response; he was thinking of other things.
'After all,' he said to himself - 'after all, Gombauld is better looking
than I, more entertaining, more confident; and, besides, he's already somebody
and I'm still only potential....'
'Everything
that ever gets done in this world is done by madmen,' Mr Scogan went on. Denis tried not to listen, but the tireless
insistence of Mr Scogan's discourse gradually compelled his attention. 'Men such as I am, such as you may possibly
become, have never achieved anything.
We're too sane; we're merely reasonable.
We lack the human touch, the compelling enthusiastic mania. People are quite ready to listen to the
philosophers for a little amusement, just as they would listen to the fiddler
or a mountebank. But as to acting on the
advice of the men of reason - never.
Wherever the choice has had to be made between the man of reason and the
madman, the world has unhesitatingly followed the madman. For the madman appeals to what is
fundamental, to passion and the instincts; the philosophers to what is
superficial and supererogatory - reason.'
They
entered the garden; at the head of one of the alleys stood a green wooden
bench, embayed in the midst of a fragrant continent of lavender bushes. It was here, though the place was shadeless
and one breathed hot, dry perfume instead of air - it was here that Mr Scogan
elected to sit. He thrived on untempered
sunlight.
'Consider,
for example, the case of Luther and Erasmus.'
He took out his pipe and began to fill it as he talked. 'There was Erasmus, a man of reason if ever
there was one. People listened to him at
first - a new virtuoso performing on that elegant and resourceful instrument,
the intellect; they even admired and venerated him. But did he move them to behave as he wanted
them to behave - reasonably, decently, or at least a little less porkishly than
usual? He did not. And then Luther appears, violent, passionate,
a madman insanely convinced about matters in which there can be no
conviction. He shouted, and men rushed
to follow him. Erasmus was no longer
listened to; he was reviled for his reasonableness. Luther was serious, Luther was reality - like
the Great War. Erasmus was only reason
and decency; he lacked the power, being a sage, to move men to action. Europe followed Luther and embarked on a
century and a half of war and bloody persecution. It's a melancholy story.' Mr Scogan lighted a match. In the intense light the flame was all but
invisible. The smell of burning tobacco
began to mingle with the sweetly acrid smell of the lavender.
'If you
want to get men to act reasonably, you must set about persuading them in a
maniacal manner. The very sane precepts
of the founders of religions are only made infectious by means of enthusiasms
which to a sane man must appear deplorable.
It is humiliating to find how impotent unadulterated sanity is. Sanity, for example, informs us that the only
way in which we can preserve civilization is by behaving decently and
intelligently. Sanity appeals and
argues; our rulers persevere in their customary porkishness, while we acquiesce
and obey. The only hope is a maniacal
crusade; I am ready, when it comes, to beat a tambourine with the loudest, but
at the same time I shall feel a little ashamed of myself. However' - Mr Scogan shrugged his shoulders
and, pipe in hand, made a gesture of resignation - 'it's futile to complain
that things are as they are. The fact
remains that sanity unassisted is useless.
What we want, then, is a sane and reasonable exploitation of the forces
of insanity. We sane men will have the
power yet.' Mr Scogan's eyes shone with
a more than ordinary brightness, and, taking his pipe out of his mouth, he gave
vent to his loud, dry, and somehow rather fiendish laugh.
'But I
don't want power,' said Denis. He was
sitting in limp discomfort at one end of the bench, shading his eyes from the
intolerable light. Mr Scogan, bolt
upright at the other end, laughed again.
'Everybody
wants power,' he said. 'Power in some
form or other. The sort of power you
hanker for is literary power. Some
people want power to persecute other human beings; you expend your lust for
power in persecuting words, twisting them, moulding them, torturing them to
obey you. But I divagate.'
'Do you?'
asked Denis faintly.
'Yes,' Mr
Scogan continued, unheeding, 'the time will come. We men of intelligence will learn to harness
the insanities to the service of reason.
We can't leave the world any longer to the direction of chance. We can't allow dangerous maniacs like Luther,
mad about dogma, like Napoleon, mad about himself, to go on casually appearing
and turning everything upside-down. In
the past it didn't so much matter; but our modern machine is too delicate. A few more knocks like the Great War, another
Luther or two, and the whole concern will go to pieces. In future, the men of reason must see that
the madness of the world's maniacs is canalized into proper channels, is made
to do useful work, like a mountain torrent driving a dynamo....'
'Making
electricity to light a Swiss hotel,' said Denis. 'You ought to complete the simile.'
Mr Scogan
waved away the interruption. 'There's
only one thing to be done,' he said.
'The men of intelligence must combine, must conspire, and seize power
from the imbeciles and maniacs who now direct us. They must found the Rational State.'
The heat
that was slowly paralysing all Denis's mental and bodily faculties seemed to
bring to Mr Scogan additional vitality.
He talked with an ever-increasing energy, his hands moved in sharp,
quick, precise gestures, his eyes shone.
Hard, dry, and continuous, his voice went on sounding and sounding in
Denis's ears with the insistence of a mechanical noise.
'In the
Rational State,' he heard Mr Scogan saying, 'human beings will be separated out
into distinct species, not according to the colour of their eyes or the shape
of their skulls, but according to the qualities of their mind and
temperament. Examining psychologists,
trained to what would now seem an almost superhuman clairvoyance, will test
each child that is born and assign it to its proper species. Duly labelled and docketed, the child will be
given the education suitable to members of its species, and will be set, in
adult life, to perform those functions which human beings of his variety are
capable of performing.'
'How many
species will there be?' asked Denis.
'A great
many, no doubt,' Mr Scogan answered; 'the classification will be subtle and
elaborate. But it is not in the power of
a prophet to go into details, nor is it his business. I will do no more than indicate the three
main species into which the subjects of the Rational State will be divided.'
He paused,
cleared his throat, and coughed once or twice, evoking in Denis's mind the
vision of a table with a glass and water-bottle, and, lying across one corner,
a long white pointer for the lantern pictures.
'The three
main species,' Mr Scogan went on, 'will be these: the Directing Intelligences,
the Men of Faith, and the Herd. Among
the Intelligences will be found all those capable of thought, those who knew
how to attain to a certain degree of freedom - and, alas, how limited, even
among the most intelligent, that freedom is! - from the mental bondage of their
time. A select body of Intelligences,
drawn from among those who have turned their attention to the problems of
practical life, will be the governors of the Rational State. They will employ as their instruments of
power the second great species of humanity - the men of Faith, the Madmen, as I
have been calling them, who believe in things unreasonably, with passion, and
are ready to die for their beliefs and their desires. These wild men, with their fearful
potentialities for good or for mischief, will no longer be allowed to react
casually to a casual environment. There
will be no more Caesar Borgias, no more Luthers and Mohammeds, no more Joanna
Southcotts, no more Comstocks. the
old-fashioned Man of Faith and Desire, that haphazard creature of brute
circumstance, who might drive men to tears and repentance, or who might equally
well set them on to cutting one another's throats, will be replaced by a new
sort of madman, still externally the same, still bubbling with a seemingly
spontaneous enthusiasm, but, ah, how very different from the madman of the
past! For the new Man of Faith will be expending
his passion, his desire, and his enthusiasm in the propagation of some
reasonable idea. He will be, all
unawares, the tool of some superior intelligence.'
Mr Scogan
chuckled maliciously; it was as though he were taking a revenge, in the name of
reason, on the enthusiasts. 'From their
earliest years, as soon, that is, as the examining psychologists have assigned
them their place in the classified scheme, the Men of Faith will have had their
special education under the eye of the Intelligences. Moulded by a long process of suggestion, they
will go out into the world, preaching and practising with a generous mania the
coldly reasonable projects of the Directors from above. When these projects are accomplished, or when
the ideas that were useful a decade ago have ceased to be useful, the
Intelligences will inspire a new generation of madmen with a new eternal
truth. The principal function of the Men
of Faith will be to move and direct the Multitude, that third great species
consisting of those countless millions who lack intelligence and are without
valuable enthusiasm. When any particular
effort is required of the Herd, when it is thought necessary, for the sake of
solidarity, that humanity shall be kindled and united by some single
enthusiastic desire or idea, the Men of Faith, primed with some simple and
satisfying creed, will be sent out on a mission of evangelization. At ordinary times, when the high spiritual
temperature of a Crusade would be unhealthy, the Men of Faith will be quietly
and earnestly busy with the great work of education. In the upbringing of the Herd, humanity's
almost boundless suggestibility will be scientifically exploited. Systematically, from earliest infancy, its
members will be assured that there is no happiness to be found except in work
and obedience; they will be made to believe that they are happy, that they are
tremendously important beings, and that everything they do is noble and
significant. For the lower species the
earth will be restored to the centre of the universe and man to pre-eminence on
the earth. Oh, I envy the lot of the
commonality in the Rational State!
Working their eight hours a day, obeying their betters, convinced of
their own grandeur and significance and immortality, they will be marvellously
happy, happier than any race of men has ever been. They will go through life in a rosy state of
intoxication, from which they will never awake.
The Men of Faith will play the cup-bearers at this lifelong bacchanal,
filling and ever filling again with the warm liquor that the Intelligences, in
sad and sober privacy behind the scenes, will brew for the intoxication of
their subjects.'
'And what
will be my place in the Rational State?' Denis drowsily inquired from under his
shading hand.
Mr Scogan
looked at him for a moment in silence.
'It's difficult to see where you would fit in,' he said at last. 'You couldn't do manual work; you're too
independent and unsuggestible to belong to the larger Herd; you have none of
the characteristics required in a Man of Faith.
As for the Directing Intelligences, they will have to be marvellously
clear and merciless and penetrating.' He
paused and shook his head. 'No, I can
see no place for you; only the lethal chamber.'
Deeply
hurt, Denis emitted the imitation of a loud Homeric laugh. 'I'm getting sunstroke here,' he said, and
got up.
Mr Scogan
followed his example, and they walked slowly away down the narrow path,
brushing the blue lavender flowers in their passage. Denis pulled a sprig of lavender and sniffed at
it; then some dark leaves of rosemary that smelt like incense in a cavernous
church. They passed a bed of opium
poppies, dispetalled now; the round, ripe seed-heads were brown and dry - like
Polynesian trophies, Denis thought; severed heads stuck on poles. He liked the fancy enough to impart it to Mr
Scogan.
'Like
Polynesian trophies....' Uttered aloud,
the fancy seemed less charming and significant than it did when it first
occurred to him.
There was a
silence, and in a growing wave of sound the whir of the reaping machines
swelled up from the fields beyond the garden and then receded into a remoter
hum.
'It is
satisfactory to think,' said Mr Scogan, as they strolled slowly onward, 'that a
multitude of people are toiling in the harvest fields in order that we may talk
of Polynesia. Like every good thing in
this world, leisure and culture have to be paid for. Fortunately, however, it is not the leisured
and the cultured who have to pay. Let us
be duly thankful for that, my dear Denis - duly thankful,' he repeated, and
knocked the ashes out of his pipe.
Denis was
not listening. He had suddenly
remembered Anne. She was with Gombauld -
alone with him in his studio. It was an
intolerable thought.
'Shall we
go and pay a call on Gombauld?' he suggested carelessly. 'It would be amusing to see what he's doing
now.'
He laughed
inwardly to think how furious Gombauld would be when he saw them arriving.
CHAPTER XXIII
Gombauld was by no means so furious at their
apparition as Denis had hoped and expected he would be. Indeed, he was rather pleased than annoyed
when the two faces, one brown and pointed, the other round a pale, appeared in
the frame of the open door. The energy
born of his restless irritation was dying within him, returning to its
emotional elements. A moment more and he
would have been losing his temper again - and Anne would be keeping hers,
infuriatingly. Yes, he was positively
glad to see them.
'Come in,
come in,' he called out hospitably.
Followed by
Mr Scogan, Denis climbed the little ladder and stepped over the threshold. He looked suspiciously from Gombauld to his
sitter, and could learn nothing from the expression of their faces except that
they both seemed pleased to see the visitors.
Were they really glad, or were they cunningingly simulating
gladness? He wondered.
Mr Scogan,
meanwhile, was looking at the portrait.
'Excellent,'
he said approvingly, 'excellent. Almost
too true to character, if that is possible; yes, positively too true. But I'm surprised to find you putting in all
this psychology business.' He pointed to
the face, and with his extended finger followed the slack curves of the painted
figure. 'I thought you were one of the
fellows who went in exclusively for balanced masses and impinging planes.'
Gombauld
laughed. 'This is a little infidelity,'
he said.
'I'm
sorry,' said Mr Scogan. 'I for one,
without ever having had the slightest appreciation of painting, have always
taken particular pleasure in Cubismus. I
like to see pictures from which nature has been completely banished, pictures
which are exclusively the product of the human mind. They give me the same pleasure as I derive
from a good piece of reasoning or a mathematical problem or an achievement of
engineering. Nature, or anything that
reminds me of nature, disturbs me; it is too large, too complicated, above all
too utterly pointless and incomprehensible.
I am at home with the works of man; if I choose to set my mind to it, I
can understand anything that any man has made or thought. That is why I always travel by Tube, never by
bus if I can possibly help it. For,
travelling by bus, one can't avoid seeing, even in London, a few stray works of
God - the sky, for example, an occasional tree, the flowers in the
window-boxes. But travel by Tube and you
see nothing but the works of man - iron riveted into geometrical forms,
straight lines of concrete, patterned expanses of tiles. All is human and the product of friendly and
comprehensible minds. All philosophies
and all religious - what are they but spiritual Tubes where all is recognizably
human, one travels comfortable and secure, contriving to forget that all round
and below and above them stretches the blind mass of earth, endless and
unexplored. Yes, give me the Tube and
Cubismus every time; give me ideas, so snug and neat and simple and well
made. And preserve me from nature,
preserve me from all that's inhumanly large and complicated and obscure. I haven't the courage and, above all, I
haven't the time to start wandering in that labyrinth.'
While Mr
Scogan was discoursing, Denis had crossed over to the father side of the little
square chamber, where Anne was sitting, still in her graceful, lazy pose, on
the low chair.
'Well?' he
demanded, looking at her almost fiercely.
What was he asking of her? He
hardly knew himself.
Anne looked
up at him, and for answer echoed his 'Well?' in another, a laughing key.
Denis had
nothing more, at the moment, to say. Two
or three canvases stood in the corner behind Anne's chair, their faces turned
to the wall. He pulled them out and
began to look at the paintings.
'May I see
too?' Anne requested.
He stood
them in a row against the wall. Anne had
to turn round in her chair to look at them.
There was the big canvas of the man fallen from the horse, there was a
painting of flowers, there was a small landscape. His hands on the back of the chair, Denis
leaned over her. From behind the easel
at the other side of the room Mr Scogan was talking away. For a long time they looked at the pictures,
saying nothing; or, rather, Anne looked at the pictures, while Denis, for the
most part, looked at Anne.
'I like the
man and the horse; don't you?' she said at last, looking up with an inquiring
smile.
Denis
nodded, and then in a queer, strangled voice, as though it had cost him a great
effort to utter the words, he said, 'I love you.'
It was a
remark which Anne had heard a good many times before and mostly heard with
equanimity. But on this occasion -
perhaps because they had come so unexpectedly, perhaps for some other reason -
the words provoked in her a certain surprised commotion.
'My poor
Denis,' she managed to say, with a laugh; but she was blushing as she spoke.
CHAPTER XXIV
It was noon. Denis, descending from his chamber, where he
had been making an unsuccessful effort to write something about nothing in
particular, found the drawing-room deserted.
He was about to go out into the garden when his eye fell on a familiar
but mysterious object - the large red notebook in which he had so often seen
Jenny quietly and busily scribbling. She
had left it lying on the window-seat.
The temptation was great. He
picked up the book and slipped off the elastic band that kept it discreetly
closed.
'Private. Not to be opened,' was written in capital
letters on the cover. He raised his
eyebrows. It was the sort of thing one
wrote in one's Latin Grammar while one was still at one's preparatory school.
'Black is the raven, black is the rook,
But blacker the thief who steals this book!'
It was curiously childish, he thought, and he smiled
to himself. He opened the book. What he saw made him wince as though he had
been struck.
Denis was
his own severest critic; so, at least, he had always believed. He liked to think of himself as a merciless
vivisector probing into the palpitating entrails of his own soul; he was Brown
Dog to himself. His weaknesses, his
absurdities - no one knew them better than he did. Indeed, in a vague way he imagined that
nobody beside himself was aware of them at all.
It seemed, somehow, inconceivable that he should appear to other people
as they appeared to him, inconceivable that they ever spoke of him among
themselves in that same freely critical and, to be quite honest, mildly
malicious tone in which he was accustomed to talk of them. In his own eyes he had defects, but to see
them was a privilege reserved to him alone.
For the rest of the world he was surely an image of flawless
crystal. It was almost axiomatic.
On opening
the red notebook that crystal image of himself crashed to the ground, and was
irreparably shattered. He was not his
own severest critic after all. The
discovery was a painful one.
The fruit
of Jenny's unobtrusive scribbling lay before him. A caricature of himself, reading (the book
was upside-down). In the background a
dancing couple, recognizable as Gombauld and Anne. Beneath, the legend: 'Fable of the Wallflower
and the Sour Grapes.' Fascinated and
horrified, Denis pored over the drawing.
It was masterful. A mute,
inglorious Rouveyre appeared in every one of those cruelly clear lines. The expression of the face, an assumed
aloofness and superiority tempered by a feeble envy; the attitude of the body
and limbs, an attitude of studious and scholarly dignity, given away by the
fidgety pose of the turned-in feet - these things were terrible. And, more terrible still, was the likeness,
was the magisterial certainty with which his physical peculiarities were all
recorded and subtly exaggerated.
Denis
looked deeper into the book. There were
caricatures of other people: of Priscilla and Mr Barbecue-Smith; of Henry
Wimbush, of Anne and Gombauld; of Mr Scogan, whom Jenny had represented in a
light that was more than slightly sinister, that was, indeed, diabolic; of Mary
and Ivor. He scarcely glanced at
them. A fearful desire to know the worst
about himself possessed him. He turned
over the leaves, lingering at nothing that was not his own image. Seven full pages were devoted to him.
'Private. Not to be opened.' He had disobeyed the injunction; he had only
got what he deserved. Thoughtfully he
closed the book, and slid the rubber band once more into its place. Sadder and wiser, he went out on to the
terrace. And so this, he reflected, this
was how Jenny employed the leisure hours in her ivory tower apart. And he had thought her a simple-minded,
uncritical creature! It was he, it
seemed, who was the fool. He felt no
resentment towards Jenny. No, the
distressing thing wasn't Jenny herself; it was what she and the phenomenon of
her red book represented, what they stood for and concretely symbolized. They represented all the vast conscious world
of men outside himself; they symbolized something that in his studious
solitariness he was apt not to believe in.
He could stand at Piccadilly Circus, could watch the crowds shuffle
past, and still imagine himself the one fully conscious, intelligent,
individual being among all those thousands.
It seemed, somehow, impossible that other people should be in their way
as elaborate and complete as he in his.
Impossible; and yet, periodically he would make some painful discovery
about the external world and the horrible reality of its consciousness and its
intelligence. The red notebook was one
of these discoveries, a footprint in the sand.
It put beyond a doubt the fact
that the outer world really existed.
Sitting on
the balustrade of the terrace, he ruminated this unpleasant truth for some
time. Still chewing on it, he strolled
pensively down towards the swimming-pool.
A peacock and his hen trailed their shabby finery across the turf of the
lower lawn. Odious birds! Their necks, thick and greedily fleshy at the
roots, tapered up to the cruel inanity of their brainless heads, their flat
eyes and piercing beaks. The fabulists
were right, he reflected, when they took beasts to illustrate their tractates
of human morality. Animals resemble men
with all the truthfulness of a caricature.
(Oh, the red notebook!) He threw
a piece of stick at the slowly pacing birds.
They rushed towards it, thinking it was something to eat.
He walked
on. The profound shade of a giant ilex
tree engulfed him. Like a great wooden
octopus, it spread its long arms abroad.
'Under the spreading ilex tree ...'
He tried to remember who the poem was by, but couldn't.
'The smith, a brawny man is he,
With arms like rubber bands.'
Just like his; he would have to try and do his Muller
exercises more regularly.
He emerged
once more into the sunshine. The pool lay
before him, reflecting in its bronze mirror the blue and various green of the
summer day. Looking at it, he thought of
Anne's bare arms and seal-sleek bathing-dress, her moving knees and feet.
'And little Luce with the white legs,
And bouncing Barbary ...'
Oh, these rags and tags of other people's making! Would he ever be able to call his brain his
own? Was there, indeed, anything in it
that was truly his own, or was it simply an education?
He walked
slowly round the water's edge. In an
embayed recess among the surrounding yew trees, leaning her back against the
pedestal of a pleasantly comic version of the Medici Venus, executed by some
nameless mason of the seicento, he saw Mary pensively sitting.
'Hullo!' he
said, for he was passing so close to her that he had to say something.
Mary looked
up. 'Hullo!' she answered in a
melancholy, uninterested tone.
In this
alcove, hewed out of the dark trees, the atmosphere seemed to Denis agreeably
elegiac. He sat down beside her under
the shadow of the public goddess. There
was a prolonged silence.
At
breakfast that morning Mary had found on her plate a picture postcard of Gobley
Great Park. A stately Georgian pile,
with a façade sixteen windows wide; parterres in the foreground; huge, smooth
lawns receding out of the picture to right and left. Ten years more of the hard times and Gobley,
with all its peers, will be deserted and decaying. Fifty years, and the countryside will know
the old landmarks no more. They will
have vanished as the monasteries vanished before them. At the moment, however, Mary's mind was not
moved by these considerations.
On the back
of the postcard, next to the address, was written, in Ivor's bold, large hand,
a single quatrain.
'Hail, maid of moonlight! Bride of the sun, farewell!
Like bright plumes moulted in an angel's flight,
There sleep within my heart's most mystic cell
Memories of morning, memories of the night.'
There followed a postscript of three lines: 'Would you
mind asking one of the housemaids to forward the packet of safety-razor blades
I left in the drawer of my washstand.
Thanks - Ivor.'
Seated
under the Venus's immemorial gesture, Mary considered life and love. The abolition of her repressions, so far from
bringing the expected peace of mind, had brought nothing but disquiet, a new
and hitherto unexperienced misery. Ivor,
Ivor.... She couldn't do without him now.
It was evident on the other hand, from the poem on the back of the
picture postcard, that Ivor could very well do without her. He was at Gobley now; so was Zenobia. Mary knew Zenobia. She thought of the last verse of the song he had
sung that night in the garden.
'Le Lendemain, Phillis peu sage
Aurait donné moutons et chien
Pour un baiser que le volage
A Lisette donnait pour rien.'
Mary shed
tears at the memory; she had never been so unhappy in all her life before.
It was
Denis who first broke the silence. 'The
individual,' he began in a soft and sadly philosophical tone, 'is not a
self-supporting universe. There are
times when he comes into contact with other individuals, when he is forced to
take cognizance of the existence of other universes besides himself.'
He had
contrived this highly abstract generalization as a preliminary to a personal
confidence. It was the first gambit in a
conversation that was to lead up to Jenny's caricatures.
'True,'
said Mary; and, generalizing for herself, she added, 'When one individual comes
into intimate contact with another, she - or he, of course, as the case may be
- must almost inevitably receive or inflict suffering.'
'One is
apt,' Denis went on, 'to be so spellbound by the spectacle of one's own
personality that one forgets that the spectacle presents itself to other people
as well as to oneself.'
Mary was
not listening. 'The difficulty,' she
said, 'makes itself acutely felt in matters of sex. If one individual seeks intimate contact with
another individual in the natural way, she is certain to receive or inflict
suffering. If, on the other hand, she
avoids contacts, she risks the equally grave sufferings that follow on
unnatural repressions. As you see, it's
a dilemma.'
'When I
think of my own case,' said Denis, making a more decided move in the desired
direction, 'I am amazed how ignorant I am of other people's mentality in
general and, above all and in particular, of their opinions about myself. Our minds are sealed books only occasionally
opened to the outside world.' He made a
gesture that was faintly suggestive of the drawing off of a rubber band.
'It's an
awful problem,' said Mary thoughtfully.
'One has to have had personal experience to realize quite how awful it
is.'
'Exactly,'
Denis nodded. 'One has to have had
first-hand experience.' He leaned
towards her and slightly lowered his voice.
'This very morning, for example ...' he began, but his confidences were
cut short. The deep voice of the gong,
tempered by distance to a pleasant booming, floated down from the house. It was lunch-time. Mechanically, Mary rose to her feet, and
Denis, a little hurt that she should exhibit such a desperate anxiety for her
food and so slight an interest in his spiritual experiences, followed her. They made their way up to the house without
speaking.
CHAPTER XXV
'I hope you all realize,' said Henry Wimbush during
dinner, 'that next Monday is Bank Holiday, and that you will all be expected to
help in the Fair.'
'Heavens!'
cried Anne. 'The Fair - I had forgotten
all about it. What a nightmare! Couldn't you put a stop to it, Uncle Henry?'
Mr Wimbush
sighed and shook his head. 'Alas,' he
said, 'I fear I cannot. I should have
liked to put an end to it years ago; but the claims of Charity are strong.'
'It's not
charity we want,' Anne murmured rebelliously; 'it's justice.'
'Besides,'
Mr Wimbush went on, 'the Fair has become an institution. Let me see, it must be twenty-two years since
we started it. It was a modest affair
then. Now ...' he made a sweeping
movement with his hand and was silent.
It spoke
highly of Mr Wimbush's public spirit that he still continued to tolerate the
Fair. Beginning as a sort of glorified
Church bazaar, Crome's yearly Charity Fair had grown into a noisy thing of
merry-go-rounds, coconut shies, and miscellaneous side-shows - a real genuine
fair on the grand scale. It was the
local St Bartholomew, and the people of all the neighbouring villages, with
even a contingent from the county town, flocked into the park for their Bank
Holiday amusement. The local hospital
profited handsomely, and it was this fact alone which prevented Mr Wimbush, to
whom the Fair was a cause of recurrent and never-diminishing agony, from
putting a stop to the nuisance which yearly desecrated his park and garden.
'I've made
all the arrangements already,' Henry Wimbush went on. 'Some of the larger marquees will be put up
tomorrow. The swings and the
merry-go-round arrive on Sunday.'
'So there's
no escape,' said Anne, turning to the rest of the party. 'You'll all have to do something. As a special favour you're allowed to choose
your slavery. My job is the tea tent, as
usual, Aunt Priscilla ...'
'My dear,'
said Mr Wimbush, interrupting her, 'I have more important things to think about
than the Fair. But you need have no
doubt that I shall do my best when Monday comes to encourage the villagers.'
'That's
splendid,' said Anne. 'Aunt Priscilla
will encourage the villagers. What will
you do, Mary?'
'I won't do
anything where I have to stand by and watch other people eat.'
'Then
you'll look after the children's sports.'
'All
right,' Mary agreed. 'I'll look after
the children's sports.'
'And Mr
Scogan?'
Mr Scogan
reflected. 'May I be allowed to tell
fortunes?' he asked at last. 'I think I
should be good at telling fortunes.'
'But you
can't tell fortunes in that costume!'
'Can't
I?' Mr Scogan surveyed himself.
'You'll
have to be dressed up. Do you still
persist?'
'I'm ready
to suffer all indignities.'
'Good!'
said Anne; and turning to Gombauld, 'You must be our lightning artist,' she
said. '"Your portrait for a
shilling in five minutes."'
'It's a
pity I'm not Ivor,' said Gombauld, with a laugh. 'I could throw in a picture of their Auras
for an extra sixpence.'
Mary
flushed. 'Nothing is to be gained,' she
said severely, 'by speaking with levity of serious subjects. And, after all, whatever your personal views
may be, psychical research is a perfectly serious subject.'
'And what
about Denis?'
Denis made
a deprecating gesture. 'I have no
accomplishments,' he said. 'I'll just be
one of those men who wear a thing in their buttonholes and go about telling
people which is the way to tea and not to walk on the grass.'
'No, no,'
said Anne. 'That won't do. You must do something more than that.'
'But
what?' All the good jobs are taken, and
I can do nothing but lisp in numbers.'
'Well,
then, you must lisp,' concluded Anne.
'You must write a poem for the occasion - an "Ode on Bank
Holidays." We'll print it on Uncle
Henry's press and sell it at twopence a copy.'
'Sixpence,'
Denis protested. 'It'll be worth
sixpence.'
Anne shook
her head. 'Twopence,' she repeated
firmly. 'Nobody will pay more than
twopence.'
'And now
there's Jenny,' said Mr Wimbush.
'Jenny,' he said, raising his voice, 'what will you do?'
Denis
thought of suggesting that she might draw caricatures at sixpence an execution,
but decided it would be wiser to go on feigning ignorance of her talent. His mind reverted to the red notebook. Could it really be true that he looked like
that?
'What will
I do,' Jenny echoed, 'what will I do?'
She frowned thoughtfully for a moment; then her face brightened and she
smiled. 'When I was young,' she said, 'I
learnt to play the drums.'
'The
drums?'
Jenny
nodded, and, in proof of her assertion, agitated her knife and fork, like a
pair of drumsticks, over her plate. 'If
there's any opportunity of playing the drums ...' she began.
'But of
course,' said Anne, 'there's any amount of opportunity. We'll put you down definitely for the
drums. That's the lot,' she added.
'And a very
good lot too,' said Gombauld. 'I look
forward to my Bank Holiday. It ought to
be gay.'
'It ought
indeed,' Mr Scogan assented. 'But you
may rest assured that it won't be. No
holiday is ever anything but a disappointment.'
'Come,
come,' protested Gombauld. 'My holiday
at Crome isn't being a disappointment.'
'Isn't
it?' Anne turned an ingenuous mask
towards him.
'No, it
isn't,' he answered.
'I'm
delighted to hear it.'
'It's in
the very nature of things,' Mr Scogan went on; 'our holidays can't help being
disappointments. Reflect for a
moment. What is a holiday? The ideal, the Platonic Holiday of Holidays
is surely a complete and absolute change.
You agree with me in my definition?'
Mr Scogan glanced from face to face round the table; his sharp nose
moved in a series of rapid jerks through all the points of the compass. There was no sign of dissent; he continued:
'A complete and absolute change; very well.
But isn't a complete and absolute change precisely the thing we can
never have - never, in the very nature of things?' Mr Scogan once more looked rapidly about
him. 'Of course it is. As ourselves, as specimens of Homo Sapiens,
as members of a society, how can we hope to have anything like an absolute
change? We are tied down by the frightful
limitation of our human faculties, by the notions which society imposes on us
through our fatal suggestibility, by our own personalities. For us, a complete holiday is out of the
question. Some of us struggle manfully
to take one, but we never succeed, if I may be allowed to express myself
metaphorically, we never succeed in getting farther than Southend.'
'You're
depressing,' said Anne.
'I mean to
be,' Mr Scogan replied, and, expanding the fingers of his right hand, he went
on: 'Look at me, for example. What sort
of holiday can I take? In endowing me
with passions and faculties Nature has been horribly niggardly. The full range of human potentialities is in
any case distressingly limited; my range is a limitation within a
limitation. Out of the ten octaves that
make up the human instrument, I can compass perhaps two. Thus, while I may have a certain amount of
intelligence, I have no aesthetic sense; while I possess the mathematical
faculty, I am wholly without the religious emotions; while I am naturally
addicted to venery, I have little ambition and am not at all avaricious. Education has further limited my scope. Having been brought up in society, I am
impregnated with its laws; not only should I be afraid of taking a holiday from
them, I should also feel it painful to try to do so. In a word, I have a conscience as well as a
fear of gaol. Yes, I know it by
experience. How often have I tried to
take holidays, to get away from myself, my own boring nature, my insufferable
mental surroundings!' Mr Scogan
sighed. 'But always without success,' he
added, 'always without success. In my
youth I was always striving - how hard! - to feel religiously and
aesthetically. Here, said I to myself,
are two tremendously important and exciting emotions. Life would be richer, warmer, brighter,
altogether more amusing, if I could feel them.
I tried to feel them. I read the
works of the mystics. They seemed to be
nothing but the most deplorable claptrap - as indeed they always must to anyone
who does not feel the same emotion as they authors felt when they were
writing. For it is the emotion that
matters. The written work is simply an
attempt to express emotion, which is in itself inexpressible, in terms of
intellect and logic. The mystic
objectifies a rich feeling in the pit of the stomach into a cosmology. For other mystics that cosmology is a symbol
of the rich feeling. For the unreligious
it is a symbol of nothing, and so appears merely grotesque. A melancholy fact! But I divagate.' Mr Scogan checked himself. 'So much for the religious emotion. As for the aesthetic - I was at even great
pains to cultivate that. I have looked at
all the right works of art if every part of Europe. There was a time when, I venture to believe,
I knew more about Taddeo da Poggibonsi, more about the cryptic Amico di Taddeo,
even than Henry does. Today, I am happy
to say, I have forgotten most of the knowledge I then so laboriously acquired;
but without vanity I can assert that it was prodigious. I don't pretend, of course, to know anything
about nigger sculpture or the later seventeenth century in Italy; but about all
the periods that were fashionable before 1900 I am, or was, omniscient. Yes, I repeat it, omniscient. But did that fact make me any more appreciative
of art in general? It did not. Confronted by a picture, of which I could
tell you all the known and presumed history - the date when it was painted, the
character of the painter, the influences that had gone to make it what it was -
I felt none of that strange excitement and exaltation which is, as I am
informed by those who do feel it, the true aesthetic emotion. I felt nothing but a certain interest in the
subject of the picture; or more often, when the subject was hackneyed and
religious, I felt nothing but a great weariness of spirit. Nevertheless, I must have gone on looking at
pictures for ten years before I would honestly admit to myself that they merely
bored me. Since then I have given up all
attempts to take a holiday. I go on
cultivating my old stale daily self in the resigned spirit with which a bank
clerk performs from ten till six his daily task. A holiday, indeed! I'm sorry for you, Gombauld, if you still
look forward to having a holiday.'
Gombauld
shrugged his shoulders. 'Perhaps,' he
said, 'my standards aren't as elevated as yours. But personally I found the war quite as
thorough a holiday from all the ordinary decencies and sanities, all the common
emotions and preoccupations, as I ever want to have.'
'Yes,' Mr
Scogan thoughtfully agreed. 'Yes, the
war was certainly something of a holiday.
It was a step beyond Southend; it was Weston-super-Mare; it was almost
Ilfracombe.'
CHAPTER XXVI
A little canvas village of tents and booths had sprung
up, just beyond the boundaries of the garden, in the green expanse of the
park. A crowd thronged its streets, the
men dressed mostly in black - holiday best, funeral best - the women in pale
muslins. Here and there tricolour
bunting hung inert. In the midst of the
canvas town, scarlet and gold and crystal, the merry-go-round glittered in the
sun. The balloon-man walked among the
crowd, and above his head, like a huge, inverted bunch of many-coloured grapes,
the balloons strained upwards. With a
scythe-like motion the boat-swings reaped the air, and from the funnel of the
engine which worked the roundabout rose a thin, scarcely wavering column of
black smoke.
Denis had
climbed to the top of one of Sir Ferdinando's towers, and there, standing on
the sun-baked leads, his elbows resting on the parapet, he surveyed the
scene. The steam-organ sent up
prodigious music. The clashing of
automatic symbols beat out with inexorable precision the rhythm of piercingly
sounded melodies. The harmonies were
like a musical shattering of glass and brass.
Far down in the bass the Last Trump was hugely blowing, and with such
persistence, such resonance, that its alternate tonic and dominant detached
themselves from the rest of the music and made a tune of their own, a loud,
monotonous seesaw.
Denis
leaned over the gulf of swirling noise.
If he threw himself over the parapet, the noise would surely buoy him
up, keep him suspended, bobbing, as a fountain balances a ball on its breaking
crest. Another fancy came to him, this
time in metrical form.
'My soul is a thin white sheet of parchment stretched
Over a bubbling cauldron.'
Bad, bad. But
he liked the idea of something thin and distended being blown up from
underneath.
'My soul is a thin tent of gut....'
or better-
'My
soul is a pale, tenuous membrane....'
That was pleasing: a thin, tenuous membrane. It had the right anatomical quality. Tight blown, quivering in the blast of noisy
life. It was time for him to descend
from the serene empyrean of words into the actual vortex. He went down slowly. 'My soul is a thin, tenuous membrane....'
On the
terrace stood a knot of distinguished visitors.
There was old Lord Moleyn, like a caricature of an English milord in a
French comic paper: a long man, with a long nose and long, drooping moustaches
and long teeth of old ivory, and lower down, absurdly, a short covert coat, and
below that, long, long legs cased in pearl-grey trousers - legs that bent
unsteadily at the knee and gave a kind of sideways wobble as he walked. Beside him, short and thick-set, stood Mr
Callamay, the venerable, conservative statesman, with a face like a Roman bust,
and short white hair. Young girls didn't
much like going for motor drives alone with Mr Callamay; and of old Lord Moleyn
one wondered why he wasn't living in gilded exile on the island of Capri among
the other distinguished persons who, for one reason or another, find it
impossible to live in England. They were
talking to Anne, laughing, the one profoundly, the other hootingly.
A black
silk balloon towing a black-and-white striped parachute proved to be old Mrs
Budge from the big house on the other side of the valley. She stood low on the ground, and the spikes
of her black-and-white sunshade menaced the eyes of Priscilla Wimbush, who
towered over her - a massive figure dressed in purple and topped with a queenly
toque on which the nodding black plumes recalled the splendours of a
first-class Parisian funeral.
Denis peeped
at them discreetly from the window of the morning-room. His eyes were suddenly become innocent,
childlike, unprejudiced. They seemed,
these people, inconceivably fantastic.
And yet they really existed, they functioned by themselves, they were
conscious, they had minds. Moreover, he
was like them. Could one believe
it? But the evidence of the red notebook
was conclusive.
It would
have been polite to go and say, 'How d'you do?'
But at the moment Denis did not want to talk, could not have talked. His soul was a tenuous, tremulous, pale
membrane. He would keep its sensibility
intact and virgin as long as he could.
Cautiously he crept out by a side door and made his way down towards the
park. His soul fluttered as he
approached the noise and movement of the fair.
He paused for a moment on the brink, then stepped in and was engulfed.
Hundreds of
people, each with his own private face and all of them real, separate, alive:
the thought was disquieting. He paid
twopence and saw the Tattooed Woman; twopence more, the Largest Rat in the
World. From the home of the Rat he
emerged just in time to see a hydrogen-filled balloon break loose for
home. A child howled up after it; but
calmly, a perfect sphere of flushed opal, it mounted, mounted. Denis followed it with his eyes until it
became lost on the blinding sunlight. If
he could be send his soul to follow it!...
He sighed,
stuck his steward's rosette in his buttonhole, and started to push his way,
aimlessly but officially, through the crowd.
CHAPTER XXVII
My Scogan had been accommodated in a little canvas
hut. Dressed in a black shirt and a red
bodice, with a yellow-and-red bandana handkerchief tied round his black wig, he
looked - sharp-nosed, brown, and wrinkled - like the Bohemian hag of Frith's
Derby Day. A placard pinned to the
curtain of the doorway announced the presence within the tent of 'Sesostris,
the Sorceress of Ecbatana.' Seated at a
table, Mr Scogan received his clients in mysterious silence, indicating with a
movement of the finger that they were to sit down opposite him and to extend
their hands for his inspection. He then
examined the palm that was presented him, using a magnifying glass and a pair
of horn spectacles. He had a terrifying
way of shaking his head, frowning and clicking with his tongue as he looked at
the lines. Sometimes he would whisper,
as though to himself, 'Terrible, terrible!' or 'God preserve us!' sketching out
the sign of the cross as he uttered the words.
The clients who came in laughing grew suddenly grave; they began to take
the witch seriously. She was a
formidable-looking woman; could it be, was it possible, that there was
something in this sort of thing, after all?
After all, the thought, as the hag shook her head over their hands,
after all ... And they waited, with an uncomfortably beating heart, for the
oracle to speak. After a long and silent
inspection, Mr Scogan would suddenly look up and ask, in a hoarse whisper, some
horrifying question, such as, 'Have you ever been hit on the head with a hammer
by a young man with red hair?' When the
answer was in the negative, which it could hardly fail to be, Mr Scogan would
nod several times, saying, 'I was afraid so.
Everything is still to come, still to come, though it can't be very far
off now.' Sometimes, after a long
examination, he would just whisper, 'Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be
wise,' and refuse to divulge any details of a future too appalling to be
envisaged without despair. Sesostris had
a success of horror. People stood in a
queue outside the witch's booth, waiting for the privilege of hearing sentence
pronounced upon them.
Denis, in
the course of his round, looked with curiosity at this crowd of suppliants
before the shrine of the oracle. He had
a great desire to see how Mr Scogan played his part. The canvas booth was a rickety, ill-made
structure. Between its walls and its
sagging roof were long gaping chinks and crannies. Denis went to the tea-tent and borrowed a
wooden bench and a small Union Jack.
With these he hurried back tot he booth, he climbed up, and with a great
air of busy efficiency began to tie the Union Jack to the top of one of the
tent-poles. Through the crannies in the
canvas he could see almost the whole of the interior of the tent. Mr Scogan's bandana-covered head was just
below him; his terrifying whispers came clearly up. Denis looked and listened while the witch
prophesied financial losses, death by apoplexy, destruction by air-raids in the
next war.
'Is there
going to be another war?' asked the old lady to whom he had predicted this end.
'Very
soon,' said Mr Scogan, with an air of quiet confidence.
The old
lady was succeeded by a girl dressed in white muslin, garnished with pink
ribbons. She was wearing a broad hat, so
that Denis could not see her face; but from her figure and the roundness of her
bare arms he judged her young and pleasing.
Mr Scogan looked at her hand, then whispered, 'You are still virtuous.'
The young
lady giggled and exclaimed, 'Oh, lor'!'
'But you
will not remain so for long,' added Mr Scogan sepulchrally. The young lady giggled again. 'Destiny, which interests itself in small
things no less than in great, has announced the fact upon your hand.' Mr Scogan took up the magnifying-glass and
began once more to examine the white palm.
'Very interesting,' he said, as though to himself - 'very
interesting. It's as clear as day.' He was silent.
'What's
clear?' asked the girl.
'I don't
think I ought to tell you.' Mr Scogan
shook his head; the pendulous brass earrings which he had screwed on to his
ears tinkled.
'Please,
please!' she implored.
The witch
seemed to ignore her remark.
'Afterwards, it's not at all clear.
The fates don't say whether you will settle down to married life and
have four children or whether you will try to go on to the cinema and have
none. They are only specific about this
one rather crucial incident.'
'What is
it? What is it? Oh, do tell me!'
The white
muslin figure leant eagerly forward.
Mr Scogan
sighed. 'Very well,' he said, 'if you
must know, you must know. But if
anything untoward happens you must blame your own curiosity. Listen.
Listen.' He lifted up a sharp,
claw-nailed forefinger. 'This is what
the fates have written. Next Sunday
afternoon at six o'clock you will be sitting on the second stile on the
footpath that leads from the church to the lower road. At that moment a man will appear walking
along the footpath.' Mr Scogan looked at
her hand again as though to refresh his memory of the details of the
scene. 'A man,' he repeated - 'a small
man with a sharp nose, not exactly good looking nor precisely young, but
fascinating.' He lingered hissingly over
the word. 'He will ask you, "Can you
tell me the way to Paradise?" and you will answer, "Yes, I'll show
you," and walk with him down towards the little hazel copse. I cannot read what will happen after
that.' There was a silence.
'Is it
really true?' asked white muslin.
The witch
gave a shrug of the shoulders. 'I merely
tell you what I read in your hand. Good
afternoon. That will be sixpence. Yes, I have change. Thank you.
Good afternoon.'
Denis
stepped down from the bench; tied insecurely and crookedly to the tent-pole,
the Union Jack hung limp on the windless air.
'If only I could do things like that!' he thought, as he carried the
bench back to the tea-tent.
Anne was
sitting behind a long table filling thick white cups from an urn. A neat pile of printed sheets lay before her
on the table. Denis took one of them and
looked at it affectionately. It was his
poem. They had printed five hundred
copies, and very nice the quarto broadsheets looked.
'Have you
sold many?' he asked in a casual tone.
Anne put
her head on one side deprecatingly.
'Only three so far, I'm afraid.
But I'm giving a free copy to everyone who spends more than a shilling
on his tea. So in any case it's having a
circulation.'
Denis made
no reply, but walked slowly away. He
looked at the broadsheet in his hand and read the lines to himself relishingly
as he walked along:
'This day of roundabouts and swings,
Struck weights, shied coconuts, tossed rings,
Switchbacks, Aunt Sallies, and all such small
High jinks - you call it ferial?
A holiday? But paper noses
Sniffed the artificial roses
Of round Venetian cheeks through half
Each carnival year, and masks might laugh
At things the naked face for shame
Would blush at - laugh and think no blame.
A holiday? But Galba showed
Elephants on an airy road;
Jumbo trod the trightrope then,
And in the circus armèd men
Stabbed home for sport and died to break
Those dull imperatives that make
A prison of every working day,
Where all must drudge and all obey.
Sing Holiday! You do not know
How to be free. The Russian snow
Flowered with bright blood whose roses spread
Petals of fading, fading red
That died into the snow again,
Into the virgin snow; and men
From all the ancient bonds were freed
Old law, old custom, and old creed,
Old right and wrong there bled to death:
The frozen air received their breath,
A little smoke that died away;
And round about them where they lay
The snow bloomed roses. Blood was there
A red-gay flower and only fair.
Sing Holiday! Beneath the Tree
Of Innocence and Liberty,
Paper Nose and Red Cockade
Dance within the magic shade
That makes them drunken, merry, and strong
To laugh and sing their ferial song:
"Free, free ...!"
But Echo answers
Faintly to the laughing dancers,
"Free" - and faintly laughs, and still,
Within the hollows of the hill,
Faintlier laughs and whispers, "Free,"
Fadingly, diminishingly:
"Free," and laughter faints away ...
Sing Holiday! Sing Holiday!'
He folded the sheet carefully and put it in his pocket. The thing had its merits. Oh, decidedly, decidedly! But how unpleasant the crowd smelt! He lit a cigarette. The smell of cows was preferable. He passed through the gate in the park wall
into the garden. The swimming-pool was a
centre of noise and activity.
'Second
Heat in the Young Ladies' Championship.'
It was the polite voice of Henry Wimbush. A crowd of sleek, seal-like figures in black
bathing-dresses surrounded him. His grey
bowler hat, smooth, round, and motionless in the midst of a moving sea, was an
island of aristocratic calm.
Holding his
tortoiseshell-rimmed pince-nez an inch or two in front of his eyes, he read out
names from a list.
'Miss Dolly
Miles, Miss Rebecca Balister, Miss Doris Gabell ...'
Five young
persons ranged themselves on the brink.
From their seats of honour at the other end of the pool, old Lord Moleyn
and Mr Callamay looked on with eager interest.
Henry
Wimbush raised his hand. There was an
expectant silence. 'When I say
"Go," go. Go!' he said. There was an almost simultaneous splash.
Denis
pushed his way through the spectators.
Somebody plucked him by the sleeve; he looked down. It was old Mrs Budge.
'Delighted
to see you again, Mr Stone,' she said in her rich, husky voice. She panted a little as she spoke, like a
short-winded lapdog. It was Mrs Budge
who, having read in the Daily Mirror that the Government needed peach
stones - what they needed them for she never knew - had made the collection of
peach stones her peculiar 'bit' of war work.
She had thirty-six peach trees in her walled garden, as well as four
hothouses in which trees could be forced, so that she was able to eat peaches
practically the whole year round. In
1916 she ate 4200 peaches, and sent the stones to the Government. In 1917 the military authorities called up
three of her gardeners, and what with this and the fact that it was a bad year
for wall fruit, she only managed to eat 2900 peaches during that crucial period
of the national destinies. In 1918 she
did rather better, for between January 1st and the date of the Armistice she
ate 3300 peaches. Since the Armistice
she had relaxed her efforts; now she did not eat more than two or three peaches
a day. Her constitution, she complained,
had suffered; but it had suffered for a good cause.
Denis
answered her greeting by a vague and polite noise.
'So nice to
see the young people enjoying themselves,' Mrs Budge went on. 'And the old people too, for that
matter. Look at old Lord Moleyn and dear
Mr Callamay. Isn't it delightful to see
the way they enjoy themselves?'
Denis
looked. He wasn't sure whether it was so
very delightful after all. Why didn't
they go and watch the sack races? The
two old gentlemen were engaged at the moment in congratulating the winner of
the race; it seemed an act of supererogatory graciousness; for, after all, she
had only won a heat.
'Pretty
little thing, isn't she?' said Mrs Budge huskily, and panted two or three
times.
'Yes,'
Denis nodded agreement. Sixteen,
slender, but nubile, he said to himself, and laid up the phrase in his memory
as a happy one. Old Mr Callamay had put
on his spectacles to congratulate the victor, and Lord Moleyn, leaning forward
over his walking-stick, showed his long ivory teeth, hungrily smiling.
'Capital
performance, capital,' Mr Callamay was saying in his deep voice.
The victor
wriggled with embarrassment. She stood
with her hands behind her back, rubbing one foot nervously on the other. Her wet bathing-dress shone, a torso of black
polished marble.
'Very good indeed,'
said Lord Moleyn. His voice seemed to
come from just behind his teeth, a toothy voice. It was as though a dog should suddenly begin
to speak. He smiled again, Mr Callamay
readjusted his spectacles.
'When I say
"Go", go. Go!'
Splash! The third heat had started.
'Do you
know, I never could learn to swim,' said Mrs Budge.
'Really?'
'But I used
to be able to float.'
Denis
imagined her floating - up and down, up and down on a great green swell. A blown black bladder; no, that wasn't good,
that wasn't good at all. A new winner
was being congratulated. She was
atrociously stubby and fat. The last
one, long and harmoniously, continuously curved from knee to breast, had been
an Eve by Cranach; but this, this one was a bad Rubens.
'... go -
go - go!' Henry Wimbush's polite level
voice once more pronounced the formula.
Another batch of young ladies dived in.
Grown a
little weary of sustaining a conversation with Mrs Budge, Denis conveniently
remembered that his duties as a steward called him elsewhere. He pushed out through the lines of spectators
and made his way along the path left clear behind him. He was thinking again that his soul was a
pale, tenuous membrane, when he was startled by hearing a thin, sibilant voice,
speaking apparently from just above his head, pronounce the single word
'Disgusting!'
He looked
up sharply. The path along which he was
walking passed under the lee of a wall of clipped yew. Behind the hedge the ground sloped steeply up
towards the foot of the terrace and the house; for one standing on the higher
ground it was easy to look over the dark barrier. Looking up, Denis saw two heads overtopping
the hedge immediately above him. He recognized
the iron mask of Mr Bodiham and the pale, colourless face of his wife. They were looking over his head, over the
heads of the spectators, at the swimmers in the pond.
'Disgusting!'
Mrs Bodiham repeated, hissing softly.
The rector
turned up his iron mask towards the solid cobalt of the sky. 'How long?' he said, as though to himself;
'how long?' He lowered his eyes again,
and they fell on Denis's upturned curious face.
There was an abrupt movement, and Mr and Mrs Bodiham popped out of sight
behind the hedge.
Denis
continued his promenade. He wandered
past the merry-go-round, through the thronged streets of the canvas village;
the membrane of his soul flapped tumultuously in the noise and laughter. In a roped-off space beyond, Mary was
directing the children's sports. Little
creatures seethed round her, making a shrill, tiny clamour; others clustered
about the skirts and trousers of their parents.
Mary's face was shining in the heat; with an immense output of energy
she started a three-legged race. Denis
looked on in admiration.
'You're
wonderful,' he said, coming up behind her and touching her on the arm.
'I've never
seen such energy.'
She turned
towards him a face, round, red, and honest as the setting sun; the golden bell
of her hair swung silently as she moved her head and quivered to rest.
'Do you
know, Denis,' she said, in a low, serious voice, gasping a little as she spoke
- 'do you know that there's a woman here who has had three children in
thirty-one months?'
'Really,'
said Denis, making rapid mental calculations.
'It's
appalling. I've been telling her about
the Malthusian League. One really ought
...'
But a
sudden violent renewal of the metallic yelling announced the fact that somebody
had won the race. Mary became once more
the centre of a dangerous vortex. It was
time, Denis thought, to move on; he might be asked to do something if he stayed
too long.
He turned
back towards the canvas village. The
thought of tea was making itself insistent in his mind. Tea, tea, tea. But the tea-tent was horribly thronged. Anne, with an unusual expression of grimness
on her flushed face, was furiously working the handle of the urn; the brown
liquid spurted incessantly into the proffered cups. Portentous, in the farther corner of the
tent, Priscilla, in her royal toque, was encouraging the villagers. In a momentary lull Denis could hear her
deep, jovial laughter and her manly voice.
Clearly, he told himself, that was no place for one who wanted tea. He stood irresolute at the entrance to the
tent. A beautiful thought suddenly came
to him: if he went back to the house, went unobtrusively, without being
observed, if he tiptoed into the dining-room and noiselessly opened the little
doors of the sideboard - ah, then! In
the cool recess within he would find bottles and a siphon; a bottle of crystal
gin and a quart of soda water, and then for the cups that inebriate as well as
cheer....
A minute
later he was walking briskly up the shady yew-tree walk. Within the house it was deliciously quiet and
cool. Carrying his well-filled tumbler
with care, he went into the library.
There, the glass on the corner of the table beside him, he settled into
a chair with a volume of Sainte-Beuve.
There was nothing, he found, like a Causerie du Lundi for settling and
soothing the troubled spirits. The
tenuous membrane of his had been too rudely buffeted by the afternoon's
emotions; it required a rest.
CHAPTER XXVIII
Towards sunset the fair itself became quiescent. It was the hour for the dancing to
begin. At one side of the village of
tents a space had been roped off. Acetylene
lamps, hung round it on posts, cast a piercing white light. In one corner sat the band, and, obedient to
its scraping and blowing, two or three hundred dancers trampled across the dry
ground, wearing away the grass with their booted feet. Round this patch of all but daylight, alive
with motion and noise, the night seemed preternaturally dark. Bars of light reached out into it, and every
now and then a lonely figure or a couple of lovers, interlaced, would cross the
bright shaft, flashing for a moment into visible existence, to disappear again
as quickly and surprisingly as they had come.
Denis stood
by the entrance of the enclosure, watching the swaying, shuffling crowd. The slow vortex brought the couples round and
round again before him, as though he were passing them in review. There was Priscilla, still wearing her
queenly toque, still encouraging the villagers - this time by dancing with one
of the tenant farmers. There was Lord
Moleyn, who had stayed on to the disorganized, passoverish meal that took the
place of dinner of this festal day; he one-stepped shamblingly, his bent knees
more precariously wobbly than ever, with a terrified village beauty. Mr Scogan trotted round with another. Mary was in the embrace of a young farmer of
heroic proportions; she was looking up at him, talking, as Denis could see,
very seriously. What about? he
wondered. The Malthusian League,
perhaps. Seated in the corner among the
band, Jenny was performing wonders of virtuosity upon the drums. Her eyes shone, she smiled to herself. A whole subterranean life seemed to be
expressing itself in those loud rat-tats, those long rolls and flourishes of
drumming. Looking at her, Denis ruefully
remembered the red notebook; he wondered what sort of a figure he was cutting
now. But the sight of Anne and Gombauld
swimming past - Anne with her eyes almost shut and sleeping, as it were, on the
sustaining wings of movement and music - dissipated these preoccupations. Male and female created He them.... There
they were, Anne and Gombauld, and a hundred couples more - all stepping
harmoniously together to the old tune of Male and Female created He them. But Denis sat apart; he alone lacked his
complementary opposite. They were all
coupled but he; all but he....
Somebody
touched him on the shoulder and he looked up.
It was Henry Wimbush.
'I never
showed you our oaken drainpipes,' he said.
'Some of the ones we dug up are lying quite close to here. Would you like to come and see them?'
Denis got
up, and they walked off together into the darkness. The music grew fainter behind them. Some of the higher notes faded out
altogether. Jenny's drumming and the
steady sawing of the bass throbbed on, tuneless and meaningless in their
ears. Henry Wimbush halted.
'Here we are,'
he said, and, taking an electric torch out of his pocket, he cast a dim beam
over two or three blackened sections of tree trunk, scooped out into the
semblance of pipes, which were lying forlornly in a little depression in the
ground.
'Very
interesting,' said Denis, with a rather tepid enthusiasm.
They sat
down on the grass. A faint white glare,
rising from behind a belt of trees, indicated the position of the
dancing-floor. The music was nothing but
a muffled rhythmic pulse.
'I shall be
glad,' said Henry Wimbush, 'when this function comes at last to an end.'
'I can
believe it.'
'I do not
know how it is,' Mr Wimbush continued, 'but the spectacle of numbers of my
fellow-creatures in a state of agitation moves in me a certain weariness,
rather than any gaiety or excitement.
The fact is, they don't very much interest me. They aren't in my line. You follow me? I could never take much interest, for
example, in a collection of postage stamps.
Primitives or seventeenth-century books - yes. They are in my line. But stamps, no. I don't know anything about them; they're not
in my line. They don't interest me, they
give me no emotion. It's rather the same
with people, I'm afraid. I'm more at
home with these pipes.' He jerked his
head sideways towards the hollowed logs.
'The trouble with the people and events of the present is that you never
know anything about them. What do I know
of contemporary politics? Nothing. What do I know of the people I see round
about me? Nothing. What they think of me or of anything else in
the world, what they will do in five minutes' time, are things I can't guess
at. For all I know, you may suddenly
jump up and try to murder me in a moment's time.'
'Come,
come,' said Denis.
'True,' Mr
Wimbush continued, 'the little I know about your past is certainly
reassuring. But I know nothing of your
present, and neither you nor I know anything of your future. It's appalling; in living people, one is
dealing with unknown and unknowable quantities.
One can only hope to find out anything about them by a long series of
the most disagreeable and boring human contacts, involving a terrible expense
of time. It's the same with current
events; how can I find out anything about them except by devoting years to the
most exhausting first-hand study, involving once more an endless number of the
most unpleasant contacts? No, give me
the past. It doesn't change; it's all
there in black and white, and you can get to know about it comfortably and
decorously and, above all, privately - by reading. By reading I know a great deal of Caesar
Borgia, of St Francis, of Dr Johnson; a few weeks have made me thoroughly
acquainted with these interesting characters, and I have been spared the
tedious and revolting process of getting to know them by personal contact,
which I should have to do if they were living now. How gay and delightful life would be if one
could get rid of all the human contacts!
Perhaps, in the future, when machines have attained to a state of
perfection - for I confess that I am, like Godwin and Shelley, a believer in
perfectibility, the perfectibility of machinery - then, perhaps, it will be
possible for those who, like myself, desire it, to live in a dignified
seclusion, surrounded by the delicate attentions of silent and graceful
machines, and entirely secure from any human intrusion. It is a beautiful thought.'
'Beautiful,'
Denis agreed. 'But what about the
desirable human contacts, like love and friendship?'
The black
silhouette against the darkness shook its head.
'The pleasures even of these contacts are much exaggerated,' said the
polite level voice. 'It seems to me
doubtful whether they are equal to the pleasures of private reading and
contemplation. Human contacts have been
so highly valued in the past only because reading was not a common
accomplishment and because books were scarce and difficult to reproduce. The world, you must remember, is only just
becoming literate. As reading becomes
more and more habitual and widespread, an ever-increasing number of people will
discover that books will give them all the pleasures of social life and none of
its intolerable tedium. At present
people in search of pleasure naturally tend to congregate in large herds and to
make a noise; in future their natural tendency will be to seek solitude and
quiet. The proper study of mankind is
books.'
'I
sometimes think that it may be,' said Denis; he was wondering if Anne and
Gombauld were still dancing together.
'Instead of
which,' said Mr Wimbush, with a sigh, 'I must go and see if all is well on the
dancing-floor.' They got up and began to
walk slowly towards the white glare. 'If
all these people were dead,' Henry Wimbush went on, 'this festivity would be
extremely agreeable. Nothing would be
pleasanter than to read in a well-written book of an open-air ball that took
place a century ago. How charming! one
would say; how pretty and how amusing!
But when the ball takes place today, when one finds oneself involved in
it, then one sees the thing in its true light.
It turns out to be merely this.'
He waved his hand in the direction of the acetylene flares. 'In my youth,' he went on after a pause, 'I
found myself, quite fortuitously, involved in a series of the most
phantasmagorical amorous intrigues. A
novelist could have made his fortune out of them, and even if I were to tell
you, in my bald style, the details of these adventures, you would be amazed at
the romantic tale. But I assure you,
while they were happening - these romantic adventures - they seemed to me no
more and no less exciting than any other incident of actual life. To climb by night up a rope-ladder to a
second-floor window in an old house in Toledo seemed to me, while I was
actually performing this rather dangerous feat, an action as obvious, as much
to be taken for granted, as - how shall I put it? - as quotidian as catching
the 8.52 from Surbiton to go to business on a Monday morning. Adventures and romance only take on their
adventurous and romantic qualities at second-hand. Live them, and they are just a slice of life
like the rest. In literature they become
as charming as this dismal ball would be if we were celebrating its
tercentenary.' They had come to the
entrance of the enclosure and stood there, blinking, in the dazzling
light. 'Ah, if only we were!' Henry
Wimbush added.
Anne and
Gombauld were still dancing together.
CHAPTER XXIX
It was after ten o'clock. The dancers had already dispersed and the
last lights were being put out. Tomorrow
the tents would be struck, the dismantled merry-go-round would be packed into
waggons and carted away. An expanse of
worn grass, a shabby brown patch in the wide green of the park, would be all
that remained. Crome Fair was over.
By the edge
of the pool two figures lingered.
'No, no no,'
Anne was saying in a breathless whisper, leaning backwards, turning her head
from side to side in an effort to escape Gombauld's kisses. 'No, please.
No.’ Her raised voice had become imperative.
Gombauld
relaxed his embrace a little. 'Why not?'
he said. 'I will.'
With a
sudden effort Anne freed herself. 'You
won't,' she retorted. 'You've tried to
take the most unfair advantage of me.'
'Unfair
advantage?' echoed Gombauld in genuine surprise.
'Yes,
unfair advantage. You attack me after
I've been dancing for two hours, while I'm still reeling drunk with the
movement, when I've lost my head, when I've got no mind left but only a
rhythmical body! It's as bad as making
love to someone you've drugged or intoxicated.'
Gombauld
laughed angrily. 'Call me a White Slaver
and have done with it.'
'Luckily,'
said Anne, 'I am now completely sobered, and if you try and kiss me again I
shall box your ears. Shall we take a few
turns round the pool?' she added. 'The
night is delicious.'
For answer
Gombauld made an irritated noise. They
paced off slowly, side by side.
'What I
like about the painting of Degas ...' Anne began in her most detached and
conversational tone.
'Oh, damn
Degas!' Gombauld was almost shouting.
From where
he stood, leaning in an attitude of despair against the parapet of the terrace,
Denis had seen them, the two pale figures in a patch of moonlight, far down by
the pool's edge. He had seen the
beginning of what promised to be an endlessly passionate embracement, and at
the sight he had fled. It was too much;
he couldn't stand it. In another moment,
he felt, he would have burst into irrepressible tears.
Dashing
blindly into the house, he almost ran into Mr Scogan, who was walking up and
down the hall smoking a final pipe.
'Hullo!'
said Mr Scogan, catching him by the arm; dazed and hardly conscious of what he
was doing or where he was, Denis stood there for a moment like a
somnambulist. 'What's the matter?' Mr
Scogan went on. 'You looked disturbed,
distressed, depressed.'
Denis shook
his head without replying.
'Worried
about the cosmos, eh?' Mr Scogan patted
him on the arm. 'I know the feeling,' he
said. 'It's a most distressing symptom. "What's the point of it all? All is vanity. What's the good of continuing to function if
one's doomed to be snuffed out at last along with everything else?" Yes, yes.
I know exactly how you feel. It's
most distressing if one allows oneself to be distressed. But then, why allow oneself to be
distressed? After all, we all know that
there's no ultimate point. But what
difference does that make?'
At this
point the somnambulist suddenly woke up.
'What?' he said, blinking and frowning at his interlocutor. 'What?'
Then breaking away, he dashed up the stairs, two steps at a time.
Mr Scogan
ran to the foot of the stairs and called up after him. 'It makes no difference, none whatever. Life is gay all the same, always, under
whatever circumstances - under whatever circumstances,' he added, raising his
voice to a shout. But Denis was already
far out of hearing, and even if he had not been, his mind tonight was proof
against all the consolations of philosophy.
Mr Scogan replaced his pipe between his teeth and resumed his meditative
pacing. 'Under any circumstances,' he
repeated to himself. It was
ungrammatical to begin with; was it true?
And is life really its own reward?
He wondered. When his pipe had
burned itself to its stinking conclusion he took a drink of gin and went to
bed. In ten minutes he was deeply,
innocently asleep.
Denis had
mechanically undressed and, clad in those flowered silk pyjamas of which he was
so justly proud, was lying face downwards on his bed. Time passed.
When at last he looked up, the candle which he had left alight at his
bedside had burned down almost to the socket.
He looked at his watch; it was nearly half-past one. His head ached, his dry, sleepless eyes felt
as though they had been bruised from behind, and the blood was beating within
his ears a loud arterial drum. He got
up, opened the door, tiptoed noiselessly along the passage, and began to mount
the stairs towards the higher floors.
Arrived at the servants' quarters, under the roof, he hesitated, then
turning to the right he opened a little door at the end of the corridor. Within was a pitch-dark cupboard-like
boxroom, hot, stuffy, and smelling of dust and old leather. He advanced cautiously into the blackness,
groping with his hands. It was from this
den that the ladder went up to the leads of the western tower. He found the ladder, and set his feet on the
rungs; noiselessly, he lifted the trapdoor above his head; the moonlit sky was
over him, he breathed the fresh, cool air of the night. In a moment he was standing on the leads,
gazing out over the dim, colourless landscape, looking perpendicularly down at
the terrace seventy feet below.
Why had he
climbed up to this high, desolate place?
Was it to look at the moon? Was
it to commit suicide? As yet he hardly
knew. Death - the tears came into his
eyes when he thought of it. His misery assumed
a certain solemnity; he was lifted up on the wings of a kind of
exaltation. It was a mood in which he
might have done almost anything, however foolish. He advanced towards the farther parapet; the
drop was sheer there and uninterrupted.
A good leap, and perhaps one might clear the narrow terrace and so crash
down yet another thirty feet to the sun-baked ground below. He paused at the corner of the tower, looking
now down into the shadowy gulf below, now up towards the rare stars and the
waning moon. He made a gesture with his
hand, muttered something, he could not afterwards remember what; but the fact
that he had said it aloud gave the utterance a peculiarly terrible
significance. Then he looked down once
more into the depths.
'What are
you doing, Denis?' questioned a voice from somewhere very close behind him.
Denis
uttered a cry of frightened surprise, and very nearly went over the parapet in
good earnest. His heart was beating
terribly, and he was pale when, recovering himself, he turned round in the
direction from which the voice had come.
'Are you
ill?'
In the
profound shadow that slept under the eastern parapet of the tower, he saw
something he had not previously noticed - an oblong shape. It was a mattress, and someone was lying on it. Since that first memorable night on the
tower, Mary had slept out every evening; it was a sort of manifestation of
fidelity.
'It gave me
a fright,' she went on, 'to wake up and see you wavering your arms and
gibbering there. What on earth were you
doing?'
Denis
laughed melodramatically. 'What,
indeed!' he said. If she hadn't woken up
as she did, he would be lying in pieces at the bottom of the tower; he was
certain of that, now.
'You hadn't
got designs on me, I hope?' Mary inquired, jumping too rapidly to conclusions.
'I didn't
know you were here,' said Denis, laughing more bitterly and artificially than
before.
'What is
the matter, Denis?'
He sat down
on the edge of the mattress, and for all reply went on laughing in the same frightful
and improbable tone.
An hour
later he was reposing with his head on Mary's knees, and she, with an
affectionate solicitude that was wholly maternal, was running her fingers
through his tangled hair. He had told
her everything, everything: his hopeless love, his jealousy, his despair, his
suicide - as it were providentially averted by her interposition. He had solemnly promised never to think of
self-destruction again. And now his soul
was floating in a sad serenity. It was
embalmed in the sympathy that Mary so generously poured. And it was not only in receiving sympathy
that Denis found serenity and even a kind of happiness; it was also in giving
it. For if he had told Mary everything
about his miseries, Mary, reacting to these confidences, had told him in return
everything, or very nearly everything, about her own.
'Poor
Mary!' He was very sorry for her. Still, she might have guessed that Ivor
wasn't precisely a monument of constancy.
'Well,' she
concluded, 'one must put a good face on it.'
She wanted to cry, but she wouldn't allow herself to be weak. There was a silence.
'Do you
think?' asked Denis hesitatingly - 'do you really think that she ... that
Gombauld ...'
'I'm sure
of it,' Mary answered decisively. There
was another long pause.
'I don't
know what to do about it,' he said at last, utterly dejected.
'You'd
better go away,' advised Mary. 'It's the
safest thing, and the most sensible.'
'But I've
arranged to stay here three weeks more.'
'You must
concoct an excuse.'
'I suppose
you're right.'
'I know I
am,' said Mary, who was recovering all her firm self-possession. 'You can't go on like this, can you?'
'No, I
can't go on like this,' he echoed.
Immensely
practical, Mary invented a plan of action.
Startlingly, in the darkness, the church clock struck three.
'You must
go to bed at once,' she said. 'I'd no
idea it was so late.'
Denis
clambered down the ladder, cautiously descended the creaking stairs. His room was dark; the candle had long ago
guttered to extinction. He got into bed
and fell asleep almost at once.
CHAPTER XXX
Denis had been called, but in spite of the parted
curtains he had dropped off again into that drowsy, dozy state when sleep
becomes a sensual pleasure almost consciously savoured. In this condition he might have remained for
another hour, if he had not been disturbed by a violent rapping at the door.
'Come in,'
he mumbled, without opening his eyes.
The latch clicked, a hand seized him by the shoulder and he was rudely
shaken.
'Get up, get
up!'
His eyelids
blinked painfully apart, and he saw Mary standing over him, bright-faced and
earnest.
'Get up!'
she repeated. 'You must go and send the
telegram. Don't you remember?'
'O
Lord!' He threw off the bedclothes; his
tormentor retired.
Denis
dressed as quickly as he could and ran up the road to the village post
office. Satisfaction glowed within him
as he returned. He had sent a long
telegram, which would in a few hours evoke an answer ordering him back to town
at once - on urgent business. It was an
act performed, a decisive step taken - and he so rarely took decisive steps; he
felt pleased with himself. It was with a
whetted appetite that he came in to breakfast.
'Good
morning,' said Mr Scogan. 'I hope you're
better.'
'Better?'
'You were
rather worried about the cosmos last night.'
Denis tried
to laugh away the impeachment. 'Was I?'
he lightly asked.
'I wish,'
said Mr Scogan, 'that I had nothing worse to prey on my mind. I should be a happy man.'
'One is
only happy in action,' Denis enunciated, thinking of the telegram.
He looked
out of the window. Great florid baroque
clouds floated high in the blue heaven.
A wind stirred among the trees, and their shaken foliage twinkled and
glittered like metal in the sun.
Everything seemed marvellously beautiful. At the thought that he would soon be leaving
all this beauty he felt a momentary pang; but he comforted himself be
recollecting how decisively he was acting.
'Action,'
he repeated aloud, and going over to the sideboard he helped himself to an
agreeable mixture of bacon and fish.
Breakfast
over, Denis repaired to the terrace, and sitting there, raised the enormous
bulwark of The Times against the possible assaults of Mr Scogan, who
showed an unappeased desire to go on talking about the Universe. Secure behind the crackling pages, he
meditated. In the light of this
brilliant morning the emotions of last night seemed somehow rather remote. And what if he had seen them embracing in the
moonlight? Perhaps it didn't mean much after
all. And even if it did, why shouldn't
he stay? He felt strong enough to stay,
strong enough to be aloof, disinterested, a mere friendly acquaintance. And even if he weren't strong enough ...
'What time
do you think the telegram will arrive?' asked Mary suddenly, thrusting upon him
over the top of the paper.
Denis
started guiltily. 'I don't know at all,'
he said.
'I was only
wondering,' said Mary, 'because there's a very good train at 3.27 No flowers.... Mary was gone. No, he was blowed if he'd let himself be
hurried down to the Necropolis like this.
He was blowed. The sight of Mr
Scogan looking out, with a hungry expression, from the drawing-room window made
him precipitately hoist The Times once more. For a long while it kept it hoisted. Lowering it at last to take another cautious
peep at his surroundings, he found himself, with what astonishment! confronted
by Anne's faint, amused, malicious smile.
She was standing before him, - the woman who was a tree, - the swaying
grace of her movement arrested in a pose that seemed itself a movement.
'How long
have you been standing there?' he asked, when he had done gaping at her.
'Oh, about
half an hour, I suppose,' she said airily.
'You were so very deep in your paper - head over ears - I didn't like to
disturb you.'
'You look
lovely this morning,' Denis exclaimed.
It was the first time he had ever had the courage to utter a personal
remark of the kind.
Anne held
up her hand as though to ward off a blow.
'Don't bludgeon me, please.' She
sat down on the bench beside him. He was
a nice boy, she thought, quite charming; and Gombauld's violent insistences
were really becoming rather tiresome.
'Why don't you wear white trousers?' she asked. 'I like you so much in white trousers.'
'They're at
the wash,' Denis replied rather curtly.
This white-trouser business was all in the wrong spirit. He was just preparing a scheme to manoeuvre
the conversation back to the proper path, when Mr Scogan suddenly darted out of
the house, crossed the terrace with clockwork rapidity, and came to a halt in
front of the bench on which they were seated.
'To go on
with our interesting conversation about the cosmos,' he began. 'I become more and more convinced that the
various parts of the concern are fundamentally discreet.... But would you mind,
Denis, moving a shade to your right?' He
wedged himself between them on the bench.
'And if you would shift a few inches to the left, my dear Anne.... Thank
you. Discrete, I think, was what I was
saying.'
'You were,'
said Anne. Denis was speechless.
They were
taking their after-luncheon coffee in the library when the telegram
arrived. Denis blushed guiltily as he
took the orange envelope from the salver and tore it open. 'Return at once. Urgent family business! Wouldn't it be best just to crumple the thing
up and put it in his pocket without saying anything about it? He looked up; Mary's large blue china eyes
were fixed upon him, seriously, penetratingly.
He blushed more deeply than ever, hesitated in a horribly uncertainty.
'What's
your telegram about?' Mary asked significantly.
He lost his
head. 'I'm afraid,' he mumbled, 'I'm
afraid this means I shall have to go back to town at once.' He frowned at the telegram ferociously.
'But that's
absurd, impossible,' cried Anne. She had
been standing by the window talking to Gombauld; but at Denis's words she came
swaying across the room towards him.
'It's
urgent,' he repeated desperately.
'But you've
only been here such a short time,' Anne protested.
'I know,'
he said, utterly miserable. Oh, if only
she could understand! Women were
supposed to have intuition.
'If he must
go, he must,' put in Mary firmly.
'Yes, I
must.' He looked at the telegram again
for inspiration. 'You see, it's urgent
family business,' he explained.
Priscilla
got up from her chair in some excitement.
'I had a distinct presentiment of this last night,' she said. 'A distinct presentiment.'
'A mere
coincidence, no doubt,' said Mary, brushing Mrs Wimbush out of the conversation. 'There's a very good train at 3.27.' She looked at the clock on the
mantelpiece. 'You'll have nice time to
pack.'
'I'll order
the motor at once.' Henry Wimbush rang
the bell. The funeral was well under
way. It was awful, awful.
'I'm wretched
you should be going,' said Anne.
Denis
turned towards her; she really did look wretched. He abandoned himself hopelessly,
fatalistically to his destiny. That was
what came of action, of doing something decisive. If only he'd just let things drift! If only ...
'I shall
miss your conversation,' said Mr Scogan.
Mary looked
at the clock again. 'I think perhaps you
ought to go and pack,' she said.
Obediently
Denis left the room. Never again, he
said to himself, never again would he do anything decisive. Camlet, West Bowlby, Knipswich for Timpany,
Spavin Delawarr; and then all the other stations; and then, finally,
London. The thought of the journey
appalled him. And what on earth was he
going to do in London when he got there?
He climbed wearily up the stairs.
It was time for him to lay himself in his coffin.
The car was
at the door - the hearse. The whole
party had assembled to see him go.
Goodbye, goodbye. Mechanically he
tapped the barometer than hung in the porch; the needle stirred perceptibly to
the left. A sudden smile lighted up his
lugubrious face.
'"It
stinks, and I am ready to depart,"' he said, quoting Landor with an
exquisite aptness. He looked quickly
round from face to face. Nobody had
noticed. He climbed into the hearse.