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THE day broke gray and dull. The clouds hung heavily, and there
was a rawness in the air that suggested snow. A woman servant
came into a room in which a child was sleeping and drew the
curtains. She glanced mechanically at the house opposite, a
stucco house with a portico, and went to the child's bed.
"Wake up, Philip," she said.
She pulled down the bed-clothes, took him in her arms, and
carried him downstairs. He was only half awake.
"Your mother wants you," she said.
She opened the door of a room on the floor below and took the
child over to a bed in which a woman was lying. It was his
mother. She stretched out her arms, and the child nestled by her
side. He did not ask why he had been awakened. The woman kissed
his eyes, and with thin, small hands felt the warm body through
his white flannel nightgown. She pressed him closer to herself.
"Are you sleepy, darling?" she said.
Her voice was so weak that it seemed to come already from a
great distance. The child did not answer, but smiled
comfortably. He was very happy in the large, warm bed, with
those soft arms about him. He tried to make himself smaller
still as he cuddled up against his mother, and he kissed her
sleepily. In a moment he closed his eyes and was fast asleep.
The doctor came forwards and stood by the bed-side.
"Oh, don't take him away yet," she moaned.
The doctor, without answering, looked at her gravely. Knowing
she would not be allowed to keep the child much longer, the
woman kissed him again; and she passed her hand down his body
till she came to his feet; she held the right foot in her hand
and felt the five small toes; and then slowly passed her hand
over the left one. She gave a sob.
"What's the matter?" said the doctor. "You're tired."
She shook her head, unable to speak, and the tears rolled down
her cheeks. The doctor bent down.
"Let me take him."
She was too weak to resist his wish, and she gave the child up.
The doctor handed him back to his nurse.
"You'd better put him back in his own bed."
"Very well, sir." The little boy, still sleeping, was taken
away. His mother sobbed now broken-heartedly.
"What will happen to him, poor child?"
The monthly nurse tried to quiet her, and presently, from
exhaustion, the crying ceased. The doctor walked to a table on
the other side of the room, upon which, under a towel, lay the
body of a still-born child. He lifted the towel and looked. He
was hidden from the bed by a screen, but the woman guessed what
he was doing.
"Was it a girl or a boy?" she whispered to the nurse.
"Another boy."
The woman did not answer. In a moment the child's nurse came
back. She approached the bed.
"Master Philip never woke up," she said. There was a pause. Then
the doctor felt his patient's pulse once more.
"I don't think there's anything I can do just now," he said.
"I'll call again after breakfast."
"I'll show you out, sir," said the child's nurse.
They walked downstairs in silence. In the hall the doctor
stopped."
You've sent for Mrs. Carey's brother-in-law, haven't you?"
"Yes, sir."
"D'you know at what time he'll be here?"
"No, sir, I'm expecting a telegram."
"What about the little boy? I should think he'd be better out of
the way."
"Miss Watkin said she'd take him, sir."
"Who's she?"
"She's his godmother, sir. D'you think Mrs. Carey will get over
it, sir?"
IT was a week later. Philip was sitting on the floor in the
drawing-room at Miss Watkin's house in Onslow gardens. He was an
only child and used to amusing himself. The room was filled with
massive furniture, and on each of the sofas were three big
cushions. There was a cushion too in each arm-chair. All these
he had taken and, with the help of the gilt rout chairs, light
and easy to move, had made an elaborate cave in which he could
hide himself from the Red Indians who were lurking behind the
curtains. He put his ear to the floor and listened to the herd
of buffaloes that raced across the prairie. Presently, hearing
the door open, he held his breath so that he might not be
discovered; but a violent hand piled away a chair and the
cushions fell down.
"You naughty boy, Miss Watkin _will_ be cross with you."
"Hulloa, Emma!" he said.
The nurse bent down and kissed him, then began to shake out the
cushions, and put them back in their places.
"Am I to come home?" he asked. "Yes, I've come to fetch you."
"You've got a new dress on."
It was in eighteen-eighty-five, and she wore a bustle. Her gown
was of black velvet, with tight sleeves and sloping shoulders,
and the skirt had three large flounces. She wore a black bonnet
with velvet strings. She hesitated. The question she had
expected did not come, and so she could not give the answer she
had prepared.
"Aren't you going to ask how your mamma is?" she said at length.
"Oh, I forgot. How is mamma?"
Now she was ready.
"Your mamma is quite well and happy."
"Oh, I am glad."
"Your mamma's gone away. You won't ever see her any more."
Philip did not know what she meant.
"Why not?"
"Your mamma's in heaven."
She began to cry, and Philip, though he did not quite under-
stand, cried too. Emma was a tall, big-boned woman, with fair
hair and large features. She came from Devonshire and,
notwithstanding her many years of service in London, had never
lost the breadth of her accent. Her tears increased her emotion,
and she pressed the little boy to her heart. She felt vaguely
the pity of that child deprived of the only love in the world
that is quite unselfish. It seemed dreadful that he must be
handed over to strangers. But in a little while she pulled
herself together.
"Your Uncle William is waiting in to see you," she said. "Go and
say good-bye to Miss Watkin, and we'll go home."
"I don't want to say good-bye," he answered, instinctively
anxious to hide his tears.
"Very well, run upstairs and get your hat."
He fetched it, and when he came down Emma was waiting for him in
the hall. He heard the sound of voices in the study behind the
dining-room. He paused. He knew that Miss Watkin and her sister
were talking to friends, and it seemed to him--he was nine years
old--that if he went in they would be sorry for him.
"I think I'll go and say good-bye to Miss Watkin."
"I think you'd better," said Emma.
"Go in and tell them I'm coming," he said.
He wished to make the most of his opportunity. Emma knocked at
the door and walked in. He heard her speak.
"Master Philip wants to say good-bye to you, miss."
There was a sudden hush of the conversation, and Philip limped
in. Henrietta Watkin was a stout woman, with a red face and dyed
hair. In those days to dye the hair excited comment, and Philip
had heard much gossip at home when his godmother's changed
colour. She lived with an elder sister, who had resigned herself
contentedly to old age. Two ladies, whom Philip did not know,
were calling, and they looked at him curiously.
"My poor child," said Miss Watkin, opening her arms.
She began to cry. Philip understood now why she had not been in
to luncheon and why she wore a black dress. She could not speak.
"I've got to go home," said Philip, at last.
He disengaged himself from Miss Watkin's arms, and she kissed
him again. Then he went to her sister and bade her good-bye too.
One of the strange ladies asked if she might kiss him, and he
gravely gave her permission. Though crying, he keenly enjoyed
the sensation he was causing; he would have been glad to stay a
little longer to be made much of, but felt they expected him to
go, so he said that Emma was waiting for him. He went out of the
room. Emma had gone downstairs to speak with a friend in the
basement, and he waited for her on the landing. He heard
Henrietta Watkin's voice.
"His mother was my greatest friend. I can't bear to think that
she's dead."
"You oughtn't to have gone to the funeral, Henrietta," said her
sister. "I knew it would upset you."
Then one of the strangers spoke.
"Poor little boy, it's dreadful to think of him quite alone in
the world. I see he limps."
"Yes, he's got a club-foot. It was such a grief to his mother."
Then Emma came back. They called a hansom, and she told the
driver where to go.
WHEN they reached the house Mrs. Carey had died in--it was in a
dreary, respectable street between Notting Hill Gate and High
Street, Kensington--Emma led Philip into the drawing-room. His
uncle was writing letters of thanks for the wreaths which had
been sent. One of them, which had arrived too late for the
funeral, lay in its cardboard box on the hall-table.
"Here's Master Philip," said Emma.
Mr. Carey stood up slowly and shook hands with the little boy.
Then on second thoughts he bent down and kissed his forehead. He
was a man of somewhat less than average height, inclined to
corpulence, with his hair, worn long, arranged over the scalp so
as to conceal his baldness. He was clean-shaven. His features
were regular, and it was possible to imagine that in his youth
he had been good-looking. On his watch-chain he wore a gold
cross.
"You're going to live with me now, Philip," said Mr. Carey.
"Shall you like that?"
Two years before Philip had been sent down to stay at the
vicarage after an attack of chicken-pox; but there remained with
him a recollection of an attic and a large garden rather than of
his uncle and aunt.
"Yes."
"You must look upon me and your Aunt Louisa as your father and
mother."
The child's mouth trembled a little, he reddened, but did not
answer.
"Your dear mother left you in my charge."
Mr. Carey had no great ease in expressing himself. When the news
came that his sister-in-law was dying, he set off at once for
London, but on the way thought of nothing but the disturbance in
his life that would be caused if her death forced him to
undertake the care of her son. He was well over fifty, and his
wife, to whom he had been married for thirty years, was
childless; he did not look forward with any pleasure to the
presence of a small boy who might be noisy and rough. He had
never much liked his sister-in-law.
"I'm going to take you down to Blackstable tomorrow," he said.
"With Emma?"
The child put his hand in hers, and she pressed it.
"I'm afraid Emma must go away," said Mr. Carey.
"But I want Emma to come with me."
Philip began to cry, and the nurse could not help crying too.
Mr. Carey looked at them helplessly.
"I think you'd better leave me alone with Master Philip for a
moment."
"Very good, sir."
Though Philip clung to her, she released herself gently. Mr.
Carey took the boy on his knee and put his arm round him.
"You mustn't cry," he said. "You're too old to have a nurse now.
We must see about sending you to school."
"I want Emma to come with me," the child repeated.
"It costs too much money, Philip. Your father didn't leave very
much, and I don't know what's become of it. You must look at
every penny you spend."
Mr. Carey had called the day before on the family solicitor.
Philip's father was a surgeon in good practice, and his hospital
appointments suggested an established position; so that it was
a surprise on his sudden death from blood-poisoning to find that
he had left his widow little more than his life insurance and
what could be got for the lease of their house in Bruton Street.
This was six months ago; and Mrs. Carey, already in delicate
health, finding herself with child, had lost her head and
accepted for the lease the first offer that was made. She stored
her furniture, and, at a rent which the parson thought
outrageous, took a furnished house for a year, so that she might
suffer from no inconvenience till her child was born. But she
had never been used to the management of money, and was unable
to adapt her expenditure to her altered circumstances. The
little she had slipped through her fingers in one way and
another, so that now, when all expenses were paid, not much more
than two thousand pounds remained to support the boy till he was
able to earn his own living. It was impossible to explain all
this to Philip and he was sobbing still.
"You'd better go to Emma," Mr. Carey said, feeling that she
could console the child better than anyone.
Without a word Philip slipped off his uncle's knee, but Mr.
Carey stopped him."
We must go tomorrow, because on Saturday I've got to prepare my
sermon, and you must tell Emma to get your things ready today.
You can bring all your toys. And if you want anything to
remember your father and mother by you can take one thing for
each of them. Everything else is going to be sold."
The boy slipped out of the room. Mr. Carey was unused to work,
and he turned to his correspondence with resentment. On one side
of the desk was a bundle of bills, and these filled him with
irritation. One especially seemed preposterous. Immediately
after Mrs. Carey's death Emma had ordered from the florist
masses of white flowers for the room in which the dead woman
lay. It was sheer waste of money. Emma took far too much upon
herself. Even if there had been no financial necessity, he would
have dismissed her.
But Philip went to her, and hid his face in her bosom, and wept
as though his heart would break. And she, feeling that he was
almost her own son--she had taken him when he was a month
old--consoled him with soft words. She promised that she would
come and see him sometimes, and that she would never forget him;
and she told him about the country he was going to and about her
own home in Devonshire--her father kept a turnpike on the
high-road that led to Exeter, and there were pigs in the sty,
and there was a cow, and the cow had just had a calf--till
Philip forgot his tears and grew excited at the thought of his
approaching journey. Presently she put him down, for there was
much to be done, and he helped her to lay out his clothes on the
bed. She sent him into the nursery to gather up his toys, and in
a little while he was playing happily.
But at last he grew tired of being alone and went back to the
bed-room, in which Emma was now putting his things into a big
tin box; he remembered then that his uncle had said he might
take something to remember his father and mother by. He told
Emma and asked her what he should take.
"You'd better go into the drawing-room and see what you fancy."
"Uncle William's there."
"Never mind that. They're your own things now."
Philip went downstairs slowly and found the door open. Mr. Carey
had left the room. Philip walked slowly round. They had been in
the house so short a time that there was little in it that had
a particular interest to him. It was a stranger's room, and
Philip saw nothing that struck his fancy. But he knew which were
his mother's things and which belonged to the landlord, and
presently fixed on a little clock that he had once heard his
mother say she liked. With this he walked again rather
disconsolately upstairs. Outside the door of his mother's
bed-room he stopped and listened. Though no one had told him not
to go in, he had a feeling that it would be wrong to do so; he
was a little frightened, and his heart beat uncomfortably; but
at the same time something impelled him to turn the handle. He
turned it very gently, as if to prevent anyone within from
hearing, and then slowly pushed the door open. He stood on the
threshold for a moment before he had the courage to enter. He
was not frightened now, but it seemed strange. He closed the
door behind him. The blinds were drawn, and the room, in the
cold light of a January afternoon, was dark. On the
dressing-table were Mrs. Carey's brushes and the hand mirror. In
a little tray were hairpins. There was a photograph of himself
on the chimney-piece and one of his father. He had often been in
the room when his mother was not in it, but now it seemed
different. There was something curious in the look of the
chairs. The bed was made as though someone were going to sleep
in it that night, and in a case on the pillow was a night-dress.
Philip opened a large cupboard filled with dresses and, stepping
in, took as many of them as he could in his arms and buried his
face in them. They smelt of the scent his mother used. Then he
pulled open the drawers, filled with his mother's things, and
looked at them: there were lavender bags among the linen, and
their scent was fresh and pleasant. The strangeness of the room
left it, and it seemed to him that his mother had just gone out
for a walk. She would be in presently and would come upstairs to
have nursery tea with him. And he seemed to feel her kiss on his
lips.
It was not true that he would never see her again. It was not
true simply because it was impossible. He climbed up on the bed
and put his head on the pillow. He lay there quite still.
PHILIP parted from Emma with tears, but the journey to
Blackstable amused him, and, when they arrived, he was resigned
and cheerful. Blackstable was sixty miles from London. Giving
their luggage to a porter, Mr. Carey set out to walk with Philip
to the vicarage; it took them little more than five minutes,
and, when they reached it, Philip suddenly remembered the gate.
It was red and five-barred: it swung both ways on easy hinges;
and it was possible, though forbidden, to swing backwards and
forwards on it. They walked through the garden to the
front-door. This was only used by visitors and on Sundays, and
on special occasions, as when the Vicar went up to London or
came back. The traffic of the house took place through a
side-door, and there was a back door as well for the gardener
and for beggars and tramps. It was a fairly large house of
yellow brick, with a red roof, built about five and twenty years
before in an ecclesiastical style. The front-door was like a
church porch, and the drawing-room windows were gothic.
Mrs. Carey, knowing by what train they were coming, waited in
the drawing-room and listened for the click of the gate. When
she heard it she went to the door.
"There's Aunt Louisa," said Mr. Carey, when he saw her. "Run and
give her a kiss."
Philip started to run, awkwardly, trailing his club-foot, and
then stopped. Mrs. Carey was a little, shrivelled woman of the
same age as her husband, with a face extraordinarily filled with
deep wrinkles, and pale blue eyes. Her gray hair was arranged in
ringlets according to the fashion of her youth. She wore a black
dress, and her only ornament was a gold chain, from which hung
a cross. She had a shy manner and a gentle voice.
"Did you walk, William?" she said, almost reproachfully, as she
kissed her husband.
"I didn't think of it," he answered, with a glance at his
nephew.
"It didn't hurt you to walk, Philip, did it?" she asked the
child.
"No. I always walk."
He was a little surprised at their conversation. Aunt Louisa
told him to come in, and they entered the hall. It was paved
with red and yellow tiles, on which alternately were a Greek
Cross and the Lamb of God. An imposing staircase led out of the
hall. It was of polished pine, with a peculiar smell, and had
been put in because fortunately, when the church was reseated,
enough wood remained over. The balusters were decorated with
emblems of the Four Evangelists.
"I've had the stove lighted as I thought you'd be cold after
your journey," said Mrs. Carey.
It was a large black stove that stood in the hall and was only
lighted if the weather was very bad and the Vicar had a cold. It
was not lighted if Mrs. Carey had a cold. Coal was expensive.
Besides, Mary Ann, the maid, didn't like fires all over the
place. If they wanted all them fires they must keep a second
girl. In the winter Mr. and Mrs. Carey lived in the dining-room
so that one fire should do, and in the summer they could not get
out of the habit, so the drawing-room was used only by Mr. Carey
on Sunday afternoons for his nap. But every Saturday he had a
fire in the study so that he could write his sermon.
Aunt Louisa took Philip upstairs and showed him into a tiny
bed-room that looked out on the drive. Immediately in front of
the window was a large tree, which Philip remembered now because
the branches were so low that it was possible to climb quite
high up it.
"A small room for a small boy," said Mrs. Carey. "You won't be
frightened at sleeping alone?"
"Oh, no."
On his first visit to the vicarage he had come with his nurse,
and Mrs. Carey had had little to do with him. She looked at him
now with some uncertainty.
"Can you wash your own hands, or shall I wash them for you?"
"I can wash myself," he answered firmly.
"Well, I shall look at them when you come down to tea," said
Mrs. Carey.
She knew nothing about children. After it was settled that
Philip should come down to Blackstable, Mrs. Carey had thought
much how she should treat him; she was anxious to do her duty;
but now he was there she found herself just as shy of him as he
was of her. She hoped he would not be noisy and rough, because
her husband did not like rough and noisy boys. Mrs. Carey made
an excuse to leave Philip alone, but in a moment came back and
knocked at the door; she asked him, without coming in, if he
could pour out the water himself. Then she went downstairs and
rang the bell for tea.
The dining-room, large and well-proportioned, had windows on two
sides of it, with heavy curtains of red rep; there was a big
table in the middle; and at one end an imposing mahogany
sideboard with a looking-glass in it. In one corner stood a
harmonium. On each side of the fireplace were chairs covered in
stamped leather, each with an antimacassar; one had arms and was
called the husband, and the other had none and was called the
wife. Mrs. Carey never sat in the arm-chair: she said she
preferred a chair that was not too comfortable; there was always
a lot to do, and if her chair had had arms she might not be so
ready to leave it.
Mr. Carey was making up the fire when Philip came in, and he
pointed out to his nephew that there were two pokers. One was
large and bright and polished and unused, and was called the
Vicar; and the other, which was much smaller and had evidently
passed through many fires, was called the Curate.
"What are we waiting for?" said Mr. Carey.
"I told Mary Ann to make you an egg. I thought you'd be hungry
after your journey."
Mrs. Carey thought the journey from London to Blackstable very
tiring. She seldom travelled herself, for the living was only
three hundred a year, and, when her husband wanted a holiday,
since there was not money for two, he went by himself. He was
very fond of Church Congresses and usually managed to go up to
London once a year; and once he had been to Paris for the
exhibition, and two or three times to Switzerland. Mary Ann
brought in the egg, and they sat down. The chair was much too
low for Philip, and for a moment neither Mr. Carey nor his wife
knew what to do.
"I'll put some books under him," said Mary Ann.
She took from the top of the harmonium the large Bible and the
prayer-book from which the Vicar was accustomed to read prayers,
and put them on Philip's chair.
"Oh, William, he can't sit on the Bible," said Mrs. Carey, in a
shocked tone. "Couldn't you get him some books out of the
study?"
Mr. Carey considered the question for an instant.
"I don't think it matters this once if you put the prayer-book
on the top, Mary Ann," he said. "The book of Common Prayer is
the composition of men like ourselves. It has no claim to divine
authorship."
"I hadn't thought of that, William," said Aunt Louisa.
Philip perched himself on the books, and the Vicar, having said
grace, cut the top off his egg.
"There," he said, handing it to Philip, "you can eat my top if
you like."
Philip would have liked an egg to himself, but he was not
offered one, so took what he could.
"How have the chickens been laying since I went away?" asked the
Vicar.
"Oh, they've been dreadful, only one or two a day."
"How did you like that top, Philip?" asked his uncle.
"Very much, thank you."
"You shall have another one on Sunday afternoon."
Mr. Carey always had a boiled egg at tea on Sunday, so that he
might be fortified for the evening service.
PHILIP came gradually to know the people he was to live with,
and by fragments of conversation, some of it not meant for his
ears, learned a good deal both about himself and about his dead
parents. Philip's father had been much younger than the Vicar of
Blackstable. After a brilliant career at St. Luke's Hospital he
was put on the staff, and presently began to earn money in
considerable sums. He spent it freely. When the parson set about
restoring his church and asked his brother for a subscription,
he was surprised by receiving a couple of hundred pounds: Mr.
Carey, thrifty by inclination and economical by necessity,
accepted it with mingled feelings; he was envious of his brother
because he could afford to give so much, pleased for the sake of
his church, and vaguely irritated by a generosity which seemed
almost ostentatious. Then Henry Carey married a patient, a
beautiful girl but penniless, an orphan with no near relations,
but of good family; and there was an array of fine friends at
the wedding. The parson, on his visits to her when he came to
London, held himself with reserve. He felt shy with her and in
his heart he resented her great beauty: she dressed more
magnificently than became the wife of a hardworking surgeon; and
the charming furniture of her house, the flowers among which she
lived even in winter, suggested an extravagance which he
deplored. He heard her talk of entertainments she was going to;
and, as he told his wife on getting home again, it was
impossible to accept hospitality without making some return. He
had seen grapes in the dining-room that must have cost at least
eight shillings a pound; and at luncheon he had been given
asparagus two months before it was ready in the vicarage garden.
Now all he had anticipated was come to pass: the Vicar felt the
satisfaction of the prophet who saw fire and brimstone consume
the city which would not mend its way to his warning. Poor
Philip was practically penniless, and what was the good of his
mother's fine friends now? He heard that his father's
extravagance was really criminal, and it was a mercy that
Providence had seen fit to take his dear mother to itself: she
had no more idea of money than a child.
When Philip had been a week at Blackstable an incident happened
which seemed to irritate his uncle very much. One morning he
found on the breakfast table a small packet which had been sent
on by post from the late Mrs. Carey's house in London. It was
addressed to her. When the parson opened it he found a dozen
photographs of Mrs. Carey. They showed the head and shoulders
only, and her hair was more plainly done than usual, low on the
forehead, which gave her an unusual look; the face was thin and
worn, but no illness could impair the beauty of her features.
There was in the large dark eyes a sadness which Philip did not
remember. The first sight of the dead woman gave Mr. Carey a
little shock, but this was quickly followed by perplexity. The
photographs seemed quite recent, and he could not imagine who
had ordered them.
"D'you know anything about these, Philip?" he asked.
"I remember mamma said she'd been taken," he answered. "Miss
Watkin scolded her.... She said: I wanted the boy to have
something to remember me by when he grows up."
Mr. Carey looked at Philip for an instant. The child spoke in a
clear treble. He recalled the words, but they meant nothing to
him.
"You'd better take one of the photographs and keep it in your
room," said Mr. Carey. "I'll put the others away."
He sent one to Miss Watkin, and she wrote and explained how they
came to be taken.
One day Mrs. Carey was lying in bed, but she was feeling a
little better than usual, and the doctor in the morning had
seemed hopeful; Emma had taken the child out, and the maids were
downstairs in the basement: suddenly Mrs. Carey felt desperately
alone in the world. A great fear seized her that she would not
recover from the confinement which she was expecting in a
fortnight. Her son was nine years old. How could he be expected
to remember her? She could not bear to think that he would grow
up and forget, forget her utterly; and she had loved him so
passionately, because he was weakly and deformed, and because he
was her child. She had no photographs of herself taken since her
marriage, and that was ten years before. She wanted her son to
know what she looked like at the end. He could not forget her
then, not forget utterly. She knew that if she called her maid
and told her she wanted to get up, the maid would prevent her,
and perhaps send for the doctor, and she had not the strength
now to struggle or argue. She got out of bed and began to dress
herself. She had been on her back so long that her legs gave way
beneath her, and then the soles of her feet tingled so that she
could hardly bear to put them to the ground. But she went on.
She was unused to doing her own hair and, when she raised her
arms and began to brush it, she felt faint. She could never do
it as her maid did. It was beautiful hair, very fine, and of a
deep rich gold. Her eyebrows were straight and dark. She put on
a black skirt, but chose the bodice of the evening dress which
she liked best: it was of a white damask which was fashionable
in those days. She looked at herself in the glass. Her face was
very pale, but her skin was clear: she had never had much
colour, and this had always made the redness of her beautiful
mouth emphatic. She could not restrain a sob. But she could not
afford to be sorry for herself; she was feeling already
desperately tired; and she put on the furs which Henry had given
her the Christmas before--she had been so proud of them and so
happy then--and slipped downstairs with beating heart. She got
safely out of the house and drove to a photographer. She paid
for a dozen photographs. She was obliged to ask for a glass of
water in the middle of the sitting; and the assistant, seeing
she was ill, suggested that she should come another day, but she
insisted on staying till the end. At last it was finished, and
she drove back again to the dingy little house in Kensington
which she hated with all her heart. It was a horrible house to
die in.
She found the front door open, and when she drove up the maid
and Emma ran down the steps to help her. They had been
frightened when they found her room empty. At first they thought
she must have gone to Miss Watkin, and the cook was sent round.
Miss Watkin came back with her and was waiting anxiously in the
drawing-room. She came downstairs now full of anxiety and
reproaches; but the exertion had been more than Mrs. Carey was
fit for, and when the occasion for firmness no longer existed
she gave way. She fell heavily into Emma's arms and was carried
upstairs. She remained unconscious for a time that seemed
incredibly long to those that watched her, and the doctor,
hurriedly sent for, did not come. It was next day, when she was
a little better, that Miss Watkin got some explanation out of
her. Philip was playing on the floor of his mother's bed-room,
and neither of the ladies paid attention to him. He only
understood vaguely what they were talking about, and he could
not have said why those words remained in his memory.
"I wanted the boy to have something to remember me by when he
grows up."
"I can't make out why she ordered a dozen," said Mr. Carey. "Two
would have done."
Soon after breakfast Mary Ann brought in _The Times_. Mr.
Carey shared it with two neighbours. He had it from ten till
one, when the gardener took it over to Mr. Ellis at the Limes,
with whom it remained till seven; then it was taken to Miss
Brooks at the Manor House, who, since she got it late, had the
advantage of keeping it. In summer Mrs. Carey, when she was
making jam, often asked her for a copy to cover the pots with.
When the Vicar settled down to his paper his wife put on her
bonnet and went out to do the shopping. Philip accompanied her.
Blackstable was a fishing village. It consisted of a high street
in which were the shops, the bank, the doctor's house, and the
houses of two or three coalship owners; round the little harbor
were shabby streets in which lived fishermen and poor people;
but since they went to chapel they were of no account. When Mrs.
Carey passed the dissenting ministers in the street she stepped
over to the other side to avoid meeting them, but if there was
not time for this fixed her eyes on the pavement. It was a
scandal to which the Vicar had never resigned himself that there
were three chapels in the High Street: he could not help feeling
that the law should have stepped in to prevent their erection.
Shopping in Blackstable was not a simple matter; for dissent,
helped by the fact that the parish church was two miles from the
town, was very common; and it was necessary to deal only with
churchgoers; Mrs. Carey knew perfectly that the vicarage custom
might make all the difference to a tradesman's faith. There were
two butchers who went to church, and they would not understand
that the Vicar could not deal with both of them at once; nor
were they satisfied with his simple plan of going for six months
to one and for six months to the other. The butcher who was not
sending meat to the vicarage constantly threatened not to come
to church, and the Vicar was sometimes obliged to make a threat:
it was very wrong of him not to come to church, but if he
carried iniquity further and actually went to chapel, then of
course, excellent as his meat was, Mr. Carey would be forced to
leave him for ever. Mrs. Carey often stopped at the bank to
deliver a message to Josiah Graves, the manager, who was
choir-master, treasurer, and churchwarden. He was a tall, thin
man with a sallow face and a long nose; his hair was very white,
and to Philip he seemed extremely old. He kept the parish
accounts, arranged the treats for the choir and the schools;
though there was no organ in the parish church, it was generally
considered (in Blackstable) that the choir he led was the best
in Kent; and when there was any ceremony, such as a visit from
the Bishop for confirmation or from the Rural Dean to preach at
the Harvest Thanksgiving, he made the necessary preparations.
But he had no hesitation in doing all manner of things without
more than a perfunctory consultation with the Vicar, and the
Vicar, though always ready to be saved trouble, much resented
the churchwarden's managing ways. He really seemed to look upon
himself as the most important person in the parish. Mr. Carey
constantly told his wife that if Josiah Graves did not take care
he would give him a good rap over the knuckles one day; but Mrs.
Carey advised him to bear with Josiah Graves: he meant well, and
it was not his fault if he was not quite a gentleman. The Vicar,
finding his comfort in the practice of a Christian virtue,
exercised forbearance; but he revenged himself by calling the
churchwarden Bismarck behind his back.
Once there had been a serious quarrel between the pair, and Mrs.
Carey still thought of that anxious time with dismay. The
Conservative candidate had announced his intention of addressing
a meeting at Blackstable; and Josiah Graves, having arranged
that it should take place in the Mission Hall, went to Mr. Carey
and told him that he hoped he would say a few words. It appeared
that the candidate had asked Josiah Graves to take the chair.
This was more than Mr. Carey could put up with. He had firm
views upon the respect which was due to the cloth, and it was
ridiculous for a churchwarden to take the chair at a meeting
when the Vicar was there. He reminded Josiah Graves that parson
meant person, that is, the vicar was the person of the parish.
Josiah Graves answered that he was the first to recognise the
dignity of the church, but this was a matter of politics, and in
his turn he reminded the Vicar that their Blessed Saviour had
enjoined upon them to render unto Caesar the things that were
Caesar's. To this Mr. Carey replied that the devil could quote
scripture to his purpose, himself had sole authority over the
Mission Hall, and if he were not asked to be chairman he would
refuse the use of it for a political meeting. Josiah Graves told
Mr. Carey that he might do as he chose, and for his part he
thought the Wesleyan Chapel would be an equally suitable place.
Then Mr. Carey said that if Josiah Graves set foot in what was
little better than a heathen temple he was not fit to be
churchwarden in a Christian parish. Josiah Graves thereupon
resigned all his offices, and that very evening sent to the
church for his cassock and surplice. His sister, Miss Graves,
who kept house for him, gave up her secretary-ship of the
Maternity Club, which provided the pregnant poor with flannel,
baby linen, coals, and five shillings. Mr. Carey said he was at
last master in his own house. But soon he found that he was
obliged to see to all sorts of things that he knew nothing
about; and Josiah Graves, after the first moment of irritation,
discovered that he had lost his chief interest in life. Mrs.
Carey and Miss Graves were much distressed by the quarrel; they
met after a discreet exchange of letters, and made up their
minds to put the matter right: they talked, one to her husband,
the other to her brother, from morning till night; and since
they were persuading these gentlemen to do what in their hearts
they wanted, after three weeks of anxiety a reconciliation was
effected. It was to both their interests, but they ascribed it
to a common love for their Redeemer. The meeting was held at the
Mission Hall, and the doctor was asked to be chairman. Mr. Carey
and Josiah Graves both made speeches.
When Mrs. Carey had finished her business with the banker, she
generally went upstairs to have a little chat with his sister;
and while the ladies talked of parish matters, the curate or the
new bonnet of Mrs. Wilson--Mr. Wilson was the richest man in
Blackstable, he was thought to have at least five hundred a
year, and he had married his cook--Philip sat demurely in the
stiff parlour, used only to receive visitors, and busied himself
with the restless movements of goldfish in a bowl. The windows
were never opened except to air the room for a few minutes in
the morning, and it had a stuffy smell which seemed to Philip to
have a mysterious connection with banking.
Then Mrs. Carey remembered that she had to go to the grocer, and
they continued their way. When the shopping was done they often
went down a side street of little houses, mostly of wood, in
which fishermen dwelt (and here and there a fisherman sat on his
doorstep mending his nets, and nets hung to dry upon the doors),
till they came to a small beach, shut in on each side by
warehouses, but with a view of the sea. Mrs. Carey stood for a
few minutes and looked at it, it was turbid and yellow, [and who
knows what thoughts passed through her mind?] while Philip
searched for flat stones to play ducks and drakes. Then they
walked slowly back. They looked into the post office to get the
right time, nodded to Mrs. Wigram the doctor's wife, who sat at
her window sewing, and so got home.
Dinner was at one o'clock; and on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday
it consisted of beef, roast, hashed, and minced, and on
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of mutton. On Sunday they ate one
of their own chickens. In the afternoon Philip did his lessons,
He was taught latin and mathematics by his uncle who knew
neither, and French and the piano by his aunt. Of French she was
ignorant, but she knew the piano well enough to accompany the
old-fashioned songs she had sung for thirty years. Uncle William
used to tell Philip that when he was a curate his wife had known
twelve songs by heart, which she could sing at a moment's notice
whenever she was asked. She often sang still when there was a
tea-party at the vicarage. There were few people whom the Careys
cared to ask there, and their parties consisted always of the
curate, Josiah Graves with his sister, Dr. Wigram and his wife.
After tea Miss Graves played one or two of Mendelssohn's
_Songs without Words_, and Mrs. Carey sang _When the Swallows
Homeward Fly_, or _Trot, Trot, My Pony._
But the Careys did not give tea-parties often; the preparations
upset them, and when their guests were gone they felt themselves
exhausted. They preferred to have tea by themselves, and after
tea they played backgammon. Mrs. Carey arranged that her husband
should win, because he did not like losing. They had cold supper
at eight. It was a scrappy meal because Mary Ann resented
getting anything ready after tea, and Mrs. Carey helped to clear
away. Mrs. Carey seldom eat{sic} more than bread and butter,
with a little stewed fruit to follow, but the Vicar had a slice
of cold meat. Immediately after supper Mrs. Carey rang the bell
for prayers, and then Philip went to bed. He rebelled against
being undressed by Mary Ann and after a while succeeded in
establishing his right to dress and undress himself. At nine
o'clock Mary Ann brought in the eggs and the plate. Mrs. Carey
wrote the date on each egg and put the number down in a book.
She then took the plate-basket on her arm and went upstairs. Mr.
Carey continued to read one of his old books, but as the clock
struck ten he got up, put out the lamps, and followed his wife
to bed.
When Philip arrived there was some difficulty in deciding on
which evening he should have his bath. It was never easy to get
plenty of hot water, since the kitchen boiler did not work, and
it was impossible for two persons to have a bath on the same
day. The only man who had a bathroom in Blackstable was Mr.
Wilson, and it was thought ostentatious of him. Mary Ann had her
bath in the kitchen on Monday night, because she liked to begin
the week clean. Uncle William could not have his on Saturday,
because he had a heavy day before him and he was always a little
tired after a bath, so he had it on Friday. Mrs. Carey had hers
on Thursday for the same reason. It looked as though Saturday
were naturally indicated for Philip, but Mary Ann said she
couldn't keep the fire up on Saturday night: what with all the
cooking on Sunday, having to make pastry and she didn't know
what all, she did not feel up to giving the boy his bath on
Saturday night; and it was quite clear that he could not bath
himself. Mrs. Carey was shy about bathing a boy, and of course
the Vicar had his sermon. But the Vicar insisted that Philip
should be clean and sweet for the lord's Day. Mary Ann said she
would rather go than be put upon--and after eighteen years she
didn't expect to have more work given her, and they might show
some consideration--and Philip said he didn't want anyone to
bath him, but could very well bath himself. This settled it.
Mary Ann said she was quite sure he wouldn't bath himself
properly, and rather than he should go dirty--and not because he
was going into the presence of the Lord, but because she
couldn't abide a boy who wasn't properly washed--she'd work
herself to the bone even if it was Saturday night.
SUNDAY was a day crowded with incident. Mr. Carey was accustomed
to say that he was the only man in his parish who worked seven
days a week.
The household got up half an hour earlier than usual. No lying
abed for a poor parson on the day of rest, Mr. Carey remarked as
Mary Ann knocked at the door punctually at eight. It took Mrs.
Carey longer to dress, and she got down to breakfast at nine, a
little breathless, only just before her husband. Mr. Carey's
boots stood in front of the fire to warm. Prayers were longer
than usual, and the breakfast more substantial. After breakfast
the Vicar cut thin slices of bread for the communion, and Philip
was privileged to cut off the crust. He was sent to the study to
fetch a marble paperweight, with which Mr. Carey pressed the
bread till it was thin and pulpy, and then it was cut into small
squares. The amount was regulated by the weather. On a very bad
day few people came to church, and on a very fine one, though
many came, few stayed for communion. There were most when it was
dry enough to make the walk to church pleasant, but not so fine
that people wanted to hurry away.
Then Mrs. Carey brought the communion plate out of the safe,
which stood in the pantry, and the Vicar polished it with a
chamois leather. At ten the fly drove up, and Mr. Carey got into
his boots. Mrs. Carey took several minutes to put on her bonnet,
during which the Vicar, in a voluminous cloak, stood in the hall
with just such an expression on his face as would have become an
early Christian about to be led into the arena. It was
extraordinary that after thirty years of marriage his wife could
not be ready in time on Sunday morning. At last she came, in
black satin; the Vicar did not like colours in a clergyman's
wife at any time, but on Sundays he was determined that she
should wear black; now and then, in conspiracy with Miss Graves,
she ventured a white feather or a pink rose in her bonnet, but
the Vicar insisted that it should disappear; he said he would
not go to church with the scarlet woman: Mrs. Carey sighed as a
woman but obeyed as a wife. They were about to step into the
carriage when the Vicar remembered that no one had given him his
egg. They knew that he must have an egg for his voice, there
were two women in the house, and no one had the least regard for
his comfort. Mrs. Carey scolded Mary Ann, and Mary Ann answered
that she could not think of everything. She hurried away to
fetch an egg, and Mrs. Carey beat it up in a glass of sherry.
The Vicar swallowed it at a gulp. The communion plate was stowed
in the carriage, and they set off.
The fly came from _The Red Lion_ and had a peculiar smell of
stale straw. They drove with both windows closed so that the
Vicar should not catch cold. The sexton was waiting at the porch
to take the communion plate, and while the Vicar went to the
vestry Mrs. Carey and Philip settled themselves in the vicarage
pew. Mrs. Carey placed in front of her the sixpenny bit she was
accustomed to put in the plate, and gave Philip threepence for
the same purpose. The church filled up gradually and the service
began.
Philip grew bored during the sermon, but if he fidgetted Mrs.
Carey put a gentle hand on his arm and looked at him
reproachfully. He regained interest when the final hymn was sung
and Mr. graves passed round with the plate.
When everyone had gone Mrs. Carey went into Miss graves' pew to
have a few words with her while they were waiting for the
gentlemen, and Philip went to the vestry. His uncle, the curate,
and Mr. graves were still in their surplices. Mr. Carey gave him
the remains of the consecrated bread and told him he might eat
it. He had been accustomed to eat it himself, as it seemed
blasphemous to throw it away, but Philip's keen appetite
relieved him from the duty. Then they counted the money. It
consisted of pennies, sixpences and threepenny bits. There were
always two single shillings, one put in the plate by the Vicar
and the other by Mr. graves; and sometimes there was a florin.
Mr. graves told the Vicar who had given this. It was always a
stranger to Blackstable, and Mr. Carey wondered who he was. But
Miss graves had observed the rash act and was able to tell Mrs.
Carey that the stranger came from London, was married and had
children. During the drive home Mrs. Carey passed the
information on, and the Vicar made up his mind to call on him
and ask for a subscription to the Additional Curates Society.
Mr. Carey asked if Philip had behaved properly; and Mrs. Carey
remarked that Mrs. Wigram had a new mantle, Mr. Cox was not in
church, and somebody thought that Miss Phillips was engaged.
When they reached the vicarage they all felt that they deserved
a substantial dinner.
When this was over Mrs. Carey went to her room to rest, and Mr.
Carey lay down on the sofa in the drawing-room for forty winks.
They had tea at five, and the Vicar ate an egg to support
himself for evensong. Mrs. Carey did not go to this so that Mary
Ann might, but she read the service through and the hymns. Mr.
Carey walked to church in the evening, and Philip limped along
by his side. The walk through the darkness along the country
road strangely impressed him, and the church with all its lights
in the distance, coming gradually nearer, seemed very friendly.
At first he was shy with his uncle, but little by little grew
used to him, and he would slip his hand in his uncle's and walk
more easily for the feeling of protection.
They had supper when they got home. Mr. Carey's slippers were
waiting for him on a footstool in front of the fire and by their
side Philip's, one the shoe of a small boy, the other misshapen
and odd. He was dreadfully tired when he went up to bed, and he
did not resist when Mary Ann undressed him. She kissed him after
she tucked him up, and he began to love her.
PHILIP had led always the solitary life of an only child, and
his loneliness at the vicarage was no greater than it had been
when his mother lived. He made friends with Mary Ann. She was a
chubby little person of thirty-five, the daughter of a
fisherman, and had come to the vicarage at eighteen; it was her
first place and she had no intention of leaving it; but she held
a possible marriage as a rod over the timid heads of her master
and mistress. Her father and mother lived in a little house off
Harbour Street, and she went to see them on her evenings out.
Her stories of the sea touched Philip's imagination, and the
narrow alleys round the harbour grew rich with the romance which
his young fancy lent them. One evening he asked whether he might
go home with her; but his aunt was afraid that he might catch
something, and his uncle said that evil communications corrupted
good manners. He disliked the fisher folk, who were rough,
uncouth, and went to chapel. But Philip was more comfortable in
the kitchen than in the dining-room, and, whenever he could, he
took his toys and played there. His aunt was not sorry. She did
not like disorder, and though she recognised that boys must be
expected to be untidy she preferred that he should make a mess
in the kitchen. If he fidgeted his uncle was apt to grow
restless and say it was high time he went to school. Mrs. Carey
thought Philip very young for this, and her heart went out to
the motherless child; but her attempts to gain his affection
were awkward, and the boy, feeling shy, received her
demonstrations with so much sullenness that she was mortified.
Sometimes she heard his shrill voice raised in laughter in the
kitchen, but when she went in, he grew suddenly silent, and he
flushed darkly when Mary Ann explained the joke. Mrs. Carey
could not see anything amusing in what she heard, and she smiled
with constraint.
"He seems happier with Mary Ann than with us, William," she
said, when she returned to her sewing.
"One can see he's been very badly brought up. He wants licking
into shape."
On the second Sunday after Philip arrived an unlucky incident
occurred. Mr. Carey had retired as usual after dinner for a
little snooze in the drawing-room, but he was in an irritable
mood and could not sleep. Josiah Graves that morning had
objected strongly to some candlesticks with which the Vicar had
adorned the altar. He had bought them second-hand in Tercanbury,
and he thought they looked very well. But Josiah graves said
they were popish. This was a taunt that always aroused the
Vicar. He had been at Oxford during the movement which ended in
the secession from the Established Church of Edward Manning, and
he felt a certain sympathy for the Church of Rome. He would
willingly have made the service more ornate than had been usual
in the low-church parish of Blackstable, and in his secret soul
he yearned for processions and lighted candles. He drew the line
at incense. He hated the word protestant. He called himself a
Catholic. He was accustomed to say that Papists required an
epithet, they were Roman Catholic; but the Church of England was
Catholic in the best, the fullest, and the noblest sense of the
term. He was pleased to think that his shaven face gave him the
look of a priest, and in his youth he had possessed an ascetic
air which added to the impression. He often related that on one
of his holidays in Boulogne, one of those holidays upon which
his wife for economy's sake did not accompany him, when he was
sitting in a church, the _cure_ had come up to him and invited
him to preach a sermon. He dismissed his curates when they
married, having decided views on the celibacy of the unbeneficed
clergy. But when at an election the Liberals had written on his
garden fence in large blue letters: This way to Rome, he had
been very angry, and threatened to prosecute the leaders of the
Liberal party in Blackstable. He made up his mind now that
nothing Josiah Graves said would induce him to remove the
candlesticks from the altar, and he muttered Bismarck to himself
once or twice irritably.
Suddenly he heard an unexpected noise. He pulled the
handkerchief off his face, got up from the sofa on which he was
lying, and went into the dining-room. Philip was seated on the
table with all his bricks around him. He had built a monstrous
castle, and some defect in the foundation had just brought the
structure down in noisy ruin.
"What are you doing with those bricks, Philip? You know you're
not allowed to play games on Sunday."
Philip stared at him for a moment with frightened eyes, and, as
his habit was, flushed deeply.
"I always used to play at home," he answered.
"I'm sure your dear mamma never allowed you to do such a wicked
thing as that."
Philip did not know it was wicked; but if it was, he did not
wish it to be supposed that his mother had consented to it. He
hung his head and did not answer.
"Don't you know it's very, very wicked to play on Sundays what
d'you suppose it's called the day of rest for? You're going to
church tonight, and how can you face your Maker when you've been
breaking one of His laws in the afternoon?"
Mr. Carey told him to put the bricks away at once, and stood
over him while Philip did so.
"You're a very naughty boy," he repeated. "Think of the grief
you're causing your poor mother in heaven."
Philip felt inclined to cry, but he had an instinctive
disinclination to letting other people see his tears, and he
clenched his teeth to prevent the sobs from escaping. Mr. Carey
sat down in his arm-chair and began to turn over the pages of a
book. Philip stood at the window. The vicarage was set back from
the highroad to Tercanbury, and from the dining-room one saw a
semicircular strip of lawn and then as far as the horizon green
fields. Sheep were grazing in them. The sky was forlorn and gray
Philip felt infinitely unhappy.
Presently Mary Ann came in to lay the tea, and Aunt Louisa
descended the stairs.
"Have you had a nice little nap, William?" she asked.
"No," he answered. "Philip made so much noise that I couldn't
sleep a wink."
This was not quite accurate, for he had been kept awake by his
own thoughts; and Philip, listening sullenly, reflected that he
had only made a noise once, and there was no reason why his
uncle should not have slept before or after. When Mrs. Carey
asked for an explanation the Vicar narrated the facts.
"He hasn't even said he was sorry," he finished.
"Oh, Philip, I'm sure you're sorry," said Mrs. Carey, anxious
that the child should not seem wickeder to his uncle than need
be.
Philip did not reply. He went on munching his bread and butter.
He did not know what power it was in him that prevented him from
making any expression of regret. He felt his ears tingling, he
was a little inclined to cry, but no word would issue from his
lips.
"You needn't make it worse by sulking," said Mr. Carey.
Tea was finished in silence. Mrs. Carey looked at Philip
surreptitiously now and then, but the Vicar elaborately ignored
him. When Philip saw his uncle go upstairs to get ready for
church he went into the hall and got his hat and coat, but when
the Vicar came downstairs and saw him, he said:
"I don't wish you to go to church tonight, Philip. I don't think
you're in a proper frame of mind to enter the House of God."
Philip did not say a word. He felt it was a deep humiliation
that was placed upon him, and his cheeks reddened. He stood
silently watching his uncle put on his broad hat and his
voluminous cloak. Mrs. Carey as usual went to the door to see
him off. Then she turned to Philip.
"Never mind, Philip, you won't be a naughty boy next Sunday,
will you, and then your uncle will take you to church with him
in the evening."
She took off his hat and coat, and led him into the dining-room.
"Shall you and I read the service together, Philip, and we'll
sing the hymns at the harmonium. Would you like that?"
Philip shook his head decidedly. Mrs. Carey was taken aback. If
he would not read the evening service with her she did not know
what to do with him.
"Then what would you like to do until your uncle comes back?"
she asked helplessly.
Philip broke his silence at last.
"I want to be left alone," he said.
"Philip, how can you say anything so unkind? Don't you know that
your uncle and I only want your good? Don't you love me at all?"
"I hate you. I wish you was dead."
Mrs. Carey gasped. He said the words so savagely that it gave
her quite a start. She had nothing to say. She sat down in her
husband's chair; and as she thought of her desire to love the
friendless, crippled boy and her eager wish that he should love
her--she was a barren woman and, even though it was clearly
God's will that she should be childless, she could scarcely bear
to look at little children sometimes, her heart ached so--the
tears rose to her eyes and one by one, slowly, rolled down her
cheeks. Philip watched her in amazement. She took out her
handkerchief, and now she cried without restraint. Suddenly
Philip realised that she was crying because of what he had said,
and he was sorry. He went up to her silently and kissed her. It
was the first kiss he had ever given her without being asked.
And the poor lady, so small in her black satin, shrivelled up
and sallow, with her funny corkscrew curls, took the little boy
on her lap and put her arms around him and wept as though her
heart would break. But her tears were partly tears of happiness,
for she felt that the strangeness between them was gone. She
loved him now with a new love because he had made her suffer.
ON the following Sunday, when the Vicar was making his
preparations to go into the drawing-room for his nap--all the
actions of his life were conducted with ceremony--and Mrs. Carey
was about to go upstairs, Philip asked:
"What shall I do if I'm not allowed to play?"
"Can't you sit still for once and be quiet?"
"I can't sit still till tea-time."
Mr. Carey looked out of the window, but it was cold and raw, and
he could not suggest that Philip should go into the garden."
I know what you can do. You can learn by heart the collect for
the day."
He took the prayer-book which was used for prayers from the
harmonium, and turned the pages till he came to the place he
wanted.
"It's not a long one. If you can say it without a mistake when
I come in to tea you shall have the top of my egg."
Mrs. Carey drew up Philip's chair to the dining-room table--they
had bought him a high chair by now--and placed the book in front
of him.
"The devil finds work for idle hands to do," said Mr. Carey.
He put some more coals on the fire so that there should be a
cheerful blaze when he came in to tea, and went into the
drawing-room. He loosened his collar, arranged the cushions, and
settled himself comfortably on the sofa. But thinking the
drawing-room a little chilly, Mrs. Carey brought him a rug from
the hall; she put it over his legs and tucked it round his feet.
She drew the blinds so that the light should not offend his
eyes, and since he had closed them already went out of the room
on tiptoe. The Vicar was at peace with himself today, and in ten
minutes he was asleep. He snored softly.
It was the Sixth Sunday after Epiphany, and the collect began
with the words: _O God, whose blessed Son was manifested that
he might destroy the works of the devil, and make us the sons of
God, and heirs of Eternal life_. Philip read it through. He
could make no sense of it. He began saying the words aloud to
himself, but many of them were unknown to him, and the
construction of the sentence was strange. He could not get more
than two lines in his head. And his attention was constantly
wandering: there were fruit trees trained on the walls of the
vicarage, and a long twig beat now and then against the
windowpane; sheep grazed stolidly in the field beyond the
garden. It seemed as though there were knots inside his brain.
Then panic seized him that he would not know the words by
tea-time, and he kept on whispering them to himself quickly; he
did not try to understand, but merely to get them parrot-like
into his memory.
Mrs. Carey could not sleep that afternoon, and by four o'clock
she was so wide awake that she came downstairs. She thought she
would hear Philip his collect so that he should make no mistakes
when he said it to his uncle. His uncle then would be pleased;
he would see that the boy's heart was in the right place. But
when Mrs. Carey came to the dining-room and was about to go in,
she heard a sound that made her stop suddenly. Her heart gave a
little jump. She turned away and quietly slipped out of the
front-door. She walked round the house till she came to the
dining-room window and then cautiously looked in. Philip was
still sitting on the chair she had put him in, but his head was
on the table buried in his arms, and he was sobbing desperately.
She saw the convulsive movement of his shoulders. Mrs. Carey was
frightened. A thing that had always struck her about the child
was that he seemed so collected. She had never seen him cry. And
now she realised that his calmness was some instinctive shame of
showing his fillings: he hid himself to weep.
Without thinking that her husband disliked being wakened
suddenly, she burst into the drawing-room.
"William, William," she said. "The boy's crying as though his
heart would break."
Mr. Carey sat up and disentangled himself from the rug about his
legs.
"What's he got to cry about?"
"I don't know.... Oh, William, we can't let the boy be unhappy.
D'you think it's our fault? If we'd had children we'd have known
what to do."
Mr. Carey looked at her in perplexity. He felt extraordinarily
helpless.
"He can't be crying because I gave him the collect to learn.
It's not more than ten lines."
"Don't you think I might take him some picture books to look at,
William? There are some of the Holy Land. There couldn't be
anything wrong in that."
"Very well, I don't mind."
Mrs. Carey went into the study. To collect books was Mr. Carey's
only passion, and he never went into Tercanbury without spending
an hour or two in the second-hand shop; he always brought back
four or five musty volumes. He never read them, for he had long
lost the habit of reading, but he liked to turn the pages, look
at the illustrations if they were illustrated, and mend the
bindings. He welcomed wet days because on them he could stay at
home without pangs of conscience and spend the afternoon with
white of egg and a glue-pot, patching up the Russia leather of
some battered quarto. He had many volumes of old travels, with
steel engravings, and Mrs. Carey quickly found two which
described Palestine. She coughed elaborately at the door so that
Philip should have time to compose himself, she felt that he
would be humiliated if she came upon him in the midst of his
tears, then she rattled the door handle. When she went in Philip
was poring over the prayer-book, hiding his eyes with his hands
so that she might not see he had been crying.
"Do you know the collect yet?" she said.
He did not answer for a moment, and she felt that he did not
trust his voice. She was oddly embarrassed.
"I can't learn it by heart," he said at last, with a gasp.
"Oh, well, never mind," she said. "You needn't. I've got some
picture books for you to look at. Come and sit on my lap, and
we'll look at them together."
Philip slipped off his chair and limped over to her. He looked
down so that she should not see his eyes. She put her arms round
him.
"Look," she said, "that's the place where our blessed Lord was
born."
She showed him an Eastern town with flat roofs and cupolas and
minarets. In the foreground was a group of palm-trees, and under
them were resting two Arabs and some camels. Philip passed his
hand over the picture as if he wanted to feel the houses and the
loose habiliments of the nomads.
"Read what it says," he asked.
Mrs. Carey in her even voice read the opposite page. It was a
romantic narrative of some Eastern traveller of the thirties,
pompous maybe, but fragrant with the emotion with which the East
came to the generation that followed Byron and Chateaubriand. In
a moment or two Philip interrupted her.
"I want to see another picture."
When Mary Ann came in and Mrs. Carey rose to help her lay the
cloth. Philip took the book in his hands and hurried through the
illustrations. It was with difficulty that his aunt induced him
to put the book down for tea. He had forgotten his horrible
struggle to get the collect by heart; he had forgotten his
tears. Next day it was raining, and he asked for the book again.
Mrs. Carey gave it him joyfully. Talking over his future with
her husband she had found that both desired him to take orders,
and this eagerness for the book which described places hallowed
by the presence of Jesus seemed a good sign. It looked as though
the boy's mind addressed itself naturally to holy things. But in
a day or two he asked for more books. Mr. Carey took him into
his study, showed him the shelf in which he kept illustrated
works, and chose for him one that dealt with Rome. Philip took
it greedily. The pictures led him to a new amusement. He began
to read the page before and the page after each engraving to
find out what it was about, and soon he lost all interest in his
toys.
Then, when no one was near, he took out books for himself; and
perhaps because the first impression on his mind was made by an
Eastern town, he found his chief amusement in those which
described the Levant. His heart beat with excitement at the
pictures of mosques and rich palaces; but there was one, in a
book on Constantinople, which peculiarly stirred his
imagination. It was called the Hall of the Thousand Columns. It
was a Byzantine cistern, which the popular fancy had endowed
with fantastic vastness; and the legend which he read told that
a boat was always moored at the entrance to tempt the unwary,
but no traveller venturing into the darkness had ever been Seen
again. And Philip wondered whether the boat went on for ever
through one pillared alley after another or came at last to some
strange mansion.
One day a good fortune befell him, for he hit upon Lane's
translation of _The Thousand Nights and a Night_. He was
captured first by the illustrations, and then he began to read,
to start with, the stories that dealt with magic, and then the
others; and those he liked he read again and again. He could
think of nothing else. He forgot the life about him. He had to
be called two or three times before he would come to his dinner.
Insensibly he formed the most delightful habit in the world, the
habit of reading: he did not know that thus he was providing
himself with a refuge from all the distress of life; he did not
know either that he was creating for himself an unreal world
which would make the real world of every day a source of bitter
disappointment. Presently he began to read other things. His
brain was precocious his uncle and aunt, seeing that he occupied
himself and neither worried nor made a noise, ceased to trouble
themselves about him. Mr. Carey had so many books that he did
not know them, and as he read little he forgot the odd lots he
had bought at one time and another because they were cheap.
Haphazard among the sermons and homilies, the travels, the lives
of the Saints, the Fathers, the histories of the church, were
old-fashioned novels; and these Philip at last discovered. He
chose them by their titles, and the first he read was _The
Lancashire Witches_, and then he read _The Admirable
Crichton_, and then many more. Whenever he started a book with
two solitary travellers riding along the brink of a desperate
ravine he knew he was safe.
The summer was come now, and the gardener, an old sailor, made
him a hammock and fixed it up for him in the branches of a
weeping willow. And here for long hours he lay, hidden from
anyone who might come to the vicarage, reading, reading
passionately. Time passed and it was July; August came: on
Sundays the church was crowded with strangers, and the
collection at the offertory often amounted to two pounds.
Neither the Vicar nor Mrs. Carey went out of the garden much
during this period; for they disliked strange faces, and they
looked upon the visitors from London with aversion. The house
opposite was taken for six weeks by a gentleman who had two
little boys, and he sent in to ask if Philip would like to go
and play with them; but Mrs. Carey returned a polite refusal.
She was afraid that Philip would be corrupted by little boys
from London. He was going to be a clergyman, and it was
necessary that he should be preserved from contamination. She
liked to see in him an infant Samuel.
THE Careys made up their minds to send Philip to King's School
at Tercanbury. The neighbouring clergy sent their sons there. It
was united by long tradition to the Cathedral: its headmaster
was an honorary Canon, and a past headmaster was the Archdeacon.
Boys were encouraged there to aspire to Holy Orders, and the
education was such as might prepare an honest lad to spend his
life in God's service. A preparatory school was attached to it,
and to this it was arranged that Philip should go. Mr. Carey
took him into Tercanbury one Thursday afternoon towards the end
of September. All day Philip had been excited and rather
frightened. He knew little of school life but what he had read
in the stories of _The Boy's Own Paper_. He had also read
_Eric_, or _Little by Little_.
When they got out of the train at Tercanbury, Philip felt sick
with apprehension, and during the drive in to the town sat pale
and silent. The high brick wall in front of the school gave it
the look of a prison. There was a little door in it, which
opened on their ringing; and a clumsy, untidy man came out and
fetched Philip's tin trunk and his play-box. They were shown
into the drawing-room; it was filled with massive, ugly
furniture, and the chairs of the suite were placed round the
walls with a forbidding rigidity. They waited for the
headmaster.
"What's Mr. Watson like?" asked Philip, after a while.
"You'll see for yourself."
There was another pause. Mr. Carey wondered why the headmaster
did not come. Presently Philip made an effort and spoke again.
"Tell him I've got a club-foot," he said.
Before Mr. Carey could speak the door burst open and Mr. Watson
swept into the room. To Philip he seemed gigantic. He was a man
of over six feet high, and broad, with enormous hands and a
great red beard; he talked loudly in a Jovial manner; but his
aggressive cheerfulness struck terror in Philip's heart. He
shook hands with Mr. Carey, and then took Philip's small hand in
his.
"Well, young fellow, are you glad to come to school?" he
shouted.
Philip reddened and found no word to answer.
"How old are you?"
"Nine," said Philip.
"You must say sir," said his uncle.
"I expect you've got a good lot to learn," the headmaster
bellowed cheerily.
To give the boy confidence he began to tickle him with rough
fingers. Philip, feeling shy and uncomfortable, squirmed under
his touch.
"I've put him in the small dormitory for the present.... You'll
like that, won't you?" he added to Philip. "Only eight of you in
there. You won't feel so strange."
Then the door opened, and Mrs. Watson came in. She was a dark
woman with black hair, neatly parted in the middle. She had
curiously thick lips and a small round nose. Her eyes were large
and black. There was a singular coldness in her appearance. She
seldom spoke and smiled more seldom still. Her husband
introduced Mr. Carey to her, and then gave Philip a friendly
push towards her.
"This is a new boy, Helen, His name's Carey."
Without a word she shook hands with Philip and then sat down,
not speaking, while the headmaster asked Mr. Carey how much
Philip knew and what books he had been working with. The Vicar
of Blackstable was a little embarrassed by Mr. Watson's
boisterous heartiness, and in a moment or two got up.
"I think I'd better leave Philip with you now."
"That's all right," said Mr. Watson. "He'll be safe with me.
He'll get on like a house on fire. Won't you, young fellow?"
Without waiting for an answer from Philip the big man burst into
a great bellow of laughter. Mr. Carey kissed Philip on the
forehead and went away.
"Come along, young fellow," shouted Mr. Watson. "I'll show you
the school-room."
He swept out of the drawing-room with giant strides, and Philip
hurriedly limped behind him. He was taken into a long, bare room
with two tables that ran along its whole length; on each side of
them were wooden forms.
"Nobody much here yet," said Mr. Watson. "I'll Just show you the
playground, and then I'll leave you to shift for yourself."
Mr. Watson led the way. Philip found himself in a large
play-ground with high brick walls on three sides of it. On the
fourth side was an iron railing through which you saw a vast
lawn and beyond this some of the buildings of King's School. One
small boy was wandering disconsolately, kicking up the gravel as
he walked.
"Hulloa, Venning," shouted Mr. Watson. "When did you turn up?"
The small boy came forward and shook hands.
"Here's a new boy. He's older and bigger than you, so don't you
bully him."
The headmaster glared amicably at the two children, filling them
with fear by the roar of his voice, and then with a guffaw left
them.
"What's your name?"
"Carey."
"What's your father?"
"He's dead."
"Oh! Does your mother wash?"
"My mothers dead, too."
Philip thought this answer would cause the boy a certain
awkwardness, but Venning was not to be turned from his
facetiousness for so little.
"Well, did she wash?" he went on.
"Yes," said Philip indignantly.
"She was a washerwoman then?"
"No, she wasn't."
"Then she didn't wash."
The little boy crowed with delight at the success of his
dialectic. Then he caught sight of Philip's feet.
"What's the matter with your foot?"
Philip instinctively tried to withdraw it from sight. He hid it
behind the one which was whole.
"I've got a club-foot," he answered.
"How did you get it?"
"I've always had it."
"Let's have a look."
"No."
"Don't then."
The little boy accompanied the words with a sharp kick on
Philip's shin, which Philip did not expect and thus could not
guard against. The pain was so great that it made him gasp, but
greater than the pain was the surprise. He did not know why
Venning kicked him. He had not the presence of mind to give him
a black eye. Besides, the boy was smaller than he, and he had
read in _The Boy's Own Paper_ that it was a mean thing to hit
anyone smaller than yourself. While Philip was nursing his shin
a third boy appeared, and his tormentor left him. In a little
while he noticed that the pair were talking about him, and he
felt they were looking at his feet. He grew hot and
uncomfortable.
But others arrived, a dozen together, and then more, and they
began to talk about their doings during the holidays, where they
had been, and what wonderful cricket they had played. A few new
boys appeared, and with these presently Philip found himself
talking. He was shy and nervous. He was anxious to make himself
pleasant, but he could not think of anything to say. He was
asked a great many questions and answered them all quite
willingly. One boy asked him whether he could play cricket.
"No," answered Philip. "I've got a club-foot."
The boy looked down quickly and reddened. Philip saw that he
felt he had asked an unseemly question. He was too shy to
apologise and looked at Philip awkwardly.
NEXT morning when the clanging of a bell awoke Philip he looked
round his cubicle in astonishment. Then a voice sang out, and he
remembered where he was.
"Are you awake, Singer?"
The partitions of the cubicle were of polished pitch-pine, and
there was a green curtain in front. In those days there was
little thought of ventilation, and the windows were closed
except when the dormitory was aired in the morning.
Philip got up and knelt down to say his prayers. It was a cold
morning, and he shivered a little; but he had been taught by his
uncle that his prayers were more acceptable to God if he said
them in his nightshirt than if he waited till he was dressed.
This did not surprise him, for he was beginning to realise that
he was the creature of a God who appreciated the discomfort of
his worshippers. Then he washed. There were two baths for the
fifty boarders, and each boy had a bath once a week. The rest of
his washing was done in a small basin on a wash-stand, which
with the bed and a chair, made up the furniture of each cubicle.
The boys chatted gaily while they dressed. Philip was all ears.
Then another bell sounded, and they ran downstairs. They took
their seats on the forms on each side of the two long tables in
the school-room; and Mr. Watson, followed by his wife and the
servants, came in and sat down. Mr. Watson read prayers in an
impressive manner, and the supplications thundered out in his
loud voice as though they were threats personally addressed to
each boy. Philip listened with anxiety. Then Mr. Watson read a
chapter from the Bible, and the servants trooped out. In a
moment the untidy youth brought in two large pots of tea and on
a second journey immense dishes of bread and butter.
Philip had a squeamish appetite, and the thick slabs of poor
butter on the bread turned his stomach, but he saw other boys
scraping it off and followed their example. They all had potted
meats and such like, which they had brought in their play-boxes;
and some had 'extras,' eggs or bacon, upon which Mr. Watson made
a profit. When he had asked Mr. Carey whether Philip was to have
these, Mr. Carey replied that he did not think boys should be
spoilt. Mr. Watson quite agreed with him--he considered nothing
was better than bread and butter for growing lads--but some
parents, unduly pampering their offspring, insisted on it.
Philip noticed that 'extras' gave boys a certain consideration
and made up his mind, when he wrote to Aunt Louisa, to ask for
them.
After breakfast the boys wandered out into the play-ground. Here
the day-boys were gradually assembling. They were sons of the
local clergy, of the officers at the Depot, and of such
manufacturers or men of business as the old town possessed.
Presently a bell rang, and they all trooped into school. This
consisted of a large, long room at opposite ends of which two
under-masters conducted the second and third forms, and of a
smaller one, leading out of it, used by Mr. Watson, who taught
the first form. To attach the preparatory to the senior school
these three classes were known officially, on speech days and in
reports, as upper, middle, and lower second. Philip was put in
the last. The master, a red-faced man with a pleasant voice, was
called Rice; he had a jolly manner with boys, and the time
passed quickly. Philip was surprised when it was a quarter to
eleven and they were let out for ten minutes' rest.
The whole school rushed noisily into the play-ground. The new
boys were told to go into the middle, while the others stationed
themselves along opposite walls. They began to play _Pig in
the Middle_. The old boys ran from wall to wall while the new
boys tried to catch them: when one was seized and the mystic
words said--one, two, three, and a pig for me--he became a
prisoner and, turning sides, helped to catch those who were
still free. Philip saw a boy running past and tried to catch
him, but his limp gave him no chance; and the runners, taking
their opportunity, made straight for the ground he covered. Then
one of them had the brilliant idea of imitating Philip's clumsy
run. Other boys saw it and began to laugh; then they all copied
the first; and they ran round Philip, limping grotesquely,
screaming in their treble voices with shrill laughter. They lost
their heads with the delight of their new amusement, and choked
with helpless merriment. One of them tripped Philip up and he
fell, heavily as he always fell, and cut his knee. They laughed
all the louder when he got up. A boy pushed him from behind, and
he would have fallen again if another had not caught him. The
game was forgotten in the entertainment of Philip's deformity.
One of them invented an odd, rolling limp that struck the rest
as supremely ridiculous, and several of the boys lay down on the
ground and rolled about in laughter: Philip was completely
scared. He could not make out why they were laughing at him. His
heart beat so that he could hardly breathe, and he was more
frightened than he had ever been in his life. He stood still
stupidly while the boys ran round him, mimicking and laughing;
they shouted to him to try and catch them; but he did not move.
He did not want them to see him run any more. He was using all
his strength to prevent himself from crying.
Suddenly the bell rang, and they all trooped back to school.
Philip's knee was bleeding, and he was dusty and dishevelled.
For some minutes Mr. Rice could not control his form. They were
excited still by the strange novelty, and Philip saw one or two
of them furtively looking down at his feet. He tucked them under
the bench.
In the afternoon they went up to play football, but Mr. Watson
stopped Philip on the way out after dinner.
"I suppose you can't play football, Carey?" he asked him.
Philip blushed self-consciously.
"No, sir."
"Very well. You'd better go up to the field. You can walk as far
as that, can't you? "
Philip had no idea where the field was, but he answered all the
same.
"Yes, sir."
The boys went in charge of Mr. Rice, who glanced at Philip and
seeing he had not changed, asked why he was not going to play.
"Mr. Watson said I needn't, sir," said Philip.
"Why?"
There were boys all round him, looking at him curiously, and a
feeling of shame came over Philip. He looked down without
answering. Others gave the reply.
"He's got a club-foot, sir."
"Oh, I see."
Mr. Rice was quite young; he had only taken his degree a year
before; and he was suddenly embarrassed. His instinct was to beg
the boy's pardon, but he was too shy to do so. He made his voice
gruff and loud.
"Now then, you boys, what are you waiting about for? Get on with
you."
Some of them had already started and those that were left now
set off, in groups of two or three.
"You'd better come along with me, Carey," said the master "You
don't know the way, do you?"
Philip guessed the kindness, and a sob came to his throat.
"I can't go very fast, sir."
"Then I'll go very slow," said the master, with a smile.
Philip's heart went out to the red-faced, commonplace young man
who said a gentle word to him. He suddenly felt less unhappy.
But at night when they went up to bed and were undressing, the
boy who was called Singer came out of his cubicle and put his
head in Philip's.
"I say, let's look at your foot," he said.
"No," answered Philip.
He jumped into bed quickly.
"Don't say no to me," said Singer. "Come on, Mason."
The boy in the next cubicle was looking round the corner, and at
the words he slipped in. They made for Philip and tried to tear
the bed-clothes off him, but he held them tightly.
"Why can't you leave me alone?" he cried.
Singer seized a brush and with the back of it beat Philip's
hands clenched on the blanket. Philip cried out.
"Why don't you show us your foot quietly?"
"I won't."
In desperation Philip clenched his fist and hit the boy who
tormented him, but he was at a disadvantage, and the boy seized
his arm. He began to turn it.
"Oh, don't, don't," said Philip. "You'll break my arm."
"Stop still then and put out your foot."
Philip gave a sob and a gasp. The boy gave the arm another
wrench. The pain was unendurable.
"All right. I'll do it," said Philip.
He put out his foot. Singer still kept his hand on Philip's
wrist. He looked curiously at the deformity.
"Isn't it beastly?" said Mason.
Another came in and looked too.
"Ugh," he said, in disgust.
"My word, it is rum," said Singer, making a face. "Is it hard?"
He touched it with the tip of his forefinger, cautiously, as
though it were something that had a life of its own. Suddenly
they heard Mr. Watson's heavy tread on the stairs. They threw
the clothes back on Philip and dashed like rabbits into their
cubicles. Mr. Watson came into the dormitory. Raising himself on
tiptoe he could see over the rod that bore the green curtain,
and he looked into two or three of the cubicles. The little boys
were safely in bed. He put out the light and went out.
Singer called out to Philip, but he did not answer. He had got
his teeth in the pillow so that his sobbing should be inaudible.
He was not crying for the pain they had caused him, nor for the
humiliation he had suffered when they looked at his foot, but
with rage at himself because, unable to stand the torture, he
had put out his foot of his own accord.
And then he felt the misery of his life. It seemed to his
childish mind that this unhappiness must go on for ever. For no
particular reason he remembered that cold morning when Emma had
taken him out of bed and put him beside his mother. He had not
thought of it once since it happened, but now he seemed to feel
the warmth of his mother's body against his and her arms around
him. Suddenly it seemed to him that his life was a dream, his
mother's death, and the life at the vicarage, and these two
wretched days at school, and he would awake in the morning and
be back again at home. His tears dried as he thought of it. He
was too unhappy, it must be nothing but a dream, and his mother
was alive, and Emma would come up presently and go to bed. He
fell asleep.
But when he awoke next morning it was to the clanging of a bell,
and the first thing his eyes saw was the green curtain of his
cubicle.
AS time went on Philip's deformity ceased to interest. It was
accepted like one boy's red hair and another's unreasonable
corpulence. But meanwhile he had grown horribly sensitive. He
never ran if he could help it, because he knew it made his limp
more conspicuous, and he adopted a peculiar walk. He stood still
as much as he could, with his club-foot behind the other, so
that it should not attract notice, and he was constantly on the
look out for any reference to it. Because he could not join in
the games which other boys played, their life remained strange
to him; he only interested himself from the outside in their
doings; and it seemed to him that there was a barrier between
them and him. Sometimes they seemed to think that it was his
fault if he could not play football, and he was unable to make
them understand. He was left a good deal to himself. He had been
inclined to talkativeness, but gradually he became silent. He
began to think of the difference between himself and others.
The biggest boy in his dormitory, Singer, took a dislike to him,
and Philip, small for his age, had to put up with a good deal of
hard treatment. About half-way through the term a mania ran
through the school for a game called Nibs. It was a game for
two, played on a table or a form with steel pens. You had to
push your nib with the finger-nail so as to get the point of it
over your opponent's, while he manoeuvred to prevent this and to
get the point of his nib over the back of yours; when this
result was achieved you breathed on the ball of your thumb,
pressed it hard on the two nibs, and if you were able then to
lift them without dropping either, both nibs became yours. Soon
nothing was seen but boys playing this game, and the more
skilful acquired vast stores of nibs. But in a little while Mr.
Watson made up his mind that it was a form of gambling, forbade
the game, and confiscated all the nibs in the boys' possession.
Philip had been very adroit, and it was with a heavy heart that
he gave up his winning; but his fingers itched to play still,
and a few days later, on his way to the football field, he went
into a shop and bought a pennyworth of J pens. He carried them
loose in his pocket and enjoyed feeling them. Presently Singer
found out that he had them. Singer had given up his nibs too,
but he had kept back a very large one, called a Jumbo, which was
almost unconquerable, and he could not resist the opportunity of
getting Philip's Js out of him. Though Philip knew that he was
at a disadvantage with his small nibs, he had an adventurous
disposition and was willing to take the risk; besides, he was
aware that Singer would not allow him to refuse. He had not
played for a week and sat down to the game now with a thrill of
excitement. He lost two of his small nibs quickly, and Singer
was jubilant, but the third time by some chance the Jumbo
slipped round and Philip was able to push his J across it. He
crowed with triumph. At that moment Mr. Watson came in.
"What are you doing?" he asked.
He looked from Singer to Philip, but neither answered.
"Don't you know that I've forbidden you to play that idiotic
game?"
Philip's heart beat fast. He knew what was coming and was
dreadfully frightened, but in his fright there was a certain
exultation. He had never been swished. Of course it would hurt,
but it was something to boast about afterwards.
"Come into my study."
The headmaster turned, and they followed him side by side Singer
whispered to Philip:
"We're in for it." Mr. Watson pointed to Singer.
"Bend over," he said.
Philip, very white, saw the boy quiver at each stroke, and after
the third he heard him cry out. Three more followed.
"That'll do. Get up."
Singer stood up. The tears were streaming down his face. Philip
stepped forward. Mr. Watson looked at him for a moment.
"I'm not going to cane you. You're a new boy. And I can't hit a
cripple. Go away, both of you, and don't be naughty again."
When they got back into the school-room a group of boys, who had
learned in some mysterious way what was happening, were waiting
for them. They set upon Singer at once with eager questions.
Singer faced them, his face red with the pain and marks of tears
still on his cheeks. He pointed with his head at Philip, who was
standing a little behind him.
"He got off because he's a cripple," he said angrily.
Philip stood silent and flushed. He felt that they looked at him
with contempt.
"How many did you get?" one boy asked Singer.
But he did not answer. He was angry because he had been hurt
"Don't ask me to play Nibs with you again," he said to Philip.
"It's jolly nice for you. You don't risk anything."
"I didn't ask you."
"Didn't you!"
He quickly put out his foot and tripped Philip up. Philip was
always rather unsteady on his feet, and he fell heavily to the
ground.
"Cripple," said Singer.
For the rest of the term he tormented Philip cruelly, and,
though Philip tried to keep out of his way, the school was so
small that it was impossible; he tried being friendly and jolly
with him; he abased himself, so far as to buy him a knife; but
though Singer took the knife he was not placated. Once or twice,
driven beyond endurance, he hit and kicked the bigger boy, but
Singer was so much stronger that Philip was helpless, and he was
always forced after more or less torture to beg his pardon. It
was that which rankled with Philip: he could not bear the
humiliation of apologies, which were wrung from him by pain
greater than he could bear. And what made it worse was that
there seemed no end to his wretchedness; Singer was only eleven
and would not go to the upper school till he was thirteen.
Philip realised that he must live two years with a tormentor
from whom there was no escape. He was only happy while he was
working and when he got into bed. And often there recurred to
him then that queer feeling that his life with all its misery
was nothing but a dream, and that he would awake in the morning
in his own little bed in London.
TWO years passed, and Philip was nearly twelve. He was in the
first form, within two or three places of the top, and after
Christmas when several boys would be leaving for the senior
school he would be head boy. He had already quite a collection
of prizes, worthless books on bad paper, but in gorgeous
bindings decorated with the arms of the school: his position had
freed him from bullying, and he was not unhappy. His fellows
forgave him his success because of his deformity.
"After all, it's jolly easy for him to get prizes," they said,
"there's nothing he _can_ do but swat."
He had lost his early terror of Mr. Watson. He had grown used to
the loud voice, and when the headmaster's heavy hand was laid on
his shoulder Philip discerned vaguely the intention of a caress.
He had the good memory which is more useful for scholastic
achievements than mental power, and he knew Mr. Watson expected
him to leave the preparatory school with a scholarship.
But he had grown very self-conscious. The new-born child does
not realise that his body is more a part of himself than
surrounding objects, and will play with his toes without any
feeling that they belong to him more than the rattle by his
side; and it is only by degrees, through pain, that he
understands the fact of the body. And experiences of the same
kind are necessary for the individual to become conscious of
himself; but here there is the difference that, although
everyone becomes equally conscious of his body as a separate and
complete organism, everyone does not become equally conscious of
himself as a complete and separate personality. The feeling of
apartness from others comes to most with puberty, but it is not
always developed to such a degree as to make the difference
between the individual and his fellows noticeable to the
individual. It is such as he, as little conscious of himself as
the bee in a hive, who are the lucky in life, for they have the
best chance of happiness: their activities are shared by all,
and their pleasures are only pleasures because they are enjoyed
in common; you will see them on Whit-Monday dancing on Hampstead
Heath, shouting at a football match, or from club windows in
Pall Mall cheering a royal procession. It is because of them
that man has been called a social animal.
Philip passed from the innocence of childhood to bitter
consciousness of himself by the ridicule which his club-foot had
excited. The circumstances of his case were so peculiar that he
could not apply to them the ready-made rules which acted well
enough in ordinary affairs, and he was forced to think for
himself. The many books he had read filled his mind with ideas
which, because he only half understood them, gave more scope to
his imagination. Beneath his painful shyness something was
growing up within him, and obscurely he realised his
personality. But at times it gave him odd surprises; he did
things, he knew not why, and afterwards when he thought of them
found himself all at sea.
There was a boy called Luard between whom and Philip a
friendship had arisen, and one day, when they were playing
together in the school-room, Luard began to perform some trick
with an ebony pen-holder of Philip's.
"Don't play the giddy ox," said Philip. "You'll only break it."
"I shan't."
But no sooner were the words out of the boy's mouth than the
pen-holder snapped in two. Luard looked at Philip with dismay.
"Oh, I say, I'm awfully sorry."
The tears rolled down Philip's cheeks, but he did not answer.
"I say, what's the matter?" said Luard, with surprise. "I'll get
you another one exactly the same."
"It's not about the pen-holder I care," said Philip, in a
trembling voice, "only it was given me by my mater, just before
she died."
"I say, I'm awfully sorry, Carey."
"It doesn't matter. It wasn't your fault."
Philip took the two pieces of the pen-holder and looked at them.
He tried to restrain his sobs. He felt utterly miserable. And
yet he could not tell why, for he knew quite well that he had
bought the pen-holder during his last holidays at Blackstable
for one and twopence. He did not know in the least what had made
him invent that pathetic story, but he was quite as unhappy as
though it had been true. The pious atmosphere of the vicarage
and the religious tone of the school had made Philip's
conscience very sensitive; he absorbed insensibly the feeling
about him that the Tempter was ever on the watch to gain his
immortal soul; and though he was not more truthful than most
boys he never told a lie without suffering from remorse. When he
thought over this incident he was very much distressed, and made
up his mind that he must go to Luard and tell him that the story
was an invention. Though he dreaded humiliation more than
anything in the world, he hugged himself for two or three days
at the thought of the agonising joy of humiliating himself to
the Glory of God. But he never got any further. He satisfied his
conscience by the more comfortable method of expressing his
repentance only to the Almighty. But he could not understand why
he should have been so genuinely affected by the story he was
making up. The tears that flowed down his grubby cheeks were
real tears. Then by some accident of association there occurred
to him that scene when Emma had told him of his mother's death,
and, though he could not speak for crying, he had insisted on
going in to say good-bye to the Misses Watkin so that they might
see his grief and pity him.
THEN a wave of religiosity passed through the school. Bad
language was no longer heard, and the little nastinesses of
small boys were looked upon with hostility; the bigger boys,
like the lords temporal of the Middle Ages, used the strength of
their arms to persuade those weaker than themselves to virtuous
courses.
Philip, his restless mind avid for new things, became very
devout. He heard soon that it was possible to join a Bible
League, and wrote to London for particulars. These consisted in
a form to be filled up with the applicant's name, age, and
school; a solemn declaration to be signed that he would read a
set portion of Holy Scripture every night for a year; and a
request for half a crown; this, it was explained, was demanded
partly to prove the earnestness of the applicant's desire to
become a member of the League, and partly to cover clerical
expenses. Philip duly sent the papers and the money, and in
return received a calendar worth about a penny, on which was set
down the appointed passage to be read each day, and a sheet of
paper on one side of which was a picture of the Good Shepherd
and a lamb, and on the other, decoratively framed in red lines,
a short prayer which had to be said before beginning to read.
Every evening he undressed as quickly as possible in order to
have time for his task before the gas was put out. He read
industriously, as he read always, without criticism, stories of
cruelty, deceit, ingratitude, dishonesty, and low cunning.
Actions which would have excited his horror in the life about
him, in the reading passed through his mind without comment,
because they were committed under the direct inspiration of God.
The method of the League was to alternate a book of the Old
Testament with a book of the New, and one night Philip came
across these words of Jesus Christ:
_If ye have faith, and doubt not, ye shall not only do this
which is done to the fig-tree, but also if ye shall say unto
this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea;
it shall be done._
_And all this, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing,
ye shall receive._
They made no particular impression on him, but it happened that
two or three days later, being Sunday, the Canon in residence
chose them for the text of his sermon. Even if Philip had wanted
to hear this it would have been impossible, for the boys of
King's School sit in the choir, and the pulpit stands at the
corner of the transept so that the preacher's back is almost
turned to them. The distance also is so great that it needs a
man with a fine voice and a knowledge of elocution to make
himself heard in the choir; and according to long usage the
Canons of Tercanbury are chosen for their learning rather than
for any qualities which might be of use in a cathedral church.
But the words of the text, perhaps because he had read them so
short a while before, came clearly enough to Philip's ears, and
they seemed on a sudden to have a personal application. He
thought about them through most of the sermon, and that night,
on getting into bed, he turned over the pages of the Gospel and
found once more the passage. Though he believed implicitly
everything he saw in print, he had learned already that in the
Bible things that said one thing quite clearly often
mysteriously meant another. There was no one he liked to ask at
school, so he kept the question he had in mind till the
Christmas holidays, and then one day he made an opportunity. It
was after supper and prayers were just finished. Mrs. Carey was
counting the eggs that Mary Ann had brought in as usual and
writing on each one the date. Philip stood at the table and
pretended to turn listlessly the pages of the Bible.
"I say, Uncle William, this passage here, does it really mean
that?"
He put his finger against it as though he had come across it
accidentally.
Mr. Carey looked up over his spectacles. He was holding _The
Blackstable Times_ in front of the fire. It had come in that
evening damp from the press, and the Vicar always aired it for
ten minutes before he began to read.
"What passage is that?" he asked.
"Why, this about if you have faith you can remove mountains."
"If it says so in the Bible it is so, Philip," said Mrs. Carey
gently, taking up the plate-basket.
Philip looked at his uncle for an answer.
"It's a matter of faith."
"D'you mean to say that if you really believed you could move
mountains you could?"
"By the grace of God," said the Vicar.
"Now, say good-night to your uncle, Philip," said Aunt Louisa.
"You're not wanting to move a mountain tonight, are you?"
Philip allowed himself to be kissed on the forehead by his uncle
and preceded Mrs. Carey upstairs. He had got the information he
wanted. His little room was icy, and he shivered when he put on
his nightshirt. But he always felt that his prayers were more
pleasing to God when he said them under conditions of
discomfort. The coldness of his hands and feet were an offering
to the Almighty. And tonight he sank on his knees; buried his
face in his hands, and prayed to God with all his might that He
would make his club-foot whole. It was a very small thing beside
the moving of mountains. He knew that God could do it if He
wished, and his own faith was complete. Next morning, finishing
his prayers with the same request, he fixed a date for the
miracle.
"Oh, God, in Thy loving mercy and goodness, if it be Thy will,
please make my foot all right on the night before I go back to
school."
He was glad to get his petition into a formula, and he repeated
it later in the dining-room during the short pause which the
Vicar always made after prayers, before he rose from his knees.
He said it again in the evening and again, shivering in his
nightshirt, before he got into bed. And he believed. For once he
looked forward with eagerness to the end of the holidays. He
laughed to himself as he thought of his uncle's astonishment
when he ran down the stairs three at a time; and after breakfast
he and Aunt Louisa would have to hurry out and buy a new pair of
boots. At school they would be astounded.
"Hulloa, Carey, what have you done with your foot?"
"Oh, it's all right now," he would answer casually, as though it
were the most natural thing in the world.
He would be able to play football. His heart leaped as he saw
himself running, running, faster than any of the other boys. At
the end of the Easter term there were the sports, and he would
be able to go in for the races; he rather fancied himself over
the hurdles. It would be splendid to be like everyone else, not
to be stared at curiously by new boys who did not know about his
deformity, nor at the baths in summer to need incredible
precautions, while he was undressing, before he could hide his
foot in the water.
He prayed with all the power of his soul. No doubts assailed
him. He was confident in the word of God. And the night before
he was to go back to school he went up to bed tremulous with
excitement. There was snow on the ground, and Aunt Louisa had
allowed herself the unaccustomed luxury of a fire in her
bed-room; but in Philip's little room it was so cold that his
fingers were numb, and he had great difficulty in undoing his
collar. His teeth chattered. The idea came to him that he must
do something more than usual to attract the attention of God,
and he turned back the rug which was in front of his bed so that
he could kneel on the bare boards; and then it struck him that
his nightshirt was a softness that might displease his Maker, so
he took it off and said his prayers naked. When he got into bed
he was so cold that for some time he could not sleep, but when
he did, it was so soundly that Mary Ann had to shake him when
she brought in his hot water next morning. She talked to him
while she drew the curtains, but he did not answer; he had
remembered at once that this was the morning for the miracle.
His heart was filled with joy and gratitude. His first instinct
was to put down his hand and feel the foot which was whole now,
but to do this seemed to doubt the goodness of God. He knew that
his foot was well. But at last he made up his mind, and with the
toes of his right foot he just touched his left. Then he passed
his hand over it.
He limped downstairs just as Mary Ann was going into the
dining-room for prayers, and then he sat down to breakfast.
"You're very quiet this morning, Philip," said Aunt Louisa
presently.
"He's thinking of the good breakfast he'll have at school
to-morrow," said the Vicar.
When Philip answered, it was in a way that always irritated his
uncle, with something that had nothing to do with the matter in
hand. He called it a bad habit of wool-gathering.
"Supposing you'd asked God to do something," said Philip, "and
really believed it was going to happen, like moving a mountain,
I mean, and you had faith, and it didn't happen, what would it
mean?"
"What a funny boy you are!" said Aunt Louisa. "You asked about
moving mountains two or three weeks ago."
"It would just mean that you hadn't got faith," answered Uncle
William.
Philip accepted the explanation. If God had not cured him, it
was because he did not really believe. And yet he did not see
how he could believe more than he did. But perhaps he had not
given God enough time. He had only asked Him for nineteen days.
In a day or two he began his prayer again, and this time he
fixed upon Easter. That was the day of His Son's glorious
resurrection, and God in His happiness might be mercifully
inclined. But now Philip added other means of attaining his
desire: he began to wish, when he saw a new moon or a dappled
horse, and he looked out for shooting stars; during exeat they
had a chicken at the vicarage, and he broke the lucky bone with
Aunt Louisa and wished again, each time that his foot might be
made whole. He was appealing unconsciously to gods older to his
race than the God of Israel. And he bombarded the Almighty with
his prayer, at odd times of the day, whenever it occurred to
him, in identical words always, for it seemed to him important
to make his request in the same terms. But presently the feeling
came to him that this time also his faith would not be great
enough. He could not resist the doubt that assailed him. He made
his own experience into a general rule.
"I suppose no one ever has faith enough," he said.
It was like the salt which his nurse used to tell him about: you
could catch any bird by putting salt on his tail; and once he
had taken a little bag of it into Kensington Gardens. But he
could never get near enough to put the salt on a bird's tail.
Before Easter he had given up the struggle. He felt a dull
resentment against his uncle for taking him in. The text which
spoke of the moving of mountains was just one of those that said
one thing and meant another. He thought his uncle had been
playing a practical joke on him.
THE King's School at Tercanbury, to which Philip went when he
was thirteen, prided itself on its antiquity. It traced its
origin to an abbey school, founded before the Conquest, where
the rudiments of learning were taught by Augustine monks; and,
like many another establishment of this sort, on the destruction
of the monasteries it had been reorganised by the officers of
King Henry VIII and thus acquired its name. Since then, pursuing
its modest course, it had given to the sons of the local gentry
and of the professional people of Kent an education sufficient
to their needs. One or two men of letters, beginning with a
poet, than whom only Shakespeare had a more splendid genius, and
ending with a writer of prose whose view of life has affected
profoundly the generation of which Philip was a member, had gone
forth from its gates to achieve fame; it had produced one or two
eminent lawyers, but eminent lawyers are common, and one or two
soldiers of distinction; but during the three centuries since
its separation from the monastic order it had trained especially
men of the church, bishops, deans, canons, and above all country
clergymen: there were boys in the school whose fathers,
grandfathers, great-grandfathers, had been educated there and
had all been rectors of parishes in the diocese of Tercanbury;
and they came to it with their minds made up already to be
ordained. But there were signs notwithstanding that even there
changes were coming; for a few, repeating what they had heard at
home, said that the Church was no longer what it used to be. It
wasn't so much the money; but the class of people who went in
for it weren't the same; and two or three boys knew curates
whose fathers were tradesmen: they'd rather go out to the
Colonies (in those days the Colonies were still the last hope of
those who could get nothing to do in England) than be a curate
under some chap who wasn't a gentleman. At King's School, as at
Blackstable Vicarage, a tradesman was anyone who was not lucky
enough to own land (and here a fine distinction was made between
the gentleman farmer and the landowner), or did not follow one
of the four professions to which it was possible for a gentleman
to belong. Among the day-boys, of whom there were about a
hundred and fifty, sons of the local gentry and of the men
stationed at the depot, those whose fathers were engaged in
business were made to feel the degradation of their state.
The masters had no patience with modern ideas of education,
which they read of sometimes in _The Times_ or _The
Guardian_, and hoped fervently that King's School would remain
true to its old traditions. The dead languages were taught with
such thoroughness that an old boy seldom thought of Homer or
Virgil in after life without a qualm of boredom; and though in
the common room at dinner one or two bolder spirits suggested
that mathematics were of increasing importance, the general
feeling was that they were a less noble study than the classics.
Neither German nor chemistry was taught, and French only by the
form-masters; they could keep order better than a foreigner,
and, since they knew the grammar as well as any Frenchman, it
seemed unimportant that none of them could have got a cup of
coffee in the restaurant at Boulogne unless the waiter had known
a little English. Geography was taught chiefly by making boys
draw maps, and this was a favourite occupation, especially when
the country dealt with was mountainous: it was possible to waste
a great deal of time in drawing the Andes or the Apennines. The
masters, graduates of Oxford or Cambridge, were ordained and
unmarried; if by chance they wished to marry they could only do
so by accepting one of the smaller livings at the disposal of
the Chapter; but for many years none of them had cared to leave
the refined society of Tercanbury, which owing to the cavalry
depot had a martial as well as an ecclesiastical tone, for the
monotony of life in a country rectory; and they were now all men
of middle age.
The headmaster, on the other hand, was obliged to be married and
he conducted the school till age began to tell upon him. When he
retired he was rewarded with a much better living than any of
the under-masters could hope for, and an honorary Canonry.
But a year before Philip entered the school a great change had
come over it. It had been obvious for some time that Dr.
Fleming, who had been headmaster for the quarter of a century,
was become too deaf to continue his work to the greater glory of
God; and when one of the livings on the outskirts of the city
fell vacant, with a stipend of six hundred a year, the Chapter
offered it to him in such a manner as to imply that they thought
it high time for him to retire. He could nurse his ailments
comfortably on such an income. Two or three curates who had
hoped for preferment told their wives it was scandalous to give
a parish that needed a young, strong, and energetic man to an
old fellow who knew nothing of parochial work, and had feathered
his nest already; but the mutterings of the unbeneficed clergy
do not reach the ears of a cathedral Chapter. And as for the
parishioners they had nothing to say in the matter, and
therefore nobody asked for their opinion. The Wesleyans and the
Baptists both had chapels in the village.
When Dr. Fleming was thus disposed of it became necessary to
find a successor. It was contrary to the traditions of the
school that one of the lower-masters should be chosen. The
commonroom was unanimous in desiring the election of Mr. Watson,
headmaster of the preparatory school; he could hardly be
described as already a master of King's School, they had all
known him for twenty years, and there was no danger that he
would make a nuisance of himself. But the Chapter sprang a
surprise on them. It chose a man called Perkins. At first nobody
knew who Perkins was, and the name favourably impressed no one;
but before the shock of it had passed away, it was realised that
Perkins was the son of Perkins the linendraper. Dr. Fleming
informed the masters just before dinner, and his manner showed
his consternation. Such of them as were dining in, ate their
meal almost in silence, and no reference was made to the matter
till the servants had left the room. Then they set to. The names
of those present on this occasion are unimportant, but they had
been known to generations of school-boys as Sighs, Tar, Winks,
Squirts, and Pat.
They all knew Tom Perkins. The first thing about him was that he
was not a gentleman. They remembered him quite well. He was a
small, dark boy, with untidy black hair and large eyes. He
looked like a gipsy. He had come to the school as a day-boy,
with the best scholarship on their endowment, so that his
education had cost him nothing. Of course he was brilliant. At
every Speech-Day he was loaded with prizes. He was their
show-boy, and they remembered now bitterly their fear that he
would try to get some scholarship at one of the larger public
schools and so pass out of their hands. Dr. Fleming had gone to
the linendraper his father--they all remembered the shop,
Perkins and Cooper, in St. Catherine's Street--and said he hoped
Tom would remain with them till he went to Oxford. The school
was Perkins and Cooper's best customer, and Mr. Perkins was only
too glad to give the required assurance. Tom Perkins continued
to triumph, he was the finest classical scholar that Dr. Fleming
remembered, and on leaving the school took with him the most
valuable scholarship they had to offer. He got another at
Magdalen and settled down to a brilliant career at the
University. The school magazine recorded the distinctions he
achieved year after year, and when he got his double first Dr.
Fleming himself wrote a few words of eulogy on the front page.
It was with greater satisfaction that they welcomed his success,
since Perkins and Cooper had fallen upon evil days: Cooper drank
like a fish, and just before Tom Perkins took his degree the
linendrapers filed their petition in bankruptcy.
In due course Tom Perkins took Holy Orders and entered upon the
profession for which he was so admirably suited. He had been an
assistant master at Wellington and then at Rugby.
But there was quite a difference between welcoming his success
at other schools and serving under his leadership in their own.
Tar had frequently given him lines, and Squirts had boxed his
ears. They could not imagine how the Chapter had made such a
mistake. No one could be expected to forget that he was the son
of a bankrupt linendraper, and the alcoholism of Cooper seemed
to increase the disgrace. It was understood that the Dean had
supported his candidature with zeal, so the Dean would probably
ask him to dinner; but would the pleasant little dinners in the
precincts ever be the same when Tom Perkins sat at the table?
And what about the depot? He really could not expect officers
and gentlemen to receive him as one of themselves. It would do
the school incalculable harm. Parents would be dissatisfied, and
no one could be surprised if there were wholesale withdrawals.
And then the indignity of calling him Mr. Perkins! The masters
thought by way of protest of sending in their resignations in a
body, but the uneasy fear that they would be accepted with
equanimity restrained them.
"The only thing is to prepare ourselves for changes," said
Sighs, who had conducted the fifth form for five and twenty
years with unparalleled incompetence.
And when they saw him they were not reassured. Dr. Fleming
invited them to meet him at luncheon. He was now a man of
thirty-two, tall and lean, but with the same wild and unkempt
look they remembered on him as a boy. His clothes, ill-made and
shabby, were put on untidily. His hair was as black and as long
as ever, and he had plainly never learned to brush it; it fell
over his forehead with every gesture, and he had a quick
movement of the hand with which he pushed it back from his eyes.
He had a black moustache and a beard which came high up on his
face almost to the cheek-bones, He talked to the masters quite
easily, as though he had parted from them a week or two be-
fore; he was evidently delighted to see them. He seemed
unconscious of the strangeness of the position and appeared not
to notice any oddness in being addressed as Mr. Perkins.
When he bade them good-bye, one of the masters, for something to
say, remarked that he was allowing himself plenty of time to
catch his train.
"I want to go round and have a look at the shop," he answered
cheerfully.
There was a distinct embarrassment. They wondered that he could
be so tactless, and to make it worse Dr. Fleming had not heard
what he said. His wife shouted it in his ear.
"He wants to go round and look at his father's old shop."
Only Tom Perkins was unconscious of the humiliation which the
whole party felt. He turned to Mrs. Fleming.
"Who's got it now, d'you know?"
She could hardly answer. She was very angry.
"It's still a linendraper's," she said bitterly. "Grove is the
name. We don't deal there any more."
"I wonder if he'd let me go over the house."
"I expect he would if you explain who you are."
It was not till the end of dinner that evening that any
reference was made in the common-room to the subject that was in
all their minds. Then it was Sighs who asked:
"Well, what did you think of our new head?" They thought of the
conversation at luncheon. It was hardly a conversation; it was
a monologue. Perkins had talked incessantly. He talked very
quickly, with a flow of easy words and in a deep, resonant
voice. He had a short, odd little laugh which showed his white
teeth. They had followed him with difficulty, for his mind
darted from subject to subject with a connection they did not
always catch. He talked of pedagogics, and this was natural
enough; but he had much to say of modern theories in Germany
which they had never heard of and received with misgiving. He
talked of the classics, but he had been to Greece, and he
discoursed of archaeology; he had once spent a winter digging;
they could not see how that helped a man to teach boys to pass
examinations, He talked of politics. It sounded odd to them to
hear him compare Lord Beaconsfield with Alcibiades. He talked of
Mr. Gladstone and Home Rule. They realised that he was a
Liberal. Their hearts sank. He talked of German philosophy and
of French fiction. They could not think a man profound whose
interests were so diverse.
It was Winks who summed up the general impression and put it
into a form they all felt conclusively damning. Winks was the
master of the upper third, a weak-kneed man with drooping
eye-lids, He was too tall for his strength, and his movements
were slow and languid. He gave an impression of lassitude, and
his nickname was eminently appropriate.
"He's very enthusiastic," said Winks.
Enthusiasm was ill-bred. Enthusiasm was ungentlemanly. They
thought of the Salvation Army with its braying trumpets and its
drums. Enthusiasm meant change. They had goose-flesh when they
thought of all the pleasant old habits which stood in imminent
danger. They hardly dared to look forward to the future.
"He looks more of a gipsy than ever," said one, after a pause.
"I wonder if the Dean and Chapter knew that he was a Radical
when they elected him," another observed bitterly.
But conversation halted. They were too much disturbed for words.
When Tar and Sighs were walking together to the Chapter House on
Speech-Day a week later, Tar, who had a bitter tongue, remarked
to his colleague:
"Well, we've seen a good many Speech-Days here, haven't we? I
wonder if we shall see another."
Sighs was more melancholy even than usual.
"If anything worth having comes along in the way of a living I
don't mind when I retire."
A YEAR passed, and when Philip came to the school the old
masters were all in their places; but a good many changes had
taken place notwithstanding their stubborn resistance, none the
less formidable because it was concealed under an apparent
desire to fall in with the new head's ideas. Though the
form-masters still taught French to the lower school, another
master had come, with a degree of doctor of philology from the
University of Heidelberg and a record of three years spent in a
French lycee, to teach French to the upper forms and German to
anyone who cared to take it up instead of Greek. Another master
was engaged to teach mathematics more systematically than had
been found necessary hitherto. Neither of these was ordained.
This was a real revolution, and when the pair arrived the older
masters received them with distrust. A laboratory had been
fitted up, army classes were instituted; they all said the
character of the school was changing. And heaven only knew what
further projects Mr. Perkins turned in that untidy head of his.
The school was small as public schools go, there were not more
than two hundred boarders; and it was difficult for it to grow
larger, for it was huddled up against the Cathedral; the
precincts, with the exception of a house in which some of the
masters lodged, were occupied by the cathedral clergy; and there
was no more room for building. But Mr. Perkins devised an
elaborate scheme by which he might obtain sufficient space to
make the school double its present size. He wanted to attract
boys from London. He thought it would be good for them to be
thrown in contact with the Kentish lads, and it would sharpen
the country wits of these.
"It's against all our traditions," said Sighs, when Mr. Perkins
made the suggestion to him. "We've rather gone out of our way to
avoid the contamination of boys from London."
"Oh, what nonsense!" said Mr. Perkins.
No one had ever told the form-master before that he talked
nonsense, and he was meditating an acid reply, in which perhaps
he might insert a veiled reference to hosiery, when Mr. Perkins
in his impetuous way attacked him outrageously.
"That house in the precincts--if you'd only marry I'd get the
Chapter to put another couple of stories on, and we'd make
dormitories and studies, and your wife could help you."
The elderly clergyman gasped. Why should he marry? He was
fifty-seven, a man couldn't marry at fifty-seven. He couldn't
start looking after a house at his time of life. He didn't want
to marry. If the choice lay between that and the country living
he would much sooner resign. All he wanted now was peace and
quietness.
"I'm not thinking of marrying," he said.
Mr. Perkins looked at him with his dark, bright eyes, and if
there was a twinkle in them poor Sighs never saw it.
"What a pity! Couldn't you marry to oblige me? It would help me
a great deal with the Dean and Chapter when I suggest rebuilding
your house."
But Mr. Perkins' most unpopular innovation was his system of
taking occasionally another man's form. He asked it as a favour,
but after all it was a favour which could not be refused, and as
Tar, otherwise Mr. Turner, said, it was undignified for all
parties. He gave no warning, but after morning prayers would say
to one of the masters:
"I wonder if you'd mind taking the Sixth today at eleven. We'll
change over, shall we?"
They did not know whether this was usual at other schools, but
certainly it had never been done at Tercanbury. The results were
curious. Mr. Tumer, who was the first victim, broke the news to
his form that the headmaster would take them for Latin that day,
and on the pretence that they might like to ask him a question
or two so that they should not make perfect fools of themselves,
spent the last quarter of an hour of the history lesson in
construing for them the passage of Livy which had been set for
the day; but when he rejoined his class and looked at the paper
on which Mr. Perkins had written the marks, a surprise awaited
him; for the two boys at the top of the form seemed to have done
very ill, while others who had never distinguished themselves
before were given full marks. When he asked Eldridge, his
cleverest boy, what was the meaning of this the answer came
sullenly:
"Mr. Perkins never gave us any construing to do. He asked me
what I knew about General Gordon."
Mr. Turner looked at him in astonishment. The boys evidently
felt they had been hardly used, and he could not help agreeing
with their silent dissatisfaction. He could not see either what
General Gordon had to do with Livy. He hazarded an inquiry
afterwards.
"Eldridge was dreadfully put out because you asked him what he
knew about General Gordon," he said to the headmaster, with an
attempt at a chuckle.
Mr. Perkins laughed.
"I saw they'd got to the agrarian laws of Caius Gracchus, and I
wondered if they knew anything about the agrarian troubles in
Ireland. But all they knew about Ireland was that Dublin was on
the Liffey. So I wondered if they'd ever heard of General
Gordon."
Then the horrid fact was disclosed that the new head had a mania
for general information. He had doubts about the utility of
examinations on subjects which had been crammed for the
occasion. He wanted common sense.
Sighs grew more worried every month; he could not get the
thought out of his head that Mr. Perkins would ask him to fix a
day for his marriage; and he hated the attitude the head adopted
towards classical literature. There was no doubt that he was a
fine scholar, and he was engaged on a work which was quite in
the right tradition: he was writing a treatise on the trees in
Latin literature; but he talked of it flippantly, as though it
were a pastime of no great importance, like billiards, which
engaged his leisure but was not to be considered with
seriousness. And Squirts, the master of the Middle Third, grew
more ill-tempered every day.
It was in his form that Philip was put on entering the school.
The Rev. B. B. Gordon was a man by nature ill-suited to be a
schoolmaster: he was impatient and choleric. With no one to call
him to account, with only small boys to face him, he had long
lost all power of self-control. He began his work in a rage and
ended it in a passion. He was a man of middle height and of a
corpulent figure; he had sandy hair, worn very short and now
growing gray, and a small bristly moustache. His large face,
with indistinct features and small blue eyes, was naturally red,
but during his frequent attacks of anger it grew dark and
purple. His nails were bitten to the quick, for while some
trembling boy was construing he would sit at his desk shaking
with the fury that consumed him, and gnaw his fingers. Stories,
perhaps exaggerated, were told of his violence, and two years
before there had been some excitement in the school when it was
heard that one father was threatening a prosecution: he had
boxed the ears of a boy named Walters with a book so violently
that his hearing was affected and the boy had to be taken away
from the school. The boy's father lived in Tercanbury, and there
had been much indignation in the city, the local paper had
referred to the matter; but Mr. Walters was only a brewer, so
the sympathy was divided. The rest of the boys, for reasons best
known to themselves, though they loathed the master, took his
side in the affair, and, to show their indignation that the
school's business had been dealt with outside, made things as
uncomfortable as they could for Walters' younger brother, who
still remained. But Mr. Gordon had only escaped the country
living by the skin of his teeth, and he had never hit a boy
since. The right the masters possessed to cane boys on the hand
was taken away from them, and Squirts could no longer emphasize
his anger by beating his desk with the cane. He never did more
now than take a boy by the shoulders and shake him. He still
made a naughty or refractory lad stand with one arm stretched
out for anything from ten minutes to half an hour, and he was as
violent as before with his tongue.
No master could have been more unfitted to teach things to so
shy a boy as Philip. He had come to the school with fewer
terrors than he had when first he went to Mr. Watson's. He knew
a good many boys who had been with him at the preparatory
school. He felt more grownup, and instinctively realised that
among the larger numbers his deformity would be less noticeable.
But from the first day Mr. Gordon struck terror in his heart;
and the master, quick to discern the boys who were frightened of
him, seemed on that account to take a peculiar dislike to him.
Philip had enjoyed his work, but now he began to look upon the
hours passed in school with horror. Rather than risk an answer
which might be wrong and excite a storm of abuse from the
master, he would sit stupidly silent, and when it came towards
his turn to stand up and construe he grew sick and white with
apprehension. His happy moments were those when Mr. Perkins took
the form. He was able to gratify the passion for general
knowledge which beset the headmaster; he had read all sorts of
strange books beyond his years, and often Mr. Perkins, when a
question was going round the room, would stop at Philip with a
smile that filled the boy with rapture, and say:
"Now, Carey, you tell them."
The good marks he got on these occasions increased Mr. Gordon's
indignation. One day it came to Philip's turn to translate, and
the master sat there glaring at him and furiously biting his
thumb. He was in a ferocious mood. Philip began to speak in a
low voice.
"Don't mumble," shouted the master.
Something seemed to stick in Philip's throat.
"Go on. Go on. Go on."
Each time the words were screamed more loudly. The effect was to
drive all he knew out of Philip's head, and he looked at the
printed page vacantly. Mr. Gordon began to breathe heavily.
"If you don't know why don't you say so? Do you know it or not?
Did you hear all this construed last time or not? Why don't you
speak? Speak, you blockhead, speak!"
The master seized the arms of his chair and grasped them as
though to prevent himself from falling upon Philip. They knew
that in past days he often used to seize boys by the throat till
they almost choked. The veins in his forehead stood out and his
face grew dark and threatening. He was a man insane.
Philip had known the passage perfectly the day before, but now
he could remember nothing.
"I don't know it," he gasped.
"Why don't you know it? Let's take the words one by one. We'll
soon see if you don't know it."
Philip stood silent, very white, trembling a little, with his
head bent down on the book. The master's breathing grew almost
stertorous{sic}.
"The headmaster says you're clever. I don't know how he sees it.
General information." He laughed savagely. "I don't know what
they put you in his form for "Blockhead."
He was pleased with the word, and he repeated it at the top of
his voice.
"Blockhead! Blockhead! Club-footed blockhead!"
That relieved him a little. He saw Philip redden suddenly. He
told him to fetch the Black Book. Philip put down his Caesar and
went silently out. The Black Book was a sombre volume in which
the names of boys were written with their misdeeds, and when a
name was down three times it meant a caning. Philip went to the
headmaster's house and knocked at his study-door. Mr. Perkins
was seated at his table.
"May I have the Black Book, please, sir."
"There it is," answered Mr. Perkins, indicating its place by a
nod of his head. "What have you been doing that you shouldn't?"
"I don't know, sir."
Mr. Perkins gave him a quick look, but without answering went on
with his work. Philip took the book and went out. When the hour
was up, a few minutes later, he brought it back.
"Let me have a look at it," said the headmaster. "I see Mr.
Gordon has black-booked you for 'gross impertinence.' What was
it?"
"I don't know, sir. Mr. Gordon said I was a club-footed
blockhead."
Mr. Perkins looked at him again. He wondered whether there was
sarcasm behind the boy's reply, but he was still much too
shaken. His face was white and his eyes had a look of terrified
distress. Mr. Perkins got up and put the book down. As he did so
he took up some photographs.
"A friend of mine sent me some pictures of Athens this morning,"
he said casually. "Look here, there's the Akropolis."
He began explaining to Philip what he saw. The ruin grew vivid
with his words. He showed him the theatre of Dionysus and
explained in what order the people sat, and how beyond they
could see the blue Aegean. And then suddenly he said:
"I remember Mr. Gordon used to call me a gipsy counter-jumper
when I was in his form."
And before Philip, his mind fixed on the photographs, had time
to gather the meaning of the remark, Mr. Perkins was showing him
a picture of Salamis, and with his finger, a finger of which the
nail had a little black edge to it, was pointing out how the
Greek ships were placed and how the Persian.
PHILIP passed the next two years with comfortable monotony. He
was not bullied more than other boys of his size; and his
deformity, withdrawing him from games, acquired for him an
insignificance for which he was grateful. He was not popular,
and he was very lonely. He spent a couple of terms with Winks in
the Upper Third. Winks, with his weary manner and his drooping
eyelids, looked infinitely bored. He did his duty, but he did it
with an abstracted mind. He was kind, gentle, and foolish. He
had a great belief in the honour of boys; he felt that the first
thing to make them truthful was not to let it enter your head
for a moment that it was possible for them to lie. "Ask much,"
he quoted, "and much shall be given to you." Life was easy in
the Upper Third. You knew exactly what lines would come to your
turn to construe, and with the crib that passed from hand to
hand you could find out all you wanted in two minutes; you could
hold a Latin Grammar open on your knees while questions were
passing round; and Winks never noticed anything odd in the fact
that the same incredible mistake was to be found in a dozen
different exercises. He had no great faith in examinations, for
he noticed that boys never did so well in them as in form: it
was disappointing, but not significant. In due course they were
moved up, having learned little but a cheerful effrontery in the
distortion of truth, which was possibly of greater service to
them in after life than an ability to read Latin at sight.
Then they fell into the hands of Tar. His name was Turner; he
was the most vivacious of the old masters, a short man with an
immense belly, a black beard turning now to gray, and a swarthy
skin. In his clerical dress there was indeed something in him to
suggest the tar-barrel; and though on principle he gave five
hundred lines to any boy on whose lips he overheard his
nickname, at dinner-parties in the precincts he often made
little jokes about it. He was the most worldly of the masters;
he dined out more frequently than any of the others, and the
society he kept was not so exclusively clerical. The boys looked
upon him as rather a dog. He left off his clerical attire during
the holidays and had been seen in Switzerland in gay tweeds. He
liked a bottle of wine and a good dinner, and having once been
seen at the Cafe Royal with a lady who was very probably a near
relation, was thenceforward supposed by generations of
schoolboys to indulge in orgies the circumstantial details of
which pointed to an unbounded belief in human depravity.
Mr. Turner reckoned that it took him a term to lick boys into
shape after they had been in the Upper Third; and now and then
he let fall a sly hint, which showed that he knew perfectly what
went on in his colleague's form. He took it good-humouredly. He
looked upon boys as young ruffians who were more apt to be
truthful if it was quite certain a lie would be found out, whose
sense of honour was peculiar to themselves and did not apply to
dealings with masters, and who were least likely to be
troublesome when they learned that it did not pay. He was proud
of his form and as eager at fifty-five that it should do better
in examinations than any of the others as he had been when he
first came to the school. He had the choler of the obese, easily
roused and as easily calmed, and his boys soon discovered that
there was much kindliness beneath the invective with which he
constantly assailed them. He had no patience with fools, but was
willing to take much trouble with boys whom he suspected of
concealing intelligence behind their wilfulness. He was fond of
inviting them to tea; and, though vowing they never got a look
in with him at the cakes and muffins, for it was the fashion to
believe that his corpulence pointed to a voracious appetite, and
his voracious appetite to tapeworms, they accepted his
invitations with real pleasure.
Philip was now more comfortable, for space was so limited that
there were only studies for boys in the upper school, and till
then he had lived in the great hall in which they all ate and in
which the lower forms did preparation in a promiscuity which was
vaguely distasteful to him. Now and then it made him restless to
be with people and he wanted urgently to be alone. He set out
for solitary walks into the country. There was a little stream,
with pollards on both sides of it, that ran through green
fields, and it made him happy, he knew not why, to wander along
its banks. When he was tired he lay face-downward on the grass
and watched the eager scurrying of minnows and of tadpoles. It
gave him a peculiar satisfaction to saunter round the precincts.
On the green in the middle they practised at nets in the summer,
but during the rest of the year it was quiet: boys used to
wander round sometimes arm in arm, or a studious fellow with
abstracted gaze walked slowly, repeating to himself something he
had to learn by heart. There was a colony of rooks in the great
elms, and they filled the air with melancholy cries. Along one
side lay the Cathedral with its great central tower, and Philip,
who knew as yet nothing of beauty, felt when he looked at it a
troubling delight which he could not understand. When he had a
study (it was a little square room looking on a slum, and four
boys shared it), he bought a photograph of that view of the
Cathedral, and pinned it up over his desk. And he found himself
taking a new interest in what he saw from the window of the
Fourth Form room. It looked on to old lawns, carefully tended,
and fine trees with foliage dense and rich. It gave him an odd
feeling in his heart, and he did not know if it was pain or
pleasure. It was the first dawn of the aesthetic emotion. It
accompanied other changes. His voice broke. It was no longer
quite under his control, and queer sounds issued from his
throat.
Then he began to go to the classes which were held in the
headmaster's study, immediately after tea, to prepare boys for
confirmation. Philip's piety had not stood the test of time, and
he had long since given up his nightly reading of the Bible; but
now, under the influence of Mr. Perkins, with this new condition
of the body which made him so restless, his old feelings
revived, and he reproached himself bitterly for his backsliding.
The fires of Hell burned fiercely before his mind's eye. If he
had died during that time when he was little better than an
infidel he would have been lost; he believed implicitly in pain
everlasting, he believed in it much more than in eternal
happiness; and he shuddered at the dangers he had run.
Since the day on which Mr. Perkins had spoken kindly to him,
when he was smarting under the particular form of abuse which he
could least bear, Philip had conceived for his headmaster a
dog-like adoration. He racked his brains vainly for some way to
please him. He treasured the smallest word of commendation which
by chance fell from his lips. And when he came to the quiet
little meetings in his house he was prepared to surrender
himself entirely. He kept his eyes fixed on Mr. Perkins' shining
eyes, and sat with mouth half open, his head a little thrown
forward so as to miss no word. The ordinariness of the
surroundings made the matters they dealt with extraordinarily
moving. And often the master, seized himself by the wonder of
his subject, would push back the book in front of him, and with
his hands clasped together over his heart, as though to still
the beating, would talk of the mysteries of their religion.
Sometimes Philip did not understand, but he did not want to
understand, he felt vaguely that it was enough to feel. It
seemed to him then that the headmaster, with his black,
straggling hair and his pale face, was like those prophets of
Israel who feared not to take kings to task; and when he thought
of the Redeemer he saw Him only with the same dark eyes and
those wan cheeks.
Mr. Perkins took this part of his work with great seriousness.
There was never here any of that flashing humour which made the
other masters suspect him of flippancy. Finding time for
everything in his busy day, he was able at certain intervals to
take separately for a quarter of an hour or twenty minutes the
boys whom he was preparing for confirmation. He wanted to make
them feel that this was the first consciously serious step in
their lives; he tried to grope into the depths of their souls;
he wanted to instil in them his own vehement devotion. In
Philip, notwithstanding his shyness, he felt the possibility of
a passion equal to his own. The boy's temperament seemed to him
essentially religious. One day he broke off suddenly from the
subject on which he had been talking.
"Have you thought at all what you're going to be when you grow
up?" he asked.
"My uncle wants me to be ordained," said Philip.
"And you?"
Philip looked away. He was ashamed to answer that he felt
himself unworthy.
"I don't know any life that's so full of happiness as ours. I
wish I could make you feel what a wonderful privilege it is. One
can serve God in every walk, but we stand nearer to Him. I don't
want to influence you, but if you made up your mind--oh, at
once--you couldn't help feeling that joy and relief which never
desert one again."
Philip did not answer, but the headmaster read in his eyes that
he realised already something of what he tried to indicate.
"If you go on as you are now you'll find yourself head of the
school one of these days, and you ought to be pretty safe for a
scholarship when you leave. Have you got anything of your own?"
"My uncle says I shall have a hundred a year when I'm
twenty-one."
"You'll be rich. I had nothing."
The headmaster hesitated a moment, and then, idly drawing lines
with a pencil on the blotting paper in front of him, went on.
"I'm afraid your choice of professions will be rather limited.
You naturally couldn't go in for anything that required physical
activity."
Philip reddened to the roots of his hair, as he always did when
any reference was made to his club-foot. Mr. Perkins looked at
him gravely.
"I wonder if you're not oversensitive about your misfortune. Has
it ever struck you to thank God for it?"
Philip looked up quickly. His lips tightened. He remembered how
for months, trusting in what they told him, he had implored God
to heal him as He had healed the Leper and made the Blind to
see.
"As long as you accept it rebelliously it can only cause you
shame. But if you looked upon it as a cross that was given you
to bear only because your shoulders were strong enough to bear
it, a sign of God's favour, then it would be a source of
happiness to you instead of misery."
He saw that the boy hated to discuss the matter and he let him
go.
But Philip thought over all that the headmaster had said, and
presently, his mind taken up entirely with the ceremony that was
before him, a mystical rapture seized him. His spirit seemed to
free itself from the bonds of the flesh and he seemed to be
living a new life. He aspired to perfection with all the passion
that was in him. He wanted to surrender himself entirely to the
service of God, and he made up his mind definitely that he would
be ordained. When the great day arrived, his soul deeply moved
by all the preparation, by the books he had studied and above
all by the overwhelming influence of the head, he could hardly
contain himself for fear and joy. One thought had tormented him.
He knew that he would have to walk alone through the chancel,
and he dreaded showing his limp thus obviously, not only to the
whole school, who were attending the service, but also to the
strangers, people from the city or parents who had come to see
their sons confirmed. But when the time came he felt suddenly
that he could accept the humiliation joyfully; and as he limped
up the chancel, very small and insignificant beneath the lofty
vaulting of the Cathedral, he offered consciously his deformity
as a sacrifice to the God who loved him.
BUT Philip could not live long in the rarefied air of the
hilltops. What had happened to him when first he was seized by
the religious emotion happened to him now. Because he felt so
keenly the beauty of faith, because the desire for
self-sacrifice burned in his heart with such a gem-like glow,
his strength seemed inadequate to his ambition. He was tired out
by the violence of his passion. His soul was filled on a sudden
with a singular aridity. He began to forget the presence of God
which had seemed so surrounding; and his religious exercises,
still very punctually performed, grew merely formal. At first he
blamed himself for this falling away, and the fear of hell-fire
urged him to renewed vehemence; but the passion was dead, and
gradually other interests distracted his thoughts.
Philip had few friends. His habit of reading isolated him: it
became such a need that after being in company for some time he
grew tired and restless; he was vain of the wider knowledge he
had acquired from the perusal of so many books, his mind was
alert, and he had not the skill to hide his contempt for his
companions' stupidity. They complained that he was conceited;
and, since he excelled only in matters which to them were
unimportant, they asked satirically what he had to be conceited
about. He was developing a sense of humour, and found that he
had a knack of saying bitter things, which caught people on the
raw; he said them because they amused him, hardly realising how
much they hurt, and was much offended when he found that his
victims regarded him with active dislike. The humiliations he
suffered when first he went to school had caused in him a
shrinking from his fellows which he could never entirely
overcome; he remained shy and silent. But though he did
everything to alienate the sympathy of other boys he longed with
all his heart for the popularity which to some was so easily
accorded. These from his distance he admired extravagantly; and
though he was inclined to be more sarcastic with them than with
others, though he made little jokes at their expense, he would
have given anything to change places with them. Indeed he would
gladly have changed places with the dullest boy in the school
who was whole of limb. He took to a singular habit. He would
imagine that he was some boy whom he had a particular fancy for;
he would throw his soul, as it were, into the other's body, talk
with his voice and laugh with his heart; he would imagine
himself doing all the things the other did. It was so vivid that
he seemed for a moment really to be no longer himself. In this
way he enjoyed many intervals of fantastic happiness.
At the beginning of the Christmas term which followed on his
confirmation Philip found himself moved into another study. One
of the boys who shared it was called Rose. He was in the same
form as Philip, and Philip had always looked upon him with
envious admiration. He was not good-looking; though his large
hands and big bones suggested that he would be a tall man, he
was clumsily made; but his eyes were charming, and when he
laughed (he was constantly laughing) his face wrinkled all round
them in a jolly way. He was neither clever nor stupid, but good
enough at his work and better at games. He was a favourite with
masters and boys, and he in his turn liked everyone.
When Philip was put in the study he could not help seeing that
the others, who had been together for three terms, welcomed him
coldly. It made him nervous to feel himself an intruder; but he
had learned to hide his feelings, and they found him quiet and
unobtrusive. With Rose, because he was as little able as anyone
else to resist his charm, Philip was even more than usually shy
and abrupt; and whether on account of this, unconsciously bent
upon exerting the fascination he knew was his only by the
results, or whether from sheer kindness of heart, it was Rose
who first took Philip into the circle. One day, quite suddenly,
he asked Philip if he would walk to the football field with him.
Philip flushed.
"I can't walk fast enough for you," he said.
"Rot. Come on."
And just before they were setting out some boy put his head in
the study-door and asked Rose to go with him.
"I can't," he answered. "I've already promised Carey."
"Don't bother about me," said Philip quickly. "I shan't mind."
"Rot," said Rose.
He looked at Philip with those good-natured eyes of his and
laughed. Philip felt a curious tremor in his heart.
In a little while, their friendship growing with boyish
rapidity, the pair were inseparable. Other fellows wondered at
the sudden intimacy, and Rose was asked what he saw in Philip.
"Oh, I don't know," he answered. "He's not half a bad chap
really."
Soon they grew accustomed to the two walking into chapel arm in
arm or strolling round the precincts in conversation; wherever
one was the other could be found also, and, as though
acknowledging his proprietorship, boys who wanted Rose would
leave messages with Carey. Philip at first was reserved. He
would not let himself yield entirely to the proud joy that
filled him; but presently his distrust of the fates gave way
before a wild happiness. He thought Rose the most wonderful
fellow he had ever seen. His books now were insignificant; he
could not bother about them when there was something infinitely
more important to occupy him. Rose's friends used to come in to
tea in the study sometimes or sit about when there was nothing
better to do--Rose liked a crowd and the chance of a rag--and
they found that Philip was quite a decent fellow. Philip was
happy.
When the last day of term came he and Rose arranged by which
train they should come back, so that they might meet at the
station and have tea in the town before returning to school.
Philip went home with a heavy heart. He thought of Rose all
through the holidays, and his fancy was active with the things
they would do together next term. He was bored at the vicarage,
and when on the last day his uncle put him the usual question in
the usual facetious tone:
"Well, are you glad to be going back to school?"
Philip answered joyfully.
"Rather."
In order to be sure of meeting Rose at the station he took an
earlier train than he usually did, and he waited about the
platform for an hour. When the train came in from Faversham,
where he knew Rose had to change, he ran along it excitedly. But
Rose was not there. He got a porter to tell him when another
train was due, and he waited; but again he was disappointed; and
he was cold and hungry, so he walked, through side-streets and
slums, by a short cut to the school. He found Rose in the study,
with his feet on the chimney-piece, talking eighteen to the
dozen with half a dozen boys who were sitting on whatever there
was to sit on. He shook hands with Philip enthusiastically, but
Philip's face fell, for he realised that Rose had forgotten all
about their appointment.
"I say, why are you so late?" said Rose. "I thought you were
never coming."
"You were at the station at half-past four," said another boy.
"I saw you when I came."
Philip blushed a little. He did not want Rose to know that he
had been such a fool as to wait for him.
"I had to see about a friend of my people's," he invented
readily. "I was asked to see her off."
But his disappointment made him a little sulky. He sat in
silence, and when spoken to answered in monosyllables. He was
making up his mind to have it out with Rose when they were
alone. But when the others had gone Rose at once came over and
sat on the arm of the chair in which Philip was lounging.
"I say, I'm jolly glad we're in the same study this term.
Ripping, isn't it?"
He seemed so genuinely pleased to see Philip that Philip's
annoyance vanished. They began as if they had not been separated
for five minutes to talk eagerly of the thousand things that
interested them.
AT FIRST Philip had been too grateful for Rose's friendship to
make any demands on him. He took things as they came and enjoyed
life. But presently he began to resent Rose's universal
amiability; he wanted a more exclusive attachment, and he
claimed as a right what before he had accepted as a favour. He
watched jealously Rose's companionship with others; and though
he knew it was unreasonable could not help sometimes saying
bitter things to him. If Rose spent an hour playing the fool in
another study, Philip would receive him when he returned to his
own with a sullen frown. He would sulk for a day, and he
suffered more because Rose either did not notice his ill-humour
or deliberately ignored it. Not seldom Philip, knowing all the
time how stupid he was, would force a quarrel, and they would
not speak to one another for a couple of days. But Philip could
not bear to be angry with him long, and even when convinced that
he was in the right, would apologise humbly. Then for a week
they would be as great friends as ever. But the best was over,
and Philip could see that Rose often walked with him merely from
old habit or from fear of his anger; they had not so much to say
to one another as at first, and Rose was often bored. Philip
felt that his lameness began to irritate him.
Towards the end of the term two or three boys caught scarlet
fever, and there was much talk of sending them all home in order
to escape an epidemic; but the sufferers were isolated, and
since no more were attacked it was supposed that the outbreak
was stopped. One of the stricken was Philip. He remained in
hospital through the Easter holidays, and at the beginning of
the summer term was sent home to the vicarage to get a little
fresh air. The Vicar, notwithstanding medical assurance that the
boy was no longer infectious, received him with suspicion; he
thought it very inconsiderate of the doctor to suggest that his
nephew's convalescence should be spent by the seaside, and
consented to have him in the house only because there was
nowhere else he could go.
Philip went back to school at half-term. He had forgotten the
quarrels he had had with Rose, but remembered only that he was
his greatest friend. He knew that he had been silly. He made up
his mind to be more reasonable. During his illness Rose had sent
him in a couple of little notes, and he had ended each with the
words: "Hurry up and come back." Philip thought Rose must be
looking forward as much to his return as he was himself to
seeing Rose.
He found that owing to the death from scarlet fever of one of
the boys in the Sixth there had been some shifting in the
studies and Rose was no longer in his. It was a bitter
disappointment. But as soon as he arrived he burst into Rose's
study. Rose was sitting at his desk, working with a boy called
Hunter, and turned round crossly as Philip came in.
"Who the devil's that?" he cried. And then, seeing Philip: "Oh,
it's you."
Philip stopped in embarrassment.
"I thought I'd come in and see how you were."
"We were just working."
Hunter broke into the conversation.
"When did you get back?"
"Five minutes ago."
They sat and looked at him as though he was disturbing them.
They evidently expected him to go quickly. Philip reddened.
"I'll be off. You might look in when you've done," he said to
Rose.
"All right."
Philip closed the door behind him and limped back to his own
study. He felt frightfully hurt. Rose, far from seeming glad to
see him, had looked almost put out. They might never have been
more than acquaintances. Though he waited in his study, not
leaving it for a moment in case just then Rose should come, his
friend never appeared; and next morning when he went in to
prayers he saw Rose and Hunter singing along arm in arm. What he
could not see for himself others told him. He had forgotten that
three months is a long time in a schoolboy's life, and though he
had passed them in solitude Rose had lived in the world. Hunter
had stepped into the vacant place. Philip found that Rose was
quietly avoiding him. But he was not the boy to accept a
situation without putting it into words; he waited till he was
sure Rose was alone in his study and went in.
"May I come in?" he asked.
Rose looked at him with an embarrassment that made him angry
with Philip.
"Yes, if you want to."
"It's very kind of you," said Philip sarcastically.
"What d'you want?"
"I say, why have you been so rotten since I came back?"
"Oh, don't be an ass," said Rose.
"I don't know what you see in Hunter."
"That's my business."
Philip looked down. He could not bring himself to say what was
in his heart. He was afraid of humiliating himself. Rose got up.
"I've got to go to the Gym," he said.
When he was at the door Philip forced himself to speak.
"I say, Rose, don't be a perfect beast."
"Oh, go to hell."
Rose slammed the door behind him and left Philip alone. Philip
shivered with rage. He went back to his study and turned the
conversation over in his mind. He hated Rose now, he wanted to
hurt him, he thought of biting things he might have said to him.
He brooded over the end to their friendship and fancied that
others were talking of it. In his sensitiveness he saw sneers
and wonderings in other fellows' manner when they were not
bothering their heads with him at all. He imagined to himself
what they were saying.
"After all, it wasn't likely to last long. I wonder he ever
stuck Carey at all. Blighter!"
To show his indifference he struck up a violent friendship with
a boy called Sharp whom he hated and despised. He was a London
boy, with a loutish air, a heavy fellow with the beginnings of
a moustache on his lip and bushy eyebrows that joined one
another across the bridge of his nose. He had soft hands and
manners too suave for his years. He spoke with the suspicion of
a cockney accent. He was one of those boys who are too slack to
play games, and he exercised great ingenuity in making excuses
to avoid such as were compulsory. He was regarded by boys and
masters with a vague dislike, and it was from arrogance that
Philip now sought his society. Sharp in a couple of terms was
going to Germany for a year. He hated school, which he looked
upon as an indignity to be endured till he was old enough to go
out into the world. London was all he cared for, and he had many
stories to tell of his doings there during the holidays. From
his conversation--he spoke in a soft, deep-toned voice--there
emerged the vague rumour of the London streets by night. Philip
listened to him at once fascinated and repelled. With his vivid
fancy he seemed to see the surging throng round the pit-door of
theatres, and the glitter of cheap restaurants, bars where men,
half drunk, sat on high stools talking with barmaids; and under
the street lamps the mysterious passing of dark crowds bent upon
pleasure. Sharp lent him cheap novels from Holywell Row, which
Philip read in his cubicle with a sort of wonderful fear.
Once Rose tried to effect a reconciliation. He was a
good-natured fellow, who did not like having enemies.
"I say, Carey, why are you being such a silly ass? It doesn't do
you any good cutting me and all that."
"I don't know what you mean," answered Philip.
"Well, I don't see why you shouldn't talk."
"You bore me," said Philip.
"Please yourself."
Rose shrugged his shoulders and left him. Philip was very white,
as he always became when he was moved, and his heart beat
violently. When Rose went away he felt suddenly sick with
misery. He did not know why he had answered in that fashion. He
would have given anything to be friends with Rose. He hated to
have quarrelled with him, and now that he saw he had given him
pain he was very sorry. But at the moment he had not been master
of himself. It seemed that some devil had seized him, forcing
him to say bitter things against his will, even though at the
time he wanted to shake hands with Rose and meet him more than
halfway. The desire to wound had been too strong for him. He had
wanted to revenge himself for the pain and the humiliation he
had endured. It was pride: it was folly too, for he knew that
Rose would not care at all, while he would suffer bitterly. The
thought came to him that he would go to Rose, and say:
"I say, I'm sorry I was such a beast. I couldn't help it. Let's
make it up."
But he knew he would never be able to do it. He was afraid that
Rose would sneer at him. He was angry with himself, and when
Sharp came in a little while afterwards he seized upon the first
opportunity to quarrel with him. Philip had a fiendish instinct
for discovering other people's raw spots, and was able to say
things that rankled because they were true. But Sharp had the
last word.
"I heard Rose talking about you to Mellor just now," he said.
"Mellor said: Why didn't you kick him? It would teach him
manners. And Rose said: I didn't like to. Damned cripple."
Philip suddenly became scarlet. He could not answer, for there
was a lump in his throat that almost choked him.
PHILIP was moved into the Sixth, but he hated school now with
all his heart, and, having lost his ambition, cared nothing
whether he did ill or well. He awoke in the morning with a
sinking heart because he must go through another day of
drudgery. He was tired of having to do things because he was
told; and the restrictions irked him, not because they were
unreasonable, but because they were restrictions. He yearned for
freedom. He was weary of repeating things that he knew already
and of the hammering away, for the sake of a thick-witted
fellow, at something that he understood from the beginning.
With Mr. Perkins you could work or not as you chose. He was at
once eager and abstracted. The Sixth Form room was in a part of
the old abbey which had been restored, and it had a gothic
window: Philip tried to cheat his boredom by drawing this over
and over again; and sometimes out of his head he drew the great
tower of the Cathedral or the gateway that led into the
precincts. He had a knack for drawing. Aunt Louisa during her
youth had painted in water colours, and she had several albums
filled with sketches of churches, old bridges, and picturesque
cottages. They were often shown at the vicarage tea-parties. She
had once given Philip a paint-box as a Christmas present, and he
had started by copying her pictures. He copied them better than
anyone could have expected, and presently he did little pictures
of his own. Mrs. Carey encouraged him. It was a good way to keep
him out of mischief, and later on his sketches would be useful
for bazaars. Two or three of them had been framed and hung in
his bed-room.
But one day, at the end of the morning's work, Mr. Perkins
stopped him as he was lounging out of the form-room.
"I want to speak to you, Carey."
Philip waited. Mr. Perkins ran his lean fingers through his
beard and looked at Philip. He seemed to be thinking over what
he wanted to say.
"What's the matter with you, Carey?" he said abruptly.
Philip, flushing, looked at him quickly. But knowing him well by
now, without answering, he waited for him to go on.
"I've been dissatisfied with you lately. You've been slack and
inattentive. You seem to take no interest in your work. It's
been slovenly and bad."
"I'm very sorry, sir," said Philip.
"Is that all you have to say for yourself?"
Philip looked down sulkily. How could he answer that he was
bored to death?
"You know, this term you'll go down instead of up. I shan't give
you a very good report."
Philip wondered what he would say if he knew how the report was
treated. It arrived at breakfast, Mr. Carey glanced at it
indifferently, and passed it over to Philip.
"There's your report. You'd better see what it says," he
remarked, as he ran his fingers through the wrapper of a
catalogue of second-hand books.
Philip read it.
"Is it good?" asked Aunt Louisa.
"Not so good as I deserve," answered Philip, with a smile,
giving it to her.
"I'll read it afterwards when I've got my spectacles," she said.
But after breakfast Mary Ann came in to say the butcher was
there, and she generally forgot.
Mr. Perkins went on.
"I'm disappointed with you. And I can't understand. I know you
can do things if you want to, but you don't seem to want to any
more. I was going to make you a monitor next term, but I think
I'd better wait a bit."
Philip flushed. He did not like the thought of being passed
over. He tightened his lips.
"And there's something else. You must begin thinking of your
scholarship now. You won't get anything unless you start working
very seriously."
Philip was irritated by the lecture. He was angry with the
headmaster, and angry with himself.
"I don't think I'm going up to Oxford," he said.
"Why not? I thought your idea was to be ordained."
"I've changed my mind."
"Why?"
Philip did not answer. Mr. Perkins, holding himself oddly as he
always did, like a figure in one of Perugino's pictures, drew
his fingers thoughtfully through his beard. He looked at Philip
as though he were trying to understand and then abruptly told
him he might go.
Apparently he was not satisfied, for one evening, a week later,
when Philip had to go into his study with some papers, he
resumed the conversation; but this time he adopted a different
method: he spoke to Philip not as a schoolmaster with a boy but
as one human being with another. He did not seem to care now
that Philip's work was poor, that he ran small chance against
keen rivals of carrying off the scholarship necessary for him to
go to Oxford: the important matter was his changed intention
about his life afterwards. Mr. Perkins set himself to revive his
eagerness to be ordained. With infinite skill he worked on his
feelings, and this was easier since he was himself genuinely
moved. Philip's change of mind caused him bitter distress, and
he really thought he was throwing away his chance of happiness
in life for he knew not what. His voice was very persuasive. And
Philip, easily moved by the emotion of others, very emotional
himself notwithstanding a placid exterior--his face, partly by
nature but also from the habit of all these years at school,
seldom except by his quick flushing showed what he felt--Philip
was deeply touched by what the master said. He was very grateful
to him for the interest he showed, and he was
conscience-stricken by the grief which he felt his behaviour
caused him. It was subtly flattering to know that with the whole
school to think about Mr. Perkins should trouble with him, but
at the same time something else in him, like another person
standing at his elbow, clung desperately to two words.
"I won't. I won't. I won't."
He felt himself slipping. He was powerless against the weakness
that seemed to well up in him; it was like the water that rises
up in an empty bottle held over a full basin; and he set his
teeth, saying the words over and over to himself.
"I won't. I won't. I won't."
At last Mr. Perkins put his hand on Philip's shoulder.
"I don't want to influence you," he said. "You must decide for
yourself. Pray to Almighty God for help and guidance."
When Philip came out of the headmaster's house there was a light
rain falling. He went under the archway that led to the
precincts, there was not a soul there, and the rooks were silent
in the elms. He walked round slowly. He felt hot, and the rain
did him good. He thought over all that Mr. Perkins had said,
calmly now that he was withdrawn from the fervour of his
personality, and he was thankful he had not given way.
In the darkness he could but vaguely see the great mass of the
Cathedral: he hated it now because of the irksomeness of the
long services which he was forced to attend. The anthem was
interminable, and you had to stand drearily while it was being
sung; you could not hear the droning sermon, and your body
twitched because you had to sit still when you wanted to move
about. Then philip thought of the two services every Sunday at
Blackstable. The church was bare and cold, and there was a smell
all about one of pomade and starched clothes. The curate
preached once and his uncle preached once. As he grew up he had
learned to know his uncle; Philip was downright and intolerant,
and he could not understand that a man might sincerely say
things as a clergyman which he never acted up to as a man. The
deception outraged him. His uncle was a weak and selfish man,
whose chief desire it was to be saved trouble.
Mr. Perkins had spoken to him of the beauty of a life dedicated
to the service of God. Philip knew what sort of lives the clergy
led in the corner of East Anglia which was his home. There was
the Vicar of Whitestone, a parish a little way from Blackstable:
he was a bachelor and to give himself something to do had lately
taken up farming: the local paper constantly reported the cases
he had in the county court against this one and that, labourers
he would not pay their wages to or tradesmen whom he accused of
cheating him; scandal said he starved his cows, and there was
much talk about some general action which should be taken
against him. Then there was the Vicar of Ferne, a bearded, fine
figure of a man: his wife had been forced to leave him because
of his cruelty, and she had filled the neighbourhood with
stories of his immorality. The Vicar of Surle, a tiny hamlet by
the sea, was to be seen every evening in the public house a
stone's throw from his vicarage; and the churchwardens had been
to Mr. Carey to ask his advice. There was not a soul for any of
them to talk to except small farmers or fishermen; there were
long winter evenings when the wind blew, whistling drearily
through the leafless trees, and all around they saw nothing but
the bare monotony of ploughed fields; and there was poverty, and
there was lack of any work that seemed to matter; every kink in
their characters had free play; there was nothing to restrain
them; they grew narrow and eccentric: Philip knew all this, but
in his young intolerance he did not offer it as an excuse. He
shivered at the thought of leading such a life; he wanted to get
out into the world.
MR. PERKINS soon saw that his words had had no effect on Philip,
and for the rest of the term ignored him. He wrote a report
which was vitriolic. When it arrived and Aunt Louisa asked
Philip what it was like, he answered cheerfully.
"Rotten."
"Is it?" said the Vicar. "I must look at it again."
"Do you think there's any use in my staying on at Tercanbury? I
should have thought it would be better if I went to Germany for
a bit."
"What has put that in your head?" said Aunt Louisa.
"Don't you think it's rather a good idea?"
Sharp had already left King's School and had written to Philip
from Hanover. He was really starting life, and it made Philip
more restless to think of it. He felt he could not bear another
year of restraint.
"But then you wouldn't get a scholarship."
"I haven't a chance of getting one anyhow. And besides, I don't
know that I particularly want to go to Oxford."
"But if you're going to be ordained, Philip?" Aunt Louisa
exclaimed in dismay.
"I've given up that idea long ago."
Mrs. Carey looked at him with startled eyes, and then, used to
self-restraint, she poured out another cup of tea for his uncle.
They did not speak. In a moment Philip saw tears slowly falling
down her cheeks. His heart was suddenly wrung because he caused
her pain. In her tight black dress, made by the dressmaker down
the street, with her wrinkled face and pale tired eyes, her gray
hair still done in the frivolous ringlets of her youth, she was
a ridiculous but strangely pathetic figure. Philip saw it for
the first time.
Afterwards, when the Vicar was shut up in his study with the
curate, he put his arms round her waist.
"I say, I'm sorry you're upset, Aunt Louisa," he said. "But it's
no good my being ordained if I haven't a real vocation, is it?"
"I'm so disappointed, Philip," she moaned. "I'd set my heart on
it. I thought you could be your uncle's curate, and then when
our time came--after all, we can't last for ever, can we?--you
might have taken his place."
Philip shivered. He was seized with panic. His heart beat like
a pigeon in a trap beating with its wings. His aunt wept softly,
her head upon his shoulder.
"I wish you'd persuade Uncle William to let me leave Tercanbury.
I'm so sick of it."
But the Vicar of Blackstable did not easily alter any
arrangements he had made, and it had always been intended that
Philip should stay at King's School till he was eighteen, and
should then go to Oxford. At all events he would not hear of
Philip leaving then, for no notice had been given and the term's
fee would have to be paid in any case.
"Then will you give notice for me to leave at Christmas?" said
Philip, at the end of a long and often bitter conversation.
"I'll write to Mr. Perkins about it and see what he says."
"Oh, I wish to goodness I were twenty-one. It is awful to be at
Somebody else's beck and call."
"Philip, you shouldn't speak to your uncle like that," said Mrs.
Carey gently.
"But don't you see that Perkins will want me to stay? He gets so
much a head for every chap in the school."
"Why don't you want to go to Oxford?"
"What's the good if I'm not going into the Church?"
"You can't go into the Church: you're in the Church already,"
said the Vicar.
"Ordained then," replied Philip impatiently.
"What are you going to be, Philip?" asked Mrs. Carey.
"I don't know. I've not made up my mind. But whatever I am,
it'll be useful to know foreign languages. I shall get far more
out of a year in Germany than by staying on at that hole."
He would not say that he felt Oxford would be little better than
a continuation of his life at school. He wished immensely to be
his own master. Besides he would be known to a certain extent
among old schoolfellows, and he wanted to get away from them
all. He felt that his life at school had been a failure. He
wanted to start fresh.
It happened that his desire to go to Germany fell in with
certain ideas which had been of late discussed at Blackstable.
Sometimes friends came to stay with the doctor and brought news
of the world outside; and the visitors spending August by the
sea had their own way of looking at things. The Vicar had heard
that there were people who did not think the old-fashioned
education so useful nowadays as it had been in the past, and
modern languages were gaining an importance which they had not
had in his own youth. His own mind was divided, for a younger
brother of his had been sent to Germany when he failed in some
examination, thus creating a precedent but since he had there
died of typhoid it was impossible to look upon the experiment as
other than dangerous. The result of innumerable conversations
was that Philip should go back to Tercanbury for another term,
and then should leave. With this agreement Philip was not
dissatisfied. But when he had been back a few days the
headmaster spoke to him.
"I've had a letter from your uncle. It appears you want to go to
Germany, and he asks me what I think about it."
Philip was astounded. He was furious with his guardian for going
back on his word.
"I thought it was settled, sir," he said.
"Far from it. I've written to say I think it the greatest
mistake to take you away."
Philip immediately sat down and wrote a violent letter to his
uncle. He did not measure his language. He was so angry that he
could not get to sleep till quite late that night, and he awoke
in the early morning and began brooding over the way they had
treated him. He waited impatiently for an answer. In two or
three days it came. It was a mild, pained letter from Aunt
Louisa, saying that he should not write such things to his
uncle, who was very much distressed. He was unkind and
unchristian. He must know they were only trying to do their best
for him, and they were so much older than he that they must be
better judges of what was good for him. Philip clenched his
hands. He had heard that statement so often, and he could not
see why it was true; they did not know the conditions as he did,
why should they accept it as self-evident that their greater age
gave them greater wisdom? The letter ended with the information
that Mr. Carey had withdrawn the notice he had given.
Philip nursed his wrath till the next half-holiday. They had
them on Tuesdays and Thursdays, since on Saturday afternoons
they had to go to a service in the Cathedral. He stopped behind
when the rest of the Sixth went out.
"May I go to Blackstable this afternoon, please, sir?" he asked.
"No," said the headmaster briefly.
"I wanted to see my uncle about something very important."
"Didn't you hear me say no?"
Philip did not answer. He went out. He felt almost sick with
humiliation, the humiliation of having to ask and the
humiliation of the curt refusal. He hated the headmaster now.
Philip writhed under that despotism which never vouchsafed a
reason for the most tyrannous act. He was too angry to care what
he did, and after dinner walked down to the station, by the back
ways he knew so well, just in time to catch the train to
Blackstable. He walked into the vicarage and found his uncle and
aunt sitting in the dining-room.
"Hulloa, where have you sprung from?" said the Vicar.
It was very clear that he was not pleased to see him. He looked
a little uneasy.
"I thought I'd come and see you about my leaving. I want to know
what you mean by promising me one thing when I was here, and
doing something different a week after."
He was a little frightened at his own boldness, but he had made
up his mind exactly what words to use, and, though his heart
beat violently, he forced himself to say them.
"Have you got leave to come here this afternoon?"
"No. I asked Perkins and he refused. If you like to write and
tell him I've been here you can get me into a really fine old
row."
Mrs. Carey sat knitting with trembling hands. She was unused to
scenes and they agitated her extremely.
"It would serve you right if I told him," said Mr. Carey.
"If you like to be a perfect sneak you can. After writing to
Perkins as you did you're quite capable of it."
It was foolish of Philip to say that, because it gave the Vicar
exactly the opportunity he wanted.
"I'm not going to sit still while you say impertinent things to
me," he said with dignity.
He got up and walked quickly out of the room into his study.
Philip heard him shut the door and lock it.
"Oh, I wish to God I were twenty-one. It is awful to be tied
down like this."
Aunt Louisa began to cry quietly.
"Oh, Philip, you oughtn't to have spoken to your uncle like
that. Do please go and tell him you're sorry."
"I'm not in the least sorry. He's taking a mean advantage. Of
Course it's just waste of money keeping me on at school, but
what does he care? It's not his money. It was cruel to put me
under the guardianship of people who know nothing about things."
"Philip."
Philip in his voluble anger stopped suddenly at the sound of her
voice. It was heart-broken. He had not realised what bitter
things he was saying.
"Philip, how can you be so unkind? You know we are only trying
to do our best for you, and we know that we have no experience;
it isn't as if we'd had any children of our own: that's why we
consulted Mr. Perkins." Her voice broke. "I've tried to be like
a mother to you. I've loved you as if you were my own son."
She was so small and frail, there was something so pathetic in
her old-maidish air, that Philip was touched. A great lump came
suddenly in his throat and his eyes filled with tears.
"I'm so sorry," he said. "I didn't mean to be beastly."
He knelt down beside her and took her in his arms, and kissed
her wet, withered cheeks. She sobbed bitterly, and he seemed to
feel on a sudden the pity of that wasted life. She had never
surrendered herself before to such a display of emotion.
"I know I've not been what I wanted to be to you, Philip, but I
didn't know how. It's been just as dreadful for me to have no
children as for you to have no mother."
Philip forgot his anger and his own concerns, but thought only
of consoling her, with broken words and clumsy little caresses.
Then the clock struck, and he had to bolt off at once to catch
the only train that would get him back to Tercanbury in time for
call-over. As he sat in the corner of the railway carriage he
saw that he had done nothing. He was angry with himself for his
weakness. It was despicable to have allowed himself to be turned
from his purpose by the pompous airs of the Vicar and the tears
of his aunt. But as the result of he knew not what conversations
between the couple another letter was written to the headmaster.
Mr. Perkins read it with an impatient shrug of the shoulders. He
showed it to Philip. It ran:
Dear Mr. Perkins,
Forgive me for troubling you again about my ward, but both his
Aunt and I have been uneasy about him. He seems very anxious to
leave school, and his Aunt thinks he is unhappy. It is very
difficult for us to know what to do as we are not his parents.
He does not seem to think he is doing very well and he feels it
is wasting his money to stay on. I should be very much obliged
if you would have a talk to him, and if he is still of the same
mind perhaps it would be better if he left at Christmas as I
originally intended.
Yours very truly,
William Carey.
Philip gave him back the letter. He felt a thrill of pride in
his triumph. He had got his own way, and he was satisfied. His
will had gained a victory over the wills of others.
"It's not much good my spending half an hour writing to your
uncle if he changes his mind the next letter he gets from you,"
said the headmaster irritably.
Philip said nothing, and his face was perfectly placid; but he
could not prevent the twinkle in his eyes. Mr. Perkins noticed
it and broke into a little laugh.
"You've rather scored, haven't you?" he said.
Then Philip smiled outright. He could not conceal his
exultation.
"Is it true that you're very anxious to leave?"
"Yes, sir."
"Are you unhappy here?"
Philip blushed. He hated instinctively any attempt to get into
the depths of his feelings.
"Oh, I don't know, sir."
Mr. Perkins, slowly dragging his fingers through his beard,
looked at him thoughtfully. He seemed to speak almost to
himself.
"Of course schools are made for the average. The holes are all
round, and whatever shape the pegs are they must wedge in
somehow. One hasn't time to bother about anything but the
average." Then suddenly he addressed himself to Philip: "Look
here, I've got a suggestion to make to you. It's getting on
towards the end of the term now. Another term won't kill you,
and if you want to go to Germany you'd better go after Easter
than after Christmas. It'll be much pleasanter in the spring
than in midwinter. If at the end of the next term you still want
to go I'll make no objection. What d'you say to that?"
"Thank you very much, sir."
Philip was so glad to have gained the last three months that he
did not mind the extra term. The school seemed less of a prison
when he knew that before Easter he would be free from it for
ever. His heart danced within him. That evening in chapel he
looked round at the boys, standing according to their forms,
each in his due place, and he chuckled with satisfaction at the
thought that soon he would never see them again. It made him
regard them almost with a friendly feeling. His eyes rested on
Rose. Rose took his position as a monitor very seriously: he had
quite an idea of being a good influence in the school; it was
his turn to read the lesson that evening, and he read it very
well. Philip smiled when he thought that he would be rid of him
for ever, and it would not matter in six months whether Rose was
tall and straight-limbed; and where would the importance be that
he was a monitor and captain of the eleven? Philip looked at the
masters in their gowns. Gordon was dead, he had died of apoplexy
two years before, but all the rest were there. Philip knew now
what a poor lot they were, except Turner perhaps, there was
something of a man in him; and he writhed at the thought of the
subjection in which they had held him. In six months they would
not matter either. Their praise would mean nothing to him, and
he would shrug his shoulders at their censure.
Philip had learned not to express his emotions by outward signs,
and shyness still tormented him, but he had often very high
spirits; and then, though he limped about demurely, silent and
reserved, it seemed to be hallooing in his heart. He seemed to
himself to walk more lightly. All sorts of ideas danced through
his head, fancies chased one another so furiously that he could
not catch them; but their coming and their going filled him with
exhilaration. Now, being happy, he was able to work, and during
the remaining weeks of the term set himself to make up for his
long neglect. His brain worked easily, and he took a keen
pleasure in the activity of his intellect. He did very well in
the examinations that closed the term. Mr. Perkins made only one
remark: he was talking to him about an essay he had written,
and, after the usual criticisms, said:
"So you've made up your mind to stop playing the fool for a bit,
have you?"
He smiled at him with his shining teeth, and Philip, looking
down, gave an embarrassed smile.
The half dozen boys who expected to divide between them the
various prizes which were given at the end of the summer term
had ceased to look upon Philip as a serious rival, but now they
began to regard him with some uneasiness. He told no one that he
was leaving at Easter and so was in no sense a competitor, but
left them to their anxieties. He knew that Rose flattered
himself on his French, for he had spent two or three holidays in
France; and he expected to get the Dean's Prize for English
essay; Philip got a good deal of satisfaction in watching his
dismay when he saw how much better Philip was doing in these
subjects than himself. Another fellow, Norton, could not go to
Oxford unless he got one of the scholarships at the disposal of
the school. He asked Philip if he was going in for them.
"Have you any objection?" asked Philip.
It entertained him to think that he held someone else's future
in his hand. There was something romantic in getting these
various rewards actually in his grasp, and then leaving them to
others because he disdained them. At last the breaking-up day
came, and he went to Mr. Perkins to bid him good-bye.
"You don't mean to say you really want to leave?"
Philip's face fell at the headmaster's evident surprise.
"You said you wouldn't put any objection in the way, sir," he
answered.
"I thought it was only a whim that I'd better humour. I know
you're obstinate and headstrong. What on earth d'you want to
leave for now? You've only got another term in any case. You can
get the Magdalen scholarship easily; you'll get half the prizes
we've got to give."
Philip looked at him sullenly. He felt that he had been tricked;
but he had the promise, and Perkins would have to stand by it.
"You'll have a very pleasant time at Oxford. You needn't decide
at once what you're going to do afterwards. I wonder if you
realise how delightful the life is up there for anyone who has
brains."
"I've made all my arrangements now to go to Germany, sir," said
Philip.
"Are they arrangements that couldn't possibly be altered?" asked
Mr. Perkins, with his quizzical smile. "I shall be very sorry to
lose you. In schools the rather stupid boys who work always do
better than the clever boy who's idle, but when the clever boy
works--why then, he does what you've done this term."
Philip flushed darkly. He was unused to compliments, and no one
had ever told him he was clever. The headmaster put his hand on
Philip's shoulder.
"You know, driving things into the heads of thick-witted boys is
dull work, but when now and then you have the chance of teaching
a boy who comes half-way towards you, who understands almost
before you've got the words out of your mouth, why, then
teaching is the most exhilarating thing in the world." Philip
was melted by kindness; it had never occurred to him that it
mattered really to Mr. Perkins whether he went or stayed. He was
touched and immensely flattered. It would be pleasant to end up
his school-days with glory and then go to Oxford: in a flash
there appeared before him the life which he had heard described
from boys who came back to play in the O.K.S. match or in
letters from the University read out in one of the studies. But
he was ashamed; he would look such a fool in his own eyes if he
gave in now; his uncle would chuckle at the success of the
headmaster's ruse. It was rather a come-down from the dramatic
surrender of all these prizes which were in his reach, because
he disdained to take them, to the plain, ordinary winning of
them. It only required a little more persuasion, just enough to
save his self-respect, and Philip would have done anything that
Mr. Perkins wished; but his face showed nothing of his
conflicting emotions. It was placid and sullen.
"I think I'd rather go, sir," he said.
Mr. Perkins, like many men who manage things by their personal
influence, grew a little impatient when his power was not
immediately manifest. He had a great deal of work to do, and
could not waste more time on a boy who seemed to him insanely
obstinate.
"Very well, I promised to let you if you really wanted it, and
I keep my promise. When do you go to Germany?"
Philip's heart beat violently. The battle was won, and he did
not know whether he had not rather lost it.
"At the beginning of May, sir," he answered.
"Well, you must come and see us when you get back."
He held out his hand. If he had given him one more chance Philip
would have changed his mind, but he seemed to look upon the
matter as settled. Philip walked out of the house. His
school-days were over, and he was free; but the wild exultation
to which he had looked forward at that moment was not there. He
walked round the precincts slowly, and a profound depression
seized him. He wished now that he had not been foolish. He did
not want to go, but he knew he could never bring himself to go
to the headmaster and tell him he would stay. That was a
humiliation he could never put upon himself. He wondered whether
he had done right. He was dissatisfied with himself and with all
his circumstances. He asked himself dully whether whenever you
got your way you wished afterwards that you hadn't.
PHILIP'S uncle had an old friend, called Miss Wilkinson, who
lived in Berlin. She was the daughter of a clergyman, and it was
with her father, the rector of a village in Lincolnshire, that
Mr. Carey had spent his last curacy; on his death, forced to
earn her living, she had taken various situations as a governess
in France and Germany. She had kept up a correspondence with
Mrs. Carey, and two or three times had spent her holidays at
Blackstable Vicarage, paying as was usual with the Careys'
unfrequent guests a small sum for her keep. When it became clear
that it was less trouble to yield to Philip's wishes than to
resist them, Mrs. Carey wrote to ask her for advice. Miss
Wilkinson recommended Heidelberg as an excellent place to learn
German in and the house of Frau Professor Erlin as a comfortable
home. Philip might live there for thirty marks a week, and the
Professor himself, a teacher at the local high school, would
instruct him.
Philip arrived in Heidelberg one morning in May. His things were
put on a barrow and he followed the porter out of the station.
The sky was bright blue, and the trees in the avenue through
which they passed were thick with leaves; there was something in
the air fresh to Philip, and mingled with the timidity he felt
at entering on a new life, among strangers, was a great
exhilaration. He was a little disconsolate that no one had come
to meet him, and felt very shy when the porter left him at the
front door of a big white house. An untidy lad let him in and
took him into a drawing-room. It was filled with a large suite
covered in green velvet, and in the middle was a round table. On
this in water stood a bouquet of flowers tightly packed together
in a paper frill like the bone of a mutton chop, and carefully
spaced round it were books in leather bindings. There was a
musty smell.
Presently, with an odour of cooking, the Frau Professor came in,
a short, very stout woman with tightly dressed hair and a red
face; she had little eyes, sparkling like beads, and an effusive
manner. She took both Philip's hands and asked him about Miss
Wilkinson, who had twice spent a few weeks with her. She spoke
in German and in broken English. Philip could not make her
understand that he did not know Miss Wilkinson. Then her two
daughters appeared. They seemed hardly young to Philip, but
perhaps they were not more than twenty-five: the elder, Thekla,
was as short as her mother, with the same, rather shifty air,
but with a pretty face and abundant dark hair; Anna, her younger
sister, was tall and plain, but since she had a pleasant smile
Philip immediately preferred her. After a few minutes of polite
conversation the Frau Professor took Philip to his room and left
him. It was in a turret, looking over the tops of the trees in
the Anlage; and the bed was in an alcove, so that when you sat
at the desk it had not the look of a bed-room at all. Philip
unpacked his things and set out all his books. He was his own
master at last.
A bell summoned him to dinner at one o'clock, and he found the
Frau Professor's guests assembled in the drawing-room. He was
introduced to her husband, a tall man of middle age with a large
fair head, turning now to gray, and mild blue eyes. He spoke to
Philip in correct, rather archaic English, having learned it
from a study of the English classics, not from conversation; and
it was odd to hear him use words colloquially which Philip had
only met in the plays of Shakespeare. Frau Professor Erlin
called her establishment a family and not a pension; but it
would have required the subtlety of a metaphysician to find out
exactly where the difference lay. When they sat down to dinner
in a long dark apartment that led out of the drawing-room,
Philip, feeling very shy, saw that there were sixteen people.
The Frau Professor sat at one end and carved. The service was
conducted, with a great clattering of plates, by the same clumsy
lout who had opened the door for him; and though he was quick it
happened that the first persons to be served had finished before
the last had received their appointed portions. The Frau
Professor insisted that nothing but German should be spoken, so
that Philip, even if his bashfulness had permitted him to be
talkative, was forced to hold his tongue. He looked at the
people among whom he was to live. By the Frau Professor sat
several old ladies, but Philip did not give them much of his
attention. There were two young girls, both fair and one of them
very pretty, whom Philip heard addressed as Fraulein Hedwig and
Fraulein Cacilie. Fraulein Cacilie had a long pig-tail hanging
down her back. They sat side by side and chattered to one
another, with smothered laughter: now and then they glanced at
Philip and one of them said something in an undertone; they both
giggled, and Philip blushed awkwardly, feeling that they were
making fun of him. Near them sat a Chinaman, with a yellow face
and an expansive smile, who was studying Western conditions at
the University. He spoke so quickly, with a queer accent, that
the girls could not always understand him, and then they burst
out laughing. He laughed too, good-humouredly, and his almond
eyes almost closed as he did so. There were two or three
American men, in black coats, rather yellow and dry of skin:
they were theological students; Philip heard the twang of their
New England accent through their bad German, and he glanced at
them with suspicion; for he had been taught to look upon
Americans as wild and desperate barbarians.
Afterwards, when they had sat for a little on the stiff green
velvet chairs of the drawing-room, Fraulein Anna asked Philip if
he would like to go for a walk with them.
Philip accepted the invitation. They were quite a party. There
were the two daughters of the Frau Professor, the two other
girls, one of the American students, and Philip. Philip walked
by the side of Anna and Fraulein Hedwig. He was a little
fluttered. He had never known any girls. At Blackstable there
were only the farmers' daughters and the girls of the local
tradesmen. He knew them by name and by sight, but he was timid,
and he thought they laughed at his deformity. He accepted
willingly the difference which the Vicar and Mrs. Carey put
between their own exalted rank and that of the farmers. The
doctor had two daughters, but they were both much older than
Philip and had been married to successive assistants while
Philip was still a small boy. At school there had been two or
three girls of more boldness than modesty whom some of the boys
knew; and desperate stories, due in all probability to the
masculine imagination, were told of intrigues with them; but
Philip had always concealed under a lofty contempt the terror
with which they filled him. His imagination and the books he had
read had inspired in him a desire for the Byronic attitude; and
he was torn between a morbid self-consciousness and a conviction
that he owed it to himself to be gallant. He felt now that he
should be bright and amusing, but his brain seemed empty and he
could not for the life of him think of anything to say. Fraulein
Anna, the Frau Professor's daughter, addressed herself to him
frequently from a sense of duty, but the other said little: she
looked at him now and then with sparkling eyes, and sometimes to
his confusion laughed outright. Philip felt that she thought him
perfectly ridiculous. They walked along the side of a hill among
pine-trees, and their pleasant odour caused Philip a keen
delight. The day was warm and cloudless. At last they came to an
eminence from which they saw the valley of the Rhine spread out
before them under the sun. It was a vast stretch of country,
sparkling with golden light, with cities in the distance; and
through it meandered the silver ribband of the river. Wide
spaces are rare in the corner of Kent which Philip knew, the sea
offers the only broad horizon, and the immense distance he saw
now gave him a peculiar, an indescribable thrill. He felt
suddenly elated. Though he did not know it, it was the first
time that he had experienced, quite undiluted with foreign
emotions, the sense of beauty. They sat on a bench, the three of
them, for the others had gone on, and while the girls talked in
rapid German, Philip, indifferent to their proximity, feasted
his eyes.
"By Jove, I am happy," he said to himself unconsciously.
PHILIP thought occasionally of the King's School at Tercanbury,
and laughed to himself as he remembered what at some particular
moment of the day they were doing. Now and then he dreamed that
he was there still, and it gave him an extraordinary
satisfaction, on awaking, to realise that he was in his little
room in the turret. From his bed he could see the great cumulus
clouds that hung in the blue sky. He revelled in his freedom. He
could go to bed when he chose and get up when the fancy took
him. There was no one to order him about. It struck him that he
need not tell any more lies.
It had been arranged that Professor Erlin should teach him Latin
and German; a Frenchman came every day to give him lessons in
French; and the Frau Professor had recommended for mathematics
an Englishman who was taking a philological degree at the
university. This was a man named Wharton. Philip went to him
every morning. He lived in one room on the top floor of a shabby
house. It was dirty and untidy, and it was filled with a pungent
odour made up of many different stinks. He was generally in bed
when Philip arrived at ten o'clock, and he jumped out, put on a
filthy dressing-gown and felt slippers, and, while he gave
instruction, ate his simple breakfast. He was a short man, stout
from excessive beer drinking, with a heavy moustache and long,
unkempt hair. He had been in Germany for five years and was
become very Teutonic. He spoke with scorn of Cambridge where he
had taken his degree and with horror of the life which awaited
him when, having taken his doctorate in Heidelberg, he must
return to England and a pedagogic career. He adored the life of
the German university with its happy freedom and its jolly
companionships. He was a member of a Burschenschaft, and
promised to take Philip to a Kneipe. He was very poor and made
no secret that the lessons he was giving Philip meant the
difference between meat for his dinner and bread and cheese.
Sometimes after a heavy night he had such a headache that he
could not drink his coffee, and he gave his lesson with
heaviness of spirit. For these occasions he kept a few bottles
of beer under the bed, and one of these and a pipe would help
him to bear the burden of life.
"A hair of the dog that bit him," he would say as he poured out
the beer, carefully so that the foam should not make him wait
too long to drink.
Then he would talk to Philip of the university, the quarrels
between rival corps, the duels, and the merits of this and that
professor. Philip learnt more of life from him than of
mathematics. Sometimes Wharton would sit back with a laugh and
say:
"Look here, we've not done anything today. You needn't pay me
for the lesson."
"Oh, it doesn't matter," said Philip.
This was something new and very interesting, and he felt that it
was of greater import than trigonometry, which he never could
understand. It was like a window on life that he had a chance of
peeping through, and he looked with a wildly beating heart.
"No, you can keep your dirty money," said Wharton.
"But how about your dinner?" said Philip, with a smile, for he
knew exactly how his master's finances stood.
Wharton had even asked him to pay him the two shillings which
the lesson cost once a week rather than once a month, since it
made things less complicated.
"Oh, never mind my dinner. It won't be the first time I've dined
off a bottle of beer, and my mind's never clearer than when I
do."
He dived under the bed (the sheets were gray with want of
washing), and fished out another bottle. Philip, who was young
and did not know the good things of life, refused to share it
with him, so he drank alone.
"How long are you going to stay here?" asked Wharton.
Both he and Philip had given up with relief the pretence of
mathematics.
"Oh, I don't know. I suppose about a year. Then my people want
me to go to Oxford."
Wharton gave a contemptuous shrug of the shoulders. It was a new
experience for Philip to learn that there were persons who did
not look upon that seat of learning with awe.
"What d'you want to go there for? You'll only be a glorified
schoolboy. Why don't you matriculate here? A year's no good.
Spend five years here. You know, there are two good things in
life, freedom of thought and freedom of action. In France you
get freedom of action: you can do what you like and nobody
bothers, but you must think like everybody else. In Germany you
must do what everybody else does, but you may think as you
choose. They're both very good things. I personally prefer
freedom of thought. But in England you get neither: you're
ground down by convention. You can't think as you like and you
can't act as you like. That's because it's a democratic nation.
I expect America's worse."
He leaned back cautiously, for the chair on which he sat had a
ricketty leg, and it was disconcerting when a rhetorical
flourish was interrupted by a sudden fall to the floor.
"I ought to go back to England this year, but if I can scrape
together enough to keep body and soul on speaking terms I shall
stay another twelve months. But then I shall have to go. And I
must leave all this"--he waved his arm round the dirty garret,
with its unmade bed, the clothes lying on the floor, a row of
empty beer bottles against the wall, piles of unbound, ragged
books in every corner--"for some provincial university where I
shall try and get a chair of philology. And I shall play tennis
and go to tea-parties." He interrupted himself and gave Philip,
very neatly dressed, with a clean collar on and his hair
well-brushed, a quizzical look. "And, my God! I shall have to
wash."
Philip reddened, feeling his own spruceness an intolerable
reproach; for of late he had begun to pay some attention to his
toilet, and he had come out from England with a pretty selection
of ties.
The summer came upon the country like a conqueror. Each day was
beautiful. The sky had an arrogant blue which goaded the nerves
like a spur. The green of the trees in the Anlage was violent
and crude; and the houses, when the sun caught them, had a
dazzling white which stimulated till it hurt. Sometimes on his
way back from Wharton Philip would sit in the shade on one of
the benches in the Anlage, enjoying the coolness and watching
the patterns of light which the sun, shining through the leaves,
made on the ground. His soul danced with delight as gaily as the
sunbeams. He revelled in those moments of idleness stolen from
his work. Sometimes he sauntered through the streets of the old
town. He looked with awe at the students of the corps, their
cheeks gashed and red, who swaggered about in their coloured
caps. In the afternoons he wandered about the hills with the
girls in the Frau Professor's house, and sometimes they went up
the river and had tea in a leafy beer-garden. In the evenings
they walked round and round the Stadtgarten, listening to the
band.
Philip soon learned the various interests of the household.
Fraulein Thekla, the professor's elder daughter, was engaged to
a man in England who had spent twelve months in the house to
learn German, and their marriage was to take place at the end of
the year. But the young man wrote that his father, an
india-rubber merchant who lived in Slough, did not approve of
the union, and Fraulein Thekla was often in tears. Sometimes she
and her mother might be seen, with stern eyes and determined
mouths, looking over the letters of the reluctant lover. Thekla
painted in water colour, and occasionally she and Philip, with
another of the girls to keep them company, would go out and
paint little pictures. The pretty Fraulein Hedwig had amorous
troubles too. She was the daughter of a merchant in Berlin and
a dashing hussar had fallen in love with her, a _von_ if you
please: but his parents opposed a marriage with a person of her
condition, and she had been sent to Heidelberg to forget him.
She could never, never do this, and corresponded with him
continually, and he was making every effort to induce an
exasperating father to change his mind. She told all this to
Philip with pretty sighs and becoming blushes, and showed him
the photograph of the gay lieutenant. Philip liked her best of
all the girls at the Frau Professor's, and on their walks always
tried to get by her side. He blushed a great deal when the
others chaffed him for his obvious preference. He made the first
declaration in his life to Fraulein Hedwig, but unfortunately it
was an accident, and it happened in this manner. In the evenings
when they did not go out, the young women sang little songs in
the green velvet drawing-room, while Fraulein Anna, who always
made herself useful, industriously accompanied. Fraulein
Hedwig's favourite song was called _Ich liebe dich_, I love
you; and one evening after she had sung this, when Philip was
standing with her on the balcony, looking at the stars, it
occurred to him to make some remark about it. He began:
"_Ich liebe dich_."
His German was halting, and he looked about for the word he
wanted. The pause was infinitesimal, but before he could go on
Fraulein Hedwig said:
"_Ach, Herr Carey, Sie mussen mir nicht du sagen_--you mustn't
talk to me in the second person singular."
Philip felt himself grow hot all over, for he would never have
dared to do anything so familiar, and he could think of nothing
on earth to say. It would be ungallant to explain that he was
not making an observation, but merely mentioning the title of a
song.
"_Entschuldigen Sie_," he said. "I beg your pardon."
"It does not matter," she whispered.
She smiled pleasantly, quietly took his hand and pressed it,
then turned back into the drawing-room.
Next day he was so embarrassed that he could not speak to her,
and in his shyness did all that was possible to avoid her. When
he was asked to go for the usual walk he refused because, he
said, he had work to do. But Fraulein Hedwig seized an
opportunity to speak to him alone.
"Why are you behaving in this way?" she said kindly. "You know,
I'm not angry with you for what you said last night. You can't
help it if you love me. I'm flattered. But although I'm not
exactly engaged to Hermann I can never love anyone else, and I
look upon myself as his bride."
Philip blushed again, but he put on quite the expression of a
rejected lover.
PROFESSOR ERLIN gave Philip a lesson every day. He made out a
list of books which Philip was to read till he was ready for the
final achievement of _Faust_, and meanwhile, ingeniously
enough, started him on a German translation of one of the plays
by Shakespeare which Philip had studied at school. It was the
period in Germany of Goethe's highest fame. Notwithstanding his
rather condescending attitude towards patriotism he had been
adopted as the national poet, and seemed since the war of
seventy to be one of the most significant glories of national
unity. The enthusiastic seemed in the wildness of the
_Walpurgisnacht_ to hear the rattle of artillery at Gravelotte.
But one mark of a writer's greatness is that different minds can
find in him different inspirations; and Professor Erlin, who
hated the Prussians, gave his enthusiastic admiration to Goethe
because his works, Olympian and sedate, offered the only refuge
for a sane mind against the onslaughts of the present
generation. There was a dramatist whose name of late had been
much heard at Heidelberg, and the winter before one of his plays
had been given at the theatre amid the cheers of adherents and
the hisses of decent people. Philip heard discussions about it
at the Frau Professor's long table, and at these Professor Erlin
lost his wonted calm: he beat the table with his fist, and
drowned all opposition with the roar of his fine deep voice. It
was nonsense and obscene nonsense. He forced himself to sit the
play out, but he did not know whether he was more bored or
nauseated. If that was what the theatre was coming to, then it
was high time the police stepped in and closed the playhouses.
He was no prude and could laugh as well as anyone at the witty
immorality of a farce at the Palais Royal, but here was nothing
but filth. With an emphatic gesture he held his nose and
whistled through his teeth. It was the ruin of the family, the
uprooting of morals, the destruction of Germany.
"_Aber, Adolf_," said the Frau Professor from the other end of
the table. "Calm yourself."
He shook his fist at her. He was the mildest of creatures and
ventured upon no action of his life without consulting her.
"No, Helene, I tell you this," he shouted. "I would sooner my
daughters were lying dead at my feet than see them listening to
the garbage of that shameless fellow."
The play was _The Doll's House_ and the author was Henrik
Ibsen.
Professor Erlin classed him with Richard Wagner, but of him he
spoke not with anger but with good-humoured laughter. He was a
charlatan but a successful charlatan, and in that was always
something for the comic spirit to rejoice in.
"_Verruckter Kerl!_ A madman!" he said.
He had seen _Lohengrin_ and that passed muster. It was dull
but no worse. But _Siegfried!_ When he mentioned it Professor
Erlin leaned his head on his hand and bellowed with laughter.
Not a melody in it from beginning to end! He could imagine
Richard Wagner sitting in his box and laughing till his sides
ached at the sight of all the people who were taking it
seriously. It was the greatest hoax of the nineteenth century.
He lifted his glass of beer to his lips, threw back his head,
and drank till the glass was empty. Then wiping his mouth with
the back of his hand, he said:
"I tell you young people that before the nineteenth century is
out Wagner will be as dead as mutton. Wagner! I would give all
his works for one opera by Donizetti."
THE oddest of Philip's masters was his teacher of French.
Monsieur Ducroz was a citizen of Geneva. He was a tall old man,
with a sallow skin and hollow cheeks; his gray hair was thin and
long. He wore shabby black clothes, with holes at the elbows of
his coat and frayed trousers. His linen was very dirty. Philip
had never seen him in a clean collar. He was a man of few words,
who gave his lesson conscientiously but without enthusiasm,
arriving as the clock struck and leaving on the minute. His
charges were very small. He was taciturn, and what Philip learnt
about him he learnt from others: it appeared that he had fought
with Gatibaldi against the Pope, but had left Italy in disgust
when it was clear that all his efforts for freedom, by which he
meant the establishment of a republic, tended to no more than an
exchange of yokes; he had been expelled from Geneva for it was
not known what political offences. Philip looked upon him with
puzzled surprise; for he was very unlike his idea of the
revolutionary: he spoke in a low voice and was extraordinarily
polite; he never sat down till he was asked to; and when on rare
occasions he met Philip in the street took off his hat with an
elaborate gesture; he never laughed, he never even smiled. A
more complete imagination than Philip's might have pictured a
youth of splendid hope, for he must have been entering upon
manhood in 1848 when kings, remembering their brother of France,
went about with an uneasy crick in theit necks; and perhaps that
passion for liberty which passed through Europe, sweeping before
it what of absolutism and tyranny had reared its head during the
reaction from the revolution of 1789, filled no breast with a
hotter fire. One might fancy him, passionate with theories of
human equality and human rights, discussing, arguing, fighting
behind barricades in Paris, flying before the Austrian cavalry
in Milan, imprisoned here, exiled from there, hoping on and
upborne ever with the word which seemed so magical, the word
Liberty; till at last, broken with disease and starvation, old,
without means to keep body and soul together but such lessons as
he could pick up from poor students, he found himself in that
little neat town under the heel of a personal tyranny greater
than any in Europe. Perhaps his taciturnity hid a contempt for
the human race which had abandoned the great dreams of his youth
and now wallowed in sluggish ease; or perhaps these thirty years
of revolution had taught him that men are unfit for liberty, and
he thought that he had spent his life in the pursuit of that
which was not worth the finding. Or maybe he was tired out and
waited only with indifference for the release of death.
One day Philip, with the bluntness of his age, asked him if it
was true he had been with Garibaldi. The old man did not seem to
attach any importance to the question. He answered quite quietly
in as low a voice as usual.
"_Oui, monsieur_."
"They say you were in the Commune?"
"Do they? Shall we get on with our work?"
He held the book open and Philip, intimidated, began to
translate the passage he had prepared.
One day Monsieur Ducroz seemed to be in great pain. He had been
scarcely able to drag himself up the many stairs to Philip's
room: and when he arrived sat down heavily, his sallow face
drawn, with beads of sweat on his forehead, trying to recover
himself.
"I'm afraid you're ill," said Philip.
"It's of no consequence."
But Philip saw that he was suffering, and at the end of the hour
asked whether he would not prefer to give no more lessons till
he was better.
"No," said the old man, in his even low voice. "I prefer to go
on while I am able."
Philip, morbidly nervous when he had to make any reference to
money, reddened.
"But it won't make any difference to you," he said. "I'll pay
for the lessons just the same. If you wouldn't mind I'd like to
give you the money for next week in advance."
Monsieur Ducroz charged eighteen pence an hour. Philip took a
tenmark piece out of his pocket and shyly put it on the table.
He could not bring himself to offer it as if the old man were a
beggar.
"In that case I think I won't come again till I'm better." He
took the coin and, without anything more than the elaborate bow
with which he always took his leave, went out.
"_Bonjour, monsieur_."
Philip was vaguely disappointed. Thinking he had done a generous
thing, he had expected that Monsieur Ducroz would overwhelm him
with expressions of gratitude. He was taken aback to find that
the old teacher accepted the present as though it were his due.
He was so young, he did not realise how much less is the sense
of obligation in those who receive favours than in those who
grant them. Monsieur Ducroz appeared again five or six days
later. He tottered a little more and was very weak, but seemed
to have overcome the severity of the attack. He was no more
communicative than he had been before. He remained mysterious,
aloof, and dirty. He made no reference to his illness till after
the lesson: and then, just as he was leaving, at the door, which
he held open, he paused. He hesitated, as though to speak were
difficult.
"If it hadn't been for the money you gave me I should have
starved. It was all I had to live on."
He made his solemn, obsequious bow, and went out. Philip felt a
little lump in his throat. He seemed to realise in a fashion the
hopeless bitterness of the old man's struggle, and how hard life
was for him when to himself it was so pleasant.
PHILIP had spent three months in Heidelberg when one morning the
Frau Professor told him that an Englishman named Hayward was
coming to stay in the house, and the same evening at supper he
saw a new face. For some days the family had lived in a state of
excitement. First, as the result of heaven knows what scheming,
by dint of humble prayers and veiled threats, the parents of the
young Englishman to whom Fraulein Thekla was engaged had invited
her to visit them in England, and she had set off with an album
of water colours to show how accomplished she was and a bundle
of letters to prove how deeply the young man had compromised
himself. A week later Fraulein Hedwig with radiant smiles
announced that the lieutenant of her affections was coming to
Heidelberg with his father and mother. Exhausted by the
importunity of their son and touched by the dowry which Fraulein
Hedwig's father offered, the lieutenant's parents had consented
to pass through Heidelberg to make the young woman's
acquaintance. The interview was satisfactory and Fraulein Hedwig
had the satisfaction of showing her lover in the Stadtgarten to
the whole of Frau Professor Erlin's household. The silent old
ladies who sat at the top of the table near the Frau Professor
were in a flutter, and when Fraulein Hedwig said she was to go
home at once for the formal engagement to take place, the Frau
Professor, regardless of expense, said she would give a
_Maibowle_. Professor Erlin prided himself on his skill in
preparing this mild intoxicant, and after supper the large bowl
of hock and soda, with scented herbs floating in it and wild
strawberries, was placed with solemnity on the round table in
the drawing-room. Fraulein Anna teased Philip about the
departure of his lady-love, and he felt very uncomfortable and
rather melancholy. Fraulein Hedwig sang several songs, Fraulein
Anna played the Wedding March, and the Professor sang _Die
Wacht am Rhein_. Amid all this jollification Philip paid little
attention to the new arrival. They had sat opposite one another
at supper, but Philip was chattering busily with Fraulein
Hedwig, and the stranger, knowing no German, had eaten his food
in silence. Philip, observing that he wore a pale blue tie, had
on that account taken a sudden dislike to him. He was a man of
twenty-six, very fair, with long, wavy hair through which he
passed his hand frequently with a careless gesture. His eyes
were large and blue, but the blue was very pale, and they looked
rather tired already. He was clean-shaven, and his mouth,
notwithstanding its thin lips, was well-shaped. Fraulein Anna
took an interest in physiognomy, and she made Philip notice
afterwards how finely shaped was his skull, and how weak was the
lower part of his face. The head, she remarked, was the head of
a thinker, but the jaw lacked character. Fraulein Anna,
foredoomed to a spinster's life, with her high cheek-bones and
large misshapen nose, laid great stress upon character. While
they talked of him he stood a little apart from the others,
watching the noisy party with a good-humoured but faintly
supercilious expression. He was tall and slim. He held himself
with a deliberate grace. Weeks, one of the American students,
seeing him alone, went up and began to talk to him. The pair
were oddly contrasted: the American very neat in his black coat
and pepper-and-salt trousers, thin and dried-up, with something
of ecclesiastical unction already in his manner; and the
Englishman in his loose tweed suit, large-limbed and slow of
gesture.
Philip did not speak to the newcomer till next day. They found
themselves alone on the balcony of the drawing-room before
dinner. Hayward addressed him.
"You're English, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"Is the food always as bad it was last night?"
"It's always about the same."
"Beastly, isn't it?"
"Beastly."
Philip had found nothing wrong with the food at all, and in fact
had eaten it in large quantities with appetite and enjoyment,
but he did not want to show himself a person of so little
discrimination as to think a dinner good which another thought
execrable.
Fraulein Thekla's visit to England made it necessary for her
sister to do more in the house, and she could not often spare
the time for long walks; and Fraulein Cacilie, with her long
plait of fair hair and her little snub-nosed face, had of late
shown a certain disinclination for society. Fraulein Hedwig was
gone, and Weeks, the American who generally accompanied them on
their rambles, had set out for a tour of South Germany. Philip
was left a good deal to himself. Hayward sought his
acquaintance; but Philip had an unfortunate trait: from shyness
or from some atavistic inheritance of the cave-dweller, he
always disliked people on first acquaintance; and it was not
till he became used to them that he got over his first
impression. It made him difficult of access. He received
Hayward's advances very shyly, and when Hayward asked him one
day to go for a walk he accepted only because he could not think
of a civil excuse. He made his usual apology, angry with himself
for the flushing cheeks he could not control, and trying to
carry it off with a laugh.
"I'm afraid I can't walk very fast."
"Good heavens, I don't walk for a wager. I prefer to stroll.
Don't you remember the chapter in Marius where Pater talks of
the gentle exercise of walking as the best incentive to
conversation?"
Philip was a good listener; though he often thought of clever
things to say, it was seldom till after the opportunity to say
them had passed; but Hayward was communicative; anyone more
experienced than Philip might have thought he liked to hear
himself talk. His supercilious attitude impressed Philip. He
could not help admiring, and yet being awed by, a man who
faintly despised so many things which Philip had looked upon as
almost sacred. He cast down the fetish of exercise, damning with
the contemptuous word pot-hunters all those who devoted
themselves to its various forms; and Philip did not realise that
he was merely putting up in its stead the other fetish of
culture.
They wandered up to the castle, and sat on the terrace that
overlooked the town. It nestled in the valley along the pleasant
Neckar with a comfortable friendliness. The smoke from the
chimneys hung over it, a pale blue haze; and the tall roofs, the
spires of the churches, gave it a pleasantly medieval air. There
was a homeliness in it which warmed the heart. Hayward talked of
_Richard Feverel_ and _Madame Bovary_, of Verlaine, Dante,
and Matthew Arnold. In those days Fitzgerald's translation of
Omar Khayyam was known only to the elect, and Hayward repeated
it to Philip. He was very fond of reciting poetry, his own and
that of others, which he did in a monotonous sing-song. By the
time they reached home Philip's distrust of Hayward was changed
to enthusiastic admiration.
They made a practice of walking together every afternoon, and
Philip learned presently something of Hayward's circumstances.
He was the son of a country judge, on whose death some time
before he had inherited three hundred a year. His record at
Charterhouse was so brilliant that when he went to Cambridge the
Master of Trinity Hall went out of his way to express his
satisfaction that he was going to that college. He prepared
himself for a distinguished career. He moved in the most
intellectual circles: he read Browning with enthusiasm and
turned up his well-shaped nose at Tennyson; he knew all the
details of Shelley's treatment of Harriet; he dabbled in the
history of art (on the walls of his rooms were reproductions of
pictures by G. F. Watts, Burne-Jones, and Botticelli); and he
wrote not without distinction verses of a pessimistic character.
His friends told one another that he was a man of excellent
gifts, and he listened to them willingly when they prophesied
his future eminence. In course of time he became an authority on
art and literature. He came under the influence of Newman's
_Apologia_; the picturesqueness of the Roman Catholic faith
appealed to his esthetic sensibility; and it was only the feat
of his father's wrath (a plain, blunt man of narrow ideas, who
read Macaulay) which prevented him from 'going over.' When he
only got a pass degree his friends were astonished; but he
shrugged his shoulders and delicately insinuated that he was not
the dupe of examiners. He made one feel that a first class was
ever so slightly vulgar. He described one of the vivas with
tolerant humour; some fellow in an outrageous collar was asking
him questions in logic; it was infinitely tedious, and suddenly
he noticed that he wore elastic-sided boots: it was grotesque
and ridiculous; so he withdrew his mind and thought of the
gothic beauty of the Chapel at King's. But he had spent some
delightful days at Cambridge; he had given better dinners than
anyone he knew; and the conversation in his rooms had been often
memorable. He quoted to Philip the exquisite epigram:
"_They told me, Herakleitus, they told me you were dead_."
And now, when he related again the picturesque little anecdote
about the examiner and his boots, he laughed.
"Of course it was folly," he said, "but it was a folly in which
there was something fine."
Philip, with a little thrill, thought it magnificent.
Then Hayward went to London to read for the Bar. He had charming
rooms in Clement's Inn, with panelled walls, and he tried to
make them look like his old rooms at the Hall. He had ambitions
that were vaguely political, he described himself as a Whig, and
he was put up for a club which was of Liberal but gentlemanly
flavour. His idea was to practise at the Bar (he chose the
Chancery side as less brutal), and get a seat for some pleasant
constituency as soon as the various promises made him were
carried out; meanwhile he went a great deal to the opera, and
made acquaintance with a small number of charming people who
admired the things that he admired. He joined a dining-club of
which the motto was, The Whole, The Good, and The Beautiful. He
formed a platonic friendship with a lady some years older than
himself, who lived in Kensington Square; and nearly every
afternoon he drank tea with her by the light of shaded candles,
and talked of George Meredith and Walter Pater. It was notorious
that any fool could pass the examinations of the Bar Council,
and he pursued his studies in a dilatory fashion. When he was
ploughed for his final he looked upon it as a personal affront.
At the same time the lady in Kensington Square told him that her
husband was coming home from India on leave, and was a man,
though worthy in every way, of a commonplace mind, who would not
understand a young man's frequent visits. Hayward felt that life
was full of ugliness, his soul revolted from the thought of
affronting again the cynicism of examiners, and he saw something
rather splendid in kicking away the ball which lay at his feet.
He was also a good deal in debt: it was difficult to live in
London like a gentleman on three hundred a year; and his heart
yearned for the Venice and Florence which John Ruskin had so
magically described. He felt that he was unsuited to the vulgar
bustle of the Bar, for he had discovered that it was not
sufficient to put your name on a door to get briefs; and modern
politics seemed to lack nobility. He felt himself a poet. He
disposed of his rooms in Clement's Inn and went to Italy. He had
spent a winter in Florence and a winter in Rome, and now was
passing his second summer abroad in Germany so that he might
read Goethe in the original.
Hayward had one gift which was very precious. He had a real
feeling for literature, and he could impart his own passion with
an admirable fluency. He could throw himself into sympathy with
a writer and see all that was best in him, and then he could
talk about him with understanding. Philip had read a great deal,
but he had read without discrimination everything that he
happened to come across, and it was very good for him now to
meet someone who could guide his taste. He borrowed books from
the small lending library which the town possessed and began
reading all the wonderful things that Hayward spoke of. He did
not read always with enjoyment but invariably with perseverance.
He was eager for self-improvement. He felt himself very ignorant
and very humble. By the end of August, when Weeks returned from
South Germany, Philip was completely under Hayward's influence.
Hayward did not like Weeks. He deplored the American's black
coat and pepper-and-salt trousers, and spoke with a scornful
shrug of his New England conscience. Philip listened
complacently to the abuse of a man who had gone out of his way
to be kind to him, but when Weeks in his turn made disagreeable
remarks about Hayward he lost his temper.
"Your new friend looks like a poet," said Weeks, with a thin
smile on his careworn, bitter mouth.
"He is a poet."
"Did he tell you so? In America we should call him a pretty fair
specimen of a waster."
"Well, we're not in America," said Philip frigidly.
"How old is he? Twenty-five? And he does nothing but stay in
pensions and write poetry."
"You don't know him," said Philip hotly.
"Oh yes, I do: I've met a hundred and forty-seven of him."
Weeks' eyes twinkled, but Philip, who did not understand
American humour, pursed his lips and looked severe. Weeks to
Philip seemed a man of middle age, but he was in point of fact
little more than thirty. He had a long, thin body and the
scholar's stoop; his head was large and ugly; he had pale scanty
hair and an earthy skin; his thin mouth and thin, long nose, and
the great protuberance of his frontal bones, gave him an uncouth
look. He was cold and precise in his manner, a bloodless man,
without passion; but he had a curious vein of frivolity which
disconcerted the serious-minded among whom his instincts
naturally threw him. He was studying theology in Heidelberg, but
the other theological students of his own nationality looked
upon him with suspicion. He was very unorthodox, which
frightened them; and his freakish humour excited their
disapproval.
"How can you have known a hundred and forty-seven of him?" asked
Philip seriously.
"I've met him in the Latin Quarter in Paris, and I've met him in
pensions in Berlin and Munich. He lives in small hotels in
Perugia and Assisi. He stands by the dozen before the
Botticellis in Florence, and he sits on all the benches of the
Sistine Chapel in Rome. In Italy he drinks a little too much
wine, and in Germany he drinks a great deal too much beer. He
always admires the right thing whatever the right thing is, and
one of these days he's going to write a great work. Think of it,
there are a hundred and forty-seven great works reposing in the
bosoms of a hundred and forty-seven great men, and the tragic
thing is that not one of those hundred and forty-seven great
works will ever be written. And yet the world goes on."
Weeks spoke seriously, but his gray eyes twinkled a little at
the end of his long speech, and Philip flushed when he saw that
the American was making fun of him.
WEEKS had two little rooms at the back of Frau Erlin's house,
and one of them, arranged as a parlour, was comfortable enough
for him to invite people to sit in. After supper, urged perhaps
by the impish humour which was the despair of his friends in
Cambridge, Mass., he often asked Philip and Hayward to come in
for a chat. He received them with elaborate courtesy and
insisted on their sitting in the only two comfortable chairs in
the room. Though he did not drink himself, with a politeness of
which Philip recognised the irony, he put a couple of bottles of
beer at Hayward's elbow, and he insisted on lighting matches
whenever in the heat of argument Hayward's pipe went out. At the
beginning of their acquaintance Hayward, as a member of so
celebrated a university, had adopted a patronising attitude
towards Weeks, who was a graduate of Harvard; and when by chance
the conversation turned upon the Greek tragedians, a subject
upon which Hayward felt he spoke with authority, he had assumed
the air that it was his part to give information rather than to
exchange ideas. Weeks had listened politely, with smiling
modesty, till Hayward finished; then he asked one or two
insidious questions, so innocent in appearance that Hayward, not
seeing into what a quandary they led him, answered blandly;
Weeks made a courteous objection, then a correction of fact,
after that a quotation from some little known Latin commentator,
then a reference to a German authority; and the fact was
disclosed that he was a scholar. With smiling ease,
apologetically, Weeks tore to pieces all that Hayward had said;
with elaborate civility he displayed the superficiality of his
attainments. He mocked him with gentle irony. Philip could not
help seeing that Hayward looked a perfect fool, and Hayward had
not the sense to hold his tongue; in his irritation, his
self-assurance undaunted, he attempted to argue: he made wild
statements and Weeks amicably corrected them; he reasoned
falsely and Weeks proved that he was absurd: Weeks confessed
that he had taught Greek Literature at Harvard. Hayward gave a
laugh of scorn.
"I might have known it. Of course you read Greek like a
schoolmaster," he said. "I read it like a poet."
"And do you find it more poetic when you don't quite know what
it means? I thought it was only in revealed religion that a
mistranslation improved the sense."
At last, having finished the beer, Hayward left Weeks' room hot
and dishevelled; with an angry gesture he said to Philip:
"Of course the man's a pedant. He has no real feeling for
beauty. Accuracy is the virtue of clerks. It's the spirit of the
Greeks that we aim at. Weeks is like that fellow who went to
hear Rubenstein and complained that he played false notes. False
notes! What did they matter when he played divinely?"
Philip, not knowing how many incompetent people have found
solace in these false notes, was much impressed.
Hayward could never resist the opportunity which Weeks offered
him of regaining ground lost on a previous occasion, and Weeks
was able with the greatest ease to draw him into a discussion.
Though he could not help seeing how small his attainments were
beside the American's, his British pertinacity, his wounded
vanity (perhaps they are the same thing), would not allow him to
give up the struggle. Hayward seemed to take a delight in
displaying his ignorance, self-satisfaction, and
wrongheadedness. Whenever Hayward said something which was
illogical, Weeks in a few words would show the falseness of his
reasoning, pause for a moment to enjoy his triumph, and then
hurry on to another subject as though Christian charity impelled
him to spare the vanquished foe. Philip tried sometimes to put
in something to help his friend, and Weeks gently crushed him,
but so kindly, differently from the way in which he answered
Hayward, that even Philip, outrageously sensitive, could not
feel hurt. Now and then, losing his calm as he felt himself more
and more foolish, Hayward became abusive, and only the
American's smiling politeness prevented the argument from
degenerating into a quarrel. On these occasions when Hayward
left Weeks' room he muttered angrily:
"Damned Yankee!"
That settled it. It was a perfect answer to an argument which
had seemed unanswerable.
Though they began by discussing all manner of subjects in Weeks'
little room eventually the conversation always turned to
religion: the theological student took a professional interest
in it, and Hayward welcomed a subject in which hard facts need
not disconcert him; when feeling is the gauge you can snap your
angers at logic, and when your logic is weak that is very
agreeable. Hayward found it difficult to explain his beliefs to
Philip without a great flow of words; but it was clear (and this
fell in with Philip's idea of the natural order of things), that
he had been brought up in the church by law established. Though
he had now given up all idea of becoming a Roman Catholic, he
still looked upon that communion with sympathy. He had much to
say in its praise, and he compared favourably its gorgeous
ceremonies with the simple services of the Church of England. He
gave Philip Newman's _Apologia_ to read, and Philip, finding
it very dull, nevertheless read it to the end.
"Read it for its style, not for its matter," said Hayward.
He talked enthusiastically of the music at the Oratory, and said
charming things about the connection between incense and the
devotional spirit. Weeks listened to him with his frigid smile.
"You think it proves the truth of Roman Catholicism that John
Henry Newman wrote good English and that Cardinal Manning has a
picturesque appearance?"
Hayward hinted that he had gone through much trouble with his
soul. For a year he had swum in a sea of darkness. He passed his
fingers through his fair, waving hair and told them that he
would not for five hundred pounds endure again those agonies of
mind. Fortunately he had reached calm waters at last.
"But what do you believe?" asked Philip, who was never satisfied
with vague statements.
"I believe in the Whole, the Good, and the Beautiful."
Hayward with his loose large limbs and the fine carriage of his
head looked very handsome when he said this, and he said it with
an air.
"Is that how you would describe your religion in a census
paper?" asked Weeks, in mild tones.
"I hate the rigid definition: it's so ugly, so obvious. If you
like I will say that I believe in the church of the Duke of
Wellington and Mr. Gladstone."
"That's the Church of England," said Philip.
"Oh wise young man!" retorted Hayward, with a smile which made
Philip blush, for he felt that in putting into plain words what
the other had expressed in a paraphrase, he had been guilty of
vulgarity. "I belong to the Church of England. But I love the
gold and the silk which clothe the priest of Rome, and his
celibacy, and the confessional, and purgatory: and in the
darkness of an Italian cathedral, incense-laden and mysterious,
I believe with all my heart in the miracle of the Mass. In
Venice I have seen a fisherwoman come in, barefoot, throw down
her basket of fish by her side, fall on her knees, and pray to
the Madonna; and that I felt was the real faith, and I prayed
and believed with her. But I believe also in Aphrodite and
Apollo and the Great God Pan."
He had a charming voice, and he chose his words as he spoke; he
uttered them almost rhythmically. He would have gone on, but
Weeks opened a second bottle of beer.
"Let me give you something to drink."
Hayward turned to Philip with the slightly condescending gesture
which so impressed the youth.
"Now are you satisfied?" he asked.
Philip, somewhat bewildered, confessed that he was.
"I'm disappointed that you didn't add a little Buddhism," said
Weeks. "And I confess I have a sort of sympathy for Mahomet; I
regret that you should have left him out in the cold."
Hayward laughed, for he was in a good humour with himself that
evening, and the ring of his sentences still sounded pleasant in
his ears. He emptied his glass.
"I didn't expect you to understand me," he answered. "With your
cold American intelligence you can only adopt the critical
attitude. Emerson and all that sort of thing. But what is
criticism? Criticism is purely destructive; anyone can destroy,
but not everyone can build up. You are a pedant, my dear fellow.
The important thing is to construct: I am constructive; I am a
poet."
Weeks looked at him with eyes which seemed at the same time to
be quite grave and yet to be smiling brightly.
"I think, if you don't mind my saying so, you're a little
drunk."
"Nothing to speak of," answered Hayward cheerfully. "And not
enough for me to be unable to overwhelm you in argument. But
come, I have unbosomed my soul; now tell us what your religion
is."
Weeks put his head on one side so that he looked like a sparrow
on a perch.
"I've been trying to find that out for years. I think I'm a
Unitarian."
"But that's a dissenter," said Philip.
He could not imagine why they both burst into laughter, Hayward
uproariously, and Weeks with a funny chuckle.
"And in England dissenters aren't gentlemen, are they?" asked
Weeks.
"Well, if you ask me point-blank, they're not," replied Philip
rather crossly.
He hated being laughed at, and they laughed again.
"And will you tell me what a gentleman is?" asked Weeks.
"Oh, I don't know; everyone knows what it is."
"Are you a gentleman?"
No doubt had ever crossed Philip's mind on the subject, but he
knew it was not a thing to state of oneself.
"If a man tells you he's a gentleman you can bet your boots he
isn't," he retorted.
"Am I a gentleman?"
Philip's truthfulness made it difficult for him to answer, but
he was naturally polite.
"Oh, well, you're different," he said. "You're American, aren't
you?"
"I suppose we may take it that only Englishmen are gentlemen,"
said Weeks gravely.
Philip did not contradict him.
"Couldn't you give me a few more particulars?" asked Weeks.
Philip reddened, but, growing angry, did not care if he made
himself ridiculous.
"I can give you plenty" He remembered his uncle's saying that it
took three generations to make a gentleman: it was a companion
proverb to the silk purse and the sow's ear. "First of all he's
the son of a gentleman, and he's been to a public school, and to
Oxford or Cambridge."
"Edinburgh wouldn't do, I suppose?" asked Weeks.
"And he talks English like a gentleman, and he wears the right
sort of things, and if he's a gentleman he can always tell if
another chap's a gentleman."
It seemed rather lame to Philip as he went on, but there it was:
that was what he meant by the word, and everyone he had ever
known had meant that too.
"It is evident to me that I am not a gentleman," said Weeks. "I
don't see why you should have been so surprised because I was a
dissenter."
"I don't quite know what a Unitarian is," said Philip.
Weeks in his odd way again put his head on one side: you almost
expected him to twitter.
"A Unitarian very earnestly disbelieves in almost everything
that anybody else believes, and he has a very lively sustaining
faith in he doesn't quite know what."
"I don't see why you should make fun of me," said Philip. "I
really want to know."
"My dear friend, I'm not making fun of you. I have arrived at
that definition after years of great labour and the most
anxious, nerve-racking study."
When Philip and Hayward got up to go, Weeks handed Philip a
little book in a paper cover.
"I suppose you can read French pretty well by now. I wonder if
this would amuse you."
Philip thanked him and, taking the book, looked at the title. It
was Renan's _Vie de Jesus_.
IT OCCURRED neither to Hayward nor to Weeks that the
conversations which helped them to pass an idle evening were
being turned over afterwards in Philip's active brain. It had
never struck him before that religion was a matter upon which
discussion was possible. To him it meant the Church of England,
and not to believe in its tenets was a sign of wilfulness which
could not fail of punishment here or hereafter. There was some
doubt in his mind about the chastisement of unbelievers. It was
possible that a merciful judge, reserving the flames of hell for
the heathen--Mahommedans, Buddhists, and the rest--would spare
Dissenters and Roman Catholics (though at the cost of how much
humiliation when they were made to realise their error!), and it
was also possible that He would be pitiful to those who had had
no chance of learning the truth,--this was reasonable enough,
though such were the activities of the Missionary Society there
could not be many in this condition--but if the chance had been
theirs and they had neglected it (in which category were
obviously Roman Catholics and Dissenters), the punishment was
sure and merited. It was clear that the miscreant was in a
parlous state. Perhaps Philip had not been taught it in so many
words, but certainly the impression had been given him that only
members of the Church of England had any real hope of eternal
happiness.
One of the things that Philip had heard definitely stated was
that the unbeliever was a wicked and a vicious man; but Weeks,
though he believed in hardly anything that Philip believed, led
a life of Christian purity. Philip had received little kindness
in his life, and he was touched by the American's desire to help
him: once when a cold kept him in bed for three days, Weeks
nursed him like a mother. There was neither vice nor wickedness
in him, but only sincerity and loving-kindness. It was evidently
possible to be virtuous and unbelieving.
Also Philip had been given to understand that people adhered to
other faiths only from obstinacy or self-interest: in their
hearts they knew they were false; they deliberately sought to
deceive others. Now, for the sake of his German he had been
accustomed on Sunday mornings to attend the Lutheran service,
but when Hayward arrived he began instead to go with him to
Mass. He noticed that, whereas the Protestant church was nearly
empty and the congregation had a listless air, the Jesuit on the
other hand was crowded and the worshippers seemed to pray with
all their hearts. They had not the look of hypocrites. He was
surprised at the contrast; for he knew of course that the
Lutherans, whose faith was closer to that of the Church of
England, on that account were nearer the truth than the Roman
Catholics. Most of the men--it was largely a masculine
congregation--were South Germans; and he could not help saying
to himself that if he had been born in South Germany he would
certainly have been a Roman Catholic. He might just as well have
been born in a Roman Catholic country as in England; and in
England as well in a Wesleyan, Baptist, or Methodist family as
in one that fortunately belonged to the church by law
established. He was a little breathless at the danger he had
run. Philip was on friendly terms with the little Chinaman who
sat at table with him twice each day. His name was Sung. He was
always smiling, affable, and polite. It seemed strange that he
should frizzle in hell merely because he was a Chinaman; but if
salvation was possible whatever a man's faith was, there did not
seem to be any particular advantage in belonging to the Church
of England.
Philip, more puzzled than he had ever been in his life, sounded
Weeks. He had to be careful, for he was very sensitive to
ridicule; and the acidulous humour with which the American
treated the Church of England disconcerted him. Weeks only
puzzled him more. He made Philip acknowledge that those South
Germans whom he saw in the Jesuit church were every bit as
firmly convinced of the truth of Roman Catholicism as he was of
that of the Church of England, and from that he led him to admit
that the Mahommedan and the Buddhist were convinced also of the
truth of their respective religions. It looked as though knowing
that you were right meant nothing; they all knew they were
right. Weeks had no intention of undermining the boy's faith,
but he was deeply interested in religion, and found it an
absorbing topic of conversation. He had described his own views
accurately when he said that he very earnestly disbelieved in
almost everything that other people believed. Once Philip asked
him a question, which he had heard his uncle put when the
conversation at the vicarage had fallen upon some mildly
rationalistic work which was then exciting discussion in the
newspapers.
"But why should you be right and all those fellows like St.
Anselm and St. Augustine be wrong?"
"You mean that they were very clever and learned men, while you
have grave doubts whether I am either?" asked Weeks.
"Yes," answered Philip uncertainly, for put in that way his
question seemed impertinent.
"St. Augustine believed that the earth was flat and that the sun
turned round it."
"I don't know what that proves."
"Why, it proves that you believe with your generation. Your
saints lived in an age of faith, when it was practically
impossible to disbelieve what to us is positively incredible."
"Then how d'you know that we have the truth now?"
"I don't."
Philip thought this over for a moment, then he said:
"I don't see why the things we believe absolutely now shouldn't
be just as wrong as what they believed in the past."
"Neither do I."
"Then how can you believe anything at all?"
"I don't know."
Philip asked Weeks what he thought of Hayward's religion.
"Men have always formed gods in their own image," said Weeks.
"He believes in the picturesque."
Philip paused for a little while, then he said:
"I don't see why one should believe in God at all."
The words were no sooner out of his mouth than he realised that
he had ceased to do so. It took his breath away like a plunge
into cold water. He looked at Weeks with startled eyes. Suddenly
he felt afraid. He left Weeks as quickly as he could. He wanted
to be alone. It was the most startling experience that he had
ever had. He tried to think it all out; it was very exciting,
since his whole life seemed concerned (he thought his decision
on this matter must profoundly affect its course) and a mistake
might lead to eternal damnation; but the more he reflected the
more convinced he was; and though during the next few weeks he
read books, aids to scepticism, with eager interest it was only
to confirm him in what he felt instinctively. The fact was that
he had ceased to believe not for this reason or the other, but
because he had not the religious temperament. Faith had been
forced upon him from the outside. It was a matter of environment
and example. A new environment and a new example gave him the
opportunity to find himself. He put off the faith of his
childhood quite simply, like a cloak that he no longer needed.
At first life seemed strange and lonely without the belief
which, though he never realised it, had been an unfailing
support. He felt like a man who has leaned on a stick and finds
himself forced suddenly to walk without assistance. It really
seemed as though the days were colder and the nights more
solitary. But he was upheld by the excitement; it seemed to make
life a more thrilling adventure; and in a little while the stick
which he had thrown aside, the cloak which had fallen from his
shoulders, seemed an intolerable burden of which he had been
eased. The religious exercises which for so many years had been
forced upon him were part and parcel of religion to him. He
thought of the collects and epistles which he had been made to
learn by heart, and the long services at the Cathedral through
which he had sat when every limb itched with the desire for
movement; and he remembered those walks at night through muddy
roads to the parish church at Blackstable, and the coldness of
that bleak building; he sat with his feet like ice, his fingers
numb and heavy, and all around was the sickly odour of pomatum.
Oh, he had been so bored! His heart leaped when he saw he was
free from all that.
He was surprised at himself because he ceased to believe so
easily, and, not knowing that he felt as he did on account of
the subtle workings of his inmost nature, he ascribed the
certainty he had reached to his own cleverness. He was unduly
pleased with himself. With youth's lack of sympathy for an
attitude other than its own he despised not a little Weeks and
Hayward because they were content with the vague emotion which
they called God and would not take the further step which to
himself seemed so obvious. One day he went alone up a certain
hill so that he might see a view which, he knew not why, filled
him always with wild exhilaration. It was autumn now, but often
the days were cloudless still, and then the sky seemed to glow
with a more splendid light: it was as though nature consciously
sought to put a fuller vehemence into the remaining days of fair
weather. He looked down upon the plain, a-quiver with the sun,
stretching vastly before him: in the distance were the roofs of
Mannheim and ever so far away the dimness of Worms. Here and
there a more piercing glitter was the Rhine. The tremendous
spaciousness of it was glowing with rich gold. Philip, as he
stood there, his heart beating with sheer joy, thought how the
tempter had stood with Jesus on a high mountain and shown him
the kingdoms of the earth. To Philip, intoxicated with the
beauty of the scene, it seemed that it was the whole world which
was spread before him, and he was eager to step down and enjoy
it. He was free from degrading fears and free from prejudice. He
could go his way without the intolerable dread of hell-fire.
Suddenly he realised that he had lost also that burden of
responsibility which made every action of his life a matter of
urgent consequence. He could breathe more freely in a lighter
air. He was responsible only to himself for the things he did.
Freedom! He was his own master at last. From old habit,
unconsciously he thanked God that he no longer believed in Him.
Drunk with pride in his intelligence and in his fearlessness,
Philip entered deliberately upon a new life. But his loss of
faith made less difference in his behaviour than he expected.
Though he had thrown on one side the Christian dogmas it never
occurred to him to criticise the Christian ethics; he accepted
the Christian virtues, and indeed thought it fine to practise
them for their own sake, without a thought of reward or
punishment. There was small occasion for heroism in the Frau
Professor's house, but he was a little more exactly truthful
than he had been, and he forced himself to be more than commonly
attentive to the dull, elderly ladies who sometimes engaged him
in conversation. The gentle oath, the violent adjective, which
are typical of our language and which he had cultivated before
as a sign of manliness, he now elaborately eschewed.
Having settled the whole matter to his satisfaction he sought to
put it out of his mind, but that was more easily said than done;
and he could not prevent the regrets nor stifle the misgivings
which sometimes tormented him. He was so young and had so few
friends that immortality had no particular attractions for him,
and he was able without trouble to give up belief in it; but
there was one thing which made him wretched; he told himself
that he was unreasonable, he tried to laugh himself out of such
pathos; but the tears really came to his eyes when he thought
that he would never see again the beautiful mother whose love
for him had grown more precious as the years since her death
passed on. And sometimes, as though the influence of innumerable
ancestors, Godfearing and devout, were working in him
unconsciously, there seized him a panic fear that perhaps after
all it was all true, and there was, up there behind the blue
sky, a jealous God who would punish in everlasting flames the
atheist. At these times his reason could offer him no help, he
imagined the anguish of a physical torment which would last
endlessly, he felt quite sick with fear and burst into a violent
sweat. At last he would say to himself desperately:
"After all, it's not my fault. I can't force myself to believe.
If there is a God after all and he punishes me because I
honestly don't believe in Him I can't help it."
WINTER set in. Weeks went to Berlin to attend the lectures of
Paulssen, and Hayward began to think of going South. The local
theatre opened its doors. Philip and Hayward went to it two or
three times a week with the praiseworthy intention of improving
their German, and Philip found it a more diverting manner of
perfecting himself in the language than listening to sermons.
They found themselves in the midst of a revival of the drama.
Several of Ibsen's plays were on the repertory for the winter;
Sudermann's _Die Ehre_ was then a new play, and on its
production in the quiet university town caused the greatest
excitement; it was extravagantly praised and bitterly attacked;
other dramatists followed with plays written under the modern
influence, and Philip witnessed a series of works in which the
vileness of mankind was displayed before him. He had never been
to a play in his life till then (poor touring companies
sometimes came to the Assembly Rooms at Blackstable, but the
Vicar, partly on account of his profession, partly because he
thought it would be vulgar, never went to see them) and the
passion of the stage seized him. He felt a thrill the moment he
got into the little, shabby, ill-lit theatre. Soon he came to
know the peculiarities of the small company, and by the casting
could tell at once what were the characteristics of the persons
in the drama; but this made no difference to him. To him it was
real life. It was a strange life, dark and tortured, in which
men and women showed to remorseless eyes the evil that was in
their hearts: a fair face concealed a depraved mind; the
virtuous used virtue as a mask to hide their secret vice, the
seeming-strong fainted within with their weakness; the honest
were corrupt, the chaste were lewd. You seemed to dwell in a
room where the night before an orgy had taken place: the windows
had not been opened in the morning; the air was foul with the
dregs of beer, and stale smoke, and flaring gas. There was no
laughter. At most you sniggered at the hypocrite or the fool:
the characters expressed themselves in cruel words that seemed
wrung out of their hearts by shame and anguish.
Philip was carried away by the sordid intensity of it. He seemed
to see the world again in another fashion, and this world too he
was anxious to know. After the play was over he went to a tavern
and sat in the bright warmth with Hayward to eat a sandwich and
drink a glass of beer. All round were little groups of students,
talking and laughing; and here and there was a family, father
and mother, a couple of sons and a girl; and sometimes the girl
said a sharp thing, and the father leaned back in his chair and
laughed, laughed heartily. It was very friendly and innocent.
There was a pleasant homeliness in the scene, but for this
Philip had no eyes. His thoughts ran on the play he had just
come from.
"You do feel it's life, don't you?" he said excitedly. "You
know, I don't think I can stay here much longer. I want to get
to London so that I can really begin. I want to have
experiences. I'm so tired of preparing for life: I want to live
it now."
Sometimes Hayward left Philip to go home by himself. He would
never exactly reply to Philip's eager questioning, but with a
merry, rather stupid laugh, hinted at a romantic amour; he
quoted a few lines of Rossetti, and once showed Philip a sonnet
in which passion and purple, pessimism and pathos, were packed
together on the subject of a young lady called Trude. Hayward
surrounded his sordid and vulgar little adventures with a glow
of poetry, and thought he touched hands with Pericles and
Pheidias because to describe the object of his attentions he
used the word hetaira instead of one of those, more blunt and
apt, provided by the English language. Philip in the daytime had
been led by curiosity to pass through the little street near the
old bridge, with its neat white houses and green shutters, in
which according to Hayward the Fraulein Trude lived; but the
women, with brutal faces and painted cheeks, who came out of
their doors and cried out to him, filled him with fear; and he
fled in horror from the rough hands that sought to detain him.
He yearned above all things for experience and felt himself
ridiculous because at his age he had not enjoyed that which all
fiction taught him was the most important thing in life; but he
had the unfortunate gift of seeing things as they were, and the
reality which was offered him differed too terribly from the
ideal of his dreams.
He did not know how wide a country, arid and precipitous, must
be crossed before the traveller through life comes to an
acceptance of reality. It is an illusion that youth is happy, an
illusion of those who have lost it; but the young know they are
wretched, for they are full of the truthless ideals which have
been instilled into them, and each time they come in contact
with the real they are bruised and wounded. It looks as if they
were victims of a conspiracy; for the books they read, ideal by
the necessity of selection, and the conversation of their
elders, who look back upon the past through a rosy haze of
forgetfulness, prepare them for an unreal life. They must
discover for themselves that all they have read and all they
have been told are lies, lies, lies; and each discovery is
another nail driven into the body on the cross of life. The
strange thing is that each one who has gone through that bitter
disillusionment adds to it in his turn, unconsciously, by the
power within him which is stronger than himself. The
companionship of Hayward was the worst possible thing for
Philip. He was a man who saw nothing for himself, but only
through a literary atmosphere, and he was dangerous because he
had deceived himself into sincerity. He honestly mistook his
sensuality for romantic emotion, his vacillation for the
artistic temperament, and his idleness for philosophic calm. His
mind, vulgar in its effort at refinement, saw everything a
little larger than life size, with the outlines blurred, in a
golden mist of sentimentality. He lied and never knew that he
lied, and when it was pointed out to him said that lies were
beautiful. He was an idealist.
PHILIP was restless and dissatisfied. Hayward's poetic allusions
troubled his imagination, and his soul yearned for romance. At
least that was how he put it to himself.
And it happened that an incident was taking place in Frau
Erlin's house which increased Philip's preoccupation with the
matter of sex. Two or three times on his walks among the hills
he had met Fraulein Cacilie wandering by herself. He had passed
her with a bow, and a few yards further on had seen the
Chinaman. He thought nothing of it; but one evening on his way
home, when night had already fallen, he passed two people
walking very close together. Hearing his footstep, they
separated quickly, and though he could not see well in the
darkness he was almost certain they were Cacilie and Herr Sung.
Their rapid movement apart suggested that they had been walking
arm in arm. Philip was puzzled and surprised. He had never paid
much attention to Fraulein Cacilie. She was a plain girl, with
a square face and blunt features. She could not have been more
than sixteen, since she still wore her long fair hair in a
plait. That evening at supper he looked at her curiously; and,
though of late she had talked little at meals, she addressed
him.
"Where did you go for your walk today, Herr Carey?" she asked.
"Oh, I walked up towards the Konigstuhl."
"I didn't go out," she volunteered. "I had a headache."
The Chinaman, who sat next to her, turned round.
"I'm so sorry," he said. "I hope it's better now."
Fraulein Cacilie was evidently uneasy, for she spoke again to
Philip.
"Did you meet many people on the way?"
Philip could not help reddening when he told a downright lie.
"No. I don't think I saw a living soul."
He fancied that a look of relief passed across her eyes.
Soon, however, there could be no doubt that there was something
between the pair, and other people in the Frau Professor's house
saw them lurking in dark places. The elderly ladies who sat at
the head of the table began to discuss what was now a scandal.
The Frau Professor was angry and harassed. She had done her best
to see nothing. The winter was at hand, and it was not as easy
a matter then as in the summer to keep her house full. Herr Sung
was a good customer: he had two rooms on the ground floor, and
he drank a bottle of Moselle at each meal. The Frau Professor
charged him three marks a bottle and made a good profit. None of
her other guests drank wine, and some of them did not even drink
beer. Neither did she wish to lose Fraulein Cacilie, whose
parents were in business in South America and paid well for the
Frau Professor's motherly care; and she knew that if she wrote
to the girl's uncle, who lived in Berlin, he would immediately
take her away. The Frau Professor contented herself with giving
them both severe looks at table and, though she dared not be
rude to the Chinaman, got a certain satisfaction out of
incivility to Cacilie. But the three elderly ladies were not
content. Two were widows, and one, a Dutchwoman, was a spinster
of masculine appearance; they paid the smallest possible sum for
their pension, and gave a good deal of trouble, but they were
permanent and therefore had to be put up with. They went to the
Frau Professor and said that something must be done; it was
disgraceful, and the house was ceasing to be respectable. The
Frau Professor tried obstinacy, anger, tears, but the three old
ladies routed her, and with a sudden assumption of virtuous
indignation she said that she would put a stop to the whole
thing.
After luncheon she took Cacilie into her bed-room and began to
talk very seriously to her; but to her amazement the girl
adopted a brazen attitude; she proposed to go about as she
liked; and if she chose to walk with the Chinaman she could not
see it was anybody's business but her own. The Frau Professor
threatened to write to her uncle.
"Then Onkel Heinrich will put me in a family in Berlin for the
winter, and that will be much nicer for me. And Herr Sung will
come to Berlin too."
The Frau Professor began to cry. The tears rolled down her
coarse, red, fat cheeks; and Cacilie laughed at her.
"That will mean three rooms empty all through the winter," she
said.
Then the Frau Professor tried another plan. She appealed to
Fraulein Cacilie's better nature: she was kind, sensible,
tolerant; she treated her no longer as a child, but as a grown
woman. She said that it wouldn't be so dreadful, but a Chinaman,
with his yellow skin and flat nose, and his little pig's eyes!
That's what made it so horrible. It filled one with disgust to
think of it.
"_Bitte, bitte_," said Cacilie, with a rapid intake of the
breath.
"I won't listen to anything against him."
"But it's not serious?" gasped Frau Erlin.
"I love him. I love him. I love him."
"_Gott im Himmel!_"
The Frau Professor stared at her with horrified surprise; she
had thought it was no more than naughtiness on the child's part,
and innocent, folly. but the passion in her voice revealed
everything. Cacilie looked at her for a moment with flaming
eyes, and then with a shrug of her shoulders went out of the
room.
Frau Erlin kept the details of the interview to herself, and a
day or two later altered the arrangement of the table. She asked
Herr Sung if he would not come and sit at her end, and he with
his unfailing politeness accepted with alacrity. Cacilie took
the change indifferently. But as if the discovery that the
relations between them were known to the whole household made
them more shameless, they made no secret now of their walks
together, and every afternoon quite openly set out to wander
about the hills. It was plain that they did not care what was
said of them. At last even the placidity of Professor Erlin was
moved, and he insisted that his wife should speak to the
Chinaman. She took him aside in his turn and expostulated; he
was ruining the girl's reputation, he was doing harm to the
house, he must see how wrong and wicked his conduct was; but she
was met with smiling denials; Herr Sung did not know what she
was talking about, he was not paying any attention to Fraulein
Cacilie, he never walked with her; it was all untrue, every word
of it.
"_Ach_, Herr Sung, how can you say such things? You've been
seen again and again."
"No, you're mistaken. It's untrue."
He looked at her with an unceasing smile, which showed his even,
little white teeth. He was quite calm. He denied everything. He
denied with bland effrontery. At last the Frau Professor lost
her temper and said the girl had confessed she loved him. He was
not moved. He continued to smile.
"Nonsense! Nonsense! It's all untrue."
She could get nothing out of him. The weather grew very bad;
there was snow and frost, and then a thaw with a long succession
of cheerless days, on which walking was a poor amusement. One
evening when Philip had just finished his German lesson with the
Herr Professor and was standing for a moment in the
drawing-room, talking to Frau Erlin, Anna came quickly in.
"Mamma, where is Cacilie?" she said.
"I suppose she's in her room."
"There's no light in it."
The Frau Professor gave an exclamation, and she looked at her
daughter in dismay. The thought which was in Anna's head had
flashed across hers.
"Ring for Emil," she said hoarsely.
This was the stupid lout who waited at table and did most of the
housework. He came in.
"Emil, go down to Herr Sung's room and enter without knocking.
If anyone is there say you came in to see about the stove."
No sign of astonishment appeared on Emil's phlegmatic face.
He went slowly downstairs. The Frau Professor and Anna left the
door open and listened. Presently they heard Emil come up again,
and they called him.
"Was anyone there?" asked the Frau Professor.
"Yes, Herr Sung was there."
"Was he alone?"
The beginning of a cunning smile narrowed his mouth.
"No, Fraulein Cacilie was there."
"Oh, it's disgraceful," cried the Frau Professor.
Now he smiled broadly.
"Fraulein Cacilie is there every evening. She spends hours at a
time there."
Frau Professor began to wring her hands.
"Oh, how abominable! But why didn't you tell me?"
"It was no business of mine," he answered, slowly shrugging his
shoulders.
"I suppose they paid you well. Go away. Go."
He lurched clumsily to the door.
"They must go away, mamma," said Anna.
"And who is going to pay the rent? And the taxes are falling
due. It's all very well for you to say they must go away. If
they go away I can't pay the bills." She turned to Philip, with
tears streaming down her face. "_Ach_, Herr Carey, you will
not say what you have heard. If Fraulein Forster--" this was the
Dutch spinster--"if Fraulein Forster knew she would leave at
once. And if they all go we must close the house. I cannot
afford to keep it."
"Of course I won't say anything."
"If she stays, I will not speak to her," said Anna.
That evening at supper Fraulein Cacilie, redder than usual, with
a look of obstinacy on her face, took her place punctually; but
Herr Sung did not appear, and for a while Philip thought he was
going to shirk the ordeal. At last he came, very smiling, his
little eyes dancing with the apologies he made for his late
arrival. He insisted as usual on pouring out the Frau Professor
a glass of his Moselle, and he offered a glass to Fraulein
Forster. The room was very hot, for the stove had been alight
all day and the windows were seldom opened. Emil blundered
about, but succeeded somehow in serving everyone quickly and
with order. The three old ladies sat in silence, visibly
disapproving: the Frau Professor had scarcely recovered from her
tears; her husband was silent and oppressed. Conversation
languished. It seemed to Philip that there was something
dreadful in that gathering which he had sat with so often; they
looked different under the light of the two hanging lamps from
what they had ever looked before; he was vaguely uneasy. Once he
caught Cacilie's eye, and he thought she looked at him with
hatred and contempt. The room was stifling. It was as though the
beastly passion of that pair troubled them all; there was a
feeling of Oriental depravity; a faint savour of joss-sticks, a
mystery of hidden vices, seemed to make their breath heavy.
Philip could feel the beating of the arteries in his forehead.
He could not understand what strange emotion distracted him; he
seemed to feel something infinitely attractive, and yet he was
repelled and horrified.
For several days things went on. The air was sickly with the
unnatural passion which all felt about them, and the nerves of
the little household seemed to grow exasperated. Only Herr Sung
remained unaffected; he was no less smiling, affable, and polite
than he had been before: one could not tell whether his manner
was a triumph of civilisation or an expression of contempt on
the part of the Oriental for the vanquished West. Cacilie was
flaunting and cynical. At last even the Frau Professor could
bear the position no longer. Suddenly panic seized her; for
Professor Erlin with brutal frankness had suggested the possible
consequences of an intrigue which was now manifest to everyone,
and she saw her good name in Heidelberg and the repute of her
house ruined by a scandal which could not possibly be hidden.
For some reason, blinded perhaps by her interests, this
possibility had never occurred to her; and now, her wits muddled
by a terrible fear, she could hardly be prevented from turning
the girl out of the house at once. It was due to Anna's good
sense that a cautious letter was written to the uncle in Berlin
suggesting that Cacilie should be taken away.
But having made up her mind to lose the two lodgers, the Frau
Professor could not resist the satisfaction of giving rein to
the ill-temper she had curbed so long. She was free now to say
anything she liked to Cacilie.
"I have written to your uncle, Cacilie, to take you away. I
cannot have you in my house any longer."
Her little round eyes sparkled when she noticed the sudden
whiteness of the girl's face.
"You're shameless. Shameless," she went on.
She called her foul names.
"What did you say to my uncle Heinrich, Frau Professor?" the
girl asked, suddenly falling from her attitude of flaunting
independence.
"Oh, he'll tell you himself. I expect to get a letter from him
tomorrow."
Next day, in order to make the humiliation more public, at
supper she called down the table to Cacilie.
"I have had a letter from your uncle, Cacilie. You are to pack
your things tonight, and we will put you in the train tomorrow
morning. He will meet you himself in Berlin at the Central
Bahnhof."
"Very good, Frau Professor."
Herr Sung smiled in the Frau Professor's eyes, and
notwithstanding her protests insisted on pouring out a glass of
wine for her. The Frau Professor ate her supper with a good
appetite. But she had triumphed unwisely. Just before going to
bed she called the servant.
"Emil, if Fraulein Cacilie's box is ready you had better take it
downstairs tonight. The porter will fetch it before breakfast."
The servant went away and in a moment came back.
"Fraulein Cacilie is not in her room, and her bag has gone."
With a cry the Frau Professor hurried along: the box was on the
floor, strapped and locked; but there was no bag, and neither
hat nor cloak. The dressing-table was empty. Breathing heavily,
the Frau Professor ran downstairs to the Chinaman's rooms, she
had not moved so quickly for twenty years, and Emil called out
after her to beware she did not fall; she did not trouble to
knock, but burst in. The rooms were empty. The luggage had gone,
and the door into the garden, still open, showed how it had been
got away. In an envelope on the table were notes for the money
due on the month's board and an approximate sum for extras.
Groaning, suddenly overcome by her haste, the Frau Professor
sank obesely on to a sofa. There could be no doubt. The pair had
gone off together. Emil remained stolid and unmoved.
HAYWARD, after saying for a month that he was going South next
day and delaying from week to week out of inability to make up
his mind to the bother of packing and the tedium of a journey,
had at last been driven off just before Christmas by the
preparations for that festival. He could not support the thought
of a Teutonic merry-making. It gave him goose-flesh to think of
the season's aggressive cheerfulness, and in his desire to avoid
the obvious he determined to travel on Christmas Eve.
Philip was not sorry to see him off, for he was a downright
person and it irritated him that anybody should not know his own
mind. Though much under Hayward's influence, he would not grant
that indecision pointed to a charming sensitiveness; and he
resented the shadow of a sneer with which Hayward looked upon
his straight ways. They corresponded. Hayward was an admirable
letter-writer, and knowing his talent took pains with his
letters. His temperament was receptive to the beautiful
influences with which he came in contact, and he was able in his
letters from Rome to put a subtle fragrance of Italy. He thought
the city of the ancient Romans a little vulgar, finding
distinction only in the decadence of the Empire; but the Rome of
the Popes appealed to his sympathy, and in his chosen words,
quite exquisitely, there appeared a rococo beauty. He wrote of
old church music and the Alban Hills, and of the languor of
incense and the charm of the streets by night, in the rain, when
the pavements shone and the light of the street lamps was
mysterious. Perhaps he repeated these admirable letters to
various friends. He did not know what a troubling effect they
had upon Philip; they seemed to make his life very humdrum. With
the spring Hayward grew dithyrambic. He proposed that Philip
should come down to Italy. He was wasting his time at
Heidelberg. The Germans were gross and life there was common;
how could the soul come to her own in that prim landscape? In
Tuscany the spring was scattering flowers through the land, and
Philip was nineteen; let him come and they could wander through
the mountain towns of Umbria. Their names sang in Philip's
heart. And Cacilie too, with her lover, had gone to Italy. When
he thought of them Philip was seized with a restlessness he
could not account for. He cursed his fate because he had no
money to travel, and he knew his uncle would not send him more
than the fifteen pounds a month which had been agreed upon. He
had not managed his allowance very well. His pension and the
price of his lessons left him very little over, and he had found
going about with Hayward expensive. Hayward had often suggested
excursions, a visit to the play, or a bottle of wine, when
Philip had come to the end of his month's money; and with the
folly of his age he had been unwilling to confess he could not
afford an extravagance.
Luckily Hayward's letters came seldom, and in the intervals
Philip settled down again to his industrious life. He had
matriculated at the university and attended one or two courses
of lectures. Kuno Fischer was then at the height of his fame and
during the winter had been lecturing brilliantly on
Schopenhauer. It was Philip's introduction to philosophy. He had
a practical mind and moved uneasily amid the abstract; but he
found an unexpected fascination in listening to metaphysical
disquisitions; they made him breathless; it was a little like
watching a tight-rope dancer doing perilous feats over an abyss;
but it was very exciting. The pessimism of the subject attracted
his youth; and he believed that the world he was about to enter
was a place of pitiless woe and of darkness. That made him none
the less eager to enter it; and when, in due course, Mrs. Carey,
acting as the correspondent for his guardian's views, suggested
that it was time for him to come back to England, he agreed with
enthusiasm. He must make up his mind now what he meant to do. If
he left Heidelberg at the end of July they could talk things
over during August, and it would be a good time to make
arrangements.
The date of his departure was settled, and Mrs. Carey wrote to
him again. She reminded him of Miss Wilkinson, through whose
kindness he had gone to Frau Erlin's house at Heidelberg, and
told him that she had arranged to spend a few weeks with them at
Blackstable. She would be crossing from Flushing on such and
such a day, and if he travelled at the same time he could look
after her and come on to Blackstable in her company. Philip's
shyness immediately made him write to say that he could not
leave till a day or two afterwards. He pictured himself looking
out for Miss Wilkinson, the embarrassment of going up to her and
asking if it were she (and he might so easily address the wrong
person and be snubbed), and then the difficulty of knowing
whether in the train he ought to talk to her or whether he could
ignore her and read his book.
At last he left Heidelberg. For three months he had been
thinking of nothing but the future; and he went without regret.
He never knew that he had been happy there. Fraulein Anna gave
him a copy of _Der Trompeter von Sackingen_ and in return he
presented her with a volume of William Morris. Very wisely
neither of them ever read the other's present.
PHILIP was surprised when he saw his uncle and aunt. He had
never noticed before that they were quite old people. The Vicar
received him with his usual, not unamiable indifference. He was
a little stouter, a little balder, a little grayer. Philip saw
how insignificant he was. His face was weak and self-indulgent.
Aunt Louisa took him in her arms and kissed him; and tears of
happiness flowed down her cheeks. Philip was touched and
embarrassed; he had not known with what a hungry love she cared
for him.
"Oh, the time has seemed long since you've been away, Philip,"
she cried.
She stroked his hands and looked into his face with glad eyes.
"You've grown. You're quite a man now."
There was a very small moustache on his upper lip. He had bought
a razor and now and then with infinite care shaved the down off
his smooth chin.
"We've been so lonely without you." And then shyly, with a
little break in her voice, she asked: "You are glad to come back
to your home, aren't you?"
"Yes, rather."
She was so thin that she seemed almost transparent, the arms she
put round his neck were frail bones that reminded you of chicken
bones, and her faded face was oh! so wrinkled. The gray curls
which she still wore in the fashion of her youth gave her a
queer, pathetic look; and her little withered body was like an
autumn leaf, you felt it might be blown away by the first sharp
wind. Philip realised that they had done with life, these two
quiet little people: they belonged to a past generation, and
they were waiting there patiently, rather stupidly, for death;
and he, in his vigour and his youth, thirsting for excitement
and adventure, was appalled at the waste. They had done nothing,
and when they went it would be just as if they had never been.
He felt a great pity for Aunt Louisa, and he loved her suddenly
because she loved him.
Then Miss Wilkinson, who had kept discreetly out of the way till
the Careys had had a chance of welcoming their nephew, came into
the room.
"This is Miss Wilkinson, Philip," said Mrs. Carey.
"The prodigal has returned," she said, holding out her hand. "I
have brought a rose for the prodigal's buttonhole."
With a gay smile she pinned to Philip's coat the flower she had
just picked in the garden. He blushed and felt foolish. He knew
that Miss Wilkinson was the daughter of his Uncle William's last
rector, and he had a wide acquaintance with the daughters of
clergymen. They wore ill-cut clothes and stout boots. They were
generally dressed in black, for in Philip's early years at
Blackstable homespuns had not reached East Anglia, and the
ladies of the clergy did not favour colours. Their hair was done
very untidily, and they smelt aggressively of starched linen.
They considered the feminine graces unbecoming and looked the
same whether they were old or young. They bore their religion
arrogantly. The closeness of their connection with the church
made them adopt a slightly dictatorial attitude to the rest of
mankind.
Miss Wilkinson was very different. She wore a white muslin gown
stamped with gay little bunches of flowers, and pointed,
high-heeled shoes, with open-work stockings. To Philip's
inexperience it seemed that she was wonderfully dressed; he did
not see that her frock was cheap and showy. Her hair was
elaborately dressed, with a neat curl in the middle of the
forehead: it was very black, shiny and hard, and it looked as
though it could never be in the least disarranged. She had large
black eyes and her nose was slightly aquiline; in profile she
had somewhat the look of a bird of prey, but full face she was
prepossessing. She smiled a great deal, but her mouth was large
and when she smiled she tried to hide her teeth, which were big
and rather yellow. But what embarrassed Philip most was that she
was heavily powdered: he had very strict views on feminine
behaviour and did not think a lady ever powdered; but of course
Miss Wilkinson was a lady because she was a clergyman's
daughter, and a clergyman was a gentleman.
Philip made up his mind to dislike her thoroughly. She spoke
with a slight French accent; and he did not know why she should,
since she had been born and bred in the heart of England. He
thought her smile affected, and the coy sprightliness of her
manner irritated him. For two or three days he remained silent
and hostile, but Miss Wilkinson apparently did not notice it.
She was very affable. She addressed her conversation almost
exclusively to him, and there was something flattering in the
way she appealed constantly to his sane judgment. She made him
laugh too, and Philip could never resist people who amused him:
he had a gift now and then of saying neat things; and it was
pleasant to have an appreciative listener. Neither the Vicar nor
Mrs. Carey had a sense of humour, and they never laughed at
anything he said. As he grew used to Miss Wilkinson, and his
shyness left him, he began to like her better; he found the
French accent picturesque; and at a garden party which the
doctor gave she was very much better dressed than anyone else.
She wore a blue foulard with large white spots, and Philip was
tickled at the sensation it caused.
"I'm certain they think you're no better than you should be," he
told her, laughing.
"It's the dream of my life to be taken for an abandoned hussy,"
she answered.
One day when Miss Wilkinson was in her room he asked Aunt Louisa
how old she was.
"Oh, my dear, you should never ask a lady's age; but she's
certainly too old for you to marry."
The Vicar gave his slow, obese smile.
"She's no chicken, Louisa," he said. "She was nearly grown up
when we were in Lincolnshire, and that was twenty years ago. She
wore a pigtail hanging down her back."
"She may not have been more than ten," said Philip.
"She was older than that," said Aunt Louisa.
"I think she was near twenty," said the Vicar.
"Oh no, William. Sixteen or seventeen at the outside."
"That would make her well over thirty," said Philip.
At that moment Miss Wilkinson tripped downstairs, singing a song
by Benjamin Goddard. She had put her hat on, for she and Philip
were going for a walk, and she held out her hand for him to
button her glove. He did it awkwardly. He felt embarrassed but
gallant. Conversation went easily between them now, and as they
strolled along they talked of all manner of things. She told
Philip about Berlin, and he told her of his year in Heidelberg.
As he spoke, things which had appeared of no importance gained
a new interest: he described the people at Frau Erlin's house;
and to the conversations between Hayward and Weeks, which at the
time seemed so significant, he gave a little twist, so that they
looked absurd. He was flattered at Miss Wilkinson's laughter.
"I'm quite frightened of you," she said. "You're so sarcastic."
Then she asked him playfully whether he had not had any love
affairs at Heidelberg. Without thinking, he frankly answered
that he had not; but she refused to believe him.
"How secretive you are!" she said. "At your age is it likely?"
He blushed and laughed.
"You want to know too much," he said.
"Ah, I thought so," she laughed triumphantly. "Look at him
blushing."
He was pleased that she should think he had been a sad dog, and
he changed the conversation so as to make her believe he had all
sorts of romantic things to conceal. He was angry with himself
that he had not. There had been no opportunity.
Miss Wilkinson was dissatisfied with her lot. She resented
having to earn her living and told Philip a long story of an
uncle of her mother's, who had been expected to leave her a
fortune but had married his cook and changed his will. She
hinted at the luxury of her home and compared her life in
Lincolnshire, with horses to ride and carriages to drive in,
with the mean dependence of her present state. Philip was a
little puzzled when he mentioned this afterwards to Aunt Louisa,
and she told him that when she knew the Wilkinsons they had
never had anything more than a pony and a dog-cart; Aunt Louisa
had heard of the rich uncle, but as he was married and had
children before Emily was born she could never have had much
hope of inheriting his fortune. Miss Wilkinson had little good
to say of Berlin, where she was now in a situation. She
complained of the vulgarity of German life, and compared it
bitterly with the brilliance of Paris, where she had spent a
number of years. She did not say how many. She had been
governess in the family of a fashionable portrait-painter, who
had married a Jewish wife of means, and in their house she had
met many distinguished people. She dazzled Philip with their
names. Actors from the Comedie Francaise had come to the house
frequently, and Coquelin, sitting next her at dinner, had told
her he had never met a foreigner who spoke such perfect French.
Alphonse Daudet had come also, and he had given her a copy of
_Sappho_: he had promised to write her name in it, but she had
forgotten to remind him. She treasured the volume none the less
and she would lend it to Philip. Then there was Maupassant. Miss
Wilkinson with a rippling laugh looked at Philip knowingly. What
a man, but what a writer! Hayward had talked of Maupassant, and
his reputation was not unknown to Philip.
"Did he make love to you?" he asked.
The words seemed to stick funnily in his throat, but he asked
them nevertheless. He liked Miss Wilkinson very much now, and
was thrilled by her conversation, but he could not imagine
anyone making love to her.
"What a question!" she cried. "Poor Guy, he made love to every
woman he met. It was a habit that he could not break himself
of."
She sighed a little, and seemed to look back tenderly on the
past.
"He was a charming man," she murmured.
A greater experience than Philip's would have guessed from these
words the probabilities of the encounter: the distinguished
writer invited to luncheon _en famille_, the governess coming
in sedately with the two tall girls she was teaching; the
introduction:
"_Notre Miss Anglaise_."
"_Mademoiselle_."
And the luncheon during which the Miss Anglaise sat silent while
the distinguished writer talked to his host and hostess.
But to Philip her words called up much more romantic fancies.
"Do tell me all about him," he said excitedly.
"There's nothing to tell," she said truthfully, but in such a
manner as to convey that three volumes would scarcely have
contained the lurid facts. "You mustn't be curious."
She began to talk of Paris. She loved the boulevards and the
Bois. There was grace in every street, and the trees in the
Champs Elysees had a distinction which trees had not elsewhere.
They were sitting on a stile now by the high-road, and Miss
Wilkinson looked with disdain upon the stately elms in front of
them. And the theatres: the plays were brilliant, and the acting
was incomparable. She often went with Madame Foyot, the mother
of the girls she was educating, when she was trying on clothes.
"Oh, what a misery to be poor!" she cried. "These beautiful
things, it's only in Paris they know how to dress, and not to be
able to afford them! Poor Madame Foyot, she had no figure.
Sometimes the dressmaker used to whisper to me: `Ah,
Mademoiselle, if she only had your figure.' "
Philip noticed then that Miss Wilkinson had a robust form and
was proud of it.
"Men are so stupid in England. They only think of the face. The
French, who are a nation of lovers, know how much more important
the figure is."
Philip had never thought of such things before, but he observed
now that Miss Wilkinson's ankles were thick and ungainly. He
withdrew his eyes quickly.
"You should go to France. Why don't you go to Paris for a year?
You would learn French, and it would--_deniaiser_ you."
"What is that?" asked Philip.
She laughed slyly.
"You must look it out in the dictionary. Englishmen do not know
how to treat women. They are so shy. Shyness is ridiculous in a
man. They don't know how to make love. They can't even tell a
woman she is charming without looking foolish."
Philip felt himself absurd. Miss Wilkinson evidently expected
him to behave very differently; and he would have been delighted
to say gallant and witty things, but they never occurred to him;
and when they did he was too much afraid of making a fool of
himself to say them.
"Oh, I love Paris," sighed Miss Wilkinson. "But I had to go to
Berlin. I was with the Foyots till the girls married, and then
I could get nothing to do, and I had the chance of this post in
Berlin. They're relations of Madame Foyot, and I accepted. I had
a tiny apartment in the Rue Breda, on the _cinquieme_: it
wasn't at all respectable. You know about the Rue Breda--_ces
dames_, you know."
Philip nodded, not knowing at all what she meant, but vaguely
suspecting, and anxious she should not think him too ignorant.
"But I didn't care. _Je suis libre, n'est-ce pas_?" She was
very fond of speaking French, which indeed she spoke well. "Once
I had such a curious adventure there."
She paused a little and Philip pressed her to tell it.
"You wouldn't tell me yours in Heidelberg," she said.
"They were so unadventurous," he retorted.
"I don't know what Mrs. Carey would say if she knew the sort of
things we talk about together."
"You don't imagine I shall tell her."
"Will you promise?"
When he had done this, she told him how an art-student who had
a room on the floor above her--but she interrupted herself.
"Why don't you go in for art? You paint so prettily."
"Not well enough for that."
"That is for others to judge. _Je m'y connais_, and I believe
you have the making of a great artist."
"Can't you see Uncle William's face if I suddenly told him I
wanted to go to Paris and study art?"
"You're your own master, aren't you?"
"You're trying to put me off. Please go on with the story." Miss
Wilkinson, with a little laugh, went on. The art-student had
passed her several times on the stairs, and she had paid no
particular attention. She saw that he had fine eyes, and he took
off his hat very politely. And one day she found a letter
slipped under her door. It was from him. He told her that he had
adored her for months, and that he waited about the stairs for
her to pass. Oh, it was a charming letter! Of course she did not
reply, but what woman could help being flattered? And next day
there was another letter! It was wonderful, passionate, and
touching. When next she met him on the stairs she did not know
which way to look. And every day the letters came, and now he
begged her to see him. He said he would come in the evening,
_vers neuf heures_, and she did not know what to do. Of course it
was impossible, and he might ring and ring, but she would never
open the door; and then while she was waiting for the tinkling
of the bell, all nerves, suddenly he stood before her. She had
forgotten to shut the door when she came in.
"_C'etait une fatalite_."
"And what happened then?" asked Philip.
"That is the end of the story," she replied, with a ripple of
laughter.
Philip was silent for a moment. His heart beat quickly, and
strange emotions seemed to be hustling one another in his heart.
He saw the dark staircase and the chance meetings, and he
admired the boldness of the letters--oh, he would never have
dared to do that--and then the silent, almost mysterious
entrance. It seemed to him the very soul of romance.
"What was he like?"
"Oh, he was handsome. _Charmant garcon_."
"Do you know him still?"
Philip felt a slight feeling of irritation as he asked this.
"He treated me abominably. Men are always the same. You're
heartless, all of you."
"I don't know about that," said Philip, not without
embarrassment.
PHILIP could not get Miss Wilkinson's story out of his head. It
was clear enough what she meant even though she cut it short,
and he was a little shocked. That sort of thing was all very
well for married women, he had read enough French novels to know
that in France it was indeed the rule, but Miss Wilkinson was
English and unmarried; her father was a clergyman. Then it
struck him that the art-student probably was neither the first
nor the last of her lovers, and he gasped: he had never looked
upon Miss Wilkinson like that; it seemed incredible that anyone
should make love to her. In his ingenuousness he doubted her
story as little as he doubted what he read in books, and he was
angry that such wonderful things never happened to him. It was
humiliating that if Miss Wilkinson insisted upon his telling her
of his adventures in Heidelberg he would have nothing to tell.
It was true that he had some power of invention, but he was not
sure whether he could persuade her that he was steeped in vice;
women were full of intuition, he had read that, and she might
easily discover that he was fibbing. He blushed scarlet as he
thought of her laughing up her sleeve.
Miss Wilkinson played the piano and sang in a rather tired
voice; but her songs, Massenet, Benjamin Goddard, and Augusta
Holmes, were new to Philip; and together they spent many hours
at the piano. One day she wondered if he had a voice and
insisted on trying it. She told him he had a pleasant baritone
and offered to give him lessons. At first with his usual
bashfulness he refused, but she insisted, and then every morning
at a convenient time after breakfast she gave him an hour's
lesson. She had a natural gift for teaching, and it was clear
that she was an excellent governess. She had method and
firmness. Though her French accent was so much part of her that
it remained, all the mellifluousness of her manner left her when
she was engaged in teaching. She put up with no nonsense. Her
voice became a little peremptory, and instinctively she
suppressed inattention and corrected slovenliness. She knew what
she was about and put Philip to scales and exercises.
When the lesson was over she resumed without effort her
seductive smiles, her voice became again soft and winning, but
Philip could not so easily put away the pupil as she the
pedagogue; and this impression convicted with the feelings her
stories had aroused in him. He looked at her more narrowly. He
liked her much better in the evening than in the morning. In the
morning she was rather lined and the skin of her neck was just
a little rough. He wished she would hide it, but the weather was
very warm just then and she wore blouses which were cut low. She
was very fond of white; in the morning it did not suit her. At
night she often looked very attractive, she put on a gown which
was almost a dinner dress, and she wore a chain of garnets round
her neck; the lace about her bosom and at her elbows gave her a
pleasant softness, and the scent she wore (at Blackstable no one
used anything but _Eau de Cologne_, and that only on Sundays
or when suffering from a sick headache) was troubling and
exotic. She really looked very young then.
Philip was much exercised over her age. He added twenty and
seventeen together, and could not bring them to a satisfactory
total. He asked Aunt Louisa more than once why she thought Miss
Wilkinson was thirty-seven: she didn't look more than thirty,
and everyone knew that foreigners aged more rapidly than English
women; Miss Wilkinson had lived so long abroad that she might
almost be called a foreigner. He personally wouldn't have
thought her more than twenty-six.
"She's more than that," said Aunt Louisa.
Philip did not believe in the accuracy of the Careys'
statements. All they distinctly remembered was that Miss
Wilkinson had not got her hair up the last time they saw her in
Lincolnshire. Well, she might have been twelve then: it was so
long ago and the Vicar was always so unreliable. They said it
was twenty years ago, but people used round figures, and it was
just as likely to be eighteen years, or seventeen. Seventeen and
twelve were only twenty-nine, and hang it all, that wasn't old,
was it? Cleopatra was forty-eight when Antony threw away the
world for her sake.
It was a fine summer. Day after day was hot and cloudless; but
the heat was tempered by the neighbourhood of the sea, and there
was a pleasant exhilaration in the air, so that one was excited
and not oppressed by the August sunshine. There was a pond in
the garden in which a fountain played; water lilies grew in it
and gold fish sunned themselves on the surface. Philip and Miss
Wilkinson used to take rugs and cushions there after dinner and
lie on the lawn in the shade of a tall hedge of roses. They
talked and read all the afternoon. They smoked cigarettes, which
the Vicar did not allow in the house; he thought smoking a
disgusting habit, and used frequently to say that it was
disgraceful for anyone to grow a slave to a habit. He forgot
that he was himself a slave to afternoon tea.
One day Miss Wilkinson gave Philip _La Vie de Boheme_. She had
found it by accident when she was rummaging among the books in
the Vicar's study. It had been bought in a lot with something
Mr. Carey wanted and had remained undiscovered for ten years.
Philip began to read Murger's fascinating, ill-written, absurd
masterpiece, and fell at once under its spell. His soul danced
with joy at that picture of starvation which is so
good-humoured, of squalor which is so picturesque, of sordid
love which is so romantic, of bathos which is so moving.
Rodolphe and Mimi, Musette and Schaunard! They wander through
the gray streets of the Latin Quarter, finding refuge now in one
attic, now in another, in their quaint costumes of Louis
Philippe, with their tears and their smiles, happy-go-lucky and
reckless. Who can resist them? It is only when you return to the
book with a sounder judgment that you find how gross their
pleasures were, how vulgar their minds; and you feel the utter
worthlessness, as artists and as human beings, of that gay
procession. Philip was enraptured.
"Don't you wish you were going to Paris instead of London?"
asked Miss Wilkinson, smiling at his enthusiasm.
"It's too late now even if I did," he answered.
During the fortnight he had been back from Germany there had
been much discussion between himself and his uncle about his
future. He had refused definitely to go to Oxford, and now that
there was no chance of his getting scholarships even Mr. Carey
came to the conclusion that he could not afford it. His entire
fortune had consisted of only two thousand pounds, and though it
had been invested in mortgages at five per cent, he had not been
able to live on the interest. It was now a little reduced. It
would be absurd to spend two hundred a year, the least he could
live on at a university, for three years at Oxford which would
lead him no nearer to earning his living. He was anxious to go
straight to London. Mrs. Carey thought there were only four
professions for a gentleman, the Army, the Navy, the Law, and
the Church. She had added medicine because her brother-in-law
practised it, but did not forget that in her young days no one
ever considered the doctor a gentleman. The first two were out
of the question, and Philip was firm in his refusal to be
ordained. Only the law remained. The local doctor had suggested
that many gentlemen now went in for engineering, but Mrs. Carey
opposed the idea at once.
"I shouldn't like Philip to go into trade," she said.
"No, he must have a profession," answered the Vicar.
"Why not make him a doctor like his father?"
"I should hate it," said Philip.
Mrs. Carey was not sorry. The Bar seemed out of the question,
since he was not going to Oxford, for the Careys were under the
impression that a degree was still necessary for success in that
calling; and finally it was suggested that he should become
articled to a solicitor. They wrote to the family lawyer, Albert
Nixon, who was co-executor with the Vicar of Blackstable for the
late Henry Carey's estate, and asked him whether he would take
Philip. In a day or two the answer came back that he had not a
vacancy, and was very much opposed to the whole scheme; the
profession was greatly overcrowded, and without capital or
connections a man had small chance of becoming more than a
managing clerk; he suggested, however, that Philip should become
a chartered accountant. Neither the Vicar nor his wife knew in
the least what this was, and Philip had never heard of anyone
being a chartered accountant; but another letter from the
solicitor explained that the growth of modern businesses and the
increase of companies had led to the formation of many firms of
accountants to examine the books and put into the financial
affairs of their clients an order which old-fashioned methods
had lacked. Some years before a Royal Charter had been obtained,
and the profession was becoming every year more respectable,
lucrative, and important. The chartered accountants whom Albert
Nixon had employed for thirty years happened to have a vacancy
for an articled pupil, and would take Philip for a fee of three
hundred pounds. Half of this would be returned during the five
years the articles lasted in the form of salary. The prospect
was not exciting, but Philip felt that he must decide on
something, and the thought of living in London over-balanced the
slight shrinking he felt. The Vicar of Blackstable wrote to ask
Mr. Nixon whether it was a profession suited to a gentleman; and
Mr. Nixon replied that, since the Charter, men were going into
it who had been to public schools and a university; moreover, if
Philip disliked the work and after a year wished to leave,
Herbert Carter, for that was the accountant's name, would return
half the money paid for the articles. This settled it, and it
was arranged that Philip should start work on the fifteenth of
September.
"I have a full month before me," said Philip.
"And then you go to freedom and I to bondage," returned Miss
Wilkinson.
Her holidays were to last six weeks, and she would be leaving
Blackstable only a day or two before Philip.
"I wonder if we shall ever meet again," she said.
"I don't know why not."
"Oh, don't speak in that practical way. I never knew anyone so
unsentimental."
Philip reddened. He was afraid that Miss Wilkinson would think
him a milksop: after all she was a young woman, sometimes quite
pretty, and he was getting on for twenty; it was absurd that
they should talk of nothing but art and literature. He ought to
make love to her. They had talked a good deal of love. There was
the art-student in the Rue Breda, and then there was the painter
in whose family she had lived so long in Paris: he had asked her
to sit for him, and had started to make love to her so violently
that she was forced to invent excuses not to sit to him again.
It was clear enough that Miss Wilkinson was used to attentions
of that sort. She looked very nice now in a large straw hat: it
was hot that afternoon, the hottest day they had had, and beads
of sweat stood in a line on her upper lip. He called to mind
Fraulein Cacilie and Herr Sung. He had never thought of Cacilie
in an amorous way, she was exceedingly plain; but now, looking
back, the affair seemed very romantic. He had a chance of
romance too. Miss Wilkinson was practically French, and that
added zest to a possible adventure. When he thought of it at
night in bed, or when he sat by himself in the garden reading a
book, he was thrilled by it; but when he saw Miss Wilkinson it
seemed less picturesque.
At all events, after what she had told him, she would not be
surprised if he made love to her. He had a feeling that she must
think it odd of him to make no sign: perhaps it was only his
fancy, but once or twice in the last day or two he had imagined
that there was a suspicion of contempt in her eyes.
"A penny for your thoughts," said Miss Wilkinson, looking at him
with a smile.
"I'm not going to tell you," he answered.
He was thinking that he ought to kiss her there and then. He
wondered if she expected him to do it; but after all he didn't
see how he could without any preliminary business at all. She
would just think him mad, or she might slap his face; and
perhaps she would complain to his uncle. He wondered how Herr
Sung had started with Fraulein Cacilie. It would be beastly if
she told his uncle: he knew what his uncle was, he would tell
the doctor and Josiah Graves; and he would look a perfect fool.
Aunt Louisa kept on saying that Miss Wilkinson was thirty-seven
if she was a day; he shuddered at the thought of the ridicule he
would be exposed to; they would say she was old enough to be his
mother.
"Twopence for your thoughts," smiled Miss Wilkinson.
"I was thinking about you," he answered boldly.
That at all events committed him to nothing.
"What were you thinking?"
"Ah, now you want to know too much."
"Naughty boy!" said Miss Wilkinson.
There it was again! Whenever he had succeeded in working himself
up she said something which reminded him of the governess. She
called him playfully a naughty boy when he did not sing his
exercises to her satisfaction. This time he grew quite sulky.
"I wish you wouldn't treat me as if I were a child."
"Are you cross?"
"Very."
"I didn't mean to."
She put out her hand and he took it. Once or twice lately when
they shook hands at night he had fancied she slightly pressed
his hand, but this time there was no doubt about it.
He did not quite know what he ought to say next. Here at last
was his chance of an adventure, and he would be a fool not to
take it; but it was a little ordinary, and he had expected more
glamour. He had read many descriptions of love, and he felt in
himself none of that uprush of emotion which novelists
described; he was not carried off his feet in wave upon wave of
passion; nor was Miss Wilkinson the ideal: he had often pictured
to himself the great violet eyes and the alabaster skin of some
lovely girl, and he had thought of himself burying his face in
the rippling masses of her auburn hair. He could not imagine
himself burying his face in Miss Wilkinson's hair, it always
struck him as a little sticky. All the same it would be very
satisfactory to have an intrigue, and he thrilled with the
legitimate pride he would enjoy in his conquest. He owed it to
himself to seduce her. He made up his mind to kiss Miss
Wilkinson; not then, but in the evening; it would be easier in
the dark, and after he had kissed her the rest would follow. He
would kiss her that very evening. He swore an oath to that
effect.
He laid his plans. After supper he suggested that they should
take a stroll in the garden. Miss Wilkinson accepted, and they
sauntered side by side. Philip was very nervous. He did not know
why, but the conversation would not lead in the right direction;
he had decided that the first thing to do was to put his arm
round her waist; but he could not suddenly put his arm round her
waist when she was talking of the regatta which was to be held
next week. He led her artfully into the darkest parts of the
garden, but having arrived there his courage failed him. They
sat on a bench, and he had really made up his mind that here was
his opportunity when Miss Wilkinson said she was sure there were
earwigs and insisted on moving. They walked round the garden
once more, and Philip promised himself he would take the plunge
before they arrived at that bench again; but as they passed the
house, they saw Mrs. Carey standing at the door.
"Hadn't you young people better come in? I'm sure the night air
isn't good for you."
"Perhaps we had better go in," said Philip. "I don't want you to
catch cold."
He said it with a sigh of relief. He could attempt nothing more
that night. But afterwards, when he was alone in his room, he
was furious with himself. He had been a perfect fool. He was
certain that Miss Wilkinson expected him to kiss her, otherwise
she wouldn't have come into the garden. She was always saying
that only Frenchmen knew how to treat women. Philip had read
French novels. If he had been a Frenchman he would have seized
her in his arms and told her passionately that he adored her; he
would have pressed his lips on her _nuque_. He did not know
why Frenchmen always kissed ladies on the _nuque_. He did not
himself see anything so very attractive in the nape of the neck.
Of course it was much easier for Frenchmen to do these things;
the language was such an aid; Philip could never help feeling
that to say passionate things in English sounded a little
absurd. He wished now that he had never undertaken the siege of
Miss Wilkinson's virtue; the first fortnight had been so jolly,
and now he was wretched; but he was determined not to give in,
he would never respect himself again if he did, and he made up
his mind. irrevocably that the next night he would kiss her
without fail.
Next day when he got up he saw it was raining, and his first
thought was that they would not be able to go into the garden
that evening. He was in high spirits at breakfast. Miss
Wilkinson sent Mary Ann in to say that she had a headache and
would remain in bed. She did not come down till tea-time, when
she appeared in a becoming wrapper and a pale face; but she was
quite recovered by supper, and the meal was very cheerful. After
prayers she said she would go straight to bed, and she kissed
Mrs. Carey. Then she turned to Philip.
"Good gracious!" she cried. "I was just going to kiss you too."
"Why don't you?" he said.
She laughed and held out her hand. She distinctly pressed his.
The following day there was not a cloud in the sky, and the
garden was sweet and fresh after the rain. Philip went down to
the beach to bathe and when he came home ate a magnificent
dinner. They were having a tennis party at the vicarage in the
afternoon and Miss Wilkinson put on her best dress. She
certainly knew how to wear her clothes, and Philip could not
help noticing how elegant she looked beside the curate's wife
and the doctor's married daughter. There were two roses in her
waistband. She sat in a garden chair by the side of the lawn,
holding a red parasol over herself, and the light on her face
was very becoming. Philip was fond of tennis. He served well and
as he ran clumsily played close to the net: notwithstanding his
club-foot he was quick, and it was difficult to get a ball past
him. He was pleased because he won all his sets. At tea he lay
down at Miss Wilkinson's feet, hot and panting.
"Flannels suit you," she said. "You look very nice this
afternoon."
He blushed with delight.
"I can honestly return the compliment. You look perfectly
ravishing."
She smiled and gave him a long look with her black eyes.
After supper he insisted that she should come out.
"Haven't you had enough exercise for one day?"
"It'll be lovely in the garden tonight. The stars are all out."
He was in high spirits.
"D'you know, Mrs. Carey has been scolding me on your account?"
said Miss Wilkinson, when they were sauntering through the
kitchen garden. "She says I mustn't flirt with you."
"Have you been flirting with me? I hadn't noticed it."
"She was only joking."
"It was very unkind of you to refuse to kiss me last night."
"If you saw the look your uncle gave me when I said what I did!"
"Was that all that prevented you?"
"I prefer to kiss people without witnesses."
"There are no witnesses now."
Philip put his arm round her waist and kissed her lips. She only
laughed a little and made no attempt to withdraw. It had come
quite naturally. Philip was very proud of himself. He said he
would, and he had. It was the easiest thing in the world. He
wished he had done it before. He did it again.
NEXT day after dinner they took their rugs and cushions to the
fountain, and their books; but they did not read. Miss Wilkinson
made herself comfortable and she opened the red sun-shade.
Philip was not at all shy now, but at first she would not let
him kiss her.
"It was very wrong of me last night," she said. "I couldn't
sleep, I felt I'd done so wrong."
"What nonsense!" he cried. "I'm sure you slept like a top."
"What do you think your uncle would say if he knew?"
"There's no reason why he should know."
He leaned over her, and his heart went pit-a-pat.
"Why d'you want to kiss me?"
He knew he ought to reply: "Because I love you." But he could
not bring himself to say it.
"Why do you think?" he asked instead.
She looked at him with smiling eyes and touched his face with
the tips of her fingers.
"How smooth your face is," she murmured.
"I want shaving awfully," he said.
It was astonishing how difficult he found it to make romantic
speeches. He found that silence helped him much more than words.
He could look inexpressible things. Miss Wilkinson sighed.
"Do you like me at all?"
"Yes, awfully."
When he tried to kiss her again she did not resist. He pretended
to be much more passionate than he really was, and he succeeded
in playing a part which looked very well in his own eyes.
"I'm beginning to be rather frightened of you," said Miss
Wilkinson.
"You'll come out after supper, won't you?" he begged.
"Not unless you promise to behave yourself."
"I'll promise anything."
He was catching fire from the flame he was partly simulating,
and at tea-time he was obstreperously merry. Miss Wilkinson
looked at him nervously.
"You mustn't have those shining eyes," she said to him
afterwards. "What will your Aunt Louisa think?"
"I don't care what she thinks."
Miss Wilkinson gave a little laugh of pleasure. They had no
sooner finished supper than he said to her:
"Are you going to keep me company while I smoke a cigarette?"
"Why don't you let Miss Wilkinson rest?" said Mrs. Carey. "You
must remember she's not as young as you."
"Oh, I'd like to go out, Mrs. Carey," she said, rather acidly.
"After dinner walk a mile, after supper rest a while," said the
Vicar.
"Your aunt is very nice, but she gets on my nerves sometimes,"
said Miss Wilkinson, as soon as they closed the side-door behind
them.
Philip threw away the cigarette he had just lighted, and flung
his arms round her. She tried to push him away.
"You promised you'd be good, Philip."
"You didn't think I was going to keep a promise like that?"
"Not so near the house, Philip," she said. "Supposing someone
should come out suddenly?"
He led her to the kitchen garden where no one was likely to
come, and this time Miss Wilkinson did not think of earwigs. He
kissed her passionately. It was one of the things that puzzled
him that he did not like her at all in the morning, and only
moderately in the afternoon, but at night the touch of her hand
thrilled him. He said things that he would never have thought
himself capable of saying; he could certainly never have said
them in the broad light of day; and he listened to himself with
wonder and satisfaction.
"How beautifully you make love," she said.
That was what he thought himself.
"Oh, if I could only say all the things that burn my heart!" he
murmured passionately.
It was splendid. It was the most thrilling game he had ever
played; and the wonderful thing was that he felt almost all he
said. It was only that he exaggerated a little. He was
tremendously interested and excited in the effect he could see
it had on her. It was obviously with an effort that at last she
suggested going in.
"Oh, don't go yet," he cried.
"I must," she muttered. "I'm frightened."
He had a sudden intuition what was the right thing to do then.
"I can't go in yet. I shall stay here and think. My cheeks are
burning. I want the night-air. Good-night."
He held out his hand seriously, and she took it in silence. He
thought she stifled a sob. Oh, it was magnificent! When, after
a decent interval during which he had been rather bored in the
dark garden by himself, he went in he found that Miss Wilkinson
had already gone to bed.
After that things were different between them. The next day and
the day after Philip showed himself an eager lover. He was
deliciously flattered to discover that Miss Wilkinson was in
love with him: she told him so in English, and she told him so
in French. She paid him compliments. No one had ever informed
him before that his eyes were charming and that he had a sensual
mouth. He had never bothered much about his personal appearance,
but now, when occasion presented, he looked at himself in the
glass with satisfaction. When he kissed her it was wonderful to
feel the passion that seemed to thrill her soul. He kissed her
a good deal, for he found it easier to do that than to say the
things he instinctively felt she expected of him. It still made
him feel a fool to say he worshipped her. He wished there were
someone to whom he could boast a little, and he would willingly
have discussed minute points of his conduct. Sometimes she said
things that were enigmatic, and he was puzzled. He wished
Hayward had been there so that he could ask him what he thought
she meant, and what he had better do next. He could not make up
his mind whether he ought to rush things or let them take their
time. There were only three weeks more.
"I can't bear to think of that," she said. "It breaks my heart.
And then perhaps we shall never see one another again."
"If you cared for me at all, you wouldn't be so unkind to me,"
he whispered.
"Oh, why can't you be content to let it go on as it is? Men are
always the same. They're never satisfied."
And when he pressed her, she said:
"But don't you see it's impossible. How can we here?"
He proposed all sorts of schemes, but she would not have
anything to do with them.
"I daren't take the risk. It would be too dreadful if your aunt
found out."
A day or two later he had an idea which seemed brilliant.
"Look here, if you had a headache on Sunday evening and offered
to stay at home and look after the house, Aunt Louisa would go
to church."
Generally Mrs. Carey remained in on Sunday evening in order to
allow Mary Ann to go to church, but she would welcome the
opportunity of attending evensong.
Philip had not found it necessary to impart to his relations the
change in his views on Christianity which had occurred in
Germany; they could not be expected to understand; and it seemed
less trouble to go to church quietly. But he only went in the
morning. He regarded this as a graceful concession to the
prejudices of society and his refusal to go a second time as an
adequate assertion of free thought.
When he made the suggestion, Miss Wilkinson did not speak for a
moment, then shook her head.
"No, I won't," she said.
But on Sunday at tea-time she surprised Philip. "I don't think
I'll come to church this evening," she said suddenly. "I've
really got a dreadful headache."
Mrs. Carey, much concerned, insisted on giving her some `drops'
which she was herself in the habit of using. Miss Wilkinson
thanked her, and immediately after tea announced that she would
go to her room and lie down.
"Because, if there isn't, I think I'll go to church. I don't
often have the chance of going in the evening."
"Oh yes, do go."
"I shall be in," said Philip. "If Miss Wilkinson wants anything,
she can always call me."
"You'd better leave the drawing-room door open, Philip, so that
if Miss Wilkinson rings, you'll hear."
"Certainly," said Philip.
So after six o'clock Philip was left alone in the house with
Miss Wilkinson. He felt sick with apprehension. He wished with
all his heart that he had not suggested the plan; but it was too
late now; he must take the opportunity which he had made. What
would Miss Wilkinson think of him if he did not! He went into
the hall and listened. There was not a sound. He wondered if
Miss Wilkinson really had a headache. Perhaps she had forgotten
his suggestion. His heart beat painfully. He crept up the stairs
as softly as he could, and he stopped with a start when they
creaked. He stood outside Miss Wilkinson's room and listened; he
put his hand on the knob of the door-handle. He waited. It
seemed to him that he waited for at least five minutes, trying
to make up his mind; and his hand trembled. He would willingly
have bolted, but he was afraid of the remorse which he knew
would seize him. It was like getting on the highest diving-board
in a swimming-bath; it looked nothing from below, but when you
got up there and stared down at the water your heart sank; and
the only thing that forced you to dive was the shame of coming
down meekly by the steps you had climbed up. Philip screwed up
his courage. He turned the handle softly and walked in. He
seemed to himself to be trembling like a leaf.
Miss Wilkinson was standing at the dressing-table with her back
to the door, and she turned round quickly when she heard it
open.
"Oh, it's you. What d'you want?"
She had taken off her skirt and blouse, and was standing in her
petticoat. It was short and only came down to the top of her
boots; the upper part of it was black, of some shiny material,
and there was a red flounce. She wore a camisole of white calico
with short arms. She looked grotesque. Philip's heart sank as he
stared at her; she had never seemed so unattractive; but it was
too late now. He closed the door behind him and locked it.
PHILIP woke early next morning. His sleep had been restless; but
when he stretched his legs and looked at the sunshine that slid
through the Venetian blinds, making patterns on the floor, he
sighed with satisfaction. He was delighted with himself. He
began to think of Miss Wilkinson. She had asked him to call her
Emily, but, he knew not why, he could not; he always thought of
her as Miss Wilkinson. Since she chid him for so addressing her,
he avoided using her name at all. During his childhood he had
often heard a sister of Aunt Louisa, the widow of a naval
officer, spoken of as Aunt Emily. It made him uncomfortable to
call Miss Wilkinson by that name, nor could he think of any that
would have suited her better. She had begun as Miss Wilkinson,
and it seemed inseparable from his impression of her. He frowned
a little: somehow or other he saw her now at her worst; he could
not forget his dismay when she turned round and he saw her in
her camisole and the short petticoat; he remembered the slight
roughness of her skin and the sharp, long lines on the side of
the neck. His triumph was short-lived. He reckoned out her age
again, and he did not see how she could be less than forty. It
made the affair ridiculous. She was plain and old. His quick
fancy showed her to him, wrinkled, haggard, made-up, in those
frocks which were too showy for her position and too young for
her years. He shuddered; he felt suddenly that he never wanted
to see her again; he could not bear the thought of kissing her.
He was horrified with himself. Was that love?
He took as long as he could over dressing in order to put back
the moment of seeing her, and when at last he went into the
dining-room it was with a sinking heart. Prayers were over, and
they were sitting down at breakfast.
"Lazybones," Miss Wilkinson cried gaily.
He looked at her and gave a little gasp of relief. She was
sitting with her back to the window. She was really quite nice.
He wondered why he had thought such things about her. His
self-satisfaction returned to him.
He was taken aback by the change in her. She told him in a voice
thrilling with emotion immediately after breakfast that she
loved him; and when a little later they went into the
drawing-room for his singing lesson and she sat down on the
music-stool she put up her face in the middle of a scale and
said:
"_Embrasse-moi_."
When he bent down she flung her arms round his neck. It was
slightly uncomfortable, for she held him in such a position that
he felt rather choked.
"_Ah, je t'aime. Je t'aime. Je t'aime_," she cried, with her
extravagantly French accent.
Philip wished she would speak English.
"I say, I don't know if it's struck you that the gardener's
quite likely to pass the window any minute."
"_Ah, je m'en fiche du jardinier. Je m'en refiche, et je m'en
contrefiche_."
Philip thought it was very like a French novel, and he did not
know why it slightly irritated him.
At last he said:
"Well, I think I'll tootle along to the beach and have a dip."
"Oh, you're not going to leave me this morning--of all
mornings?" Philip did not quite know why he should not, but it
did not matter.
"Would you like me to stay?" he smiled.
"Oh, you darling! But no, go. Go. I want to think of you
mastering the salt sea waves, bathing your limbs in the broad
ocean."
He got his hat and sauntered off.
"What rot women talk!" he thought to himself.
But he was pleased and happy and flattered. She was evidently
frightfully gone on him. As he limped along the high street of
Blackstable he looked with a tinge of superciliousness at the
people he passed. He knew a good many to nod to, and as he gave
them a smile of recognition he thought to himself, if they only
knew! He did want someone to know very badly. He thought he
would write to Hayward, and in his mind composed the letter. He
would talk of the garden and the roses, and the little French
governess, like an exotic flower amongst them, scented and
perverse: he would say she was French, because--well, she had
lived in France so long that she almost was, and besides it
would be shabby to give the whole thing away too exactly, don't
you know; and he would tell Hayward how he had seen her first in
her pretty muslin dress and of the flower she had given him. He
made a delicate idyl of it: the sunshine and the sea gave it
passion and magic, and the stars added poetry, and the old
vicarage garden was a fit and exquisite setting. There was
something Meredithian about it: it was not quite Lucy Feverel
and not quite Clara Middleton; but it was inexpressibly
charming. Philip's heart beat quickly. He was so delighted with
his fancies that he began thinking of them again as soon as he
crawled back, dripping and cold, into his bathing-machine. He
thought of the object of his affections. She had the most
adorable little nose and large brown eyes--he would describe her
to Hayward--and masses of soft brown hair, the sort of hair it
was delicious to bury your face in, and a skin which was like
ivory and sunshine, and her cheek was like a red, red rose. How
old was she? Eighteen perhaps, and he called her Musette. Her
laughter was like a rippling brook, and her voice was so soft,
so low, it was the sweetest music he had ever heard.
"What _are_ you thinking about?"
Philip stopped suddenly. He was walking slowly home.
"I've been waving at you for the last quarter of a mile. You
_are_ absent-minded."
Miss Wilkinson was standing in front of him, laughing at his
surprise.
"I thought I'd come and meet you."
"That's awfully nice of you," he said.
"Did I startle you?"
"You did a bit," he admitted.
He wrote his letter to Hayward all the same. There were eight
pages of it.
The fortnight that remained passed quickly, and though each
evening, when they went into the garden after supper, Miss
Wilkinson remarked that one day more had gone, Philip was in too
cheerful spirits to let the thought depress him. One night Miss
Wilkinson suggested that it would be delightful if she could
exchange her situation in Berlin for one in London. Then they
could see one another constantly. Philip said it would be very
jolly, but the prospect aroused no enthusiasm in him; he was
looking forward to a wonderful life in London, and he preferred
not to be hampered. He spoke a little too freely of all he meant
to do, and allowed Miss Wilkinson to see that already he was
longing to be off.
"You wouldn't talk like that if you loved me," she cried.
He was taken aback and remained silent.
"What a fool I've been," she muttered.
To his surprise he saw that she was crying. He had a tender
heart, and hated to see anyone miserable.
"Oh, I'm awfully sorry. What have I done? Don't Cry."
"Oh, Philip, don't leave me. You don't know what you mean to me.
I have such a wretched life, and you've made me so happy."
He kissed her silently. There really was anguish in her tone,
and he was frightened. It had never occurred to him that she
meant what she said quite, quite seriously.
"I'm awfully sorry. You know I'm frightfully fond of you. I wish
you would come to London."
"You know I can't. Places are almost impossible to get, and I
hate English life."
Almost unconscious that he was acting a part, moved by her
distress, he pressed her more and more. Her tears vaguely
flattered him, and he kissed her with real passion.
But a day or two later she made a real scene. There was a
tennis-party at the vicarage, and two girls came, daughters of
a retired major in an Indian regiment who had lately settled in
Blackstable. They were very pretty, one was Philip's age and the
other was a year or two younger. Being used to the society of
young men (they were full of stories of hill-stations in India,
and at that time the stories of Rudyard Kipling were in every
hand) they began to chaff Philip gaily; and he, pleased with the
novelty--the young ladies at Blackstable treated the Vicar's
nephew with a certain seriousness--was gay and jolly. Some devil
within him prompted him to start a violent flirtation with them
both, and as he was the only young man there, they were quite
willing to meet him half-way. It happened that they played
tennis quite well and Philip was tired of pat-ball with Miss
Wilkinson (she had only begun to play when she came to
Blackstable), so when he arranged the sets after tea he
suggested that Miss Wilkinson should play against the curate's
wife, with the curate as her partner; and he would play later
with the new-comers. He sat down by the elder Miss O'Connor and
said to her in an undertone:
"We'll get the duffers out of the way first, and then we'll have
a jolly set afterwards."
Apparently Miss Wilkinson overheard him, for she threw down her
racket, and, saying she had a headache, went away. It was plain
to everyone that she was offended. Philip was annoyed that she
should make the fact public. The set was arranged without her,
but presently Mrs. Carey called him.
"Philip, you've hurt Emily's feelings. She's gone to her room
and she's crying."
"What about?"
"Oh, something about a duffer's set. Do go to her, and say you
didn't mean to be unkind, there's a good boy."
"All right."
He knocked at Miss Wilkinson's door, but receiving no answer
went in. He found her lying face downwards on her bed, weeping.
He touched her on the shoulder.
"I say, what on earth's the matter?"
"Leave me alone. I never want to speak to you again."
"What have I done? I'm awfully sorry if I've hurt your feelings.
I didn't mean to. I say, do get up."
"Oh, I'm so unhappy. How could you be cruel to me? You know I
hate that stupid game. I only play because I want to play with
you."
She got up and walked towards the dressing-table, but after a
quick look in the glass sank into a chair. She made her
handkerchief into a ball and dabbed her eyes with it.
"I've given you the greatest thing a woman can give a man--oh,
what a fool I was--and you have no gratitude. You must be quite
heartless. How could you be so cruel as to torment me by
flirting with those vulgar girls. We've only got just over a
week. Can't you even give me that?"
Philip stood over her rather sulkily. He thought her behaviour
childish. He was vexed with her for having shown her ill-temper
before strangers.
"But you know I don't care twopence about either of the
O'Connors. Why on earth should you think I do?"
Miss Wilkinson put away her handkerchief. Her tears had made
marks on her powdered face, and her hair was somewhat
disarranged. Her white dress did not suit her very well just
then. She looked at Philip with hungry, passionate eyes.
"Because you're twenty and so's she," she said hoarsely. "And
I'm old."
Philip reddened and looked away. The anguish of her tone made
him feel strangely uneasy. He wished with all his heart that he
had never had anything to do with Miss Wilkinson.
"I don't want to make you unhappy," he said awkwardly. "You'd
better go down and look after your friends. They'll wonder what
has become of you."
"All right."
He was glad to leave her.
The quarrel was quickly followed by a reconciliation, but the
few days that remained were sometimes irksome to Philip. He
wanted to talk of nothing but the future, and the future
invariably reduced Miss Wilkinson to tears. At first her weeping
affected him, and feeling himself a beast he redoubled his
protestations of undying passion; but now it irritated him: it
would have been all very well if she had been a girl, but it was
silly of a grown-up woman to cry so much. She never ceased
reminding him that he was under a debt of gratitude to her which
he could never repay. He was willing to acknowledge this since
she made a point of it, but he did not really know why he should
be any more grateful to her than she to him. He was expected to
show his sense of obligation in ways which were rather a
nuisance: he had been a good deal used to solitude, and it was
a necessity to him sometimes; but Miss Wilkinson looked upon it
as an unkindness if he was not always at her beck and call. The
Miss O'Connors asked them both to tea, and Philip would have
liked to go, but Miss Wilkinson said she only had five days more
and wanted him entirely to herself. It was flattering, but a
bore. Miss Wilkinson told him stories of the exquisite delicacy
of Frenchmen when they stood in the same relation to fair ladies
as he to Miss Wilkinson. She praised their courtesy, their
passion for self-sacrifice, their perfect tact. Miss Wilkinson
seemed to want a great deal.
Philip listened to her enumeration of the qualities which must
be possessed by the perfect lover, and he could not help feeling
a certain satisfaction that she lived in Berlin.
"You will write to me, won't you? Write to me every day. I want
to know everything you're doing. You must keep nothing from me."
"I shall be awfully, busy" he answered. "I'll write as often as
I can."
She flung her arms passionately round his neck. He was
embarrassed sometimes by the demonstrations of her affection. He
would have preferred her to be more passive. It shocked him a
little that she should give him so marked a lead: it did not
tally altogether with his prepossessions about the modesty of
the feminine temperament.
At length the day came on which Miss Wilkinson was to go, and
she came down to breakfast, pale and subdued, in a serviceable
travelling dress of black and white check. She looked a very
competent governess. Philip was silent too, for he did not quite
know what to say that would fit the circumstance; and he was
terribly afraid that, if he said something flippant, Miss
Wilkinson would break down before his uncle and make a scene.
They had said their last good-bye to one another in the garden
the night before, and Philip was relieved that there was now no
opportunity for them to be alone. He remained in the dining-room
after breakfast in case Miss Wilkinson should insist on kissing
him on the stairs. He did not want Mary Ann, now a woman hard
upon middle age with a sharp tongue, to catch them in a
compromising position. Mary Ann did not like Miss Wilkinson and
called her an old cat. Aunt Louisa was not very well and could
not come to the station, but the Vicar and Philip saw her off.
Just as the train was leaving she leaned out and kissed Mr.
Carey.
"I must kiss you too, Philip," she said.
"All right," he said, blushing.
He stood up on the step and she kissed him quickly. The train
started, and Miss Wilkinson sank into the corner of her carriage
and wept disconsolately. Philip, as he walked back to the
vicarage, felt a distinct sensation of relief.
"Well, did you see her safely off?" asked Aunt Louisa, when they
got in.
"Yes, she seemed rather weepy. She insisted on kissing me and
Philip."
"Oh, well, at her age it's not dangerous." Mrs. Carey pointed to
the sideboard. "There's a letter for you, Philip. It came by the
second post."
It was from Hayward and ran as follows:
My dear boy,
I answer your letter at once. I ventured to read it to a great
friend of mine, a charming woman whose help and sympathy have
been very precious to me, a woman withal with a real feeling for
art and literature; and we agreed that it was charming. You
wrote from your heart and you do not know the delightful naivete
which is in every line. And because you love you write like a
poet. Ah, dear boy, that is the real thing: I felt the glow of
your young passion, and your prose was musical from the
sincerity of your emotion. You must be happy! I wish I could
have been present unseen in that enchanted garden while you
wandered hand in hand, like Daphnis and Chloe, amid the flowers.
I can see you, my Daphnis, with the light of young love in your
eyes, tender, enraptured, and ardent; while Chloe in your arms,
so young and soft and fresh, vowing she would ne'er
consent--consented. Roses and violets and honeysuckle! Oh, my
friend, I envy you. It is so good to think that your first love
should have been pure poetry. Treasure the moments, for the
immortal gods have given you the Greatest Gift of All, and it
will be a sweet, sad memory till your dying day. You will never
again enjoy that careless rapture. First love is best love; and
she is beautiful and you are young, and all the world is yours.
I felt my pulse go faster when with your adorable simplicity you
told me that you buried your face in her long hair. I am sure
that it is that exquisite chestnut which seems just touched with
gold. I would have you sit under a leafy tree side by side, and
read together Romeo and Juliet; and then I would have you fall
on your knees and on my behalf kiss the ground on which her foot
has left its imprint; then tell her it is the homage of a poet
to her radiant youth and to your love for her.
Yours always,
G. Etheridge Hayward.
"What damned rot!" said Philip, when he finished the letter.
Miss Wilkinson oddly enough had suggested that they should read
Romeo and Juliet together; but Philip had firmly declined. Then,
as he put the letter in his pocket, he felt a queer little pang
of bitterness because reality seemed so different from the
ideal.
A FEW days later Philip went to London. The curate had
recommended rooms in Barnes, and these Philip engaged by letter
at fourteen shillings a week. He reached them in the evening;
and the landlady, a funny little old woman with a shrivelled
body and a deeply wrinkled face, had prepared high tea for him.
Most of the sitting-room was taken up by the sideboard and a
square table; against one wall was a sofa covered with
horsehair, and by the fireplace an arm-chair to match: there was
a white antimacassar over the back of it, and on the seat,
because the springs were broken, a hard cushion.
After having his tea he unpacked and arranged his books, then he
sat down and tried to read; but he was depressed. The silence in
the street made him slightly uncomfortable, and he felt very
much alone.
Next day he got up early. He put on his tail-coat and the tall
hat which he had worn at school; but it was very shabby, and he
made up his mind to stop at the Stores on his way to the office
and buy a new one. When he had done this he found himself in
plenty of time and so walked along the Strand. The office of
Messrs. Herbert Carter & Co. was in a little street off Chancery
Lane, and he had to ask his way two or three times. He felt that
people were staring at him a great deal, and once he took off
his hat to see whether by chance the label had been left on.
When he arrived he knocked at the door; but no one answered, and
looking at his watch he found it was barely half past nine; he
supposed he was too early. He went away and ten minutes later
returned to find an office-boy, with a long nose, pimply face,
and a Scotch accent, opening the door. Philip asked for Mr.
Herbert Carter. He had not come yet.
"When will he be here?"
"Between ten and half past."
"I'd better wait," said Philip.
"What are you wanting?" asked the office-boy.
Philip was nervous, but tried to hide the fact by a jocose
manner.
"Well, I'm going to work here if you have no objection."
"Oh, you're the new articled clerk? You'd better come in. Mr.
Goodworthy'll be here in a while."
Philip walked in, and as he did so saw the office-boy--he was
about the same age as Philip and called himself a junior
clerk--look at his foot. He flushed and, sitting down, hid it
behind the other. He looked round the room. It was dark and very
dingy. It was lit by a skylight. There were three rows of desks
in it and against them high stools. Over the chimney-piece was
a dirty engraving of a prize-fight. Presently a clerk came in
and then another; they glanced at Philip and in an undertone
asked the office-boy (Philip found his name was Macdougal) who
he was. A whistle blew, and Macdougal got up.
"Mr. Goodworthy's come. He's the managing clerk. Shall I tell
him you're here?"
"Yes, please," said Philip.
The office-boy went out and in a moment returned.
"Will you come this way?"
Philip followed him across the passage and was shown into a
room, small and barely furnished, in which a little, thin man
was standing with his back to the fireplace. He was much below
the middle height, but his large head, which seemed to hang
loosely on his body, gave him an odd ungainliness. His features
were wide and flattened, and he had prominent, pale eyes; his
thin hair was sandy; he wore whiskers that grew unevenly on his
face, and in places where you would have expected the hair to
grow thickly there was no hair at all. His skin was pasty and
yellow. He held out his hand to Philip, and when he smiled
showed badly decayed teeth. He spoke with a patronising and at
the same time a timid air, as though he sought to assume an
importance which he did not feel. He said he hoped Philip would
like the work; there was a good deal of drudgery about it, but
when you got used to it, it was interesting; and one made money,
that was the chief thing, wasn't it? He laughed with his odd
mixture of superiority and shyness.
"Mr. Carter will be here presently," he said. "He's a little
late on Monday mornings sometimes. I'll call you when he comes.
In the meantime I must give you something to do. Do you know
anything about book-keeping or accounts?"
"I'm afraid not," answered Philip.
"I didn't suppose you would. They don't teach you things at
school that are much use in business, I'm afraid." He considered
for a moment. "I think I can find you something to do."
He went into the next room and after a little while came out
with a large cardboard box. It contained a vast number of
letters in great disorder, and he told Philip to sort them out
and arrange them alphabetically according to the names of the
writers.
"I'll take you to the room in which the articled clerk generally
sits. There's a very nice fellow in it. His name is Watson. He's
a son of Watson, Crag, and Thompson--you know--the brewers. He's
spending a year with us to learn business."
Mr. Goodworthy led Philip through the dingy office, where now
six or eight clerks were working, into a narrow room behind. It
had been made into a separate apartment by a glass partition,
and here they found Watson sitting back in a chair, reading The
_Sportsman_. He was a large, stout young man, elegantly
dressed, and he looked up as Mr. Goodworthy entered. He asserted
his position by calling the managing clerk Goodworthy. The
managing clerk objected to the familiarity, and pointedly called
him Mr. Watson, but Watson, instead of seeing that it was a
rebuke, accepted the title as a tribute to his gentlemanliness.
"I see they've scratched Rigoletto," he said to Philip, as soon
as they were left alone.
"Have they?" said Philip, who knew nothing about horse-racing.
He looked with awe upon Watson's beautiful clothes. His
tail-coat fitted him perfectly, and there was a valuable pin
artfully stuck in the middle of an enormous tie. On the
chimney-piece rested his tall hat; it was saucy and bell-shaped
and shiny. Philip felt himself very shabby. Watson began to talk
of hunting--it was such an infernal bore having to waste one's
time in an infernal office, he would only be able to hunt on
Saturdays--and shooting: he had ripping invitations all over the
country and of course he had to refuse them. It was infernal
luck, but he wasn't going to put up with it long; he was only in
this internal hole for a year, and then he was going into the
business, and he would hunt four days a week and get all the
shooting there was.
"You've got five years of it, haven't you?" he said, waving his
arm round the tiny room.
"I suppose so," said Philip.
"I daresay I shall see something of you. Carter does our
accounts, you know."
Philip was somewhat overpowered by the young gentleman's
condescension. At Blackstable they had always looked upon
brewing with civil contempt, the Vicar made little jokes about
the beerage, and it was a surprising experience for Philip to
discover that Watson was such an important and magnificent
fellow. He had been to Winchester and to Oxford, and his
conversation impressed the fact upon one with frequency. When he
discovered the details of Philip's education his manner became
more patronising still.
"Of course, if one doesn't go to a public school those sort of
schools are the next best thing, aren't they?"
Philip asked about the other men in the office.
"Oh, I don't bother about them much, you know," said Watson.
"Carter's not a bad sort. We have him to dine now and then. All
the rest are awful bounders."
Presently Watson applied himself to some work he had in hand,
and Philip set about sorting his letters. Then Mr. Goodworthy
came in to say that Mr. Carter had arrived. He took Philip into
a large room next door to his own. There was a big desk in it,
and a couple of big arm-chairs; a Turkey carpet adorned the
floor, and the walls were decorated with sporting prints. Mr.
Carter was sitting at the desk and got up to shake hands with
Philip. He was dressed in a long frock coat. He looked like a
military man; his moustache was waxed, his gray hair was short
and nut, he held himself upright, he talked in a breezy way, he
lived at Enfield. He was very keen on games and the good of the
country. He was an officer in the Hertfordshire Yeomanry and
chairman of the Conservative Association. When he was told that
a local magnate had said no one would take him for a City man,
he felt that he had not lived in vain. He talked to Philip in a
pleasant, off-hand fashion. Mr. Goodworthy would look after him.
Watson was a nice fellow, perfect gentleman, good sportsman--did
Philip hunt? Pity, _the_ sport for gentlemen. Didn't have much
chance of hunting now, had to leave that to his son. His son was
at Cambridge, he'd sent him to Rugby, fine school Rugby, nice
class of boys there, in a couple of years his son would be
articled, that would be nice for Philip, he'd like his son,
thorough sportsman. He hoped Philip would get on well and like
the work, he mustn't miss his lectures, they were getting up the
tone of the profession, they wanted gentlemen in it. Well, well,
Mr. Goodworthy was there. If he wanted to know anything Mr.
Goodworthy would tell him. What was his handwriting like? Ah
well, Mr. Goodworthy would see about that.
Philip was overwhelmed by so much gentlemanliness: in East
Anglia they knew who were gentlemen and who weren't, but the
gentlemen didn't talk about it.
AT FIRST the novelty of the work kept Philip interested. Mr.
Carter dictated letters to him, and he had to make fair copies
of statements of accounts.
Mr. Carter preferred to conduct the office on gentlemanly lines;
he would have nothing to do with typewriting and looked upon
shorthand with disfavour: the office-boy knew shorthand, but it
was only Mr. Goodworthy who made use of his accomplishment. Now
and then Philip with one of the more experienced clerks went out
to audit the accounts of some firm: he came to know which of the
clients must be treated with respect and which were in low
water. Now and then long lists of figures were given him to add
up. He attended lectures for his first examination. Mr.
Goodworthy repeated to him that the work was dull at first, but
he would grow used to it. Philip left the office at six and
walked across the river to Waterloo. His supper was waiting for
him when he reached his lodgings and he spent the evening
reading. On Saturday afternoons he went to the National Gallery.
Hayward had recommended to him a guide which had been compiled
out of Ruskin's works, and with this in hand he went
industriously through room after room: he read carefully what
the critic had said about a picture and then in a determined
fashion set himself to see the same things in it. His Sundays
were difficult to get through. He knew no one in London and
spent them by himself. Mr. Nixon, the solicitor, asked him to
spend a Sunday at Hampstead, and Philip passed a happy day with
a set of exuberant strangers; he ate and drank a great deal,
took a walk on the heath, and came away with a general
invitation to come again whenever he liked; but he was morbidly
afraid of being in the way, so waited for a formal invitation.
Naturally enough it never came, for with numbers of friends of
their own the Nixons did not think of the lonely, silent boy
whose claim upon their hospitality was so small. So on Sundays
he got up late and took a walk along the tow-path. At Barnes the
river is muddy, dingy, and tidal; it has neither the graceful
charm of the Thames above the locks nor the romance of the
crowded stream below London Bridge. In the afternoon he walked
about the common; and that is gray and dingy too; it is neither
country nor town; the gorse is stunted; and all about is the
litter of civilisation. He went to a play every Saturday night
and stood cheerfully for an hour or more at the gallery-door. It
was not worth while to go back to Barnes for the interval
between the closing of the Museum and his meal in an A. B. C.
shop, and the time hung heavily on his hands. He strolled up
Bond Street or through the Burlington Arcade, and when he was
tired went and sat down in the Park or in wet weather in the
public library in St. Martin's Lane. He looked at the people
walking about and envied them because they had friends;
sometimes his envy turned to hatred because they were happy and
he was miserable. He had never imagined that it was possible to
be so lonely in a great city. Sometimes when he was standing at
the gallery-door the man next to him would attempt a
conversation; but Philip had the country boy's suspicion of
strangers and answered in such a way as to prevent any further
acquaintance. After the play was over, obliged to keep to
himself all he thought about it, he hurried across the bridge to
Waterloo. When he got back to his rooms, in which for economy no
fire had been lit, his heart sank. It was horribly cheerless. He
began to loathe his lodgings and the long solitary evenings he
spent in them. Sometimes he felt so lonely that he could not
read, and then he sat looking into the fire hour after hour in
bitter wretchedness.
He had spent three months in London now, and except for that one
Sunday at Hampstead had never talked to anyone but his
fellow-clerks. One evening Watson asked him to dinner at a
restaurant and they went to a music-hall together; but he felt
shy and uncomfortable. Watson talked all the time of things he
did not care about, and while he looked upon Watson as a
Philistine he could not help admiring him. He was angry because
Watson obviously set no store on his culture, and with his way
of taking himself at the estimate at which he saw others held
him he began to despise the acquirements which till then had
seemed to him not unimportant. He felt for the first time the
humiliation of poverty. His uncle sent him fourteen pounds a
month and he had had to buy a good many clothes. His evening
suit cost him five guineas. He had not dared tell Watson that it
was bought in the Strand. Watson said there was only one tailor
in London.
"I suppose you don't dance," said Watson, one day, with a glance
at Philip's club-foot.
"No," said Philip.
"Pity. I've been asked to bring some dancing men to a ball. I
could have introduced you to some jolly girls."
Once or twice, hating the thought of going back to Barnes,
Philip had remained in town, and late in the evening wandered
through the West End till he found some house at which there was
a party. He stood among the little group of shabby people,
behind the footmen, watching the guests arrive, and he listened
to the music that floated through the window. Sometimes,
notwithstanding the cold, a couple came on to the balcony and
stood for a moment to get some fresh air; and Philip, imagining
that they were in love with one another, turned away and limped
along the street with a heavy hurt. He would never be able to
stand in that man's place. He felt that no woman could ever
really look upon him without distaste for his deformity.
That reminded him of Miss Wilkinson. He thought of her without
satisfaction. Before parting they had made an arrangement that
she should write to Charing Cross Post Office till he was able
to send her an address, and when he went there he found three
letters from her. She wrote on blue paper with violet ink, and
she wrote in French. Philip wondered why she could not write in
English like a sensible woman, and her passionate expressions,
because they reminded him of a French novel, left him cold. She
upbraided him for not having written, and when he answered he
excused himself by saying that he had been busy. He did not
quite know how to start the letter. He could not bring himself
to use dearest or darling, and he hated to address her as Emily,
so finally he began with the word dear. It looked odd, standing
by itself, and rather silly, but he made it do. It was the first
love letter he had ever written, and he was conscious of its
tameness; he felt that he should say all sorts of vehement
things, how he thought of her every minute of the day and how he
longed to kiss her beautiful hands and how he trembled at the
thought of her red lips, but some inexplicable modesty prevented
him; and instead he told her of his new rooms and his office.
The answer came by return of post, angry, heart-broken,
reproachful: how could he be so cold? Did he not know that she
hung on his letters? She had given him all that a woman could
give, and this was her reward. Was he tired of her already?
Then, because he did not reply for several days, Miss Wilkinson
bombarded him with letters. She could not bear his unkindness,
she waited for the post, and it never brought her his letter,
she cried herself to sleep night after night, she was looking so
ill that everyone remarked on it: if he did not love her why did
he not say so? She added that she could not live without him,
and the only thing was for her to commit suicide. She told him
he was cold and selfish and ungrateful. It was all in French,
and Philip knew that she wrote in that language to show off, but
he was worried all the same. He did not want to make her
unhappy. In a little while she wrote that she could not bear the
separation any longer, she would arrange to come over to London
for Christmas. Philip wrote back that he would like nothing
better, only he had already an engagement to spend Christmas
with friends in the country, and he did not see how he could
break it. She answered that she did not wish to force herself on
him, it was quite evident that he did not wish to see her; she
was deeply hurt, and she never thought he would repay with such
cruelty all her kindness. Her letter was touching, and Philip
thought he saw marks of her tears on the paper; he wrote an
impulsive reply saying that he was dreadfully sorry and
imploring her to come; but it was with relief that he received
her answer in which she said that she found it would be
impossible for her to get away. Presently when her letters came
his heart sank: he delayed opening them, for he knew what they
would contain, angry reproaches and pathetic appeals; they would
make him feel a perfect beast, and yet he did not see with what
he had to blame himself. He put off his answer from day to day,
and then another letter would come, saying she was ill and
lonely and miserable.
"I wish to God I'd never had anything to do with her," he said.
He admired Watson because he arranged these things so easily.
The young man had been engaged in an intrigue with a girl who
played in touring companies, and his account of the affair
filled Philip with envious amazement. But after a time Watson's
young affections changed, and one day he described the rupture
to Philip.
"I thought it was no good making any bones about it so I just
told her I'd had enough of her," he said.
"Didn't she make an awful scene?" asked Philip.
"The usual thing, you know, but I told her it was no good trying
on that sort of thing with me."
"Did she cry?"
"She began to, but I can't stand women when they cry, so I said
she'd better hook it."
Philip's sense of humour was growing keener with advancing
years.
"And did she hook it?" he asked smiling.
"Well, there wasn't anything else for her to do, was there?"
Meanwhile the Christmas holidays approached. Mrs. Carey had been
ill all through November, and the doctor suggested that she and
the Vicar should go to Cornwall for a couple of weeks round
Christmas so that she should get back her strength. The result
was that Philip had nowhere to go, and he spent Christmas Day in
his lodgings. Under Hayward's influence he had persuaded himself
that the festivities that attend this season were vulgar and
barbaric, and he made up his mind that he would take no notice
of the day; but when it came, the jollity of all around affected
him strangely. His landlady and her husband were spending the
day with a married daughter, and to save trouble Philip
announced that he would take his meals out. He went up to London
towards mid-day and ate a slice of turkey and some Christmas
pudding by himself at Gatti's, and since he had nothing to do
afterwards went to Westminster Abbey for the afternoon service.
The streets were almost empty, and the people who went along had
a preoccupied look; they did not saunter but walked with some
definite goal in view, and hardly anyone was alone. To Philip
they all seemed happy. He felt himself more solitary than he had
ever done in his life. His intention had been to kill the day
somehow in the streets and then dine at a restaurant, but he
could not face again the sight of cheerful people, talking,
laughing, and making merry; so he went back to Waterloo, and on
his way through the Westminster Bridge Road bought some ham and
a couple of mince pies and went back to Barnes. He ate his food
in his lonely little room and spent the evening with a book. His
depression was almost intolerable.
When he was back at the office it made him very sore to listen
to Watson's account of the short holiday. They had had some
jolly girls staying with them, and after dinner they had cleared
out the drawing-room and had a dance.
"I didn't get to bed till three and I don't know how I got there
then. By George, I was squiffy."
At last Philip asked desperately:
"How does one get to know people in London?"
Watson looked at him with surprise and with a slightly
contemptuous amusement.
"Oh, I don't know, one just knows them. If you go to dances you
soon get to know as many people as you can do with."
Philip hated Watson, and yet he would have given anything to
change places with him. The old feeling that he had had at
school came back to him, and he tried to throw himself into the
other's skin, imagining what life would be if he were Watson.
AT THE end of the year there was a great deal to do. Philip went
to various places with a clerk named Thompson and spent the day
monotonously calling out items of expenditure, which the other
checked; and sometimes he was given long pages of figures to add
up. He had never had a head for figures, and he could only do
this slowly. Thompson grew irritated at his mistakes. His
fellow-clerk was a long, lean man of forty, sallow, with black
hair and a ragged moustache; he had hollow cheeks and deep lines
on each side of his nose. He took a dislike to Philip because he
was an articled clerk. Because he could put down three hundred
guineas and keep himself for five years Philip had the chance of
a career; while he, with his experience and ability, had no
possibility of ever being more than a clerk at thirty-five
shillings a week. He was a cross-grained man, oppressed by a
large family, and he resented the superciliousness which he
fancied he saw in Philip. He sneered at Philip because he was
better educated than himself, and he mocked at Philip's
pronunciation; he could not forgive him because he spoke without
a cockney accent, and when he talked to him sarcastically
exaggerated his aitches. At first his manner was merely gruff
and repellent, but as he discovered that Philip had no gift for
accountancy he took pleasure in humiliating him; his attacks
were gross and silly, but they wounded Philip, and in
self-defence he assumed an attitude of superiority which he did
not feel.
"Had a bath this morning?" Thompson said when Philip came to the
office late, for his early punctuality had not lasted.
"Yes, haven't you?"
"No, I'm not a gentleman, I'm only a clerk. I have a bath on
Saturday night."
"I suppose that's why you're more than usually disagreeable on
Monday."
"Will you condescend to do a few sums in simple addition today?
I'm afraid it's asking a great deal from a gentleman who knows
Latin and Greek."
"Your attempts at sarcasm are not very happy."
But Philip could not conceal from himself that the other clerks,
ill-paid and uncouth, were more useful than himself. Once or
twice Mr. Goodworthy grew impatient with him.
"You really ought to be able to do better than this by now," he
said. "You're not even as smart as the office-boy."
Philip listened sulkily. He did not like being blamed, and it
humiliated him, when, having been given accounts to make fair
copies of, Mr. Goodworthy was not satisfied and gave them to
another clerk to do. At first the work had been tolerable from
its novelty, but now it grew irksome; and when he discovered
that he had no aptitude for it, he began to hate it. Often, when
he should have been doing something that was given him, he
wasted his time drawing little pictures on the office
note-paper. He made sketches of Watson in every conceivable
attitude, and Watson was impressed by his talent. It occurred to
him to take the drawings home, and he came back next day with
the praises of his family.
"I wonder you didn't become a painter," he said. "Only of course
there's no money in it."
It chanced that Mr. Carter two or three days later was dining
with the Watsons, and the sketches were shown him. The following
morning he sent for Philip. Philip saw him seldom and stood in
some awe of him.
"Look here, young fellow, I don't care what you do out of
office-hours, but I've seen those sketches of yours and they're
on office-paper, and Mr. Goodworthy tells me you're slack. You
won't do any good as a chartered accountant unless you look
alive. It's a fine profession, and we're getting a very good
class of men in it, but it's a profession in which you have
to..." he looked for the termination of his phrase, but could
not find exactly what he wanted, so finished rather tamely, "in
which you have to look alive."
Perhaps Philip would have settled down but for the agreement
that if he did not like the work he could leave after a year,
and get back half the money paid for his articles. He felt that
he was fit for something better than to add up accounts, and it
was humiliating that he did so ill something which seemed
contemptible. The vulgar scenes with Thompson got on his nerves.
In March Watson ended his year at the office and Philip, though
he did not care for him, saw him go with regret. The fact that
the other clerks disliked them equally, because they belonged to
a class a little higher than their own, was a bond of union.
When Philip thought that he must spend over four years more with
that dreary set of fellows his heart sank. He had expected
wonderful things from London and it had given him nothing. He
hated it now. He did not know a soul, and he had no idea how he
was to get to know anyone. He was tired of going everywhere by
himself. He began to feel that he could not stand much more of
such a life. He would lie in bed at night and think of the joy
of never seeing again that dingy office or any of the men in it,
and of getting away from those drab lodgings.
A great disappointment befell him in the spring. Hayward had
announced his intention of coming to London for the season, and
Philip had looked forward very much to seeing him again. He had
read so much lately and thought so much that his mind was full
of ideas which he wanted to discuss, and he knew nobody who was
willing to interest himself in abstract things. He was quite
excited at the thought of talking his fill with someone, and he
was wretched when Hayward wrote to say that the spring was
lovelier than ever he had known it in Italy, and he could not
bear to tear himself away. He went on to ask why Philip did not
come. What was the use of squandering the days of his youth in
an office when the world was beautiful? The letter proceeded.
_I wonder you can bear it. I think of Fleet Street and
Lincoln's Inn now with a shudder of disgust. There are only two
things in the world that make life worth living, love and art.
I cannot imagine you sitting in an office over a ledger, and do
you wear a tall hat and an umbrella and a little black bag? My
feeling is that one should look upon life as an adventure, one
should burn with the hard, gem-like flame, and one should take
risks, one should expose oneself to danger. Why do you not go to
Paris and study art? I always thought you had talent._
The suggestion fell in with the possibility that Philip for some
time had been vaguely turning over in his mind. It startled him
at first, but he could not help thinking of it, and in the
constant rumination over it he found his only escape from the
wretchedness of his present state. They all thought he had
talent; at Heidelberg they had admired his water colours, Miss
Wilkinson had told him over and over again that they were
chasing; even strangers like the Watsons had been struck by his
sketches. _La Vie de Boheme_ had made a deep impression on
him. He had brought it to London and when he was most depressed
he had only to read a few pages to be transported into those
chasing attics where Rodolphe and the rest of them danced and
loved and sang. He began to think of Paris as before he had
thought of London, but he had no fear of a second disillusion;
he yearned for romance and beauty and love, and Paris seemed to
offer them all. He had a passion for pictures, and why should he
not be able to paint as well as anybody else? He wrote to Miss
Wilkinson and asked her how much she thought he could live on in
Paris. She told him that he could manage easily on eighty pounds
a year, and she enthusiastically approved of his project. She
told him he was too good to be wasted in an office. Who would be
a clerk when he might be a great artist, she asked dramatically,
and she besought Philip to believe in himself: that was the
great thing. But Philip had a cautious nature. It was all very
well for Hayward to talk of taking risks, he had three hundred
a year in gilt-edged securities; Philip's entire fortune
amounted to no more than eighteen-hundred pounds. He hesitated.
Then it chanced that one day Mr. Goodworthy asked him suddenly
if he would like to go to Paris. The firm did the accounts for
a hotel in the Faubourg St. Honore, which was owned by an
English company, and twice a year Mr. Goodworthy and a clerk
went over. The clerk who generally went happened to be ill, and
a press of work prevented any of the others from getting away.
Mr. Goodworthy thought of Philip because he could best be
spared, and his articles gave him some claim upon a job which
was one of the pleasures of the business. Philip was delighted.
"You'll 'ave to work all day," said Mr. Goodworthy, "but we get
our evenings to ourselves, and Paris is Paris." He smiled in a
knowing way. "They do us very well at the hotel, and they give
us all our meals, so it don't cost one anything. That's the way
I like going to Paris, at other people's expense."
When they arrived at Calais and Philip saw the crowd of
gesticulating porters his heart leaped.
"This is the real thing," he said to himself.
He was all eyes as the train sped through the country; he adored
the sand dunes, their colour seemed to him more lovely than
anything he had ever seen; and he was enchanted with the canals
and the long lines of poplars. When they got out of the Gare du
Nord, and trundled along the cobbled streets in a ramshackle,
noisy cab, it seemed to him that he was breathing a new air so
intoxicating that he could hardly restrain himself from shouting
aloud. They were met at the door of the hotel by the manager, a
stout, pleasant man, who spoke tolerable English; Mr. Goodworthy
was an old friend and he greeted them effusively; they dined in
his private room with his wife, and to Philip it seemed that he
had never eaten anything so delicious as the _beefsteak aux
pommes_, nor drunk such nectar as the _vin ordinaire_, which
were set before them.
To Mr. Goodworthy, a respectable householder with excellent
principles, the capital of France was a paradise of the joyously
obscene. He asked the manager next morning what there was to be
seen that was `thick.' He thoroughly enjoyed these visits of his
to Paris; he said they kept you from growing rusty. In the
evenings, after their work was over and they had dined, he took
Philip to the Moulin Rouge and the Folies Bergeres. His little
eyes twinkled and his face wore a sly, sensual smile as he
sought out the pornographic. He went into all the haunts which
were specially arranged for the foreigner, and afterwards said
that a nation could come to no good which permitted that sort of
thing. He nudged Philip when at some revue a woman appeared with
practically nothing on, and pointed out to him the most
strapping of the courtesans who walked about the hall. It was a
vulgar Paris that he showed Philip, but Philip saw it with eyes
blinded with illusion. In the early morning he would rush out of
the hotel and go to the Champs Elysees, and stand at the Place
de la Concorde. It was June, and Paris was silvery with the
delicacy of the air. Philip felt his heart go out to the people.
Here he thought at last was romance.
They spent the inside of a week there, leaving on Sunday, and
when Philip late at night reached his dingy rooms in Barnes his
mind was made up; he would surrender his articles, and go to
Paris to study art; but so that no one should think him
unreasonable he determined to stay at the office till his year
was up. He was to have his holiday during the last fortnight in
August, and when he went away he would tell Herbert Carter that
he had no intention of returning. But though Philip could force
himself to go to the office every day he could not even pretend
to show any interest in the work. His mind was occupied with the
future. After the middle of July there was nothing much to do
and he escaped a good deal by pretending he had to go to
lectures for his first examination. The time he got in this way
he spent in the National Gallery. He read books about Paris and
books about painting. He was steeped in Ruskin. He read many of
Vasari's lives of the painters. He liked that story of
Correggio, and he fancied himself standing before some great
masterpiece and crying: _Anch' io son' pittore_. His
hesitation had left him now, and he was convinced that he had in
him the makings of a great painter.
"After all, I can only try," he said to himself. "The great
thing in life is to take risks."
At last came the middle of August. Mr. Carter was spending the
month in Scotland, and the managing clerk was in charge of the
office. Mr. Goodworthy had seemed pleasantly disposed to Philip
since their trip to Paris, and now that Philip knew he was so
soon to be free, he could look upon the funny little man with
tolerance.
"You're going for your holiday tomorrow, Carey?" he said to him
in the evening.
All day Philip had been telling himself that this was the last
time he would ever sit in that hateful office.
"Yes, this is the end of my year."
"I'm afraid you've not done very well. Mr. Carter's very
dissatisfied with you."
"Not nearly so dissatisfied as I am with Mr. Carter," returned
Philip cheerfully.
"I don't think you should speak like that, Carey."
"I'm not coming back. I made the arrangement that if I didn't
like accountancy Mr. Carter would return me half the money I
paid for my articles and I could chuck it at the end of a year."
"You shouldn't come to such a decision hastily."
"For ten months I've loathed it all, I've loathed the work, I've
loathed the office, I loathe Loudon. I'd rather sweep a crossing
than spend my days here."
"Well, I must say, I don't think you're very fitted for
accountancy."
"Good-bye," said Philip, holding out his hand. "I want to thank
you for your kindness to me. I'm sorry if I've been troublesome.
I knew almost from the beginning I was no good."
"Well, if you really do make up your mind it is good-bye. I
don't know what you're going to do, but if you're in the
neighbourhood at any time come in and see us."
Philip gave a little laugh.
"I'm afraid it sounds very rude, but I hope from the bottom of
my heart that I shall never set eyes on any of you again."
THE Vicar of Blackstable would have nothing to do with the
scheme which Philip laid before him. He had a great idea that
one should stick to whatever one had begun. Like all weak men he
laid an exaggerated stress on not changing one's mind.
"You chose to be an accountant of your own free will," he said.
"I just took that because it was the only chance I saw of
getting up to town. I hate London, I hate the work, and nothing
will induce me to go back to it."
Mr. and Mrs. Carey were frankly shocked at Philip's idea of
being an artist. He should not forget, they said, that his
father and mother were gentlefolk, and painting wasn't a serious
profession; it was Bohemian, disreputable, immoral. And then
Paris!
"So long as I have anything to say in the matter, I shall not
allow you to live in Paris," said the Vicar firmly.
It was a sink of iniquity. The scarlet woman and she of Babylon
Haunted their vileness there; the cities of the plain were not
more wicked.
"You've been brought up like a gentleman and Christian, and I
should be false to the trust laid upon me by your dead father
and mother if I allowed you to expose yourself to such
temptation."
"Well, I know I'm not a Christian and I'm beginning to doubt
whether I'm a gentleman," said Philip.
The dispute grew more violent. There was another year before
Philip took possession of his small inheritance, and during that
time Mr. Carey proposed only to give him an allowance if he
remained at the office. It was clear to Philip that if he meant
not to continue with accountancy he must leave it while he could
still get back half the money that had been paid for his
articles. The Vicar would not listen. Philip, losing all
reserve, said things to wound and irritate.
"You've got no right to waste my money," he said at last. "After
all it's my money, isn't it? I'm not a child. You can't prevent
me from going to Paris if I make up my mind to. You can't force
me to go back to London."
"All I can do is to refuse you money unless you do what I think
fit."
"Well, I don't care, I've made up my mind to go to Paris. I
shall sell my clothes, and my books, and my father's jewellery."
Aunt Louisa sat by in silence, anxious and unhappy. she saw that
Philip was beside himself, and anything she said then would but
increase his anger. Finally the Vicar announced that he wished
to hear nothing more about it and with dignity left the room.
For the next three days neither Philip nor he spoke to one
another. Philip wrote to Hayward for information about Paris,
and made up his mind to set out as soon as he got a reply. Mrs.
Carey turned the matter over in her mind incessantly; she felt
that Philip included her in the hatred he bore her husband, and
the thought tortured her. She loved him with all her heart. At
length she spoke to him; she listened attentively while he
poured out all his disillusionment of London and his eager
ambition for the future.
"I may be no good, but at least let me have a try. I can't be a
worse failure than I was in that beastly office. And I feel that
I can paint. I know I've got it in me."
She was not so sure as her husband that they did right in
thwarting so strong an inclination. She had read of great
painters whose parents had opposed their wish to study, the
event had shown with what folly; and after all it was just as
possible for a painter to lead a virtuous life to the glory of
God as for a chartered accountant.
"I'm so afraid of your going to Paris," she said piteously. "It
wouldn't be so bad if you studied in London."
"If I'm going in for painting I must do it thoroughly, and it's
only in Paris that you can get the real thing."
At his suggestion Mrs. Carey wrote to the solicitor, saying that
Philip was discontented with his work in London, and asking what
he thought of a change. Mr. Nixon answered as follows:
_Dear Mrs. Carey,
I have seen Mr. Herbert Carter, and I am afraid I must tell you
that Philip has not done so well as one could have wished. If he
is very strongly set against the work, perhaps it is better that
he should take the opportunity there is now to break his
articles. I am naturally very disappointed, but as you know you
can take a horse to the water, but you can't make him drink.
Yours very sincerely,
Albert Nixon._
The letter was shown to the Vicar, but served only to increase
his obstinacy. He was willing enough that Philip should take up
some other profession, he suggested his father's calling,
medicine, but nothing would induce him to pay an allowance if
Philip went to Paris.
"It's a mere excuse for self-indulgence and sensuality," he
said.
"I'm interested to hear you blame self-indulgence in others,"
retorted Philip acidly.
But by this time an answer had come from Hayward, giving the
name of a hotel where Philip could get a room for thirty francs
a month and enclosing a note of introduction to the massiere of
a school. Philip read the letter to Mrs. Carey and told her he
proposed to start on the first of September.
"But you haven't got any money?" she said.
"I'm going into Tercanbury this afternoon to sell the
jewellery."
He had inherited from his father a gold watch and chain, two or
three rings, some links, and two pins. One of them was a pearl
and might fetch a considerable sum.
"It's a very different thing, what a thing's worth and what
it'll fetch," said Aunt Louisa.
Philip smiled, for this was one of his uncle's stock phrases.
"I know, but at the worst I think I can get a hundred pounds on
the lot, and that'll keep me till I'm twenty-one."
Mrs. Carey did not answer, but she went upstairs, put on her
little black bonnet, and went to the bank. In an hour she came
back. She went to Philip, who was reading in the drawing-room,
and handed him an envelope.
"What's this?" he asked.
"It's a little present for you," she answered, smiling shyly.
He opened it and found eleven five-pound notes and a little
paper sack bulging with sovereigns.
"I couldn't bear to let you sell your father's jewellery. It's
the money I had in the bank. It comes to very nearly a hundred
pounds."
Philip blushed, and, he knew not why, tears suddenly filled his
eyes.
"Oh, my dear, I can't take it," he said. "It's most awfully good
of you, but I couldn't bear to take it."
When Mrs. Carey was married she had three hundred pounds, and
this money, carefully watched, had been used by her to meet any
unforeseen expense, any urgent charity, or to buy Christmas and
birthday presents for her husband and for Philip. In the course
of years it had diminished sadly, but it was still with the
Vicar a subject for jesting. He talked of his wife as a rich
woman and he constantly spoke of the `nest egg.'
"Oh, please take it, Philip. I'm so sorry I've been extravagant,
and there's only that left. But it'll make me so happy if you'll
accept it."
"But you'll want it," said Philip.
"No, I don't think I shall. I was keeping it in case your uncle
died before me. I thought it would be useful to have a little
something I could get at immediately if I wanted it, but I don't
think I shall live very much longer now."
"Oh, my dear, don't say that. Why, of course you're going to
live for ever. I can't possibly spare you."
"Oh, I'm not sorry." Her voice broke and she hid her eyes, but
in a moment, drying them, she smiled bravely. "At first, I used
to pray to God that He might not take me first, because I didn't
want your uncle to be left alone, I didn't want him to have all
the suffering, but now I know that it wouldn't mean so much to
your uncle as it would mean to me. He wants to live more than I
do, I've never been the wife he wanted, and I daresay he'd marry
again if anything happened to me. So I should like to go first.
You don't think it's selfish of me, Philip, do you? But I
couldn't bear it if he went."
Philip kissed her wrinkled, thin cheek. He did not know why the
sight he had of that overwhelming love made him feel strangely
ashamed. It was incomprehensible that she should care so much
for a man who was so indifferent, so selfish, so grossly
self-indulgent; and he divined dimly that in her heart she knew
his indifference and his selfishness, knew them and loved him
humbly all the same.
"You will take the money, Philip?" she said, gently stroking his
hand. "I know you can do without it, but it'll give me so much
happiness. I've always wanted to do something for you. You see,
I never had a child of my own, and I've loved you as if you were
my son. When you were a little boy, though I knew it was wicked,
I used to wish almost that you might be ill, so that I could
nurse you day and night. But you were only ill once and then it
was at school. I should so like to help you. It's the only
chance I shall ever have. And perhaps some day when you're a
great artist you won't forget me, but you'll remember that I
gave you your start."
"It's very good of you," said Philip. "I'm very grateful." A
smile came into her tired eyes, a smile of pure happiness.
A FEW days later Mrs. Carey went to the station to see Philip
off. She stood at the door of the carriage, trying to keep back
her tears. Philip was restless and eager. He wanted to be gone.
"Kiss me once more," she said.
He leaned out of the window and kissed her. The train started,
and she stood on the wooden platform of the little station,
waving her handkerchief till it was out of sight. Her heart was
dreadfully heavy, and the few hundred yards to the vicarage
seemed very, very long. It was natural enough that he should be
eager to go, she thought, he was a boy and the future beckoned
to him; but she--she clenched her teeth so that she should not
cry. She uttered a little inward prayer that God would guard
him, and keep him out of temptation, and give him happiness and
good fortune.
But Philip ceased to think of her a moment after he had settled
down in his carriage. He thought only of the future. He had
written to Mrs. Otter, the _massiere_ to whom Hayward had
given him an introduction, and had in his pocket an invitation
to tea on the following day. When he arrived in Paris he had his
luggage put on a cab and trundled off slowly through the gay
streets, over the bridge, and along the narrow ways of the Latin
Quarter. He had taken a room at the Hotel des Deux Ecoles, which
was in a shabby street off the Boulevard du Montparuasse; it was
convenient for Amitrano's School at which he was going to work.
A waiter took his box up five flights of stairs, and Philip was
shown into a tiny room, fusty from unopened windows, the greater
part of which was taken up by a large wooden bed with a canopy
over it of red rep; there were heavy curtains on the windows of
the same dingy material; the chest of drawers served also as a
washing-stand; and there was a massive wardrobe of the style
which is connected with the good King Louis Philippe. The
wall-paper was discoloured with age; it was dark gray, and there
could be vaguely seen on it garlands of brown leaves. To Philip
the room seemed quaint and charming.
Though it was late he felt too excited to sleep and, going out,
made his way into the boulevard and walked towards the light.
This led him to the station; and the square in front of it,
vivid with arc-lamps, noisy with the yellow trams that seemed to
cross it in all directions, made him laugh aloud with joy. There
were cafes all round, and by chance, thirsty and eager to get a
nearer sight of the crowd, Philip installed himself at a little
table outside the Cafe de Versailles. Every other table was
taken, for it was a fine night; and Philip looked curiously at
the people, here little family groups, there a knot of men with
odd-shaped hats and beards talking loudly and gesticulating;
next to him were two men who looked like painters with women who
Philip hoped were not their lawful wives; behind him he heard
Americans loudly arguing on art. His soul was thrilled. He sat
till very late, tired out but too happy to move, and when at
last he went to bed he was wide awake; he listened to the
manifold noise of Paris.
Next day about tea-time he made his way to the Lion de Belfort,
and in a new street that led out of the Boulevard Raspail found
Mrs. Otter. She was an insignificant woman of thirty, with a
provincial air and a deliberately lady-like manner; she
introduced him to her mother. He discovered presently that she
had been studying in Paris for three years and later that she
was separated from her husband. She had in her small
drawing-room one or two portraits which she had painted, and to
Philip's inexperience they seemed extremely accomplished.
"I wonder if I shall ever be able to paint as well as that," he
said to her.
"Oh, I expect so," she replied, not without self-satisfaction.
"You can't expect to do everything all at once, of course."
She was very kind. She gave him the address of a shop where he
could get a portfolio, drawing-paper, and charcoal.
"I shall be going to Amitrano's about nine tomorrow, and if
you'll be there then I'll see that you get a good place and all
that sort of thing."
She asked him what he wanted to do, and Philip felt that he
should not let her see how vague he was about the whole matter.
"Well, first I want to learn to draw," he said.
"I'm so glad to hear you say that. People always want to do
things in such a hurry. I never touched oils till I'd been here
for two years, and look at the result."
She gave a glance at the portrait of her mother, a sticky piece
of painting that hung over the piano.
"And if I were you, I would be very careful about the people you
get to know. I wouldn't mix myself up with any foreigners. I'm
very careful myself."
Philip thanked her for the suggestion, but it seemed to him odd.
He did not know that he particularly wanted to be careful.
"We live just as we would if we were in England," said Mrs.
Otter's mother, who till then had spoken little. "When we came
here we brought all our own furniture over."
Philip looked round the room. It was filled with a massive
suite, and at the window were the same sort of white lace
curtains which Aunt Louisa put up at the vicarage in summer. The
piano was draped in Liberty silk and so was the chimney-piece.
Mrs. Otter followed his wandering eye.
"In the evening when we close the shutters one might really feel
one was in England."
"And we have our meals just as if we were at home," added her
mother. "A meat breakfast in the morning and dinner in the
middle of the day."
When he left Mrs. Otter Philip went to buy drawing materials;
and next morning at the stroke of nine, trying to seem
self-assured, he presented himself at the school. Mrs. Otter was
already there, and she came forward with a friendly smile. He
had been anxious about the reception he would have as a
_nouveau_, for he had read a good deal of the rough joking to
which a newcomer was exposed at some of the studios; but Mrs.
Otter had reassured him.
"Oh, there's nothing like that here," she said. "You see, about
half our students are ladies, and they set a tone to the place."
The studio was large and bare, with gray walls, on which were
pinned the studies that had received prizes. A model was sitting
in a chair with a loose wrap thrown over her, and about a dozen
men and women were standing about, some talking and others still
working on their sketch. It was the first rest of the model.
"You'd better not try anything too difficult at first," said
Mrs. Otter. "Put your easel here. You'll find that's the easiest
pose."
Philip placed an easel where she indicated, and Mrs. Otter
introduced him to a young woman who sat next to him.
"Mr. Carey--Miss Price. Mr. Carey's never studied before, you
won't mind helping him a little just at first will you?" Then
she turned to the model. "_La Pose_."
The model threw aside the paper she had been reading, _La
Petite Republique_, and sulkily, throwing off her gown, got on
to the stand. She stood, squarely on both feet with her hands
clasped behind her head.
"It's a stupid pose," said Miss Price. "I can't imagine why they
chose it."
When Philip entered, the people in the studio had looked at him
curiously, and the model gave him an indifferent glance, but now
they ceased to pay attention to him. Philip, with his beautiful
sheet of paper in front of him, stared awkwardly at the model.
He did not know how to begin. He had never seen a naked woman
before. She was not young and her breasts were shrivelled. She
had colourless, fair hair that fell over her forehead untidily,
and her face was covered with large freckles. He glanced at Miss
Price's work. She had only been working on it two days, and it
looked as though she had had trouble; her paper was in a mess
from constant rubbing out, and to Philip's eyes the figure
looked strangely distorted.
"I should have thought I could do as well as that," he said to
himself.
He began on the head, thinking that he would work slowly
downwards, but, he could not understand why, he found it
infinitely more difficult to draw a head from the model than to
draw one from his imagination. He got into difficulties. He
glanced at Miss Price. She was working with vehement gravity.
Her brow was wrinkled with eagerness, and there was an anxious
look in her eyes. It was hot in the studio, and drops of sweat
stood on her forehead. She was a girl of twenty-six, with a
great deal of dull gold hair; it was handsome hair, but it was
carelessly done, dragged back from her forehead and tied in a
hurried knot. She had a large face, with broad, flat features
and small eyes; her skin was pasty, with a singular
unhealthiness of tone, and there was no colour in the cheeks.
She had an unwashed air and you could not help wondering if she
slept in her clothes. She was serious and silent. When the next
pause came, she stepped back to look at her work.
"I don't know why I'm having so much bother," she said. "But I
mean to get it right." She turned to Philip. "How are you
getting on?"
"Not at all," he answered, with a rueful smile.
She looked at what he had done.
"You can't expect to do anything that way. You must take
measurements. And you must square out your paper."
She showed him rapidly how to set about the business. Philip was
impressed by her earnestness, but repelled by her want of charm.
He was grateful for the hints she gave him and set to work
again. Meanwhile other people had come in, mostly men, for the
women always arrived first, and the studio for the time of year
(it was early yet) was fairly full. Presently there came in a
young man with thin, black hair, an enormous nose, and a face so
long that it reminded you of a horse. He sat down next to Philip
and nodded across him to Miss Price.
"You're very late," she said. "Are you only just up?"
"It was such a splendid day, I thought I'd lie in bed and think
how beautiful it was out."
Philip smiled, but Miss Price took the remark seriously.
"That seems a funny thing to do, I should have thought it would
be more to the point to get up and enjoy it."
"The way of the humorist is very hard," said the young man
gravely.
He did not seem inclined to work. He looked at his canvas; he
was working in colour, and had sketched in the day before the
model who was posing. He turned to Philip.
"Have you just come out from England?"
"Yes."
"How did you find your way to Amitrano's?"
"It was the only school I knew of."
"I hope you haven't come with the idea that you will learn
anything here which will be of the smallest use to you."
"It's the best school in Paris," said Miss Price. "It's the only
one where they take art seriously."
"Should art be taken seriously?" the young man asked; and since
Miss Price replied only with a scornful shrug, he added: "But
the point is, all schools are bad. They are academical,
obviously. Why this is less injurious than most is that the
teaching is more incompetent than elsewhere. Because you learn
nothing...."
"But why d'you come here then?" interrupted Philip.
"I see the better course, but do not follow it. Miss Price, who
is cultured, will remember the Latin of that."
"I wish you would leave me out of your conversation, Mr.
Clutton," said Miss Price brusquely.
"The only way to learn to paint," he went on, imperturbable, "is
to take a studio, hire a model, and just fight it out for
yourself."
"That seems a simple thing to do," said Philip.
"It only needs money," replied Clutton.
He began to paint, and Philip looked at him from the comer of
his eye. He was long and desperately thin; his huge bones seemed
to protrude from his body; his elbows were so sharp that they
appeared to jut out through the arms of his shabby coat. His
trousers were frayed at the bottom, and on each of his boots was
a clumsy patch. Miss Price got up and went over to Philip's
easel.
"If Mr. Clutton will hold his tongue for a moment, I'll just
help you a little," she said.
"Miss Price dislikes me because I have humour," said Clutton,
looking meditatively at his canvas, "but she detests me because
I have genius."
He spoke with solemnity, and his colossal, misshapen nose made
what he said very quaint. Philip was obliged to laugh, but Miss
Price grew darkly red with anger.
"You're the only person who has ever accused you of genius."
"Also I am the only person whose opinion is of the least value
to me."
Miss Price began to criticise what Philip had done. She talked
glibly of anatomy and construction, planes and lines, and of
much else which Philip did not understand. She had been at the
studio a long time and knew the main points which the masters
insisted upon, but though she could show what was wrong with
Philip's work she could not tell him how to put it right.
"It's awfully kind of you to take so much trouble with me," said
Philip.
"Oh, it's nothing," she answered, flushing awkwardly. "People
did the same for me when I first came, I'd do it for anyone."
"Miss Price wants to indicate that she is giving you the
advantage of her knowledge from a sense of duty rather than on
account of any charms of your person," said Clutton.
Miss Price gave him a furious look, and went back to her own
drawing. The clock struck twelve, and the model with a cry of
relief stepped down from the stand.
Miss Price gathered up her things.
"Some of us go to Gravier's for lunch," she said to Philip, with
a look at Clutton. "I always go home myself."
"I'll take you to Gravier's it you like," said Clutton.
Philip thanked him and made ready to go. On his way out Mrs.
Otter asked him how he had been getting on.
"Did Fanny Price help you?" she asked. "I put you there because
I know she can do it if she likes. She's a disagreeable,
ill-natured girl, and she can't draw herself at all, but she
knows the ropes, and she can be useful to a newcomer if she
cares to take the trouble."
On the way down the street Clutton said to him:
"You've made an impression on Fanny Price. You'd better look
out."
Philip laughed. He had never seen anyone on whom he wished less
to make an impression. They came to the cheap little restaurant
at which several of the students ate, and Clutton sat down at a
table at which three or four men were already seated. For a
franc, they got an egg, a plate of meat, cheese, and a small
bottle of wine. Coffee was extra. They sat on the pavement, and
yellow trams passed up and down the boulevard with a ceaseless
ringing of bells.
"By the way, what's your name?" said Clutton, as they took their
seats.
"Carey."
"Allow me to introduce an old and trusted friend, Carey by
name," said Clutton gravely. "Mr. Flanagan, Mr. Lawson."
They laughed and went on with their conversation. They talked of
a thousand things, and they all talked at once. No one paid the
smallest attention to anyone else. They talked of the places
they had been to in the summer, of studios, of the various
schools; they mentioned names which were unfamiliar to Philip,
Monet, Manet, Renoir, Pissarro, Degas. Philip listened with all
his ears, and though he felt a little out of it, his heart
leaped with exultation. The time flew. When Clutton got up he
said:
"I expect you'll find me here this evening if you care to come.
You'll find this about the best place for getting dyspepsia at
the lowest cost in the Quarter."
PHILIP walked down the Boulevard du Montparnasse. It was not at
all like the Paris he had seen in the spring during his visit to
do the accounts of the Hotel St. Georges--he thought already of
that part of his life with a shudder--but reminded him of what
he thought a provincial town must be. There was an easy-going
air about it, and a sunny spaciousness which invited the mind to
day-dreaming. The trimness of the trees, the vivid whiteness of
the houses, the breadth, were very agreeable; and he felt
himself already thoroughly at home. He sauntered along, staring
at the people; there seemed an elegance about the most ordinary,
workmen with their broad red sashes and their wide trousers,
little soldiers in dingy, charming uniforms. He came presently
to the Avenue de l'Observatoire, and he gave a sigh of pleasure
at the magnificent, yet so graceful, vista. He came to the
gardens of the Luxembourg: children were playing, nurses with
long ribbons walked slowly two by two, busy men passed through
with satchels under their arms, youths strangely dressed. The
scene was formal and dainty; nature was arranged and ordered,
but so exquisitely, that nature unordered and unarranged seemed
barbaric. Philip was enchanted. It excited him to stand on that
spot of which he had read so much; it was classic ground to him;
and he felt the awe and the delight which some old don might
feel when for the first time he looked on the smiling plain of
Sparta.
As he wandered he chanced to see Miss Price sitting by herself
on a bench. He hesitated, for he did not at that moment want to
see anyone, and her uncouth way seemed out of place amid the
happiness he felt around him; but he had divined her
sensitiveness to affront, and since she had seen him thought it
would be polite to speak to her.
"What are you doing here?" she said, as he came up.
"Enjoying myself. Aren't you?"
"Oh, I come here every day from four to five. I don't think one
does any good if one works straight through."
"May I sit down for a minute?" he said.
"If you want to."
"That doesn't sound very cordial," he laughed.
"I'm not much of a one for saying pretty things."
Philip, a little disconcerted, was silent as he lit a cigarette.
"Did Clutton say anything about my work?" she asked suddenly.
"No, I don't think he did," said Philip.
"He's no good, you know. He thinks he's a genius, but he isn't.
He's too lazy, for one thing. Genius is an infinite capacity for
taking pains. The only thing is to peg away. If one only makes
up one's mind badly enough to do a thing one can't help doing
it."
She spoke with a passionate strenuousness which was rather
striking. She wore a sailor hat of black straw, a white blouse
which was not quite clean, and a brown skirt. She had no gloves
on, and her hands wanted washing. She was so unattractive that
Philip wished he had not begun to talk to her. He could not make
out whether she wanted him to stay or go.
"I'll do anything I can for you," she said all at once, without
reference to anything that had gone before. "I know how hard it
is."
"Thank you very much," said Philip, then in a moment: "Won't you
come and have tea with me somewhere?"
She looked at him quickly and flushed. When she reddened her
pasty skin acquired a curiously mottled look, like strawberries
and cream that had gone bad.
"No, thanks. What d'you think I want tea for? I've only just had
lunch."
"I thought it would pass the time," said Philip.
"If you find it long you needn't bother about me, you know. I
don't mind being left alone."
At that moment two men passed, in brown velveteens, enormous
trousers, and basque caps. They were young, but both wore
beards.
"I say, are those art-students?" said Philip. "They might have
stepped out of the _Vie de Boheme_."
"They're Americans," said Miss Price scornfully. "Frenchmen
haven't worn things like that for thirty years, but the
Americans from the Far West buy those clothes and have
themselves photographed the day after they arrive in Paris.
That's about as near to art as they ever get. But it doesn't
matter to them, they've all got money."
Philip liked the daring picturesqueness of the Americans'
costume; he thought it showed the romantic spirit. Miss Price
asked him the time.
"I must be getting along to the studio," she said. "Are you
going to the sketch classes?"
Philip did not know anything about them, and she told him that
from five to six every evening a model sat, from whom anyone who
liked could go and draw at the cost of fifty centimes. They had
a different model every day, and it was very good practice.
"I don't suppose you're good enough yet for that. You'd better
wait a bit."
"I don't see why I shouldn't try. I haven't got anything else to
do."
They got up and walked to the studio. Philip could not tell from
her manner whether Miss Price wished him to walk with her or
preferred to walk alone. He remained from sheer embarrassment,
not knowing how to leave her; but she would not talk; she
answered his questions in an ungracious manner.
A man was standing at the studio door with a large dish into
which each person as he went in dropped his half franc. The
studio was much fuller than it had been in the morning, and
there was not the preponderance of English and Americans; nor
were women there in so large a proportion. Philip felt the
assemblage was more the sort of thing he had expected. It was
very warm, and the air quickly grew fetid. It was an old man who
sat this time, with a vast gray beard, and Philip tried to put
into practice the little he had learned in the morning; but he
made a poor job of it; he realised that he could not draw nearly
as well as he thought. He glanced enviously at one or two
sketches of men who sat near him, and wondered whether he would
ever be able to use the charcoal with that mastery. The hour
passed quickly. Not wishing to press himself upon Miss Price he
sat down at some distance from her, and at the end, as he passed
her on his way out, she asked him brusquely how he had got on.
"Not very well," he smiled.
"If you'd condescended to come and sit near me I could have
given you some hints. I suppose you thought yourself too grand."
"No, it wasn't that. I was afraid you'd think me a nuisance."
"When I do that I'll tell you sharp enough."
Philip saw that in her uncouth way she was offering him help.
"Well, tomorrow I'll just force myself upon you."
"I don't mind," she answered.
Philip went out and wondered what he should do with himself till
dinner. He was eager to do something characteristic.
_Absinthe!_ of course it was indicated, and so, sauntering
towards the station, he seated himself outside a cafe and
ordered it. He drank with nausea and satisfaction. He found the
taste disgusting, but the moral effect magnificent; he felt
every inch an art-student; and since he drank on an empty
stomach his spirits presently grew very high. He watched the
crowds, and felt all men were his brothers. He was happy. When
he reached Gravier's the table at which Clutton sat was full,
but as soon as he saw Philip limping along he called out to him.
They made room. The dinner was frugal, a plate of soup, a dish
of meat, fruit, cheese, and half a bottle of wine; but Philip
paid no attention to what he ate. He took note of the men at the
table. Flanagan was there again: he was an American, a short,
snub-nosed youth with a jolly face and a laughing mouth. He wore
a Norfolk jacket of bold pattern, a blue stock round his neck,
and a tweed cap of fantastic shape. At that time impressionism
reigned in the Latin Quarter, but its victory over the older
schools was still recent; and Carolus-Duran, Bouguereau, and
their like were set up against Manet, Monet, and Degas. To
appreciate these was still a sign of grace. Whistler was an
influence strong with the English and his compatriots, and the
discerning collected Japanese prints. The old masters were
tested by new standards. The esteem in which Raphael had been
for centuries held was a matter of derision to wise young men.
They offered to give all his works for Velasquez' head of Philip
IV in the National Gallery. Philip found that a discussion on
art was raging. Lawson, whom he had met at luncheon, sat
opposite to him. He was a thin youth with a freckled face and
red hair. He had very bright green eyes. As Philip sat down he
fixed them on him and remarked suddenly:
"Raphael was only tolerable when he painted other people's
pictures. When he painted Peruginos or Pinturichios he was
charming; when he painted Raphaels he was," with a scornful
shrug, "Raphael."
Lawson spoke so aggressively that Philip was taken aback, but he
was not obliged to answer because Flanagan broke in impatiently.
"Oh, to hell with art!" he cried. "Let's get ginny."
"You were ginny last night, Flanagan," said Lawson.
"Nothing to what I mean to be tonight," he answered. "Fancy
being in Pa-ris and thinking of nothing but art all the time."
He spoke with a broad Western accent. "My, it is good to be
alive." He gathered himself together and then banged his fist on
the table. "To hell with art, I say."
"You not only say it, but you say it with tiresome iteration,"
said Clutton severely.
There was another American at the table. He was dressed like
those fine fellows whom Philip had seen that afternoon in the
Luxembourg. He had a handsome face, thin, ascetic, with dark
eyes; he wore his fantastic garb with the dashing air of a
buccaneer. He had a vast quantity of dark hair which fell
constantly over his eyes, and his most frequent gesture was to
throw back his head dramatically to get some long wisp out of
the way. He began to talk of the _Olympia_ by Manet, which
then hung in the Luxembourg.
"I stood in front of it for an hour today, and I tell you it's
not a good picture."
Lawson put down his knife and fork. His green eyes flashed fire,
he gasped with rage; but he could be seen imposing calm upon
himself.
"It's very interesting to hear the mind of the untutored
savage," he said. "Will you tell us why it isn't a good
picture?"
Before the American could answer someone else broke in
vehemently.
"D'you mean to say you can look at the painting of that flesh
and say it's not good?"
"I don't say that. I think the right breast is very well
painted."
"The right breast be damned," shouted Lawson. "The whole thing's
a miracle of painting."
He began to describe in detail the beauties of the picture, but
at this table at Gravier's they who spoke at length spoke for
their own edification. No one listened to him. The American
interrupted angrily.
"You don't mean to say you think the head's good?"
Lawson, white with passion now, began to defend the head; but
Clutton, who had been sitting in silence with a look on his face
of good-humoured scorn, broke in.
"Give him the head. We don't want the head. It doesn't affect
the picture."
"All right, I'll give you the head," cried Lawson. "Take the
head and be damned to you."
"What about the black line?" cried the American, triumphantly
pushing back a wisp of hair which nearly fell in his soup. "You
don't see a black line round objects in nature."
"Oh, God, send down fire from heaven to consume the blasphemer,"
said Lawson. "What has nature got to do with it? No one knows
what's in nature and what isn't! The world sees nature through
the eyes of the artist. Why, for centuries it saw horses jumping
a fence with all their legs extended, and by Heaven, sir, they
were extended. It saw shadows black until Monet discovered they
were coloured, and by Heaven, sir, they were black. If we choose
to surround objects with a black line, the world will see the
black line, and there will be a black line; and if we paint
grass red and cows blue, it'll see them red and blue, and, by
Heaven, they will be red and blue."
"To hell with art," murmured Flanagan. "I want to get ginny."
Lawson took no notice of the interruption.
"Now look here, when _Olympia_ was shown at the Salon,
Zola--amid the jeers of the Philistines and the hisses of the
pompiers, the academicians, and the public, Zola said: `I look
forward to the day when Manet's picture will hang in the Louvre
opposite the _Odalisque_ of Ingres, and it will not be the
_Odalisque_ which will gain by comparison.' It'll be there. Every
day I see the time grow nearer. In ten years the _Olympia_
will be in the Louvre."
"Never," shouted the American, using both hands now with a
sudden desperate attempt to get his hair once for all out of the
way. "In ten years that picture will be dead. It's only a
fashion of the moment. No picture can live that hasn't got
something which that picture misses by a million miles."
"And what is that?"
"Great art can't exist without a moral element."
"Oh God!" cried Lawson furiously. "I knew it was that. He wants
morality." He joined his hands and held them towards heaven in
supplication. "Oh, Christopher Columbus, Christopher Columbus,
what did you do when you discovered America?"
"Ruskin says..."
But before he could add another word, Clutton rapped with the
handle of his knife imperiously on the table.
"Gentlemen," he said in a stern voice, and his huge nose
positively wrinkled with passion, "a name has been mentioned
which I never thought to hear again in decent society. Freedom
of speech is all very well, but we must observe the limits of
common propriety. You may talk of Bouguereau if you will: there
is a cheerful disgustingness in the sound which excites
laughter; but let us not sully our chaste lips with the names of
J. Ruskin, G. F. Watts, or E. B. Jones."
"Who was Ruskin anyway?" asked Flanagan.
"He was one of the Great Victorians. He was a master of English
style."
"Ruskin's style--a thing of shreds and purple patches," said
Lawson. "Besides, damn the Great Victorians. Whenever I open a
paper and see Death of a Great Victorian, I thank Heaven there's
one more of them gone. Their only talent was longevity, and no
artist should be allowed to live after he's forty; by then a man
has done his best work, all he does after that is repetition.
Don't you think it was the greatest luck in the world for them
that Keats, Shelley, Bonnington, and Byron died early? What a
genius we should think Swinburne if he had perished on the day
the first series of _Poems and Ballads_ was published!"
The suggestion pleased, for no one at the table was more than
twenty-four, and they threw themselves upon it with gusto. They
were unanimous for once. They elaborated. Someone proposed a
vast bonfire made out of the works of the Forty Academicians
into which the Great Victorians might be hurled on their
fortieth birthday. The idea was received with acclamation.
Carlyle and Ruskin, Tennyson, Browning, G. F. Watts, E. B.
Jones, Dickens, Thackeray, they were hurried into the flames;
Mr. Gladstone, John Bright, and Cobden; there was a moment's
discussion about George Meredith, but Matthew Arnold and Emerson
were given up cheerfully. At last came Walter Pater.
"Not Walter Pater," murmured Philip.
Lawson stared at him for a moment with his green eyes and then
nodded.
"You're quite right, Walter Pater is the only justification for
Mona Lisa. D'you know Cronshaw? He used to know Pater."
"Who's Cronshaw?" asked Philip.
"Cronshaw's a poet. He lives here. Let's go to the Lilas."
La Closerie des Lilas was a cafe to which they often went in the
evening after dinner, and here Cronshaw was invariably to be
found between the hours of nine at night and two in the morning.
But Flanagan had had enough of intellectual conversation for one
evening, and when Lawson made his suggestion, turned to Philip.
"Oh gee, let's go where there are girls," he said. "Come to the
Gaite Montparnasse, and we'll get ginny."
"I'd rather go and see Cronshaw and keep sober," laughed Philip.
THERE was a general disturbance. Flanagan and two or three more
went on to the music-hall, while Philip walked slowly with
Clutton and Lawson to the Closerie des Lilas.
"You must go to the Gaite Montparnasse," said Lawson to him.
"It's one of the loveliest things in Paris. I'm going to paint
it one of these days."
Philip, influenced by Hayward, looked upon music-halls with
scornful eyes, but he had reached Paris at a time when their
artistic possibilities were just discovered. The peculiarities
of lighting, the masses of dingy red and tarnished gold, the
heaviness of the shadows and the decorative lines, offered a new
theme; and half the studios in the Quarter contained sketches
made in one or other of the local theatres. Men of letters,
following in the painters' wake, conspired suddenly to find
artistic value in the turns; and red-nosed comedians were lauded
to the skies for their sense of character; fat female singers,
who had bawled obscurely for twenty years, were discovered to
possess inimitable drollery; there were those who found an
aesthetic delight in performing dogs; while others exhausted
their vocabulary to extol the distinction of conjurers and
trick-cyclists. The crowd too, under another influence, was
become an object of sympathetic interest. With Hayward, Philip
had disdained humanity in the mass; he adopted the attitude of
one who wraps himself in solitariness and watches with disgust
the antics of the vulgar; but Clutton and Lawson talked of the
multitude with enthusiasm. They described the seething throng
that filled the various fairs of Paris, the sea of faces, half
seen in the glare of acetylene, half hidden in the darkness, and
the blare of trumpets, the hooting of whistles, the hum of
voices. What they said was new and strange to Philip. They told
him about Cronshaw.
"Have you ever read any of his work?"
"No," said Philip.
"It came out in _The Yellow Book_."
They looked upon him, as painters often do writers, with
contempt because he was a layman, with tolerance because he
practised an art, and with awe because he used a medium in which
themselves felt ill-at-ease.
"He's an extraordinary fellow. You'll find him a bit
disappointing at first, he only comes out at his best when he's
drunk."
"And the nuisance is," added Clutton, "that it takes him a devil
of a time to get drunk."
When they arrived at the cafe Lawson told Philip that they would
have to go in. There was hardly a bite in the autumn air, but
Cronshaw had a morbid fear of draughts and even in the warmest
weather sat inside.
"He knows everyone worth knowing," Lawson explained. "He knew
Pater and Oscar Wilde, and he knows Mallarme and all those
fellows."
The object of their search sat in the most sheltered corner of
the cafe, with his coat on and the collar turned up. He wore his
hat pressed well down on his forehead so that he should avoid
cold air. He was a big man, stout but not obese, with a round
face, a small moustache, and little, rather stupid eyes. His
head did not seem quite big enough for his body. It looked like
a pea uneasily poised on an egg. He was playing dominoes with a
Frenchman, and greeted the new-comers with a quiet smile; he did
not speak, but as if to make room for them pushed away the
little pile of saucers on the table which indicated the number
of drinks he had already consumed. He nodded to Philip when he
was introduced to him, and went on with the game. Philip's
knowledge of the language was small, but he knew enough to tell
that Cronshaw, although he had lived in Paris for several years,
spoke French execrably.
At last he leaned back with a smile of triumph.
"_Je vous ai battu_," he said, with an abominable accent.
"_Garcong!_"
He called the waiter and turned to Philip.
"Just out from England? See any cricket?"
Philip was a little confused at the unexpected question.
"Cronshaw knows the averages of every first-class cricketer for
the last twenty years," said Lawson, smiling.
The Frenchman left them for friends at another table, and
Cronshaw, with the lazy enunciation which was one of his
peculiarities, began to discourse on the relative merits of Kent
and Lancashire. He told them of the last test match he had seen
and described the course of the game wicket by wicket.
"That's the only thing I miss in Paris," he said, as he finished
the _bock_ which the waiter had brought. "You don't get any
cricket."
Philip was disappointed, and Lawson, pardonably anxious to show
off one of the celebrities of the Quarter, grew impatient.
Cronshaw was taking his time to wake up that evening, though the
saucers at his side indicated that he had at least made an
honest attempt to get drunk. Clutton watched the scene with
amusement. He fancied there was something of affectation in
Cronshaw's minute knowledge of cricket; he liked to tantalise
people by talking to them of things that obviously bored them;
Clutton threw in a question.
"Have you seen Mallarme lately?"
Cronshaw looked at him slowly, as if he were turning the inquiry
over in his mind, and before he answered rapped on the marble
table with one of the saucers.
"Bring my bottle of whiskey," he called out. He turned again to
Philip. "I keep my own bottle of whiskey. I can't afford to pay
fifty centimes for every thimbleful."
The waiter brought the bottle, and Cronshaw held it up to the
light.
"They've been drinking it. Waiter, who's been helping himself to
my whiskey?"
"_Mais personne, Monsieur Cronshaw_."
"I made a mark on it last night, and look at it."
"Monsieur made a mark, but he kept on drinking after that. At
that rate Monsieur wastes his time in making marks."
The waiter was a jovial fellow and knew Cronshaw intimately.
Cronshaw gazed at him.
"If you give me your word of honour as a nobleman and a
gentleman that nobody but I has been drinking my whiskey, I'll
accept your statement."
This remark, translated literally into the crudest French,
sounded very funny, and the lady at the _comptoir_ could not
help laughing.
"_Il est impayable_," she murmured.
Cronshaw, hearing her, turned a sheepish eye upon her; she was
stout, matronly, and middle-aged; and solemnly kissed his hand
to her. She shrugged her shoulders.
"Fear not, madam," he said heavily. "I have passed the age when
I am tempted by forty-five and gratitude."
He poured himself out some whiskey and water, and slowly drank
it. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
"He talked very well."
Lawson and Clutton knew that Cronshaw's remark was an answer to
the question about Mallarme. Cronshaw often went to the
gatherings on Tuesday evenings when the poet received men of
letters and painters, and discoursed with subtle oratory on any
subject that was suggested to him. Cronshaw had evidently been
there lately.
"He talked very well, but he talked nonsense. He talked about
art as though it were the most important thing in the world."
"If it isn't, what are we here for?" asked Philip.
"What you're here for I don't know. It is no business of mine.
But art is a luxury. Men attach importance only to
self-preservation and the propagation of their species. It is
only when these instincts are satisfied that they consent to
occupy themselves with the entertainment which is provided for
them by writers, painters, and poets."
Cronshaw stopped for a moment to drink. He had pondered for
twenty years the problem whether he loved liquor because it made
him talk or whether he loved conversation because it made him
thirsty.
Then he said: "I wrote a poem yesterday."
Without being asked he began to recite it, very slowly, marking
the rhythm with an extended forefinger. It was possibly a very
fine poem, but at that moment a young woman came in. She had
scarlet lips, and it was plain that the vivid colour of her
cheeks was not due to the vulgarity of nature; she had blackened
her eyelashes and eyebrows, and painted both eyelids a bold
blue, which was continued to a triangle at the corner of the
eyes. It was fantastic and amusing. Her dark hair was done over
her ears in the fashion made popular by Mlle. Cleo de Merode.
Philip's eyes wandered to her, and Cronshaw, having finished the
recitation of his verses, smiled upon him indulgently.
"You were not listening," he said.
"Oh yes, I was."
"I do not blame you, for you have given an apt illustration of
the statement I just made. What is art beside love? I respect
and applaud your indifference to fine poetry when you can
contemplate the meretricious charms of this young person."
She passed by the table at which they were sitting, and he took
her arm.
"Come and sit by my side, dear child, and let us play the divine
comedy of love."
"_Fichez-moi la paix_," she said, and pushing him on one side
continued her perambulation.
"Art," he continued, with a wave of the hand, "is merely the
refuge which the ingenious have invented, when they were
supplied with food and women, to escape the tediousness of
life."
Cronshaw filled his glass again, and began to talk at length. He
spoke with rotund delivery. He chose his words carefully. He
mingled wisdom and nonsense in the most astounding manner,
gravely making fun of his hearers at one moment, and at the next
playfully giving them sound advice. He talked of art, and
literature, and life. He was by turns devout and obscene, merry
and lachrymose. He grew remarkably drunk, and then he began to
recite poetry, his own and Milton's, his own and Shelley's, his
own and Kit Marlowe's.
At last Lawson, exhausted, got up to go home.
"I shall go too," said Philip.
Clutton, the most silent of them all, remained behind listening,
with a sardonic smile on his lips, to Cronshaw's maunderings.
Lawson accompanied Philip to his hotel and then bade him
good-night. But when Philip got to bed he could not sleep. All
these new ideas that had been flung before him carelessly
seethed in his brain. He was tremendously excited. He felt in
himself great powers. He had never before been so
self-confident.
"I know I shall be a great artist," he said to himself. "I feel
it in me."
A thrill passed through him as another thought came, but even to
himself he would not put it into words:
"By George, I believe I've got genius."
He was in fact very drunk, but as he had not taken more than one
glass of beer, it could have been due only to a more dangerous
intoxicant than alcohol.
ON TUESDAYS and Fridays masters spent the morning at Amitrano's,
criticising the work done. In France the painter earns little
unless he paints portraits and is patronised by rich Americans;
and men of reputation are glad to increase their incomes by
spending two or three hours once a week at one of the numerous
studios where art is taught. Tuesday was the day upon which
Michel Rollin came to Amitrano's. He was an elderly man, with a
white beard and a florid complexion, who had painted a number of
decorations for the State, but these were an object of derision
to the students he instructed: he was a disciple of Ingres,
impervious to the progress of art and angrily impatient with
that _tas de farceurs_ whose names were Manet, Degas, Monet,
and Sisley; but he was an excellent teacher, helpful, polite,
and encouraging. Foinet, on the other hand, who visited the
studio on Fridays, was a difficult man to get on with. He was a
small, shrivelled person, with bad teeth and a bilious air, an
untidy gray beard, and savage eyes; his voice was high and his
tone sarcastic. He had had pictures bought by the Luxembourg,
and at twenty-five looked forward to a great career; but his
talent was due to youth rather than to personality, and for
twenty years he had done nothing but repeat the landscape which
had brought him his early success. When he was reproached with
monotony, he answered:
"Corot only painted one thing. Why shouldn't I?"
He was envious of everyone else's success, and had a peculiar,
personal loathing of the impressionists; for he looked upon his
own failure as due to the mad fashion which had attracted the
public, _sale bete_, to their works. The genial disdain of
Michel Rollin, who called them impostors, was answered by him
with vituperation, of which _crapule_ and _canaille_ were
the least violent items; he amused himself with abuse of their
private lives, and with sardonic humour, with blasphemous and
obscene detail, attacked the legitimacy of their births and the
purity of their conjugal relations: he used an Oriental imagery
and an Oriental emphasis to accentuate his ribald scorn. Nor did
he conceal his contempt for the students whose work he examined.
By them he was hated and feared; the women by his brutal sarcasm
he reduced often to tears, which again aroused his ridicule; and
he remained at the studio, notwithstanding the protests of those
who suffered too bitterly from his attacks, because there could
be no doubt that he was one of the best masters in Paris.
Sometimes the old model who kept the school ventured to
remonstrate with him, but his expostulations quickly gave way
before the violent insolence of the painter to abject apologies.
It was Foinet with whom Philip first came in contact. He was
already in the studio when Philip arrived. He went round from
easel to easel, with Mrs. Otter, the _massiere_, by his side
to interpret his remarks for the benefit of those who could not
understand French. Fanny Price, sitting next to Philip, was
working feverishly. Her face was sallow with nervousness, and
every now and then she stopped to wipe her hands on her blouse;
for they were hot with anxiety. Suddenly she turned to Philip
with an anxious look, which she tried to hide by a sullen frown.
"D'you think it's good?" she asked, nodding at her drawing.
Philip got up and looked at it. He was astounded; he felt she
must have no eye at all; the thing was hopelessly out of
drawing.
"I wish I could draw half as well myself," he answered.
"You can't expect to, you've only just come. It's a bit too much
to expect that you should draw as well as I do. I've been here
two years."
Fanny Price puzzled Philip. Her conceit was stupendous. Philip
had already discovered that everyone in the studio cordially
disliked her; and it was no wonder, for she seemed to go out of
her way to wound people.
"I complained to Mrs. Otter about Foinet," she said now. "The
last two weeks he hasn't looked at my drawings. He spends about
half an hour on Mrs. Otter because she's the _massiere_. After
all I pay as much as anybody else, and I suppose my money's as
good as theirs. I don't see why I shouldn't get as much
attention as anybody else."
She took up her charcoal again, but in a moment put it down with
a groan.
"I can't do any more now. I'm so frightfully nervous."
She looked at Foinet, who was coming towards them with Mrs.
Otter. Mrs. Otter, meek, mediocre, and self-satisfied, wore an
air of importance. Foinet sat down at the easel of an untidy
little Englishwoman called Ruth Chalice. She had the fine black
eyes, languid but passionate, the thin face, ascetic but
sensual, the skin like old ivory, which under the influence of
Burne-Jones were cultivated at that time by young ladies in
Chelsea. Foinet seemed in a pleasant mood; he did not say much
to her, but with quick, determined strokes of her charcoal
pointed out her errors. Miss Chalice beamed with pleasure when
he rose. He came to Clutton, and by this time Philip was nervous
too but Mrs. Otter had promised to make things easy for him.
Foinet stood for a moment in front of Clutton's work, biting his
thumb silently, then absent-mindedly spat out upon the canvas
the little piece of skin which he had bitten off.
"That's a fine line," he said at last, indicating with his thumb
what pleased him. "You're beginning to learn to draw."
Clutton did not answer, but looked at the master with his usual
air of sardonic indifference to the world's opinion.
"I'm beginning to think you have at least a trace of talent."
Mrs. Otter, who did not like Clutton, pursed her lips. She did
not see anything out of the way in his work. Foinet sat down and
went into technical details. Mrs. Otter grew rather tired of
standing. Clutton did not say anything, but nodded now and then,
and Foinet felt with satisfaction that he grasped what he said
and the reasons of it; most of them listened to him, but it was
clear they never understood. Then Foinet got up and came to
Philip.
"He only arrived two days ago," Mrs. Otter hurried to explain.
"He's a beginner. He's never studied before."
"_Ca se voit_," the master said. "One sees that."
He passed on, and Mrs. Otter murmured to him:
"This is the young lady I told you about."
He looked at her as though she were some repulsive animal, and
his voice grew more rasping.
"It appears that you do not think I pay enough attention to you.
You have been complaining to the _massiere_. Well, show me
this work to which you wish me to give attention."
Fanny Price coloured. The blood under her unhealthy skin seemed
to be of a strange purple. Without answering she pointed to the
drawing on which she had been at work since the beginning of the
week. Foinet sat down.
"Well, what do you wish me to say to you? Do you wish me to tell
you it is good? It isn't. Do you wish me to tell you it is well
drawn? It isn't. Do you wish me to say it has merit? It hasn't.
Do you wish me to show you what is wrong with it? It is all
wrong. Do you wish me to tell you what to do with it? Tear it
up. Are you satisfied now?"
Miss Price became very white. She was furious because he had
said all this before Mrs. Otter. Though she had been in France
so long and could understand French well enough, she could
hardly speak two words.
"He's got no right to treat me like that. My money's as good as
anyone else's. I pay him to teach me. That's not teaching me."
"What does she say? What does she say?" asked Foinet.
Mrs. Otter hesitated to translate, and Miss Price repeated in
execrable French.
"_Je vous paye Pour m'apprendre_."
His eyes flashed with rage, he raised his voice and shook his
fist.
"_Mais, nom de Dieu_, I can't teach you. I could more easily
teach a camel." He turned to Mrs. Otter. "Ask her, does she do
this for amusement, or does she expect to earn money by it?"
"I'm going to earn my living as an artist," Miss Price answered.
"Then it is my duty to tell you that you are wasting your time.
It would not matter that you have no talent, talent does not run
about the streets in these days, but you have not the beginning
of an aptitude. How long have you been here? A child of five
after two lessons would draw better than you do. I only say one
thing to you, give up this hopeless attempt. You're more likely
to earn your living as a _bonne a tout faire_ than as a
painter. Look."
He seized a piece of charcoal, and it broke as he applied it to
the paper. He cursed, and with the stump drew great firm lines.
He drew rapidly and spoke at the same time, spitting out the
words with venom.
"Look, those arms are not the same length. That knee, it's
grotesque. I tell you a child of five. You see, she's not
standing on her legs. That foot!"
With each word the angry pencil made a mark, and in a moment the
drawing upon which Fanny Price had spent so much time and eager
trouble was unrecognisable, a confusion of lines and smudges. At
last he flung down the charcoal and stood up.
"Take my advice, Mademoiselle, try dressmaking." He looked at
his watch. "It's twelve. _A la semaine Prochaine, messieurs_."
Miss Price gathered up her things slowly. Philip waited behind
after the others to say to her something consolatory. He could
think of nothing but:
"I say, I'm awfully sorry. What a beast that man is!"
She turned on him savagely.
"Is that what you're waiting about for? When I want your
sympathy I'll ask for it. Please get out of my way."
She walked past him, out of the studio, and Philip, with a shrug
of the shoulders, limped along to Gravier's for luncheon.
"It served her right," said Lawson, when Philip told him what
had happened. "Ill-tempered slut."
Lawson was very sensitive to criticism and, in order to avoid
it, never went to the studio when Foinet was coming.
"I don't want other people's opinion of my work," he said. "I
know myself if it's good or bad."
"You mean you don't want other people's bad opinion of your
work," answered Clutton dryly.
In the afternoon Philip thought he would go to the Luxembourg to
see the pictures, and walking through the garden he saw Fanny
Price sitting in her accustomed seat. He was sore at the
rudeness with which she had met his well-meant attempt to say
something pleasant, and passed as though he had not caught sight
of her. But she got up at once and came towards him.
"Are you trying to cut me?" she said.
"No, of course not. I thought perhaps you didn't want to be
spoken to."
"Where are you going?"
"I wanted to have a look at the Manet, I've heard so much about
it."
"Would you like me to come with you? I know the Luxembourg
rather well. I could show you one or two good things."
He understood that, unable to bring herself to apologise
directly, she made this offer as amends.
"It's awfully kind of you. I should like it very much."
"You needn't say yes if you'd rather go alone," she said
suspiciously.
"I wouldn't."
They walked towards the gallery. Caillebotte's collection had
lately been placed on view, and the student for the first time
had the opportunity to examine at his ease the works of the
impressionists. Till then it had been possible to see them only
at Durand-Ruel's shop in the Rue Lafitte (and the dealer, unlike
his fellows in England, who adopt towards the painter an
attitude of superiority, was always pleased to show the
shabbiest student whatever he wanted to see), or at his private
house, to which it was not difficult to get a card of admission
on Tuesdays, and where you might see pictures of world-wide
reputation. Miss Price led Philip straight up to Manet's
_Olympia_. He looked at it in astonished silence.
"Do you like it?" asked Miss Price.
"I don't know," he answered helplessly.
"You can take it from me that it's the best thing in the gallery
except perhaps Whistler's portrait of his mother."
She gave him a certain time to contemplate the masterpiece and
then took him to a picture representing a railway-station.
"Look, here's a Monet," she said. "It's the Gare St. Lazare."
"But the railway lines aren't parallel," said Philip.
"What does that matter?" she asked, with a haughty air.
Philip felt ashamed of himself. Fanny Price had picked up the
glib chatter of the studios and had no difficulty in impressing
Philip with the extent of her knowledge. She proceeded to
explain the pictures to him, superciliously but not without
insight, and showed him what the painters had attempted and what
he must look for. She talked with much gesticulation of the
thumb, and Philip, to whom all she said was new, listened with
profound but bewildered interest. Till now he had worshipped
Watts and Burne-Jones. The pretty colour of the first, the
affected drawing of the second, had entirely satisfied his
aesthetic sensibilities. Their vague idealism, the suspicion of
a philosophical idea which underlay the titles they gave their
pictures, accorded very well with the functions of art as from
his diligent perusal of Ruskin he understood it; but here was
something quite different: here was no moral appeal; and the
contemplation of these works could help no one to lead a purer
and a higher life. He was puzzled.
At last he said: "You know, I'm simply dead. I don't think I can
absorb anything more profitably. Let's go and sit down on one of
the benches."
"It's better not to take too much art at a time," Miss Price
answered.
When they got outside he thanked her warmly for the trouble she
had taken.
"Oh, that's all right," she said, a little ungraciously. "I do
it because I enjoy it. We'll go to the Louvre tomorrow if you
like, and then I'll take you to Durand-Ruel's."
"You're really awfully good to me."
"You don't think me such a beast as the most of them do."
"I don't," he smiled.
"They think they'll drive me away from the studio; but they
won't; I shall stay there just exactly as long as it suits me.
All that this morning, it was Lucy Otter's doing, I know it was.
She always has hated me. She thought after that I'd take myself
off. I daresay she'd like me to go. She's afraid I know too much
about her."
Miss Price told him a long, involved story, which made out that
Mrs. Otter, a humdrum and respectable little person, had
scabrous intrigues. Then she talked of Ruth Chalice, the girl
whom Foinet had praised that morning.
"She's been with every one of the fellows at the studio. She's
nothing better than a street-walker. And she's dirty. She hasn't
had a bath for a month. I know it for a fact."
Philip listened uncomfortably. He had heard already that various
rumours were in circulation about Miss Chalice; but it was
ridiculous to suppose that Mrs. Otter, living with her mother,
was anything but rigidly virtuous. The woman walking by his side
with her malignant lying positively horrified him.
"I don't care what they say. I shall go on just the same. I know
I've got it in me. I feel I'm an artist. I'd sooner kill myself
than give it up. Oh, I shan't be the first they've all laughed
at in the schools and then he's turned out the only genius of
the lot. Art's the only thing I care for, I'm willing to give my
whole life to it. It's only a question of sticking to it and
pegging away"
She found discreditable motives for everyone who would not take
her at her own estimate of herself. She detested Clutton. She
told Philip that his friend had no talent really; it was just
flashy and superficial; he couldn't compose a figure to save his
life. And Lawson:
"Little beast, with his red hair and his freckles. He's so
afraid of Foinet that he won't let him see his work. After all,
I don't funk it, do I? I don't care what Foinet says to me, I
know I'm a real artist."
They reached the street in which she lived, and with a sigh of
relief Philip left her.
BUT notwithstanding when Miss Price on the following Sunday
offered to take him to the Louvre Philip accepted. She showed
him Mona Lisa. He looked at it with a slight feeling of
disappointment, but he had read till he knew by heart the
jewelled words with which Walter Pater has added beauty to the
most famous picture in the world; and these now he repeated to
Miss Price.
"That's all literature," she said, a little contemptuously. "You
must get away from that."
She showed him the Rembrandts, and she said many appropriate
things about them. She stood in front of the _Disciples at
Emmaus_.
"When you feel the beauty of that," she said, "you'll know
something about painting."
She showed him the _Odalisque_ and _La Source_ of Ingres.
Fanny Price was a peremptory guide, she would not let him look
at the things he wished, and attempted to force his admiration
for all she admired. She was desperately in earnest with her
study of art, and when Philip, passing in the Long Gallery a
window that looked out on the Tuileries, gay, sunny, and urbane,
like a picture by Raffaelli, exclaimed:
"I say, how jolly! Do let's stop here a minute."
She said, indifferently: "Yes, it's all right. But we've come
here to look at pictures."
The autumn air, blithe and vivacious, elated Philip; and when
towards mid-day they stood in the great court-yard of the
Louvre, he felt inclined to cry like Flanagan: To hell with art.
"I say, do let's go to one of those restaurants in the Boul'
Mich' and have a snack together, shall we?" he suggested.
Miss Price gave him a suspicious look.
"I've got my lunch waiting for me at home," she answered.
"That doesn't matter. You can eat it tomorrow. Do let me stand
you a lunch."
"I don't know why you want to."
"It would give me pleasure," he replied, smiling.
They crossed the river, and at the corner of the Boulevard St.
Michel there was a restaurant.
"Let's go in there."
"No, I won't go there, it looks too expensive."
She walked on firmly, and Philip was obliged to follow. A few
steps brought them to a smaller restaurant, where a dozen people
were already lunching on the pavement under an awning; on the
window was announced in large white letters: _Dejeuner 1.25,
vin compris_.
"We couldn't have anything cheaper than this, and it looks quite
all right."
They sat down at a vacant table and waited for the omelette
which was the first article on the bill of fare. Philip gazed
with delight upon the passers-by. His heart went out to them. He
was tired but very happy.
"I say, look at that man in the blouse. Isn't he ripping!"
He glanced at Miss Price, and to his astonishment saw that she
was looking down at her plate, regardless of the passing
spectacle, and two heavy tears were rolling down her cheeks.
"What on earth's the matter?" he exclaimed.
"If you say anything to me I shall get up and go at once," she
answered.
He was entirely puzzled, but fortunately at that moment the
omelette came. He divided it in two and they began to eat.
Philip did his best to talk of indifferent things, and it seemed
as though Miss Price were making an effort on her side to be
agreeable; but the luncheon was not altogether a success. Philip
was squeamish, and the way in which Miss Price ate took his
appetite away. She ate noisily, greedily, a little like a wild
beast in a menagerie, and after she had finished each course
rubbed the plate with pieces of bread till it was white and
shining, as if she did not wish to lose a single drop of gravy.
They had Camembert cheese, and it disgusted Philip to see that
she ate rind and all of the portion that was given her. She
could not have eaten more ravenously if she were starving.
Miss Price was unaccountable, and having parted from her on one
day with friendliness he could never tell whether on the next
she would not be sulky and uncivil; but he learned a good deal
from her: though she could not draw well herself, she knew all
that could be taught, and her constant suggestions helped his
progress. Mrs. Otter was useful to him too, and sometimes Miss
Chalice criticised his work; he learned from the glib loquacity
of Lawson and from the example of Clutton. But Fanny Price hated
him to take suggestions from anyone but herself, and when he
asked her help after someone else had been talking to him she
would refuse with brutal rudeness. The other fellows, Lawson,
Clutton, Flanagan, chaffed him about her.
"You be careful, my lad," they said, "she's in love with you."
"Oh, what nonsense," he laughed.
The thought that Miss Price could be in love with anyone was
preposterous. It made him shudder when he thought of her
uncomeliness, the bedraggled hair and the dirty hands, the brown
dress she always wore, stained and ragged at the hem: he
supposed she was hard up, they were all hard up, but she might
at least be clean; and it was surely possible with a needle and
thread to make her skirt tidy.
Philip began to sort his impressions of the people he was thrown
in contact with. He was not so ingenuous as in those days which
now seemed so long ago at Heidelberg, and, beginning to take a
more deliberate interest in humanity, he was inclined to examine
and to criticise. He found it difficult to know Clutton any
better after seeing him every day for three months than on the
first day of their acquaintance. The general impression at the
studio was that he was able; it was supposed that he would do
great things, and he shared the general opinion; but what
exactly he was going to do neither he nor anybody else quite
knew. He had worked at several studios before Amitrano's, at
Julian's, the Beaux Arts, and MacPherson's, and was remaining
longer at Amitrano's than anywhere because he found himself more
left alone. He was not fond of showing his work, and unlike most
of the young men who were studying art neither sought nor gave
advice. It was said that in the little studio in the Rue
Campagne Premiere, which served him for work-room and bed-room,
he had wonderful pictures which would make his reputation if
only he could be induced to exhibit them. He could not afford a
model but painted still life, and Lawson constantly talked of a
plate of apples which he declared was a masterpiece. He was
fastidious, and, aiming at something he did not quite fully
grasp, was constantly dissatisfied with his work as a whole:
perhaps a part would please him, the forearm or the leg and foot
of a figure, a glass or a cup in a still-life; and he would cut
this out and keep it, destroying the rest of the canvas; so that
when people invited themselves to see his work he could
truthfully answer that he had not a single picture to show. In
Brittany he had come across a painter whom nobody else had heard
of, a queer fellow who had been a stockbroker and taken up
painting at middle-age, and he was greatly influenced by his
work. He was turning his back on the impressionists and working
out for himself painfully an individual way not only of painting
but of seeing. Philip felt in him something strangely original.
At Gravier's where they ate, and in the evening at the
Versailles or at the Closerie des Lilas Clutton was inclined to
taciturnity. He sat quietly, with a sardonic expression on his
gaunt face, and spoke only when the opportunity occurred to
throw in a witticism. He liked a butt and was most cheerful when
someone was there on whom he could exercise his sarcasm. He
seldom talked of anything but painting, and then only with the
one or two persons whom he thought worth while. Philip wondered
whether there was in him really anything: his reticence, the
haggard look of him, the pungent humour, seemed to suggest
personality, but might be no more than an effective mask which
covered nothing.
With Lawson on the other hand Philip Soon grew intimate. He had
a variety of interests which made him an agreeable companion. He
read more than most of the students and though his income was
small, loved to buy books. He lent them willingly; and Philip
became acquainted with Flaubert and Balzac, with Verlaine,
Heredia, and Villiers de l'Isle Adam. They went to plays
together and sometimes to the gallery of the Opera Comique.
There was the Odeon quite near them, and Philip Soon shared his
friend's passion for the tragedians of Louis XIV and the
sonorous Alexandrine. In the Rue Taitbout were the Concerts
Rouge, where for seventy-five centimes they could hear excellent
music and get into the bargain something which it was quite
possible to drink: the seats were uncomfortable, the place was
crowded, the air thick with caporal horrible to breathe, but in
their young enthusiasm they were indifferent. Sometimes they
went to the Bal Bullier. On these occasions Flanagan accompanied
them. His excitability and his roisterous enthusiasm made them
laugh. He was an excellent dancer, and before they had been ten
minutes in the room he was prancing round with some little
shop-girl whose acquaintance he had just made.
The desire of all of them was to have a mistress. It was part of
the paraphernalia of the art-student in Paris. It gave
consideration in the eyes of one's fellows. It was something to
boast about. But the difficulty was that they had scarcely
enough money to keep themselves, and though they argued that
French-women were so clever it cost no more to keep two then
one, they found it difficult to meet young women who were
willing to take that view of the circumstances. They had to
content themselves for the most part with envying and abusing
the ladies who received protection from painters of more settled
respectability than their own. It was extraordinary how
difficult these things were in Paris. Lawson would become
acquainted with some young thing and make an appointment; for
twenty-four hours he would be all in a flutter and describe the
charmer at length to everyone he met; but she never by any
chance turned up at the time fixed. He would come to Gravier's
very late, ill-tempered, and exclaim:
"Confound it, another rabbit! I don't know why it is they don't
like me. I suppose it's because I don't speak French well, or my
red hair. It's too sickening to have spent over a year in Paris
without getting hold of anyone."
"You don't go the right way to work," said Flanagan.
He had a long and enviable list of triumphs to narrate, and
though they took leave not to believe all he said, evidence
forced them to acknowledge that he did not altogether lie. But
he sought no permanent arrangement. He only had two years in
Paris: he had persuaded his people to let him come and study art
instead of going to college; but at the end of that period he
was to return to Seattle and go into his father's business. He
had made up his mind to get as much fun as possible into the
time, and demanded variety rather than duration in his love
affairs.
"I don't know how you get hold of them," said Lawson furiously.
"There's no difficulty about that, sonny," answered Flanagan.
"You just go right in. The difficulty is to get rid of them.
That's where you want tact."
Philip was too much occupied with his work, the books he was
reading, the plays he saw, the conversation he listened to, to
trouble himself with the desire for female society. He thought
there would be plenty of time for that when he could speak
French more glibly.
It was more than a year now since he had seen Miss Wilkinson,
and during his first weeks in Paris he had been too busy to
answer a letter she had written to him just before he left
Blackstable. When another came, knowing it would be full of
reproaches and not being just then in the mood for them, he put
it aside, intending to open it later; but he forgot and did not
run across it till a month afterwards, when he was turning out
a drawer to find some socks that had no holes in them. He looked
at the unopened letter with dismay. He was afraid that Miss
Wilkinson had suffered a good deal, and it made him feel a
brute; but she had probably got over the suffering by now, at
all events the worst of it. It suggested itself to him that
women were often very emphatic in their expressions. These did
not mean so much as when men used them. He had quite made up his
mind that nothing would induce him ever to see her again. He had
not written for so long that it seemed hardly worth while to
write now. He made up his mind not to read the letter.
"I daresay she won't write again," he said to himself. "She
can't help seeing the thing's over. After all, she was old
enough to be my mother; she ought to have known better."
For an hour or two he felt a little uncomfortable. His attitude
was obviously the right one, but he could not help a feeling of
dissatisfaction with the whole business. Miss Wilkinson,
however, did not write again; nor did she, as he absurdly
feared, suddenly appear in Paris to make him ridiculous before
his friends. In a little while he clean forgot her.
Meanwhile he definitely forsook his old gods. The amazement with
which at first he had looked upon the works of the
impressionists, changed to admiration; and presently he found
himself talking as emphatically as the rest on the merits of
Manet, Monet, and Degas. He bought a photograph of a drawing by
Ingres of the _Odalisque_ and a photograph of the _Olympia_.
They were pinned side by side over his washing-stand so that he
could contemplate their beauty while he shaved. He knew now
quite positively that there had been no painting of landscape
before Monet; and he felt a real thrill when he stood in front
of Rembrandt's _Disciples at Emmaus_ or Velasquez' _Lady
with the Flea-bitten Nose_. That was not her real name, but by
that she was distinguished at Gravier's to emphasise the
picture's beauty notwithstanding the somewhat revolting
peculiarity of the sitter's appearance. With Ruskin,
Burne-Jones, and Watts, he had put aside his bowler hat and the
neat blue tie with white spots which he had worn on coming to
Paris; and now disported himself in a soft, broad-brimmed hat,
a flowing black cravat, and a cape of romantic cut. He walked
along the Boulevard du Montparnasse as though he had known it
all his life, and by virtuous perseverance he had learnt to
drink absinthe without distaste. He was letting his hair grow,
and it was only because Nature is unkind and has no regard for
the immortal longings of youth that he did not attempt a beard.
PHILIP soon realised that the spirit which informed his friends
was Cronshaw's. It was from him that Lawson got his paradoxes;
and even Clutton, who strained after individuality, expressed
himself in the terms he had insensibly acquired from the older
man. It was his ideas that they bandied about at table, and on
his authority they formed their judgments. They made up for the
respect with which unconsciously they treated him by laughing at
his foibles and lamenting his vices.
"Of course, poor old Cronshaw will never do any good," they
said. "He's quite hopeless."
They prided themselves on being alone in appreciating his
genius; and though, with the contempt of youth for the follies
of middle-age, they patronised him among themselves, they did
not fail to look upon it as a feather in their caps if he had
chosen a time when only one was there to be particularly
wonderful. Cronshaw never came to Gravier's. For the last four
years he had lived in squalid conditions with a woman whom only
Lawson had once seen, in a tiny apartment on the sixth floor of
one of the most dilapidated houses on the Quai des Grands
Augustins: Lawson described with gusto the filth, the
untidiness, the litter.
"And the stink nearly blew your head off."
"Not at dinner, Lawson," expostulated one of the others.
But he would not deny himself the pleasure of giving picturesque
details of the odours which met his nostril. With a fierce
delight in his own realism he described the woman who had opened
the door for him. She was dark, small, and fat, quite young,
with black hair that seemed always on the point of coming down.
She wore a slatternly blouse and no corsets. With her red
cheeks, large sensual mouth, and shining, lewd eyes, she
reminded you of the _Bohemienne_ in the Louvre by Franz Hals.
She had a flaunting vulgarity which amused and yet horrified. A
scrubby, unwashed baby was playing on the floor. It was known
that the slut deceived Cronshaw with the most worthless
ragamuffins of the Quarter, and it was a mystery to the
ingenuous youths who absorbed his wisdom over a cafe table that
Cronshaw with his keen intellect and his passion for beauty
could ally himself to such a creature. But he seemed to revel in
the coarseness of her language and would often report some
phrase which reeked of the gutter. He referred to her ironically
as _la fille de mon concierge_. Cronshaw was very poor. He
earned a bare subsistence by writing on the exhibitions of
pictures for one or two English papers, and he did a certain
amount of translating. He had been on the staff of an English
paper in Paris, but had been dismissed for drunkenness; he still
however did odd jobs for it, describing sales at the Hotel
Drouot or the revues at music-halls. The life of Paris had got
into his bones, and he would not change it, notwithstanding its
squalor, drudgery, and hardship, for any other in the world. He
remained there all through the year, even in summer when
everyone he knew was away, and felt himself only at ease within
a mile of the Boulevard St. Michel. But the curious thing was
that he had never learnt to speak French passably, and he kept
in his shabby clothes bought at _La Belle Jardiniere_ an
ineradicably English appearance.
He was a man who would have made a success of life a century and
a half ago when conversation was a passport to good company and
inebriety no bar.
"I ought to have lived in the eighteen hundreds," he said
himself. "What I want is a patron. I should have published my
poems by subscription and dedicated them to a nobleman. I long
to compose rhymed couplets upon the poodle of a countess. My
soul yearns for the love of chamber-maids and the conversation
of bishops."
He quoted the romantic Rolla,
"_Je suis venu trop tard dans un monde trop vieux_."
He liked new faces, and he took a fancy to Philip, who seemed to
achieve the difficult feat of talking just enough to suggest
conversation and not too much to prevent monologue. Philip was
captivated. He did not realise that little that Cronshaw said
was new. His personality in conversation had a curious power. He
had a beautiful and a sonorous voice, and a manner of putting
things which was irresistible to youth. All he said seemed to
excite thought, and often on the way home Lawson and Philip
would walk to and from one another's hotels, discussing some
point which a chance word of Cronshaw had suggested. It was
disconcerting to Philip, who had a youthful eagerness for
results, that Cronshaw's poetry hardly came up to expectation.
It had never been published in a volume, but most of it had
appeared in periodicals; and after a good deal of persuasion
Cronshaw brought down a bundle of pages torn out of _The
Yellow Book_, _The Saturday Review_, and other journals, on
each of which was a poem. Philip was taken aback to find that
most of them reminded him either of Henley or of Swinburne. It
needed the splendour of Cronshaw's delivery to make them
personal. He expressed his disappointment to Lawson, who
carelessly repeated his words; and next time Philip went to the
Closerie des Lilas the poet turned to him with his sleek smile:
"I hear you don't think much of my verses."
Philip was embarrassed.
"I don't know about that," he answered. "I enjoyed reading them
very much."
"Do not attempt to spare my feelings," returned Cronshaw, with
a wave of his fat hand. "I do not attach any exaggerated
importance to my poetical works. Life is there to be lived
rather than to be written about. My aim is to search out the
manifold experience that it offers, wringing from each moment
what of emotion it presents. I look upon my writing as a
graceful accomplishment which does not absorb but rather adds
pleasure to existence. And as for posterity--damn posterity."
Philip smiled, for it leaped to one's eyes that the artist in
life had produced no more than a wretched daub. Cronshaw looked
at him meditatively and filled his glass. He sent the waiter for
a packet of cigarettes.
"You are amused because I talk in this fashion and you know that
I am poor and live in an attic with a vulgar trollop who
deceives me with hair-dressers and _garcons de cafe_; I
translate wretched books for the British public, and write
articles upon contemptible pictures which deserve not even to be
abused. But pray tell me what is the meaning of life?"
"I say, that's rather a difficult question. Won't you give the
answer yourself?"
"No, because it's worthless unless you yourself discover it. But
what do you suppose you are in the world for?"
Philip had never asked himself, and he thought for a moment
before replying.
"Oh, I don't know: I suppose to do one's duty, and make the best
possible use of one's faculties, and avoid hurting other
people."
"In short, to do unto others as you would they should do unto
you?"
"I suppose so."
"Christianity."
"No, it isn't," said Philip indignantly. "It has nothing to do
with Christianity. It's just abstract morality."
"But there's no such thing as abstract morality."
"In that case, supposing under the influence of liquor you left
your purse behind when you leave here and I picked it up, why do
you imagine that I should return it to you? It's not the fear of
the police."
"It's the dread of hell if you sin and the hope of Heaven if you
are virtuous."
"But I believe in neither."
"That may be. Neither did Kant when he devised the Categorical
Imperative. You have thrown aside a creed, but you have
preserved the ethic which was based upon it. To all intents you
are a Christian still, and if there is a God in Heaven you will
undoubtedly receive your reward. The Almighty can hardly be such
a fool as the churches make out. If you keep His laws I don't
think He can care a packet of pins whether you believe in Him or
not."
"But if I left my purse behind you would certainly return it to
me," said Philip.
"Not from motives of abstract morality, but only from fear of
the police."
"It's a thousand to one that the police would never find out."
"My ancestors have lived in a civilised state so long that the
fear of the police has eaten into my bones. The daughter of my
_concierge_ would not hesitate for a moment. You answer that
she belongs to the criminal classes; not at all, she is merely
devoid of vulgar prejudice."
"But then that does away with honour and virtue and goodness and
decency and everything," said Philip.
"Have you ever committed a sin?"
"I don't know, I suppose so," answered Philip.
"You speak with the lips of a dissenting minister. I have never
committed a sin."
Cronshaw in his shabby great-coat, with the collar turned up,
and his hat well down on his head, with his red fat face and his
little gleaming eyes, looked extraordinarily comic; but Philip
was too much in earnest to laugh.
"Have you never done anything you regret?"
"How can I regret when what I did was inevitable?" asked
Cronshaw in return.
"But that's fatalism."
"The illusion which man has that his will is free is so deeply
rooted that I am ready to accept it. I act as though I were a
free agent. But when an action is performed it is clear that all
the forces of the universe from all eternity conspired to cause
it, and nothing I could do could have prevented it. It was
inevitable. If it was good I can claim no merit; if it was bad
I can accept no censure."
"My brain reels," said Philip.
"Have some whiskey," returned Cronshaw, passing over the bottle.
"There's nothing like it for clearing the head. You must expect
to be thick-witted if you insist upon drinking beer."
Philip shook his head, and Cronshaw proceeded:
"You're not a bad fellow, but you won't drink. Sobriety disturbs
conversation. But when I speak of good and bad..." Philip saw he
was taking up the thread of his discourse, "I speak
conventionally. I attach no meaning to those words. I refuse to
make a hierarchy of human actions and ascribe worthiness to some
and ill-repute to others. The terms vice and virtue have no
signification for me. I do not confer praise or blame: I accept.
I am the measure of all things. I am the centre of the world."
"But there are one or two other people in the world," objected
Philip.
"I speak only for myself. I know them only as they limit my
activities. Round each of them too the world turns, and each one
for himself is the centre of the universe. My right over them
extends only as far as my power. What I can do is the only limit
of what I may do. Because we are gregarious we live in society,
and society holds together by means of force, force of arms
(that is the policeman) and force of public opinion (that is
Mrs. Grundy). You have society on one hand and the individual on
the other: each is an organism striving for self-preservation.
It is might against might. I stand alone, bound to accept
society and not unwilling, since in return for the taxes I pay
it protects me, a weakling, against the tyranny of another
stronger than I am; but I submit to its laws because I must; I
do not acknowledge their justice: I do not know justice, I only
know power. And when I have paid for the policeman who protects
me and, if I live in a country where conscription is in force,
served in the army which guards my house and land from the
invader, I am quits with society: for the rest I counter its
might with my wiliness. It makes laws for its self-preservation,
and if I break them it imprisons or kills me: it has the might
to do so and therefore the right. If I break the laws I will
accept the vengeance of the state, but I will not regard it as
punishment nor shall I feel myself convicted of wrong-doing.
Society tempts me to its service by honours and riches and the
good opinion of my fellows; but I am indifferent to their good
opinion, I despise honours and I can do very well without
riches."
"But if everyone thought like you things would go to pieces at
once."
"I have nothing to do with others, I am only concerned with
myself. I take advantage of the fact that the majority of
mankind are led by certain rewards to do things which directly
or indirectly tend to my convenience."
"It seems to me an awfully selfish way of looking at things,"
said Philip.
"But are you under the impression that men ever do anything
except for selfish reasons?"
"Yes."
"It is impossible that they should. You will find as you grow
older that the first thing needful to make the world a tolerable
place to live in is to recognise the inevitable selfishness of
humanity. You demand unselfishness from others, which is a
preposterous claim that they should sacrifice their desires to
yours. Why should they? When you are reconciled to the fact that
each is for himself in the world you will ask less from your
fellows. They will not disappoint you, and you will look upon
them more charitably. Men seek but one thing in life--their
pleasure."
"No, no, no!" cried Philip.
Cronshaw chuckled.
"You rear like a frightened colt, because I use a word to which
your Christianity ascribes a deprecatory meaning. You have a
hierarchy of values; pleasure is at the bottom of the ladder,
and you speak with a little thrill of self-satisfaction, of
duty, charity, and truthfulness. You think pleasure is only of
the senses; the wretched slaves who manufactured your morality
despised a satisfaction which they had small means of enjoying.
You would not be so frightened if I had spoken of happiness
instead of pleasure: it sounds less shocking, and your mind
wanders from the sty of Epicurus to his garden. But I will speak
of pleasure, for I see that men aim at that, and I do not know
that they aim at happiness. It is pleasure that lurks in the
practice of every one of your virtues. Man performs actions
because they are good for him, and when they are good for other
people as well they are thought virtuous: if he finds pleasure
in giving alms he is charitable; if he finds pleasure in helping
others he is benevolent; if he finds pleasure in working for
society he is public-spirited; but it is for your private
pleasure that you give twopence to a beggar as much as it is for
my private pleasure that I drink another whiskey and soda. I,
less of a humbug than you, neither applaud myself for my
pleasure nor demand your admiration."
"But have you never known people do things they didn't want to
instead of things they did?"
"No. You put your question foolishly. What you mean is that
people accept an immediate pain rather than an immediate
pleasure. The objection is as foolish as your manner of putting
it. It is clear that men accept an immediate pain rather than an
immediate pleasure, but only because they expect a greater
pleasure in the future. Often the pleasure is illusory, but
their error in calculation is no refutation of the rule. You are
puzzled because you cannot get over the idea that pleasures are
only of the senses; but, child, a man who dies for his country
dies because he likes it as surely as a man eats pickled cabbage
because he likes it. It is a law of creation. If it were
possible for men to prefer pain to pleasure the human race would
have long since become extinct."
"But if all that is true," cried Philip, "what is the use of
anything? If you take away duty and goodness and beauty why are
we brought into the world?"
"Here comes the gorgeous East to suggest an answer," smiled
Cronshaw.
He pointed to two persons who at that moment opened the door of
the cafe, and, with a blast of cold air, entered. They were
Levantines, itinerant vendors of cheap rugs, and each bore on
his arm a bundle. It was Sunday evening, and the cafe was very
full. They passed among the tables, and in that atmosphere heavy
and discoloured with tobacco smoke, rank with humanity, they
seemed to bring an air of mystery. They were clad in European,
shabby clothes, their thin great-coats were threadbare, but each
wore a tarbouch. Their faces were gray with cold. One was of
middle age, with a black beard, but the other was a youth of
eighteen, with a face deeply scarred by smallpox and with one
eye only. They passed by Cronshaw and Philip.
"Allah is great, and Mahomet is his prophet," said Cronshaw
impressively.
The elder advanced with a cringing smile, like a mongrel used to
blows. With a sidelong glance at the door and a quick
surreptitious movement he showed a pornographic picture.
"Are you Masr-ed-Deen, the merchant of Alexandria, or is it from
far Bagdad that you bring your goods, O, my uncle; and yonder
one-eyed youth, do I see in him one of the three kings of whom
Scheherazade told stories to her lord?"
The pedlar's smile grew more ingratiating, though he understood
no word of what Cronshaw said, and like a conjurer he produced
a sandalwood box.
"Nay, show us the priceless web of Eastern looms," quoth
Cronshaw. "For I would point a moral and adorn a tale."
The Levantine unfolded a table-cloth, red and yellow, vulgar,
hideous, and grotesque.
"Thirty-five francs," he said.
"O, my uncle, this cloth knew not the weavers of Samarkand, and
those colours were never made in the vats of Bokhara."
"Twenty-five francs," smiled the pedlar obsequiously.
"Ultima Thule was the place of its manufacture, even Birmingham
the place of my birth."
"Fifteen francs," cringed the bearded man.
"Get thee gone, fellow," said Cronshaw. "May wild asses defile
the grave of thy maternal grandmother."
Imperturbably, but smiling no more, the Levantine passed with
his wares to another table. Cronshaw turned to Philip.
"Have you ever been to the Cluny, the museum? There you will see
Persian carpets of the most exquisite hue and of a pattern the
beautiful intricacy of which delights and amazes the eye. In
them you will see the mystery and the sensual beauty of the
East, the roses of Hafiz and the wine-cup of Omar; but presently
you will see more. You were asking just now what was the meaning
of life. Go and look at those Persian carpets, and one of these
days the answer will come to you."
PHILIP did not find living in Paris as cheap as he had been led
to believe and by February had spent most of the money with
which he started. He was too proud to appeal to his guardian,
nor did he wish Aunt Louisa to know that his circumstances were
straitened, since he was certain she would make an effort to
send him something from her own pocket, and he knew how little
she could afford to. In three months he would attain his
majority and come into possession of his small fortune. He tided
over the interval by selling the few trinkets which he had
inherited from his father.
At about this time Lawson suggested that they should take a
small studio which was vacant in one of the streets that led out
of the Boulevard Raspail. It was very cheap. It had a room
attached, which they could use as a bed-room; and since Philip
was at the school every morning Lawson could have the
undisturbed use of the studio then; Lawson, after wandering from
school to school, had come to the conclusion that he could work
best alone, and proposed to get a model in three or four days a
week. At first Philip hesitated on account of the expense, but
they reckoned it out; and it seemed (they were so anxious to
have a studio of their own that they calculated pragmatically)
that the cost would not be much greater than that of living in
a hotel. Though the rent and the cleaning by the _concierge_
would come to a little more, they would save on the _petit
dejeuner_, which they could make themselves. A year or two
earlier Philip would have refused to share a room with anyone,
since he was so sensitive about his deformed foot, but his
morbid way of looking at it was growing less marked: in Paris it
did not seem to matter so much, and, though he never by any
chance forgot it himself, he ceased to feel that other people
were constantly noticing it.
They moved in, bought a couple of beds, a washing-stand, a few
chairs, and felt for the first time the thrill of possession.
They were so excited that the first night they went to bed in
what they could call a home they lay awake talking till three in
the morning; and next day found lighting the fire and making
their own coffee, which they had in pyjamas, such a jolly
business that Philip did not get to Amitrano's till nearly
eleven. He was in excellent spirits. He nodded to Fanny Price.
"How are you getting on?" he asked cheerily.
"What does that matter to you?" she asked in reply.
Philip could not help laughing.
"Don't jump down my throat. I was only trying to make myself
polite."
"I don't want your politeness."
"D'you think it's worth while quarrelling with me too?" asked
Philip mildly. "There are so few people you're on speaking terms
with, as it is."
"That's my business, isn't it?"
"Quite."
He began to work, vaguely wondering why Fanny Price made herself
so disagreeable. He had come to the conclusion that he
thoroughly disliked her. Everyone did. People were only civil to
her at all from fear of the malice of her tongue; for to their
faces and behind their backs she said abominable things. But
Philip was feeling so happy that he did not want even Miss Price
to bear ill-feeling towards him. He used the artifice which had
often before succeeded in banishing her ill-humour.
"I say, I wish you'd come and look at my drawing. I've got in an
awful mess."
"Thank you very much, but I've got something better to do with
my time."
Philip stared at her in surprise, for the one thing she could be
counted upon to do with alacrity was to give advice. She went on
quickly in a low voice, savage with fury.
"Now that Lawson's gone you think you'll put up with me. Thank
you very much. Go and find somebody else to help you. I don't
want anybody else's leavings."
Lawson had the pedagogic instinct; whenever he found anything
out he was eager to impart it; and because he taught with
delight he talked with profit. Philip, without thinking anything
about it, had got into the habit of sitting by his side; it
never occurred to him that Fanny Price was consumed with
jealousy, and watched his acceptance of someone else's tuition
with ever-increasing anger.
"You were very glad to put up with me when you knew nobody
here," she said bitterly, "and as soon as you made friends with
other people you threw me aside, like an old glove"--she
repeated the stale metaphor with satisfaction--"like an old
glove. All right, I don't care, but I'm not going to be made a
fool of another time."
There was a suspicion of truth in what she said, and it made
Philip angry enough to answer what first came into his head.
"Hang it all, I only asked your advice because I saw it pleased
you."
She gave a gasp and threw him a sudden look of anguish. Then two
tears rolled down her cheeks. She looked frowsy and grotesque.
Philip, not knowing what on earth this new attitude implied,
went back to his work. He was uneasy and conscience-stricken;
but he would not go to her and say he was sorry if he had caused
her pain, because he was afraid she would take the opportunity
to snub him. For two or three weeks she did not speak to him,
and, after Philip had got over the discomfort of being cut by
her, he was somewhat relieved to be free from so difficult a
friendship. He had been a little disconcerted by the air of
proprietorship she assumed over him. She was an extraordinary
woman. She came every day to the studio at eight o'clock, and
was ready to start working when the model was in position; she
worked steadily, talking to no one, struggling hour after hour
with difficulties she could not overcome, and remained till the
clock struck twelve. Her work was hopeless. There was not in it
the smallest approach even to the mediocre achievement at which
most of the young persons were able after some months to arrive.
She wore every day the same ugly brown dress, with the mud of
the last wet day still caked on the hem and with the raggedness,
which Philip had noticed the first time he saw her, still
unmended.
But one day she came up to him, and with a scarlet face asked
whether she might speak to him afterwards.