CHAPTER THE FIRST
OF
BLADESOVER HOUSE, AND MY MOTHER; AND THE CONSTITUTION OF SOCIETYIMost
people in this world seem to live “in character”; they have a
beginning, a middle and an end, and the three are congruous one with
another and true to the rules of their type. You can speak of them as
being of this sort of people or that. They are, as theatrical people
say, no more (and no less) than “character actors.” They have a
class, they have a place, they know what is becoming in them and what
is due to them, and their proper size of tombstone tells at last how
properly they have played the part. But there is also another kind of
life that is not so much living as a miscellaneous tasting of life.
One gets hit by some unusual transverse force, one is jerked out of
one’s stratum and lives crosswise for the rest of the time, and, as
it were, in a succession of samples. That has been my lot, and that
is what has set me at last writing something in the nature of a
novel. I have got an unusual series of impressions that I want very
urgently to tell. I have seen life at very different levels, and at
all these levels I have seen it with a sort of intimacy and in good
faith. I have been a native in many social countries. I have been the
unwelcome guest of a working baker, my cousin, who has since died in
the Chatham infirmary; I have eaten illegal snacks—the
unjustifiable gifts of footmen—in pantries, and been despised for
my want of style (and subsequently married and divorced) by the
daughter of a gasworks clerk; and—to go to my other extreme—I was
once—oh, glittering days!—an item in the house-party of a
countess. She was, I admit, a countess with a financial aspect, but
still, you know, a countess. I’ve seen these people at various
angles. At the dinner-table I’ve met not simply the titled but the
great. On one occasion—it is my brightest memory—I upset my
champagne over the trousers of the greatest statesman in the
empire—Heaven forbid I should be so invidious as to name him!—in
the warmth of our mutual admiration.And
once (though it is the most incidental thing in my life) I murdered a
man....Yes,
I’ve seen a curious variety of people and ways of living
altogether. Odd people they all are great and small, very much alike
at bottom and curiously different on their surfaces. I wish I had
ranged just a little further both up and down, seeing I have ranged
so far. Royalty must be worth knowing and very great fun. But my
contacts with princes have been limited to quite public occasions,
nor at the other end of the scale have I had what I should call an
inside acquaintance with that dusty but attractive class of people
who go about on the high-roads drunk but enfamille (so redeeming the
minor lapse), in the summertime, with a perambulator, lavender to
sell, sun-brown children, a smell, and ambiguous bundles that fire
the imagination. Navvies, farm-labourers, sailormen and stokers, all
such as sit in 1834 beer-houses, are beyond me also, and I suppose
must remain so now for ever. My intercourse with the ducal rank too
has been negligible; I once went shooting with a duke, and in an
outburst of what was no doubt snobbishness, did my best to get him in
the legs. But that failed.I’m
sorry I haven’t done the whole lot though....You
will ask by what merit I achieved this remarkable social range, this
extensive cross-section of the British social organism. It was the
Accident of Birth. It always is in England.Indeed,
if I may make the remark so cosmic, everything is. But that is by the
way. I was my uncle’s nephew, and my uncle was no less a person
than Edward Ponderevo, whose comet-like transit of the financial
heavens happened—it is now ten years ago! Do you remember the days
of Ponderevo, the great days, I mean, of Ponderevo? Perhaps you had a
trifle in some world-shaking enterprise! Then you know him only too
well. Astraddle on Tono-Bungay, he flashed athwart the empty
heavens—like a comet—rather, like a stupendous rocket!—and
overawed investors spoke of his star. At his zenith he burst into a
cloud of the most magnificent promotions. What a time that was! The
Napoleon of domestic conveniences!I
was his nephew, his peculiar and intimate nephew. I was hanging on to
his coat-tails all the way through. I made pills with him in the
chemist’s shop at Wimblehurst before he began. I was, you might
say, the stick of his rocket; and after our tremendous soar, after he
had played with millions, a golden rain in the sky, after my
bird’s-eye view of the modern world, I fell again, a little scarred
and blistered perhaps, two and twenty years older, with my youth
gone, my manhood eaten in upon, but greatly edified, into this
Thames-side yard, into these white heats and hammerings, amidst the
fine realites of steel—to think it all over in my leisure and jot
down the notes and inconsecutive observations that make this book. It
was more, you know, than a figurative soar. The zenith of that career
was surely our flight across the channel in the Lord Roberts B....I
warn you this book is going to be something of an agglomeration. I
want to trace my social trajectory (and my uncle’s) as the main
line of my story, but as this is my first novel and almost certainly
my last, I want to get in, too, all sorts of things that struck me,
things that amused me and impressions I got—even although they
don’t minister directly to my narrative at all. I want to set out
my own queer love experiences too, such as they are, for they
troubled and distressed and swayed me hugely, and they still seem to
me to contain all sorts of irrational and debatable elements that I
shall be the clearer-headed for getting on paper. And possibly I may
even flow into descriptions of people who are really no more than
people seen in transit, just because it amuses me to recall what they
said and did to us, and more particularly how they behaved in the
brief but splendid glare of Tono-Bungay and its still more glaring
offspring. It lit some of them up, I can assure you! Indeed, I want
to get in all sorts of things. My ideas of a novel all through are
comprehensive rather than austere....Tono-Bungay
still figures on the hoardings, it stands in rows in every chemist’s
storeroom, it still assuages the coughs of age and brightens the
elderly eye and loosens the elderly tongue; but its social glory, its
financial illumination, have faded from the world for ever. And I,
sole scorched survivor from the blaze, sit writing of it here in an
air that is never still for the clang and thunder of machines, on a
table littered with working drawings, and amid fragments of models
and notes about velocities and air and water pressures and
trajectories—of an altogether different sort from that of
Tono-Bungay.III
write that much and look at it, and wonder whether, after all, this
is any fair statement of what I am attempting in this book. I’ve
given, I see, an impression that I want to make simply a hotch-potch
of anecdotes and experiences with my uncle swimming in the middle as
the largest lump of victual. I’ll own that here, with the pen
already started, I realise what a fermenting mass of things learnt
and emotions experienced and theories formed I’ve got to deal with,
and how, in a sense, hopeless my book must be from the very outset. I
suppose what I’m really trying to render is nothing more nor less
than Life—as one man has found it. I want to tell—MYSELF, and my
impressions of the thing as a whole, to say things I have come to
feel intensely of the laws, traditions, usages, and ideas we call
society, and how we poor individuals get driven and lured and
stranded among these windy, perplexing shoals and channels. I’ve
got, I suppose, to a time of life when things begin to take on shapes
that have an air of reality, and become no longer material for
dreaming, but interesting in themselves. I’ve reached the
criticising, novel-writing age, and here I am writing mine—my one
novel—without having any of the discipline to refrain and omit that
I suppose the regular novel-writer acquires.I’ve
read an average share of novels and made some starts before this
beginning, and I’ve found the restraints and rules of the art (as I
made them out) impossible for me. I like to write, I am keenly
interested in writing, but it is not my technique. I’m an engineer
with a patent or two and a set of ideas; most of whatever artist
there is in me has been given to turbine machines and boat building
and the problem of flying, and do what I will I fail to see how I can
be other than a lax, undisciplined story-teller. I must sprawl and
flounder, comment and theorise, if I am to get the thing out I have
in mind. And it isn’t a constructed tale I have to tell, but
unmanageable realities. My love-story—and if only I can keep up the
spirit of truth-telling all through as strongly as I have now, you
shall have it all—falls into no sort of neat scheme of telling. It
involves three separate feminine persons. It’s all mixed up with
the other things....But
I’ve said enough, I hope, to excuse myself for the method or want
of method in what follows, and I think I had better tell without
further delay of my boyhood and my early impressions in the shadow of
Bladesover House.IIIThere
came a time when I realised that Bladesover House was not all it
seemed, but when I was a little boy I took the place with the
entirest faith as a complete authentic microcosm. I believed that the
Bladesover system was a little working-model—and not so very little
either—of the whole world.Let
me try and give you the effect of it.Bladesover
lies up on the Kentish Downs, eight miles perhaps from Ashborough;
and its old pavilion, a little wooden parody of the temple of Vesta
at Tibur, upon the hill crest behind the house, commands in theory at
least a view of either sea, of the Channel southward and the Thames
to the northeast. The park is the second largest in Kent, finely
wooded with well-placed beeches, many elms and some sweet chestnuts,
abounding in little valleys and hollows of bracken, with springs and
a stream and three fine ponds and multitudes of fallow deer. The
house was built in the eighteenth century, it is of pale red brick in
the style of a French chateau, and save for one pass among the crests
which opens to blue distances, to minute, remote, oast-set
farm-houses and copses and wheat fields and the occasional gleam of
water, its hundred and seventeen windows look on nothing but its own
wide and handsome territories. A semi-circular screen of great
beeches masks the church and village, which cluster picturesquely
about the high road along the skirts of the great park. Northward, at
the remotest corner of that enclosure, is a second dependent village,
Ropedean, less fortunate in its greater distance and also on account
of a rector. This divine was indeed rich, but he was vindictively
economical because of some shrinkage of his tithes; and by reason of
his use of the word Eucharist for the Lord’s Supper he had become
altogether estranged from the great ladies of Bladesover. So that
Ropedean was in the shadows through all that youthful time.Now
the unavoidable suggestion of that wide park and that fair large
house, dominating church, village and the country side, was that they
represented the thing that mattered supremely in the world, and that
all other things had significance only in relation to them. They
represented the Gentry, the Quality, by and through and for whom the
rest of the world, the farming folk and the labouring folk, the
trades-people of Ashborough, and the upper servants and the lower
servants and the servants of the estate, breathed and lived and were
permitted. And the Quality did it so quietly and thoroughly, the
great house mingled so solidly and effectually earth and sky, the
contrast of its spacious hall and saloon and galleries, its airy
housekeeper’s room and warren of offices with the meagre dignities
of the vicar, and the pinched and stuffy rooms of even the
post-office people and the grocer, so enforced these suggestions,
that it was only when I was a boy of thirteen or fourteen and some
queer inherited strain of scepticism had set me doubting whether Mr.
Bartlett, the vicar, did really know with certainty all about God,
that as a further and deeper step in doubting I began to question the
final rightness of the gentlefolks, their primary necessity in the
scheme of things. But once that scepticism had awakened it took me
fast and far. By fourteen I had achieved terrible blasphemies and
sacrilege; I had resolved to marry a viscount’s daughter, and I had
blacked the left eye—I think it was the left—of her half-brother,
in open and declared rebellion.But
of that in its place.The
great house, the church, the village, and the labourers and the
servants in their stations and degrees, seemed to me, I say, to be a
closed and complete social system. About us were other villages and
great estates, and from house to house, interlacing, correlated, the
Gentry, the fine Olympians, came and went. The country towns seemed
mere collections of ships, marketing places for the tenantry, centres
for such education as they needed, as entirely dependent on the
gentry as the village and scarcely less directly so. I thought this
was the order of the whole world. I thought London was only a greater
country town where the gentle-folk kept town-houses and did their
greater shopping under the magnificent shadow of the greatest of all
fine gentlewomen, the Queen. It seemed to be in the divine order.
That all this fine appearance was already sapped, that there were
forces at work that might presently carry all this elaborate social
system in which my mother instructed me so carefully that I might
understand my “place,” to Limbo, had scarcely dawned upon me even
by the time that Tono-Bungay was fairly launched upon the world.There
are many people in England to-day upon whom it has not yet dawned.
There are times when I doubt whether any but a very inconsiderable
minority of English people realise how extensively this ostensible
order has even now passed away. The great houses stand in the parks
still, the cottages cluster respectfully on their borders, touching
their eaves with their creepers, the English countryside—you can
range through Kent from Bladesover northward and see persists
obstinately in looking what it was. It is like an early day in a fine
October. The hand of change rests on it all, unfelt, unseen; resting
for awhile, as it were half reluctantly, before it grips and ends the
thing for ever. One frost and the whole face of things will be bare,
links snap, patience end, our fine foliage of pretences lie glowing
in the mire.For
that we have still to wait a little while. The new order may have
gone far towards shaping itself, but just as in that sort of lantern
show that used to be known in the village as the “Dissolving
Views,” the scene that is going remains upon the mind, traceable
and evident, and the newer picture is yet enigmatical long after the
lines that are to replace those former ones have grown bright and
strong, so that the new England of our children’s children is still
a riddle to me. The ideas of democracy, of equality, and above all of
promiscuous fraternity have certainly never really entered into the
English mind. But what IS coming into it? All this book, I hope, will
bear a little on that. Our people never formulates; it keeps words
for jests and ironies. In the meanwhile the old shapes, the old
attitudes remain, subtly changed and changing still, sheltering
strange tenants. Bladesover House is now let furnished to Sir Reuben
Lichtenstein, and has been since old Lady Drew died; it was my odd
experience to visit there, in the house of which my mother had been
housekeeper, when my uncle was at the climax of Tono-Bungay. It was
curious to notice then the little differences that had come to things
with this substitution. To borrow an image from my mineralogical
days, these Jews were not so much a new British gentry as
“pseudomorphous” after the gentry. They are a very clever people,
the Jews, but not clever enough to suppress their cleverness. I
wished I could have gone downstairs to savour the tone of the pantry.
It would have been very different I know. Hawksnest, over beyond, I
noted, had its pseudomorph too; a newspaper proprietor of the type
that hustles along with stolen ideas from one loud sink-or-swim
enterprise to another, had bought the place outright; Redgrave was in
the hands of brewers.But
the people in the villages, so far as I could detect, saw no
difference in their world. Two little girls bobbed and an old
labourer touched his hat convulsively as I walked through the
village. He still thought he knew his place—and mine. I did not
know him, but I would have liked dearly to have asked him if he
remembered my mother, if either my uncle or old Lichtenstein had been
man enough to stand being given away like that.In
that English countryside of my boyhood every human being had a
“place.” It belonged to you from your birth like the colour of
your eyes, it was inextricably your destiny. Above you were your
betters, below you were your inferiors, and there were even an
unstable questionable few, cases so disputable that you might for the
rough purposes of every day at least, regard them as your equals.
Head and centre of our system was Lady Drew, her “leddyship,”
shrivelled, garrulous, with a wonderful memory for genealogies and
very, very old, and beside her and nearly as old, Miss Somerville,
her cousin and companion. These two old souls lived like dried-up
kernels in the great shell of Bladesover House, the shell that had
once been gaily full of fops, of fine ladies in powder and patches
and courtly gentlemen with swords; and when there was no company they
spent whole days in the corner parlour just over the housekeeper’s
room, between reading and slumber and caressing their two pet dogs.
When I was a boy I used always to think of these two poor old
creatures as superior beings living, like God, somewhere through the
ceiling. Occasionally they bumped about a bit and one even heard them
overhead, which gave them a greater effect of reality without
mitigating their vertical predominance. Sometimes too I saw them. Of
course if I came upon them in the park or in the shrubbery (where I
was a trespasser) I hid or fled in pious horror, but I was upon due
occasion taken into the Presence by request. I remember her
“leddyship” then as a thing of black silks and a golden chain, a
quavering injunction to me to be a good boy, a very shrunken
loose-skinned face and neck, and a ropy hand that trembled a
halfcrown into mine. Miss Somerville hovered behind, a paler thing of
broken lavender and white and black, with screwed up, sandy-lashed
eyes. Her hair was yellow and her colour bright, and when we sat in
the housekeeper’s room of a winter’s night warming our toes and
sipping elder wine, her maid would tell us the simple secrets of that
belated flush.... After my fight with young Garvell I was of course
banished, and I never saw those poor old painted goddesses again.Then
there came and went on these floors over our respectful heads, the
Company; people I rarely saw, but whose tricks and manners were
imitated and discussed by their maids and valets in the housekeeper’s
room and the steward’s room—so that I had them through a medium
at second hand. I gathered that none of the company were really Lady
Drew’s equals, they were greater and lesser after the manner of all
things in our world. Once I remember there was a Prince, with a real
live gentleman in attendance, and that was a little above our
customary levels and excited us all, and perhaps raised our
expectations unduly. Afterwards, Rabbits, the butler, came into my
mother’s room downstairs, red with indignation and with tears in
his eyes. “Look at that!” gasped Rabbits. My mother was
speechless with horror. That was a sovereign, a mere sovereign, such
as you might get from any commoner!After
Company, I remember, came anxious days, for the poor old women
upstairs were left tired and cross and vindictive, and in a state of
physical and emotional indigestion after their social efforts....On
the lowest fringe of these real Olympians hung the vicarage people,
and next to them came those ambiguous beings who are neither quality
nor subjects. The vicarage people certainly hold a place by
themselves in the typical English scheme; nothing is more remarkable
than the progress the Church has made—socially—in the last two
hundred years. In the early eighteenth century the vicar was rather
under than over the house-steward, and was deemed a fitting match for
the housekeeper or any not too morally discredited discard. The
eighteenth century literature is full of his complaints that he might
not remain at table to share the pie. He rose above these indignities
because of the abundance of younger sons. When I meet the large
assumptions of the contemporary cleric, I am apt to think of these
things. It is curious to note that to-day that down-trodden,
organ-playing creature, the Church of England village Schoolmaster,
holds much the same position as the seventeenth century parson. The
doctor in Bladesover ranked below the vicar but above the “vet,”
artists and summer visitors squeezed in above or below this point
according to their appearance and expenditure, and then in a
carefully arranged scale came the tenantry, the butler and
housekeeper, the village shopkeeper, the head keeper, the cook, the
publican, the second keeper, the blacksmith (whose status was
complicated by his daughter keeping the post-office—and a fine hash
she used to make of telegrams too!) the village shopkeeper’s eldest
son, the first footman, younger sons of the village shopkeeper, his
first assistant, and so forth.All
these conceptions and applications of a universal precedence and much
else I drank in at Bladesover, as I listened to the talk of valets,
ladies’-maids, Rabbits the butler and my mother in the
much-cupboarded, white-painted, chintz-brightened housekeeper’s
room where the upper servants assembled, or of footmen and Rabbits
and estate men of all sorts among the green baize and Windsor chairs
of the pantry—where Rabbits, being above the law, sold beer without
a license or any compunction—or of housemaids and still-room maids
in the bleak, matting-carpeted still-room or of the cook and her
kitchen maids and casual friends among the bright copper and hot glow
of the kitchens.Of
course their own ranks and places came by implication to these
people, and it was with the ranks and places of the Olympians that
the talk mainly concerned itself. There was an old peerage and a
Crockford together with the books of recipes, the Whitaker’s
Almanack, the Old Moore’s Almanack, and the eighteenth century
dictionary, on the little dresser that broke the cupboards on one
side of my mother’s room; there was another peerage, with the
covers off, in the pantry; there was a new peerage in the
billiard-room, and I seem to remember another in the anomalous
apartment that held the upper servants’ bagatelle board and in
which, after the Hall dinner, they partook of the luxury of sweets.
And if you had asked any of those upper servants how such and such a
Prince of Battenberg was related to, let us say, Mr. Cunninghame
Graham or the Duke of Argyle, you would have been told upon the nail.
As a boy, I heard a great deal of that sort of thing, and if to this
day I am still a little vague about courtesy titles and the exact
application of honorifics, it is, I can assure you, because I
hardened my heart, and not from any lack of adequate opportunity of
mastering these succulent particulars.Dominating
all these memories is the figure of my mother—my mother who did not
love me because I grew liker my father every day—and who knew with
inflexible decision her place and the place of every one in the
world—except the place that concealed my father—and in some
details mine. Subtle points were put to her. I can see and hear her
saying now, “No, Miss Fison, peers of England go in before peers of
the United Kingdom, and he is merely a peer of the United Kingdom.”
She had much exercise in placing people’s servants about her
tea-table, where the etiquette was very strict. I wonder sometimes if
the etiquette of housekeepers’ rooms is as strict to-day, and what
my mother would have made of a chauffeur....On
the whole I am glad that I saw so much as I did of Bladesover—if
for no other reason than because seeing it when I did, quite naively,
believing in it thoroughly, and then coming to analyse it, has
enabled me to understand much that would be absolutely
incomprehensible in the structure of English society. Bladesover is,
I am convinced, the clue to almost all that is distinctively British
and perplexing to the foreign inquirer in England and the
English-speaking peoples. Grasp firmly that England was all
Bladesover two hundred years ago; that it has had Reform Acts indeed,
and such—like changes of formula, but no essential revolution since
then; that all that is modern and different has come in as a thing
intruded or as a gloss upon this predominant formula, either
impertinently or apologetically; and you will perceive at once the
reasonableness, the necessity, of that snobbishness which is the
distinctive quality of English thought. Everybody who is not actually
in the shadow of a Bladesover is as it were perpetually seeking after
lost orientations. We have never broken with our tradition, never
even symbolically hewed it to pieces, as the French did in quivering
fact in the Terror. But all the organizing ideas have slackened, the
old habitual bonds have relaxed or altogether come undone. And
America too, is, as it were, a detached, outlying part of that estate
which has expanded in queer ways. George Washington, Esquire, was of
the gentlefolk, and he came near being a King. It was Plutarch, you
know, and nothing intrinsically American that prevented George
Washington being a King....IVI
hated teatime in the housekeeper’s room more than anything else at
Bladesover. And more particularly I hated it when Mrs. Mackridge and
Mrs. Booch and Mrs. Latude-Fernay were staying in the house. They
were, all three of them, pensioned-off servants.Old
friends of Lady Drew’s had rewarded them posthumously for a
prolonged devotion to their minor comforts, and Mrs. Booch was also
trustee for a favourite Skye terrier. Every year Lady Drew gave them
an invitation—a reward and encouragement of virtue with especial
reference to my mother and Miss Fison, the maid. They sat about in
black and shiny and flouncey clothing adorned with gimp and beads,
eating great quantities of cake, drinking much tea in a stately
manner and reverberating remarks.I
remember these women as immense. No doubt they were of negotiable
size, but I was only a very little chap and they have assumed
nightmare proportions in my mind. They loomed, they bulged, they
impended. Mrs. Mackridge was large and dark; there was a marvel about
her head, inasmuch as she was bald. She wore a dignified cap, and in
front of that upon her brow, hair was PAINTED. I have never seen the
like since. She had been maid to the widow of Sir Roderick
Blenderhasset Impey, some sort of governor or such-like portent in
the East Indies, and from her remains—in Mrs. Mackridge—I judge
Lady Impey was a very stupendous and crushing creature indeed. Lady
Impey had been of the Juno type, haughty, unapproachable, given to
irony and a caustic wit. Mrs. Mackridge had no wit, but she had
acquired the caustic voice and gestures along with the old satins and
trimmings of the great lady. When she told you it was a fine morning,
she seemed also to be telling you you were a fool and a low fool to
boot; when she was spoken to, she had a way of acknowledging your
poor tinkle of utterance with a voluminous, scornful “Haw!” that
made you want to burn her alive. She also had a way of saying
“Indade!” with a droop of the eyelids.Mrs.
Booch was a smaller woman, brown haired, with queer little curls on
either side of her face, large blue eyes and a small set of
stereotyped remarks that constituted her entire mental range. Mrs.
Latude-Fernay has left, oddly enough, no memory at all except her
name and the effect of a green-grey silk dress, all set with gold and
blue buttons. I fancy she was a large blonde. Then there was Miss
Fison, the maid who served both Lady Drew and Miss Somerville, and at
the end of the table opposite my mother, sat Rabbits the butler.
Rabbits, for a butler, was an unassuming man, and at tea he was not
as you know butlers, but in a morning coat and a black tie with blue
spots. Still, he was large, with side whiskers, even if his
clean-shaven mouth was weak and little. I sat among these people on a
high, hard, early Gregorian chair, trying to exist, like a feeble
seedling amidst great rocks, and my mother sat with an eye upon me,
resolute to suppress the slightest manifestation of vitality. It was
hard on me, but perhaps it was also hard upon these rather over-fed,
ageing, pretending people, that my youthful restlessness and
rebellious unbelieving eyes should be thrust in among their
dignities.Tea
lasted for nearly three-quarters of an hour, and I sat it out
perforce; and day after day the talk was exactly the same.
“Sugar,
Mrs. Mackridge?” my mother used to ask.
“Sugar,
Mrs. Latude-Fernay?”The
word sugar would stir the mind of Mrs. Mackridge. “They say,” she
would begin, issuing her proclamation—at least half her sentences
began “they say”—“sugar is fatt-an-ing, nowadays. Many of the
best people do not take it at all.”
“Not
with their tea, ma’am,” said Rabbits intelligently.
“Not
with anything,” said Mrs. Mackridge, with an air of crushing
repartee, and drank.
“What
won’t they say next?” said Miss Fison.
“They
do say such things!” said Mrs. Booch.
“They
say,” said Mrs. Mackridge, inflexibly, “the doctors are not
recomm-an-ding it now.”My
Mother: “No, ma’am?”Mrs.
Mackridge: “No, ma’am.”Then,
to the table at large: “Poor Sir Roderick, before he died, consumed
great quan-ta-ties of sugar. I have sometimes fancied it may have
hastened his end.”This
ended the first skirmish. A certain gloom of manner and a pause was
considered due to the sacred memory of Sir Roderick.
“George,”
said my mother, “don’t kick the chair!”Then,
perhaps, Mrs. Booch would produce a favourite piece from her
repertoire. “The evenings are drawing out nicely,” she would say,
or if the season was decadent, “How the evenings draw in!” It was
an invaluable remark to her; I do not know how she would have got
along without it.My
mother, who sat with her back to the window, would always consider it
due to Mrs. Booch to turn about and regard the evening in the act of
elongation or contraction, whichever phase it might be.A
brisk discussion of how long we were to the longest or shortest day
would ensue, and die away at last exhausted.Mrs.
Mackridge, perhaps, would reopen. She had many intelligent habits;
among others she read the paper—The Morning Post. The other ladies
would at times tackle that sheet, but only to read the births,
marriages, and deaths on the front page. It was, of course, the old
Morning Post that cost threepence, not the brisk coruscating young
thing of to-day. “They say,” she would open, “that Lord
Tweedums is to go to Canada.”
“Ah!”
said Mr. Rabbits; “dew they?”
“Isn’t
he,” said my mother, “the Earl of Slumgold’s cousin?” She
knew he was; it was an entirely irrelevant and unnecessary remark,
but still, something to say.
“The
same, ma’am,” said Mrs. Mackridge. “They say he was extremelay
popular in New South Wales. They looked up to him greatlay. I knew
him, ma’am, as a young man. A very nice pleasant young fella.”Interlude
of respect.
“‘Is
predecessor,” said Rabbits, who had acquired from some clerical
model a precise emphatic articulation without acquiring at the same
time the aspirates that would have graced it, “got into trouble at
Sydney.”
“Haw!”
said Mrs. Mackridge, scornfully, “so am tawled.”
“‘E
came to Templemorton after ‘e came back, and I remember them
talking ‘im over after ‘e’d gone again.”
“Haw?”
said Mrs. Mackridge, interrogatively.
“‘Is
fuss was quotin’ poetry, ma’am. ‘E said—what was it ‘e
said—‘They lef’ their country for their country’s
good,’—which in some way was took to remind them of their being
originally convic’s, though now reformed. Every one I ‘eard
speak, agreed it was takless of ‘im.”
“Sir
Roderick used to say,” said Mrs. Mackridge, “that the First
Thing,”—here Mrs. Mackridge paused and looked dreadfully at
me—“and the Second Thing”—here she fixed me again—“and
the Third Thing”—now I was released—“needed in a colonial
governor is Tact.” She became aware of my doubts again, and added
predominantly, “It has always struck me that that was a Singularly
True Remark.”I
resolved that if ever I found this polypus of Tact growing up in my
soul, I would tear it out by the roots, throw it forth and stamp on
it.
“They’re
queer people—colonials,” said Rabbits, “very queer. When I was
at Templemorton I see something of ‘em. Queer fellows, some of ‘em.
Very respectful of course, free with their money in a spasammy sort
of way, but—Some of ‘em, I must confess, make me nervous. They
have an eye on you. They watch you—as you wait. They let themselves
appear to be lookin’ at you...”My
mother said nothing in that discussion. The word colonies always
upset her. She was afraid, I think, that if she turned her mind in
that direction my errant father might suddenly and shockingly be
discovered, no doubt conspicuously bigamic and altogether offensive
and revolutionary. She did not want to rediscover my father at all.It
is curious that when I was a little listening boy I had such an idea
of our colonies that I jeered in my heart at Mrs. Mackridge’s
colonial ascendancy. These brave emancipated sunburnt English of the
open, I thought, suffer these aristocratic invaders as a quaint
anachronism, but as for being gratified—!I
don’t jeer now. I’m not so sure.VIt
is a little difficult to explain why I did not come to do what was
the natural thing for any one in my circumstances to do, and take my
world for granted. A certain innate scepticism, I think, explains it
and a certain inaptitude for sympathetic assimilation. My father, I
believe, was a sceptic; my mother was certainly a hard woman.I
was an only child, and to this day I do not know whether my father is
living or dead. He fled my mother’s virtues before my distincter
memories began. He left no traces in his flight, and she, in her
indignation, destroyed every vestige that she could of him. Never a
photograph nor a scrap of his handwriting have I seen; and it was, I
know, only the accepted code of virtue and discretion that prevented
her destroying her marriage certificate and me, and so making a clean
sweep of her matrimonial humiliation. I suppose I must inherit
something of the moral stupidity that would enable her to make a
holocaust of every little personal thing she had of him. There must
have been presents made by him as a lover, for example—books with
kindly inscriptions, letters perhaps, a flattened flower, a ring, or
such-like gage. She kept her wedding-ring, of course, but all the
others she destroyed. She never told me his christian name or indeed
spoke a word to me of him; though at times I came near daring to ask
her: add what I have of him—it isn’t much—I got from his
brother, my hero, my uncle Ponderevo. She wore her ring; her marriage
certificate she kept in a sealed envelope in the very bottom of her
largest trunk, and me she sustained at a private school among the
Kentish hills. You must not think I was always at Bladesover—even
in my holidays. If at the time these came round, Lady Drew was vexed
by recent Company, or for any other reason wished to take it out of
my mother, then she used to ignore the customary reminder my mother
gave her, and I “stayed on” at the school.But
such occasions were rare, and I suppose that between ten and fourteen
I averaged fifty days a year at Bladesover.Don’t
imagine I deny that was a fine thing for me. Bladesover, in absorbing
the whole countryside, had not altogether missed greatness. The
Bladesover system has at least done one good thing for England, it
has abolished the peasant habit of mind. If many of us still live and
breathe pantry and housekeeper’s room, we are quit of the dream of
living by economising parasitically on hens and pigs.... About that
park there were some elements of a liberal education; there was a
great space of greensward not given over to manure and food grubbing;
there was mystery, there was matter for the imagination. It was still
a park of deer. I saw something of the life of these dappled
creatures, heard the belling of stags, came upon young fawns among
the bracken, found bones, skulls, and antlers in lonely places. There
were corners that gave a gleam of meaning to the word forest,
glimpses of unstudied natural splendour. There was a slope of
bluebells in the broken sunlight under the newly green beeches in the
west wood that is now precious sapphire in my memory; it was the
first time that I knowingly met Beauty.And
in the house there were books. The rubbish old Lady Drew read I never
saw; stuff of the Maria Monk type, I have since gathered, had a
fascination for her; but back in the past there had been a Drew of
intellectual enterprise, Sir Cuthbert, the son of Sir Matthew who
built the house; and thrust away, neglected and despised, in an old
room upstairs, were books and treasures of his that my mother let me
rout among during a spell of wintry wet. Sitting under a dormer
window on a shelf above great stores of tea and spices, I became
familiar with much of Hogarth in a big portfolio, with Raphael, there
was a great book of engravings from the stanzas of Raphael in the
Vatican—and with most of the capitals of Europe as they had looked
about 1780, by means of several pig iron-moulded books of views.
There was also a broad eighteenth century atlas with huge wandering
maps that instructed me mightily. It had splendid adornments about
each map title; Holland showed a fisherman and his boat; Russia a
Cossack; Japan, remarkable people attired in pagodas—I say it
deliberately, “pagodas.” There were Terrae Incognitae in every
continent then, Poland, Sarmatia, lands since lost; and many a voyage
I made with a blunted pin about that large, incorrect and dignified
world. The books in that little old closet had been banished, I
suppose, from the saloon during the Victorian revival of good taste
and emasculated orthodoxy, but my mother had no suspicion of their
character. So I read and understood the good sound rhetoric of Tom
Paine’s “Rights of Man,” and his “Common Sense,” excellent
books, once praised by bishops and since sedulously lied about.
Gulliver was there unexpurgated, strong meat for a boy perhaps but
not too strong I hold—I have never regretted that I escaped
niceness in these affairs. The satire of Traldragdubh made my blood
boil as it was meant to do, but I hated Swift for the Houyhnhnms and
never quite liked a horse afterwards. Then I remember also a
translation of Voltaire’s “Candide,” and “Rasselas;” and,
vast book though it was, I really believe I read, in a muzzy sort of
way of course, from end to end, and even with some reference now and
then to the Atlas, Gibbon—in twelve volumes.These
readings whetted my taste for more, and surreptitiously I raided the
bookcases in the big saloon. I got through quite a number of books
before my sacrilegious temerity was discovered by Ann, the old
head-housemaid. I remember that among others I tried a translation of
Plato’s “Republic” then, and found extraordinarily little
interest in it; I was much too young for that; but “Vathek”—“Vathek”
was glorious stuff. That kicking affair! When everybody HAD to kick!The
thought of “Vathek” always brings back with it my boyish memory
of the big saloon at Bladesover.It
was a huge long room with many windows opening upon the park, and
each window—there were a dozen or more reaching from the floor
up—had its elaborate silk or satin curtains, heavily fringed, a
canopy (is it?) above, its completely white shutters folding into the
deep thickness of the wall. At either end of that great still place
was an immense marble chimney-piece; the end by the bookcase showed
the wolf and Romulus and Remus, with Homer and Virgil for supporters;
the design of the other end I have forgotten. Frederick, Prince of
Wales, swaggered flatly over the one, twice life-size, but mellowed
by the surface gleam of oil; and over the other was an equally
colossal group of departed Drews as sylvan deities, scantily clad,
against a storm-rent sky. Down the centre of the elaborate ceiling
were three chandeliers, each bearing some hundreds of dangling glass
lustres, and over the interminable carpet—it impressed me as about
as big as Sarmatia in the store-room Atlas—were islands and
archipelagoes of chintz-covered chairs and couches, tables, great
Sevres vases on pedestals, a bronze man and horse. Somewhere in this
wilderness one came, I remember, upon—a big harp beside a
lyre-shaped music stand, and a grand piano....The
book-borrowing raid was one of extraordinary dash and danger.One
came down the main service stairs—that was legal, and illegality
began in a little landing when, very cautiously, one went through a
red baize door. A little passage led to the hall, and here one
reconnoitered for Ann, the old head-housemaid—the younger
housemaids were friendly and did not count. Ann located, came a dash
across the open space at the foot of that great staircase that has
never been properly descended since powder went out of fashion, and
so to the saloon door. A beast of an oscillating Chinaman in china,
as large as life, grimaced and quivered to one’s lightest steps.
That door was the perilous place; it was double with the thickness of
the wall between, so that one could not listen beforehand for the
whisk of the feather-brush on the other side. Oddly rat-like, is it
not, this darting into enormous places in pursuit of the abandoned
crumbs of thought?And
I found Langhorne’s “Plutarch” too, I remember, on those
shelves. It seems queer to me now to think that I acquired pride and
self-respect, the idea of a state and the germ of public spirit, in
such a furtive fashion; queer, too, that it should rest with an old
Greek, dead these eighteen hundred years to teach that.VIThe
school I went to was the sort of school the Bladesover system
permitted. The public schools that add comic into existence in the
brief glow of the Renascence had been taken possession of by the
ruling class; the lower classes were not supposed to stand in need of
schools, and our middle stratum got the schools it deserved, private
schools, schools any unqualified pretender was free to establish.
Mine was kept by a man who had had the energy to get himself a
College of Preceptors diploma, and considering how cheap his charges
were, I will readily admit the place might have been worse. The
building was a dingy yellow-brick residence outside the village, with
the schoolroom as an outbuilding of lath and plaster.I
do not remember that my school-days were unhappy—indeed I recall a
good lot of fine mixed fun in them—but I cannot without grave risk
of misinterpretation declare that we were at all nice and refined. We
fought much, not sound formal fighting, but “scrapping” of a
sincere and murderous kind, into which one might bring one’s
boots—it made us tough at any rate—and several of us were the
sons of London publicans, who distinguished “scraps” where one
meant to hurt from ordered pugilism, practising both arts, and
having, moreover, precocious linguistic gifts. Our cricket-field was
bald about the wickets, and we played without style and disputed with
the umpire; and the teaching was chiefly in the hands of a lout of
nineteen, who wore ready-made clothes and taught despicably. The
head-master and proprietor taught us arithmetic, algebra, and Euclid,
and to the older boys even trigonometry, himself; he had a strong
mathematical bias, and I think now that by the standard of a British
public school he did rather well by us.We
had one inestimable privilege at that school, and that was spiritual
neglect. We dealt with one another with the forcible simplicity of
natural boys, we “cheeked,” and “punched” and “clouted”;
we thought ourselves Red Indians and cowboys and such-like honourable
things, and not young English gentlemen; we never felt the strain of
“Onward Christian soldiers,” nor were swayed by any premature
piety in the cold oak pew of our Sunday devotions. All that was good.
We spent our rare pennies in the uncensored reading matter of the
village dame’s shop, on the Boys of England, and honest penny
dreadfuls—ripping stuff, stuff that anticipated Haggard and
Stevenson, badly printed and queerly illustrated, and very very good
for us. On our half-holidays we were allowed the unusual freedom of
rambling in twos and threes wide and far about the land, talking
experimentally, dreaming wildly. There was much in those walks! To
this day the landscape of the Kentish world, with its low broad
distances, its hop gardens and golden stretches of wheat, its oasts
and square church towers, its background of downland and hangers, has
for me a faint sense of adventure added to the pleasure of its
beauty. We smoked on occasion, but nobody put us up to the proper
“boyish” things to do; we never “robbed an orchard” for
example, though there were orchards all about us, we thought stealing
was sinful, we stole incidental apples and turnips and strawberries
from the fields indeed, but in a criminal inglorious fashion, and
afterwards we were ashamed. We had our days of adventure, but they
were natural accidents, our own adventures. There was one hot day
when several of us, walking out towards Maidstone, were incited by
the devil to despise ginger beer, and we fuddled ourselves dreadfully
with ale; and a time when our young minds were infected to the pitch
of buying pistols, by the legend of the Wild West. Young Roots from
Highbury came back with a revolver and cartridges, and we went off
six strong to live a free wild life one holiday afternoon. We fired
our first shot deep in the old flint mine at Chiselstead, and nearly
burst our ear drums; then we fired in a primrose studded wood by
Pickthorn Green, and I gave a false alarm of “keeper,” and we
fled in disorder for a mile. After which Roots suddenly shot at a
pheasant in the high road by Chiselstead, and then young Barker told
lies about the severity of the game laws and made Roots sore afraid,
and we hid the pistol in a dry ditch outside the school field. A day
or so after we got in again, and ignoring a certain fouling and
rusting of the barrel, tried for a rabbit at three hundred yards.
Young Roots blew a molehill at twenty paces into a dust cloud, burnt
his fingers, and scorched his face; and the weapon having once
displayed this strange disposition to flame back upon the shooter,
was not subsequently fired.One
main source of excitement for us was “cheeking” people in vans
and carts upon the Goudhurst road; and getting myself into a
monstrous white mess in the chalk pits beyond the village, and
catching yellow jaundice as a sequel to bathing stark naked with
three other Adamites, old Ewart leading that function, in the rivulet
across Hickson’s meadows, are among my memorabilia. Those free
imaginative afternoons! how much they were for us! how much they did
for us! All streams came from the then undiscovered “sources of the
Nile” in those days, all thickets were Indian jungles, and our best
game, I say it with pride, I invented. I got it out of the Bladesover
saloon. We found a wood where “Trespassing” was forbidden, and
did the “Retreat of the Ten Thousand” through it from end to end,
cutting our way bravely through a host of nettle beds that barred our
path, and not forgetting to weep and kneel when at last we emerged
within sight of the High Road Sea. So we have burst at times, weeping
and rejoicing, upon startled wayfarers. Usually I took the part of
that distinguished general Xenophen—and please note the quantity of
the o. I have all my classical names like that,—Socrates rhymes
with Bates for me, and except when the bleak eye of some scholar
warns me of his standards of judgment, I use those dear old
mispronunciations still. The little splash into Latin made during my
days as a chemist washed off nothing of the habit. Well,—if I met
those great gentlemen of the past with their accents carelessly
adjusted I did at least meet them alive, as an equal, and in a living
tongue. Altogether my school might easily have been worse for me, and
among other good things it gave me a friend who has lasted my life
out.This
was Ewart, who is now a monumental artist at Woking, after many
vicissitudes. Dear chap, how he did stick out of his clothes to be
sure! He was a longlimbed lout, ridiculously tall beside my more
youth full compactness, and, except that there was no black moustache
under his nose blob, he had the same round knobby face as he has
to-day, the same bright and active hazel brown eyes, the stare, the
meditative moment, the insinuating reply. Surely no boy ever played
the fool as Bob Ewart used to play it, no boy had a readier knack of
mantling the world with wonder. Commonness vanished before Ewart, at
his expository touch all things became memorable and rare. From him I
first heard tell of love, but only after its barbs were already
sticking in my heart. He was, I know now the bastard of that great
improvident artist, Rickmann Ewart; he brought the light of a lax
world that at least had not turned its back upon beauty, into the
growing fermentation of my mind.I
won his heart by a version of Vathek, and after that we were
inseparable yarning friends. We merged our intellectual stock so
completely that I wonder sometimes how much I did not become Ewart,
how much Ewart is not vicariously and derivatively me.VIIAnd
then when I had newly passed my fourteenth birthday, came my tragic
disgrace.It
was in my midsummer holidays that the thing happened, and it was
through the Honourable Beatrice Normandy. She had “come into my
life,” as they say, before I was twelve.She
descended unexpectedly into a peaceful interlude that followed the
annual going of those Three Great Women. She came into the old
nursery upstairs, and every day she had tea with us in the
housekeeper’s room. She was eight, and she came with a nurse called
Nannie; and to begin with, I did not like her at all.Nobody
liked this irruption into the downstairs rooms; the two “gave
trouble,”—a dire offence; Nannie’s sense of duty to her charge
led to requests and demands that took my mother’s breath away. Eggs
at unusual times, the reboiling of milk, the rejection of an
excellent milk pudding—not negotiated respectfully but dictated as
of right. Nannie was a dark, longfeatured, taciturn woman in a grey
dress; she had a furtive inflexibility of manner that finally
dismayed and crushed and overcame. She conveyed she was “under
orders”—like a Greek tragedy. She was that strange product of the
old time, a devoted, trusted servant; she had, as it were, banked all
her pride and will with the greater, more powerful people who
employed her, in return for a life-long security of servitude—the
bargain was nonetheless binding for being implicit. Finally they were
to pension her, and she would die the hated treasure of a
boarding-house. She had built up in herself an enormous habit of
reference to these upstairs people, she had curbed down all
discordant murmurings of her soul, her very instincts were perverted
or surrendered. She was sexless, her personal pride was all
transferred, she mothered another woman’s child with a hard,
joyless devotion that was at least entirely compatible with a stoical
separation. She treated us all as things that counted for nothing
save to fetch and carry for her charge. But the Honourable Beatrice
could condescend.The
queer chances of later years come between me and a distinctly
separated memory of that childish face. When I think of Beatrice, I
think of her as I came to know her at a later time, when at last I
came to know her so well that indeed now I could draw her, and show a
hundred little delicate things you would miss in looking at her. But
even then I remember how I noted the infinite delicacy of her
childish skin and the fine eyebrow, finer than the finest feather
that ever one felt on the breast of a bird. She was one of those
elfin, rather precocious little girls, quick coloured, with dark
hair, naturally curling dusky hair that was sometimes astray over her
eyes, and eyes that were sometimes impishly dark, and sometimes a
clear brown yellow. And from the very outset, after a most cursory
attention to Rabbits, she decided that the only really interesting
thing at the tea-table was myself.The
elders talked in their formal dull way—telling Nannie the trite old
things about the park and the village that they told every one, and
Beatrice watched me across the table with a pitiless little curiosity
that made me uncomfortable.
“Nannie,”
she said, pointing, and Nannie left a question of my mother’s
disregarded to attend to her; “is he a servant boy?”
“S-s-sh,”
said Nannie. “He’s Master Ponderevo.”
“Is
he a servant boy?” repeated Beatrice.
“He’s
a schoolboy,” said my mother.
“Then
may I talk to him, Nannie?”Nannie
surveyed me with brutal inhumanity. “You mustn’t talk too much,”
she said to her charge, and cut cake into fingers for her.
“No,”
she added decisively, as Beatrice made to speak.Beatrice
became malignant. Her eyes explored me with unjustifiable hostility.
“He’s got dirty hands,” she said, stabbing at the forbidden
fruit. “And there’s a fray to his collar.”Then
she gave herself up to cake with an appearance of entire
forgetfulness of me that filled me with hate and a passionate desire
to compel her to admire me.... And the next day before tea, I did for
the first time in my life, freely, without command or any compulsion,
wash my hands.So
our acquaintance began, and presently was deepened by a whim of hers.
She had a cold and was kept indoors, and confronted Nannie suddenly
with the alternative of being hopelessly naughty, which in her case
involved a generous amount of screaming unsuitable for the ears of an
elderly, shaky, rich aunt, or having me up to the nursery to play
with her all the afternoon. Nannie came downstairs and borrowed me in
a careworn manner; and I was handed over to the little creature as if
I was some large variety of kitten. I had never had anything to do
with a little girl before, I thought she was more beautiful and
wonderful and bright than anything else could possibly be in life,
and she found me the gentlest of slaves—though at the same time, as
I made evident, fairly strong. And Nannie was amazed to find the
afternoon slip cheerfully and rapidly away. She praised my manners to
Lady Drew and to my mother, who said she was glad to hear well of me,
and after that I played with Beatrice several times. The toys she had
remain in my memory still as great splendid things, gigantic to all
my previous experience of toys, and we even went to the great doll’s
house on the nursery landing to play discreetly with that, the great
doll’s house that the Prince Regent had given Sir Harry Drew’s
first-born (who died at five), that was a not ineffectual model of
Bladesover itself, and contained eighty-five dolls and had cost
hundreds of pounds. I played under imperious direction with that toy
of glory.I
went back to school when that holiday was over, dreaming of beautiful
things, and got Ewart to talk to me of love; and I made a great story
out of the doll’s house, a story that, taken over into Ewart’s
hands, speedily grew to an island doll’s city all our own.One
of the dolls, I privately decided, was like Beatrice.One
other holiday there was when I saw something of her—oddly enough my
memory of that second holiday in which she played a part is vague—and
then came a gap of a year, and then my disgrace.VIIINow
I sit down to write my story and tell over again things in their
order, I find for the first time how inconsecutive and irrational a
thing the memory can be. One recalls acts and cannot recall motives;
one recalls quite vividly moments that stand out inexplicably—things
adrift, joining on to nothing, leading nowhere. I think I must have
seen Beatrice and her half-brother quite a number of times in my last
holiday at Bladesover, but I really cannot recall more than a little
of the quality of the circumstances. That great crisis of my boyhood
stands out very vividly as an effect, as a sort of cardinal thing for
me, but when I look for details, particularly details that led up to
the crisis—I cannot find them in any developing order at all. This
halfbrother, Archie Garvell, was a new factor in the affair. I
remember him clearly as a fair-haired, supercilious looking,
weedily-lank boy, much taller than I, but I should imagine very
little heavier, and that we hated each other by a sort of instinct
from the beginning; and yet I cannot remember my first meeting with
him at all.Looking
back into these past things—it is like rummaging in a neglected
attic that has experienced the attentions of some whimsical robber—I
cannot even account for the presence of these children at Bladesover.
They were, I know, among the innumerable cousins of Lady Drew, and
according to the theories of downstairs candidates for the ultimate
possession of Bladesover. If they were, their candidature was
unsuccessful. But that great place, with all its faded splendour, its
fine furniture, its large traditions, was entirely at the old lady’s
disposition; and I am inclined to think it is true that she used this
fact to torment and dominate a number of eligible people. Lord Osprey
was among the number of these, and she showed these hospitalities to
his motherless child and step-child, partly, no doubt, because he was
poor, but quite as much, I nowadays imagine, in the dim hope of
finding some affectionate or imaginative outcome of contact with
them. Nannie had dropped out of the world this second time, and
Beatrice was in the charge of an extremely amiable and ineffectual
poor army-class young woman whose name I never knew. They were, I
think, two remarkably illmanaged and enterprising children. I seem to
remember too, that it was understood that I was not a fit companion
for them, and that our meetings had to be as unostentatious as
possible. It was Beatrice who insisted upon our meeting.I
am certain I knew quite a lot about love at fourteen and that I was
quite as much in love with Beatrice then as any impassioned adult
could be, and that Beatrice was, in her way, in love with me. It is
part of the decent and useful pretences of our world that children of
the age at which we were, think nothing, feel nothing, know nothing
of love. It is wonderful what people the English are for keeping up
pretences. But indeed I cannot avoid telling that Beatrice and I
talked of love and kissed and embraced one another.I
recall something of one talk under the overhanging bushes of the
shrubbery—I on the park side of the stone wall, and the lady of my
worship a little inelegantly astride thereon. Inelegantly do I say?
you should have seen the sweet imp as I remember her. Just her poise
on the wall comes suddenly clear before me, and behind her the light
various branches of the bushes of the shrubbery that my feet might
not profane, and far away and high behind her, dim and stately, the
cornice of the great facade of Bladesover rose against the dappled
sky. Our talk must have been serious and business-like, for we were
discussing my social position.
“I
don’t love Archie,” she had said, apropos of nothing; and then in
a whisper, leaning forward with the hair about her face, “I love
YOU!”But
she had been a little pressing to have it clear that I was not and
could not be a servant.
“You’ll
never be a servant—ever!”I
swore that very readily, and it is a vow I have kept by nature.
“What
will you be?” said she.I
ran my mind hastily over the professions.
“Will
you be a soldier?” she asked.
“And
be bawled at by duffers? No fear!” said I. “Leave that to the
plough-boys.”
“But
an officer?”
“I
don’t know,” I said, evading a shameful difficulty.
“I’d
rather go into the navy.”
“Wouldn’t
you like to fight?”
“I’d
like to fight,” I said. “But a common soldier it’s no honour to
have to be told to fight and to be looked down upon while you do it,
and how could I be an officer?”
“Couldn’t
you be?” she said, and looked at me doubtfully; and the spaces of
the social system opened between us.Then,
as became a male of spirit, I took upon myself to brag and lie my way
through this trouble. I said I was a poor man, and poor men went into
the navy; that I “knew” mathematics, which no army officer did;
and I claimed Nelson for an exemplar, and spoke very highly of my
outlook upon blue water. “He loved Lady Hamilton,” I said,
“although she was a lady—and I will love you.”We
were somewhere near that when the egregious governess became audible,
calling “Beeee-atrice! Beeee-e-atrice!”
“Snifty
beast!” said my lady, and tried to get on with the conversation;
but that governess made things impossible.
“Come
here!” said my lady suddenly, holding out a grubby hand; and I went
very close to her, and she put her little head down upon the wall
until her black fog of hair tickled my cheek.
“You
are my humble, faithful lover,” she demanded in a whisper, her warm
flushed face near touching mine, and her eyes very dark and lustrous.
“I
am your humble, faithful lover,” I whispered back.And
she put her arm about my head and put out her lips and we kissed, and
boy though I was, I was all atremble. So we two kissed for the first
time.
“Beeee-e-e-a-trice!”
fearfully close.My
lady had vanished, with one wild kick of her black-stocking leg. A
moment after, I heard her sustaining the reproaches of her governess,
and explaining her failure to answer with an admirable lucidity and
disingenuousness.I
felt it was unnecessary for me to be seen just then, and I vanished
guiltily round the corner into the West Wood, and so to love-dreams
and single-handed play, wandering along one of those meandering
bracken valleys that varied Bladesover park. And that day and for
many days that kiss upon my lips was a seal, and by night the seed of
dreams.Then
I remember an expedition we made—she, I, and her half-brother—into
those West Woods—they two were supposed to be playing in the
shrubbery—and how we were Indians there, and made a wigwam out of a
pile of beech logs, and how we stalked deer, crept near and watched
rabbits feeding in a glade, and almost got a squirrel. It was play
seasoned with plentiful disputing between me and young Garvell, for
each firmly insisted upon the leading roles, and only my wider
reading—I had read ten stories to his one—gave me the ascendency
over him. Also I scored over him by knowing how to find the eagle in
a bracken stem. And somehow—I don’t remember what led to it at
all—I and Beatrice, two hot and ruffled creatures, crept in among
the tall bracken and hid from him. The great fronds rose above us,
five feet or more, and as I had learnt how to wriggle through that
undergrowth with the minimum of betrayal by tossing greenery above, I
led the way. The ground under bracken is beautifully clear and
faintly scented in warm weather; the stems come up black and then
green; if you crawl flat, it is a tropical forest in miniature. I led
the way and Beatrice crawled behind, and then as the green of the
further glade opened before us, stopped. She crawled up to me, her
hot little face came close to mine; once more she looked and breathed
close to me, and suddenly she flung her arm about my neck and dragged
me to earth beside her, and kissed me and kissed me again. We kissed,
we embraced and kissed again, all without a word; we desisted, we
stared and hesitated—then in a suddenly damped mood and a little
perplexed at ourselves, crawled out, to be presently run down and
caught in the tamest way by Archie.