Margaret glanced at her sister’s
note and pushed it over the breakfast-table to her
aunt. There was a moment’s hush, and then
the flood-gates opened.
“I can tell you nothing, Aunt
Juley. I know no more than you do. We met—we
only met the father and mother abroad last spring.
I know so little that I didn’t even know their
son’s name. It’s all so—”
She waved her hand and laughed a little.
“In that case it is far too sudden.”
“Who knows, Aunt Juley, who knows?”
“But, Margaret, dear, I mean,
we mustn’t be unpractical now that we’ve
come to facts. It is too sudden, surely.”
“Who knows!”
“But, Margaret, dear—”
“I’ll go for her other
letters,” said Margaret. “No, I won’t,
I’ll finish my breakfast. In fact, I haven’t
them. We met the Wilcoxes on an awful expedition
that we made from Heidelberg to Speyer. Helen
and I had got it into our heads that there was a grand
old cathedral at Speyer—the Archbishop of
Speyer was one of the seven electors—you
know—’Speyer, Maintz, and Koln.’
Those three sees once commanded the Rhine Valley and
got it the name of Priest Street.”
“I still feel quite uneasy about this business,
Margaret.”
“The train crossed by a bridge
of boats, and at first sight it looked quite fine.
But oh, in five minutes we had seen the whole thing.
The cathedral had been ruined, absolutely ruined, by
restoration; not an inch left of the original structure.
We wasted a whole day, and came across the Wilcoxes
as we were eating our sandwiches in the public gardens.
They too, poor things, had been taken in—they
were actually stopping at Speyer—and they
rather liked Helen’s insisting that they must
fly with us to Heidelberg. As a matter of fact,
they did come on next day. We all took some drives
together. They knew us well enough to ask Helen
to come and see them—at least, I was asked
too, but Tibby’s illness prevented me, so last
Monday she went alone. That’s all.
You know as much as I do now. It’s a young
man out of the unknown. She was to have come
back Saturday, but put off till Monday, perhaps on
account of—I don’t know.”
She broke off, and listened to the
sounds of a London morning. Their house was in
Wickham Place, and fairly quiet, for a lofty promontory
of buildings separated it from the main thoroughfare.
One had the sense of a backwater, or rather of an estuary,
whose waters flowed in from the invisible sea, and
ebbed into a profound silence while the waves without
were still beating. Though the promontory consisted
of flats—expensive, with cavernous entrance
halls, full of concierges and palms—it
fulfilled its purpose, and gained for the older houses
opposite a certain measure of peace.
These, too, would be swept away in
time, and another promontory would arise upon their
site, as humanity piled itself higher and higher on
the precious soil of London.
Mrs. Munt had her own method of interpreting
her nieces. She decided that Margaret was a little
hysterical, and was trying to gain time by a torrent
of talk. Feeling very diplomatic, she lamented
the fate of Speyer, and declared that never, never
should she be so misguided as to visit it, and added
of her own accord that the principles of restoration
were ill understood in Germany. “The Germans,”
she said, “are too thorough, and this is all
very well sometimes, but at other times it does not
do.”
“Exactly,” said Margaret;
“Germans are too thorough.” And her
eyes began to shine.
“Of course I regard you Schlegels
as English,” said Mrs. Munt hastily—“English
to the backbone.”
Margaret leaned forward and stroked her hand.
“And that reminds me—Helen’s
letter.”
“Oh yes, Aunt Juley, I am thinking
all right about Helen’s letter. I know—I
must go down and see her. I am thinking about
her all right. I am meaning to go down.”
“But go with some plan,”
said Mrs. Munt, admitting into her kindly voice a
note of exasperation. “Margaret, if I may
interfere, don’t be taken by surprise. What
do you think of the Wilcoxes? Are they our sort?
Are they likely people? Could they appreciate
Helen, who is to my mind a very special sort of person?
Do they care about Literature and Art? That is
most important when you come to think of it.
Literature and Art. Most important. How
old would the son be? She says ‘younger
son.’ Would he be in a position to marry?
Is he likely to make Helen happy? Did you gather—”
“I gathered nothing.”
They began to talk at once.
“Then in that case—”
“In that case I can make no plans, don’t
you see.”
“On the contrary—”
“I hate plans. I hate lines of action.
Helen isn’t a baby.”
“Then in that case, my dear, why go down?”
Margaret was silent. If her aunt
could not see why she must go down, she was not going
to tell her. She was not going to say, “I
love my dear sister; I must be near her at this crisis
of her life.” The affections are more reticent
than the passions, and their expression more subtle.
If she herself should ever fall in love with a man,
she, like Helen, would proclaim it from the housetops,
but as she loved only a sister she used the voiceless
language of sympathy.
“I consider you odd girls,”
continued Mrs. Munt, “and very wonderful girls,
and in many ways far older than your years. But—you
won’t be offended? frankly, I feel you are not
up to this business. It requires an older person.
Dear, I have nothing to call me back to Swanage.”
She spread out her plump arms. “I am all
at your disposal. Let me go down to this house
whose name I forget instead of you.”
“Aunt Juley”—she
jumped up and kissed her—“I must,
must go to Howards End myself. You don’t
exactly understand, though I can never thank you properly
for offering.”
“I do understand,” retorted
Mrs. Munt, with immense confidence. “I
go down in no spirit of interference, but to make inquiries.
Inquiries are necessary. Now, I am going to be
rude. You would say the wrong thing; to a certainty
you would. In your anxiety for Helen’s
happiness you would offend the whole of these Wilcoxes
by asking one of your impetuous questions—not
that one minds offending them.”
“I shall ask no questions.
I have it in Helen’s writing that she and a
man are in love. There is no question to ask as
long as she keeps to that. All the rest isn’t
worth a straw. A long engagement if you like,
but inquiries, questions, plans, lines of action—no,
Aunt Juley, no.”
Away she hurried, not beautiful, not
supremely brilliant, but filled with something that
took the place of both qualities— something
best described as a profound vivacity, a continual
and sincere response to all that she encountered in
her path through life.
“If Helen had written the same
to me about a shop assistant or a penniless clerk—”
“Dear Margaret, do come into
the library and shut the door. Your good maids
are dusting the banisters.”
“—or if she had wanted
to marry the man who calls for Carter Paterson, I
should have said the same.” Then, with one
of those turns that convinced her aunt that she was
not mad really, and convinced observers of another
type that she was not a barren theorist, she added:
“Though in the case of Carter Paterson I should
want it to be a very long engagement indeed, I must
say.”
“I should think so,” said
Mrs. Munt; “and, indeed, I can scarcely follow
you. Now, just imagine if you said anything of
that sort to the Wilcoxes. I understand it, but
most good people would think you mad. Imagine
how disconcerting for Helen! What is wanted is
a person who will go slowly, slowly in this business,
and see how things are and where they are likely to
lead to.”
Margaret was down on this.
“But you implied just now that
the engagement must be broken off.”
“I think probably it must; but slowly.”
“Can you break an engagement
off slowly?” Her eyes lit up. “What’s
an engagement made of, do you suppose? I think
it’s made of some hard stuff that may snap,
but can’t break. It is different to the
other ties of life. They stretch or bend.
They admit of degree. They’re different.”
“Exactly so. But won’t
you let me just run down to Howards House, and save
you all the discomfort? I will really not interfere,
but I do so thoroughly understand the kind of thing
you Schlegels want that one quiet look round will
be enough for me.”
Margaret again thanked her, again
kissed her, and then ran upstairs to see her brother.
He was not so well.
The hay fever had worried him a good
deal all night. His head ached, his eyes were
wet, his mucous membrane, he informed her, in a most
unsatisfactory condition. The only thing that
made life worth living was the thought of Walter Savage
Landor, from whose Imaginary Conversations she had
promised to read at frequent intervals during the
day.
It was rather difficult. Something
must be done about Helen. She must be assured
that it is not a criminal offence to love at first
sight. A telegram to this effect would be cold
and cryptic, a personal visit seemed each moment more
impossible. Now the doctor arrived, and said
that Tibby was quite bad. Might it really be
best to accept Aunt Juley’s kind offer, and to
send her down to Howards End with a note?
Certainly Margaret was impulsive.
She did swing rapidly from one decision to another.
Running downstairs into the library, she cried:
“Yes, I have changed my mind; I do wish that
you would go.”
There was a train from King’s
Cross at eleven. At half-past ten Tibby, with
rare self-effacement, fell asleep, and Margaret was
able to drive her aunt to the station.
“You will remember, Aunt Juley,
not to be drawn into discussing the engagement.
Give my letter to Helen, and say whatever you feel
yourself, but do keep clear of the relatives.
We have scarcely got their names straight yet, and,
besides, that sort of thing is so uncivilised and
wrong.”
“So uncivilised?” queried
Mrs. Munt, fearing that she was losing the point of
some brilliant remark.
“Oh, I used an affected word.
I only meant would you please talk the thing over
only with Helen.”
“Only with Helen.”
“Because—”
But it was no moment to expound the personal nature
of love. Even Margaret shrank from it, and contented
herself with stroking her good aunt’s hand,
and with meditating, half sensibly and half poetically,
on the journey that was about to begin from King’s
Cross.
Like many others who have lived long
in a great capital, she had strong feelings about
the various railway termini. They are our gates
to the glorious and the unknown. Through them
we pass out into adventure and sunshine, to them,
alas! we return. In Paddington all Cornwall is
latent and the remoter west; down the inclines of
Liverpool Street lie fenlands and the illimitable
Broads; Scotland is through the pylons of Euston; Wessex
behind the poised chaos of Waterloo. Italians
realise this, as is natural; those of them who are
so unfortunate as to serve as waiters in Berlin call
the Anhalt Bahnhof the Stazione d’Italia, because
by it they must return to their homes. And he
is a chilly Londoner who does not endow his stations
with some personality, and extend to them, however
shyly, the emotions of fear and love.
To Margaret—I hope that
it will not set the reader against her—
the station of King’s Cross had always suggested
Infinity. Its very situation—withdrawn
a little behind the facile splendours of St. Pancras—implied
a comment on the materialism of life. Those two
great arches, colourless, indifferent, shouldering
between them an unlovely clock, were fit portals for
some eternal adventure, whose issue might be prosperous,
but would certainly not be expressed in the ordinary
language of prosperity. If you think this ridiculous,
remember that it is not Margaret who is telling you
about it; and let me hasten to add that they were in
plenty of time for the train; that Mrs. Munt, though
she took a second-class ticket, was put by the guard
into a first (only two “seconds” on the
train, one smoking and the other babies—one
cannot be expected to travel with babies); and that
Margaret, on her return to Wickham Place, was confronted
with the following telegram:
“All over. Wish I had never
written. Tell no one—, Helen.”
But Aunt Juley was gone—gone
irrevocably, and no power on earth could stop her.