The funeral was over. The carriages
had rolled away through the soft mud, and only the
poor remained. They approached to the newly-dug
shaft and looked their last at the coffin, now almost
hidden beneath the spadefuls of clay. It was their
moment. Most of them were women from the dead
woman’s district, to whom black garments had
been served out by Mr. Wilcox’s orders.
Pure curiosity had brought others. They thrilled
with the excitement of a death, and of a rapid death,
and stood in groups or moved between the graves, like
drops of ink. The son of one of them, a wood-cutter,
was perched high above their heads, pollarding one
of the churchyard elms. From where he sat he could
see the village of Hilton, strung upon the North Road,
with its accreting suburbs; the sunset beyond, scarlet
and orange, winking at him beneath brows of grey;
the church; the plantations; and behind him an unspoilt
country of fields and farms. But he, too, was
rolling the event luxuriously in his mouth. He
tried to tell his mother down below all that he had
felt when he saw the coffin approaching: how
he could not leave his work, and yet did not like
to go on with it; how he had almost slipped out of
the tree, he was so upset; the rooks had cawed, and
no wonder—it was as if rooks knew too.
His mother claimed the prophetic power herself—
she had seen a strange look about Mrs. Wilcox for some
time. London had done the mischief, said others.
She had been a kind lady; her grandmother had been
kind, too—a plainer person, but very kind.
Ah, the old sort was dying out! Mr. Wilcox, he
was a kind gentleman. They advanced to the topic
again and again, dully, but with exaltation.
The funeral of a rich person was to them what the
funeral of Alcestis or Ophelia is to the educated.
It was Art; though remote from life, it enhanced life’s
values, and they witnessed it avidly.
The grave-diggers, who had kept up
an undercurrent of disapproval —they disliked
Charles; it was not a moment to speak of such things,
but they did not like Charles Wilcox—the
grave-diggers finished their work and piled up the
wreaths and crosses above it. The sun set over
Hilton; the grey brows of the evening flushed a little,
and were cleft with one scarlet frown. Chattering
sadly to each other, the mourners passed through the
lych-gate and traversed the chestnut avenues that led
down to the village. The young wood-cutter stayed
a little longer, poised above the silence and swaying
rhythmically. At last the bough fell beneath
his saw. With a grunt, he descended, his thoughts
dwelling no longer on death, but on love, for he was
mating. He stopped as he passed the new grave;
a sheaf of tawny chrysanthemums had caught his eye.
“They didn’t ought to have coloured flowers
at buryings,” he reflected. Trudging on
a few steps, he stopped again, looked furtively at
the dusk, turned back, wrenched a chrysanthemum from
the sheaf, and hid it in his pocket.
After him came silence absolute.
The cottage that abutted on the churchyard was empty,
and no other house stood near. Hour after hour
the scene of the interment remained without an eye
to witness it. Clouds drifted over it from the
west; or the church may have been a ship, high-prowed,
steering with all its company towards infinity.
Towards morning the air grew colder, the sky clearer,
the surface of the earth hard and sparkling above
the prostrate dead. The wood-cutter, returning
after a night of joy, reflected: “They
lilies, they chrysants; it’s a pity I didn’t
take them all.”
Up at Howards End they were attempting
breakfast. Charles and Evie sat in the dining-room,
with Mrs. Charles. Their father, who could not
bear to see a face, breakfasted upstairs. He suffered
acutely. Pain came over him in spasms, as if it
was physical, and even while he was about to eat,
his eyes would fill with tears, and he would lay down
the morsel untasted.
He remembered his wife’s even
goodness during thirty years. Not anything in
detail—not courtship or early raptures—but
just the unvarying virtue, that seemed to him a woman’s
noblest quality. So many women are capricious,
breaking into odd flaws of passion or frivolity.
Not so his wife. Year after year, summer and
winter, as bride and mother, she had been the same,
he had always trusted her. Her tenderness!
Her innocence! The wonderful innocence that was
hers by the gift of God. Ruth knew no more of
worldly wickedness and wisdom than did the flowers
in her garden, or the grass in her field. Her
idea of business—” Henry, why do
people who have enough money try to get more money?”
Her idea of politics—” I am sure
that if the mothers of various nations could meet,
there would be no more wars,” Her idea of religion—
ah, this had been a cloud, but a cloud that passed.
She came of Quaker stock, and he and his family, formerly
Dissenters, were now members of the Church of England.
The rector’s sermons had at first repelled her,
and she had expressed a desire for “a more inward
light,” adding, “not so much for myself
as for baby” (Charles). Inward light must
have been granted, for he heard no complaints in later
years. They brought up their three children without
dispute. They had never disputed.
She lay under the earth now.
She had gone, and as if to make her going the more
bitter, had gone with a touch of mystery that was
all unlike her. “Why didn’t you tell
me you knew of it?” he had moaned, and her faint
voice had answered: “I didn’t want
to, Henry—I might have been wrong—and
every one hates illnesses.” He had been
told of the horror by a strange doctor, whom she had
consulted during his absence from town. Was this
altogether just? Without fully explaining, she
had died. It was a fault on her part, and—tears
rushed into his eyes—what a little fault!
It was the only time she had deceived him in those
thirty years.
He rose to his feet and looked out
of the window, for Evie had come in with the letters,
and he could meet no one’s eye. Ah yes—she
had been a good woman—she had been steady.
He chose the word deliberately. To him steadiness
included all praise. He himself, gazing at the
wintry garden, is in appearance a steady man.
His face was not as square as his son’s, and,
indeed, the chin, though firm enough in outline, retreated
a little, and the lips, ambiguous, were curtained
by a moustache. But there was no external hint
of weakness. The eyes, if capable of kindness
and good-fellowship, if ruddy for the moment with
tears, were the eyes of one who could not be driven.
The forehead, too, was like Charles’s.
High and straight, brown and polished, merging abruptly
into temples and skull, it had the effect of a bastion
that protected his head from the world. At times
it had the effect of a blank wall. He had dwelt
behind it, intact and happy, for fifty years.
“The post’s come, father,” said Evie
awkwardly.
“Thanks. Put it down.”
“Has the breakfast been all right?”
“Yes, thanks.”
The girl glanced at him and at it
with constraint. She did not know what to do.
“Charles says do you want the Times?”
“No, I’ll read it later.”
“Ring if you want anything, father, won’t
you?”
“I’ve all I want.”
Having sorted the letters from the
circulars, she went back to the dining-room.
“Father’s eaten nothing,”
she announced, sitting down with wrinkled brows behind
the tea-urn.
Charles did not answer, but after
a moment he ran quickly upstairs, opened the door,
and said “Look here father, you must eat, you
know; and having paused for a reply that did not come,
stole down again. “He’s going to read
his letters first, I think,” he said evasively;
“I dare say he will go on with his breakfast
afterwards.” Then he took up the Times,
and for some time there was no sound except the clink
of cup against saucer and of knife on plate.
Poor Mrs. Charles sat between her
silent companions terrified at the course of events,
and a little bored. She was a rubbishy little
creature, and she knew it. A telegram had dragged
her from Naples to the death-bed of a woman whom she
had scarcely known. A word from her husband had
plunged her into mourning. She desired to mourn
inwardly as well, but she wished that Mrs. Wilcox,
since fated to die, could have died before the marriage,
for then less would have been expected of her.
Crumbling her toast, and too nervous to ask for the
butter, she remained almost motionless, thankful only
for this, that her father-in-law was having his breakfast
upstairs.
At last Charles spoke. “They
had no business to be pollarding those elms yesterday,”
he said to his sister.
“No, indeed.”
“I must make a note of that,”
he continued. “I am surprised that the
rector allowed it.”
“Perhaps it may not be the rector’s affair.”
“Whose else could it be?”
“The lord of the manor.”
“Impossible.”
“Butter, Dolly?”
“Thank you, Evie dear. Charles—”
“Yes, dear?”
“I didn’t know one could
pollard elms. I thought one only pollarded willows.”
“Oh no, one can pollard elms.”
“Then why oughtn’t the
elms in the churchyard to be pollarded?” Charles
frowned a little, and turned again to his sister.
“Another point. I must speak to Chalkeley.”
“Yes, rather; you must complain to Chalkeley.”
“It’s no good his saying
he is not responsible for those men. He is responsible.”
“Yes, rather.”
Brother and sister were not callous.
They spoke thus, partly because they desired to keep
Chalkeley up to the mark—a healthy desire
in its way—partly because they avoided the
personal note in life. All Wilcoxes did.
It did not seem to them of supreme importance.
Or it may be as Helen supposed: they realised
its importance, but were afraid of it. Panic
and emptiness, could one glance behind. They
were not callous, and they left the breakfast-table
with aching hearts. Their mother never had come
in to breakfast. It was in the other rooms, and
especially in the garden, that they felt her loss
most. As Charles went out to the garage, he was
reminded at every step of the woman who had loved
him and whom he could never replace. What battles
he had fought against her gentle conservatism!
How she had disliked improvements, yet how loyally
she had accepted them when made! He and his father—what
trouble they had had to get this very garage!
With what difficulty had they persuaded her to yield
them the paddock for it—the paddock that
she loved more dearly than the garden itself!
The vine—she had got her way about the vine.
It still encumbered the south wall with its unproductive
branches. And so with Evie, as she stood talking
to the cook. Though she could take up her mother’s
work inside the house, just as the man could take
it up without, she felt that something unique had
fallen out of her life. Their grief, though less
poignant than their father’s, grew from deeper
roots, for a wife may be replaced; a mother never.
Charles would go back to the office. There was
little at Howards End. The contents of his mother’s
will had long been known to them. There were no
legacies, no annuities, none of the posthumous bustle
with which some of the dead prolong their activities.
Trusting her husband, she had left him everything
without reserve. She was quite a poor woman—the
house had been all her dowry, and the house would come
to Charles in time. Her watercolours Mr. Wilcox
intended to reserve for Paul, while Evie would take
the jewellery and lace. How easily she slipped
out of life! Charles thought the habit laudable,
though he did not intend to adopt it himself, whereas
Margaret would have seenin it an almost culpable indifference
to earthly fame. Cynicism—not the
superficial cynicism that snarls and sneers, but the
cynicism that can go with courtesy and tenderness—that
was the note of Mrs. Wilcox’s will. She
wanted not to vex people. That accomplished,
the earth might freeze over her for ever.
No, there was nothing for Charles
to wait for. He could not go on with his honeymoon,
so he would go up to London and work—he
felt too miserable hanging about. He and Dolly
would have the furnished flat while his father rested
quietly in the country with Evie. He could also
keep an eye on his own little house, which was being
painted and decorated for him in one of the Surrey
suburbs, and in which he hoped to install himself soon
after Christmas. Yes, he would go up after lunch
in his new motor, and the town servants, who had come
down for the funeral, would go up by train.
He found his father’s chauffeur
in the garage, said “Morning” without
looking at the man’s face, and bending over the
car, continued: “Hullo! my new car’s
been driven!”
“Has it, sir?”
“Yes,” said Charles, getting
rather red; “and whoever’s driven it hasn’t
cleaned it properly, for there’s mud on the axle.
Take it off.”
The man went for the cloths without
a word. He was a chauffeur as ugly as sin—not
that this did him disservice with Charles, who thought
charm in a man rather rot, and had soon got rid of
the little Italian beast with whom they had started.
“Charles—”
His bride was tripping after him over the hoar-frost,
a dainty black column, her little face and elaborate
mourning hat forming the capital thereof.
“One minute, I’m busy.
Well, Crane, who’s been driving it, do you suppose?”
“Don’t know, I’m
sure, sir. No one’s driven it since I’ve
been back, but, of course, there’s the fortnight
I’ve been away with the other car in Yorkshire.”
The mud came off easily.
“Charles, your father’s
down. Something’s happened. He wants
you in the house at once. Oh, Charles!”
“Wait, dear, wait a minute.
Who had the key of the garage while you were away,
Crane?”
“The gardener, sir.”
“Do you mean to tell me that old Penny can drive
a motor?”
“No, sir; no one’s had the motor out,
sir.”
“Then how do you account for the mud on the
axle?”
“I can’t, of course, say
for the time I’ve been in Yorkshire. No
more mud now, sir.”
Charles was vexed. The man was
treating him as a fool, and if his heart had not been
so heavy he would have reported him to his father.
But it was not a morning for complaints. Ordering
the motor to be round after lunch, he joined his wife,
who had all the while been pouring out some incoherent
story about a letter and a Miss Schlegel.
“Now, Dolly, I can attend to
you. Miss Schlegel? What does she want?”
When people wrote a letter Charles
always asked what they wanted. Want was to him
the only cause of action. And the question in
this case was correct, for his wife replied, “She
wants Howards End.”
“Howards End? Now, Crane,
just don’t forget to put on the Stepney wheel.”
“No, sir.”
“Now, mind you don’t forget,
for I— Come, little woman.” When
they were out of the chauffeur’s sight he put
his arm round her waist and pressed her against him.
All his affection and half his attention—it
was what he granted her throughout their happy married
life.
“But you haven’t listened, Charles.”
“What’s wrong?”
“I keep on telling you—Howards End.
Miss Schlegel’s got it.”
“Got what?” said Charles,
unclasping her. “What the dickens are you
talking about?”
“Now, Charles, you promised not so say those
naughty—”
“Look here, I’m in no
mood for foolery. It’s no morning for it
either.”
“I tell you—I keep
on telling you—Miss Schlegel—she’s
got it—your mother’s left it to her—and
you’ve all got to move out!”
“Howards end?”
“Howards end!”
she screamed, mimicking him, and as she did so Evie
came dashing out of the shubbery.
“Dolly, go back at once!
My father’s much annoyed with you. Charles”—she
hit herself wildly—“come in at once
to father. He’s had a letter that’s
too awful.”
Charles began to run, but checked
himself, and stepped heavily across the gravel path.
There the house was with the nine windows, the unprolific
vine. He exclaimed, “Schlegels again!”
and as if to complete chaos, Dolly said, “Oh
no, the matron of the nursing home has written instead
of her.”
“Come in, all three of you!”
cried his father, no longer inert.
“Dolly, why have you disobeyed me?”
“Oh, Mr. Wilcox—”
“I told you not to go out to
the garage. I’ve heard you all shouting
in the garden. I won’t have it. Come
in.”
He stood in the porch, transformed, letters in his
hand.
“Into the dining-room, every
one of you. We can’t discuss private matters
in the middle of all the servants. Here, Charles,
here; read these. See what you make.”
Charles took two letters, and read
them as he followed the procession. The first
was a covering note from the matron. Mrs. Wilcox
had desired her, when the funeral should be over, to
forward the enclosed. The enclosed—it
was from his mother herself. She had written:
“To my husband: I should like Miss Schlegel
(Margaret) to have Howards End.”
“I suppose we’re going
to have a talk about this?” he remarked, ominously
calm.
“Certainly. I was coming out to you when
Dolly—”
“Well, let’s sit down.”
“Come, Evie, don’t waste time, sit—down.”
In silence they drew up to the breakfast-table.
The events of yesterday—indeed, of this
morning suddenly receded into a past so remote that
they seemed scarcely to have lived in it. Heavy
breathings were heard. They were calming themselves.
Charles, to steady them further, read the enclosure
out loud: “A note in my mother’s
handwriting, in an envelope addressed to my father,
sealed. Inside: ’I should like Miss
Schlegel (Margaret) to have Howards End.’
No date, no signature. Forwarded through the matron
of that nursing home. Now, the question is—”
Dolly interrupted him. “But
I say that note isn’t legal. Houses ought
to be done by a lawyer, Charles, surely.”
Her husband worked his jaw severely.
Little lumps appeared in front of either ear—a
symptom that she had not yet learnt to respect, and
she asked whether she might see the note. Charles
looked at his father for permission, who said abstractedly,
“Give it her.” She seized it, and
at once exclaimed: “Why, it’s only
in pencil! I said so. Pencil never counts.”
“We know that it is not legally
binding, Dolly,” said Mr. Wilcox, speaking from
out of his fortress. “We are aware of that.
Legally, I should be justified in tearing it up and
throwing it into the fire. Of course, my dear,
we consider you as one of the family, but it will
be better if you do not interfere with what you do
not understand.”
Charles, vexed both with his father
and his wife, then repeated: “The question
is—” He had cleared a space of the
breakfast-table from plates and knives, so that he
could draw patterns on the tablecloth. “The
question is whether Miss Schlegel, during the fortnight
we were all away, whether she unduly—”
He stopped.
“I don’t think that,”
said his father, whose nature was nobler than his
son’s.
“Don’t think what?”
“That she would have—that
it is a case of undue influence. No, to my mind
the question is the—the invalid’s
condition at the time she wrote.”
“My dear father, consult an
expert if you like, but I don’t admit it is
my mother’s writing.”
“Why, you just said it was!” cried Dolly.
“Never mind if I did,” he blazed out;
“and hold your tongue.”
The poor little wife coloured at this,
and, drawing her handkerchief from her pocket, shed
a few tears. No one noticed her. Evie was
scowling like an angry boy. The two men were
gradually assuming the manner of the committee-room.
They were both at their best when serving on committees.
They did not make the mistake of handling human affairs
in the bulk, but disposed of them item by item, sharply.
Caligraphy was the item before them now, and on it
they turned their well-trained brains. Charles,
after a little demur, accepted the writing as genuine,
and they passed on to the next point. It is the
best—perhaps the only—way of
dodging emotion. They were the average human
article, and had they considered the note as a whole
it would have driven them miserable or mad. Considered
item by item, the emotional content was minimised,
and all went forward smoothly. The clock ticked,
the coals blazed higher, and contended with the white
radiance that poured in through the windows. Unnoticed,
the sun occupied his sky, and the shadows of the tree
stems, extraordinarily solid, fell like trenches of
purple across the frosted lawn. It was a glorious
winter morning. Evie’s fox terrier, who
had passed for white, was only a dirty grey dog now,
so intense was the purity that surrounded him.
He was discredited, but the blackbirds that he was
chasing glowed with Arabian darkness, for all the
conventional colouring of life had been altered.
Inside, the clock struck ten with a rich and confident
note. Other clocks confirmed it, and the discussion
moved towards its close.
To follow it is unnecessary.
It is rather a moment when the commentator should
step forward. Ought the Wilcoxes to have offered
their home to Margaret? I think not. The
appeal was too flimsy. It was not legal; it had
been written in illness, and under the spell of a
sudden friendship; it was contrary to the dead woman’s
intentions in the past, contrary to her very nature,
so far as that nature was understood by them.
To them Howards End was a house: they could not
know that to her it had been a spirit, for which she
sought a spiritual heir. And—pushing
one step farther in these mists—may they
not have decided even better than they supposed?
Is it credible that the possessions of the spirit
can be bequeathed at all? Has the soul offspring?
A wych-elm tree, a vine, a wisp of hay with dew on
it—can passion for such things be transmitted
where there is no bond of blood? No; the Wilcoxes
are not to be blamed. The problem is too terrific,
and they could not even perceive a problem. No;
it is natural and fitting that after due debate they
should tear the note up and throw it on to their dining-room
fire. The practical moralist may acquit them
absolutely. He who strives to look deeper may
acquit them—almost. For one hard fact
remains. They did neglect a personal appeal.
The woman who had died did say to them, “Do
this,” and they answered, “We will not.”
The incident made a most painful impression
on them. Grief mounted into the brain and worked
there disquietingly. Yesterday they had lamented:
“She was a dear mother, a true wife; in our
absence she neglected her health and died.”
To-day they thought: “She was not as true,
as dear, as we supposed.” The desire for
a more inward light had found expression at last, the
unseen had impacted on the seen, and all that they
could say was “Treachery.” Mrs. Wilcox
had been treacherous to the family, to the laws of
property, to her own written word. How did she
expect Howards End to be conveyed to Miss Schlegel?
Was her husband, to whom it legally belonged, to make
it over to her as a free gift? Was the said Miss
Schlegel to have a life interest in it, or to own
it absolutely? Was there to be no compensation
for the garage and other improvements that they had
made under the assumption that all would be theirs
some day? Treacherous! treacherous and absurd!
When we think the dead both treacherous and absurd,
we have gone far towards reconciling ourselves to
their departure. That note, scribbled in pencil,
sent through the matron, was unbusinesslike as well
as cruel, and decreased at once the value of the woman
who had written it.
“Ah, well!” said Mr. Wilcox,
rising from the table. “I shouldn’t
have thought it possible.”
“Mother couldn’t have
meant it,” said Evie, still frowning.
“No, my girl, of course not.”
“Mother believed so in ancestors
too—it isn’t like her to leave anything
to an outsider, who’d never appreciate.”
“The whole thing is unlike her,”
he announced. “If Miss Schlegel had been
poor, if she had wanted a house, I could understand
it a little. But she has a house of her own.
Why should she want another? She wouldn’t
have any use for Howards End.”
“That time may prove,” murmured Charles.
“How?” asked his sister.
“Presumably she knows—mother
will have told her. She got twice or three times
into the nursing home. Presumably she is awaiting
developments.”
“What a horrid woman!”
And Dolly, who had recovered, cried, “Why, she
may be coming down to turn us out now!”
Charles put her right. “I
wish she would,” he said ominously. “I
could then deal with her.”
“So could I,” echoed his
father, who was feeling rather in the cold. Charles
had been kind in undertaking the funeral arrangements
and in telling him to eat his breakfast, but the boy
as he grew up was a little dictatorial, and assumed
the post of chairman too readily. “I could
deal with her, if she comes, but she won’t come.
You’re all a bit hard on Miss Schlegel.”
“That Paul business was pretty scandalous, though.”
“I want no more of the Paul
business, Charles, as I said at the time, and besides,
it is quite apart from this business. Margaret
Schlegel has been officious and tiresome during this
terrible week, and we have all suffered under her,
but upon my soul she’s honest. She’s
not in collusion with the matron. I’m
absolutely certain of it. Nor was she with the
doctor, I’m equally certain of that. She
did not hide anything from us, for up to that very
afternoon she was as ignorant as we are. She,
like ourselves, was a dupe—” He stopped
for a moment. “You see, Charles, in her
terrible pain your mother put us all in false positions.
Paul would not have left England, you would not have
gone to Italy, nor Evie and I into Yorkshire, if only
we had known. Well, Miss Schlegel’s position
has been equally false. Take all in all, she
has not come out of it badly.”
Evie said: “But those chrysanthemums—”
“Or coming down to the funeral at all—”
echoed Dolly.
“Why shouldn’t she come
down? She had the right to, and she stood far
back among the Hilton women. The flowers—certainly
we should not have sent such flowers, but they may
have seemed the right thing to her, Evie, and for
all you know they may be the custom in Germany.”
“Oh, I forget she isn’t
really English,” cried Evie. “That
would explain a lot.”
“She’s a cosmopolitan,”
said Charles, looking at his watch. “I
admit I’m rather down on cosmopolitans.
My fault, doubtless. I cannot stand them, and
a German cosmopolitan is the limit. I think that’s
about all, isn’t it? I want to run down
and see Chalkeley. A bicycle will do. And,
by the way, I wish you’d speak to Crane some
time. I’m certain he’s had my new
car out.”
“Has he done it any harm?”
“No.”
“In that case I shall let it
pass. It’s not worth while having a row.”
Charles and his father sometimes disagreed.
But they always parted with an increased regard for
one another, and each desired no doughtier comrade
when it was necessary to voyage for a little past
the emotions. So the sailors of Ulysses voyaged
past the Sirens, having first stopped one another’s
ears with wool.