Helen began to wonder why she had
spent a matter of eight pounds in making some people
ill and others angry. Now that the wave of excitement
was ebbing, and had left her, Mr. Bast, and Mrs. Bast
stranded for the night in a Shropshire hotel, she asked
herself what forces had made the wave flow. At
all events, no harm was done. Margaret would
play the game properly now, and though Helen disapproved
of her sister’s methods, she knew that the Basts
would benefit by them in the long-run.
“Mr. Wilcox is so illogical,”
she explained to Leonard, who had put his wife to
bed, and was sitting with her in the empty coffee-room.
“If we told him it was his duty to take you on,
he might refuse to do it. The fact is, he isn’t
properly educated. I don’t want to set
you against him, but you’ll find him a trial.”
“I can never thank you sufficiently,
Miss Schlegel,” was all that Leonard felt equal
to.
“I believe in personal responsibility.
Don’t you? And in personal everything.
I hate—I suppose I oughtn’t to say
that—but the Wilcoxes are on the wrong
tack surely. Or perhaps it isn’t their
fault. Perhaps the little thing that says ‘I’
is missing out of the middle of their heads, and
then it’s a waste of time to blame them.
There’s a nightmare of a theory that says a special
race is being born which will rule the rest of us in
the future just because it lacks the little thing
that says ‘I.’ Had you heard that?”
“I get no time for reading.”
“Had you thought it, then?
That there are two kinds of people—our
kind, who live straight from the middle of their heads,
and the other kind who can’t, because their
heads have no middle? They can’t say ‘I.’
They aren’t in fact, and so they’re
supermen. Pierpont Morgan has never said ‘I’
in his life.”
Leonard roused himself. If his
benefactress wanted intellectual conversation, she
must have it. She was more important than his
ruined past. “I never got on to Nietzsche,”
he said. “But I always understood that
those supermen were rather what you may call egoists.”
“Oh no, that’s wrong,”
replied Helen. “No superman ever said ’I
want,’ because ‘I want’ must lead
to the question, ‘Who am I?’ and so to
Pity and to Justice. He only says ‘want.’
’Want Europe,’ if he’s Napoleon;
‘want wives,’ if he’s Bluebeard;
‘want Botticelli,’ if he’s Pierpont
Morgan. Never the ‘I’; and if you
could pierce through the superman, you’d find
panic and emptiness in the middle.”
Leonard was silent for a moment.
Then he said: “May I take it, Miss Schlegel,
that you and I are both the sort that say ’I’?”
“Of course.”
“And your sister, too?”
“Of course,” repeated
Helen, a little sharply. She was annoyed with
Margaret, but did not want her discussed. “All
presentable people say ‘I.’”
“But Mr. Wilcox—he is not perhaps—”
“I don’t know that it’s any good
discussing Mr. Wilcox either.”
“Quite so, quite so,”
he agreed. Helen asked herself why she had snubbed
him. Once or twice during the day she had encouraged
him to criticise, and then had pulled him up short.
Was she afraid of him presuming? If so, it was
disgusting of her.
But he was thinking the snub quite
natural. Everything she did was natural, and
incapable of causing offence. While the Miss
Schlegels were together he had felt them scarcely human—a
sort of admonitory whirligig. But a Miss Schlegel
alone was different. She was in Helen’s
case unmarried, in Margaret’s about to be married,
in neither case an echo of her sister. A light
had fallen at last into this rich upper world, and
he saw that it was full of men and women, some of
whom were more friendly to him than others. Helen
had become “his” Miss Schlegel, who scolded
him and corresponded with him, and had swept down yesterday
with grateful vehemence. Margaret, though not
unkind, was severe and remote. He would not presume
to help her, for instance. He had never liked
her, and began to think that his original impression
was true, and that her sister did not like her either.
Helen was certainly lonely. She, who gave away
so much, was receiving too little. Leonard was
pleased to think that he could spare her vexation
by holding his tongue and concealing what he knew about
Mr. Wilcox. Jacky had announced her discovery
when he fetched her from the lawn. After the
first shock, he did not mind for himself. By
now he had no illusions about his wife, and this was
only one new stain on the face of a love that had never
been pure. To keep perfection perfect, that should
be his ideal, if the future gave him time to have
ideals. Helen, and Margaret for Helen’s
sake, must not know.
Helen disconcerted him by turning
the conversation to his wife. “Mrs. Bast—does
she ever say ’I’?” she asked, half
mischievously, and then, “Is she very tired?”
“It’s better she stops in her room,”
said Leonard.
“Shall I sit up with her?”
“No, thank you; she does not need company.”
“Mr. Bast, what kind of woman is your wife?”
Leonard blushed up to his eyes.
“You ought to know my ways by
now. Does that question offend you?”
“No, oh no, Miss Schlegel, no.”
“Because I love honesty.
Don’t pretend your marriage has been a happy
one. You and she can have nothing in common.”
He did not deny it, but said shyly:
“I suppose that’s pretty obvious; but
Jacky never meant to do anybody any harm. When
things went wrong, or I heard things, I used to think
it was her fault, but, looking back, it’s more
mine. I needn’t have married her, but as
I have I must stick to her and keep her.”
“How long have you been married?”
“Nearly three years.”
“What did your people say?”
“They will not have anything
to do with us. They had a sort of family council
when they heard I was married, and cut us off altogether.”
Helen began to pace up and down the
room. “My good boy, what a mess!”
she said gently. “Who are your people?”
He could answer this. His parents,
who were dead, had been in trade; his sisters had
married commercial travellers; his brother was a lay-reader.
“And your grandparents?”
Leonard told her a secret that he
had held shameful up to now. “They were
just nothing at all,” he said “agricultural
labourers and that sort.”
“So! From which part?”
“Lincolnshire mostly, but my
mother’s father—he, oddly enough,
came from these parts round here.”
“From this very Shropshire.
Yes, that is odd. My mother’s people were
Lancashire. But why do your brother and your sisters
object to Mrs. Bast?”
“Oh, I don’t know.”
“Excuse me, you do know.
I am not a baby. I can bear anything you tell
me, and the more you tell the more I shall be able
to help. Have they heard anything against her?”
He was silent.
“I think I have guessed now,” said Helen
very gravely.
“I don’t think so, Miss Schlegel; I hope
not.”
“We must be honest, even over
these things. I have guessed. I am frightfully,
dreadfully sorry, but it does not make the least difference
to me. I shall feel just the same to both of you.
I blame, not your wife for these things, but men.”
Leonard left it at that—so
long as she did not guess the man. She stood
at the window and slowly pulled up the blinds.
The hotel looked over a dark square. The mists
had begun. When she turned back to him her eyes
were shining. “Don’t you worry,”
he pleaded. “I can’t bear that.
We shall be all right if I get work. If I could
only get work—something regular to do.
Then it wouldn’t be so bad again. I don’t
trouble after books as I used. I can imagine
that with regular work we should settle down again.
It stops one thinking.”
“Settle down to what?”
“Oh, just settle down.”
“And that’s to be life!”
said Helen, with a catch in her throat. “How
can you, with all the beautiful things to see and do—with
music—with walking at night—”
“Walking is well enough when
a man’s in work,” he answered. “Oh,
I did talk a lot of nonsense once, but there’s
nothing like a bailiff in the house to drive it out
of you. When I saw him fingering my Ruskins and
Stevensons, I seemed to see life straight and real,
and it isn’t a pretty sight. My books are
back again, thanks to you, but they’ll never
be the same to me again, and I shan’t ever again
think night in the woods is wonderful.”
“Why not?” asked Helen,
throwing up the window. “Because I see
one must have money.”
“Well, you’re wrong.”
“I wish I was wrong, but—the
clergyman—he has money of his own, or else
he’s paid; the poet or the musician—just
the same; the tramp—he’s no different.
The tramp goes to the workhouse in the end, and is
paid for with other people’s money. Miss
Schlegel the real thing’s money, and all the
rest is a dream.”
“You’re still wrong. You’ve
forgotten Death.”
Leonard could not understand.
“If we lived forever, what you
say would be true. But we have to die, we have
to leave life presently. Injustice and greed would
be the real thing if we lived for ever. As it
is, we must hold to other things, because Death is
coming. I love Death—not morbidly,
but because He explains. He shows me the emptiness
of Money. Death and Money are the eternal foes.
Not Death and Life. Never mind what lies behind
Death, Mr. Bast, but be sure that the poet and the
musician and the tramp will be happier in it than
the man who has never learnt to say, ‘I am I.’”
“I wonder.”
“We are all in a mist—I
know, but I can help you this far—men like
the Wilcoxes are deeper in the mist than any.
Sane, sound Englishmen! building up empires, levelling
all the world into what they call common sense.
But mention Death to them and they’re offended,
because Death’s really Imperial, and He cries
out against them for ever.”
“I am as afraid of Death as any one.”
“But not of the idea of Death.”
“But what is the difference?”
“Infinite difference,” said Helen, more
gravely than before.
Leonard looked at her wondering, and
had the sense of great things sweeping out of the
shrouded night. But he could not receive them,
because his heart was still full of little things.
As the lost umbrella had spoilt the concert at Queen’s
Hall, so the lost situation was obscuring the diviner
harmonies now. Death, Life, and Materialism were
fine words, but would Mr. Wilcox take him on as a
clerk? Talk as one would, Mr. Wilcox was king
of this world, the superman, with his own morality,
whose head remained in the clouds.
“I must be stupid,” he said apologetically.
While to Helen the paradox became
clearer and clearer. “Death destroys a
man: the idea of Death saves him.”
Behind the coffins and the skeletons that stay the
vulgar mind lies something so immense that all that
is great in us responds to it. Men of the world
may recoil from the charnel-house that they will one
day enter, but Love knows better. Death is his
foe, but his peer, and in their age-long struggle
the thews of Love have been strengthened, and his
vision cleared, until there is no one who can stand
against him.
“So never give in,” continued
the girl, and restated again and again the vague yet
convincing plea that the Invisible lodges against
the Visible. Her excitement grew as she tried
to cut the rope that fastened Leonard to the earth.
Woven of bitter experience, it resisted her.
Presently the waitress entered and gave her a letter
from Margaret. Another note, addressed to Leonard,
was inside. They read them, listening to the murmurings
of the river.