Tom’s father was cutting the
big meadow. He passed again and again amid whirring
blades and sweet odours of grass, encompassing with
narrowing circles the sacred centre of the field.
Tom was negotiating with Helen. “I haven’t
any idea,” she replied. “Do you suppose
baby may, Meg?”
Margaret put down her work and regarded
them absently. “What was that?” she
asked.
“Tom wants to know whether baby
is old enough to play with hay?”
“I haven’t the least notion,”
answered Margaret, and took up her work again.
“Now, Tom, baby is not to stand;
he is not to lie on his face; he is not to lie so
that his head wags; he is not to be teased or tickled;
and he is not to be cut into two or more pieces by
the cutter. Will you be as careful as all that?”
Tom held out his arms.
“That child is a wonderful nursemaid,”
remarked Margaret.
“He is fond of baby. That’s
why he does it!” was Helen’s answer.
“They’re going to be lifelong friends.”
“Starting at the ages of six and one?”
“Of course. It will be a great thing for
Tom.”
“It may be a greater thing for baby.”
Fourteen months had passed, but Margaret
still stopped at Howards End. No better plan
had occurred to her. The meadow was being recut,
the great red poppies were reopening in the garden.
July would follow with the little red poppies among
the wheat, August with the cutting of the wheat.
These little events would become part of her year
after year. Every summer she would fear lest the
well should give out, every winter lest the pipes should
freeze; every westerly gale might blow the wych-elm
down and bring the end of all things, and so she could
not read or talk during a westerly gale. The
air was tranquil now. She and her sister were
sitting on the remains of Evie’s rockery, where
the lawn merged into the field.
“What a time they all are!”
said Helen. “What can they be doing inside?”
Margaret, who was growing less talkative, made no answer.
The noise of the cutter came intermittently, like the
breaking of waves. Close by them a man was preparing
to scythe out one of the dell-holes.
“I wish Henry was out to enjoy
this,” said Helen. “This lovely weather
and to be shut up in the house! It’s very
hard.”
“It has to be,” said Margaret.
“The hay fever is his chief objection against
living here, but he thinks it worth while.”
“Meg, is or isn’t he ill? I can’t
make out.”
“Not ill. Eternally tired.
He has worked very hard all his life, and noticed
nothing. Those are the people who collapse when
they do notice a thing.”
“I suppose he worries dreadfully
about his part of the tangle.”
“Dreadfully. That is why
I wish Dolly had not come, too, to-day. Still,
be wanted them all to come. It has to be.”
“Why does he want them?”
Margaret did not answer.
“Meg, may I tell you something? I like
Henry.”
“You’d be odd if you didn’t, ” said
Margaret.
“I usen’t to.”
“Usen’t!” She lowered
her eyes a moment to the black abyss of the past.
They had crossed it, always excepting Leonard and Charles.
They were building up a new life, obscure, yet gilded
with tranquillity. Leonard was dead; Charles
had two years more in prison. One usen’t
always to see clearly before that time. It was
different now.
“I like Henry because he does worry.”
“And he likes you because you don’t.”
Helen sighed. She seemed humiliated,
and buried her face in her hands. After a time
she said: “About love,” a transition
less abrupt than it appeared.
Margaret never stopped working.
“I mean a woman’s love
for a man. I supposed I should hang my life on
to that once, and was driven up and down and about
as if something was worrying through me. But
everything is peaceful now; I seem cured. That
Herr Forstmeister, whom Frieda keeps writing about,
must be a noble character, but he doesn’t see
that I shall never marry him or anyone. It isn’t
shame or mistrust of myself. I simply couldn’t.
I’m ended. I used to be so dreamy about
a man’s love as a girl, and think that for good
or evil love must be the great thing. But it
hasn’t been; it has been itself a dream.
Do you agree?”
“I do not agree. I do not.”
“I ought to remember Leonard
as my lover,” said Helen, stepping down into
the field. “I tempted him, and killed him,
and it is surely the least I can do. I would
like to throw out all my heart to Leonard on such
an afternoon as this. But I cannot. It is
no good pretending. I am forgetting him.”
Her eyes filled with tears. “How nothing
seems to match—how, my darling, my precious—”
She broke off. “Tommy!”
“Yes, please?”
“Baby’s not to try and
stand.—There’s something wanting in
me. I see you loving Henry, and understanding
him better daily, and I know that death wouldn’t
part you in the least. But I— Is it
some awful, appalling, criminal defect?”
Margaret silenced her. She said:
“It is only that people are far more different
than is pretended. All over the world men and
women are worrying because they cannot develop as they
are supposed to develop. Here and there they
have the matter out, and it comforts them. Don’t
fret yourself, Helen. Develop what you have;
love your child. I do not love children.
I am thankful to have none. I can play with their
beauty and charm, but that is all—nothing
real, not one scrap of what there ought to be.
And others—others go farther still, and
move outside humanity altogether. A place, as
well as a person, may catch the glow. Don’t
you see that all this leads to comfort in the end?
It is part of the battle against sameness. Differences,
eternal differences, planted by God in a single family,
so that there may always be colour; sorrow perhaps,
but colour in the daily grey. Then I can’t
have you worrying about Leonard. Don’t drag
in the personal when it will not come. Forget
him.”
“Yes, yes, but what has Leonard got out of life?”
“Perhaps an adventure.”
“Is that enough?”
“Not for us. But for him.”
Helen took up a bunch of grass.
She looked at the sorrel, and the red and white and
yellow clover, and the quaker grass, and the daisies,
and the bents that composed it. She raised it
to her face.
“Is it sweetening yet?” asked Margaret.
“No, only withered.”
“It will sweeten to-morrow.”
Helen smiled. “Oh, Meg,
you are a person,” she said. “Think
of the racket and torture this time last year.
But now I couldn’t stop unhappy if I tried.
What a change—and all through you!”
“Oh, we merely settled down.
You and Henry learnt to understand one another and
to forgive, all through the autumn and the winter.”
“Yes, but who settled us down?”
Margaret did not reply. The scything
had begun, and she took off her pince-nez to watch
it.
“You!” cried Helen.
“You did it all, sweetest, though you’re
too stupid to see. Living here was your plan—I
wanted you; he wanted you; and everyone said it was
impossible, but you knew. Just think of our lives
without you, Meg—I and baby with Monica,
revolting by theory, he handed about from Dolly to
Evie. But you picked up the pieces, and made
us a home. Can’t it strike you—
even for a moment—that your life has been
heroic? Can’t you remember the two months
after Charles’s arrest, when you began to act,
and did all?”
“You were both ill at the time,”
said Margaret. “I did the obvious things.
I had two invalids to nurse. Here was a house,
ready furnished and empty. It was obvious.
I didn’t know myself it would turn into a permanent
home. No doubt I have done a little towards straightening
the tangle, but things that I can’t phrase have
helped me.”
“I hope it will be permanent,”
said Helen, drifting away to other thoughts.
“I think so. There are
moments when I feel Howards End peculiarly our own.”
“All the same, London’s creeping.”
She pointed over the meadow—over
eight or nine meadows, but at the end of them was
a red rust.
“You see that in Surrey and
even Hampshire now,” she continued. “I
can see it from the Purbeck Downs. And London
is only part of something else, I’m afraid.
Life’s going to be melted down, all over the
world.”
Margaret knew that her sister spoke
truly. Howards End, Oniton, the Purbeck Downs,
the Oderberge, were all survivals, and the melting-pot
was being prepared for them. Logically, they had
no right to be alive. One’s hope was in
the weakness of logic. Were they possibly the
earth beating time?
“Because a thing is going strong
now, it need not go strong for ever,” she said.
“This craze for motion has only set in during
the last hundred years. It may be followed by
a civilisation that won’t be a movement, because
it will rest on the earth. All the signs are
against it now, but I can’t help hoping, and
very early in the morning in the garden I feel that
our house is the future as well as the past.”
They turned and looked at it.
Their own memories coloured it now, for Helen’s
child had been born in the central room of the nine.
Then Margaret said, “Oh, take care—!”
for something moved behind the window of the hall,
and the door opened.
“The conclave’s breaking at last.
I’ll go.”
It was Paul.
Helen retreated with the children
far into the field. Friendly voices greeted her.
Margaret rose, to encounter a man with a heavy black
moustache.
“My father has asked for you,” he said
with hostility.
She took her work and followed him.
“We have been talking business,”
he continued, “but I dare say you knew all about
it beforehand.”
“Yes, I did.”
Clumsy of movement—for
he had spent all his life in the saddle—
Paul drove his foot against the paint of the front
door. Mrs. Wilcox gave a little cry of annoyance.
She did not like anything scratched; she stopped in
the hall to take Dolly’s boa and gloves out
of a vase.
Her husband was lying in a great leather
chair in the dining-room, and by his side, holding
his hand rather ostentatiously, was Evie. Dolly,
dressed in purple, sat near the window. The room
was a little dark and airless; they were obliged to
keep it like this until the carting of the hay.
Margaret joined the family without speaking; the five
of them had met already at tea, and she knew quite
well what was going to be said. Averse to wasting
her time, she went on sewing. The clock struck
six.
“Is this going to suit everyone?”
said Henry in a weary voice. He used the old
phrases, but their effect was unexpected and shadowy.
“Because I don’t want you all coming here
later on and complaining that I have been unfair.”
“It’s apparently got to suit us,”
said Paul.
“I beg your pardon, my boy.
You have only to speak, and I will leave the house
to you instead.”
Paul frowned ill-temperedly, and began
scratching at his arm. “As I’ve given
up the outdoor life that suited me, and I have come
home to look after the business, it’s no good
my settling down here,” he said at last.
“It’s not really the country, and it’s
not the town.”
“Very well. Does my arrangement suit you,
Evie?”
“Of course, father.”
“And you, Dolly?”
Dolly raised her faded little face,
which sorrow could wither but not steady. “Perfectly
splendidly,” she said. “I thought
Charles wanted it for the boys, but last time I saw
him he said no, because we cannot possibly live in
this part of England again. Charles says we ought
to change our name, but I cannot think what to, for
Wilcox just suits Charles and me, and I can’t
think of any other name.”
There was a general silence.
Dolly looked nervously round, fearing that she had
been inappropriate. Paul continued to scratch
his arm.
“Then I leave Howards End to
my wife absolutely,” said Henry. “And
let everyone understand that; and after I am dead let
there be no jealousy and no surprise.”
Margaret did not answer. There
was something uncanny in her triumph. She, who
had never expected to conquer anyone, had charged
straight through these Wilcoxes and broken up their
lives.
“In consequence, I leave my
wife no money,” said Henry. “That
is her own wish. All that she would have had
will be divided among you. I am also giving you
a great deal in my lifetime, so that you may be independent
of me. That is her wish, too. She also is
giving away a great deal of money. She intends
to diminish her income by half during the next ten
years; she intends when she dies to leave the house
to her nephew, down in the field. Is all that
clear? Does everyone understand?”
Paul rose to his feet. He was
accustomed to natives, and a very little shook him
out of the Englishman. Feeling manly and cynical,
he said: “Down in the field? Oh, come!
I think we might have had the whole establishment,
piccaninnies included.”
Mrs. Cahill whispered: “Don’t,
Paul. You promised you’d take care.”
Feeling a woman of the world, she rose and prepared
to take her leave.
Her father kissed her. “Good-bye,
old girl, “he said; “don’t you worry
about me.”
“Good-bye, dad.”
Then it was Dolly’s turn.
Anxious to contribute, she laughed nervously, and
said: “Good-bye, Mr. Wilcox. It does
seem curious that Mrs. Wilcox should have left Margaret
Howards End, and yet she get it, after all.”
From Evie came a sharply-drawn breath.
“Goodbye,” she said to Margaret, and kissed
her.
And again and again fell the word,
like the ebb of a dying sea.
“Good-bye.”
“Good-bye, Dolly.”
“So long, father.”
“Good-bye, my boy; always take care of yourself.”
“Good-bye, Mrs. Wilcox.”
“Good-bye.”
Margaret saw their visitors to the
gate. Then she returned to her husband and laid
her head in his hands. He was pitiably tired.
But Dolly’s remark had interested her. At
last she said: “Could you tell me, Henry,
what was that about Mrs. Wilcox having left me Howards
End?”
Tranquilly he replied: “Yes,
she did. But that is a very old story. When
she was ill and you were so kind to her she wanted
to make you some return, and, not being herself at
the time, scribbled ‘Howards End’ on a
piece of paper. I went into it thoroughly, and,
as it was clearly fanciful, I set it aside, little
knowing what my Margaret would be to me in the future.”
Margaret was silent. Something
shook her life in its inmost recesses, and she shivered.
“I didn’t do wrong, did I?” he asked,
bending down.
“You didn’t, darling. Nothing has
been done wrong.”
From the garden came laughter.
“Here they are at last!” exclaimed Henry,
disengaging himself with a smile. Helen rushed
into the gloom, holding Tom by one hand and carrying
her baby on the other. There were shouts of infectious
joy.
“The field’s cut!”
Helen cried excitedly—“the big meadow!
We’ve seen to the very end, and it’ll
be such a crop of hay as never!”
WEYBRIDGE, 1908-191O.