The more excellent way.
At the very top of the winding footpath
cut deeply into the sandstone side of the East Cliff
Hill at Hastings, a wooden seat, set a little back
from the road, invites the panting climber to rest
for five minutes after his steep ascent from the primitive
fisher village of Old Hastings, which nestles warmly
in the narrow sun-smitten gulley at his feet.
On this seat, one bright July morning, Herbert Le
Breton lay at half length, basking in the brilliant
open sunshine and evidently waiting for somebody whom
he expected to arrive by the side path from the All
Saints’ Valley. Even the old coastguardsman,
plodding his daily round over to Ecclesbourne, noticed
the obvious expectation implied in his attentive attitude,
and ventured to remark, in his cheery familiar fashion,
‘She won’t be long a-comin’ now,
sir, you may depend upon it: the gals is sure
to be out early of a fine mornin’ like this
‘ere.’ Herbert stuck his double eye-glass
gingerly upon the tip of his nose, and surveyed the
bluff old sailor through it with a stony British stare
of mingled surprise and indignation, which drove the
poor man hastily off, with a few muttered observations
about some people being so confounded stuck up that
they didn’t even understand the point of a little
good-natured seafarin’ banter.
As the coastguardsman disappeared
round the corner of the flagstaff, a young girl came
suddenly into sight by the jutting edge of sandstone
bluff near the High Wickham; and Herbert, jumping up
at once from his reclining posture, raised his bat
to her with stately politeness, and moved forward
in his courtly graceful manner to meet her as she
approached. ‘Well, Selah,’ he said,
taking her hand a little warmly (judged at least by
Herbert Le Breton’s usual standard), ’so
you’ve come at last! I’ve been waiting
here for you for fully half an hour. You see,
I’ve come down to Hastings again as I promised,
the very first moment I could possibly get away from
my pressing duties at Oxford.’
The girl withdrew her hand from his,
blushing deeply, but looking into his face with evident
pleasure and admiration. She was tall and handsome,
with a certain dashing air of queenliness about her,
too; and she was dressed in a brave, outspoken sort
of finery, which, though cheap enough in its way,
was neither common nor wholly wanting in a touch of
native good taste and even bold refinement of contrast
and harmony. ‘It’s very kind of you
to come, Mr. Walters,’ she answered in a firm
but delicate voice. ’I’m so sorry
I’ve kept you waiting. I got your letter,
and tried to come in time; but father he’s been
more aggravating than usual, almost, this morning,
and kept saying he’d like to know what on earth
a young woman could want to go out walking for, instead
of stopping at home at her work and minding her Bible
like a proper Christian. In his time young
women usen’t to be allowed to go walking except
on Sundays, and then only to chapel or Bible class.
So I’ve not been able to get away till this
very minute, with all this bundle of tracts, too, to
give to the excursionists on the way. Father
feels a most incomprehensible interest, somehow, in
the future happiness of the Sunday excursionists.’
’I wish he’d feel a little
more interest in the present happiness of his own
daughter,’ Herbert said smiling. ’But
it hasn’t mattered your keeping me waiting here,
Selah. Of course I’d have enjoyed it all
far better in your society—I don’t
think I need tell you that now, dear—but
the sunshine, and the sea breeze, and the song of
the larks, and the plash of the waves below, and the
shouts of the fishermen down there on the beach mending
their nets and putting out their smacks, have all
been so delightful after our humdrum round of daily
life at Oxford, that I only wanted your presence
here to make it all into a perfect paradise.—Why,
Selah, how pretty you look in that sweet print!
It suits your complexion admirably. I never saw
you wear anything before so perfectly becoming.’
Selah drew herself up with the conscious
pride of an unaffected pretty girl. ‘I’m
so glad you think so, Mr. Walters,’ she said,
playing nervously with the handle of her dark-blue
parasol. ’You always say such very flattering
things.’
‘No, not flattering,’
Herbert answered, smiling; ’not flattering,
Selah, simply truthful. You always extort the
truth from me with your sweet face, Selah. Nobody
can look at it and not forget the stupid conventions
of ordinary society. But please, dear, don’t
call me Mr. Walters. Call me Herbert. You
always do, you know, when you write to me.’
‘But it’s so much harder
to do it to your face, Mr. Walters,’ Selah
said, again blushing. ’Every time you go
away I say to myself, “I shall call him Herbert
as soon as ever he comes back again;” and every
time you come back, I feel too much afraid of you,
the moment I see you, ever to do it. And yet
of course I ought to, you know, for when we’re
married, why, naturally, then I shall have to learn
to call you Herbert, shan’t I?’
‘You will, I suppose,’
Herbert answered, rather chillily: ’but
that subject is one upon which we shall be able to
form a better opinion when the time comes for actually
deciding it. Meanwhile, I want you to call me
Herbert, if you please, as a personal favour and a
mark of confidence. Suppose I were to go on calling
you Miss Briggs all the time! a pretty sort of thing
that would be! what inference would you draw as to
the depth of my affection? Well, now, Selah,
how have these dreadful home authorities of yours been
treating you, my dear girl, all the time since I last
saw you?’
‘Much the same as usual, Mr.
Walters—Herbert, I mean,’ Selah answered,
hastily correcting herself. ’The regular
round. Prayers; clean the shop; breakfast, with
a chapter; serve in the shop all morning; dinner,
with a chapter; serve in the shop all afternoon; tea,
with a chapter; prayer meeting in the evening; supper,
with a chapter; exhortation; and go to bed, sick of
it all, to get up next morning and repeat the entire
performance da capo, as they always say in the music
to the hymn-books. Occasional relaxations,—Sunday
at chapel three times, and Wednesday evening Bible
class; mothers’ assembly, Dorcas society, missionary
meeting, lecture on the Holy Land, dissolving views
of Jerusalem, and Primitive Methodist district conference
in the Mahanaim Jubilee meeting hall. Salvation
privileges every day and all the year round, till I’m
ready to drop with it, and begin to wish I’d
only been lucky enough to have been born one of those
happy benighted little pagans in a heathen land where
they don’t know the value of the precious Sabbath,
and haven’t yet been taught to build Primitive
Methodist district chapels for crushing the lives
out of their sons and daughters!’
Herbert smiled a gentle smile of calm
superiority at this vehement outburst of natural irreligion.
’You must certainly be bored to death with
it all, Selah,’ he said, laughingly. ’What
a funny sort of creed it really is, after all, for
rational beings! Who on earth could believe that
the religion these people use to render your life
so absolutely miserable is meant for the same thing
as the one that makes my poor dear brother Ronald
so perfectly and inexpressibly serene and happy?
The formalism of lower natures, like your father’s,
has turned it into a machine for crushing all the
spontaneity out of your existence. What a régime
for a high-spirited girl like you to be compelled
to live under, Selah!’
‘It is, it is!’ Selah
answered, vehemently. ’I wish you could
only see the way father goes on at me all the time
about chapel, and so on, Mr. Wal—Herbert,
I mean. You wouldn’t wonder, if you were
to hear him, at my being anxious for the time to come
when you can leave Oxford and we can get comfortably
married. What between the drudgery of the shop
and the drudgery of the chapel my life’s positively
getting almost worn out of me.’
Herbert took her hand in his, quietly.
It was not a very small hand, but it was prettily,
though cheaply, gloved, and the plain silver bracelet
that encircled the wrist, though simple and inexpensive,
was not wanting in rough tastefulness. ’You’re
a bad philosopher, Selah,’ he said, turning
with her along the path towards Ecclesbourne; ’you’re
always anxious to hurry on too fast the lagging wheels
of an unknown future. After all, how do you know
whether we should be any the happier if we were really
and truly married? Don’t you know what
Swinburne says, in “Dolores”—you’ve
read it in the Poems and Ballads I gave you—
Time turns the old days to
derision,
Our loves into
corpses or wives,
And marriage and death and
division
Make barren our
lives?’
‘I’ve read it,’
Selah answered, carelessly, ’and I thought it
all very pretty. Of course Swinburne always is
very pretty: but I’m sure I never try to
discover what on earth he means by it. I suppose
father would say I don’t read him tearfully and
prayerfully—at any rate, I’m quite
sure I never understand what he’s driving at.’
‘And yet he’s worth understanding,’
Herbert answered in his clear musical voice—’well
worth understanding, Selah, especially for you, dearest.
If, in imitation of obsolete fashions, you wished
to read a few verses of some improving volume every
night and morning, as a sort of becoming religious
exercise in the elements of self-culture, I don’t
know that I could recommend you a better book to begin
upon than the Poems and Ballads. Don’t you
see the moral of those four lines I’ve just
quoted to you? Why should we wish to change from
anything so free and delightful and poetical as lovers
into anything so fettered, and commonplace, and prosaic,
and BANAL, as wives and husbands? Why should we
wish to give up the fanciful paradise of fluttering
hope and expectation for the dreary reality of housekeeping
and cold mutton on Mondays? Why should we not
be satisfied with the real pleasure of the passing
moment, without for ever torturing our souls about
the imaginary but delusive pleasure of the unrealisable,
impossible future?’
‘But we must get married
some time or other, Herbert,’ Selah said, turning
her big eyes full upon him with a doubtful look of
interrogation. ’We can’t go on courting
in this way for ever and ever, without coming to any
definite conclusion. We must get married
by-and-by, now mustn’t we?’
‘Je n’en vois pas la nécessité,
moi,’ Herbert answered with just a trace of
cynicism in his curling lip. ’I don’t
see any must about it, that is to say, in English,
Selah. The fact is, you see, I’m above
all things a philosopher; you’re a philosopher,
too, but only an instinctive one, and I want to make
your instinctive philosophy assume a rather more rational
and extrinsic shape. Why should we really be
in any hurry to go and get married? Do the actual
married people of our acquaintance, as a matter of
fact, seem so very much more ethereally happy—with
their eight children to be washed and dressed and
schooled daily, for example—than the lovers,
like you and me, who walk arm-in-arm out here in the
sunshine, and haven’t yet got over their delicious
first illusions? Depend upon it, the longer you
can keep your illusions the better. You haven’t
read Aristotle in all probability; but as Aristotle
would put it, it isn’t the end that is anything
in love-making, it’s the energy, the active
pursuit, the momentary enjoyment of it. I suppose
we shall have to get married some day, Selah, though
I don’t know when; but I confess to you I don’t
look forward to the day quite so rapturously as you
do. Shall we feel more the thrill of possession,
do you think, than I feel it now when I hold your
hand in mine, so, and catch the beating of your pulse
in your veins, even through the fingers of your pretty
little glove? Shall we look deeper into one another’s
eyes and hearts than I look now into the very inmost
depths of yours? Shall we drink in more fully
the essence of love than when I touch your lips here—one
moment, Selah, the gorse is very deep here—now
don’t be foolish—ah, there, what’s
the use of philosophising, tell me, by the side of
that? Come over here to the bench, Selah, by
the edge of the cliff; look down yonder into Ecclesbourne
glen; hear the waves dashing on the shore below, and
your own heart beating against your bosom within—and
then ask yourself what’s the good of living
in any moment, in any moment but the present.’
Selah turned her great eyes admiringly
upon him once more. ’Oh, Herbert,’
she said, looking at him with a clever uneducated girl’s
unfeigned and undisguised admiration for any cultivated
gentleman who takes the trouble to draw out her higher
self. ’Oh, Herbert, how can you talk so
beautifully to me, and then ask me why it is I’m
longing for the day to come when I can be really and
truly married to you? Do you think I don’t
feel the difference between spending my life with
such a man as you, and spending it for years and years
together with a ranting, canting Primitive Methodist?’
Herbert smiled to himself a quiet,
unobtrusive, self-satisfied smile. ‘She
appreciates me,’ he thought silently in his own
heart, ’she appreciates me at my true worth;
and, after all, that’s a great thing. Well,
Selah,’ he went on aloud, toying unreproved with
her pretty little silver bracelet, ’let us be
practical. You belong to a business family and
you know the necessity for being practical. There’s
a great deal to be said in favour of my hanging on
at Oxford a little longer. I must get a situation
somewhere else as soon as possible, in which I can
get married; but I can’t give up my fellowship
without having found something else to do which would
enable me to put my wife in the position I should like
her to occupy.’
‘A very small income would do
for me, with you, Herbert,’ Selah put in eagerly.
’You see, I’ve been brought up economically
enough, heaven knows, and I could live extremely well
on very little.’
‘But I could not, Selah,’
Herbert answered, in his colder tone. ’Pardon
me, but I could not. I’ve been accustomed
to a certain amount of comfort, not to say luxury,
which I couldn’t readily do without. And
then, you know, dear,’ he added, seeing a certain
cloud gathering dimly on Selah’s forehead, ’I
want to make my wife a real lady.’
Selah looked at him tenderly, and
gave the hand she hold in hers a faint pressure.
And then Herbert began to talk about the waves, and
the cliffs, and the sun, and the great red sails, and
to quote Shelley and Swinburne; and the conversation
glided off into more ordinary everyday topics.
They sat for a couple of hours together
on the edge of the cliff, talking to one another about
such and other subjects, till, at last, Selah asked
the time, hurriedly, and declared she must go off at
once, or father’d be in a tearing passion.
Herbert walked back with her through the green lanes
in the golden mass of gorse, till he reached the brow
of the hill by the fisher village. Then Selah
said lightly, ’Not any nearer, Herbert—you
see I can say Herbert quite naturally now—the
neighbours will go talking about it if they see me
standing here with a strange gentleman. Good-bye,
good-bye, till Friday.’ Herbert held her
face up to his in his hands, and kissed her twice
over in spite of a faint resistance. Then they
each went their own way, Selah to the little green-grocer’s
shop in a back street of the red-brick fisher village,
and Herbert to his big fashionable hotel on the Marine
Parade in the noisy stuccoed modern watering place.
‘It’s an awkward sort
of muddle to have got oneself into.’ he thought
to himself as he walked along the asphalte pavement
in front of the sea-wall: ’a most confoundedly
awkward fix to have got oneself into with a pretty
girl of the lower classes. She’s beautiful
certainly; that there’s no denying; the handsomest
woman on the whole I ever remember to have seen at
any time anywhere; and when I’m actually by
her side—though it’s a weakness to
confess it—I’m really not quite sure
that I’m not positively quite in love with her!
She’d make a grand sort of Messalina, without
a doubt, a model for a painter, with her frank imperious
face, and her splendid voluptuous figure; a Faustina,
a Catherine of Russia, an Ann Boleyn—to
be fitly painted only by a Rubens or a Gustave Courbet.
Yet how I can ever have been such a particular fool
as to go and get myself entangled with her I can’t
imagine. Heredity, heredity; it must run in the
family, for certain. There’s Ernest has
gone and handed himself over bodily to this grocer
person somewhere down in Devonshire; and I myself,
who perfectly see the folly of his absurd proceeding,
have independently put myself into this very similar
awkward fix with Selah Briggs here. Selah Briggs,
indeed! The very name reeks with commingled dissent,
vulgarity, and greengrocery. Her father’s
deacon of his chapel, and goes out at night when there’s
no missionary meeting on, to wait at serious dinner
parties! Or rather, I suppose he’d desert
the most enticing missionary to earn a casual half-crown
at even an ungodly champagne-drinking dinner!
Then that’s the difference between me and Ernest.
Ernest’s selfish, incurably and radically selfish.
Because this Oswald girl happens to take his passing
fancy, and to fit in with his impossible Schurzian
notions, he’ll actually go and marry her.
Not only will he have no consideration for mother—who
really is a very decent sort of body in her own fashion,
if you don’t rub her up the wrong way or expect
too much from her—but he’ll also interfere,
without a thought, with my prospects and my advancement.
Now, that I call really selfish; and selfishness
is a vulgar piggish vice that I thoroughly abominate.
I don’t deny that I’m a trifle selfish
myself, of course, in a refined and cultivated manner—I
flatter myself, in fact, that introspective analysis
is one of my strong points; and I don’t conceal
my own failings from my own consciousness with any
weak girlish prevarications. But after all, as
Hobbes very well showed (though our shallow modern
philosophers pretend to laugh at him), selfishness
in one form or another is at the very base of all
human motives; the difference really is between sympathetic
and unsympathetic selfishness—between piggishness
and cultivated feelings. Now I will not
give way to the foolish and selfish impulses which
would lead me to marry Selah Briggs. I will put
a curb upon my inclinations, and do what is really
best in the end for all the persons concerned—and
for myself especially.’
He strolled down on to the beach,
and began throwing pebbles carelessly into the plashing
water. ‘Yes,’ he went on in his internal
colloquy, ’I can only account for my incredible
stupidity in this matter by supposing that it depends
somehow upon some incomprehensible hereditary leaning
in the Le Breton family idiosyncrasy. It’s
awfully unlike me, I will do myself the justice to
say, to have got myself into such a silly dilemma
all for nothing. It was all very well a few years
ago, when I first met Selah. I was an undergraduate
in those days, and even if somebody had caught me
walking with a young lady of unknown antecedents and
doubtful aspirates on the East Cliff at Hastings,
it really wouldn’t have much mattered. She
was beautiful even then—though not so beautiful
as now, for she grows handsomer every day; and it
was natural enough I should have taken to going harmless
walks about the place with her. She attracted
me by her social rebelliousness—another
family trait, in me passive not active, contemplative
not personal; but she certainly attracted me.
She attracts me still. A man must have some outlet
for the natural and instinctive emotions of our common
humanity; and if a monastic Oxford community imposes
celibacy upon one with mediaeval absurdity—why,
Selah Briggs is, for the time being, the only possible
sort of outlet. One needn’t marry her in
the end; but for the moment it is certainly very excellent
fooling. Not unsentimental either—for
my part I could never care for mere coarse, commonplace,
venal wretches. Indeed, when I spoke to her just
now about my wishing to make my wife a lady, upon
my word, at the time, I almost think I was just then
quite in earnest. The idea flitted across my mind
vaguely—“Why not send her for a year
or two to be polished up at Paris or somewhere, and
really marry her afterwards for good and always?”
But on second thoughts, it won’t hold water.
She’s magnificent, she’s undeniable, she’s
admirable, but she isn’t possible. The
name alone’s enough to condemn her. Fancy
marrying somebody with a Christian name out of the
hundred and somethingth psalm! It’s too
atrocious! I really couldn’t inflict her
for a moment on poor suffering innocent society.’
He paused awhile, watching the great
russet sails of the fishing vessels flapping idly
in the breeze as the men raised them to catch the
faint breath of wind, and then he thought once more,
’But how to get rid of her, that’s the
question. Every time I come here now she goes
on more and more about the necessity of our getting
soon married—and I don’t wonder at
it either, for she has a perfect purgatory of a life
with that snivelling Methodistical father of hers,
one may be sure of it. It would be awfully awkward
if any Oxford people were to catch me here walking
with her on the cliff over yonder—some
sniggering fellow of Jesus or Worcester, for example,
or, worse than all, some prying young Pecksniff of
a third-year undergraduate! Somehow, she seems
to fascinate me, and I can’t get away from her;
but I must really do it and be done with it. It’s
no use going on this way much longer. I must stop
here for a few days more only, and then tell her that
I’m called away on important college business,
say to Yorkshire or Worcestershire, or somewhere.
I needn’t tell her in person, face to face:
I can write hastily at the last moment to the usual
name at the Post Office—to be left till
called for. And as a matter of fact I won’t
go to Yorkshire either—very awkward and
undignified, though, these petty prevarications; when
a man once begins lowering himself by making love
to a girl in an inferior position, he lets himself
in for all kinds of disagreeable necessities afterwards;—I
shall go to Switzerland. Yes, no place better
after the bother of running away like a coward from
Selah: in the Alps, one would forget all petty
human degradations; I shall go to Switzerland.
Of course I won’t break off with her altogether—that
would be cruel; and I really like her; upon my word,
even when she isn’t by, up to her own level,
I really like her; but I’ll let the thing die
a natural death of inanition. As they always
put it in the newspapers, with their stereotyped phraseology,
a gradual coldness shall intervene between us.
That’ll be the best and only way out of it.
’And if I go to Switzerland,
why not ask Oswald of Oriel to go with me? That,
I fancy, wouldn’t be a bad stroke of social policy.
Ernest will marry this Oswald girl; unfortunately
he’s as headstrong as an allegory on the banks
of the Nile; and as he’s going to drag her inevitably
into the family, I may as well put the best possible
face upon the disagreeable matter. Let’s
make a virtue of necessity. The father and mother
are old: they’ll die soon, and be gathered
to their fathers (if they had any), and the world will
straightway forget all about them. But Oswald
will always be there en évidence, and the safest thing
to do will be to take him as much as possible into
the world, and let the sister rest upon his reputation
for her place in society. It’s quite one
thing to say that Ernest has married the daughter
of a country grocer down in Devonshire, and quite
another thing to say that he has married the sister
of Oswald of Oriel, the distinguished mathematician
and fellow of the Royal Society. How beautifully
that warm brown sail stands out in a curve against
the cold grey line of the horizon—a bulging
curve just like the swell of Selah’s neck, when
she throws her head back, so, and lets you see the
contour of her throat, her beautiful rounded throat—ah,
that’s not giving her up now, is it?—What
a confounded fool I am, to be sure! Anybody would
say, if they could only have read my thoughts that
moment, that I was really in love with this girl Selah!’