THE EARLY MARRIED LIFE OF THE MORELS
“The Bottoms”
succeeded to “Hell Row”. Hell Row
was a block of thatched, bulging cottages that stood
by the brookside on Greenhill Lane. There lived
the colliers who worked in the little gin-pits two
fields away. The brook ran under the alder trees,
scarcely soiled by these small mines, whose coal was
drawn to the surface by donkeys that plodded wearily
in a circle round a gin. And all over the countryside
were these same pits, some of which had been worked
in the time of Charles II, the few colliers and the
donkeys burrowing down like ants into the earth, making
queer mounds and little black places among the corn-fields
and the meadows. And the cottages of these coal-miners,
in blocks and pairs here and there, together with
odd farms and homes of the stockingers, straying over
the parish, formed the village of Bestwood.
Then, some sixty years ago, a sudden
change took place, gin-pits were elbowed aside by
the large mines of the financiers. The coal and
iron field of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire was discovered.
Carston, Waite and Co. appeared. Amid tremendous
excitement, Lord Palmerston formally opened the company’s
first mine at Spinney Park, on the edge of Sherwood
Forest.
About this time the notorious Hell
Row, which through growing old had acquired an evil
reputation, was burned down, and much dirt was cleansed
away.
Carston, Waite & Co. found they had
struck on a good thing, so, down the valleys of the
brooks from Selby and Nuttall, new mines were sunk,
until soon there were six pits working. From
Nuttall, high up on the sandstone among the woods,
the railway ran, past the ruined priory of the Carthusians
and past Robin Hood’s Well, down to Spinney Park,
then on to Minton, a large mine among corn-fields;
from Minton across the farmlands of the valleyside
to Bunker’s Hill, branching off there, and running
north to Beggarlee and Selby, that looks over at Crich
and the hills of Derbyshire: six mines like black
studs on the countryside, linked by a loop of fine
chain, the railway.
To accommodate the regiments of miners,
Carston, Waite and Co. built the Squares, great quadrangles
of dwellings on the hillside of Bestwood, and then,
in the brook valley, on the site of Hell Row, they
erected the Bottoms.
The Bottoms consisted of six blocks
of miners’ dwellings, two rows of three, like
the dots on a blank-six domino, and twelve houses in
a block. This double row of dwellings sat at
the foot of the rather sharp slope from Bestwood,
and looked out, from the attic windows at least, on
the slow climb of the valley towards Selby.
The houses themselves were substantial
and very decent. One could walk all round, seeing
little front gardens with auriculas and saxifrage in
the shadow of the bottom block, sweet-williams and
pinks in the sunny top block; seeing neat front windows,
little porches, little privet hedges, and dormer windows
for the attics. But that was outside; that was
the view on to the uninhabited parlours of all the
colliers’ wives. The dwelling-room, the
kitchen, was at the back of the house, facing inward
between the blocks, looking at a scrubby back garden,
and then at the ash-pits. And between the rows,
between the long lines of ash-pits, went the alley,
where the children played and the women gossiped and
the men smoked. So, the actual conditions of
living in the Bottoms, that was so well built and
that looked so nice, were quite unsavoury because
people must live in the kitchen, and the kitchens opened
on to that nasty alley of ash-pits.
Mrs. Morel was not anxious to move
into the Bottoms, which was already twelve years old
and on the downward path, when she descended to it
from Bestwood. But it was the best she could
do. Moreover, she had an end house in one of
the top blocks, and thus had only one neighbour; on
the other side an extra strip of garden. And,
having an end house, she enjoyed a kind of aristocracy
among the other women of the “between”
houses, because her rent was five shillings and sixpence
instead of five shillings a week. But this superiority
in station was not much consolation to Mrs. Morel.
She was thirty-one years old, and
had been married eight years. A rather small
woman, of delicate mould but resolute bearing, she
shrank a little from the first contact with the Bottoms
women. She came down in the July, and in the
September expected her third baby.
Her husband was a miner. They
had only been in their new home three weeks when the
wakes, or fair, began. Morel, she knew, was sure
to make a holiday of it. He went off early on
the Monday morning, the day of the fair. The
two children were highly excited. William, a boy
of seven, fled off immediately after breakfast, to
prowl round the wakes ground, leaving Annie, who was
only five, to whine all morning to go also. Mrs.
Morel did her work. She scarcely knew her neighbours
yet, and knew no one with whom to trust the little
girl. So she promised to take her to the wakes
after dinner.
William appeared at half-past twelve.
He was a very active lad, fair-haired, freckled, with
a touch of the Dane or Norwegian about him.
“Can I have my dinner, mother?”
he cried, rushing in with his cap on. “’Cause
it begins at half-past one, the man says so.”
“You can have your dinner as
soon as it’s done,” replied the mother.
“Isn’t it done?”
he cried, his blue eyes staring at her in indignation.
“Then I’m goin’ be-out it.”
“You’ll do nothing of
the sort. It will be done in five minutes.
It is only half-past twelve.”
“They’ll be beginnin’,” the
boy half cried, half shouted.
“You won’t die if they
do,” said the mother. “Besides, it’s
only half-past twelve, so you’ve a full hour.”
The lad began hastily to lay the table,
and directly the three sat down. They were eating
batter-pudding and jam, when the boy jumped off his
chair and stood perfectly stiff. Some distance
away could be heard the first small braying of a merry-go-round,
and the tooting of a horn. His face quivered
as he looked at his mother.
“I told you!” he said,
running to the dresser for his cap.
“Take your pudding in your hand—and
it’s only five past one, so you were wrong—you
haven’t got your twopence,” cried the mother
in a breath.
The boy came back, bitterly disappointed,
for his twopence, then went off without a word.
“I want to go, I want to go,”
said Annie, beginning to cry.
“Well, and you shall go, whining,
wizzening little stick!” said the mother.
And later in the afternoon she trudged up the hill
under the tall hedge with her child. The hay
was gathered from the fields, and cattle were turned
on to the eddish. It was warm, peaceful.
Mrs. Morel did not like the wakes.
There were two sets of horses, one going by steam,
one pulled round by a pony; three organs were grinding,
and there came odd cracks of pistol-shots, fearful
screeching of the cocoanut man’s rattle, shouts
of the Aunt Sally man, screeches from the peep-show
lady. The mother perceived her son gazing enraptured
outside the Lion Wallace booth, at the pictures of
this famous lion that had killed a negro and maimed
for life two white men. She left him alone, and
went to get Annie a spin of toffee. Presently
the lad stood in front of her, wildly excited.
“You never said you was coming—isn’t
the’ a lot of things?—that lion’s
killed three men—I’ve spent my tuppence—an’
look here.”
He pulled from his pocket two egg-cups,
with pink moss-roses on them.
“I got these from that stall
where y’ave ter get them marbles in them holes.
An’ I got these two in two goes-’aepenny
a go-they’ve got moss-roses on, look here.
I wanted these.”
She knew he wanted them for her.
“H’m!” she said, pleased. “They
are pretty!”
“Shall you carry ’em, ‘cause I’m
frightened o’ breakin’ ’em?”
He was tipful of excitement now she
had come, led her about the ground, showed her everything.
Then, at the peep-show, she explained the pictures,
in a sort of story, to which he listened as if spellbound.
He would not leave her. All the time he stuck
close to her, bristling with a small boy’s pride
of her. For no other woman looked such a lady
as she did, in her little black bonnet and her cloak.
She smiled when she saw women she knew. When
she was tired she said to her son:
“Well, are you coming now, or later?”
“Are you goin’ a’ready?” he
cried, his face full of reproach.
“Already? It is past four, I know.”
“What are you goin’ a’ready for?”
he lamented.
“You needn’t come if you don’t want,”
she said.
And she went slowly away with her
little girl, whilst her son stood watching her, cut
to the heart to let her go, and yet unable to leave
the wakes. As she crossed the open ground in front
of the Moon and Stars she heard men shouting, and
smelled the beer, and hurried a little, thinking her
husband was probably in the bar.
At about half-past six her son came
home, tired now, rather pale, and somewhat wretched.
He was miserable, though he did not know it, because
he had let her go alone. Since she had gone, he
had not enjoyed his wakes.
“Has my dad been?” he asked.
“No,” said the mother.
“He’s helping to wait
at the Moon and Stars. I seed him through that
black tin stuff wi’ holes in, on the window,
wi’ his sleeves rolled up.”
“Ha!” exclaimed the mother
shortly. “He’s got no money.
An’ he’ll be satisfied if he gets his
’lowance, whether they give him more or not.”
When the light was fading, and Mrs.
Morel could see no more to sew, she rose and went
to the door. Everywhere was the sound of excitement,
the restlessness of the holiday, that at last infected
her. She went out into the side garden.
Women were coming home from the wakes, the children
hugging a white lamb with green legs, or a wooden horse.
Occasionally a man lurched past, almost as full as
he could carry. Sometimes a good husband came
along with his family, peacefully. But usually
the women and children were alone. The stay-at-home
mothers stood gossiping at the corners of the alley,
as the twilight sank, folding their arms under their
white aprons.
Mrs. Morel was alone, but she was
used to it. Her son and her little girl slept
upstairs; so, it seemed, her home was there behind
her, fixed and stable. But she felt wretched
with the coming child. The world seemed a dreary
place, where nothing else would happen for her—at
least until William grew up. But for herself,
nothing but this dreary endurance—till
the children grew up. And the children! She
could not afford to have this third. She did
not want it. The father was serving beer in a
public house, swilling himself drunk. She despised
him, and was tied to him. This coming child was
too much for her. If it were not for William
and Annie, she was sick of it, the struggle with poverty
and ugliness and meanness.
She went into the front garden, feeling
too heavy to take herself out, yet unable to stay
indoors. The heat suffocated her. And looking
ahead, the prospect of her life made her feel as if
she were buried alive.
The front garden was a small square
with a privet hedge. There she stood, trying
to soothe herself with the scent of flowers and the
fading, beautiful evening. Opposite her small
gate was the stile that led uphill, under the tall
hedge between the burning glow of the cut pastures.
The sky overhead throbbed and pulsed with light.
The glow sank quickly off the field; the earth and
the hedges smoked dusk. As it grew dark, a ruddy
glare came out on the hilltop, and out of the glare
the diminished commotion of the fair.
Sometimes, down the trough of darkness
formed by the path under the hedges, men came lurching
home. One young man lapsed into a run down the
steep bit that ended the hill, and went with a crash
into the stile. Mrs. Morel shuddered. He
picked himself up, swearing viciously, rather pathetically,
as if he thought the stile had wanted to hurt him.
She went indoors, wondering if things
were never going to alter. She was beginning
by now to realise that they would not. She seemed
so far away from her girlhood, she wondered if it
were the same person walking heavily up the back garden
at the Bottoms as had run so lightly up the breakwater
at Sheerness ten years before.
“What have I to do with it?”
she said to herself. “What have I to do
with all this? Even the child I am going to have!
It doesn’t seem as if I were taken into account.”
Sometimes life takes hold of one,
carries the body along, accomplishes one’s history,
and yet is not real, but leaves oneself as it were
slurred over.
“I wait,” Mrs. Morel said
to herself—“I wait, and what I wait
for can never come.”
Then she straightened the kitchen,
lit the lamp, mended the fire, looked out the washing
for the next day, and put it to soak. After which
she sat down to her sewing. Through the long hours
her needle flashed regularly through the stuff.
Occasionally she sighed, moving to relieve herself.
And all the time she was thinking how to make the most
of what she had, for the children’s sakes.
At half-past eleven her husband came.
His cheeks were very red and very shiny above his
black moustache. His head nodded slightly.
He was pleased with himself.
“Oh! Oh! waitin’
for me, lass? I’ve bin ‘elpin’
Anthony, an’ what’s think he’s gen
me? Nowt b’r a lousy hae’f-crown,
an’ that’s ivry penny—”
“He thinks you’ve made
the rest up in beer,” she said shortly.
“An’ I ’aven’t—that
I ’aven’t. You b’lieve me, I’ve
’ad very little this day, I have an’ all.”
His voice went tender. “Here, an’
I browt thee a bit o’ brandysnap, an’
a cocoanut for th’ children.” He laid
the gingerbread and the cocoanut, a hairy object,
on the table. “Nay, tha niver said thankyer
for nowt i’ thy life, did ter?”
As a compromise, she picked up the
cocoanut and shook it, to see if it had any milk.
“It’s a good ‘un,
you may back yer life o’ that. I got it
fra’ Bill Hodgkisson. ‘Bill,’
I says, ’tha non wants them three nuts, does
ter? Arena ter for gi’ein’ me one
for my bit of a lad an’ wench?’ ’I
ham, Walter, my lad,’ ’e says; ’ta’e
which on ’em ter’s a mind.’
An’ so I took one, an’ thanked ’im.
I didn’t like ter shake it afore ’is eyes,
but ’e says, ‘Tha’d better ma’e
sure it’s a good un, Walt.’ An’
so, yer see, I knowed it was. He’s a nice
chap, is Bill Hodgkisson, e’s a nice chap!”
“A man will part with anything
so long as he’s drunk, and you’re drunk
along with him,” said Mrs. Morel.
“Eh, tha mucky little ’ussy,
who’s drunk, I sh’d like ter know?”
said Morel. He was extraordinarily pleased with
himself, because of his day’s helping to wait
in the Moon and Stars. He chattered on.
Mrs. Morel, very tired, and sick of
his babble, went to bed as quickly as possible, while
he raked the fire.
Mrs. Morel came of a good old burgher
family, famous independents who had fought with Colonel
Hutchinson, and who remained stout Congregationalists.
Her grandfather had gone bankrupt in the lace-market
at a time when so many lace-manufacturers were ruined
in Nottingham. Her father, George Coppard, was
an engineer—a large, handsome, haughty
man, proud of his fair skin and blue eyes, but more
proud still of his integrity. Gertrude resembled
her mother in her small build. But her temper,
proud and unyielding, she had from the Coppards.
George Coppard was bitterly galled
by his own poverty. He became foreman of the
engineers in the dockyard at Sheerness. Mrs. Morel—Gertrude—was
the second daughter. She favoured her mother,
loved her mother best of all; but she had the Coppards’
clear, defiant blue eyes and their broad brow.
She remembered to have hated her father’s overbearing
manner towards her gentle, humorous, kindly-souled
mother. She remembered running over the breakwater
at Sheerness and finding the boat. She remembered
to have been petted and flattered by all the men when
she had gone to the dockyard, for she was a delicate,
rather proud child. She remembered the funny
old mistress, whose assistant she had become, whom
she had loved to help in the private school. And
she still had the Bible that John Field had given
her. She used to walk home from chapel with John
Field when she was nineteen. He was the son of
a well-to-do tradesman, had been to college in London,
and was to devote himself to business.
She could always recall in detail
a September Sunday afternoon, when they had sat under
the vine at the back of her father’s house.
The sun came through the chinks of the vine-leaves
and made beautiful patterns, like a lace scarf, falling
on her and on him. Some of the leaves were clean
yellow, like yellow flat flowers.
“Now sit still,” he had
cried. “Now your hair, I don’t know
what it is like! It’s as bright as
copper and gold, as red as burnt copper, and it has
gold threads where the sun shines on it. Fancy
their saying it’s brown. Your mother calls
it mouse-colour.”
She had met his brilliant eyes, but
her clear face scarcely showed the elation which rose
within her.
“But you say you don’t like business,”
she pursued.
“I don’t. I hate it!” he cried
hotly.
“And you would like to go into the ministry,”
she half implored.
“I should. I should love
it, if I thought I could make a first-rate preacher.”
“Then why don’t you—why
don’t you?” Her voice rang with defiance.
“If I were a man, nothing would stop me.”
She held her head erect. He was rather timid
before her.
“But my father’s so stiff-necked.
He means to put me into the business, and I know he’ll
do it.”
“But if you’re a man?” she
had cried.
“Being a man isn’t everything,”
he replied, frowning with puzzled helplessness.
Now, as she moved about her work at
the Bottoms, with some experience of what being a
man meant, she knew that it was not everything.
At twenty, owing to her health, she
had left Sheerness. Her father had retired home
to Nottingham. John Field’s father had been
ruined; the son had gone as a teacher in Norwood.
She did not hear of him until, two years later, she
made determined inquiry. He had married his landlady,
a woman of forty, a widow with property.
And still Mrs. Morel preserved John
Field’s Bible. She did not now believe
him to be—Well, she understood pretty well
what he might or might not have been. So she
preserved his Bible, and kept his memory intact in
her heart, for her own sake. To her dying day,
for thirty-five years, she did not speak of him.
When she was twenty-three years old,
she met, at a Christmas party, a young man from the
Erewash Valley. Morel was then twenty-seven years
old. He was well set-up, erect, and very smart.
He had wavy black hair that shone again, and a vigorous
black beard that had never been shaved. His cheeks
were ruddy, and his red, moist mouth was noticeable
because he laughed so often and so heartily.
He had that rare thing, a rich, ringing laugh.
Gertrude Coppard had watched him, fascinated.
He was so full of colour and animation, his voice
ran so easily into comic grotesque, he was so ready
and so pleasant with everybody. Her own father
had a rich fund of humour, but it was satiric.
This man’s was different: soft, non-intellectual,
warm, a kind of gambolling.
She herself was opposite. She
had a curious, receptive mind which found much pleasure
and amusement in listening to other folk. She
was clever in leading folk to talk. She loved
ideas, and was considered very intellectual.
What she liked most of all was an argument on religion
or philosophy or politics with some educated man.
This she did not often enjoy. So she always had
people tell her about themselves, finding her pleasure
so.
In her person she was rather small
and delicate, with a large brow, and dropping bunches
of brown silk curls. Her blue eyes were very straight,
honest, and searching. She had the beautiful hands
of the Coppards. Her dress was always subdued.
She wore dark blue silk, with a peculiar silver chain
of silver scallops. This, and a heavy brooch of
twisted gold, was her only ornament. She was
still perfectly intact, deeply religious, and full
of beautiful candour.
Walter Morel seemed melted away before
her. She was to the miner that thing of mystery
and fascination, a lady. When she spoke to him,
it was with a southern pronunciation and a purity
of English which thrilled him to hear. She watched
him. He danced well, as if it were natural and
joyous in him to dance. His grandfather was a
French refugee who had married an English barmaid—if
it had been a marriage. Gertrude Coppard watched
the young miner as he danced, a certain subtle exultation
like glamour in his movement, and his face the flower
of his body, ruddy, with tumbled black hair, and laughing
alike whatever partner he bowed above. She thought
him rather wonderful, never having met anyone like
him. Her father was to her the type of all men.
And George Coppard, proud in his bearing, handsome,
and rather bitter; who preferred theology in reading,
and who drew near in sympathy only to one man, the
Apostle Paul; who was harsh in government, and in familiarity
ironic; who ignored all sensuous pleasure:—he
was very different from the miner. Gertrude herself
was rather contemptuous of dancing; she had not the
slightest inclination towards that accomplishment,
and had never learned even a Roger de Coverley.
She was puritan, like her father, high-minded, and
really stern. Therefore the dusky, golden softness
of this man’s sensuous flame of life, that flowed
off his flesh like the flame from a candle, not baffled
and gripped into incandescence by thought and spirit
as her life was, seemed to her something wonderful,
beyond her.
He came and bowed above her.
A warmth radiated through her as if she had drunk
wine.
“Now do come and have this one
wi’ me,” he said caressively. “It’s
easy, you know. I’m pining to see you dance.”
She had told him before she could
not dance. She glanced at his humility and smiled.
Her smile was very beautiful. It moved the man
so that he forgot everything.
“No, I won’t dance,”
she said softly. Her words came clean and ringing.
Not knowing what he was doing—he
often did the right thing by instinct—he
sat beside her, inclining reverentially.
“But you mustn’t miss your dance,”
she reproved.
“Nay, I don’t want to dance that—it’s
not one as I care about.”
“Yet you invited me to it.”
He laughed very heartily at this.
“I never thought o’ that. Tha’rt
not long in taking the curl out of me.”
It was her turn to laugh quickly.
“You don’t look as if you’d come
much uncurled,” she said.
“I’m like a pig’s
tail, I curl because I canna help it,” he laughed,
rather boisterously.
“And you are a miner!” she exclaimed in
surprise.
“Yes. I went down when I was ten.”
She looked at him in wondering dismay.
“When you were ten! And wasn’t it
very hard?” she asked.
“You soon get used to it.
You live like th’ mice, an’ you pop out
at night to see what’s going on.”
“It makes me feel blind,” she frowned.
“Like a moudiwarp!” he
laughed. “Yi, an’ there’s some
chaps as does go round like moudiwarps.”
He thrust his face forward in the blind, snout-like
way of a mole, seeming to sniff and peer for direction.
“They dun though!” he protested naively.
“Tha niver seed such a way they get in.
But tha mun let me ta’e thee down some time,
an’ tha can see for thysen.”
She looked at him, startled.
This was a new tract of life suddenly opened before
her. She realised the life of the miners, hundreds
of them toiling below earth and coming up at evening.
He seemed to her noble. He risked his life daily,
and with gaiety. She looked at him, with a touch
of appeal in her pure humility.
“Shouldn’t ter like it?”
he asked tenderly. “’Appen not, it ’ud
dirty thee.”
She had never been “thee’d” and
“thou’d” before.
The next Christmas they were married,
and for three months she was perfectly happy:
for six months she was very happy.
He had signed the pledge, and wore
the blue ribbon of a tee-totaller: he was nothing
if not showy. They lived, she thought, in his
own house. It was small, but convenient enough,
and quite nicely furnished, with solid, worthy stuff
that suited her honest soul. The women, her neighbours,
were rather foreign to her, and Morel’s mother
and sisters were apt to sneer at her ladylike ways.
But she could perfectly well live by herself, so long
as she had her husband close.
Sometimes, when she herself wearied
of love-talk, she tried to open her heart seriously
to him. She saw him listen deferentially, but
without understanding. This killed her efforts
at a finer intimacy, and she had flashes of fear.
Sometimes he was restless of an evening: it was
not enough for him just to be near her, she realised.
She was glad when he set himself to little jobs.
He was a remarkably handy man—could
make or mend anything. So she would say:
“I do like that coal-rake of
your mother’s—it is small and natty.”
“Does ter, my wench? Well,
I made that, so I can make thee one!”
“What! why, it’s a steel one!”
“An’ what if it is!
Tha s’lt ha’e one very similar, if not
exactly same.”
She did not mind the mess, nor the
hammering and noise. He was busy and happy.
But in the seventh month, when she
was brushing his Sunday coat, she felt papers in the
breast pocket, and, seized with a sudden curiosity,
took them out to read. He very rarely wore the
frock-coat he was married in: and it had not
occurred to her before to feel curious concerning the
papers. They were the bills of the household furniture,
still unpaid.
“Look here,” she said
at night, after he was washed and had had his dinner.
“I found these in the pocket of your wedding-coat.
Haven’t you settled the bills yet?”
“No. I haven’t had a chance.”
“But you told me all was paid.
I had better go into Nottingham on Saturday and settle
them. I don’t like sitting on another man’s
chairs and eating from an unpaid table.”
He did not answer.
“I can have your bank-book, can’t I?”
“Tha can ha’e it, for what good it’ll
be to thee.”
“I thought—”
she began. He had told her he had a good bit of
money left over. But she realised it was no use
asking questions. She sat rigid with bitterness
and indignation.
The next day she went down to see his mother.
“Didn’t you buy the furniture for Walter?”
she asked.
“Yes, I did,” tartly retorted the elder
woman.
“And how much did he give you to pay for it?”
The elder woman was stung with fine indignation.
“Eighty pound, if you’re so keen on knowin’,”
she replied.
“Eighty pounds! But there are forty-two
pounds still owing!”
“I can’t help that.”
“But where has it all gone?”
“You’ll find all the papers,
I think, if you look—beside ten pound as
he owed me, an’ six pound as the wedding cost
down here.”
“Six pounds!” echoed Gertrude
Morel. It seemed to her monstrous that, after
her own father had paid so heavily for her wedding,
six pounds more should have been squandered in eating
and drinking at Walter’s parents’ house,
at his expense.
“And how much has he sunk in his houses?”
she asked.
“His houses—which houses?”
Gertrude Morel went white to the lips.
He had told her the house he lived in, and the next
one, was his own.
“I thought the house we live in—”
she began.
“They’re my houses, those
two,” said the mother-in-law. “And
not clear either. It’s as much as I can
do to keep the mortgage interest paid.”
Gertrude sat white and silent. She was her father
now.
“Then we ought to be paying you rent,”
she said coldly.
“Walter is paying me rent,” replied the
mother.
“And what rent?” asked Gertrude.
“Six and six a week,” retorted the mother.
It was more than the house was worth.
Gertrude held her head erect, looked straight before
her.
“It is lucky to be you,”
said the elder woman, bitingly, “to have a husband
as takes all the worry of the money, and leaves you
a free hand.”
The young wife was silent.
She said very little to her husband,
but her manner had changed towards him. Something
in her proud, honourable soul had crystallised out
hard as rock.
When October came in, she thought
only of Christmas. Two years ago, at Christmas,
she had met him. Last Christmas she had married
him. This Christmas she would bear him a child.
“You don’t dance yourself,
do you, missis?” asked her nearest neighbour,
in October, when there was great talk of opening a
dancing-class over the Brick and Tile Inn at Bestwood.
“No—I never had the
least inclination to,” Mrs. Morel replied.
“Fancy! An’ how funny
as you should ha’ married your Mester. You
know he’s quite a famous one for dancing.”
“I didn’t know he was famous,” laughed
Mrs. Morel.
“Yea, he is though! Why,
he ran that dancing-class in the Miners’ Arms
club-room for over five year.”
“Did he?”
“Yes, he did.” The
other woman was defiant. “An’ it was
thronged every Tuesday, and Thursday, an’ Sat’day—an’
there was carryin’s-on, accordin’
to all accounts.”
This kind of thing was gall and bitterness
to Mrs. Morel, and she had a fair share of it.
The women did not spare her, at first; for she was
superior, though she could not help it.
He began to be rather late in coming home.
“They’re working very
late now, aren’t they?” she said to her
washer-woman.
“No later than they allers do,
I don’t think. But they stop to have their
pint at Ellen’s, an’ they get talkin’,
an’ there you are! Dinner stone cold—an’
it serves ’em right.”
“But Mr. Morel does not take any drink.”
The woman dropped the clothes, looked
at Mrs. Morel, then went on with her work, saying
nothing.
Gertrude Morel was very ill when the
boy was born. Morel was good to her, as good
as gold. But she felt very lonely, miles away
from her own people. She felt lonely with him
now, and his presence only made it more intense.
The boy was small and frail at first,
but he came on quickly. He was a beautiful child,
with dark gold ringlets, and dark-blue eyes which
changed gradually to a clear grey. His mother
loved him passionately. He came just when her
own bitterness of disillusion was hardest to bear;
when her faith in life was shaken, and her soul felt
dreary and lonely. She made much of the child,
and the father was jealous.
At last Mrs. Morel despised her husband.
She turned to the child; she turned from the father.
He had begun to neglect her; the novelty of his own
home was gone. He had no grit, she said bitterly
to herself. What he felt just at the minute,
that was all to him. He could not abide by anything.
There was nothing at the back of all his show.
There began a battle between the husband
and wife—a fearful, bloody battle that
ended only with the death of one. She fought to
make him undertake his own responsibilities, to make
him fulfill his obligations. But he was too different
from her. His nature was purely sensuous, and
she strove to make him moral, religious. She tried
to force him to face things. He could not endure
it—it drove him out of his mind.
While the baby was still tiny, the
father’s temper had become so irritable that
it was not to be trusted. The child had only to
give a little trouble when the man began to bully.
A little more, and the hard hands of the collier hit
the baby. Then Mrs. Morel loathed her husband,
loathed him for days; and he went out and drank; and
she cared very little what he did. Only, on his
return, she scathed him with her satire.
The estrangement between them caused
him, knowingly or unknowingly, grossly to offend her
where he would not have done.
William was only one year old, and
his mother was proud of him, he was so pretty.
She was not well off now, but her sisters kept the
boy in clothes. Then, with his little white hat
curled with an ostrich feather, and his white coat,
he was a joy to her, the twining wisps of hair clustering
round his head. Mrs. Morel lay listening, one
Sunday morning, to the chatter of the father and child
downstairs. Then she dozed off. When she
came downstairs, a great fire glowed in the grate,
the room was hot, the breakfast was roughly laid,
and seated in his armchair, against the chimney-piece,
sat Morel, rather timid; and standing between his
legs, the child—cropped like a sheep, with
such an odd round poll—looking wondering
at her; and on a newspaper spread out upon the hearthrug,
a myriad of crescent-shaped curls, like the petals
of a marigold scattered in the reddening firelight.
Mrs. Morel stood still. It was
her first baby. She went very white, and was
unable to speak.
“What dost think o’ ’im?”
Morel laughed uneasily.
She gripped her two fists, lifted
them, and came forward. Morel shrank back.
“I could kill you, I could!”
she said. She choked with rage, her two fists
uplifted.
“Yer non want ter make a wench
on ’im,” Morel said, in a frightened tone,
bending his head to shield his eyes from hers.
His attempt at laughter had vanished.
The mother looked down at the jagged,
close-clipped head of her child. She put her
hands on his hair, and stroked and fondled his head.
“Oh—my boy!”
she faltered. Her lip trembled, her face broke,
and, snatching up the child, she buried her face in
his shoulder and cried painfully. She was one
of those women who cannot cry; whom it hurts as it
hurts a man. It was like ripping something out
of her, her sobbing.
Morel sat with his elbows on his knees,
his hands gripped together till the knuckles were
white. He gazed in the fire, feeling almost stunned,
as if he could not breathe.
Presently she came to an end, soothed
the child and cleared away the breakfast-table.
She left the newspaper, littered with curls, spread
upon the hearthrug. At last her husband gathered
it up and put it at the back of the fire. She
went about her work with closed mouth and very quiet.
Morel was subdued. He crept about wretchedly,
and his meals were a misery that day. She spoke
to him civilly, and never alluded to what he had done.
But he felt something final had happened.
Afterwards she said she had been silly,
that the boy’s hair would have had to be cut,
sooner or later. In the end, she even brought
herself to say to her husband it was just as well
he had played barber when he did. But she knew,
and Morel knew, that that act had caused something
momentous to take place in her soul. She remembered
the scene all her life, as one in which she had suffered
the most intensely.
This act of masculine clumsiness was
the spear through the side of her love for Morel.
Before, while she had striven against him bitterly,
she had fretted after him, as if he had gone astray
from her. Now she ceased to fret for his love:
he was an outsider to her. This made life much
more bearable.
Nevertheless, she still continued
to strive with him. She still had her high moral
sense, inherited from generations of Puritans.
It was now a religious instinct, and she was almost
a fanatic with him, because she loved him, or had
loved him. If he sinned, she tortured him.
If he drank, and lied, was often a poltroon, sometimes
a knave, she wielded the lash unmercifully.
The pity was, she was too much his
opposite. She could not be content with the little
he might be; she would have him the much that he ought
to be. So, in seeking to make him nobler than
he could be, she destroyed him. She injured and
hurt and scarred herself, but she lost none of her
worth. She also had the children.
He drank rather heavily, though not
more than many miners, and always beer, so that whilst
his health was affected, it was never injured.
The week-end was his chief carouse. He sat in
the Miners’ Arms until turning-out time every
Friday, every Saturday, and every Sunday evening.
On Monday and Tuesday he had to get up and reluctantly
leave towards ten o’clock. Sometimes he
stayed at home on Wednesday and Thursday evenings,
or was only out for an hour. He practically never
had to miss work owing to his drinking.
But although he was very steady at
work, his wages fell off. He was blab-mouthed,
a tongue-wagger. Authority was hateful to him,
therefore he could only abuse the pit-managers.
He would say, in the Palmerston:
“Th’ gaffer come down
to our stall this morning, an’ ’e says,
’You know, Walter, this ‘ere’ll
not do. What about these props?’ An’
I says to him, ‘Why, what art talkin’
about? What d’st mean about th’ props?’
’It’ll never do, this ‘ere,’
’e says. ‘You’ll be havin’
th’ roof in, one o’ these days.’
An’ I says, ‘Tha’d better stan’
on a bit o’ clunch, then, an’ hold it
up wi’ thy ‘ead.’ So ’e
wor that mad, ‘e cossed an’ ’e swore,
an’ t’other chaps they did laugh.”
Morel was a good mimic. He imitated the manager’s
fat, squeaky voice, with its attempt at good English.
“‘I shan’t have
it, Walter. Who knows more about it, me or you?’
So I says, ‘I’ve niver fun out how much
tha’ knows, Alfred. It’ll ’appen
carry thee ter bed an’ back.”’
So Morel would go on to the amusement
of his boon companions. And some of this would
be true. The pit-manager was not an educated man.
He had been a boy along with Morel, so that, while
the two disliked each other, they more or less took
each other for granted. But Alfred Charlesworth
did not forgive the butty these public-house sayings.
Consequently, although Morel was a good miner, sometimes
earning as much as five pounds a week when he married,
he came gradually to have worse and worse stalls,
where the coal was thin, and hard to get, and unprofitable.
Also, in summer, the pits are slack.
Often, on bright sunny mornings, the men are seen
trooping home again at ten, eleven, or twelve o’clock.
No empty trucks stand at the pit-mouth. The women
on the hillside look across as they shake the hearthrug
against the fence, and count the wagons the engine
is taking along the line up the valley. And the
children, as they come from school at dinner-time,
looking down the fields and seeing the wheels on the
headstocks standing, say:
“Minton’s knocked off. My dad’ll
be at home.”
And there is a sort of shadow over
all, women and children and men, because money will
be short at the end of the week.
Morel was supposed to give his wife
thirty shillings a week, to provide everything—rent,
food, clothes, clubs, insurance, doctors. Occasionally,
if he were flush, he gave her thirty-five. But
these occasions by no means balanced those when he
gave her twenty-five. In winter, with a decent
stall, the miner might earn fifty or fifty-five shillings
a week. Then he was happy. On Friday night,
Saturday, and Sunday, he spent royally, getting rid
of his sovereign or thereabouts. And out of so
much, he scarcely spared the children an extra penny
or bought them a pound of apples. It all went
in drink. In the bad times, matters were more
worrying, but he was not so often drunk, so that Mrs.
Morel used to say:
“I’m not sure I wouldn’t
rather be short, for when he’s flush, there
isn’t a minute of peace.”
If he earned forty shillings he kept
ten; from thirty-five he kept five; from thirty-two
he kept four; from twenty-eight he kept three; from
twenty-four he kept two; from twenty he kept one-and-six;
from eighteen he kept a shilling; from sixteen he
kept sixpence. He never saved a penny, and he
gave his wife no opportunity of saving; instead, she
had occasionally to pay his debts; not public-house
debts, for those never were passed on to the women,
but debts when he had bought a canary, or a fancy
walking-stick.
At the wakes time Morel was working
badly, and Mrs. Morel was trying to save against her
confinement. So it galled her bitterly to think
he should be out taking his pleasure and spending money,
whilst she remained at home, harassed. There
were two days’ holiday. On the Tuesday
morning Morel rose early. He was in good spirits.
Quite early, before six o’clock, she heard him
whistling away to himself downstairs. He had
a pleasant way of whistling, lively and musical.
He nearly always whistled hymns. He had been
a choir-boy with a beautiful voice, and had taken
solos in Southwell cathedral. His morning whistling
alone betrayed it.
His wife lay listening to him tinkering
away in the garden, his whistling ringing out as he
sawed and hammered away. It always gave her a
sense of warmth and peace to hear him thus as she lay
in bed, the children not yet awake, in the bright
early morning, happy in his man’s fashion.
At nine o’clock, while the children
with bare legs and feet were sitting playing on the
sofa, and the mother was washing up, he came in from
his carpentry, his sleeves rolled up, his waistcoat
hanging open. He was still a good-looking man,
with black, wavy hair, and a large black moustache.
His face was perhaps too much inflamed, and there was
about him a look almost of peevishness. But now
he was jolly. He went straight to the sink where
his wife was washing up.
“What, are thee there!”
he said boisterously. “Sluthe off an’
let me wesh mysen.”
“You may wait till I’ve finished,”
said his wife.
“Oh, mun I? An’ what if I shonna?”
This good-humoured threat amused Mrs. Morel.
“Then you can go and wash yourself in the soft-water
tub.”
“Ha! I can’ an’ a’, tha
mucky little ’ussy.”
With which he stood watching her a
moment, then went away to wait for her.
When he chose he could still make
himself again a real gallant. Usually he preferred
to go out with a scarf round his neck. Now, however,
he made a toilet. There seemed so much gusto
in the way he puffed and swilled as he washed himself,
so much alacrity with which he hurried to the mirror
in the kitchen, and, bending because it was too low
for him, scrupulously parted his wet black hair, that
it irritated Mrs. Morel. He put on a turn-down
collar, a black bow, and wore his Sunday tail-coat.
As such, he looked spruce, and what his clothes would
not do, his instinct for making the most of his good
looks would.
At half-past nine Jerry Purdy came
to call for his pal. Jerry was Morel’s
bosom friend, and Mrs. Morel disliked him. He
was a tall, thin man, with a rather foxy face, the
kind of face that seems to lack eyelashes. He
walked with a stiff, brittle dignity, as if his head
were on a wooden spring. His nature was cold
and shrewd. Generous where he intended to be
generous, he seemed to be very fond of Morel, and more
or less to take charge of him.
Mrs. Morel hated him. She had
known his wife, who had died of consumption, and who
had, at the end, conceived such a violent dislike
of her husband, that if he came into her room it caused
her haemorrhage. None of which Jerry had seemed
to mind. And now his eldest daughter, a girl
of fifteen, kept a poor house for him, and looked after
the two younger children.
“A mean, wizzen-hearted stick!” Mrs. Morel
said of him.
“I’ve never known Jerry
mean in my life,” protested Morel.
“A opener-handed and more freer chap you couldn’t
find anywhere, accordin’ to my knowledge.”
“Open-handed to you,”
retorted Mrs. Morel. “But his fist is shut
tight enough to his children, poor things.”
“Poor things! And what
for are they poor things, I should like to know.”
But Mrs. Morel would not be appeased on Jerry’s
score.
The subject of argument was seen,
craning his thin neck over the scullery curtain.
He caught Mrs. Morel’s eye.
“Mornin’, missis! Mester in?”
“Yes—he is.”
Jerry entered unasked, and stood by
the kitchen doorway. He was not invited to sit
down, but stood there, coolly asserting the rights
of men and husbands.
“A nice day,” he said to Mrs. Morel.
“Yes.
“Grand out this morning—grand for
a walk.”
“Do you mean you’re going for a walk?”
she asked.
“Yes. We mean walkin’ to Nottingham,”
he replied.
“H’m!”
The two men greeted each other, both
glad: Jerry, however, full of assurance, Morel
rather subdued, afraid to seem too jubilant in presence
of his wife. But he laced his boots quickly, with
spirit. They were going for a ten-mile walk across
the fields to Nottingham. Climbing the hillside
from the Bottoms, they mounted gaily into the morning.
At the Moon and Stars they had their first drink,
then on to the Old Spot. Then a long five miles
of drought to carry them into Bulwell to a glorious
pint of bitter. But they stayed in a field with
some haymakers whose gallon bottle was full, so that,
when they came in sight of the city, Morel was sleepy.
The town spread upwards before them, smoking vaguely
in the midday glare, fridging the crest away to the
south with spires and factory bulks and chimneys.
In the last field Morel lay down under an oak tree
and slept soundly for over an hour. When he rose
to go forward he felt queer.
The two had dinner in the Meadows,
with Jerry’s sister, then repaired to the Punch
Bowl, where they mixed in the excitement of pigeon-racing.
Morel never in his life played cards, considering them
as having some occult, malevolent power—“the
devil’s pictures,” he called them!
But he was a master of skittles and of dominoes.
He took a challenge from a Newark man, on skittles.
All the men in the old, long bar took sides, betting
either one way or the other. Morel took off his
coat. Jerry held the hat containing the money.
The men at the tables watched. Some stood with
their mugs in their hands. Morel felt his big
wooden ball carefully, then launched it. He played
havoc among the nine-pins, and won half a crown, which
restored him to solvency.
By seven o’clock the two were
in good condition. They caught the 7.30 train
home.
In the afternoon the Bottoms was intolerable.
Every inhabitant remaining was out of doors.
The women, in twos and threes, bareheaded and in white
aprons, gossiped in the alley between the blocks.
Men, having a rest between drinks, sat on their heels
and talked. The place smelled stale; the slate
roofs glistered in the arid heat.
Mrs. Morel took the little girl down
to the brook in the meadows, which were not more than
two hundred yards away. The water ran quickly
over stones and broken pots. Mother and child
leaned on the rail of the old sheep-bridge, watching.
Up at the dipping-hole, at the other end of the meadow,
Mrs. Morel could see the naked forms of boys flashing
round the deep yellow water, or an occasional bright
figure dart glittering over the blackish stagnant
meadow. She knew William was at the dipping-hole,
and it was the dread of her life lest he should get
drowned. Annie played under the tall old hedge,
picking up alder cones, that she called currants.
The child required much attention, and the flies were
teasing.
The children were put to bed at seven
o’clock. Then she worked awhile.
When Walter Morel and Jerry arrived
at Bestwood they felt a load off their minds; a railway
journey no longer impended, so they could put the
finishing touches to a glorious day. They entered
the Nelson with the satisfaction of returned travellers.
The next day was a work-day, and the
thought of it put a damper on the men’s spirits.
Most of them, moreover, had spent their money.
Some were already rolling dismally home, to sleep
in preparation for the morrow. Mrs. Morel, listening
to their mournful singing, went indoors. Nine
o’clock passed, and ten, and still “the
pair” had not returned. On a doorstep somewhere
a man was singing loudly, in a drawl: “Lead,
kindly Light.” Mrs. Morel was always indignant
with the drunken men that they must sing that hymn
when they got maudlin.
“As if ‘Genevieve’ weren’t
good enough,” she said.
The kitchen was full of the scent
of boiled herbs and hops. On the hob a large
black saucepan steamed slowly. Mrs. Morel took
a panchion, a great bowl of thick red earth, streamed
a heap of white sugar into the bottom, and then, straining
herself to the weight, was pouring in the liquor.
Just then Morel came in. He had
been very jolly in the Nelson, but coming home had
grown irritable. He had not quite got over the
feeling of irritability and pain, after having slept
on the ground when he was so hot; and a bad conscience
afflicted him as he neared the house. He did
not know he was angry. But when the garden gate
resisted his attempts to open it, he kicked it and
broke the latch. He entered just as Mrs. Morel
was pouring the infusion of herbs out of the saucepan.
Swaying slightly, he lurched against the table.
The boiling liquor pitched. Mrs. Morel started
back.
“Good gracious,” she cried,
“coming home in his drunkenness!”
“Comin’ home in his what?”
he snarled, his hat over his eye.
Suddenly her blood rose in a jet.
“Say you’re not drunk!” she
flashed.
She had put down her saucepan, and
was stirring the sugar into the beer. He dropped
his two hands heavily on the table, and thrust his
face forwards at her.
“‘Say you’re not
drunk,’” he repeated. “Why,
nobody but a nasty little bitch like you ’ud
’ave such a thought.”
He thrust his face forward at her.
“There’s money to bezzle with, if there’s
money for nothing else.”
“I’ve not spent a two-shillin’ bit
this day,” he said.
“You don’t get as drunk
as a lord on nothing,” she replied. “And,”
she cried, flashing into sudden fury, “if you’ve
been sponging on your beloved Jerry, why, let him
look after his children, for they need it.”
“It’s a lie, it’s a lie. Shut
your face, woman.”
They were now at battle-pitch.
Each forgot everything save the hatred of the other
and the battle between them. She was fiery and
furious as he. They went on till he called her
a liar.
“No,” she cried, starting
up, scarce able to breathe. “Don’t
call me that—you, the most despicable liar
that ever walked in shoe-leather.” She
forced the last words out of suffocated lungs.
“You’re a liar!”
he yelled, banging the table with his fist. “You’re
a liar, you’re a liar.”
She stiffened herself, with clenched fists.
“The house is filthy with you,” she cried.
“Then get out on it—it’s
mine. Get out on it!” he shouted. “It’s
me as brings th’ money whoam, not thee.
It’s my house, not thine. Then ger out
on’t—ger out on’t!”
“And I would,” she cried,
suddenly shaken into tears of impotence. “Ah,
wouldn’t I, wouldn’t I have gone long ago,
but for those children. Ay, haven’t I repented
not going years ago, when I’d only the one”—suddenly
drying into rage. “Do you think it’s
for you I stop—do you think I’d
stop one minute for you?”
“Go, then,” he shouted, beside himself.
“Go!”
“No!” She faced round.
“No,” she cried loudly, “you shan’t
have it all your own way; you shan’t do
all you like. I’ve got those children
to see to. My word,” she laughed, “I
should look well to leave them to you.”
“Go,” he cried thickly,
lifting his fist. He was afraid of her. “Go!”
“I should be only too glad.
I should laugh, laugh, my lord, if I could get away
from you,” she replied.
He came up to her, his red face, with
its bloodshot eyes, thrust forward, and gripped her
arms. She cried in fear of him, struggled to be
free. Coming slightly to himself, panting, he
pushed her roughly to the outer door, and thrust her
forth, slotting the bolt behind her with a bang.
Then he went back into the kitchen, dropped into his
armchair, his head, bursting full of blood, sinking
between his knees. Thus he dipped gradually into
a stupor, from exhaustion and intoxication.
The moon was high and magnificent
in the August night. Mrs. Morel, seared with
passion, shivered to find herself out there in a great
white light, that fell cold on her, and gave a shock
to her inflamed soul. She stood for a few moments
helplessly staring at the glistening great rhubarb
leaves near the door. Then she got the air into
her breast. She walked down the garden path,
trembling in every limb, while the child boiled within
her. For a while she could not control her consciousness;
mechanically she went over the last scene, then over
it again, certain phrases, certain moments coming
each time like a brand red-hot down on her soul; and
each time she enacted again the past hour, each time
the brand came down at the same points, till the mark
was burnt in, and the pain burnt out, and at last
she came to herself. She must have been half
an hour in this delirious condition. Then the
presence of the night came again to her. She
glanced round in fear. She had wandered to the
side garden, where she was walking up and down the
path beside the currant bushes under the long wall.
The garden was a narrow strip, bounded from the road,
that cut transversely between the blocks, by a thick
thorn hedge.
She hurried out of the side garden
to the front, where she could stand as if in an immense
gulf of white light, the moon streaming high in face
of her, the moonlight standing up from the hills in
front, and filling the valley where the Bottoms crouched,
almost blindingly. There, panting and half weeping
in reaction from the stress, she murmured to herself
over and over again: “The nuisance! the
nuisance!”
She became aware of something about
her. With an effort she roused herself to see
what it was that penetrated her consciousness.
The tall white lilies were reeling in the moonlight,
and the air was charged with their perfume, as with
a presence. Mrs. Morel gasped slightly in fear.
She touched the big, pallid flowers on their petals,
then shivered. They seemed to be stretching in
the moonlight. She put her hand into one white
bin: the gold scarcely showed on her fingers by
moonlight. She bent down to look at the binful
of yellow pollen; but it only appeared dusky.
Then she drank a deep draught of the scent. It
almost made her dizzy.
Mrs. Morel leaned on the garden gate,
looking out, and she lost herself awhile. She
did not know what she thought. Except for a slight
feeling of sickness, and her consciousness in the
child, herself melted out like scent into the shiny,
pale air. After a time the child, too, melted
with her in the mixing-pot of moonlight, and she rested
with the hills and lilies and houses, all swum together
in a kind of swoon.
When she came to herself she was tired
for sleep. Languidly she looked about her; the
clumps of white phlox seemed like bushes spread with
linen; a moth ricochetted over them, and right across
the garden. Following it with her eye roused
her. A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of
phlox invigorated her. She passed along the path,
hesitating at the white rose-bush. It smelled
sweet and simple. She touched the white ruffles
of the roses. Their fresh scent and cool, soft
leaves reminded her of the morning-time and sunshine.
She was very fond of them. But she was tired,
and wanted to sleep. In the mysterious out-of-doors
she felt forlorn.
There was no noise anywhere.
Evidently the children had not been wakened, or had
gone to sleep again. A train, three miles away,
roared across the valley. The night was very large,
and very strange, stretching its hoary distances infinitely.
And out of the silver-grey fog of darkness came sounds
vague and hoarse: a corncrake not far off, sound
of a train like a sigh, and distant shouts of men.
Her quietened heart beginning to beat
quickly again, she hurried down the side garden to
the back of the house. Softly she lifted the latch;
the door was still bolted, and hard against her.
She rapped gently, waited, then rapped again.
She must not rouse the children, nor the neighbours.
He must be asleep, and he would not wake easily.
Her heart began to burn to be indoors. She clung
to the door-handle. Now it was cold; she would
take a chill, and in her present condition!
Putting her apron over her head and
her arms, she hurried again to the side garden, to
the window of the kitchen. Leaning on the sill,
she could just see, under the blind, her husband’s
arms spread out on the table, and his black head on
the board. He was sleeping with his face lying
on the table. Something in his attitude made her
feel tired of things. The lamp was burning smokily;
she could tell by the copper colour of the light.
She tapped at the window more and more noisily.
Almost it seemed as if the glass would break.
Still he did not wake up.
After vain efforts, she began to shiver,
partly from contact with the stone, and from exhaustion.
Fearful always for the unborn child, she wondered
what she could do for warmth. She went down to
the coal-house, where there was an old hearthrug she
had carried out for the rag-man the day before.
This she wrapped over her shoulders. It was warm,
if grimy. Then she walked up and down the garden
path, peeping every now and then under the blind,
knocking, and telling herself that in the end the very
strain of his position must wake him.
At last, after about an hour, she
rapped long and low at the window. Gradually
the sound penetrated to him. When, in despair,
she had ceased to tap, she saw him stir, then lift
his face blindly. The labouring of his heart
hurt him into consciousness. She rapped imperatively
at the window. He started awake. Instantly
she saw his fists set and his eyes glare. He
had not a grain of physical fear. If it had been
twenty burglars, he would have gone blindly for them.
He glared round, bewildered, but prepared to fight.
“Open the door, Walter,” she said coldly.
His hands relaxed. It dawned
on him what he had done. His head dropped, sullen
and dogged. She saw him hurry to the door, heard
the bolt chock. He tried the latch. It opened—and
there stood the silver-grey night, fearful to him,
after the tawny light of the lamp. He hurried
back.
When Mrs. Morel entered, she saw him
almost running through the door to the stairs.
He had ripped his collar off his neck in his haste
to be gone ere she came in, and there it lay with
bursten button-holes. It made her angry.
She warmed and soothed herself.
In her weariness forgetting everything, she moved
about at the little tasks that remained to be done,
set his breakfast, rinsed his pit-bottle, put his
pit-clothes on the hearth to warm, set his pit-boots
beside them, put him out a clean scarf and snap-bag
and two apples, raked the fire, and went to bed.
He was already dead asleep. His narrow black
eyebrows were drawn up in a sort of peevish misery
into his forehead while his cheeks’ down-strokes,
and his sulky mouth, seemed to be saying: “I
don’t care who you are nor what you are, I shall
have my own way.”
Mrs. Morel knew him too well to look
at him. As she unfastened her brooch at the mirror,
she smiled faintly to see her face all smeared with
the yellow dust of lilies. She brushed it off,
and at last lay down. For some time her mind
continued snapping and jetting sparks, but she was
asleep before her husband awoke from the first sleep
of his drunkenness.