THE BIRTH OF PAUL, AND ANOTHER BATTLE
After such a scene as the last,
Walter Morel was for some days abashed and ashamed,
but he soon regained his old bullying indifference.
Yet there was a slight shrinking, a diminishing in
his assurance. Physically even, he shrank, and
his fine full presence waned. He never grew in
the least stout, so that, as he sank from his erect,
assertive bearing, his physique seemed to contract
along with his pride and moral strength.
But now he realised how hard it was
for his wife to drag about at her work, and, his sympathy
quickened by penitence, hastened forward with his
help. He came straight home from the pit, and
stayed in at evening till Friday, and then he could
not remain at home. But he was back again by
ten o’clock, almost quite sober.
He always made his own breakfast.
Being a man who rose early and had plenty of time
he did not, as some miners do, drag his wife out of
bed at six o’clock. At five, sometimes
earlier, he woke, got straight out of bed, and went
downstairs. When she could not sleep, his wife
lay waiting for this time, as for a period of peace.
The only real rest seemed to be when he was out of
the house.
He went downstairs in his shirt and
then struggled into his pit-trousers, which were left
on the hearth to warm all night. There was always
a fire, because Mrs. Morel raked. And the first
sound in the house was the bang, bang of the poker
against the raker, as Morel smashed the remainder
of the coal to make the kettle, which was filled and
left on the hob, finally boil. His cup and knife
and fork, all he wanted except just the food, was
laid ready on the table on a newspaper. Then
he got his breakfast, made the tea, packed the bottom
of the doors with rugs to shut out the draught, piled
a big fire, and sat down to an hour of joy. He
toasted his bacon on a fork and caught the drops of
fat on his bread; then he put the rasher on his thick
slice of bread, and cut off chunks with a clasp-knife,
poured his tea into his saucer, and was happy.
With his family about, meals were never so pleasant.
He loathed a fork: it is a modern introduction
which has still scarcely reached common people.
What Morel preferred was a clasp-knife. Then,
in solitude, he ate and drank, often sitting, in cold
weather, on a little stool with his back to the warm
chimney-piece, his food on the fender, his cup on
the hearth. And then he read the last night’s
newspaper—what of it he could—spelling
it over laboriously. He preferred to keep the
blinds down and the candle lit even when it was daylight;
it was the habit of the mine.
At a quarter to six he rose, cut two
thick slices of bread and butter, and put them in
the white calico snap-bag. He filled his tin bottle
with tea. Cold tea without milk or sugar was
the drink he preferred for the pit. Then he pulled
off his shirt, and put on his pit-singlet, a vest
of thick flannel cut low round the neck, and with short
sleeves like a chemise.
Then he went upstairs to his wife
with a cup of tea because she was ill, and because
it occurred to him.
“I’ve brought thee a cup o’ tea,
lass,” he said.
“Well, you needn’t, for you know I don’t
like it,” she replied.
“Drink it up; it’ll pop thee off to sleep
again.”
She accepted the tea. It pleased him to see her
take it and sip it.
“I’ll back my life there’s no sugar
in,” she said.
“Yi—there’s one big ’un,”
he replied, injured.
“It’s a wonder,” she said, sipping
again.
She had a winsome face when her hair
was loose. He loved her to grumble at him in
this manner. He looked at her again, and went,
without any sort of leave-taking. He never took
more than two slices of bread and butter to eat in
the pit, so an apple or an orange was a treat to him.
He always liked it when she put one out for him.
He tied a scarf round his neck, put on his great,
heavy boots, his coat, with the big pocket, that carried
his snap-bag and his bottle of tea, and went forth
into the fresh morning air, closing, without locking,
the door behind him. He loved the early morning,
and the walk across the fields. So he appeared
at the pit-top, often with a stalk from the hedge between
his teeth, which he chewed all day to keep his mouth
moist, down the mine, feeling quite as happy as when
he was in the field.
Later, when the time for the baby
grew nearer, he would bustle round in his slovenly
fashion, poking out the ashes, rubbing the fireplace,
sweeping the house before he went to work. Then,
feeling very self-righteous, he went upstairs.
“Now I’m cleaned up for
thee: tha’s no ’casions ter stir a
peg all day, but sit and read thy books.”
Which made her laugh, in spite of her indignation.
“And the dinner cooks itself?” she answered.
“Eh, I know nowt about th’ dinner.”
“You’d know if there weren’t any.”
“Ay, ’appen so,” he answered, departing.
When she got downstairs, she would
find the house tidy, but dirty. She could not
rest until she had thoroughly cleaned; so she went
down to the ash-pit with her dustpan. Mrs. Kirk,
spying her, would contrive to have to go to her own
coal-place at that minute. Then, across the wooden
fence, she would call:
“So you keep wagging on, then?”
“Ay,” answered Mrs. Morel deprecatingly.
“There’s nothing else for it.”
“Have you seen Hose?”
called a very small woman from across the road.
It was Mrs. Anthony, a black-haired, strange little
body, who always wore a brown velvet dress, tight
fitting.
“I haven’t,” said Mrs. Morel.
“Eh, I wish he’d come.
I’ve got a copperful of clothes, an’ I’m
sure I heered his bell.”
“Hark! He’s at the end.”
The two women looked down the alley.
At the end of the Bottoms a man stood in a sort of
old-fashioned trap, bending over bundles of cream-coloured
stuff; while a cluster of women held up their arms
to him, some with bundles. Mrs. Anthony herself
had a heap of creamy, undyed stockings hanging over
her arm.
“I’ve done ten dozen this week,”
she said proudly to Mrs. Morel.
“T-t-t!” went the other. “I
don’t know how you can find time.”
“Eh!” said Mrs. Anthony. “You
can find time if you make time.”
“I don’t know how you
do it,” said Mrs. Morel. “And how
much shall you get for those many?”
“Tuppence-ha’penny a dozen,” replied
the other.
“Well,” said Mrs. Morel.
“I’d starve before I’d sit down and
seam twenty-four stockings for twopence ha’penny.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said Mrs. Anthony.
“You can rip along with ’em.”
Hose was coming along, ringing his
bell. Women were waiting at the yard-ends with
their seamed stockings hanging over their arms.
The man, a common fellow, made jokes with them, tried
to swindle them, and bullied them. Mrs. Morel
went up her yard disdainfully.
It was an understood thing that if
one woman wanted her neighbour, she should put the
poker in the fire and bang at the back of the fireplace,
which, as the fires were back to back, would make a
great noise in the adjoining house. One morning
Mrs. Kirk, mixing a pudding, nearly started out of
her skin as she heard the thud, thud, in her grate.
With her hands all floury, she rushed to the fence.
“Did you knock, Mrs. Morel?”
“If you wouldn’t mind, Mrs. Kirk.”
Mrs. Kirk climbed on to her copper,
got over the wall on to Mrs. Morel’s copper,
and ran in to her neighbour.
“Eh, dear, how are you feeling?” she cried
in concern.
“You might fetch Mrs. Bower,” said Mrs.
Morel.
Mrs. Kirk went into the yard, lifted
up her strong, shrill voice, and called:
“Ag-gie—Ag-gie!”
The sound was heard from one end of
the Bottoms to the other. At last Aggie came
running up, and was sent for Mrs. Bower, whilst Mrs.
Kirk left her pudding and stayed with her neighbour.
Mrs. Morel went to bed. Mrs.
Kirk had Annie and William for dinner. Mrs. Bower,
fat and waddling, bossed the house.
“Hash some cold meat up for
the master’s dinner, and make him an apple-charlotte
pudding,” said Mrs. Morel.
“He may go without pudding this day,”
said Mrs. Bower.
Morel was not as a rule one of the
first to appear at the bottom of the pit, ready to
come up. Some men were there before four o’clock,
when the whistle blew loose-all; but Morel, whose
stall, a poor one, was at this time about a mile and
a half away from the bottom, worked usually till the
first mate stopped, then he finished also. This
day, however, the miner was sick of the work.
At two o’clock he looked at his watch, by the
light of the green candle—he was in a safe
working—and again at half-past two.
He was hewing at a piece of rock that was in the way
for the next day’s work. As he sat on his
heels, or kneeled, giving hard blows with his pick,
“Uszza—uszza!” he went.
“Shall ter finish, Sorry?”
cried Barker, his fellow butty.
“Finish? Niver while the world stands!”
growled Morel.
And he went on striking. He was tired.
“It’s a heart-breaking job,” said
Barker.
But Morel was too exasperated, at
the end of his tether, to answer. Still he struck
and hacked with all his might.
“Tha might as well leave it,
Walter,” said Barker. “It’ll
do to-morrow, without thee hackin’ thy guts
out.”
“I’ll lay no b——
finger on this to-morrow, Isr’el!” cried
Morel.
“Oh, well, if tha wunna, somebody
else’ll ha’e to,” said Israel.
Then Morel continued to strike.
“Hey-up there—loose-A’!”
cried the men, leaving the next stall.
Morel continued to strike.
“Tha’ll happen catch me up,” said
Barker, departing.
When he had gone, Morel, left alone,
felt savage. He had not finished his job.
He had overworked himself into a frenzy. Rising,
wet with sweat, he threw his tool down, pulled on
his coat, blew out his candle, took his lamp, and
went. Down the main road the lights of the other
men went swinging. There was a hollow sound of
many voices. It was a long, heavy tramp underground.
He sat at the bottom of the pit, where
the great drops of water fell plash. Many colliers
were waiting their turns to go up, talking noisily.
Morel gave his answers short and disagreeable.
“It’s rainin’, Sorry,”
said old Giles, who had had the news from the top.
Morel found one comfort. He had
his old umbrella, which he loved, in the lamp cabin.
At last he took his stand on the chair, and was at
the top in a moment. Then he handed in his lamp
and got his umbrella, which he had bought at an auction
for one-and-six. He stood on the edge of the
pit-bank for a moment, looking out over the fields;
grey rain was falling. The trucks stood full
of wet, bright coal. Water ran down the sides
of the waggons, over the white “C.W. and Co.”.
Colliers, walking indifferent to the rain, were streaming
down the line and up the field, a grey, dismal host.
Morel put up his umbrella, and took pleasure from
the peppering of the drops thereon.
All along the road to Bestwood the
miners tramped, wet and grey and dirty, but their
red mouths talking with animation. Morel also
walked with a gang, but he said nothing. He frowned
peevishly as he went. Many men passed into the
Prince of Wales or into Ellen’s. Morel,
feeling sufficiently disagreeable to resist temptation,
trudged along under the dripping trees that overhung
the park wall, and down the mud of Greenhill Lane.
Mrs. Morel lay in bed, listening to
the rain, and the feet of the colliers from Minton,
their voices, and the bang, bang of the gates as they
went through the stile up the field.
“There’s some herb beer
behind the pantry door,” she said. “Th’
master’ll want a drink, if he doesn’t stop.”
But he was late, so she concluded
he had called for a drink, since it was raining.
What did he care about the child or her?
She was very ill when her children were born.
“What is it?” she asked, feeling sick
to death.
“A boy.”
And she took consolation in that.
The thought of being the mother of men was warming
to her heart. She looked at the child. It
had blue eyes, and a lot of fair hair, and was bonny.
Her love came up hot, in spite of everything.
She had it in bed with her.
Morel, thinking nothing, dragged his
way up the garden path, wearily and angrily.
He closed his umbrella, and stood it in the sink; then
he sluthered his heavy boots into the kitchen.
Mrs. Bower appeared in the inner doorway.
“Well,” she said, “she’s
about as bad as she can be. It’s a boy childt.”
The miner grunted, put his empty snap-bag
and his tin bottle on the dresser, went back into
the scullery and hung up his coat, then came and dropped
into his chair.
“Han yer got a drink?” he asked.
The woman went into the pantry.
There was heard the pop of a cork. She set the
mug, with a little, disgusted rap, on the table before
Morel. He drank, gasped, wiped his big moustache
on the end of his scarf, drank, gasped, and lay back
in his chair. The woman would not speak to him
again. She set his dinner before him, and went
upstairs.
“Was that the master?” asked Mrs. Morel.
“I’ve gave him his dinner,” replied
Mrs. Bower.
After he had sat with his arms on
the table—he resented the fact that Mrs.
Bower put no cloth on for him, and gave him a little
plate, instead of a full-sized dinner-plate—he
began to eat. The fact that his wife was ill,
that he had another boy, was nothing to him at that
moment. He was too tired; he wanted his dinner;
he wanted to sit with his arms lying on the board;
he did not like having Mrs. Bower about. The fire
was too small to please him.
After he had finished his meal, he
sat for twenty minutes; then he stoked up a big fire.
Then, in his stockinged feet, he went reluctantly
upstairs. It was a struggle to face his wife at
this moment, and he was tired. His face was black,
and smeared with sweat. His singlet had dried
again, soaking the dirt in. He had a dirty woollen
scarf round his throat. So he stood at the foot
of the bed.
“Well, how are ter, then?” he asked.
“I s’ll be all right,” she answered.
“H’m!”
He stood at a loss what to say next.
He was tired, and this bother was rather a nuisance
to him, and he didn’t quite know where he was.
“A lad, tha says,” he stammered.
She turned down the sheet and showed the child.
“Bless him!” he murmured.
Which made her laugh, because he blessed by rote—pretending
paternal emotion, which he did not feel just then.
“Go now,” she said.
“I will, my lass,” he answered, turning
away.
Dismissed, he wanted to kiss her,
but he dared not. She half wanted him to kiss
her, but could not bring herself to give any sign.
She only breathed freely when he was gone out of the
room again, leaving behind him a faint smell of pit-dirt.
Mrs. Morel had a visit every day from
the Congregational clergyman. Mr. Heaton was
young, and very poor. His wife had died at the
birth of his first baby, so he remained alone in the
manse. He was a Bachelor of Arts of Cambridge,
very shy, and no preacher. Mrs. Morel was fond
of him, and he depended on her. For hours he
talked to her, when she was well. He became the
god-parent of the child.
Occasionally the minister stayed to
tea with Mrs. Morel. Then she laid the cloth
early, got out her best cups, with a little green rim,
and hoped Morel would not come too soon; indeed, if
he stayed for a pint, she would not mind this day.
She had always two dinners to cook, because she believed
children should have their chief meal at midday, whereas
Morel needed his at five o’clock. So Mr.
Heaton would hold the baby, whilst Mrs. Morel beat
up a batter-pudding or peeled the potatoes, and he,
watching her all the time, would discuss his next sermon.
His ideas were quaint and fantastic. She brought
him judiciously to earth. It was a discussion
of the wedding at Cana.
“When He changed the water into
wine at Cana,” he said, “that is a symbol
that the ordinary life, even the blood, of the married
husband and wife, which had before been uninspired,
like water, became filled with the Spirit, and was
as wine, because, when love enters, the whole spiritual
constitution of a man changes, is filled with the Holy
Ghost, and almost his form is altered.”
Mrs. Morel thought to herself:
“Yes, poor fellow, his young
wife is dead; that is why he makes his love into the
Holy Ghost.”
They were halfway down their first
cup of tea when they heard the sluther of pit-boots.
“Good gracious!” exclaimed
Mrs. Morel, in spite of herself.
The minister looked rather scared.
Morel entered. He was feeling rather savage.
He nodded a “How d’yer do” to the
clergyman, who rose to shake hands with him.
“Nay,” said Morel, showing
his hand, “look thee at it! Tha niver wants
ter shake hands wi’ a hand like that, does ter?
There’s too much pick-haft and shovel-dirt on
it.”
The minister flushed with confusion,
and sat down again. Mrs. Morel rose, carried
out the steaming saucepan. Morel took off his
coat, dragged his armchair to table, and sat down
heavily.
“Are you tired?” asked the clergyman.
“Tired? I ham that,”
replied Morel. “You don’t know
what it is to be tired, as I’m tired.”
“No,” replied the clergyman.
“Why, look yer ’ere,”
said the miner, showing the shoulders of his singlet.
“It’s a bit dry now, but it’s wet
as a clout with sweat even yet. Feel it.”
“Goodness!” cried Mrs.
Morel. “Mr. Heaton doesn’t want to
feel your nasty singlet.”
The clergyman put out his hand gingerly.
“No, perhaps he doesn’t,”
said Morel; “but it’s all come out of me,
whether or not. An’ iv’ry day alike
my singlet’s wringin’ wet. ’Aven’t
you got a drink, Missis, for a man when he comes home
barkled up from the pit?”
“You know you drank all the
beer,” said Mrs. Morel, pouring out his tea.
“An’ was there no more
to be got?” Turning to the clergyman—“A
man gets that caked up wi’ th’ dust, you
know,—that clogged up down a coal-mine,
he needs a drink when he comes home.”
“I am sure he does,” said the clergyman.
“But it’s ten to one if there’s
owt for him.”
“There’s water—and there’s
tea,” said Mrs. Morel.
“Water! It’s not water as’ll
clear his throat.”
He poured out a saucerful of tea,
blew it, and sucked it up through his great black
moustache, sighing afterwards. Then he poured
out another saucerful, and stood his cup on the table.
“My cloth!” said Mrs. Morel, putting it
on a plate.
“A man as comes home as I do
’s too tired to care about cloths,” said
Morel.
“Pity!” exclaimed his wife, sarcastically.
The room was full of the smell of meat and vegetables
and pit-clothes.
He leaned over to the minister, his
great moustache thrust forward, his mouth very red
in his black face.
“Mr. Heaton,” he said,
“a man as has been down the black hole all day,
dingin’ away at a coal-face, yi, a sight harder
than that wall—”
“Needn’t make a moan of it,” put
in Mrs. Morel.
She hated her husband because, whenever
he had an audience, he whined and played for sympathy.
William, sitting nursing the baby, hated him, with
a boy’s hatred for false sentiment, and for the
stupid treatment of his mother. Annie had never
liked him; she merely avoided him.
When the minister had gone, Mrs. Morel
looked at her cloth.
“A fine mess!” she said.
“Dos’t think I’m
goin’ to sit wi’ my arms danglin’,
cos tha’s got a parson for tea wi’ thee?”
he bawled.
They were both angry, but she said
nothing. The baby began to cry, and Mrs. Morel,
picking up a saucepan from the hearth, accidentally
knocked Annie on the head, whereupon the girl began
to whine, and Morel to shout at her. In the midst
of this pandemonium, William looked up at the big
glazed text over the mantelpiece and read distinctly:
“God Bless Our Home!”
Whereupon Mrs. Morel, trying to soothe
the baby, jumped up, rushed at him, boxed his ears,
saying:
“What are you putting in for?”
And then she sat down and laughed,
till tears ran over her cheeks, while William kicked
the stool he had been sitting on, and Morel growled:
“I canna see what there is so much to laugh
at.”
One evening, directly after the parson’s
visit, feeling unable to bear herself after another
display from her husband, she took Annie and the baby
and went out. Morel had kicked William, and the
mother would never forgive him.
She went over the sheep-bridge and
across a corner of the meadow to the cricket-ground.
The meadows seemed one space of ripe, evening light,
whispering with the distant mill-race. She sat
on a seat under the alders in the cricket-ground,
and fronted the evening. Before her, level and
solid, spread the big green cricket-field, like the
bed of a sea of light. Children played in the
bluish shadow of the pavilion. Many rooks, high
up, came cawing home across the softly-woven sky.
They stooped in a long curve down into the golden
glow, concentrating, cawing, wheeling, like black
flakes on a slow vortex, over a tree clump that made
a dark boss among the pasture.
A few gentlemen were practising, and
Mrs. Morel could hear the chock of the ball, and the
voices of men suddenly roused; could see the white
forms of men shifting silently over the green, upon
which already the under shadows were smouldering.
Away at the grange, one side of the haystacks was
lit up, the other sides blue-grey. A waggon of
sheaves rocked small across the melting yellow light.
The sun was going down. Every
open evening, the hills of Derbyshire were blazed
over with red sunset. Mrs. Morel watched the sun
sink from the glistening sky, leaving a soft flower-blue
overhead, while the western space went red, as if
all the fire had swum down there, leaving the bell
cast flawless blue. The mountain-ash berries across
the field stood fierily out from the dark leaves,
for a moment. A few shocks of corn in a corner
of the fallow stood up as if alive; she imagined them
bowing; perhaps her son would be a Joseph. In
the east, a mirrored sunset floated pink opposite
the west’s scarlet. The big haystacks on
the hillside, that butted into the glare, went cold.
With Mrs. Morel it was one of those
still moments when the small frets vanish, and the
beauty of things stands out, and she had the peace
and the strength to see herself. Now and again,
a swallow cut close to her. Now and again, Annie
came up with a handful of alder-currants. The
baby was restless on his mother’s knee, clambering
with his hands at the light.
Mrs. Morel looked down at him.
She had dreaded this baby like a catastrophe, because
of her feeling for her husband. And now she felt
strangely towards the infant. Her heart was heavy
because of the child, almost as if it were unhealthy,
or malformed. Yet it seemed quite well.
But she noticed the peculiar knitting of the baby’s
brows, and the peculiar heaviness of its eyes, as
if it were trying to understand something that was
pain. She felt, when she looked at her child’s
dark, brooding pupils, as if a burden were on her
heart.
“He looks as if he was thinking
about something—quite sorrowful,”
said Mrs. Kirk.
Suddenly, looking at him, the heavy
feeling at the mother’s heart melted into passionate
grief. She bowed over him, and a few tears shook
swiftly out of her very heart. The baby lifted
his fingers.
“My lamb!” she cried softly.
And at that moment she felt, in some
far inner place of her soul, that she and her husband
were guilty.
The baby was looking up at her.
It had blue eyes like her own, but its look was heavy,
steady, as if it had realised something that had stunned
some point of its soul.
In her arms lay the delicate baby.
Its deep blue eyes, always looking up at her unblinking,
seemed to draw her innermost thoughts out of her.
She no longer loved her husband; she had not wanted
this child to come, and there it lay in her arms and
pulled at her heart. She felt as if the navel
string that had connected its frail little body with
hers had not been broken. A wave of hot love
went over her to the infant. She held it close
to her face and breast. With all her force, with
all her soul she would make up to it for having brought
it into the world unloved. She would love it
all the more now it was here; carry it in her love.
Its clear, knowing eyes gave her pain and fear.
Did it know all about her? When it lay under
her heart, had it been listening then? Was there
a reproach in the look? She felt the marrow melt
in her bones, with fear and pain.
Once more she was aware of the sun
lying red on the rim of the hill opposite. She
suddenly held up the child in her hands.
“Look!” she said. “Look, my
pretty!”
She thrust the infant forward to the
crimson, throbbing sun, almost with relief. She
saw him lift his little fist. Then she put him
to her bosom again, ashamed almost of her impulse
to give him back again whence he came.
“If he lives,” she thought
to herself, “what will become of him—what
will he be?”
Her heart was anxious.
“I will call him Paul,” she said suddenly;
she knew not why.
After a while she went home.
A fine shadow was flung over the deep green meadow,
darkening all.
As she expected, she found the house
empty. But Morel was home by ten o’clock,
and that day, at least, ended peacefully.
Walter Morel was, at this time, exceedingly
irritable. His work seemed to exhaust him.
When he came home he did not speak civilly to anybody.
If the fire were rather low he bullied about that;
he grumbled about his dinner; if the children made
a chatter he shouted at them in a way that made their
mother’s blood boil, and made them hate him.
On the Friday, he was not home by
eleven o’clock. The baby was unwell, and
was restless, crying if he were put down. Mrs.
Morel, tired to death, and still weak, was scarcely
under control.
“I wish the nuisance would come,”
she said wearily to herself.
The child at last sank down to sleep
in her arms. She was too tired to carry him to
the cradle.
“But I’ll say nothing,
whatever time he comes,” she said. “It
only works me up; I won’t say anything.
But I know if he does anything it’ll make my
blood boil,” she added to herself.
She sighed, hearing him coming, as
if it were something she could not bear. He,
taking his revenge, was nearly drunk. She kept
her head bent over the child as he entered, not wishing
to see him. But it went through her like a flash
of hot fire when, in passing, he lurched against the
dresser, setting the tins rattling, and clutched at
the white pot knobs for support. He hung up his
hat and coat, then returned, stood glowering from
a distance at her, as she sat bowed over the child.
“Is there nothing to eat in
the house?” he asked, insolently, as if to a
servant. In certain stages of his intoxication
he affected the clipped, mincing speech of the towns.
Mrs. Morel hated him most in this condition.
“You know what there is in the
house,” she said, so coldly, it sounded impersonal.
He stood and glared at her without moving a muscle.
“I asked a civil question, and
I expect a civil answer,” he said affectedly.
“And you got it,” she said, still ignoring
him.
He glowered again. Then he came
unsteadily forward. He leaned on the table with
one hand, and with the other jerked at the table drawer
to get a knife to cut bread. The drawer stuck
because he pulled sideways. In a temper he dragged
it, so that it flew out bodily, and spoons, forks,
knives, a hundred metallic things, splashed with a
clatter and a clang upon the brick floor. The
baby gave a little convulsed start.
“What are you doing, clumsy,
drunken fool?” the mother cried.
“Then tha should get the flamin’
thing thysen. Tha should get up, like other women
have to, an’ wait on a man.”
“Wait on you—wait
on you?” she cried. “Yes, I see myself.”
“Yis, an’ I’ll learn
thee tha’s got to. Wait on me, yes
tha sh’lt wait on me—”
“Never, milord. I’d wait on a dog
at the door first.”
“What—what?”
He was trying to fit in the drawer.
At her last speech he turned round. His face
was crimson, his eyes bloodshot. He stared at
her one silent second in threat.
“P-h!” she went quickly, in contempt.
He jerked at the drawer in his excitement.
It fell, cut sharply on his shin, and on the reflex
he flung it at her.
One of the corners caught her brow
as the shallow drawer crashed into the fireplace.
She swayed, almost fell stunned from her chair.
To her very soul she was sick; she clasped the child
tightly to her bosom. A few moments elapsed;
then, with an effort, she brought herself to.
The baby was crying plaintively. Her left brow
was bleeding rather profusely. As she glanced
down at the child, her brain reeling, some drops of
blood soaked into its white shawl; but the baby was
at least not hurt. She balanced her head to keep
equilibrium, so that the blood ran into her eye.
Walter Morel remained as he had stood,
leaning on the table with one hand, looking blank.
When he was sufficiently sure of his balance, he went
across to her, swayed, caught hold of the back of her
rocking-chair, almost tipping her out; then leaning
forward over her, and swaying as he spoke, he said,
in a tone of wondering concern:
“Did it catch thee?”
He swayed again, as if he would pitch
on to the child. With the catastrophe he had
lost all balance.
“Go away,” she said, struggling
to keep her presence of mind.
He hiccoughed. “Let’s—let’s
look at it,” he said, hiccoughing again.
“Go away!” she cried.
“Lemme—lemme look at it, lass.”
She smelled him of drink, felt the
unequal pull of his swaying grasp on the back of her
rocking-chair.
“Go away,” she said, and weakly she pushed
him off.
He stood, uncertain in balance, gazing
upon her. Summoning all her strength she rose,
the baby on one arm. By a cruel effort of will,
moving as if in sleep, she went across to the scullery,
where she bathed her eye for a minute in cold water;
but she was too dizzy. Afraid lest she should
swoon, she returned to her rocking-chair, trembling
in every fibre. By instinct, she kept the baby
clasped.
Morel, bothered, had succeeded in
pushing the drawer back into its cavity, and was on
his knees, groping, with numb paws, for the scattered
spoons.
Her brow was still bleeding.
Presently Morel got up and came craning his neck towards
her.
“What has it done to thee, lass?”
he asked, in a very wretched, humble tone.
“You can see what it’s done,” she
answered.
He stood, bending forward, supported
on his hands, which grasped his legs just above the
knee. He peered to look at the wound. She
drew away from the thrust of his face with its great
moustache, averting her own face as much as possible.
As he looked at her, who was cold and impassive as
stone, with mouth shut tight, he sickened with feebleness
and hopelessness of spirit. He was turning drearily
away, when he saw a drop of blood fall from the averted
wound into the baby’s fragile, glistening hair.
Fascinated, he watched the heavy dark drop hang in
the glistening cloud, and pull down the gossamer.
Another drop fell. It would soak through to the
baby’s scalp. He watched, fascinated, feeling
it soak in; then, finally, his manhood broke.
“What of this child?”
was all his wife said to him. But her low, intense
tones brought his head lower. She softened:
“Get me some wadding out of the middle drawer,”
she said.
He stumbled away very obediently,
presently returning with a pad, which she singed before
the fire, then put on her forehead, as she sat with
the baby on her lap.
“Now that clean pit-scarf.”
Again he rummaged and fumbled in the
drawer, returning presently with a red, narrow scarf.
She took it, and with trembling fingers proceeded to
bind it round her head.
“Let me tie it for thee,” he said humbly.
“I can do it myself,”
she replied. When it was done she went upstairs,
telling him to rake the fire and lock the door.
In the morning Mrs. Morel said:
“I knocked against the latch
of the coal-place, when I was getting a raker in the
dark, because the candle blew out.” Her
two small children looked up at her with wide, dismayed
eyes. They said nothing, but their parted lips
seemed to express the unconscious tragedy they felt.
Walter Morel lay in bed next day until
nearly dinner-time. He did not think of the previous
evening’s work. He scarcely thought of anything,
but he would not think of that. He lay and suffered
like a sulking dog. He had hurt himself most;
and he was the more damaged because he would never
say a word to her, or express his sorrow. He tried
to wriggle out of it. “It was her own fault,”
he said to himself. Nothing, however, could prevent
his inner consciousness inflicting on him the punishment
which ate into his spirit like rust, and which he could
only alleviate by drinking.
He felt as if he had not the initiative
to get up, or to say a word, or to move, but could
only lie like a log. Moreover, he had himself
violent pains in the head. It was Saturday.
Towards noon he rose, cut himself food in the pantry,
ate it with his head dropped, then pulled on his boots,
and went out, to return at three o’clock slightly
tipsy and relieved; then once more straight to bed.
He rose again at six in the evening, had tea and went
straight out.
Sunday was the same: bed till
noon, the Palmerston Arms till 2.30, dinner, and bed;
scarcely a word spoken. When Mrs. Morel went upstairs,
towards four o’clock, to put on her Sunday dress,
he was fast asleep. She would have felt sorry
for him, if he had once said, “Wife, I’m
sorry.” But no; he insisted to himself it
was her fault. And so he broke himself.
So she merely left him alone. There was this deadlock
of passion between them, and she was stronger.
The family began tea. Sunday
was the only day when all sat down to meals together.
“Isn’t my father going to get up?”
asked William.
“Let him lie,” the mother replied.
There was a feeling of misery over
all the house. The children breathed the air
that was poisoned, and they felt dreary. They
were rather disconsolate, did not know what to do,
what to play at.
Immediately Morel woke he got straight
out of bed. That was characteristic of him all
his life. He was all for activity. The prostrated
inactivity of two mornings was stifling him.
It was near six o’clock when
he got down. This time he entered without hesitation,
his wincing sensitiveness having hardened again.
He did not care any longer what the family thought
or felt.
The tea-things were on the table.
William was reading aloud from “The Child’s
Own”, Annie listening and asking eternally “why?”
Both children hushed into silence as they heard the
approaching thud of their father’s stockinged
feet, and shrank as he entered. Yet he was usually
indulgent to them.
Morel made the meal alone, brutally.
He ate and drank more noisily than he had need.
No one spoke to him. The family life withdrew,
shrank away, and became hushed as he entered.
But he cared no longer about his alienation.
Immediately he had finished tea he
rose with alacrity to go out. It was this alacrity,
this haste to be gone, which so sickened Mrs. Morel.
As she heard him sousing heartily in cold water, heard
the eager scratch of the steel comb on the side of
the bowl, as he wetted his hair, she closed her eyes
in disgust. As he bent over, lacing his boots,
there was a certain vulgar gusto in his movement that
divided him from the reserved, watchful rest of the
family. He always ran away from the battle with
himself. Even in his own heart’s privacy,
he excused himself, saying, “If she hadn’t
said so-and-so, it would never have happened.
She asked for what she’s got.” The
children waited in restraint during his preparations.
When he had gone, they sighed with relief.
He closed the door behind him, and
was glad. It was a rainy evening. The Palmerston
would be the cosier. He hastened forward in anticipation.
All the slate roofs of the Bottoms shone black with
wet. The roads, always dark with coal-dust, were
full of blackish mud. He hastened along.
The Palmerston windows were steamed over. The
passage was paddled with wet feet. But the air
was warm, if foul, and full of the sound of voices
and the smell of beer and smoke.
“What shollt ha’e, Walter?”
cried a voice, as soon as Morel appeared in the doorway.
“Oh, Jim, my lad, wheriver has thee sprung frae?”
The men made a seat for him, and took
him in warmly. He was glad. In a minute
or two they had thawed all responsibility out of him,
all shame, all trouble, and he was clear as a bell
for a jolly night.
On the Wednesday following, Morel
was penniless. He dreaded his wife. Having
hurt her, he hated her. He did not know what to
do with himself that evening, having not even twopence
with which to go to the Palmerston, and being already
rather deeply in debt. So, while his wife was
down the garden with the child, he hunted in the top
drawer of the dresser where she kept her purse, found
it, and looked inside. It contained a half-crown,
two halfpennies, and a sixpence. So he took the
sixpence, put the purse carefully back, and went out.
The next day, when she wanted to pay
the greengrocer, she looked in the purse for her sixpence,
and her heart sank to her shoes. Then she sat
down and thought: “Was there a sixpence?
I hadn’t spent it, had I? And I hadn’t
left it anywhere else?”
She was much put about. She hunted
round everywhere for it. And, as she sought,
the conviction came into her heart that her husband
had taken it. What she had in her purse was all
the money she possessed. But that he should sneak
it from her thus was unbearable. He had done so
twice before. The first time she had not accused
him, and at the week-end he had put the shilling again
into her purse. So that was how she had known
he had taken it. The second time he had not paid
back.
This time she felt it was too much.
When he had had his dinner—he came home
early that day—she said to him coldly:
“Did you take sixpence out of my purse last
night?”
“Me!” he said, looking
up in an offended way. “No, I didna!
I niver clapped eyes on your purse.”
But she could detect the lie.
“Why, you know you did,” she said quietly.
“I tell you I didna,”
he shouted. “Yer at me again, are yer?
I’ve had about enough on’t.”
“So you filch sixpence out of my purse while
I’m taking the clothes in.”
“I’ll may yer pay for
this,” he said, pushing back his chair in desperation.
He bustled and got washed, then went determinedly upstairs.
Presently he came down dressed, and with a big bundle
in a blue-checked, enormous handkerchief.
“And now,” he said, “you’ll
see me again when you do.”
“It’ll be before I want
to,” she replied; and at that he marched out
of the house with his bundle. She sat trembling
slightly, but her heart brimming with contempt.
What would she do if he went to some other pit, obtained
work, and got in with another woman? But she knew
him too well—he couldn’t. She
was dead sure of him. Nevertheless her heart was
gnawed inside her.
“Where’s my dad?” said William,
coming in from school.
“He says he’s run away,” replied
the mother.
“Where to?”
“Eh, I don’t know.
He’s taken a bundle in the blue handkerchief,
and says he’s not coming back.”
“What shall we do?” cried the boy.
“Eh, never trouble, he won’t go far.”
“But if he doesn’t come back,” wailed
Annie.
And she and William retired to the
sofa and wept. Mrs. Morel sat and laughed.
“You pair of gabeys!”
she exclaimed. “You’ll see him before
the night’s out.”
But the children were not to be consoled.
Twilight came on. Mrs. Morel grew anxious from
very weariness. One part of her said it would
be a relief to see the last of him; another part fretted
because of keeping the children; and inside her, as
yet, she could not quite let him go. At the bottom,
she knew very well he could not go.
When she went down to the coal-place
at the end of the garden, however, she felt something
behind the door. So she looked. And there
in the dark lay the big blue bundle. She sat
on a piece of coal and laughed. Every time she
saw it, so fat and yet so ignominious, slunk into its
corner in the dark, with its ends flopping like dejected
ears from the knots, she laughed again. She was
relieved.
Mrs. Morel sat waiting. He had
not any money, she knew, so if he stopped he was running
up a bill. She was very tired of him—tired
to death. He had not even the courage to carry
his bundle beyond the yard-end.
As she meditated, at about nine o’clock,
he opened the door and came in, slinking, and yet
sulky. She said not a word. He took off his
coat, and slunk to his armchair, where he began to
take off his boots.
“You’d better fetch your
bundle before you take your boots off,” she
said quietly.
“You may thank your stars I’ve
come back to-night,” he said, looking up from
under his dropped head, sulkily, trying to be impressive.
“Why, where should you have
gone? You daren’t even get your parcel
through the yard-end,” she said.
He looked such a fool she was not
even angry with him. He continued to take his
boots off and prepare for bed.
“I don’t know what’s
in your blue handkerchief,” she said. “But
if you leave it the children shall fetch it in the
morning.”
Whereupon he got up and went out of
the house, returning presently and crossing the kitchen
with averted face, hurrying upstairs. As Mrs.
Morel saw him slink quickly through the inner doorway,
holding his bundle, she laughed to herself: but
her heart was bitter, because she had loved him.