LAD-AND-GIRL LOVE
Paul had been many times up to
Willey Farm during the autumn. He was friends
with the two youngest boys. Edgar the eldest,
would not condescend at first. And Miriam also
refused to be approached. She was afraid of being
set at nought, as by her own brothers. The girl
was romantic in her soul. Everywhere was a Walter
Scott heroine being loved by men with helmets or with
plumes in their caps. She herself was something
of a princess turned into a swine-girl in her own imagination.
And she was afraid lest this boy, who, nevertheless,
looked something like a Walter Scott hero, who could
paint and speak French, and knew what algebra meant,
and who went by train to Nottingham every day, might
consider her simply as the swine-girl, unable to perceive
the princess beneath; so she held aloof.
Her great companion was her mother.
They were both brown-eyed, and inclined to be mystical,
such women as treasure religion inside them, breathe
it in their nostrils, and see the whole of life in
a mist thereof. So to Miriam, Christ and God
made one great figure, which she loved tremblingly
and passionately when a tremendous sunset burned out
the western sky, and Ediths, and Lucys, and Rowenas,
Brian de Bois Guilberts, Rob Roys, and Guy Mannerings,
rustled the sunny leaves in the morning, or sat in
her bedroom aloft, alone, when it snowed. That
was life to her. For the rest, she drudged in
the house, which work she would not have minded had
not her clean red floor been mucked up immediately
by the trampling farm-boots of her brothers. She
madly wanted her little brother of four to let her
swathe him and stifle him in her love; she went to
church reverently, with bowed head, and quivered in
anguish from the vulgarity of the other choir-girls
and from the common-sounding voice of the curate;
she fought with her brothers, whom she considered
brutal louts; and she held not her father in too high
esteem because he did not carry any mystical ideals
cherished in his heart, but only wanted to have as
easy a time as he could, and his meals when he was
ready for them.
She hated her position as swine-girl.
She wanted to be considered. She wanted to learn,
thinking that if she could read, as Paul said he could
read, “Colomba”, or the “Voyage autour
de ma Chambre”, the world would have a different
face for her and a deepened respect. She could
not be princess by wealth or standing. So she
was mad to have learning whereon to pride herself.
For she was different from other folk, and must not
be scooped up among the common fry. Learning was
the only distinction to which she thought to aspire.
Her beauty—that of a shy,
wild, quiveringly sensitive thing—seemed
nothing to her. Even her soul, so strong for rhapsody,
was not enough. She must have something to reinforce
her pride, because she felt different from other people.
Paul she eyed rather wistfully. On the whole,
she scorned the male sex. But here was a new specimen,
quick, light, graceful, who could be gentle and who
could be sad, and who was clever, and who knew a lot,
and who had a death in the family. The boy’s
poor morsel of learning exalted him almost sky-high
in her esteem. Yet she tried hard to scorn him,
because he would not see in her the princess but only
the swine-girl. And he scarcely observed her.
Then he was so ill, and she felt he
would be weak. Then she would be stronger than
he. Then she could love him. If she could
be mistress of him in his weakness, take care of him,
if he could depend on her, if she could, as it were,
have him in her arms, how she would love him!
As soon as the skies brightened and
plum-blossom was out, Paul drove off in the milkman’s
heavy float up to Willey Farm. Mr. Leivers shouted
in a kindly fashion at the boy, then clicked to the
horse as they climbed the hill slowly, in the freshness
of the morning. White clouds went on their way,
crowding to the back of the hills that were rousing
in the springtime. The water of Nethermere lay
below, very blue against the seared meadows and the
thorn-trees.
It was four and a half miles’
drive. Tiny buds on the hedges, vivid as copper-green,
were opening into rosettes; and thrushes called, and
blackbirds shrieked and scolded. It was a new,
glamorous world.
Miriam, peeping through the kitchen
window, saw the horse walk through the big white gate
into the farmyard that was backed by the oak-wood,
still bare. Then a youth in a heavy overcoat climbed
down. He put up his hands for the whip and the
rug that the good-looking, ruddy farmer handed down
to him.
Miriam appeared in the doorway.
She was nearly sixteen, very beautiful, with her warm
colouring, her gravity, her eyes dilating suddenly
like an ecstasy.
“I say,” said Paul, turning
shyly aside, “your daffodils are nearly out.
Isn’t it early? But don’t they look
cold?”
“Cold!” said Miriam, in her musical, caressing
voice.
“The green on their buds—”
and he faltered into silence timidly.
“Let me take the rug,” said Miriam over-gently.
“I can carry it,” he answered, rather
injured. But he yielded it to her.
Then Mrs. Leivers appeared.
“I’m sure you’re
tired and cold,” she said. “Let me
take your coat. It is heavy. You mustn’t
walk far in it.”
She helped him off with his coat.
He was quite unused to such attention. She was
almost smothered under its weight.
“Why, mother,” laughed
the farmer as he passed through the kitchen, swinging
the great milk-churns, “you’ve got almost
more than you can manage there.”
She beat up the sofa cushions for the youth.
The kitchen was very small and irregular.
The farm had been originally a labourer’s cottage.
And the furniture was old and battered. But Paul
loved it—loved the sack-bag that formed
the hearthrug, and the funny little corner under the
stairs, and the small window deep in the corner, through
which, bending a little, he could see the plum trees
in the back garden and the lovely round hills beyond.
“Won’t you lie down?” said Mrs.
Leivers.
“Oh no; I’m not tired,”
he said. “Isn’t it lovely coming out,
don’t you think? I saw a sloe-bush in blossom
and a lot of celandines. I’m glad it’s
sunny.”
“Can I give you anything to eat or to drink?”
“No, thank you.”
“How’s your mother?”
“I think she’s tired now.
I think she’s had too much to do. Perhaps
in a little while she’ll go to Skegness with
me. Then she’ll be able to rest. I
s’ll be glad if she can.”
“Yes,” replied Mrs. Leivers. “It’s
a wonder she isn’t ill herself.”
Miriam was moving about preparing
dinner. Paul watched everything that happened.
His face was pale and thin, but his eyes were quick
and bright with life as ever. He watched the
strange, almost rhapsodic way in which the girl moved
about, carrying a great stew-jar to the oven, or looking
in the saucepan. The atmosphere was different
from that of his own home, where everything seemed
so ordinary. When Mr. Leivers called loudly outside
to the horse, that was reaching over to feed on the
rose-bushes in the garden, the girl started, looked
round with dark eyes, as if something had come breaking
in on her world. There was a sense of silence
inside the house and out. Miriam seemed as in
some dreamy tale, a maiden in bondage, her spirit
dreaming in a land far away and magical. And
her discoloured, old blue frock and her broken boots
seemed only like the romantic rags of King Cophetua’s
beggar-maid.
She suddenly became aware of his keen
blue eyes upon her, taking her all in. Instantly
her broken boots and her frayed old frock hurt her.
She resented his seeing everything. Even he knew
that her stocking was not pulled up. She went
into the scullery, blushing deeply. And afterwards
her hands trembled slightly at her work. She nearly
dropped all she handled. When her inside dream
was shaken, her body quivered with trepidation.
She resented that he saw so much.
Mrs. Leivers sat for some time talking
to the boy, although she was needed at her work.
She was too polite to leave him. Presently she
excused herself and rose. After a while she looked
into the tin saucepan.
“Oh dear, Miriam,”
she cried, “these potatoes have boiled dry!”
Miriam started as if she had been stung.
“Have they, mother?” she cried.
“I shouldn’t care, Miriam,”
said the mother, “if I hadn’t trusted them
to you.” She peered into the pan.
The girl stiffened as if from a blow.
Her dark eyes dilated; she remained standing in the
same spot.
“Well,” she answered,
gripped tight in self-conscious shame, “I’m
sure I looked at them five minutes since.”
“Yes,” said the mother, “I know
it’s easily done.”
“They’re not much burned,” said
Paul. “It doesn’t matter, does it?”
Mrs. Leivers looked at the youth with her brown, hurt
eyes.
“It wouldn’t matter but
for the boys,” she said to him. “Only
Miriam knows what a trouble they make if the potatoes
are ’caught’.”
“Then,” thought Paul to
himself, “you shouldn’t let them make a
trouble.”
After a while Edgar came in.
He wore leggings, and his boots were covered with
earth. He was rather small, rather formal, for
a farmer. He glanced at Paul, nodded to him distantly,
and said:
“Dinner ready?”
“Nearly, Edgar,” replied the mother apologetically.
“I’m ready for mine,”
said the young man, taking up the newspaper and reading.
Presently the rest of the family trooped in. Dinner
was served. The meal went rather brutally.
The over-gentleness and apologetic tone of the mother
brought out all the brutality of manners in the sons.
Edgar tasted the potatoes, moved his mouth quickly
like a rabbit, looked indignantly at his mother, and
said:
“These potatoes are burnt, mother.”
“Yes, Edgar. I forgot them
for a minute. Perhaps you’ll have bread
if you can’t eat them.”
Edgar looked in anger across at Miriam.
“What was Miriam doing that she couldn’t
attend to them?” he said.
Miriam looked up. Her mouth opened,
her dark eyes blazed and winced, but she said nothing.
She swallowed her anger and her shame, bowing her dark
head.
“I’m sure she was trying hard,”
said the mother.
“She hasn’t got sense
even to boil the potatoes,” said Edgar.
“What is she kept at home for?”
“On’y for eating everything that’s
left in th’ pantry,” said Maurice.
“They don’t forget that
potato-pie against our Miriam,” laughed the
father.
She was utterly humiliated. The
mother sat in silence, suffering, like some saint
out of place at the brutal board.
It puzzled Paul. He wondered
vaguely why all this intense feeling went running
because of a few burnt potatoes. The mother exalted
everything—even a bit of housework—to
the plane of a religious trust. The sons resented
this; they felt themselves cut away underneath, and
they answered with brutality and also with a sneering
superciliousness.
Paul was just opening out from childhood
into manhood. This atmosphere, where everything
took a religious value, came with a subtle fascination
to him. There was something in the air. His
own mother was logical. Here there was something
different, something he loved, something that at times
he hated.
Miriam quarrelled with her brothers
fiercely. Later in the afternoon, when they had
gone away again, her mother said:
“You disappointed me at dinner-time, Miriam.”
The girl dropped her head.
“They are such BRUTES!”
she suddenly cried, looking up with flashing eyes.
“But hadn’t you promised
not to answer them?” said the mother. “And
I believed in you. I can’t stand it
when you wrangle.”
“But they’re so hateful!” cried
Miriam, “and—and low.”
“Yes, dear. But how often
have I asked you not to answer Edgar back? Can’t
you let him say what he likes?”
“But why should he say what he likes?”
“Aren’t you strong enough
to bear it, Miriam, if even for my sake? Are
you so weak that you must wrangle with them?”
Mrs. Leivers stuck unflinchingly to
this doctrine of “the other cheek”.
She could not instil it at all into the boys.
With the girls she succeeded better, and Miriam was
the child of her heart. The boys loathed the
other cheek when it was presented to them. Miriam
was often sufficiently lofty to turn it. Then
they spat on her and hated her. But she walked
in her proud humility, living within herself.
There was always this feeling of jangle
and discord in the Leivers family. Although the
boys resented so bitterly this eternal appeal to their
deeper feelings of resignation and proud humility,
yet it had its effect on them. They could not
establish between themselves and an outsider just
the ordinary human feeling and unexaggerated friendship;
they were always restless for the something deeper.
Ordinary folk seemed shallow to them, trivial and
inconsiderable. And so they were unaccustomed,
painfully uncouth in the simplest social intercourse,
suffering, and yet insolent in their superiority.
Then beneath was the yearning for the soul-intimacy
to which they could not attain because they were too
dumb, and every approach to close connection was blocked
by their clumsy contempt of other people. They
wanted genuine intimacy, but they could not get even
normally near to anyone, because they scorned to take
the first steps, they scorned the triviality which
forms common human intercourse.
Paul fell under Mrs. Leivers’s
spell. Everything had a religious and intensified
meaning when he was with her. His soul, hurt,
highly developed, sought her as if for nourishment.
Together they seemed to sift the vital fact from an
experience.
Miriam was her mother’s daughter.
In the sunshine of the afternoon mother and daughter
went down the fields with him. They looked for
nests. There was a jenny wren’s in the hedge
by the orchard.
“I do want you to see this,” said
Mrs. Leivers.
He crouched down and carefully put
his finger through the thorns into the round door
of the nest.
“It’s almost as if you
were feeling inside the live body of the bird,”
he said, “it’s so warm. They say a
bird makes its nest round like a cup with pressing
its breast on it. Then how did it make the ceiling
round, I wonder?”
The nest seemed to start into life
for the two women. After that, Miriam came to
see it every day. It seemed so close to her.
Again, going down the hedgeside with the girl, he
noticed the celandines, scalloped splashes of gold,
on the side of the ditch.
“I like them,” he said,
“when their petals go flat back with the sunshine.
They seemed to be pressing themselves at the sun.”
And then the celandines ever after
drew her with a little spell. Anthropomorphic
as she was, she stimulated him into appreciating things
thus, and then they lived for her. She seemed
to need things kindling in her imagination or in her
soul before she felt she had them. And she was
cut off from ordinary life by her religious intensity
which made the world for her either a nunnery garden
or a paradise, where sin and knowledge were not, or
else an ugly, cruel thing.
So it was in this atmosphere of subtle
intimacy, this meeting in their common feeling for
something in Nature, that their love started.
Personally, he was a long time before
he realized her. For ten months he had to stay
at home after his illness. For a while he went
to Skegness with his mother, and was perfectly happy.
But even from the seaside he wrote long letters to
Mrs. Leivers about the shore and the sea. And
he brought back his beloved sketches of the flat Lincoln
coast, anxious for them to see. Almost they would
interest the Leivers more than they interested his
mother. It was not his art Mrs. Morel cared about;
it was himself and his achievement. But Mrs.
Leivers and her children were almost his disciples.
They kindled him and made him glow to his work, whereas
his mother’s influence was to make him quietly
determined, patient, dogged, unwearied.
He soon was friends with the boys,
whose rudeness was only superficial. They had
all, when they could trust themselves, a strange gentleness
and lovableness.
“Will you come with me on to
the fallow?” asked Edgar, rather hesitatingly.
Paul went joyfully, and spent the
afternoon helping to hoe or to single turnips with
his friend. He used to lie with the three brothers
in the hay piled up in the barn and tell them about
Nottingham and about Jordan’s. In return,
they taught him to milk, and let him do little jobs—chopping
hay or pulping turnips—just as much as he
liked. At midsummer he worked all through hay-harvest
with them, and then he loved them. The family
was so cut off from the world actually. They seemed,
somehow, like “les derniers fils d’une
race epuisee”. Though the lads were
strong and healthy, yet they had all that over-sensitiveness
and hanging-back which made them so lonely, yet also
such close, delicate friends once their intimacy was
won. Paul loved them dearly, and they him.
Miriam came later. But he had
come into her life before she made any mark on his.
One dull afternoon, when the men were on the land and
the rest at school, only Miriam and her mother at
home, the girl said to him, after having hesitated
for some time:
“Have you seen the swing?”
“No,” he answered. “Where?”
“In the cowshed,” she replied.
She always hesitated to offer or to
show him anything. Men have such different standards
of worth from women, and her dear things—the
valuable things to her—her brothers had
so often mocked or flouted.
“Come on, then,” he replied, jumping up.
There were two cowsheds, one on either
side of the barn. In the lower, darker shed there
was standing for four cows. Hens flew scolding
over the manger-wall as the youth and girl went forward
for the great thick rope which hung from the beam
in the darkness overhead, and was pushed back over
a peg in the wall.
“It’s something like a
rope!” he exclaimed appreciatively; and he sat
down on it, anxious to try it. Then immediately
he rose.
“Come on, then, and have first go,” he
said to the girl.
“See,” she answered, going
into the barn, “we put some bags on the seat”;
and she made the swing comfortable for him. That
gave her pleasure. He held the rope.
“Come on, then,” he said to her.
“No, I won’t go first,” she answered.
She stood aside in her still, aloof fashion.
“Why?”
“You go,” she pleaded.
Almost for the first time in her life
she had the pleasure of giving up to a man, of spoiling
him. Paul looked at her.
“All right,” he said, sitting down.
“Mind out!”
He set off with a spring, and in a
moment was flying through the air, almost out of the
door of the shed, the upper half of which was open,
showing outside the drizzling rain, the filthy yard,
the cattle standing disconsolate against the black
cartshed, and at the back of all the grey-green wall
of the wood. She stood below in her crimson tam-o’-shanter
and watched. He looked down at her, and she saw
his blue eyes sparkling.
“It’s a treat of a swing,” he said.
“Yes.”
He was swinging through the air, every
bit of him swinging, like a bird that swoops for joy
of movement. And he looked down at her. Her
crimson cap hung over her dark curls, her beautiful
warm face, so still in a kind of brooding, was lifted
towards him. It was dark and rather cold in the
shed. Suddenly a swallow came down from the high
roof and darted out of the door.
“I didn’t know a bird was watching,”
he called.
He swung negligently. She could
feel him falling and lifting through the air, as if
he were lying on some force.
“Now I’ll die,”
he said, in a detached, dreamy voice, as though he
were the dying motion of the swing. She watched
him, fascinated. Suddenly he put on the brake
and jumped out.
“I’ve had a long turn,”
he said. “But it’s a treat of a swing—it’s
a real treat of a swing!”
Miriam was amused that he took a swing
so seriously and felt so warmly over it.
“No; you go on,” she said.
“Why, don’t you want one?” he asked,
astonished.
“Well, not much. I’ll have just a
little.”
She sat down, whilst he kept the bags in place for
her.
“It’s so ripping!”
he said, setting her in motion. “Keep your
heels up, or they’ll bang the manger wall.”
She felt the accuracy with which he
caught her, exactly at the right moment, and the exactly
proportionate strength of his thrust, and she was
afraid. Down to her bowels went the hot wave of
fear. She was in his hands. Again, firm
and inevitable came the thrust at the right moment.
She gripped the rope, almost swooning.
“Ha!” she laughed in fear. “No
higher!”
“But you’re not a bit high,”
he remonstrated.
“But no higher.”
He heard the fear in her voice, and
desisted. Her heart melted in hot pain when the
moment came for him to thrust her forward again.
But he left her alone. She began to breathe.
“Won’t you really go any farther?”
he asked. “Should I keep you there?”
“No; let me go by myself,” she answered.
He moved aside and watched her.
“Why, you’re scarcely moving,” he
said.
She laughed slightly with shame, and in a moment got
down.
“They say if you can swing you
won’t be sea-sick,” he said, as he mounted
again. “I don’t believe I should ever
be sea-sick.”
Away he went. There was something
fascinating to her in him. For the moment he
was nothing but a piece of swinging stuff; not a particle
of him that did not swing. She could never lose
herself so, nor could her brothers. It roused
a warmth in her. It was almost as if he were a
flame that had lit a warmth in her whilst he swung
in the middle air.
And gradually the intimacy with the
family concentrated for Paul on three persons—the
mother, Edgar, and Miriam. To the mother he went
for that sympathy and that appeal which seemed to
draw him out. Edgar was his very close friend.
And to Miriam he more or less condescended, because
she seemed so humble.
But the girl gradually sought him
out. If he brought up his sketch-book, it was
she who pondered longest over the last picture.
Then she would look up at him. Suddenly, her
dark eyes alight like water that shakes with a stream
of gold in the dark, she would ask:
“Why do I like this so?”
Always something in his breast shrank
from these close, intimate, dazzled looks of hers.
“Why do you?” he asked.
“I don’t know. It seems so true.”
“It’s because—it’s
because there is scarcely any shadow in it; it’s
more shimmery, as if I’d painted the shimmering
protoplasm in the leaves and everywhere, and not the
stiffness of the shape. That seems dead to me.
Only this shimmeriness is the real living. The
shape is a dead crust. The shimmer is inside
really.”
And she, with her little finger in
her mouth, would ponder these sayings. They gave
her a feeling of life again, and vivified things which
had meant nothing to her. She managed to find
some meaning in his struggling, abstract speeches.
And they were the medium through which she came distinctly
at her beloved objects.
Another day she sat at sunset whilst
he was painting some pine-trees which caught the red
glare from the west. He had been quiet.
“There you are!” he said
suddenly. “I wanted that. Now, look
at them and tell me, are they pine trunks or are they
red coals, standing-up pieces of fire in that darkness?
There’s God’s burning bush for you, that
burned not away.”
Miriam looked, and was frightened.
But the pine trunks were wonderful to her, and distinct.
He packed his box and rose. Suddenly he looked
at her.
“Why are you always sad?” he asked her.
“Sad!” she exclaimed,
looking up at him with startled, wonderful brown eyes.
“Yes,” he replied. “You are
always sad.”
“I am not—oh, not a bit!” she
cried.
“But even your joy is like a
flame coming off of sadness,” he persisted.
“You’re never jolly, or even just all right.”
“No,” she pondered. “I wonder—why?”
“Because you’re not; because
you’re different inside, like a pine-tree, and
then you flare up; but you’re not just like an
ordinary tree, with fidgety leaves and jolly—”
He got tangled up in his own speech;
but she brooded on it, and he had a strange, roused
sensation, as if his feelings were new. She got
so near him. It was a strange stimulant.
Then sometimes he hated her.
Her youngest brother was only five. He was a
frail lad, with immense brown eyes in his quaint fragile
face—one of Reynolds’s “Choir
of Angels”, with a touch of elf. Often Miriam
kneeled to the child and drew him to her.
“Eh, my Hubert!” she sang,
in a voice heavy and surcharged with love. “Eh,
my Hubert!”
And, folding him in her arms, she
swayed slightly from side to side with love, her face
half lifted, her eyes half closed, her voice drenched
with love.
“Don’t!” said the child, uneasy—“don’t,
Miriam!”
“Yes; you love me, don’t
you?” she murmured deep in her throat, almost
as if she were in a trance, and swaying also as if
she were swooned in an ecstasy of love.
“Don’t!” repeated the child, a frown
on his clear brow.
“You love me, don’t you?” she murmured.
“What do you make such a fuss
for?” cried Paul, all in suffering because of
her extreme emotion. “Why can’t you
be ordinary with him?”
She let the child go, and rose, and
said nothing. Her intensity, which would leave
no emotion on a normal plane, irritated the youth into
a frenzy. And this fearful, naked contact of her
on small occasions shocked him. He was used to
his mother’s reserve. And on such occasions
he was thankful in his heart and soul that he had his
mother, so sane and wholesome.
All the life of Miriam’s body
was in her eyes, which were usually dark as a dark
church, but could flame with light like a conflagration.
Her face scarcely ever altered from its look of brooding.
She might have been one of the women who went with
Mary when Jesus was dead. Her body was not flexible
and living. She walked with a swing, rather heavily,
her head bowed forward, pondering. She was not
clumsy, and yet none of her movements seemed quite
the movement. Often, when wiping the dishes,
she would stand in bewilderment and chagrin because
she had pulled in two halves a cup or a tumbler.
It was as if, in her fear and self-mistrust, she put
too much strength into the effort. There was
no looseness or abandon about her. Everything
was gripped stiff with intensity, and her effort,
overcharged, closed in on itself.
She rarely varied from her swinging,
forward, intense walk. Occasionally she ran with
Paul down the fields. Then her eyes blazed naked
in a kind of ecstasy that frightened him. But
she was physically afraid. If she were getting
over a stile, she gripped his hands in a little hard
anguish, and began to lose her presence of mind.
And he could not persuade her to jump from even a
small height. Her eyes dilated, became exposed
and palpitating.
“No!” she cried, half laughing in terror—“no!”
“You shall!” he cried
once, and, jerking her forward, he brought her falling
from the fence. But her wild “Ah!”
of pain, as if she were losing consciousness, cut
him. She landed on her feet safely, and afterwards
had courage in this respect.
She was very much dissatisfied with her lot.
“Don’t you like being at home?”
Paul asked her, surprised.
“Who would?” she answered,
low and intense. “What is it? I’m
all day cleaning what the boys make just as bad in
five minutes. I don’t want to be at
home.”
“What do you want, then?”
“I want to do something.
I want a chance like anybody else. Why should
I, because I’m a girl, be kept at home and not
allowed to be anything? What chance have
I?”
“Chance of what?”
“Of knowing anything—of
learning, of doing anything. It’s not fair,
because I’m a woman.”
She seemed very bitter. Paul
wondered. In his own home Annie was almost glad
to be a girl. She had not so much responsibility;
things were lighter for her. She never wanted
to be other than a girl. But Miriam almost fiercely
wished she were a man. And yet she hated men at
the same time.
“But it’s as well to be
a woman as a man,” he said, frowning.
“Ha! Is it? Men have everything.”
“I should think women ought
to be as glad to be women as men are to be men,”
he answered.
“No!”—she shook her head—“no!
Everything the men have.”
“But what do you want?” he asked.
“I want to learn. Why should it be
that I know nothing?”
“What! such as mathematics and French?”
“Why shouldn’t I
know mathematics? Yes!” she cried, her eye
expanding in a kind of defiance.
“Well, you can learn as much
as I know,” he said. “I’ll teach
you, if you like.”
Her eyes dilated. She mistrusted him as teacher.
“Would you?” he asked.
Her head had dropped, and she was sucking her finger
broodingly.
“Yes,” she said hesitatingly.
He used to tell his mother all these things.
“I’m going to teach Miriam algebra,”
he said.
“Well,” replied Mrs. Morel, “I hope
she’ll get fat on it.”
When he went up to the farm on the
Monday evening, it was drawing twilight. Miriam
was just sweeping up the kitchen, and was kneeling
at the hearth when he entered. Everyone was out
but her. She looked round at him, flushed, her
dark eyes shining, her fine hair falling about her
face.
“Hello!” she said, soft and musical.
“I knew it was you.”
“How?”
“I knew your step. Nobody treads so quick
and firm.”
He sat down, sighing.
“Ready to do some algebra?”
he asked, drawing a little book from his pocket.
“But—”
He could feel her backing away.
“You said you wanted,” he insisted.
“To-night, though?” she faltered.
“But I came on purpose. And if you want
to learn it, you must begin.”
She took up her ashes in the dustpan
and looked at him, half tremulously, laughing.
“Yes, but to-night! You see, I haven’t
thought of it.”
“Well, my goodness! Take the ashes and
come.”
He went and sat on the stone bench
in the back-yard, where the big milk-cans were standing,
tipped up, to air. The men were in the cowsheds.
He could hear the little sing-song of the milk spurting
into the pails. Presently she came, bringing
some big greenish apples.
“You know you like them,” she said.
He took a bite.
“Sit down,” he said, with his mouth full.
She was short-sighted, and peered
over his shoulder. It irritated him. He
gave her the book quickly.
“Here,” he said.
“It’s only letters for figures. You
put down ‘a’ instead of ‘2’
or ’6’.”
They worked, he talking, she with
her head down on the book. He was quick and hasty.
She never answered. Occasionally, when he demanded
of her, “Do you see?” she looked up at
him, her eyes wide with the half-laugh that comes
of fear. “Don’t you?” he cried.
He had been too fast. But she
said nothing. He questioned her more, then got
hot. It made his blood rouse to see her there,
as it were, at his mercy, her mouth open, her eyes
dilated with laughter that was afraid, apologetic,
ashamed. Then Edgar came along with two buckets
of milk.
“Hello!” he said. “What are
you doing?”
“Algebra,” replied Paul.
“Algebra!” repeated Edgar
curiously. Then he passed on with a laugh.
Paul took a bite at his forgotten apple, looked at
the miserable cabbages in the garden, pecked into
lace by the fowls, and he wanted to pull them up.
Then he glanced at Miriam. She was poring over
the book, seemed absorbed in it, yet trembling lest
she could not get at it. It made him cross.
She was ruddy and beautiful. Yet her soul seemed
to be intensely supplicating. The algebra-book
she closed, shrinking, knowing he was angered; and
at the same instant he grew gentle, seeing her hurt
because she did not understand.
But things came slowly to her.
And when she held herself in a grip, seemed so utterly
humble before the lesson, it made his blood rouse.
He stormed at her, got ashamed, continued the lesson,
and grew furious again, abusing her. She listened
in silence. Occasionally, very rarely, she defended
herself. Her liquid dark eyes blazed at him.
“You don’t give me time to learn it,”
she said.
“All right,” he answered,
throwing the book on the table and lighting a cigarette.
Then, after a while, he went back to her repentant.
So the lessons went. He was always either in
a rage or very gentle.
“What do you tremble your soul
before it for?” he cried. “You don’t
learn algebra with your blessed soul. Can’t
you look at it with your clear simple wits?”
Often, when he went again into the
kitchen, Mrs. Leivers would look at him reproachfully,
saying:
“Paul, don’t be so hard
on Miriam. She may not be quick, but I’m
sure she tries.”
“I can’t help it,”
he said rather pitiably. “I go off like
it.”
“You don’t mind me, Miriam,
do you?” he asked of the girl later.
“No,” she reassured him
in her beautiful deep tones—“no, I
don’t mind.”
“Don’t mind me; it’s my fault.”
But, in spite of himself, his blood
began to boil with her. It was strange that no
one else made him in such fury. He flared against
her. Once he threw the pencil in her face.
There was a silence. She turned her face slightly
aside.
“I didn’t—”
he began, but got no farther, feeling weak in all his
bones. She never reproached him or was angry with
him. He was often cruelly ashamed. But still
again his anger burst like a bubble surcharged; and
still, when he saw her eager, silent, as it were, blind
face, he felt he wanted to throw the pencil in it;
and still, when he saw her hand trembling and her
mouth parted with suffering, his heart was scalded
with pain for her. And because of the intensity
to which she roused him, he sought her.
Then he often avoided her and went
with Edgar. Miriam and her brother were naturally
antagonistic. Edgar was a rationalist, who was
curious, and had a sort of scientific interest in
life. It was a great bitterness to Miriam to
see herself deserted by Paul for Edgar, who seemed
so much lower. But the youth was very happy with
her elder brother. The two men spent afternoons
together on the land or in the loft doing carpentry,
when it rained. And they talked together, or Paul
taught Edgar the songs he himself had learned from
Annie at the piano. And often all the men, Mr.
Leivers as well, had bitter debates on the nationalizing
of the land and similar problems. Paul had already
heard his mother’s views, and as these were
as yet his own, he argued for her. Miriam attended
and took part, but was all the time waiting until
it should be over and a personal communication might
begin.
“After all,” she said
within herself, “if the land were nationalized,
Edgar and Paul and I would be just the same.”
So she waited for the youth to come back to her.
He was studying for his painting.
He loved to sit at home, alone with his mother, at
night, working and working. She sewed or read.
Then, looking up from his task, he would rest his
eyes for a moment on her face, that was bright with
living warmth, and he returned gladly to his work.
“I can do my best things when
you sit there in your rocking-chair, mother,”
he said.
“I’m sure!” she
exclaimed, sniffing with mock scepticism. But
she felt it was so, and her heart quivered with brightness.
For many hours she sat still, slightly conscious of
him labouring away, whilst she worked or read her
book. And he, with all his soul’s intensity
directing his pencil, could feel her warmth inside
him like strength. They were both very happy
so, and both unconscious of it. These times, that
meant so much, and which were real living, they almost
ignored.
He was conscious only when stimulated.
A sketch finished, he always wanted to take it to
Miriam. Then he was stimulated into knowledge
of the work he had produced unconsciously. In
contact with Miriam he gained insight; his vision
went deeper. From his mother he drew the life-warmth,
the strength to produce; Miriam urged this warmth into
intensity like a white light.
When he returned to the factory the
conditions of work were better. He had Wednesday
afternoon off to go to the Art School—Miss
Jordan’s provision—returning in the
evening. Then the factory closed at six instead
of eight on Thursday and Friday evenings.
One evening in the summer Miriam and
he went over the fields by Herod’s Farm on their
way from the library home. So it was only three
miles to Willey Farm. There was a yellow glow
over the mowing-grass, and the sorrel-heads burned
crimson. Gradually, as they walked along the high
land, the gold in the west sank down to red, the red
to crimson, and then the chill blue crept up against
the glow.
They came out upon the high road to
Alfreton, which ran white between the darkening fields.
There Paul hesitated. It was two miles home for
him, one mile forward for Miriam. They both looked
up the road that ran in shadow right under the glow
of the north-west sky. On the crest of the hill,
Selby, with its stark houses and the up-pricked headstocks
of the pit, stood in black silhouette small against
the sky.
He looked at his watch.
“Nine o’clock!” he said.
The pair stood, loth to part, hugging their books.
“The wood is so lovely now,” she said.
“I wanted you to see it.”
He followed her slowly across the road to the white
gate.
“They grumble so if I’m late,” he
said.
“But you’re not doing anything wrong,”
she answered impatiently.
He followed her across the nibbled
pasture in the dusk. There was a coolness in
the wood, a scent of leaves, of honeysuckle, and a
twilight. The two walked in silence. Night
came wonderfully there, among the throng of dark tree-trunks.
He looked round, expectant.
She wanted to show him a certain wild-rose
bush she had discovered. She knew it was wonderful.
And yet, till he had seen it, she felt it had not
come into her soul. Only he could make it her
own, immortal. She was dissatisfied.
Dew was already on the paths.
In the old oak-wood a mist was rising, and he hesitated,
wondering whether one whiteness were a strand of fog
or only campion-flowers pallid in a cloud.
By the time they came to the pine-trees
Miriam was getting very eager and very tense.
Her bush might be gone. She might not be able
to find it; and she wanted it so much. Almost
passionately she wanted to be with him when he stood
before the flowers. They were going to have a
communion together—something that thrilled
her, something holy. He was walking beside her
in silence. They were very near to each other.
She trembled, and he listened, vaguely anxious.
Coming to the edge of the wood, they
saw the sky in front, like mother-of-pearl, and the
earth growing dark. Somewhere on the outermost
branches of the pine-wood the honeysuckle was streaming
scent.
“Where?” he asked.
“Down the middle path,” she murmured,
quivering.
When they turned the corner of the
path she stood still. In the wide walk between
the pines, gazing rather frightened, she could distinguish
nothing for some moments; the greying light robbed
things of their colour. Then she saw her bush.
“Ah!” she cried, hastening forward.
It was very still. The tree was
tall and straggling. It had thrown its briers
over a hawthorn-bush, and its long streamers trailed
thick, right down to the grass, splashing the darkness
everywhere with great spilt stars, pure white.
In bosses of ivory and in large splashed stars the
roses gleamed on the darkness of foliage and stems
and grass. Paul and Miriam stood close together,
silent, and watched. Point after point the steady
roses shone out to them, seeming to kindle something
in their souls. The dusk came like smoke around,
and still did not put out the roses.
Paul looked into Miriam’s eyes.
She was pale and expectant with wonder, her lips were
parted, and her dark eyes lay open to him. His
look seemed to travel down into her. Her soul
quivered. It was the communion she wanted.
He turned aside, as if pained. He turned to the
bush.
“They seem as if they walk like
butterflies, and shake themselves,” he said.
She looked at her roses. They
were white, some incurved and holy, others expanded
in an ecstasy. The tree was dark as a shadow.
She lifted her hand impulsively to the flowers; she
went forward and touched them in worship.
“Let us go,” he said.
There was a cool scent of ivory roses—a
white, virgin scent. Something made him feel
anxious and imprisoned. The two walked in silence.
“Till Sunday,” he said
quietly, and left her; and she walked home slowly,
feeling her soul satisfied with the holiness of the
night. He stumbled down the path. And as
soon as he was out of the wood, in the free open meadow,
where he could breathe, he started to run as fast as
he could. It was like a delicious delirium in
his veins.
Always when he went with Miriam, and
it grew rather late, he knew his mother was fretting
and getting angry about him—why, he could
not understand. As he went into the house, flinging
down his cap, his mother looked up at the clock.
She had been sitting thinking, because a chill to
her eyes prevented her reading. She could feel
Paul being drawn away by this girl. And she did
not care for Miriam. “She is one of those
who will want to suck a man’s soul out till
he has none of his own left,” she said to herself;
“and he is just such a gaby as to let himself
be absorbed. She will never let him become a
man; she never will.” So, while he was
away with Miriam, Mrs. Morel grew more and more worked
up.
She glanced at the clock and said,
coldly and rather tired:
“You have been far enough to-night.”
His soul, warm and exposed from contact with the girl,
shrank.
“You must have been right home with her,”
his mother continued.
He would not answer. Mrs. Morel,
looking at him quickly, saw his hair was damp on his
forehead with haste, saw him frowning in his heavy
fashion, resentfully.
“She must be wonderfully fascinating,
that you can’t get away from her, but must go
trailing eight miles at this time of night.”
He was hurt between the past glamour
with Miriam and the knowledge that his mother fretted.
He had meant not to say anything, to refuse to answer.
But he could not harden his heart to ignore his mother.
“I do like to talk to her,” he answered
irritably.
“Is there nobody else to talk to?”
“You wouldn’t say anything if I went with
Edgar.”
“You know I should. You
know, whoever you went with, I should say it was too
far for you to go trailing, late at night, when you’ve
been to Nottingham. Besides”—her
voice suddenly flashed into anger and contempt—“it
is disgusting—bits of lads and girls courting.”
“It is not courting,” he cried.
“I don’t know what else you call it.”
“It’s not! Do you think we spoon
and do? We only talk.”
“Till goodness knows what time
and distance,” was the sarcastic rejoinder.
Paul snapped at the laces of his boots angrily.
“What are you so mad about?” he asked.
“Because you don’t like her.”
“I don’t say I don’t
like her. But I don’t hold with children
keeping company, and never did.”
“But you don’t mind our Annie going out
with Jim Inger.”
“They’ve more sense than you two.”
“Why?”
“Our Annie’s not one of the deep sort.”
He failed to see the meaning of this
remark. But his mother looked tired. She
was never so strong after William’s death; and
her eyes hurt her.
“Well,” he said, “it’s
so pretty in the country. Mr. Sleath asked about
you. He said he’d missed you. Are you
a bit better?”
“I ought to have been in bed a long time ago,”
she replied.
“Why, mother, you know you wouldn’t have
gone before quarter-past ten.”
“Oh, yes, I should!”
“Oh, little woman, you’d
say anything now you’re disagreeable with me,
wouldn’t you?”
He kissed her forehead that he knew
so well: the deep marks between the brows, the
rising of the fine hair, greying now, and the proud
setting of the temples. His hand lingered on
her shoulder after his kiss. Then he went slowly
to bed. He had forgotten Miriam; he only saw how
his mother’s hair was lifted back from her warm,
broad brow. And somehow, she was hurt.
Then the next time he saw Miriam he said to her:
“Don’t let me be late
to-night—not later than ten o’clock.
My mother gets so upset.”
Miriam dropped her bead, brooding.
“Why does she get upset?” she asked.
“Because she says I oughtn’t
to be out late when I have to get up early.”
“Very well!” said Miriam, rather quietly,
with just a touch of a sneer.
He resented that. And he was usually late again.
That there was any love growing between
him and Miriam neither of them would have acknowledged.
He thought he was too sane for such sentimentality,
and she thought herself too lofty. They both were
late in coming to maturity, and psychical ripeness
was much behind even the physical. Miriam was
exceedingly sensitive, as her mother had always been.
The slightest grossness made her recoil almost in anguish.
Her brothers were brutal, but never coarse in speech.
The men did all the discussing of farm matters outside.
But, perhaps, because of the continual business of
birth and of begetting which goes on upon every farm,
Miriam was the more hypersensitive to the matter, and
her blood was chastened almost to disgust of the faintest
suggestion of such intercourse. Paul took his
pitch from her, and their intimacy went on in an utterly
blanched and chaste fashion. It could never be
mentioned that the mare was in foal.
When he was nineteen, he was earning
only twenty shillings a week, but he was happy.
His painting went well, and life went well enough.
On the Good Friday he organised a walk to the Hemlock
Stone. There were three lads of his own age,
then Annie and Arthur, Miriam and Geoffrey. Arthur,
apprenticed as an electrician in Nottingham, was home
for the holiday. Morel, as usual, was up early,
whistling and sawing in the yard. At seven o’clock
the family heard him buy threepennyworth of hot-cross
buns; he talked with gusto to the little girl who brought
them, calling her “my darling”. He
turned away several boys who came with more buns,
telling them they had been “kested” by
a little lass. Then Mrs. Morel got up, and the
family straggled down. It was an immense luxury
to everybody, this lying in bed just beyond the ordinary
time on a weekday. And Paul and Arthur read before
breakfast, and had the meal unwashed, sitting in their
shirt-sleeves. This was another holiday luxury.
The room was warm. Everything felt free of care
and anxiety. There was a sense of plenty in the
house.
While the boys were reading, Mrs.
Morel went into the garden. They were now in
another house, an old one, near the Scargill Street
home, which had been left soon after William had died.
Directly came an excited cry from the garden:
“Paul! Paul! come and look!”
It was his mother’s voice.
He threw down his book and went out. There was
a long garden that ran to a field. It was a grey,
cold day, with a sharp wind blowing out of Derbyshire.
Two fields away Bestwood began, with a jumble of roofs
and red house-ends, out of which rose the church tower
and the spire of the Congregational Chapel. And
beyond went woods and hills, right away to the pale
grey heights of the Pennine Chain.
Paul looked down the garden for his
mother. Her head appeared among the young currant-bushes.
“Come here!” she cried.
“What for?” he answered.
“Come and see.”
She had been looking at the buds on the currant trees.
Paul went up.
“To think,” she said, “that here
I might never have seen them!”
Her son went to her side. Under
the fence, in a little bed, was a ravel of poor grassy
leaves, such as come from very immature bulbs, and
three scyllas in bloom. Mrs. Morel pointed to
the deep blue flowers.
“Now, just see those!”
she exclaimed. “I was looking at the currant
bushes, when, thinks I to myself, ’There’s
something very blue; is it a bit of sugar-bag?’
and there, behold you! Sugar-bag! Three glories
of the snow, and such beauties! But where on
earth did they come from?”
“I don’t know,” said Paul.
“Well, that’s a marvel,
now! I thought I knew every weed and blade
in this garden. But haven’t they done
well? You see, that gooseberry-bush just shelters
them. Not nipped, not touched!”
He crouched down and turned up the bells of the little
blue flowers.
“They’re a glorious colour!” he
said.
“Aren’t they!” she
cried. “I guess they come from Switzerland,
where they say they have such lovely things.
Fancy them against the snow! But where have they
come from? They can’t have blown here,
can they?”
Then he remembered having set here
a lot of little trash of bulbs to mature.
“And you never told me,” she said.
“No! I thought I’d leave it till
they might flower.”
“And now, you see! I might
have missed them. And I’ve never had a glory
of the snow in my garden in my life.”
She was full of excitement and elation.
The garden was an endless joy to her. Paul was
thankful for her sake at last to be in a house with
a long garden that went down to a field. Every
morning after breakfast she went out and was happy
pottering about in it. And it was true, she knew
every weed and blade.
Everybody turned up for the walk.
Food was packed, and they set off, a merry, delighted
party. They hung over the wall of the mill-race,
dropped paper in the water on one side of the tunnel
and watched it shoot out on the other. They stood
on the foot-bridge over Boathouse Station and looked
at the metals gleaming coldly.
“You should see the Flying Scotsman
come through at half-past six!” said Leonard,
whose father was a signalman. “Lad, but
she doesn’t half buzz!” and the little
party looked up the lines one way, to London, and the
other way, to Scotland, and they felt the touch of
these two magical places.
In Ilkeston the colliers were waiting
in gangs for the public-houses to open. It was
a town of idleness and lounging. At Stanton Gate
the iron foundry blazed. Over everything there
were great discussions. At Trowell they crossed
again from Derbyshire into Nottinghamshire. They
came to the Hemlock Stone at dinner-time. Its
field was crowded with folk from Nottingham and Ilkeston.
They had expected a venerable and
dignified monument. They found a little, gnarled,
twisted stump of rock, something like a decayed mushroom,
standing out pathetically on the side of a field.
Leonard and Dick immediately proceeded to carve their
initials, “L. W.” and “R.
P.”, in the old red sandstone; but Paul desisted,
because he had read in the newspaper satirical remarks
about initial-carvers, who could find no other road
to immortality. Then all the lads climbed to the
top of the rock to look round.
Everywhere in the field below, factory
girls and lads were eating lunch or sporting about.
Beyond was the garden of an old manor. It had
yew-hedges and thick clumps and borders of yellow crocuses
round the lawn.
“See,” said Paul to Miriam, “what
a quiet garden!”
She saw the dark yews and the golden
crocuses, then she looked gratefully. He had
not seemed to belong to her among all these others;
he was different then—not her Paul, who
understood the slightest quiver of her innermost soul,
but something else, speaking another language than
hers. How it hurt her, and deadened her very perceptions.
Only when he came right back to her, leaving his other,
his lesser self, as she thought, would she feel alive
again. And now he asked her to look at this garden,
wanting the contact with her again. Impatient
of the set in the field, she turned to the quiet lawn,
surrounded by sheaves of shut-up crocuses. A
feeling of stillness, almost of ecstasy, came over
her. It felt almost as if she were alone with
him in this garden.
Then he left her again and joined
the others. Soon they started home. Miriam
loitered behind, alone. She did not fit in with
the others; she could very rarely get into human relations
with anyone: so her friend, her companion, her
lover, was Nature. She saw the sun declining wanly.
In the dusky, cold hedgerows were some red leaves.
She lingered to gather them, tenderly, passionately.
The love in her finger-tips caressed the leaves; the
passion in her heart came to a glow upon the leaves.
Suddenly she realised she was alone
in a strange road, and she hurried forward. Turning
a corner in the lane, she came upon Paul, who stood
bent over something, his mind fixed on it, working
away steadily, patiently, a little hopelessly.
She hesitated in her approach, to watch.
He remained concentrated in the middle
of the road. Beyond, one rift of rich gold in
that colourless grey evening seemed to make him stand
out in dark relief. She saw him, slender and
firm, as if the setting sun had given him to her.
A deep pain took hold of her, and she knew she must
love him. And she had discovered him, discovered
in him a rare potentiality, discovered his loneliness.
Quivering as at some “annunciation”, she
went slowly forward.
At last he looked up.
“Why,” he exclaimed gratefully, “have
you waited for me!”
She saw a deep shadow in his eyes.
“What is it?” she asked.
“The spring broken here;”
and he showed her where his umbrella was injured.
Instantly, with some shame, she knew
he had not done the damage himself, but that Geoffrey
was responsible.
“It is only an old umbrella, isn’t it?”
she asked.
She wondered why he, who did not usually
trouble over trifles, made such a mountain of this
molehill.
“But it was William’s
an’ my mother can’t help but know,”
he said quietly, still patiently working at the umbrella.
The words went through Miriam like
a blade. This, then, was the confirmation of
her vision of him! She looked at him. But
there was about him a certain reserve, and she dared
not comfort him, not even speak softly to him.
“Come on,” he said.
“I can’t do it;” and they went in
silence along the road.
That same evening they were walking
along under the trees by Nether Green. He was
talking to her fretfully, seemed to be struggling to
convince himself.
“You know,” he said, with
an effort, “if one person loves, the other does.”
“Ah!” she answered.
“Like mother said to me when I was little, ’Love
begets love.’”
“Yes, something like that, I think it must
be.”
“I hope so, because, if it were
not, love might be a very terrible thing,” she
said.
“Yes, but it is—at least with
most people,” he answered.
And Miriam, thinking he had assured
himself, felt strong in herself. She always regarded
that sudden coming upon him in the lane as a revelation.
And this conversation remained graven in her mind as
one of the letters of the law.
Now she stood with him and for him.
When, about this time, he outraged the family feeling
at Willey Farm by some overbearing insult, she stuck
to him, and believed he was right. And at this
time she dreamed dreams of him, vivid, unforgettable.
These dreams came again later on, developed to a more
subtle psychological stage.
On the Easter Monday the same party
took an excursion to Wingfield Manor. It was
great excitement to Miriam to catch a train at Sethley
Bridge, amid all the bustle of the Bank Holiday crowd.
They left the train at Alfreton. Paul was interested
in the street and in the colliers with their dogs.
Here was a new race of miners. Miriam did not
live till they came to the church. They were
all rather timid of entering, with their bags of food,
for fear of being turned out. Leonard, a comic,
thin fellow, went first; Paul, who would have died
rather than be sent back, went last. The place
was decorated for Easter. In the font hundreds
of white narcissi seemed to be growing. The air
was dim and coloured from the windows and thrilled
with a subtle scent of lilies and narcissi. In
that atmosphere Miriam’s soul came into a glow.
Paul was afraid of the things he mustn’t do;
and he was sensitive to the feel of the place.
Miriam turned to him. He answered. They were
together. He would not go beyond the Communion-rail.
She loved him for that. Her soul expanded into
prayer beside him. He felt the strange fascination
of shadowy religious places. All his latent mysticism
quivered into life. She was drawn to him.
He was a prayer along with her.
Miriam very rarely talked to the other
lads. They at once became awkward in conversation
with her. So usually she was silent.
It was past midday when they climbed
the steep path to the manor. All things shone
softly in the sun, which was wonderfully warm and
enlivening. Celandines and violets were out.
Everybody was tip-top full with happiness. The
glitter of the ivy, the soft, atmospheric grey of
the castle walls, the gentleness of everything near
the ruin, was perfect.
The manor is of hard, pale grey stone,
and the other walls are blank and calm. The young
folk were in raptures. They went in trepidation,
almost afraid that the delight of exploring this ruin
might be denied them. In the first courtyard,
within the high broken walls, were farm-carts, with
their shafts lying idle on the ground, the tyres of
the wheels brilliant with gold-red rust. It was
very still.
All eagerly paid their sixpences,
and went timidly through the fine clean arch of the
inner courtyard. They were shy. Here on the
pavement, where the hall had been, an old thorn tree
was budding. All kinds of strange openings and
broken rooms were in the shadow around them.
After lunch they set off once more
to explore the ruin. This time the girls went
with the boys, who could act as guides and expositors.
There was one tall tower in a corner, rather tottering,
where they say Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned.
“Think of the Queen going up
here!” said Miriam in a low voice, as she climbed
the hollow stairs.
“If she could get up,”
said Paul, “for she had rheumatism like anything.
I reckon they treated her rottenly.”
“You don’t think she deserved it?”
asked Miriam.
“No, I don’t. She was only lively.”
They continued to mount the winding
staircase. A high wind, blowing through the loopholes,
went rushing up the shaft, and filled the girl’s
skirts like a balloon, so that she was ashamed, until
he took the hem of her dress and held it down for
her. He did it perfectly simply, as he would
have picked up her glove. She remembered this
always.
Round the broken top of the tower
the ivy bushed out, old and handsome. Also, there
were a few chill gillivers, in pale cold bud.
Miriam wanted to lean over for some ivy, but he would
not let her. Instead, she had to wait behind
him, and take from him each spray as he gathered it
and held it to her, each one separately, in the purest
manner of chivalry. The tower seemed to rock
in the wind. They looked over miles and miles
of wooded country, and country with gleams of pasture.
The crypt underneath the manor was
beautiful, and in perfect preservation. Paul
made a drawing: Miriam stayed with him. She
was thinking of Mary Queen of Scots looking with her
strained, hopeless eyes, that could not understand
misery, over the hills whence no help came, or sitting
in this crypt, being told of a God as cold as the place
she sat in.
They set off again gaily, looking
round on their beloved manor that stood so clean and
big on its hill.
“Supposing you could have that
farm,” said Paul to Miriam.
“Yes!”
“Wouldn’t it be lovely to come and see
you!”
They were now in the bare country
of stone walls, which he loved, and which, though
only ten miles from home, seemed so foreign to Miriam.
The party was straggling. As they were crossing
a large meadow that sloped away from the sun, along
a path embedded with innumerable tiny glittering points,
Paul, walking alongside, laced his fingers in the
strings of the bag Miriam was carrying, and instantly
she felt Annie behind, watchful and jealous.
But the meadow was bathed in a glory of sunshine,
and the path was jewelled, and it was seldom that he
gave her any sign. She held her fingers very
still among the strings of the bag, his fingers touching;
and the place was golden as a vision.
At last they came into the straggling
grey village of Crich, that lies high. Beyond
the village was the famous Crich Stand that Paul could
see from the garden at home. The party pushed
on. Great expanse of country spread around and
below. The lads were eager to get to the top of
the hill. It was capped by a round knoll, half
of which was by now cut away, and on the top of which
stood an ancient monument, sturdy and squat, for signalling
in old days far down into the level lands of Nottinghamshire
and Leicestershire.
It was blowing so hard, high up there
in the exposed place, that the only way to be safe
was to stand nailed by the wind to the wan of the
tower. At their feet fell the precipice where
the limestone was quarried away. Below was a
jumble of hills and tiny villages—Mattock,
Ambergate, Stoney Middleton. The lads were eager
to spy out the church of Bestwood, far away among
the rather crowded country on the left. They were
disgusted that it seemed to stand on a plain.
They saw the hills of Derbyshire fall into the monotony
of the Midlands that swept away South.
Miriam was somewhat scared by the
wind, but the lads enjoyed it. They went on,
miles and miles, to Whatstandwell. All the food
was eaten, everybody was hungry, and there was very
little money to get home with. But they managed
to procure a loaf and a currant-loaf, which they hacked
to pieces with shut-knives, and ate sitting on the
wall near the bridge, watching the bright Derwent
rushing by, and the brakes from Matlock pulling up
at the inn.
Paul was now pale with weariness.
He had been responsible for the party all day, and
now he was done. Miriam understood, and kept close
to him, and he left himself in her hands.
They had an hour to wait at Ambergate
Station. Trains came, crowded with excursionists
returning to Manchester, Birmingham, and London.
“We might be going there—folk
easily might think we’re going that far,”
said Paul.
They got back rather late. Miriam,
walking home with Geoffrey, watched the moon rise
big and red and misty. She felt something was
fulfilled in her.
She had an elder sister, Agatha, who
was a school-teacher. Between the two girls was
a feud. Miriam considered Agatha worldly.
And she wanted herself to be a school-teacher.
One Saturday afternoon Agatha and
Miriam were upstairs dressing. Their bedroom
was over the stable. It was a low room, not very
large, and bare. Miriam had nailed on the wall
a reproduction of Veronese’s “St. Catherine”.
She loved the woman who sat in the window, dreaming.
Her own windows were too small to sit in. But
the front one was dripped over with honeysuckle and
virginia creeper, and looked upon the tree-tops of
the oak-wood across the yard, while the little back
window, no bigger than a handkerchief, was a loophole
to the east, to the dawn beating up against the beloved
round hills.
The two sisters did not talk much
to each other. Agatha, who was fair and small
and determined, had rebelled against the home atmosphere,
against the doctrine of “the other cheek”.
She was out in the world now, in a fair way to be
independent. And she insisted on worldly values,
on appearance, on manners, on position, which Miriam
would fain have ignored.
Both girls liked to be upstairs, out
of the way, when Paul came. They preferred to
come running down, open the stair-foot door, and see
him watching, expectant of them. Miriam stood
painfully pulling over her head a rosary he had given
her. It caught in the fine mesh of her hair.
But at last she had it on, and the red-brown wooden
beads looked well against her cool brown neck.
She was a well-developed girl, and very handsome.
But in the little looking-glass nailed against the
whitewashed wall she could only see a fragment of
herself at a time. Agatha had bought a little
mirror of her own, which she propped up to suit herself.
Miriam was near the window. Suddenly she heard
the well-known click of the chain, and she saw Paul
fling open the gate, push his bicycle into the yard.
She saw him look at the house, and she shrank away.
He walked in a nonchalant fashion, and his bicycle
went with him as if it were a live thing.
“Paul’s come!” she exclaimed.
“Aren’t you glad?” said Agatha cuttingly.
Miriam stood still in amazement and bewilderment.
“Well, aren’t you?” she asked.
“Yes, but I’m not going to let him see
it, and think I wanted him.”
Miriam was startled. She heard
him putting his bicycle in the stable underneath,
and talking to Jimmy, who had been a pit-horse, and
who was seedy.
“Well, Jimmy my lad, how are
ter? Nobbut sick an’ sadly, like? Why,
then, it’s a shame, my owd lad.”
She heard the rope run through the
hole as the horse lifted its head from the lad’s
caress. How she loved to listen when he thought
only the horse could hear. But there was a serpent
in her Eden. She searched earnestly in herself
to see if she wanted Paul Morel. She felt there
would be some disgrace in it. Full of twisted
feeling, she was afraid she did want him. She
stood self-convicted. Then came an agony of new
shame. She shrank within herself in a coil of
torture. Did she want Paul Morel, and did he
know she wanted him? What a subtle infamy upon
her. She felt as if her whole soul coiled into
knots of shame.
Agatha was dressed first, and ran
downstairs. Miriam heard her greet the lad gaily,
knew exactly how brilliant her grey eyes became with
that tone. She herself would have felt it bold
to have greeted him in such wise. Yet there she
stood under the self-accusation of wanting him, tied
to that stake of torture. In bitter perplexity
she kneeled down and prayed:
“O Lord, let me not love Paul
Morel. Keep me from loving him, if I ought not
to love him.”
Something anomalous in the prayer
arrested her. She lifted her head and pondered.
How could it be wrong to love him? Love was God’s
gift. And yet it caused her shame. That
was because of him, Paul Morel. But, then, it
was not his affair, it was her own, between herself
and God. She was to be a sacrifice. But
it was God’s sacrifice, not Paul Morel’s
or her own. After a few minutes she hid her face
in the pillow again, and said:
“But, Lord, if it is Thy will
that I should love him, make me love him—as
Christ would, who died for the souls of men. Make
me love him splendidly, because he is Thy son.”
She remained kneeling for some time,
quite still, and deeply moved, her black hair against
the red squares and the lavender-sprigged squares of
the patchwork quilt. Prayer was almost essential
to her. Then she fell into that rapture of self-sacrifice,
identifying herself with a God who was sacrificed,
which gives to so many human souls their deepest bliss.
When she went downstairs Paul was
lying back in an armchair, holding forth with much
vehemence to Agatha, who was scorning a little painting
he had brought to show her. Miriam glanced at
the two, and avoided their levity. She went into
the parlour to be alone.
It was tea-time before she was able
to speak to Paul, and then her manner was so distant
he thought he had offended her.
Miriam discontinued her practice of
going each Thursday evening to the library in Bestwood.
After calling for Paul regularly during the whole
spring, a number of trifling incidents and tiny insults
from his family awakened her to their attitude towards
her, and she decided to go no more. So she announced
to Paul one evening she would not call at his house
again for him on Thursday nights.
“Why?” he asked, very short.
“Nothing. Only I’d rather not.”
“Very well.”
“But,” she faltered, “if
you’d care to meet me, we could still go together.”
“Meet you where?”
“Somewhere—where you like.”
“I shan’t meet you anywhere.
I don’t see why you shouldn’t keep calling
for me. But if you won’t, I don’t
want to meet you.”
So the Thursday evenings which had
been so precious to her, and to him, were dropped.
He worked instead. Mrs. Morel sniffed with satisfaction
at this arrangement.
He would not have it that they were
lovers. The intimacy between them had been kept
so abstract, such a matter of the soul, all thought
and weary struggle into consciousness, that he saw
it only as a platonic friendship. He stoutly
denied there was anything else between them.
Miriam was silent, or else she very quietly agreed.
He was a fool who did not know what was happening
to himself. By tacit agreement they ignored the
remarks and insinuations of their acquaintances.
“We aren’t lovers, we
are friends,” he said to her. “We
know it. Let them talk. What does it matter
what they say.”
Sometimes, as they were walking together,
she slipped her arm timidly into his. But he
always resented it, and she knew it. It caused
a violent conflict in him. With Miriam he was
always on the high plane of abstraction, when his
natural fire of love was transmitted into the fine
stream of thought. She would have it so.
If he were jolly and, as she put it, flippant, she
waited till he came back to her, till the change had
taken place in him again, and he was wrestling with
his own soul, frowning, passionate in his desire for
understanding. And in this passion for understanding
her soul lay close to his; she had him all to herself.
But he must be made abstract first.
Then, if she put her arm in his, it
caused him almost torture. His consciousness
seemed to split. The place where she was touching
him ran hot with friction. He was one internecine
battle, and he became cruel to her because of it.
One evening in midsummer Miriam called
at the house, warm from climbing. Paul was alone
in the kitchen; his mother could be heard moving about
upstairs.
“Come and look at the sweet-peas,” he
said to the girl.
They went into the garden. The
sky behind the townlet and the church was orange-red;
the flower-garden was flooded with a strange warm light
that lifted every leaf into significance. Paul
passed along a fine row of sweet-peas, gathering a
blossom here and there, all cream and pale blue.
Miriam followed, breathing the fragrance. To her,
flowers appealed with such strength she felt she must
make them part of herself. When she bent and
breathed a flower, it was as if she and the flower
were loving each other. Paul hated her for it.
There seemed a sort of exposure about the action,
something too intimate.
When he had got a fair bunch, they
returned to the house. He listened for a moment
to his mother’s quiet movement upstairs, then
he said:
“Come here, and let me pin them
in for you.” He arranged them two or three
at a time in the bosom of her dress, stepping back
now and then to see the effect. “You know,”
he said, taking the pin out of his mouth, “a
woman ought always to arrange her flowers before her
glass.”
Miriam laughed. She thought flowers
ought to be pinned in one’s dress without any
care. That Paul should take pains to fix her flowers
for her was his whim.
He was rather offended at her laughter.
“Some women do—those who look decent,”
he said.
Miriam laughed again, but mirthlessly,
to hear him thus mix her up with women in a general
way. From most men she would have ignored it.
But from him it hurt her.
He had nearly finished arranging the
flowers when he heard his mother’s footstep
on the stairs. Hurriedly he pushed in the last
pin and turned away.
“Don’t let mater know,” he said.
Miriam picked up her books and stood
in the doorway looking with chagrin at the beautiful
sunset. She would call for Paul no more, she said.
“Good-evening, Mrs. Morel,”
she said, in a deferential way. She sounded as
if she felt she had no right to be there.
“Oh, is it you, Miriam?” replied Mrs.
Morel coolly.
But Paul insisted on everybody’s
accepting his friendship with the girl, and Mrs. Morel
was too wise to have any open rupture.
It was not till he was twenty years
old that the family could ever afford to go away for
a holiday. Mrs. Morel had never been away for
a holiday, except to see her sister, since she had
been married. Now at last Paul had saved enough
money, and they were all going. There was to
be a party: some of Annie’s friends, one
friend of Paul’s, a young man in the same office
where William had previously been, and Miriam.
It was great excitement writing for
rooms. Paul and his mother debated it endlessly
between them. They wanted a furnished cottage
for two weeks. She thought one week would be
enough, but he insisted on two.
At last they got an answer from Mablethorpe,
a cottage such as they wished for thirty shillings
a week. There was immense jubilation. Paul
was wild with joy for his mother’s sake.
She would have a real holiday now. He and she
sat at evening picturing what it would be like.
Annie came in, and Leonard, and Alice, and Kitty.
There was wild rejoicing and anticipation. Paul
told Miriam. She seemed to brood with joy over
it. But the Morel’s house rang with excitement.
They were to go on Saturday morning
by the seven train. Paul suggested that Miriam
should sleep at his house, because it was so far for
her to walk. She came down for supper. Everybody
was so excited that even Miriam was accepted with
warmth. But almost as soon as she entered the
feeling in the family became close and tight.
He had discovered a poem by Jean Ingelow which mentioned
Mablethorpe, and so he must read it to Miriam.
He would never have got so far in the direction of
sentimentality as to read poetry to his own family.
But now they condescended to listen. Miriam sat
on the sofa absorbed in him. She always seemed
absorbed in him, and by him, when he was present.
Mrs. Morel sat jealously in her own chair. She
was going to hear also. And even Annie and the
father attended, Morel with his head cocked on one
side, like somebody listening to a sermon and feeling
conscious of the fact. Paul ducked his head over
the book. He had got now all the audience he
cared for. And Mrs. Morel and Annie almost contested
with Miriam who should listen best and win his favour.
He was in very high feather.
“But,” interrupted Mrs.
Morel, “what is the ‘Bride of Enderby’
that the bells are supposed to ring?”
“It’s an old tune they
used to play on the bells for a warning against water.
I suppose the Bride of Enderby was drowned in a flood,”
he replied. He had not the faintest knowledge
what it really was, but he would never have sunk so
low as to confess that to his womenfolk. They
listened and believed him. He believed himself.
“And the people knew what that
tune meant?” said his mother.
“Yes—just like the
Scotch when they heard ‘The Flowers o’
the Forest’—and when they used to
ring the bells backward for alarm.”
“How?” said Annie.
“A bell sounds the same whether it’s rung
backwards or forwards.”
“But,” he said, “if
you start with the deep bell and ring up to the high
one—der—der—der—der—der—der—der—der!”
He ran up the scale. Everybody
thought it clever. He thought so too. Then,
waiting a minute, he continued the poem.
“Hm!” said Mrs. Morel
curiously, when he finished. “But I wish
everything that’s written weren’t so sad.”
“I canna see what they want
drownin’ theirselves for,” said Morel.
There was a pause. Annie got up to clear the
table.
Miriam rose to help with the pots.
“Let me help to wash up,” she said.
“Certainly not,” cried Annie. “You
sit down again. There aren’t many.”
And Miriam, who could not be familiar
and insist, sat down again to look at the book with
Paul.
He was master of the party; his father
was no good. And great tortures he suffered lest
the tin box should be put out at Firsby instead of
at Mablethorpe. And he wasn’t equal to
getting a carriage. His bold little mother did
that.
“Here!” she cried to a man. “Here!”
Paul and Annie got behind the rest, convulsed with
shamed laughter.
“How much will it be to drive to Brook Cottage?”
said Mrs. Morel.
“Two shillings.”
“Why, how far is it?”
“A good way.”
“I don’t believe it,” she said.
But she scrambled in. There were
eight crowded in one old seaside carriage.
“You see,” said Mrs. Morel,
“it’s only threepence each, and if it were
a tramcar—”
They drove along. Each cottage they came to,
Mrs. Morel cried:
“Is it this? Now, this is it!”
Everybody sat breathless. They drove past.
There was a universal sigh.
“I’m thankful it wasn’t
that brute,” said Mrs. Morel. “I was
frightened.” They drove on and on.
At last they descended at a house
that stood alone over the dyke by the highroad.
There was wild excitement because they had to cross
a little bridge to get into the front garden.
But they loved the house that lay so solitary, with
a sea-meadow on one side, and immense expanse of land
patched in white barley, yellow oats, red wheat, and
green root-crops, flat and stretching level to the
sky.
Paul kept accounts. He and his
mother ran the show. The total expenses—lodging,
food, everything—was sixteen shillings a
week per person. He and Leonard went bathing
in the mornings. Morel was wandering abroad quite
early.
“You, Paul,” his mother
called from the bedroom, “eat a piece of bread-and-butter.”
“All right,” he answered.
And when he got back he saw his mother
presiding in state at the breakfast-table. The
woman of the house was young. Her husband was
blind, and she did laundry work. So Mrs. Morel
always washed the pots in the kitchen and made the
beds.
“But you said you’d have
a real holiday,” said Paul, “and now you
work.”
“Work!” she exclaimed. “What
are you talking about!”
He loved to go with her across the
fields to the village and the sea. She was afraid
of the plank bridge, and he abused her for being a
baby. On the whole he stuck to her as if he were
her man.
Miriam did not get much of him, except,
perhaps, when all the others went to the “Coons”.
Coons were insufferably stupid to Miriam, so he thought
they were to himself also, and he preached priggishly
to Annie about the fatuity of listening to them.
Yet he, too, knew all their songs, and sang them along
the roads roisterously. And if he found himself
listening, the stupidity pleased him very much.
Yet to Annie he said:
“Such rot! there isn’t
a grain of intelligence in it. Nobody with more
gumption than a grasshopper could go and sit and listen.”
And to Miriam he said, with much scorn of Annie and
the others: “I suppose they’re at
the ’Coons’.”
It was queer to see Miriam singing
coon songs. She had a straight chin that went
in a perpendicular line from the lower lip to the turn.
She always reminded Paul of some sad Botticelli angel
when she sang, even when it was:
“Come down lover’s
lane
For a walk with me,
talk with me.”
Only when he sketched, or at evening
when the others were at the “Coons”, she
had him to herself. He talked to her endlessly
about his love of horizontals: how they, the
great levels of sky and land in Lincolnshire, meant
to him the eternality of the will, just as the bowed
Norman arches of the church, repeating themselves,
meant the dogged leaping forward of the persistent
human soul, on and on, nobody knows where; in contradiction
to the perpendicular lines and to the Gothic arch,
which, he said, leapt up at heaven and touched the
ecstasy and lost itself in the divine. Himself,
he said, was Norman, Miriam was Gothic. She bowed
in consent even to that.
One evening he and she went up the
great sweeping shore of sand towards Theddlethorpe.
The long breakers plunged and ran in a hiss of foam
along the coast. It was a warm evening.
There was not a figure but themselves on the far reaches
of sand, no noise but the sound of the sea. Paul
loved to see it clanging at the land. He loved
to feel himself between the noise of it and the silence
of the sandy shore. Miriam was with him.
Everything grew very intense. It was quite dark
when they turned again. The way home was through
a gap in the sandhills, and then along a raised grass
road between two dykes. The country was black
and still. From behind the sandhills came the
whisper of the sea. Paul and Miriam walked in
silence. Suddenly he started. The whole of
his blood seemed to burst into flame, and he could
scarcely breathe. An enormous orange moon was
staring at them from the rim of the sandhills.
He stood still, looking at it.
“Ah!” cried Miriam, when she saw it.
He remained perfectly still, staring
at the immense and ruddy moon, the only thing in the
far-reaching darkness of the level. His heart
beat heavily, the muscles of his arms contracted.
“What is it?” murmured Miriam, waiting
for him.
He turned and looked at her.
She stood beside him, for ever in shadow. Her
face, covered with the darkness of her hat, was watching
him unseen. But she was brooding. She was
slightly afraid—deeply moved and religious.
That was her best state. He was impotent against
it. His blood was concentrated like a flame in
his chest. But he could not get across to her.
There were flashes in his blood. But somehow she
ignored them. She was expecting some religious
state in him. Still yearning, she was half aware
of his passion, and gazed at him, troubled.
“What is it?” she murmured again.
“It’s the moon,” he answered, frowning.
“Yes,” she assented.
“Isn’t it wonderful?” She was curious
about him. The crisis was past.
He did not know himself what was the
matter. He was naturally so young, and their
intimacy was so abstract, he did not know he wanted
to crush her on to his breast to ease the ache there.
He was afraid of her. The fact that he might
want her as a man wants a woman had in him been suppressed
into a shame. When she shrank in her convulsed,
coiled torture from the thought of such a thing, he
had winced to the depths of his soul. And now
this “purity” prevented even their first
love-kiss. It was as if she could scarcely stand
the shock of physical love, even a passionate kiss,
and then he was too shrinking and sensitive to give
it.
As they walked along the dark fen-meadow
he watched the moon and did not speak. She plodded
beside him. He hated her, for she seemed in some
way to make him despise himself. Looking ahead—he
saw the one light in the darkness, the window of their
lamp-lit cottage.
He loved to think of his mother, and
the other jolly people.
“Well, everybody else has been
in long ago!” said his mother as they entered.
“What does that matter!”
he cried irritably. “I can go a walk if
I like, can’t I?”
“And I should have thought you
could get in to supper with the rest,” said
Mrs. Morel.
“I shall please myself,”
he retorted. “It’s not late.
I shall do as I like.”
“Very well,” said his
mother cuttingly, “then do as you like.”
And she took no further notice of him that evening.
Which he pretended neither to notice nor to care about,
but sat reading. Miriam read also, obliterating
herself. Mrs. Morel hated her for making her son
like this. She watched Paul growing irritable,
priggish, and melancholic. For this she put the
blame on Miriam. Annie and all her friends joined
against the girl. Miriam had no friend of her
own, only Paul. But she did not suffer so much,
because she despised the triviality of these other
people.
And Paul hated her because, somehow,
she spoilt his ease and naturalness. And he writhed
himself with a feeling of humiliation.