STRIFE IN LOVE
Arthur finished his apprenticeship,
and got a job on the electrical plant at Minton Pit.
He earned very little, but had a good chance of getting
on. But he was wild and restless. He did
not drink nor gamble. Yet he somehow contrived
to get into endless scrapes, always through some hot-headed
thoughtlessness. Either he went rabbiting in the
woods, like a poacher, or he stayed in Nottingham
all night instead of coming home, or he miscalculated
his dive into the canal at Bestwood, and scored his
chest into one mass of wounds on the raw stones and
tins at the bottom.
He had not been at his work many months
when again he did not come home one night.
“Do you know where Arthur is?” asked Paul
at breakfast.
“I do not,” replied his mother.
“He is a fool,” said Paul.
“And if he did anything I shouldn’t
mind. But no, he simply can’t come away
from a game of whist, or else he must see a girl home
from the skating-rink—quite proprietously—and
so can’t get home. He’s a fool.”
“I don’t know that it
would make it any better if he did something to make
us all ashamed,” said Mrs. Morel.
“Well, I should respect him more,” said
Paul.
“I very much doubt it,” said his mother
coldly.
They went on with breakfast.
“Are you fearfully fond of him?” Paul
asked his mother.
“What do you ask that for?”
“Because they say a woman always like the youngest
best.”
“She may do—but I don’t.
No, he wearies me.”
“And you’d actually rather he was good?”
“I’d rather he showed some of a man’s
common sense.”
Paul was raw and irritable. He
also wearied his mother very often. She saw the
sunshine going out of him, and she resented it.
As they were finishing breakfast came
the postman with a letter from Derby. Mrs. Morel
screwed up her eyes to look at the address.
“Give it here, blind eye!”
exclaimed her son, snatching it away from her.
She started, and almost boxed his ears.
“It’s from your son, Arthur,” he
said.
“What now—!” cried Mrs. Morel.
“‘My dearest Mother,’”
Paul read, “’I don’t know what made
me such a fool. I want you to come and fetch
me back from here. I came with Jack Bredon yesterday,
instead of going to work, and enlisted. He said
he was sick of wearing the seat of a stool out, and,
like the idiot you know I am, I came away with him.
“’I have taken the King’s
shilling, but perhaps if you came for me they would
let me go back with you. I was a fool when I did
it. I don’t want to be in the army.
My dear mother, I am nothing but a trouble to you.
But if you get me out of this, I promise I will have
more sense and consideration. . . .’”
Mrs. Morel sat down in her rocking-chair.
“Well, now,” she cried, “let
him stop!”
“Yes,” said Paul, “let him stop.”
There was silence. The mother
sat with her hands folded in her apron, her face set,
thinking.
“If I’m not sick!” she cried
suddenly. “Sick!”
“Now,” said Paul, beginning
to frown, “you’re not going to worry your
soul out about this, do you hear.”
“I suppose I’m to take
it as a blessing,” she flashed, turning on her
son.
“You’re not going to mount
it up to a tragedy, so there,” he retorted.
“The fool!—the young fool!”
she cried.
“He’ll look well in uniform,” said
Paul irritatingly.
His mother turned on him like a fury.
“Oh, will he!” she cried. “Not
in my eyes!”
“He should get in a cavalry
regiment; he’ll have the time of his life, and
will look an awful swell.”
“Swell
—a
mighty swell idea indeed!—a common soldier!”
“Well,” said Paul, “what am I but
a common clerk?”
“A good deal, my boy!” cried his mother,
stung.
“What?”
“At any rate, a man, and not a thing in
a red coat.”
“I shouldn’t mind being
in a red coat—or dark blue, that would suit
me better—if they didn’t boss me
about too much.”
But his mother had ceased to listen.
“Just as he was getting on,
or might have been getting on, at his job—a
young nuisance—here he goes and ruins himself
for life. What good will he be, do you think,
after this?”
“It may lick him into shape beautifully,”
said Paul.
“Lick him into shape!—lick
what marrow there was out of his bones. A
soldier!—a common soldier!—nothing
but a body that makes movements when it hears a shout!
It’s a fine thing!”
“I can’t understand why it upsets you,”
said Paul.
“No, perhaps you can’t.
But I understand”; and she sat back in her chair,
her chin in one hand, holding her elbow with the other,
brimmed up with wrath and chagrin.
“And shall you go to Derby?” asked Paul.
“Yes.”
“It’s no good.”
“I’ll see for myself.”
“And why on earth don’t you let him stop.
It’s just what he wants.”
“Of course,” cried the mother, “You
know what he wants!”
She got ready and went by the first
train to Derby, where she saw her son and the sergeant.
It was, however, no good.
When Morel was having his dinner in the evening, she
said suddenly:
“I’ve had to go to Derby to-day.”
The miner turned up his eyes, showing the whites in
his black face.
“Has ter, lass. What took thee there?”
“That Arthur!”
“Oh—an’ what’s agate
now?”
“He’s only enlisted.”
Morel put down his knife and leaned back in his chair.
“Nay,” he said, “that he niver ’as!”
“And is going down to Aldershot tomorrow.”
“Well!” exclaimed the
miner. “That’s a winder.”
He considered it a moment, said “H’m!”
and proceeded with his dinner. Suddenly his face
contracted with wrath. “I hope he may never
set foot i’ my house again,” he said.
“The idea!” cried Mrs. Morel. “Saying
such a thing!”
“I do,” repeated Morel.
“A fool as runs away for a soldier, let ’im
look after ’issen; I s’ll do no more for
’im.”
“A fat sight you have done as it is,”
she said.
And Morel was almost ashamed to go to his public-house
that evening.
“Well, did you go?” said Paul to his mother
when he came home.
“I did.”
“And could you see him?”
“Yes.”
“And what did he say?”
“He blubbered when I came away.”
“H’m!”
“And so did I, so you needn’t ’h’m’!”
Mrs. Morel fretted after her son.
She knew he would not like the army. He did not.
The discipline was intolerable to him.
“But the doctor,” she
said with some pride to Paul, “said he was perfectly
proportioned—almost exactly; all his measurements
were correct. He is good-looking, you know.”
“He’s awfully nice-looking.
But he doesn’t fetch the girls like William,
does he?”
“No; it’s a different
character. He’s a good deal like his father,
irresponsible.”
To console his mother, Paul did not
go much to Willey Farm at this time. And in the
autumn exhibition of students’ work in the Castle
he had two studies, a landscape in water-colour and
a still life in oil, both of which had first-prize
awards. He was highly excited.
“What do you think I’ve
got for my pictures, mother?” he asked, coming
home one evening. She saw by his eyes he was glad.
Her face flushed.
“Now, how should I know, my boy!”
“A first prize for those glass jars—”
“H’m!”
“And a first prize for that sketch up at Willey
Farm.”
“Both first?”
“Yes.”
“H’m!”
There was a rosy, bright look about her, though she
said nothing.
“It’s nice,” he said, “isn’t
it?”
“It is.”
“Why don’t you praise me up to the skies?”
She laughed.
“I should have the trouble of dragging you down
again,” she said.
But she was full of joy, nevertheless.
William had brought her his sporting trophies.
She kept them still, and she did not forgive his death.
Arthur was handsome—at least, a good specimen—and
warm and generous, and probably would do well in the
end. But Paul was going to distinguish himself.
She had a great belief in him, the more because he
was unaware of his own powers. There was so much
to come out of him. Life for her was rich with
promise. She was to see herself fulfilled.
Not for nothing had been her struggle.
Several times during the exhibition
Mrs. Morel went to the Castle unknown to Paul.
She wandered down the long room looking at the other
exhibits. Yes, they were good. But they had
not in them a certain something which she demanded
for her satisfaction. Some made her jealous,
they were so good. She looked at them a long time
trying to find fault with them. Then suddenly
she had a shock that made her heart beat. There
hung Paul’s picture! She knew it as if it
were printed on her heart.
“Name—Paul Morel—First
Prize.”
It looked so strange, there in public,
on the walls of the Castle gallery, where in her lifetime
she had seen so many pictures. And she glanced
round to see if anyone had noticed her again in front
of the same sketch.
But she felt a proud woman. When
she met well-dressed ladies going home to the Park,
she thought to herself:
“Yes, you look very well—but
I wonder if your son has two first prizes in
the Castle.”
And she walked on, as proud a little
woman as any in Nottingham. And Paul felt he
had done something for her, if only a trifle.
All his work was hers.
One day, as he was going up Castle
Gate, he met Miriam. He had seen her on the Sunday,
and had not expected to meet her in town. She
was walking with a rather striking woman, blonde,
with a sullen expression, and a defiant carriage.
It was strange how Miriam, in her bowed, meditative
bearing, looked dwarfed beside this woman with the
handsome shoulders. Miriam watched Paul searchingly.
His gaze was on the stranger, who ignored him.
The girl saw his masculine spirit rear its head.
“Hello!” he said, “you
didn’t tell me you were coming to town.”
“No,” replied Miriam,
half apologetically. “I drove in to Cattle
Market with father.”
He looked at her companion.
“I’ve told you about Mrs.
Dawes,” said Miriam huskily; she was nervous.
“Clara, do you know Paul?”
“I think I’ve seen him
before,” replied Mrs. Dawes indifferently, as
she shook hands with him. She had scornful grey
eyes, a skin like white honey, and a full mouth, with
a slightly lifted upper lip that did not know whether
it was raised in scorn of all men or out of eagerness
to be kissed, but which believed the former.
She carried her head back, as if she had drawn away
in contempt, perhaps from men also. She wore a
large, dowdy hat of black beaver, and a sort of slightly
affected simple dress that made her look rather sack-like.
She was evidently poor, and had not much taste.
Miriam usually looked nice.
“Where have you seen me?” Paul asked of
the woman.
She looked at him as if she would not trouble to answer.
Then:
“Walking with Louie Travers,” she said.
Louie was one of the “Spiral” girls.
“Why, do you know her?” he asked.
She did not answer. He turned to Miriam.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
“To the Castle.”
“What train are you going home by?”
“I am driving with father.
I wish you could come too. What time are you
free?”
“You know not till eight to-night, damn it!”
And directly the two women moved on.
Paul remembered that Clara Dawes was
the daughter of an old friend of Mrs. Leivers.
Miriam had sought her out because she had once been
Spiral overseer at Jordan’s, and because her
husband, Baxter Dawes, was smith for the factory,
making the irons for cripple instruments, and so on.
Through her Miriam felt she got into direct contact
with Jordan’s, and could estimate better Paul’s
position. But Mrs. Dawes was separated from her
husband, and had taken up Women’s Rights.
She was supposed to be clever. It interested
Paul.
Baxter Dawes he knew and disliked.
The smith was a man of thirty-one or thirty-two.
He came occasionally through Paul’s corner—a
big, well-set man, also striking to look at, and handsome.
There was a peculiar similarity between himself and
his wife. He had the same white skin, with a
clear, golden tinge. His hair was of soft brown,
his moustache was golden. And he had a similar
defiance in his bearing and manner. But then
came the difference. His eyes, dark brown and
quick-shifting, were dissolute. They protruded
very slightly, and his eyelids hung over them in a
way that was half hate. His mouth, too, was sensual.
His whole manner was of cowed defiance, as if he were
ready to knock anybody down who disapproved of him—perhaps
because he really disapproved of himself.
From the first day he had hated Paul.
Finding the lad’s impersonal, deliberate gaze
of an artist on his face, he got into a fury.
“What are yer lookin’ at?” he sneered,
bullying.
The boy glanced away. But the
smith used to stand behind the counter and talk to
Mr. Pappleworth. His speech was dirty, with a
kind of rottenness. Again he found the youth
with his cool, critical gaze fixed on his face.
The smith started round as if he had been stung.
“What’r yer lookin’
at, three hap’orth o’ pap?” he snarled.
The boy shrugged his shoulders slightly.
“Why yer—!” shouted Dawes.
“Leave him alone,” said
Mr. Pappleworth, in that insinuating voice which means,
“He’s only one of your good little sops
who can’t help it.”
Since that time the boy used to look
at the man every time he came through with the same
curious criticism, glancing away before he met the
smith’s eye. It made Dawes furious.
They hated each other in silence.
Clara Dawes had no children.
When she had left her husband the home had been broken
up, and she had gone to live with her mother.
Dawes lodged with his sister. In the same house
was a sister-in-law, and somehow Paul knew that this
girl, Louie Travers, was now Dawes’s woman.
She was a handsome, insolent hussy, who mocked at
the youth, and yet flushed if he walked along to the
station with her as she went home.
The next time he went to see Miriam
it was Saturday evening. She had a fire in the
parlour, and was waiting for him. The others,
except her father and mother and the young children,
had gone out, so the two had the parlour together.
It was a long, low, warm room. There were three
of Paul’s small sketches on the wall, and his
photo was on the mantelpiece. On the table and
on the high old rosewood piano were bowls of coloured
leaves. He sat in the armchair, she crouched on
the hearthrug near his feet. The glow was warm
on her handsome, pensive face as she kneeled there
like a devotee.
“What did you think of Mrs. Dawes?” she
asked quietly.
“She doesn’t look very amiable,”
he replied.
“No, but don’t you think she’s a
fine woman?” she said, in a deep tone,
“Yes—in stature.
But without a grain of taste. I like her for some
things. Is she disagreeable?”
“I don’t think so. I think she’s
dissatisfied.”
“What with?”
“Well—how would you like to be tied
for life to a man like that?”
“Why did she marry him, then, if she was to
have revulsions so soon?”
“Ay, why did she!” repeated Miriam bitterly.
“And I should have thought she
had enough fight in her to match him,” he said.
Miriam bowed her head.
“Ay?” she queried satirically. “What
makes you think so?”
“Look at her mouth—made
for passion—and the very setback of her
throat—” He threw his head back in
Clara’s defiant manner.
Miriam bowed a little lower.
“Yes,” she said.
There was a silence for some moments, while he thought
of Clara.
“And what were the things you liked about her?”
she asked.
“I don’t know—her
skin and the texture of her—and her—I
don’t know—there’s a sort of
fierceness somewhere in her. I appreciate her
as an artist, that’s all.”
“Yes.”
He wondered why Miriam crouched there
brooding in that strange way. It irritated him.
“You don’t really like her, do you?”
he asked the girl.
She looked at him with her great, dazzled dark eyes.
“I do,” she said.
“You don’t—you can’t—not
really.”
“Then what?” she asked slowly.
“Eh, I don’t know—perhaps
you like her because she’s got a grudge against
men.”
That was more probably one of his
own reasons for liking Mrs. Dawes, but this did not
occur to him. They were silent. There had
come into his forehead a knitting of the brows which
was becoming habitual with him, particularly when
he was with Miriam. She longed to smooth it away,
and she was afraid of it. It seemed the stamp
of a man who was not her man in Paul Morel.
There were some crimson berries among
the leaves in the bowl. He reached over and pulled
out a bunch.
“If you put red berries in your
hair,” he said, “why would you look like
some witch or priestess, and never like a reveller?”
She laughed with a naked, painful sound.
“I don’t know,” she said.
His vigorous warm hands were playing excitedly with
the berries.
“Why can’t you laugh?”
he said. “You never laugh laughter.
You only laugh when something is odd or incongruous,
and then it almost seems to hurt you.”
She bowed her head as if he were scolding her.
“I wish you could laugh at me
just for one minute—just for one minute.
I feel as if it would set something free.”
“But”—and she
looked up at him with eyes frightened and struggling—“I
do laugh at you—I do.”
“Never! There’s always
a kind of intensity. When you laugh I could always
cry; it seems as if it shows up your suffering.
Oh, you make me knit the brows of my very soul and
cogitate.”
Slowly she shook her head despairingly.
“I’m sure I don’t want to,”
she said.
“I’m so damned spiritual with you
always!” he cried.
She remained silent, thinking, “Then
why don’t you be otherwise.” But he
saw her crouching, brooding figure, and it seemed to
tear him in two.
“But, there, it’s autumn,”
he said, “and everybody feels like a disembodied
spirit then.”
There was still another silence.
This peculiar sadness between them thrilled her soul.
He seemed so beautiful with his eyes gone dark, and
looking as if they were deep as the deepest well.
“You make me so spiritual!”
he lamented. “And I don’t want to
be spiritual.”
She took her finger from her mouth
with a little pop, and looked up at him almost challenging.
But still her soul was naked in her great dark eyes,
and there was the same yearning appeal upon her.
If he could have kissed her in abstract purity he
would have done so. But he could not kiss her
thus—and she seemed to leave no other way.
And she yearned to him.
He gave a brief laugh.
“Well,” he said, “get that French
and we’ll do some—some Verlaine.”
“Yes,” she said in a deep
tone, almost of resignation. And she rose and
got the books. And her rather red, nervous hands
looked so pitiful, he was mad to comfort her and kiss
her. But then be dared not—or could
not. There was something prevented him. His
kisses were wrong for her. They continued the
reading till ten o’clock, when they went into
the kitchen, and Paul was natural and jolly again
with the father and mother. His eyes were dark
and shining; there was a kind of fascination about
him.
When he went into the barn for his
bicycle he found the front wheel punctured.
“Fetch me a drop of water in
a bowl,” he said to her. “I shall
be late, and then I s’ll catch it.”
He lighted the hurricane lamp, took
off his coat, turned up the bicycle, and set speedily
to work. Miriam came with the bowl of water and
stood close to him, watching. She loved to see
his hands doing things. He was slim and vigorous,
with a kind of easiness even in his most hasty movements.
And busy at his work he seemed to forget her.
She loved him absorbedly. She wanted to run her
hands down his sides. She always wanted to embrace
him, so long as he did not want her.
“There!” he said, rising
suddenly. “Now, could you have done it
quicker?”
“No!” she laughed.
He straightened himself. His
back was towards her. She put her two hands on
his sides, and ran them quickly down.
“You are so fine!” she said.
He laughed, hating her voice, but
his blood roused to a wave of flame by her hands.
She did not seem to realise him in all this.
He might have been an object. She never realised
the male he was.
He lighted his bicycle-lamp, bounced
the machine on the barn floor to see that the tyres
were sound, and buttoned his coat.
“That’s all right!” he said.
She was trying the brakes, that she knew were broken.
“Did you have them mended?” she asked.
“No!”
“But why didn’t you?”
“The back one goes on a bit.”
“But it’s not safe.”
“I can use my toe.”
“I wish you’d had them mended,”
she murmured.
“Don’t worry—come to tea tomorrow,
with Edgar.”
“Shall we?”
“Do—about four. I’ll come
to meet you.”
“Very well.”
She was pleased. They went across
the dark yard to the gate. Looking across, he
saw through the uncurtained window of the kitchen the
heads of Mr. and Mrs. Leivers in the warm glow.
It looked very cosy. The road, with pine trees,
was quite black in front.
“Till tomorrow,” he said, jumping on his
bicycle.
“You’ll take care, won’t you?”
she pleaded.
“Yes.”
His voice already came out of the
darkness. She stood a moment watching the light
from his lamp race into obscurity along the ground.
She turned very slowly indoors. Orion was wheeling
up over the wood, his dog twinkling after him, half
smothered. For the rest the world was full of
darkness, and silent, save for the breathing of cattle
in their stalls. She prayed earnestly for his
safety that night. When he left her, she often
lay in anxiety, wondering if he had got home safely.
He dropped down the hills on his bicycle.
The roads were greasy, so he had to let it go.
He felt a pleasure as the machine plunged over the
second, steeper drop in the hill. “Here
goes!” he said. It was risky, because of
the curve in the darkness at the bottom, and because
of the brewers’ waggons with drunken waggoners
asleep. His bicycle seemed to fall beneath him,
and he loved it. Recklessness is almost a man’s
revenge on his woman. He feels he is not valued,
so he will risk destroying himself to deprive her
altogether.
The stars on the lake seemed to leap
like grasshoppers, silver upon the blackness, as he
spun past. Then there was the long climb home.
“See, mother!” he said,
as he threw her the berries and leaves on to the table.
“H’m!” she said,
glancing at them, then away again. She sat reading,
alone, as she always did.
“Aren’t they pretty?”
“Yes.”
He knew she was cross with him. After a few minutes
he said:
“Edgar and Miriam are coming to tea tomorrow.”
She did not answer.
“You don’t mind?”
Still she did not answer.
“Do you?” he asked.
“You know whether I mind or not.”
“I don’t see why you should. I have
plenty of meals there.”
“You do.”
“Then why do you begrudge them tea?”
“I begrudge whom tea?”
“What are you so horrid for?”
“Oh, say no more! You’ve
asked her to tea, it’s quite sufficient.
She’ll come.”
He was very angry with his mother.
He knew it was merely Miriam she objected to.
He flung off his boots and went to bed.
Paul went to meet his friends the
next afternoon. He was glad to see them coming.
They arrived home at about four o’clock.
Everywhere was clean and still for Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Morel sat in her black dress and black apron.
She rose to meet the visitors. With Edgar she
was cordial, but with Miriam cold and rather grudging.
Yet Paul thought the girl looked so nice in her brown
cashmere frock.
He helped his mother to get the tea
ready. Miriam would have gladly proffered, but
was afraid. He was rather proud of his home.
There was about it now, he thought, a certain distinction.
The chairs were only wooden, and the sofa was old.
But the hearthrug and cushions were cosy; the pictures
were prints in good taste; there was a simplicity in
everything, and plenty of books. He was never
ashamed in the least of his home, nor was Miriam of
hers, because both were what they should be, and warm.
And then he was proud of the table; the china was pretty,
the cloth was fine. It did not matter that the
spoons were not silver nor the knives ivory-handled;
everything looked nice. Mrs. Morel had managed
wonderfully while her children were growing up, so
that nothing was out of place.
Miriam talked books a little.
That was her unfailing topic. But Mrs. Morel
was not cordial, and turned soon to Edgar.
At first Edgar and Miriam used to
go into Mrs. Morel’s pew. Morel never went
to chapel, preferring the public-house. Mrs. Morel,
like a little champion, sat at the head of her pew,
Paul at the other end; and at first Miriam sat next
to him. Then the chapel was like home. It
was a pretty place, with dark pews and slim, elegant
pillars, and flowers. And the same people had
sat in the same places ever since he was a boy.
It was wonderfully sweet and soothing to sit there
for an hour and a half, next to Miriam, and near to
his mother, uniting his two loves under the spell
of the place of worship. Then he felt warm and
happy and religious at once. And after chapel
he walked home with Miriam, whilst Mrs. Morel spent
the rest of the evening with her old friend, Mrs. Burns.
He was keenly alive on his walks on Sunday nights
with Edgar and Miriam. He never went past the
pits at night, by the lighted lamp-house, the tall
black headstocks and lines of trucks, past the fans
spinning slowly like shadows, without the feeling
of Miriam returning to him, keen and almost unbearable.
She did not very long occupy the Morels’
pew. Her father took one for themselves once
more. It was under the little gallery, opposite
the Morels’. When Paul and his mother came
in the chapel the Leivers’s pew was always empty.
He was anxious for fear she would not come: it
was so far, and there were so many rainy Sundays.
Then, often very late indeed, she came in, with her
long stride, her head bowed, her face hidden under
her bat of dark green velvet. Her face, as she
sat opposite, was always in shadow. But it gave
him a very keen feeling, as if all his soul stirred
within him, to see her there. It was not the same
glow, happiness, and pride, that he felt in having
his mother in charge: something more wonderful,
less human, and tinged to intensity by a pain, as
if there were something he could not get to.
At this time he was beginning to question
the orthodox creed. He was twenty-one, and she
was twenty. She was beginning to dread the spring:
he became so wild, and hurt her so much. All the
way he went cruelly smashing her beliefs. Edgar
enjoyed it. He was by nature critical and rather
dispassionate. But Miriam suffered exquisite pain,
as, with an intellect like a knife, the man she loved
examined her religion in which she lived and moved
and had her being. But he did not spare her.
He was cruel. And when they went alone he was
even more fierce, as if he would kill her soul.
He bled her beliefs till she almost lost consciousness.
“She exults—she exults
as she carries him off from me,” Mrs. Morel
cried in her heart when Paul had gone. “She’s
not like an ordinary woman, who can leave me my share
in him. She wants to absorb him. She wants
to draw him out and absorb him till there is nothing
left of him, even for himself. He will never
be a man on his own feet—she will suck
him up.” So the mother sat, and battled
and brooded bitterly.
And he, coming home from his walks
with Miriam, was wild with torture. He walked
biting his lips and with clenched fists, going at a
great rate. Then, brought up against a stile,
he stood for some minutes, and did not move.
There was a great hollow of darkness fronting him,
and on the black upslopes patches of tiny lights,
and in the lowest trough of the night, a flare of
the pit. It was all weird and dreadful. Why
was he torn so, almost bewildered, and unable to move?
Why did his mother sit at home and suffer? He
knew she suffered badly. But why should she?
And why did he hate Miriam, and feel so cruel towards
her, at the thought of his mother. If Miriam
caused his mother suffering, then he hated her—and
he easily hated her. Why did she make him feel
as if he were uncertain of himself, insecure, an indefinite
thing, as if he had not sufficient sheathing to prevent
the night and the space breaking into him? How
he hated her! And then, what a rush of tenderness
and humility!
Suddenly he plunged on again, running
home. His mother saw on him the marks of some
agony, and she said nothing. But he had to make
her talk to him. Then she was angry with him
for going so far with Miriam.
“Why don’t you like her, mother?”
he cried in despair.
“I don’t know, my boy,”
she replied piteously. “I’m sure I’ve
tried to like her. I’ve tried and tried,
but I can’t—I can’t!”
And he felt dreary and hopeless between the two.
Spring was the worst time. He
was changeable, and intense and cruel. So he
decided to stay away from her. Then came the hours
when he knew Miriam was expecting him. His mother
watched him growing restless. He could not go
on with his work. He could do nothing. It
was as if something were drawing his soul out towards
Willey Farm. Then he put on his hat and went,
saying nothing. And his mother knew he was gone.
And as soon as he was on the way he sighed with relief.
And when he was with her he was cruel again.
One day in March he lay on the bank
of Nethermere, with Miriam sitting beside him.
It was a glistening, white-and-blue day. Big clouds,
so brilliant, went by overhead, while shadows stole
along on the water. The clear spaces in the sky
were of clean, cold blue. Paul lay on his back
in the old grass, looking up. He could not bear
to look at Miriam. She seemed to want him, and
he resisted. He resisted all the time. He
wanted now to give her passion and tenderness, and
he could not. He felt that she wanted the soul
out of his body, and not him. All his strength
and energy she drew into herself through some channel
which united them. She did not want to meet him,
so that there were two of them, man and woman together.
She wanted to draw all of him into her. It urged
him to an intensity like madness, which fascinated
him, as drug-taking might.
He was discussing Michael Angelo.
It felt to her as if she were fingering the very quivering
tissue, the very protoplasm of life, as she heard
him. It gave her deepest satisfaction. And
in the end it frightened her. There he lay in
the white intensity of his search, and his voice gradually
filled her with fear, so level it was, almost inhuman,
as if in a trance.
“Don’t talk any more,”
she pleaded softly, laying her hand on his forehead.
He lay quite still, almost unable
to move. His body was somewhere discarded.
“Why not? Are you tired?”
“Yes, and it wears you out.”
He laughed shortly, realising.
“Yet you always make me like it,” he said.
“I don’t wish to,” she said, very
low.
“Not when you’ve gone
too far, and you feel you can’t bear it.
But your unconscious self always asks it of me.
And I suppose I want it.”
He went on, in his dead fashion:
“If only you could want me, and not want
what I can reel off for you!”
“I!” she cried bitterly—“I!
Why, when would you let me take you?”
“Then it’s my fault,”
he said, and, gathering himself together, he got up
and began to talk trivialities. He felt insubstantial.
In a vague way he hated her for it. And he knew
he was as much to blame himself. This, however,
did not prevent his hating her.
One evening about this time he had
walked along the home road with her. They stood
by the pasture leading down to the wood, unable to
part. As the stars came out the clouds closed.
They had glimpses of their own constellation, Orion,
towards the west. His jewels glimmered for a
moment, his dog ran low, struggling with difficulty
through the spume of cloud.
Orion was for them chief in significance
among the constellations. They had gazed at him
in their strange, surcharged hours of feeling, until
they seemed themselves to live in every one of his
stars. This evening Paul had been moody and perverse.
Orion had seemed just an ordinary constellation to
him. He had fought against his glamour and fascination.
Miriam was watching her lover’s mood carefully.
But he said nothing that gave him away, till the moment
came to part, when he stood frowning gloomily at the
gathered clouds, behind which the great constellation
must be striding still.
There was to be a little party at
his house the next day, at which she was to attend.
“I shan’t come and meet you,” he
said.
“Oh, very well; it’s not very nice out,”
she replied slowly.
“It’s not that—only
they don’t like me to. They say I care more
for you than for them. And you understand, don’t
you? You know it’s only friendship.”
Miriam was astonished and hurt for
him. It had cost him an effort. She left
him, wanting to spare him any further humiliation.
A fine rain blew in her face as she walked along the
road. She was hurt deep down; and she despised
him for being blown about by any wind of authority.
And in her heart of hearts, unconsciously, she felt
that he was trying to get away from her. This
she would never have acknowledged. She pitied
him.
At this time Paul became an important
factor in Jordan’s warehouse. Mr. Pappleworth
left to set up a business of his own, and Paul remained
with Mr. Jordan as Spiral overseer. His wages
were to be raised to thirty shillings at the year-end,
if things went well.
Still on Friday night Miriam often
came down for her French lesson. Paul did not
go so frequently to Willey Farm, and she grieved at
the thought of her education’s coming to end;
moreover, they both loved to be together, in spite
of discords. So they read Balzac, and did compositions,
and felt highly cultured.
Friday night was reckoning night for
the miners. Morel “reckoned”—shared
up the money of the stall—either in the
New Inn at Bretty or in his own house, according as
his fellow-butties wished. Barker had turned
a non-drinker, so now the men reckoned at Morel’s
house.
Annie, who had been teaching away,
was at home again. She was still a tomboy; and
she was engaged to be married. Paul was studying
design.
Morel was always in good spirits on
Friday evening, unless the week’s earnings were
small. He bustled immediately after his dinner,
prepared to get washed. It was decorum for the
women to absent themselves while the men reckoned.
Women were not supposed to spy into such a masculine
privacy as the butties’ reckoning, nor were they
to know the exact amount of the week’s earnings.
So, whilst her father was spluttering in the scullery,
Annie went out to spend an hour with a neighbour.
Mrs. Morel attended to her baking.
“Shut that doo-er!” bawled Morel furiously.
Annie banged it behind her, and was gone.
“If tha oppens it again while
I’m weshin’ me, I’ll ma’e thy
jaw rattle,” he threatened from the midst of
his soap-suds. Paul and the mother frowned to
hear him.
Presently he came running out of the
scullery, with the soapy water dripping from him,
dithering with cold.
“Oh, my sirs!” he said. “Wheer’s
my towel?”
It was hung on a chair to warm before
the fire, otherwise he would have bullied and blustered.
He squatted on his heels before the hot baking-fire
to dry himself.
“F-ff-f!” he went, pretending to shudder
with cold.
“Goodness, man, don’t be such a kid!”
said Mrs. Morel. “It’s not cold.”
“Thee strip thysen stark nak’d
to wesh thy flesh i’ that scullery,” said
the miner, as he rubbed his hair; “nowt b’r
a ice-’ouse!”
“And I shouldn’t make that fuss,”
replied his wife.
“No, tha’d drop down stiff, as dead as
a door-knob, wi’ thy nesh sides.”
“Why is a door-knob deader than anything else?”
asked Paul, curious.
“Eh, I dunno; that’s what
they say,” replied his father. “But
there’s that much draught i’ yon scullery,
as it blows through your ribs like through a five-barred
gate.”
“It would have some difficulty
in blowing through yours,” said Mrs. Morel.
Morel looked down ruefully at his sides.
“Me!” he exclaimed.
“I’m nowt b’r a skinned rabbit.
My bones fair juts out on me.”
“I should like to know where,” retorted
his wife.
“Iv’ry-wheer! I’m nobbut a
sack o’ faggots.”
Mrs. Morel laughed. He had still
a wonderfully young body, muscular, without any fat.
His skin was smooth and clear. It might have been
the body of a man of twenty-eight, except that there
were, perhaps, too many blue scars, like tattoo-marks,
where the coal-dust remained under the skin, and that
his chest was too hairy. But he put his hand on
his side ruefully. It was his fixed belief that,
because he did not get fat, he was as thin as a starved
rat. Paul looked at his father’s thick,
brownish hands all scarred, with broken nails, rubbing
the fine smoothness of his sides, and the incongruity
struck him. It seemed strange they were the same
flesh.
“I suppose,” he said to his father, “you
had a good figure once.”
“Eh!” exclaimed the miner,
glancing round, startled and timid, like a child.
“He had,” exclaimed Mrs.
Morel, “if he didn’t hurtle himself up
as if he was trying to get in the smallest space he
could.”
“Me!” exclaimed Morel—“me
a good figure! I wor niver much more n’r
a skeleton.”
“Man!” cried his wife, “don’t
be such a pulamiter!”
“’Strewth!” he said.
“Tha’s niver knowed me but what I looked
as if I wor goin’ off in a rapid decline.”
She sat and laughed.
“You’ve had a constitution
like iron,” she said; “and never a man
had a better start, if it was body that counted.
You should have seen him as a young man,” she
cried suddenly to Paul, drawing herself up to imitate
her husband’s once handsome bearing.
Morel watched her shyly. He saw
again the passion she had had for him. It blazed
upon her for a moment. He was shy, rather scared,
and humble. Yet again he felt his old glow.
And then immediately he felt the ruin he had made
during these years. He wanted to bustle about,
to run away from it.
“Gi’e my back a bit of a wesh,”
he asked her.
His wife brought a well-soaped flannel
and clapped it on his shoulders. He gave a jump.
“Eh, tha mucky little ’ussy!” he
cried. “Cowd as death!”
“You ought to have been a salamander,”
she laughed, washing his back. It was very rarely
she would do anything so personal for him. The
children did those things.
“The next world won’t
be half hot enough for you,” she added.
“No,” he said; “tha’lt see
as it’s draughty for me.”
But she had finished. She wiped
him in a desultory fashion, and went upstairs, returning
immediately with his shifting-trousers. When he
was dried he struggled into his shirt. Then,
ruddy and shiny, with hair on end, and his flannelette
shirt hanging over his pit-trousers, he stood warming
the garments he was going to put on. He turned
them, he pulled them inside out, he scorched them.
“Goodness, man!” cried Mrs. Morel, “get
dressed!”
“Should thee like to clap thysen
into britches as cowd as a tub o’ water?”
he said.
At last he took off his pit-trousers
and donned decent black. He did all this on the
hearthrug, as he would have done if Annie and her familiar
friends had been present.
Mrs. Morel turned the bread in the
oven. Then from the red earthenware panchion
of dough that stood in a corner she took another handful
of paste, worked it to the proper shape, and dropped
it into a tin. As she was doing so Barker knocked
and entered. He was a quiet, compact little man,
who looked as if he would go through a stone wall.
His black hair was cropped short, his head was bony.
Like most miners, he was pale, but healthy and taut.
“Evenin’, missis,”
he nodded to Mrs. Morel, and he seated himself with
a sigh.
“Good-evening,” she replied cordially.
“Tha’s made thy heels crack,” said
Morel.
“I dunno as I have,” said Barker.
He sat, as the men always did in Morel’s
kitchen, effacing himself rather.
“How’s missis?” she asked of him.
He had told her some time back:
“We’re expectin’ us third just now,
you see.”
“Well,” he answered, rubbing
his head, “she keeps pretty middlin’, I
think.”
“Let’s see—when?” asked
Mrs. Morel.
“Well, I shouldn’t be surprised any time
now.”
“Ah! And she’s kept fairly?”
“Yes, tidy.”
“That’s a blessing, for she’s none
too strong.”
“No. An’ I’ve done another
silly trick.”
“What’s that?”
Mrs. Morel knew Barker wouldn’t do anything
very silly.
“I’m come be-out th’ market-bag.”
“You can have mine.”
“Nay, you’ll be wantin’ that yourself.”
“I shan’t. I take a string bag always.”
She saw the determined little collier
buying in the week’s groceries and meat on the
Friday nights, and she admired him. “Barker’s
little, but he’s ten times the man you are,”
she said to her husband.
Just then Wesson entered. He
was thin, rather frail-looking, with a boyish ingenuousness
and a slightly foolish smile, despite his seven children.
But his wife was a passionate woman.
“I see you’ve kested me,” he said,
smiling rather vapidly.
“Yes,” replied Barker.
The newcomer took off his cap and
his big woollen muffler. His nose was pointed
and red.
“I’m afraid you’re cold, Mr. Wesson,”
said Mrs. Morel.
“It’s a bit nippy,” he replied.
“Then come to the fire.”
“Nay, I s’ll do where I am.”
Both colliers sat away back.
They could not be induced to come on to the hearth.
The hearth is sacred to the family.
“Go thy ways i’ th’ armchair,”
cried Morel cheerily.
“Nay, thank yer; I’m very nicely here.”
“Yes, come, of course,” insisted Mrs.
Morel.
He rose and went awkwardly. He
sat in Morel’s armchair awkwardly. It was
too great a familiarity. But the fire made him
blissfully happy.
“And how’s that chest of yours?”
demanded Mrs. Morel.
He smiled again, with his blue eyes rather sunny.
“Oh, it’s very middlin’,”
he said.
“Wi’ a rattle in it like a kettle-drum,”
said Barker shortly.
“T-t-t-t!” went Mrs. Morel
rapidly with her tongue. “Did you have that
flannel singlet made?”
“Not yet,” he smiled.
“Then, why didn’t you?” she cried.
“It’ll come,” he smiled.
“Ah, an’ Doomsday!” exclaimed Barker.
Barker and Morel were both impatient
of Wesson. But, then, they were both as hard
as nails, physically.
When Morel was nearly ready he pushed the bag of money
to Paul.
“Count it, boy,” he asked humbly.
Paul impatiently turned from his books
and pencil, tipped the bag upside down on the table.
There was a five-pound bag of silver, sovereigns and
loose money. He counted quickly, referred to the
checks—the written papers giving amount
of coal—put the money in order. Then
Barker glanced at the checks.
Mrs. Morel went upstairs, and the
three men came to table. Morel, as master of
the house, sat in his armchair, with his back to the
hot fire. The two butties had cooler seats.
None of them counted the money.
“What did we say Simpson’s
was?” asked Morel; and the butties cavilled
for a minute over the dayman’s earnings.
Then the amount was put aside.
“An’ Bill Naylor’s?”
This money also was taken from the pack.
Then, because Wesson lived in one
of the company’s houses, and his rent had been
deducted, Morel and Barker took four-and-six each.
And because Morel’s coals had come, and the
leading was stopped, Barker and Wesson took four shillings
each. Then it was plain sailing. Morel gave
each of them a sovereign till there were no more sovereigns;
each half a crown till there were no more half-crowns;
each a shilling till there were no more shillings.
If there was anything at the end that wouldn’t
split, Morel took it and stood drinks.
Then the three men rose and went.
Morel scuttled out of the house before his wife came
down. She heard the door close, and descended.
She looked hastily at the bread in the oven.
Then, glancing on the table, she saw her money lying.
Paul had been working all the time. But now he
felt his mother counting the week’s money, and
her wrath rising,
“T-t-t-t-t!” went her tongue.
He frowned. He could not work when she was cross.
She counted again.
“A measly twenty-five shillings!”
she exclaimed. “How much was the cheque?”
“Ten pounds eleven,” said Paul irritably.
He dreaded what was coming.
“And he gives me a scrattlin’
twenty-five, an’ his club this week! But
I know him. He thinks because you’re
earning he needn’t keep the house any longer.
No, all he has to do with his money is to guttle it.
But I’ll show him!”
“Oh, mother, don’t!” cried Paul.
“Don’t what, I should like to know?”
she exclaimed.
“Don’t carry on again. I can’t
work.”
She went very quiet.
“Yes, it’s all very well,”
she said; “but how do you think I’m going
to manage?”
“Well, it won’t make it any better to
whittle about it.”
“I should like to know what you’d do if
you had it to put up with.”
“It won’t be long. You can have my
money. Let him go to hell.”
He went back to his work, and she
tied her bonnet-strings grimly. When she was
fretted he could not bear it. But now he began
to insist on her recognizing him.
“The two loaves at the top,”
she said, “will be done in twenty minutes.
Don’t forget them.”
“All right,” he answered; and she went
to market.
He remained alone working. But
his usual intense concentration became unsettled.
He listened for the yard-gate. At a quarter-past
seven came a low knock, and Miriam entered.
“All alone?” she said.
“Yes.”
As if at home, she took off her tam-o’-shanter
and her long coat, hanging them up. It gave him
a thrill. This might be their own house, his
and hers. Then she came back and peered over his
work.
“What is it?” she asked.
“Still design, for decorating stuffs, and for
embroidery.”
She bent short-sightedly over the drawings.
It irritated him that she peered so
into everything that was his, searching him out.
He went into the parlour and returned with a bundle
of brownish linen. Carefully unfolding it, he
spread it on the floor. It proved to be a curtain
or portiere, beautifully stencilled with a design
on roses.
“Ah, how beautiful!” she cried.
The spread cloth, with its wonderful
reddish roses and dark green stems, all so simple,
and somehow so wicked-looking, lay at her feet.
She went on her knees before it, her dark curls dropping.
He saw her crouched voluptuously before his work,
and his heart beat quickly. Suddenly she looked
up at him.
“Why does it seem cruel?” she asked.
“What?”
“There seems a feeling of cruelty about it,”
she said.
“It’s jolly good, whether
or not,” he replied, folding up his work with
a lover’s hands.
She rose slowly, pondering.
“And what will you do with it?” she asked.
“Send it to Liberty’s.
I did it for my mother, but I think she’d rather
have the money.”
“Yes,” said Miriam.
He had spoken with a touch of bitterness, and Miriam
sympathised. Money would have been nothing to
her.
He took the cloth back into the parlour.
When he returned he threw to Miriam a smaller piece.
It was a cushion-cover with the same design.
“I did that for you,” he said.
She fingered the work with trembling
hands, and did not speak. He became embarrassed.
“By Jove, the bread!” he cried.
He took the top loaves out, tapped
them vigorously. They were done. He put
them on the hearth to cool. Then he went to the
scullery, wetted his hands, scooped the last white
dough out of the punchion, and dropped it in a baking-tin.
Miriam was still bent over her painted cloth.
He stood rubbing the bits of dough from his hands.
“You do like it?” he asked.
She looked up at him, with her dark
eyes one flame of love. He laughed uncomfortably.
Then he began to talk about the design. There
was for him the most intense pleasure in talking about
his work to Miriam. All his passion, all his
wild blood, went into this intercourse with her, when
he talked and conceived his work. She brought
forth to him his imaginations. She did not understand,
any more than a woman understands when she conceives
a child in her womb. But this was life for her
and for him.
While they were talking, a young woman
of about twenty-two, small and pale, hollow-eyed,
yet with a relentless look about her, entered the
room. She was a friend at the Morel’s.
“Take your things off,” said Paul.
“No, I’m not stopping.”
She sat down in the armchair opposite
Paul and Miriam, who were on the sofa. Miriam
moved a little farther from him. The room was
hot, with a scent of new bread. Brown, crisp
loaves stood on the hearth.
“I shouldn’t have expected
to see you here to-night, Miriam Leivers,” said
Beatrice wickedly.
“Why not?” murmured Miriam huskily.
“Why, let’s look at your shoes.”
Miriam remained uncomfortably still.
“If tha doesna tha durs’na,” laughed
Beatrice.
Miriam put her feet from under her
dress. Her boots had that queer, irresolute,
rather pathetic look about them, which showed how
self-conscious and self-mistrustful she was. And
they were covered with mud.
“Glory! You’re a
positive muck-heap,” exclaimed Beatrice.
“Who cleans your boots?”
“I clean them myself.”
“Then you wanted a job,”
said Beatrice. “It would ha’ taken
a lot of men to ha’ brought me down here to-night.
But love laughs at sludge, doesn’t it, ’Postle
my duck?”
“Inter alia,” he said.
“Oh, Lord! are you going to
spout foreign languages? What does it mean, Miriam?”
There was a fine sarcasm in the last
question, but Miriam did not see it.
“‘Among other things,’ I believe,”
she said humbly.
Beatrice put her tongue between her teeth and laughed
wickedly.
“‘Among other things,’
’Postle?” she repeated. “Do
you mean love laughs at mothers, and fathers, and
sisters, and brothers, and men friends, and lady friends,
and even at the b’loved himself?”
She affected a great innocence.
“In fact, it’s one big smile,” he
replied.
“Up its sleeve, ’Postle
Morel—you believe me,” she said; and
she went off into another burst of wicked, silent
laughter.
Miriam sat silent, withdrawn into
herself. Every one of Paul’s friends delighted
in taking sides against her, and he left her in the
lurch—seemed almost to have a sort of revenge
upon her then.
“Are you still at school?” asked Miriam
of Beatrice.
“Yes.”
“You’ve not had your notice, then?”
“I expect it at Easter.”
“Isn’t it an awful shame,
to turn you off merely because you didn’t pass
the exam?”
“I don’t know,” said Beatrice coldly.
“Agatha says you’re as
good as any teacher anywhere. It seems to me
ridiculous. I wonder why you didn’t pass.”
“Short of brains, eh, ’Postle?”
said Beatrice briefly.
“Only brains to bite with,” replied Paul,
laughing.
“Nuisance!” she cried;
and, springing from her seat, she rushed and boxed
his ears. She had beautiful small hands.
He held her wrists while she wrestled with him.
At last she broke free, and seized two handfuls of
his thick, dark brown hair, which she shook.
“Beat!” he said, as he
pulled his hair straight with his fingers. “I
hate you!”
She laughed with glee.
“Mind!” she said. “I want to
sit next to you.”
“I’d as lief be neighbours
with a vixen,” he said, nevertheless making
place for her between him and Miriam.
“Did it ruffle his pretty hair,
then!” she cried; and, with her hair-comb, she
combed him straight. “And his nice little
moustache!” she exclaimed. She tilted his
head back and combed his young moustache. “It’s
a wicked moustache, ’Postle,” she said.
“It’s a red for danger. Have you
got any of those cigarettes?”
He pulled his cigarette-case from
his pocket. Beatrice looked inside it.
“And fancy me having Connie’s
last cig.,” said Beatrice, putting the thing
between her teeth. He held a lit match to her,
and she puffed daintily.
“Thanks so much, darling,” she said mockingly.
It gave her a wicked delight.
“Don’t you think he does it nicely, Miriam?”
she asked.
“Oh, very!” said Miriam.
He took a cigarette for himself.
“Light, old boy?” said Beatrice, tilting
her cigarette at him.
He bent forward to her to light his
cigarette at hers. She was winking at him as
he did so. Miriam saw his eyes trembling with
mischief, and his full, almost sensual, mouth quivering.
He was not himself, and she could not bear it.
As he was now, she had no connection with him; she
might as well not have existed. She saw the cigarette
dancing on his full red lips. She hated his thick
hair for being tumbled loose on his forehead.
“Sweet boy!” said Beatrice,
tipping up his chin and giving him a little kiss on
the cheek.
“I s’ll kiss thee back, Beat,” he
said.
“Tha wunna!” she giggled,
jumping up and going away. “Isn’t
he shameless, Miriam?”
“Quite,” said Miriam. “By the
way, aren’t you forgetting the bread?”
“By Jove!” he cried, flinging open the
oven door.
Out puffed the bluish smoke and a smell of burned
bread.
“Oh, golly!” cried Beatrice,
coming to his side. He crouched before the oven,
she peered over his shoulder. “This is what
comes of the oblivion of love, my boy.”
Paul was ruefully removing the loaves.
One was burnt black on the hot side; another was hard
as a brick.
“Poor mater!” said Paul.
“You want to grate it,” said Beatrice.
“Fetch me the nutmeg-grater.”
She arranged the bread in the oven.
He brought the grater, and she grated the bread on
to a newspaper on the table. He set the doors
open to blow away the smell of burned bread.
Beatrice grated away, puffing her cigarette, knocking
the charcoal off the poor loaf.
“My word, Miriam! you’re in for it this
time,” said Beatrice.
“I!” exclaimed Miriam in amazement.
“You’d better be gone
when his mother comes in. I know why King Alfred
burned the cakes. Now I see it! ’Postle
would fix up a tale about his work making him forget,
if he thought it would wash. If that old woman
had come in a bit sooner, she’d have boxed the
brazen thing’s ears who made the oblivion, instead
of poor Alfred’s.”
She giggled as she scraped the loaf.
Even Miriam laughed in spite of herself. Paul
mended the fire ruefully.
The garden gate was heard to bang.
“Quick!” cried Beatrice,
giving Paul the scraped loaf. “Wrap it up
in a damp towel.”
Paul disappeared into the scullery.
Beatrice hastily blew her scrapings into the fire,
and sat down innocently. Annie came bursting in.
She was an abrupt, quite smart young woman. She
blinked in the strong light.
“Smell of burning!” she exclaimed.
“It’s the cigarettes,” replied Beatrice
demurely.
“Where’s Paul?”
Leonard had followed Annie. He
had a long comic face and blue eyes, very sad.
“I suppose he’s left you
to settle it between you,” he said. He nodded
sympathetically to Miriam, and became gently sarcastic
to Beatrice.
“No,” said Beatrice, “he’s
gone off with number nine.”
“I just met number five inquiring for him,”
said Leonard.
“Yes—we’re going to share him
up like Solomon’s baby,” said Beatrice.
Annie laughed.
“Oh, ay,” said Leonard. “And
which bit should you have?”
“I don’t know,” said Beatrice.
“I’ll let all the others pick first.”
“An’ you’d have
the leavings, like?” said Leonard, twisting up
a comic face.
Annie was looking in the oven. Miriam sat ignored.
Paul entered.
“This bread’s a fine sight, our Paul,”
said Annie.
“Then you should stop an’ look after it,”
said Paul.
“You mean you should do what you’re
reckoning to do,” replied Annie.
“He should, shouldn’t he!” cried
Beatrice.
“I s’d think he’d got plenty on
hand,” said Leonard.
“You had a nasty walk, didn’t you, Miriam?”
said Annie.
“Yes—but I’d been in all week—”
“And you wanted a bit of a change, like,”
insinuated Leonard kindly.
“Well, you can’t be stuck
in the house for ever,” Annie agreed. She
was quite amiable. Beatrice pulled on her coat,
and went out with Leonard and Annie. She would
meet her own boy.
“Don’t forget that bread,
our Paul,” cried Annie. “Good-night,
Miriam. I don’t think it will rain.”
When they had all gone, Paul fetched
the swathed loaf, unwrapped it, and surveyed it sadly.
“It’s a mess!” he said.
“But,” answered Miriam
impatiently, “what is it, after all—twopence,
ha’penny.”
“Yes, but—it’s
the mater’s precious baking, and she’ll
take it to heart. However, it’s no good
bothering.”
He took the loaf back into the scullery.
There was a little distance between him and Miriam.
He stood balanced opposite her for some moments considering,
thinking of his behaviour with Beatrice. He felt
guilty inside himself, and yet glad. For some
inscrutable reason it served Miriam right. He
was not going to repent. She wondered what he
was thinking of as he stood suspended. His thick
hair was tumbled over his forehead. Why might
she not push it back for him, and remove the marks
of Beatrice’s comb? Why might she not press
his body with her two hands. It looked so firm,
and every whit living. And he would let other
girls, why not her?
Suddenly he started into life.
It made her quiver almost with terror as he quickly
pushed the hair off his forehead and came towards her.
“Half-past eight!” he
said. “We’d better buck up. Where’s
your French?”
Miriam shyly and rather bitterly produced
her exercise-book. Every week she wrote for him
a sort of diary of her inner life, in her own French.
He had found this was the only way to get her to do
compositions. And her diary was mostly a love-letter.
He would read it now; she felt as if her soul’s
history were going to be desecrated by him in his present
mood. He sat beside her. She watched his
hand, firm and warm, rigorously scoring her work.
He was reading only the French, ignoring her soul that
was there. But gradually his hand forgot its work.
He read in silence, motionless. She quivered.
“‘Ce matin les oiseaux
m’ont eveille,’” he read. “’Il
faisait encore un crepuscule. Mais la petite
fenetre de ma chambre etait bleme, et puis, jaune,
et tous les oiseaux du bois eclaterent dans un chanson
vif et resonnant. Toute l’aube tressaillit.
J’avais reve de vous. Est-ce que vous voyez
aussi l’aube? Les oiseaux m’eveillent
presque tous les matins, et toujours il y a quelque
chose de terreur dans le cri des grives. Il est
si clair—’”
Miriam sat tremulous, half ashamed.
He remained quite still, trying to understand.
He only knew she loved him. He was afraid of her
love for him. It was too good for him, and he
was inadequate. His own love was at fault, not
hers. Ashamed, he corrected her work, humbly writing
above her words.
“Look,” he said quietly,
“the past participle conjugated with avoir
agrees with the direct object when it precedes.”
She bent forward, trying to see and
to understand. Her free, fine curls tickled his
face. He started as if they had been red hot,
shuddering. He saw her peering forward at the
page, her red lips parted piteously, the black hair
springing in fine strands across her tawny, ruddy cheek.
She was coloured like a pomegranate for richness.
His breath came short as he watched her. Suddenly
she looked up at him. Her dark eyes were naked
with their love, afraid, and yearning. His eyes,
too, were dark, and they hurt her. They seemed
to master her. She lost all her self-control,
was exposed in fear. And he knew, before he could
kiss her, he must drive something out of himself.
And a touch of hate for her crept back again into
his heart. He returned to her exercise.
Suddenly he flung down the pencil,
and was at the oven in a leap, turning the bread.
For Miriam he was too quick. She started violently,
and it hurt her with real pain. Even the way he
crouched before the oven hurt her. There seemed
to be something cruel in it, something cruel in the
swift way he pitched the bread out of the tins, caught
it up again. If only he had been gentle in his
movements she would have felt so rich and warm.
As it was, she was hurt.
He returned and finished the exercise.
“You’ve done well this week,” he
said.
She saw he was flattered by her diary. It did
not repay her entirely.
“You really do blossom out sometimes,”
he said. “You ought to write poetry.”
She lifted her head with joy, then she shook it mistrustfully.
“I don’t trust myself,” she said.
“You should try!”
Again she shook her head.
“Shall we read, or is it too late?” he
asked.
“It is late—but we can read just
a little,” she pleaded.
She was really getting now the food
for her life during the next week. He made her
copy Baudelaire’s “Le Balcon”.
Then he read it for her. His voice was soft and
caressing, but growing almost brutal. He had a
way of lifting his lips and showing his teeth, passionately
and bitterly, when he was much moved. This he
did now. It made Miriam feel as if he were trampling
on her. She dared not look at him, but sat with
her head bowed. She could not understand why
he got into such a tumult and fury. It made her
wretched. She did not like Baudelaire, on the
whole—nor Verlaine.
“Behold her singing
in the field
Yon solitary highland
lass.”
That nourished her heart. So did “Fair
Ines”. And—
“It was a beauteous
evening, calm and pure,
And breathing holy quiet
like a nun.”
These were like herself. And
there was he, saying in his throat bitterly:
“Tu te rappelleras la beaute des caresses.”
The poem was finished; he took the
bread out of the oven, arranging the burnt loaves
at the bottom of the panchion, the good ones at the
top. The desiccated loaf remained swathed up
in the scullery.
“Mater needn’t know till
morning,” he said. “It won’t
upset her so much then as at night.”
Miriam looked in the bookcase, saw
what postcards and letters he had received, saw what
books were there. She took one that had interested
him. Then he turned down the gas and they set
off. He did not trouble to lock the door.
He was not home again until a quarter
to eleven. His mother was seated in the rocking-chair.
Annie, with a rope of hair hanging down her back,
remained sitting on a low stool before the fire, her
elbows on her knees, gloomily. On the table stood
the offending loaf unswathed. Paul entered rather
breathless. No one spoke. His mother was
reading the little local newspaper. He took off
his coat, and went to sit down on the sofa. His
mother moved curtly aside to let him pass. No
one spoke. He was very uncomfortable. For
some minutes he sat pretending to read a piece of
paper he found on the table. Then—
“I forgot that bread, mother,” he said.
There was no answer from either woman.
“Well,” he said, “it’s only
twopence ha’penny. I can pay you for that.”
Being angry, he put three pennies
on the table and slid them towards his mother.
She turned away her head. Her mouth was shut tightly.
“Yes,” said Annie, “you don’t
know how badly my mother is!”
The girl sat staring glumly into the fire.
“Why is she badly?” asked Paul, in his
overbearing way.
“Well!” said Annie. “She could
scarcely get home.”
He looked closely at his mother. She looked ill.
“Why could you scarcely
get home?” he asked her, still sharply.
She would not answer.
“I found her as white as a sheet
sitting here,” said Annie, with a suggestion
of tears in her voice.
“Well, why?” insisted
Paul. His brows were knitting, his eyes dilating
passionately.
“It was enough to upset anybody,”
said Mrs. Morel, “hugging those parcels—meat,
and green-groceries, and a pair of curtains—”
“Well, why did you hug them; you needn’t
have done.”
“Then who would?”
“Let Annie fetch the meat.”
“Yes, and I would fetch
the meat, but how was I to know. You were off
with Miriam, instead of being in when my mother came.”
“And what was the matter with you?” asked
Paul of his mother.
“I suppose it’s my heart,”
she replied. Certainly she looked bluish round
the mouth.
“And have you felt it before?”
“Yes—often enough.”
“Then why haven’t you told me?—and
why haven’t you seen a doctor?”
Mrs. Morel shifted in her chair, angry with him for
his hectoring.
“You’d never notice anything,”
said Annie. “You’re too eager to be
off with Miriam.”
“Oh, am I—and any worse than you
with Leonard?”
“I was in at a quarter to ten.”
There was silence in the room for a time.
“I should have thought,”
said Mrs. Morel bitterly, “that she wouldn’t
have occupied you so entirely as to burn a whole ovenful
of bread.”
“Beatrice was here as well as she.”
“Very likely. But we know why the bread
is spoilt.”
“Why?” he flashed.
“Because you were engrossed with Miriam,”
replied Mrs. Morel hotly.
“Oh, very well—then it was not!”
he replied angrily.
He was distressed and wretched.
Seizing a paper, he began to read. Annie, her
blouse unfastened, her long ropes of hair twisted into
a plait, went up to bed, bidding him a very curt good-night.
Paul sat pretending to read.
He knew his mother wanted to upbraid him. He
also wanted to know what had made her ill, for he was
troubled. So, instead of running away to bed,
as he would have liked to do, he sat and waited.
There was a tense silence. The clock ticked loudly.
“You’d better go to bed
before your father comes in,” said the mother
harshly. “And if you’re going to have
anything to eat, you’d better get it.”
“I don’t want anything.”
It was his mother’s custom to
bring him some trifle for supper on Friday night,
the night of luxury for the colliers. He was too
angry to go and find it in the pantry this night.
This insulted her.
“If I wanted you to go
to Selby on Friday night, I can imagine the scene,”
said Mrs. Morel. “But you’re never
too tired to go if she will come for you.
Nay, you neither want to eat nor drink then.”
“I can’t let her go alone.”
“Can’t you? And why does she come?”
“Not because I ask her.”
“She doesn’t come without you want her—”
“Well, what if I do want her—”
he replied.
“Why, nothing, if it was sensible
or reasonable. But to go trapseing up there miles
and miles in the mud, coming home at midnight, and
got to go to Nottingham in the morning—”
“If I hadn’t, you’d be just the
same.”
“Yes, I should, because there’s
no sense in it. Is she so fascinating that you
must follow her all that way?” Mrs. Morel was
bitterly sarcastic. She sat still, with averted
face, stroking with a rhythmic, jerked movement, the
black sateen of her apron. It was a movement that
hurt Paul to see.
“I do like her,” he said, “but—”
“Like her!” said
Mrs. Morel, in the same biting tones. “It
seems to me you like nothing and nobody else.
There’s neither Annie, nor me, nor anyone now
for you.”
“What nonsense, mother—you
know I don’t love her—I—I
tell you I don’t love her—she
doesn’t even walk with my arm, because I don’t
want her to.”
“Then why do you fly to her so often?”
“I do like to talk to her—I
never said I didn’t. But I don’t
love her.”
“Is there nobody else to talk to?”
“Not about the things we talk
of. There’s a lot of things that you’re
not interested in, that—”
“What things?”
Mrs. Morel was so intense that Paul began to pant.
“Why—painting—and books.
You don’t care about Herbert Spencer.”
“No,” was the sad reply. “And
you won’t at my age.”
“Well, but I do now—and Miriam does—”
“And how do you know,”
Mrs. Morel flashed defiantly, “that I shouldn’t.
Do you ever try me!”
“But you don’t, mother,
you know you don’t care whether a picture’s
decorative or not; you don’t care what manner
it is in.”
“How do you know I don’t
care? Do you ever try me? Do you ever talk
to me about these things, to try?”
“But it’s not that that
matters to you, mother, you know t’s not.”
“What is it, then—what
is it, then, that matters to me?” she flashed.
He knitted his brows with pain.
“You’re old, mother, and we’re young.”
He only meant that the interests of
her age were not the interests of his. But
he realised the moment he had spoken that he had said
the wrong thing.
“Yes, I know it well—I
am old. And therefore I may stand aside; I have
nothing more to do with you. You only want me
to wait on you—the rest is for Miriam.”
He could not bear it. Instinctively
he realised that he was life to her. And, after
all, she was the chief thing to him, the only supreme
thing.
“You know it isn’t, mother, you know it
isn’t!”
She was moved to pity by his cry.
“It looks a great deal like
it,” she said, half putting aside her despair.
“No, mother—I really
don’t love her. I talk to her, but
I want to come home to you.”
He had taken off his collar and tie,
and rose, bare-throated, to go to bed. As he
stooped to kiss his mother, she threw her arms round
his neck, hid her face on his shoulder, and cried,
in a whimpering voice, so unlike her own that he writhed
in agony:
“I can’t bear it.
I could let another woman—but not her.
She’d leave me no room, not a bit of room—”
And immediately he hated Miriam bitterly.
“And I’ve never—you know, Paul—I’ve
never had a husband—not really—”
He stroked his mother’s hair, and his mouth
was on her throat.
“And she exults so in taking
you from me—she’s not like ordinary
girls.”
“Well, I don’t love her,
mother,” he murmured, bowing his head and hiding
his eyes on her shoulder in misery. His mother
kissed him a long, fervent kiss.
“My boy!” she said, in
a voice trembling with passionate love.
Without knowing, he gently stroked her face.
“There,” said his mother,
“now go to bed. You’ll be so tired
in the morning.” As she was speaking she
heard her husband coming. “There’s
your father—now go.” Suddenly
she looked at him almost as if in fear. “Perhaps
I’m selfish. If you want her, take her,
my boy.”
His mother looked so strange, Paul kissed her, trembling.
“Ha—mother!” he said softly.
Morel came in, walking unevenly.
His hat was over one corner of his eye. He balanced
in the doorway.
“At your mischief again?” he said venomously.
Mrs. Morel’s emotion turned
into sudden hate of the drunkard who had come in thus
upon her.
“At any rate, it is sober,” she said.
“H’m—h’m!
h’m—h’m!” he sneered.
He went into the passage, hung up his hat and coat.
Then they heard him go down three steps to the pantry.
He returned with a piece of pork-pie in his fist.
It was what Mrs. Morel had bought for her son.
“Nor was that bought for you.
If you can give me no more than twenty-five shillings,
I’m sure I’m not going to buy you pork-pie
to stuff, after you’ve swilled a bellyful of
beer.”
“Wha-at—wha-at!”
snarled Morel, toppling in his balance. “Wha-at—not
for me?” He looked at the piece of meat and crust,
and suddenly, in a vicious spurt of temper, flung
it into the fire.
Paul started to his feet.
“Waste your own stuff!” he cried.
“What—what!”
suddenly shouted Morel, jumping up and clenching his
fist. “I’ll show yer, yer young jockey!”
“All right!” said Paul
viciously, putting his head on one side. “Show
me!”
He would at that moment dearly have
loved to have a smack at something. Morel was
half crouching, fists up, ready to spring. The
young man stood, smiling with his lips.
“Ussha!” hissed the father,
swiping round with a great stroke just past his son’s
face. He dared not, even though so close, really
touch the young man, but swerved an inch away.
“Right!” said Paul, his
eyes upon the side of his father’s mouth, where
in another instant his fist would have hit. He
ached for that stroke. But he heard a faint moan
from behind. His mother was deadly pale and dark
at the mouth. Morel was dancing up to deliver
another blow.
“Father!” said Paul, so that the word
rang.
Morel started, and stood at attention.
“Mother!” moaned the boy. “Mother!”
She began to struggle with herself.
Her open eyes watched him, although she could not
move. Gradually she was coming to herself.
He laid her down on the sofa, and ran upstairs for
a little whisky, which at last she could sip.
The tears were hopping down his face. As he kneeled
in front of her he did not cry, but the tears ran
down his face quickly. Morel, on the opposite
side of the room, sat with his elbows on his knees
glaring across.
“What’s a-matter with ’er?”
he asked.
“Faint!” replied Paul.
“H’m!”
The elderly man began to unlace his
boots. He stumbled off to bed. His last
fight was fought in that home.
Paul kneeled there, stroking his mother’s hand.
“Don’t be poorly, mother—don’t
be poorly!” he said time after time.
“It’s nothing, my boy,” she murmured.
At last he rose, fetched in a large
piece of coal, and raked the fire. Then he cleared
the room, put everything straight, laid the things
for breakfast, and brought his mother’s candle.
“Can you go to bed, mother?”
“Yes, I’ll come.”
“Sleep with Annie, mother, not with him.”
“No. I’ll sleep in my own bed.”
“Don’t sleep with him, mother.”
“I’ll sleep in my own bed.”
She rose, and he turned out the gas,
then followed her closely upstairs, carrying her candle.
On the landing he kissed her close.
“Good-night, mother.”
“Good-night!” she said.
He pressed his face upon the pillow
in a fury of misery. And yet, somewhere in his
soul, he was at peace because he still loved his mother
best. It was the bitter peace of resignation.
The efforts of his father to conciliate
him next day were a great humiliation to him.
Everybody tried to forget the scene.