The Town Hall was crowded and exceedingly
hot. As Charity marched into it third in the
white muslin file headed by Orma Fry, she was conscious
mainly of the brilliant effect of the wreathed columns
framing the green-carpeted stage toward which she
was moving; and of the unfamiliar faces turning from
the front rows to watch the advance of the procession.
But it was all a bewildering blur
of eyes and colours till she found herself standing
at the back of the stage, her great bunch of asters
and goldenrod held well in front of her, and answering
the nervous glance of Lambert Sollas, the organist
from Mr. Miles’s church, who had come up from
Nettleton to play the harmonium and sat behind it,
his conductor’s eye running over the fluttered
girls.
A moment later Mr. Miles, pink and
twinkling, emerged from the background, as if buoyed
up on his broad white gown, and briskly dominated
the bowed heads in the front rows. He prayed energetically
and briefly and then retired, and a fierce nod from
Lambert Sollas warned the girls that they were to
follow at once with “Home, Sweet Home.”
It was a joy to Charity to sing: it seemed as
though, for the first time, her secret rapture might
burst from her and flash its defiance at the world.
All the glow in her blood, the breath of the summer
earth, the rustle of the forest, the fresh call of
birds at sunrise, and the brooding midday languors,
seemed to pass into her untrained voice, lifted and
led by the sustaining chorus.
And then suddenly the song was over,
and after an uncertain pause, during which Miss Hatchard’s
pearl-grey gloves started a furtive signalling down
the hall, Mr. Royall, emerging in turn, ascended the
steps of the stage and appeared behind the flower-wreathed
desk. He passed close to Charity, and she noticed
that his gravely set face wore the look of majesty
that used to awe and fascinate her childhood.
His frock-coat had been carefully brushed and ironed,
and the ends of his narrow black tie were so nearly
even that the tying must have cost him a protracted
struggle. His appearance struck her all the more
because it was the first time she had looked him full
in the face since the night at Nettleton, and nothing
in his grave and impressive demeanour revealed a trace
of the lamentable figure on the wharf.
He stood a moment behind the desk,
resting his finger-tips against it, and bending slightly
toward his audience; then he straightened himself
and began.
At first she paid no heed to what
he was saying: only fragments of sentences, sonorous
quotations, allusions to illustrious men, including
the obligatory tribute to Honorius Hatchard, drifted
past her inattentive ears. She was trying to
discover Harney among the notable people in the front
row; but he was nowhere near Miss Hatchard, who, crowned
by a pearl-grey hat that matched her gloves, sat just
below the desk, supported by Mrs. Miles and an important-looking
unknown lady. Charity was near one end of the
stage, and from where she sat the other end of the
first row of seats was cut off by the screen of foliage
masking the harmonium. The effort to see Harney
around the corner of the screen, or through its interstices,
made her unconscious of everything else; but the effort
was unsuccessful, and gradually she found her attention
arrested by her guardian’s discourse.
She had never heard him speak in public
before, but she was familiar with the rolling music
of his voice when he read aloud, or held forth to
the selectmen about the stove at Carrick Fry’s.
Today his inflections were richer and graver than
she had ever known them: he spoke slowly, with
pauses that seemed to invite his hearers to silent
participation in his thought; and Charity perceived
a light of response in their faces.
He was nearing the end of his address…
“Most of you,” he said, “most of
you who have returned here today, to take contact with
this little place for a brief hour, have come only
on a pious pilgrimage, and will go back presently
to busy cities and lives full of larger duties.
But that is not the only way of coming back to North
Dormer. Some of us, who went out from here in
our youth… went out, like you, to busy cities and
larger duties… have come back in another way—come
back for good. I am one of those, as many of
you know….” He paused, and there was a
sense of suspense in the listening hall. “My
history is without interest, but it has its lesson:
not so much for those of you who have already made
your lives in other places, as for the young men who
are perhaps planning even now to leave these quiet
hills and go down into the struggle. Things they
cannot foresee may send some of those young men back
some day to the little township and the old homestead:
they may come back for good….” He looked
about him, and repeated gravely: “For good.
There’s the point I want to make… North
Dormer is a poor little place, almost lost in a mighty
landscape: perhaps, by this time, it might have
been a bigger place, and more in scale with the landscape,
if those who had to come back had come with that feeling
in their minds—that they wanted to come
back for good... and not for bad… or just for
indifference….
“Gentlemen, let us look at things
as they are. Some of us have come back to our
native town because we’d failed to get on elsewhere.
One way or other, things had gone wrong with us…
what we’d dreamed of hadn’t come true.
But the fact that we had failed elsewhere is no reason
why we should fail here. Our very experiments
in larger places, even if they were unsuccessful,
ought to have helped us to make North Dormer a larger
place… and you young men who are preparing even now
to follow the call of ambition, and turn your back
on the old homes—well, let me say this
to you, that if ever you do come back to them it’s
worth while to come back to them for their good….
And to do that, you must keep on loving them while
you’re away from them; and even if you come back
against your will—and thinking it’s
all a bitter mistake of Fate or Providence—you
must try to make the best of it, and to make the best
of your old town; and after a while—well,
ladies and gentlemen, I give you my recipe for what
it’s worth; after a while, I believe you’ll
be able to say, as I can say today: ‘I’m
glad I’m here.’ Believe me, all of
you, the best way to help the places we live in is
to be glad we live there.”
He stopped, and a murmur of emotion
and surprise ran through the audience. It was
not in the least what they had expected, but it moved
them more than what they had expected would have moved
them. “Hear, hear!” a voice cried
out in the middle of the hall. An outburst of
cheers caught up the cry, and as they subsided Charity
heard Mr. Miles saying to someone near him: “That
was a man talking——” He
wiped his spectacles.
Mr. Royall had stepped back from the
desk, and taken his seat in the row of chairs in front
of the harmonium. A dapper white-haired gentleman—a
distant Hatchard—succeeded him behind the
goldenrod, and began to say beautiful things about
the old oaken bucket, patient white-haired mothers,
and where the boys used to go nutting… and Charity
began again to search for Harney….
Suddenly Mr. Royall pushed back his
seat, and one of the maple branches in front of the
harmonium collapsed with a crash. It uncovered
the end of the first row and in one of the seats Charity
saw Harney, and in the next a lady whose face was
turned toward him, and almost hidden by the brim of
her drooping hat. Charity did not need to see
the face. She knew at a glance the slim figure,
the fair hair heaped up under the hat-brim, the long
pale wrinkled gloves with bracelets slipping over them.
At the fall of the branch Miss Balch turned her head
toward the stage, and in her pretty thin-lipped smile
there lingered the reflection of something her neighbour
had been whispering to her….
Someone came forward to replace the
fallen branch, and Miss Balch and Harney were once
more hidden. But to Charity the vision of their
two faces had blotted out everything. In a flash
they had shown her the bare reality of her situation.
Behind the frail screen of her lover’s caresses
was the whole inscrutable mystery of his life:
his relations with other people—with other
women—his opinions, his prejudices, his
principles, the net of influences and interests and
ambitions in which every man’s life is entangled.
Of all these she knew nothing, except what he had
told her of his architectural aspirations. She
had always dimly guessed him to be in touch with important
people, involved in complicated relations—but
she felt it all to be so far beyond her understanding
that the whole subject hung like a luminous mist on
the farthest verge of her thoughts. In the foreground,
hiding all else, there was the glow of his presence,
the light and shadow of his face, the way his short-sighted
eyes, at her approach, widened and deepened as if
to draw her down into them; and, above all, the flush
of youth and tenderness in which his words enclosed
her.
Now she saw him detached from her,
drawn back into the unknown, and whispering to another
girl things that provoked the same smile of mischievous
complicity he had so often called to her own lips.
The feeling possessing her was not one of jealousy:
she was too sure of his love. It was rather a
terror of the unknown, of all the mysterious attractions
that must even now be dragging him away from her, and
of her own powerlessness to contend with them.
She had given him all she had—but
what was it compared to the other gifts life held
for him? She understood now the case of girls
like herself to whom this kind of thing happened.
They gave all they had, but their all was not enough:
it could not buy more than a few moments….
The heat had grown suffocating—she
felt it descend on her in smothering waves, and the
faces in the crowded hall began to dance like the
pictures flashed on the screen at Nettleton. For
an instant Mr. Royall’s countenance detached
itself from the general blur. He had resumed his
place in front of the harmonium, and sat close to her,
his eyes on her face; and his look seemed to pierce
to the very centre of her confused sensations….
A feeling of physical sickness rushed over her—and
then deadly apprehension. The light of the fiery
hours in the little house swept back on her in a glare
of fear….
She forced herself to look away from
her guardian, and became aware that the oratory of
the Hatchard cousin had ceased, and that Mr. Miles
was again flapping his wings. Fragments of his
peroration floated through her bewildered brain….
“A rich harvest of hallowed memories….
A sanctified hour to which, in moments of trial, your
thoughts will prayerfully return…. And now,
O Lord, let us humbly and fervently give thanks for
this blessed day of reunion, here in the old home to
which we have come back from so far. Preserve
it to us, O Lord, in times to come, in all its homely
sweetness—in the kindliness and wisdom of
its old people, in the courage and industry of its
young men, in the piety and purity of this group of
innocent girls——” He flapped
a white wing in their direction, and at the same moment
Lambert Sollas, with his fierce nod, struck the opening
bars of “Auld Lang Syne.” ...Charity stared
straight ahead of her and then, dropping her flowers,
fell face downward at Mr. Royall’s feet.