It began in a Woman’s Club in
London on a February afternoon—an uncomfortable
club, and a miserable afternoon—when Mrs.
Wilkins, who had come down from Hampstead to shop
and had lunched at her club, took up The Times from
the table in the smoking-room, and running her listless
eye down the Agony Column saw this:
To Those Who Appreciate Wistaria and
Sunshine. Small mediaeval Italian Castle on
the shores of the Mediterranean to be Let furnished
for the month of April. Necessary servants remain.
Z, Box 1000, The Times.
That was its conception; yet, as in
the case of many another, the conceiver was unaware
of it at the moment.
So entirely unaware was Mrs. Wilkins
that her April for that year had then and there been
settled for her that she dropped the newspaper with
a gesture that was both irritated and resigned, and
went over to the window and stared drearily out at
the dripping street.
Not for her were mediaeval castles,
even those that are specially described as small.
Not for her the shores in April of the Mediterranean,
and the wisteria and sunshine. Such delights
were only for the rich. Yet the advertisement
had been addressed to persons who appreciate these
things, so that it had been, anyhow addressed too to
her, for she certainly appreciated them; more than
anybody knew; more than she had ever told. But
she was poor. In the whole world she possessed
of her very own only ninety pounds, saved from year
to year, put by carefully pound by pound, out of her
dress allowance. She had scraped this sum together
at the suggestion of her husband as a shield and refuge
against a rainy day. Her dress allowance, given
her by her father, was £100 a year, so that Mrs. Wilkins’s
clothes were what her husband, urging her to save,
called modest and becoming, and her acquaintance to
each other, when they spoke of her at all, which was
seldom for she was very negligible, called a perfect
sight.
Mr. Wilkins, a solicitor, encouraged
thrift, except that branch of it which got into his
food. He did not call that thrift, he called
it bad housekeeping. But for the thrift which,
like moth, penetrated into Mrs. Wilkins’s clothes
and spoilt them, he had much praise. “You
never know,” he said, “when there will
be a rainy day, and you may be very glad to find you
have a nest-egg. Indeed we both may.”
Looking out of the club window into
Shaftesbury Avenue—hers was an economical
club, but convenient for Hampstead, where she lived,
and for Shoolbred’s, where she shopped—Mrs.
Wilkins, having stood there some time very drearily,
her mind’s eye on the Mediterranean in April,
and the wisteria, and the enviable opportunities of
the rich, while her bodily eye watched the really
extremely horrible sooty rain falling steadily on
the hurrying umbrellas and splashing omnibuses, suddenly
wondered whether perhaps this was not the rainy day
Mellersh—Mellersh was Mr. Wilkins—had
so often encouraged her to prepare for, and whether
to get out of such a climate and into the small mediaeval
castle wasn’t perhaps what Providence had all
along intended her to do with her savings. Part
of her savings, of course; perhaps quite a small part.
The castle, being mediaeval, might also be dilapidated,
and dilapidations were surely cheap. She wouldn’t
in the lest mind a few of them, because you didn’t
pay for dilapidations which were already there, on
the contrary—by reducing the price you had
to pay they really paid you. But what nonsense
to think of it . . .
She turned away from the window with
the same gesture of mingled irritation and resignation
with which she had laid down The Times, and crossed
the room towards the door with the intention of getting
her mackintosh and umbrella and fighting her way into
one of the overcrowded omnibuses and going to Shoolbred’s
on her way home and buying some soles for Mellersh’s
dinner—Mellersh was difficult with fish
and liked only soles, except salmon—when
she beheld Mrs. Arbuthnot, a woman she knew by sight
as also living in Hampstead and belonging to the club,
sitting at the table in the middle of the room on
which the newspapers and magazines were kept, absorbed,
in her turn, in the first page of The Times.
Mrs. Wilkins had never yet spoken
to Mrs. Arbuthnot, who belonged to one of the various
church sets, and who analysed, classified, divided
and registered the poor; whereas she and Mellersh,
when they did go out, went to the parties of impressionist
painters, of whom in Hampstead there were many.
Mellersh had a sister who had married one of them
and lived up on the Heath, and because of this alliance
Mrs. Wilkins was drawn into a circle which was highly
unnatural to her, and she had learned to dread pictures.
She had to say things about them, and she didn’t
know what to say. She used to murmur, “marvelous,”
and feel that it was not enough. But nobody
minded. Nobody listened. Nobody took any
notice of Mrs. Wilkins. She was the kind of person
who is not noticed at parties. Her clothes,
infested by thrift, made her practically invisible;
her face was non-arresting; her conversation was reluctant;
she was shy. And if one’s clothes and face
and conversation are all negligible, thought Mrs.
Wilkins, who recognized her disabilities, what, at
parties, is there left of one?
Also she was always with Wilkins,
that clean-shaven, fine-looking man, who gave a party,
merely by coming to it, a great air. Wilkins
was very respectable. He was known to be highly
thought of by his senior partners. His sister’s
circle admired him. He pronounced adequately
intelligent judgments on art and artists. He
was pithy; he was prudent; he never said a word too
much, nor, on the other had, did he ever say a word
too little. He produced the impression of keeping
copies of everything he said; and he was so obviously
reliable that it often happened that people who met
him at these parties became discontented with their
own solicitors, and after a period of restlessness
extricated themselves and went to Wilkins.
Naturally Mrs. Wilkins was blotted
out. “She,” said his sister, with
something herself of the judicial, the digested, and
the final in her manner, “should stay at home.”
But Wilkins could not leave his wife at home.
He was a family solicitor, and all such have wives
and show them. With his in the week he went
to parties, and with his on Sundays he went to church.
Being still fairly young—he was thirty-nine—and
ambitious of old ladies, of whom he had not yet acquired
in his practice a sufficient number, he could not
afford to miss church, and it was there that Mrs.
Wilkins became familiar, though never through words,
with Mrs. Arbuthnot.
She saw her marshalling the children
of the poor into pews. She would come in at
the head of the procession from the Sunday School
exactly five minutes before the choir, and get her
boys and girls neatly fitted into their allotted seats,
and down on their little knees in their preliminary
prayer, and up again on their feet just as, to the
swelling organ, the vestry door opened, and the choir
and clergy, big with the litanies and commandments
they were presently to roll out, emerged. She
had a sad face, yet she was evidently efficient.
The combination used to make Mrs. Wilkins wonder,
for she had been told my Mellersh, on days when she
had only been able to get plaice, that if one were
efficient one wouldn’t be depressed, and that
if one does one’s job well one becomes automatically
bright and brisk.
About Mrs. Arbuthnot there was nothing
bright and brisk, though much in her way with the
Sunday School children that was automatic; but when
Mrs. Wilkins, turning from the window, caught sight
of her in the club she was not being automatic at
all, but was looking fixedly at one portion of the
first page of The Times, holding the paper quite still,
her eyes not moving. She was just staring; and
her face, as usual, was the face of a patient and
disappointed Madonna.
Mrs. Wilkins watched her a minute,
trying to screw up courage to speak to her.
She wanted to ask her if she had seen the advertisement.
She did not know why she wanted to ask her this, but
she wanted to. How stupid not to be able to speak
to her. She looked so kind. She looked
so unhappy. Why couldn’t two unhappy people
refresh each other on their way through this dusty
business of life by a little talk—real,
natural talk, about what they felt, what they would
have liked, what they still tried to hope? And
she could not help thinking that Mrs. Arbuthnot, too,
was reading that very same advertisement. Her
eyes were on the very part of the paper. Was
she, too, picturing what it would be like—the
colour, the fragrance, the light, the soft lapping
of the sea among little hot rocks? Colour, fragrance,
light, sea; instead of Shaftesbury Avenue, and the
wet omnibuses, and the fish department at Shoolbred’s,
and the Tube to Hampstead, and dinner, and to-morrow
the same and the day after the same and always the
same . . .
Suddenly Mrs. Wilkins found herself
leaning across the table. “Are you reading
about the mediaeval castle and the wisteria?”
she heard herself asking.
Naturally Mrs. Arbuthnot was surprised;
but she was not half so much surprised as Mrs. Wilkins
was at herself for asking.
Mrs. Arbuthnot had not yet to her
knowledge set eyes on the shabby, lank, loosely-put-together
figure sitting opposite her, with its small freckled
face and big grey eyes almost disappearing under a
smashed-down wet-weather hat, and she gazed at her
a moment without answering. She was reading
about the mediaeval castle and the wisteria, or rather
had read about it ten minutes before, and since then
had been lost in dreams—of light, of colour,
of fragrance, of the soft lapping of the sea among
little hot rocks . . .
“Why do you ask me that?”
she said in her grave voice, for her training of and
by the poor had made her grave and patient.
Mrs. Wilkins flushed and looked excessively
shy and frightened. “Oh, only because I
saw it too, and I thought perhaps—I thought
somehow—” she stammered.
Whereupon Mrs. Arbuthnot, her mind
being used to getting people into lists and divisions,
from habit considered, as she gazed thoughtfully at
Mrs. Wilkins, under what heading, supposing she had
to classify her, she could most properly be put.
“And I know you by sight,”
went on Mrs. Wilkins, who, like all the shy, once
she was started; lunged on, frightening herself to
more and more speech by the sheer sound of what she
had said last in her ears. “Every Sunday—I
see you every Sunday in church—”
“In church?” echoed Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“And this seems such a wonderful
thing—this advertisement about the wisteria—and—”
Mrs. Wilkins, who must have been at
least thirty, broke off and wriggled in her chair
with the movement of an awkward and embarrassed schoolgirl.
“It seems so wonderful,”
she went on in a kind of burst, “and—it
is such a miserable day . . .”
And then she sat looking at Mrs. Arbuthnot
with the eyes of an imprisoned dog.
“This poor thing,” thought
Mrs. Arbuthnot, whose life was spent in helping and
alleviating, “needs advice.”
She accordingly prepared herself patiently to give
it.
“If you see me in church,”
she said, kindly and attentively, “I suppose
you live in Hampstead too?”
“Oh yes,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
And she repeated, her head on its long thin neck
drooping a little as if the recollection of Hampstead
bowed her, “Oh yes.”
“Where?” asked Mrs. Arbuthnot,
who, when advice was needed, naturally first proceeded
to collect the facts.
But Mrs. Wilkins, laying her hand
softly and caressingly on the part of The Times where
the advertisement was, as though the mere printed
words of it were precious, only said, “Perhaps
that is why this seems so wonderful.”
“No—I think that’s
wonderful anyhow,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot, forgetting
facts and faintly sighing.
“Then you were reading it?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot, her eyes going
dreamy again.
“Wouldn’t it be wonderful?” murmured
Mrs. Wilkins.
“Wonderful,” said Mrs.
Arbuthnot. Her face, which had lit up, faded
into patience again. “Very wonderful,”
she said. “But it’s no use wasting
one’s time thinking of such things.”
“Oh, but it is,” was Mrs.
Wilkins’s quick, surprising reply; surprising
because it was so much unlike the rest of her—the
characterless coat and skirt, the crumpled hat, the
undecided wisp of hair straggling out, “And
just the considering of them is worth while in itself—such
a change from Hampstead—and sometimes I
believe—I really do believe—if
one considers hard enough one gets things.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot observed her patiently.
In what category would she, supposing she had to,
put her?
“Perhaps,” she said, leaning
forward a little, “you will tell me your name.
If we are to be friends”—she smiled
her grave smile—“as I hope we are,
we had better begin at the beginning.”
“Oh yes—how kind
of you. I’m Mrs. Wilkins,” said Mrs.
Wilkins. “I don’t expect,”
she added, flushing, as Mrs. Arbuthnot said nothing,
“that it conveys anything to you. Sometimes
it—it doesn’t seem to convey anything
to me either. But”—she looked
round with a movement of seeking help—“I
am Mrs. Wilkins.”
She did not like her name. It
was a mean, small name, with a kind of facetious twist,
she thought, about its end like the upward curve of
a pugdog’s tail. There it was, however.
There was no doing anything with it. Wilkins
she was and Wilkins she would remain; and though her
husband encouraged her to give it on all occasions
as Mrs. Mellersh-Wilkins she only did that when he
was within earshot, for she thought Mellersh made
Wilkins worse, emphasizing it in the way Chatsworth
on the gate-posts of a villa emphasizes the villa.
When first he suggested she should
add Mellersh she had objected for the above reason,
and after a pause—Mellersh was much too
prudent to speak except after a pause, during which
presumably he was taking a careful mental copy of
his coming observation—he said, much displeased,
“But I am not a villa,” and looked at her
as he looks who hopes, for perhaps the hundredth time,
that he may not have married a fool.
Of course he was not a villa, Mrs.
Wilkins assured him; she had never supposed he was;
she had not dreamed of meaning . . . she was only
just thinking . . .
The more she explained the more earnest
became Mellersh’s hope, familiar to him by this
time, for he had then been a husband for two years,
that he might not by any chance have married a fool;
and they had a prolonged quarrel, if that can be called
a quarrel which is conducted with dignified silence
on one side and earnest apology on the other, as to
whether or no Mrs. Wilkins had intended to suggest
that Mr. Wilkins was a villa.
“I believe,” she had thought
when it was at last over—it took a long
while—“that anybody would quarrel
about anything when they’ve not left off being
together for a single day for two whole years.
What we both need is a holiday.”
“My husband,” went on
Mrs. Wilkins to Mrs. Arbuthnot, trying to throw some
light on herself, “is a solicitor. He—”
She cast about for something she could say elucidatory
of Mellersh, and found: “He’s very
handsome.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot
kindly, “that must be a great pleasure to you.”
“Why?” asked Mrs. Wilkins.
“Because,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot,
a little taken aback, for constant intercourse with
the poor had accustomed her to have her pronouncements
accepted without question, “because beauty—handsomeness—
is a gift like any other, and if it is properly used—”
She trailed off into silence.
Mrs. Wilkins’s great grey eyes were fixed on
her, and it seemed suddenly to Mrs. Arbuthnot that
perhaps she was becoming crystallized into a habit
of exposition, and of exposition after the manner
of nursemaids, through having an audience that couldn’t
but agree, that would be afraid, if it wished, to
interrupt, that didn’t know, that was, in fact,
at her mercy.
But Mrs. Wilkins was not listening;
for just then, absurd as it seemed, a picture had
flashed across her brain, and there were two figures
in it sitting together under a great trailing wisteria
that stretched across the branches of a tree she didn’t
know, and it was herself and Mrs. Arbuthnot—she
saw them—she saw them. And behind
them, bright in sunshine, were old grey walls—the
mediaeval castle —she saw it—they
were there . . .
She therefore stared at Mrs. Arbuthnot
and did not hear a word she said. And Mrs. Arbuthnot
stared too at Mrs. Wilkins, arrested by the expression
on her face, which was swept by the excitement of what
she saw, and was as luminous and tremulous under it
as water in sunlight when it is ruffled by a gust
of wind. At this moment, if she had been at
a party, Mrs. Wilkins would have been looked at with
interest.
They stared at each other; Mrs. Arbuthnot
surprised, inquiringly, Mrs. Wilkins with the eyes
of some one who has had a revelation. Of course.
That was how it could be done. She herself,
she by herself, couldn’t afford it, and wouldn’t
be able, even if she could afford it, to go there
all alone; but she and Mrs. Arbuthnot together . .
.
She leaned across the table, “Why
don’t we try and get it?” she whispered.
Mrs. Arbuthnot became even more wide-eyed.
“Get it?” she repeated.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Wilkins,
still as though she were afraid of being overheard.
“Not just sit here and say How wonderful, and
then go home to Hampstead without having put out a
finger—go home just as usual and see about
the dinner and the fish just as we’ve been doing
for years and years and will go on doing for years
and years. In fact,” said Mrs. Wilkins,
flushing to the roots of her hair, for the sound of
what she was saying, of what was coming pouring out,
frightened her, and yet she couldn’t stop, “I
see no end to it. There is no end to it.
So that there ought to be a break, there ought to be
intervals—in everybody’s interests.
Why, it would really be being unselfish to go away
and be happy for a little, because we would come back
so much nicer. You see, after a bit everybody
needs a holiday.”
“But—how do you mean, get it?”
asked Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“Take it,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
“Take it?”
“Rent it. Hire it. Have it.”
“But—do you mean you and I?”
“Yes. Between us.
Share. Then it would only cost half, and you
look so—you look exactly as if you wanted
it just as much as I do—as if you ought
to have a rest—have something happy happen
to you.”
“Why, but we don’t know each other.”
“But just think how well we
would if we went away together for a month!
And I’ve saved for a rainy day—look
at it—”
“She is unbalanced,” thought
Mrs. Arbuthnot; yet she felt strangely stirred.
“Think of getting away for a
whole month—from everything—to
heaven—”
“She shouldn’t say things
like that,” thought Mrs. Arbuthnot. “The
vicar—” Yet she felt strangely stirred.
It would indeed be wonderful to have a rest, a cessation.
Habit, however, steadied her again;
and years of intercourse with the poor made her say,
with the slight though sympathetic superiority of
the explainer, “But then, you see, heaven isn’t
somewhere else. It is here and now. We
are told so.”
She became very earnest, just as she
did when trying patiently to help and enlighten the
poor. “Heaven is within us,” she
said in her gentle low voice. “We are
told that on the very highest authority. And
you know the lines about the kindred points, don’t
you—”
“Oh yes, I know them,”
interrupted Mrs. Wilkins impatiently.
“The kindred points of heaven
and home,” continued Mrs. Arbuthnot, who was
used to finishing her sentences. “Heaven
is in our home.”
“It isn’t,” said Mrs. Wilkins, again
surprisingly.
Mrs. Arbuthnot was taken aback.
Then she said gently, “Oh, but it is.
It is there if we choose, if we make it.”
“I do choose, and I do make
it, and it isn’t,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
Then Mrs. Arbuthnot was silent, for
she too sometimes had doubts about homes. She
sat and looked uneasily at Mrs. Wilkins, feeling more
and more the urgent need to getting her classified.
If she could only classify Mrs. Wilkins, get her
safely under her proper heading, she felt that she
herself would regain her balance, which did seem very
strangely to be slipping all to one side. For
neither had she had a holiday for years, and the advertisement
when she saw it had set her dreaming, and Mrs. Wilkins’s
excitement about it was infectious, and she had the
sensation, as she listened to her impetuous, odd talk
and watched her lit-up face, that she was being stirred
out of sleep.
Clearly Mrs. Wilkins was unbalanced,
but Mrs. Arbuthnot had met the unbalanced before—indeed
she was always meeting them—and they had
no effect on her own stability at all; whereas this
one was making her feel quite wobbly, quite as though
to be off and away, away from her compass points of
God, Husband, Home and Duty—she didn’t
feel as if Mrs. Wilkins intended Mr. Wilkins to come
too—and just for once be happy, would be
both good and desirable. Which of course it wasn’t;
which certainly of course it wasn’t. She,
also, had a nest-egg, invested gradually in the Post
Office Savings Bank, but to suppose that she would
ever forget her duty to the extent of drawing it out
and spending it on herself was surely absurd.
Surely she couldn’t, she wouldn’t ever
do such a thing? Surely she wouldn’t, she
couldn’t ever forget her poor, forget misery
and sickness as completely as that? No doubt
a trip to Italy would be extraordinarily delightful,
but there were many delightful things one would like
to do, and what was strength given to one for except
to help one not to do them?
Steadfast as the points of the compass
to Mrs. Arbuthnot were the great four facts of life:
God, Husband, Home, Duty. She had gone to sleep
on these facts years ago, after a period of much misery,
her head resting on them as on a pillow; and she had
a great dread of being awakened out of so simple and
untroublesome a condition. Therefore it was
that she searched with earnestness for a heading under
which to put Mrs. Wilkins, and in this way illumine
and steady her own mind; and sitting there looking
at her uneasily after her last remark, and feeling
herself becoming more and more unbalanced and infected,
she decided pro tem, as the vicar said at meetings,
to put her under the heading Nerves. It was
just possible that she ought to go straight into the
category Hysteria, which was often only the antechamber
to Lunacy, but Mrs. Arbuthnot had learned not to hurry
people into their final categories, having on more
than one occasion discovered with dismay that she
had made a mistake; and how difficult it had been to
get them out again, and how crushed she had been with
the most terrible remorse.
Yes. Nerves. Probably
she had no regular work for others, thought Mrs. Arbuthnot;
no work that would take her outside herself.
Evidently she was rudderless—blown about
by gusts, by impulses. Nerves was almost certainly
her category, or would be quite soon if no one helped
her. Poor little thing, thought Mrs. Arbuthnot,
her own balance returning hand in hand with her compassion,
and unable, because of the table, to see the length
of Mrs. Wilkins’s legs. All she saw was
her small, eager, shy face, and her thin shoulders,
and the look of childish longing in her eyes for something
that she was sure was going to make her happy.
No; such things didn’t make people happy, such
fleeting things. Mrs. Arbuthnot had learned in
her long life with Frederick—he was her
husband, and she had married him at twenty and was
not thirty-three—where alone true joys are
to be found. They are to be found, she now knew,
only in daily, in hourly, living for others; they
are to be found only—hadn’t she over
and over again taken her disappointments and discouragements
there, and come away comforted?—at the
feet of God.
Frederick had been the kind of husband
whose wife betakes herself early to the feet of God.
From him to them had been a short though painful
step. It seemed short to her in retrospect, but
I had really taken the whole of the first year of
their marriage, and every inch of the way had been
a struggle, and every inch of it was stained, she felt
at the time, with her heart’s blood. All
that was over now. She had long since found
peace. And Frederick, from her passionately loved
bridegroom, from her worshipped young husband, had
become second only to God on her list of duties and
forbearances. There he hung, the second in importance,
a bloodless thing bled white by her prayers.
For years she had been able to be happy only by forgetting
happiness. She wanted to stay like that.
She wanted to shut out everything that would remind
her of beautiful things, that might set her off again
long, desiring . . .
“I’d like so much to be
friends,” she said earnestly. “Won’t
you come and see me, or let me come to you sometimes?
Whenever you feel as if you wanted to talk.
I’ll give you my address”—she
searched in her handbag—“and then
you won’t forget.” And she found
a card and held it out.
Mrs. Wilkins ignored the card.
“It’s so funny,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, just as if she had not heard her,
“But I see us both—you and me—this
April in the mediaeval castle.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot relapsed into uneasiness.
“Do you?” she said, making an effort
to stay balanced under the visionary gaze of the shining
grey eyes. “Do you?”
“Don’t you ever see things
in a kind of flash before they happen?” asked
Mrs. Wilkins.
“Never,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
She tried to smile; she tried to smile
the sympathetic yet wise and tolerant smile with which
she was accustomed to listen to the necessarily biased
and incomplete view of the poor. She didn’t
succeed. The smile trembled out.
“Of course,” she said
in a low voice, almost as if she were afraid the vicar
and the Savings Bank were listening, “it would
be most beautiful—most beautiful—”
“Even if it were wrong,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, “it would only be for a month.”
“That—” began
Mrs. Arbuthnot, quite clear as to the reprehensibleness
of such a point of view; but Mrs. Wilkins stopped her
before she could finish.
“Anyhow,” said Mrs. Wilkins,
stopping her, “I’m sure it’s wrong
to go on being good for too long, till one gets miserable.
And I can see you’ve been good for years and
years, because you look so unhappy”—
Mrs. Arbuthnot opened her mouth to protest—“and
I—I’ve done nothing but duties, things
for other people, ever since I was a girl, and I don’t
believe anybody loves me a bit—a bit—the
b-better—and I long— oh, I long—for
something else—something else—”
Was she going to cry? Mrs. Arbuthnot
became acutely uncomfortable and sympathetic.
She hoped she wasn’t going to cry. Not
there. Not in that unfriendly room, with strangers
coming and going.
But Mrs. Wilkins, after tugging agitatedly
at a handkerchief that wouldn’t come out of
her pocket, did succeed at last in merely apparently
blowing her nose with it, and then, blinking her eyes
very quickly once or twice, looked at Mrs. Arbuthnot
with a quivering air of half humble, half frightened
apology, and smiled.
“Will you believe,” she
whispered, trying to steady her mouth, evidently dreadfully
ashamed of herself, “that I’ve never spoken
to any one before in my life like this? I can’t
think, I simply don’t know, what has come over
me.”
“It’s the advertisement,”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot, nodding gravely.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Wilkins,
dabbing furtively at her eyes, “and us both
being so—“—she blew her
nose again a little—“miserable.”