When Mrs. Wilkins woke next morning
she lay in bed a few minutes before getting up and
opening the shutters. What would she see out
of her window? A shining world, or a world of
rain? But it would be beautiful; whatever it
was would be beautiful.
She was in a little bedroom with bare
white walls and a stone floor and sparse old furniture.
The beds—there were two—were
made of iron, enameled black and painted with bunches
of gay flowers. She lay putting off the great
moment of going to the window as one puts off opening
a precious letter, gloating over it. She had
no idea what time it was; she had forgotten to wind
up her watch ever since, centuries ago, she last went
to bed in Hampstead. No sounds were to be heard
in the house, so she supposed it was very early, yet
she felt as if she had slept a long while—so
completely rested, so perfectly content. She
lay with her arms clasped round her head thinking how
happy she was, her lips curved upwards in a delighted
smile. In bed by herself: adorable condition.
She had not been in a bed without Mellersh once now
for five whole years; and the cool roominess of it,
the freedom of one’s movements, the sense of
recklessness, of audacity, in giving the blankets
a pull if one wanted to, or twitching the pillows more
comfortably! It was like the discovery of an
entirely new joy.
Mrs. Wilkins longed to get up and
open the shutters, but where she was was really so
very delicious. She gave a sigh of contentment,
and went on lying there looking round her, taking in
everything in her room, her own little room, her very
own to arrange just as she pleased for this one blessed
month, her room bought with her own savings, the fruit
of her careful denials, whose door she could bolt if
she wanted to, and nobody had the right to come in.
It was such a strange little room, so different from
any she had known, and so sweet. It was like
a cell. Except for the two beds, it suggested
a happy austerity. “And the name of the
chamber,” she thought, quoting and smiling round
at it, “was Peace.”
Well, this was delicious, to lie there
thinking how happy she was, but outside those shutters
it was more delicious still. She jumped up,
pulled on her slippers, for there was nothing on the
stone floor but one small rug, ran to the window and
threw open the shutters.
“Oh!” cried Mrs. Wilkins.
All the radiance of April in Italy
lay gathered together at her feet. The sun poured
in on her. The sea lay asleep in it, hardly
stirring. Across the bay the lovely mountains,
exquisitely different in colour, were asleep too in
the light; and underneath her window, at the bottom
of the flower-starred grass slope from which the wall
of the castle rose up, was a great cypress, cutting
through the delicate blues and violets and rose-colours
of the mountains and the sea like a great black sword.
She stared. Such beauty; and
she there to see it. Such beauty; and she alive
to feel it. Her face was bathed in light.
Lovely scents came up to the window and caressed
her. A tiny breeze gently lifted her hair.
Far out in the bay a cluster of almost motionless
fishing boats hovered like a flock of white birds
on the tranquil sea. How beautiful, how beautiful.
Not to have died before this . . . to have been allowed
to see, breathe, feel this. . . . She stared,
her lips parted. Happy? Poor, ordinary,
everyday word. But what could one say, how could
one describe it? It was as though she could hardly
stay inside herself, it was as though she were too
small to hold so much of joy, it was as though she
were washed through with light. And how astonishing
to feel this sheer bliss, for here she was, not doing
and not going to do a single unselfish thing, not
going to do a thing she didn’t want to do.
According to everybody she had ever some across she
ought at least to have twinges. She had not one
twinge. Something was wrong somewhere.
Wonderful that at home she should have been so good,
so terribly good, and merely felt tormented.
Twinges of every sort had there been her portion;
aches, hurts, discouragements, and she the whole time
being steadily unselfish. Now she had taken off
all her goodness and left it behind her like a heap
in rain-sodden clothes, and she only felt joy.
She was naked of goodness, and was rejoicing in being
naked. She was stripped, and exulting.
And there, away in the dim mugginess of Hampstead,
was Mellersh being angry.
She tired to visualize Mellersh, she
tried to see him having breakfast and thinking bitter
things about her; and lo, Mellersh himself began to
shimmer, became rose-colour, became delicate violet,
became an enchanting blue, became formless, became
iridescent. Actually Mellersh, after quivering
a minute, was lost in light.
“Well,” thought Mrs. Wilkins,
staring, as it were, after him. How extraordinary
not to be able to visualize Mellersh; and she who
used to know every feature, every expression of his
by heart. She simply could not see him as he
was. She could only see him resolved into beauty,
melted into harmony with everything else. The
familiar words of the General Thanksgiving came quite
naturally into her mind, and she found herself blessing
God for her creation, preservation, and all the blessings
of this life, but above all for His inestimable Love;
out loud; in a burst of acknowledgment. While
Mellersh, at that moment angrily pulling on his boots
before going out into the dripping streets, was indeed
thinking bitter things about her.
She began to dress, choosing clean
white clothes in honour of the summer’s day,
unpacking her suit-cases, tidying her adorable little
room. She moved about with quick, purposeful
steps, her long thin body held up straight, her small
face, so much puckered at home with effort and fear,
smoothed out. All she had been and done before
this morning, all she had felt and worried about,
was gone. Each of her worries behaved as the
image of Mellersh had behaved, and dissolved into colour
and light. And she noticed things she had not
noticed for years—when she was doing her
hair in front of the glass she noticed it, and thought,
“Why, what pretty stuff.” For years
she had forgotten she had such a thing as hair, plaiting
it in the evening and unplaiting it in the morning
with the same hurry and indifference with which she
laced and unlaced her shoes. Now she suddenly
saw it, and she twisted it round her fingers before
the glass, and was glad it was so pretty. Mellersh
couldn’t have seen it either, for he had never
said a word about it. Well, when she got home
she would draw his attention to it. “Mellersh,”
she would say, “look at my hair. Aren’t
you pleased you’ve got a wife with hair like
curly honey?”
She laughed. She had never said
anything like that to Mellersh yet, and the idea of
it amused her. But why had she not? Oh
yes—she used to be afraid of him.
Funny to be afraid of anybody; and especially of
one’s husband, whom one saw in his more simplified
moments, such as asleep, and not breathing properly
through his nose.
When she was ready she opened her
door to go across to see if Rose, who had been put
the night before by a sleepy maidservant into a cell
opposite, were awake. She would say good-morning
to her, and then she would run down and stay with
that cypress tree till breakfast was ready, and after
breakfast she wouldn’t so much as look out of
a window till she had helped Rose get everything ready
for Lady Caroline and Mrs. Fisher. There was
much to be done that day, settling in, arranging the
rooms; she mustn’t leave Rose to do it alone.
They would make it all so lovely for the two to come,
have such an entrancing vision ready for them of little
cells bright with flowers. She remembered she
had wanted Lady Caroline not to come; fancy wanting
to shut some one out of heaven because she thought
she would be shy of her! And as though it mattered
if she were, and as though she would be anything so
self-conscious as shy. Besides, what a reason.
She could not accuse herself of goodness over that.
And she remembered she had wanted not to have Mrs.
Fisher either, because she had seemed lofty.
How funny of her. So funny to worry about such
little things, making them important.
The bedrooms and two of the sitting-rooms
at San Salvatore were on the top floor, and opened
into a roomy hall with a wide glass window at the
north end. San Salvatore was rich in small gardens
in different parts and on different levels.
The garden this window looked down on was made on
the highest part of the walls, and could only be reached
through the corresponding spacious hall on the floor
below. When Mrs. Wilkins came out of her room
this window stood wide open, and beyond it in the
sun was a Judas tree in full flower. There was
no sign of anybody, no sound of voices or feet.
Tubs of arum lilies stood about on the stone floor,
and on a table flamed a huge bunch of fierce nasturtiums.
Spacious, flowery, silent, with the wide window at
the end opening into the garden, and the Judas tree
absurdly beautiful in the sunshine, it seemed to Mrs.
Wilkins, arrested on her way across to Mrs. Arbuthnot,
too good to be true. Was she really going to
live in this for a whole month? Up to now she
had had to take what beauty she could as she went
along, snatching at little bits of it when she came
across it—a patch of daisies on a fine day
in a Hampstead field, a flash of sunset between two
chimney pots. She had never been in definitely,
completely beautiful places. She had never been
even in a venerable house; and such a thing as a profusion
of flowers in her rooms was unattainable to her.
Sometimes in the spring she had bought six tulips
at Shoolbred’s, unable to resist them, conscious
that Mellersh if he knew what they had cost would
think it inexcusable; but they had soon died, and
then there were no more. As for the Judas tree,
she hadn’t an idea what it was, and gazed at
it out there against the sky with the rapt expression
of one who sees a heavenly vision.
Mrs. Arbuthnot, coming out of her
room, found her there like that, standing in the middle
of the hall staring.
“Now what does she think she
sees now?” thought Mrs. Arbuthnot.
“We are in God’s hands,”
said Mrs. Wilkins, turning to her, speaking with extreme
conviction.
“Oh!” said Mrs. Arbuthnot
quickly, her face, which had been covered with smiles
when she came out of her room, fall. “Why,
what has happened?”
For Mrs. Arbuthnot had woken up with
such a delightful feeling of security, of relief,
and she did not want to find she had not after all
escaped from the need of refuge. She had not
even dreamed of Frederick. For the first time
in years she had been spared the nightly dream that
he was with her, that they were heart to heart, and
its miserable awakening. She had slept like
a baby, and had woken up confident; she had found
there was nothing she wished to say in her morning
prayer, except Thank you. It was disconcerting
to be told she was after all in God’s hands.
“I hope nothing has happened?” she asked
anxiously.
Mrs. Wilkins looked at her a moment,
and laughed. “How funny,” she said,
kissing her.
“What is funny?” asked
Mrs. Arbuthnot, her face clearing because Mrs. Wilkins
laughed.
“We are. This is.
Everything. It’s all so wonderful.
It’s so funny and so adorable that we should
be in it. I daresay when we finally reach heaven—the
one they talk about so much—we shan’t
find it a bit more beautiful.”
Mrs. Arbuthnot relaxed to smiling
security again. “Isn’t it divine?”
she said?
“Were you ever, ever in your
life so happy?” asked Mrs. Wilkins, catching
her by the arm.
“No,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot.
Nor had she been; not ever; not even in her first
love-days with Frederick. Because always pain
had been close at hand in that other happiness, ready
to torture with doubts, to torture even with the very
excess of her love; while this was the simple happiness
of complete harmony with her surroundings, the happiness
that asks for nothing, that just accepts, just breathes,
just is.
“Let’s go and look at
that tree close,” said Mrs. Wilkins. “I
don’t believe it can only be a tree.”
And arm in arm they went along the
hall, and their husbands would not have known them
their faces were so young with eagerness, and together
they stood at the open window, and when their eyes,
having feasted on the marvelous pink thing, wandered
farther among the beauties of the garden, they saw
sitting on the low wall at the east edge of it, gazing
out over the bay, her feet in lilies, Lady Caroline.
They were astonished. They said
nothing in their astonishment, but stood quite still,
arm in arm, staring down at her.
She too had on a white frock, and
her head was bare. They had had no idea that
day in London, when her hat was down to her nose and
her furs were up to her ears, that she was so pretty.
They had merely thought her different from the other
women in the club, and so had the other women themselves,
and so had all the waitresses, eyeing her sideways
and eyeing her again as they passed the corner where
she sat talking; but they had had no idea she was
so pretty. She was exceedingly pretty.
Everything about her was very much that which it
was. Her fair hair was very fair, her lovely
grey eyes were very lovely and grey, her dark eyelashes
were very dark, her white skin was very white, her
red mouth was very red. She was extravagantly
slender— the merest thread of a girl, though
not without little curves beneath her thin frock where
little curves should be. She was looking out
across the bay, and was sharply defined against the
background of empty blue. She was full in the
sun. Her feet dangled among the leaves and flowers
of the lilies just as if it did not matter that they
should be bent or bruised.
“She ought to have a headache,”
whispered Mrs. Arbuthnot at last, “sitting there
in the sun like that.”
“She ought to have a hat,” whispered Mrs.
Wilkins.
“She is treading on lilies.”
“But they’re hers as much as ours.”
“Only one-fourth of them.”
Lady Caroline turned her head.
She looked up at them a moment, surprised to see
them so much younger than they had seemed that day
at the club, and so much less unattractive.
Indeed, they were really almost quite attractive,
if any one could ever be really quite attractive in
the wrong clothes. Her eyes, swiftly glancing
over them, took in every inch of each of them in the
half second before she smiled and waved her hand and
called out Good-morning. There was nothing, she
saw at once to be hoped for in the way of interest
from their clothes. She did not consciously think
this, for she was having a violent reaction against
beautiful clothes and the slavery they impose on one,
her experience being that the instant one had got them
they took one in hand and gave one no peace till they
had been everywhere and been seen by everybody.
You didn’t take your clothes to parties; they
took you. It was quite a mistake to think that
a woman, a really well-dressed woman, wore out her
clothes; it was the clothes that wore out the woman—dragging
her about at all hours of the day and night.
No wonder men stayed younger longer. Just new
trousers couldn’t excite them. She couldn’t
suppose that even the newest trousers ever behaved
like that, taking the bit between their teeth.
Her images were disorderly, but she thought as she
chose, she used what images she like. As she
got off the wall and came towards the window, it seemed
a restful thing to know she was going to spend an
entire month with people in dresses made as she dimly
remembered dresses used to be made five summers ago.
“I got here yesterday morning,”
she said, looking up at them and smiling. She
really was bewitching. She had everything, even
a dimple.
“It’s a great pity,”
said Mrs. Arbuthnot, smiling back, “because
we were going to choose the nicest room for you.”
“Oh, but I’ve done that,”
said Lady Caroline. “At least, I think
it’s the nicest. It looks two ways—I
adore a room that looks two ways, don’t you?
Over the sea to the west, and over this Judas tree
to the north.”
“And we had meant to make it
pretty for you with flowers,” said Mrs. Wilkins.
“Oh, Domenico did that.
I told him to directly I got here. He’s
the gardener. He’s wonderful.”
“It’s a good thing, of
course,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot a little hesitatingly,
“to be independent, and to know exactly what
one wants.”
“Yes, it saves trouble,” agreed Lady Caroline.
“But one shouldn’t be
so independent,” said Mrs. Wilkins, “as
to leave no opportunity for other people to exercise
their benevolences on one.”
Lady Caroline, who had been looking
at Mrs. Arbuthnot, now looked at Mrs. Wilkins.
That day at the queer club she had had merely a blurred
impression of Mrs. Wilkins, for it was the other one
who did all the talking, and her impression had been
of somebody so shy, so awkward that it was best to
take no notice of her. She had not even been
able to say good-bye properly, doing it in an agony,
turning red, turning damp. Therefore she now
looked at her in some surprise; and she was still
more surprised when Mrs. Wilkins added, gazing at her
with the most obvious sincere admiration, speaking
indeed with a conviction that refused to remain unuttered,
“I didn’t realize you were so pretty.”
She stared at Mrs. Wilkins.
She was not usually told this quite so immediately
and roundly. Abundantly as she was used to it—
impossible not to be after twenty-eight solid years—it
surprised her to be told it with such bluntness, and
by a woman.
“It’s very kind of you to think so,”
she said.
“Why, you’re very lovely,”
said Mrs. Wilkins. “Quite, quite lovely.”
“I hope,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot
pleasantly, “you make the most of it.”
Lady Caroline then stared at Mrs.
Arbuthnot. “Oh yes,” she said.
“I make the most of it. I’ve been
doing that ever since I can remember.”
“Because,” said Mrs. Arbuthnot,
smiling and raising a warning forefinger, “it
won’t last.”
Then Lady Caroline began to be afraid
these two were originals. If so, she would be
bored. Nothing bored her so much as people who
insisted on being original, who came and buttonholed
her and kept her waiting while they were being original.
And the one who admired her— it would
be tiresome if she dogged her about in order to look
at her. What she wanted of this holiday was complete
escape from all she had had before, she wanted the
rest of complete contrast. Being admired, being
dogged, wasn’t contrast, it was repetition; and
as for originals, to find herself shut up with two
on the top of a precipitous hill in a medieval castle
built for the express purpose of preventing easy goings
out and in, would not, she was afraid, be especially
restful. Perhaps she had better be a little
less encouraging. They had seemed such timid
creatures, even the dark one—she couldn’t
remember their names—that day at the club,
that she had felt it quite safe to be very friendly.
Here they had come out of their shells; already; indeed,
at once. There was no sign of timidity about
either of them here. If they had got out of
their shells so immediately, at the very first contact,
unless she checked them they would soon begin to press
upon her, and then good-bye to her dream of thirty
restful, silent days, lying unmolested in the sun,
getting her feathers smooth again, not being spoken
to, not waited on, not grabbed at and monopolized,
but just recovering from the fatigue, the deep and
melancholy fatigue, of the too much.
Besides, there was Mrs. Fisher.
She too must be checked. Lady Caroline had
started two days earlier than had been arranged for
two reasons: first, because she wished to arrive
before the others in order to pick out the room or
rooms she preferred, and second, because she judged
it likely that otherwise she would have to travel with
Mrs. Fisher. She did not want to travel with
Mrs. Fisher. She did not want to arrive with
Mrs. Fisher. She saw no reason whatever why for
a single moment she should have to have anything at
all to do with Mrs. Fisher.
But unfortunately Mrs. Fisher also
was filled with a desire to get to San Salvatore first
and pick out the room or rooms she preferred, and
she and Lady Caroline had after all traveled together.
As early as Calais they began to suspect it; in Paris
they feared it; at Modane they knew it; at Mezzago
they concealed it, driving out to Castagneto in two
separate flys, the nose of the one almost touching
the back of the other the whole way. But when
the road suddenly left off at the church and the steps,
further evasion was impossible; and faced by this
abrupt and difficult finish to their journey there
was nothing for it but to amalgamate.
Because of Mrs. Fisher’s stick
Lady Caroline had to see about everything. Mrs.
Fisher’s intentions, she explained from her fly
when the situation had become plain to her, were active,
but her stick prevented their being carried out.
The two drivers told Lady Caroline boys would have
to carry the luggage up to the castle, and she went
in search of some, while Mrs. Fisher waited in the
fly because of her stick. Mrs. Fisher could
speak Italian, but only, she explained, the Italian
of Dante, which Matthew Arnold used to read with her
when she was a girl, and she thought this might be
above the heads of boys. Therefore Lady Caroline,
who spoke ordinary Italian very well, was obviously
the one to go and do things.
“I am in your hands,”
said Mrs. Fisher, sitting firmly in her fly.
“You must please regard me as merely an old
woman with a stick.”
And presently, down the steps and
cobbles to the piazza, and along the quay, and up
the zigzag path, Lady Caroline found herself as much
obliged to walk slowly with Mrs. Fisher as if she were
her own grandmother.
“It’s my stick,”
Mrs. Fisher complacently remarked at intervals.
And when they rested at those bends
of the zigzag path where seats were, and Lady Caroline,
who would have liked to run on and get to the top
quickly, was forced in common humanity to remain with
Mrs. Fisher because of her stick, Mrs. Fisher told
her how she had been on a zigzag path once with Tennyson.
“Isn’t his cricket wonderful?”
said Lady Caroline absently.
“The Tennyson,” said Mrs.
Fisher, turning her head and observing her a moment
over her spectacles.
“Isn’t he?” said Lady Caroline.
“And it was a path, too,”
Mrs. Fisher went on severely, “curiously like
this. No eucalyptus tree, of course, but otherwise
curiously like this. And at one of the bends
he turned and said to me—I see him now
turning and saying to me—”
Yes, Mrs. Fisher would have to be
checked. And so would these two up at the window.
She had better begin at once. She was sorry
she had got off the wall. All she need have
done was to have waved her hand, and waited till they
came down and out into the garden to her.
So she ignored Mrs. Arbuthnot’s
remark and raised forefinger, and said with marked
coldness—at least, she tried to make it
sound marked— that she supposed they would
be going to breakfast, and that she had had hers;
but it was her fate that however coldly she sent forth
her words they came out sounding quite warm and agreeable.
That was because she had a sympathetic and delightful
voice, due entirely to some special formation of her
throat and the roof of her mouth, and having nothing
whatever to do with what she was feeling. Nobody
in consequence ever believed they were being snubbed.
It was most tiresome. And if she stared icily
it did not look icy at all, because her eyes, lovely
to begin with, had the added loveliness of very long,
soft, dark eyelashes. No icy stare could come
out of eyes like that; it got caught and lost in the
soft eyelashes, and the persons stared at merely thought
they were being regarded with a flattering and exquisite
attentiveness. And if ever she was out of humour
or definitely cross— and who would not
be sometimes in such a world?—–she
only looked so pathetic that people all rushed to
comfort her, if possible by means of kissing.
It was more than tiresome, it was maddening.
Nature was determined that she should look and sound
angelic. She could never be disagreeable or
rude without being completely misunderstood.
“I had my breakfast in my room,”
she said, trying her utmost to sound curt. “Perhaps
I’ll see you later.”
And she nodded, and went back to where
she had been sitting on the wall, with the lilies
being nice and cool round her feet.