But when a man has once broken through
the paper walls of everyday circumstance, those unsubstantial
walls that hold so many of us securely prisoned from
the cradle to the grave, he has made a discovery.
If the world does not please you you can change
it. Determine to alter it at any price, and
you can change it altogether. You may change
it to something sinister and angry, to something appalling,
but it may be you will change it to something brighter,
something more agreeable, and at the worst something
much more interesting. There is only one sort
of man who is absolutely to blame for his own misery,
and that is the man who finds life dull and dreary.
There are no circumstances in the world that determined
action cannot alter, unless perhaps they are the walls
of a prison cell, and even those will dissolve and
change, I am told, into the infirmary compartment
at any rate, for the man who can fast with resolution.
I give these things as facts and information, and
with no moral intimations. And Mr. Polly lying
awake at nights, with a renewed indigestion, with
Miriam sleeping sonorously beside him and a general
air of inevitableness about his situation, saw through
it, understood there was no inevitable any more, and
escaped his former despair.
He could, for example, “clear out.”
It became a wonderful and alluring phrase to him:
“clear out!”
Why had he never thought of clearing out before?
He was amazed and a little shocked
at the unimaginative and superfluous criminality in
him that had turned old cramped and stagnant Fishbourne
into a blaze and new beginnings. (I wish from the
bottom of my heart I could add that he was properly
sorry.) But something constricting and restrained
seemed to have been destroyed by that flare. Fishbourne
wasn’t the world. That was the new,
the essential fact of which he had lived so lamentably
in ignorance. Fishbourne as he had known it and
hated it, so that he wanted to kill himself to get
out of it, wasn’t the world.
The insurance money he was to receive
made everything humane and kindly and practicable.
He would “clear out,” with justice and
humanity. He would take exactly twenty-one pounds,
and all the rest he would leave to Miriam. That
seemed to him absolutely fair. Without him, she
could do all sorts of things—all the sorts
of things she was constantly urging him to do.
And he would go off along the white
road that led to Garchester, and on to Crogate and
so to Tunbridge Wells, where there was a Toad Rock
he had heard of, but never seen. (It seemed to him
this must needs be a marvel.) And so to other towns
and cities. He would walk and loiter by the way,
and sleep in inns at night, and get an odd job here
and there and talk to strange people. Perhaps
he would get quite a lot of work and prosper, and
if he did not do so he would lie down in front of
a train, or wait for a warm night, and then fall into
some smooth, broad river. Not so bad as sitting
down to a dentist, not nearly so bad. And he
would never open a shop any more. Never!
So the possibilities of the future
presented themselves to Mr. Polly as he lay awake
at nights.
It was springtime, and in the woods
so soon as one got out of reach of the sea wind, there
would be anémones and primroses.