I
Did she want to?
She had gone through many and extraordinary
phases during these years of close personal contact
with the martial history of Europe, as precisely different
from the first twenty-six years of her life as peace
from war.
During those months of nineteen-fifteen
when she had worked in hospitals close to the front
as auxiliary nurse, all the high courage of her nature
which she had inherited from a long line of men who
had fought in the Civil War, the Revolution, and in
the colonial wars before that, and the tribal wars
that came after, and all that she had inherited from
those foremothers whose courage, as severely tested,
had never failed either their men or their country;
in short, the inheritance of the best American tradition;
had risen automatically to sustain her during that
period of incessant danger and horror. She had
been firm and smiling for the consolation of wounded
men when under direct shell fire. She had felt
so profound a pity for the mutilated patient men that
it had seemed to cleanse her of every selfish impulse
fostered by a too sheltered life. She had bathed
so many helpless bodies that she lost all sense of
sex and felt herself a part of the eternal motherhood
of the world. She had once thrown herself over
the bed of a politely protesting poilu, covering his
helpless body with her own, as a shell from a taube
came through the roof.
That had been a wonderful, a noble
and exalted (not to say exhilarating) period; a period
that made her almost grateful for a war that revealed
to her such undreamed of possibilities in her soul.
She might smile at it in satiric wonder in the retrospect,
but at least it was ineradicable in her memory.
If it could but have lasted!
But it had not. Insensibly she accepted suffering,
sacrifice, pity, as a matter of course, even as danger
and death. It had been the romance of war she
had experienced in spite of its horrors, and no romance
lives after novelty has fled. For months nothing
seemed to affect her bodily resistance to fatigue,
and as exaltation dropped, as the monotony of nursing,
even of danger, left her mind more and more free,
as war grew more and more to seem, the normal condition
of life, more and more she became conscious of herself.
II
Life at the front is very primitive.
Social relations as the world knows them cease to
exist. The habits of the past are almost forgotten.
It is death and blood; shells shrieking, screaming,
whining, jangling; the boom of great guns as if Nature
herself were in a constant electrical orgasm; hideous
stench; torn bodies, groans, cries, still more terrible
silences of brave men in torment; incessant unintermittent
danger. Above all, blood, blood, blood.
She believed she should smell it as long as she lived.
She knew it in every stage from the fresh dripping
blood of men rushed from the field to the evacuation
hospitals, to the black caked and stinking blood of
men rescued from No Man’s Land endless days and
nights after they had fallen.
All that was elementary in her strong
nature, inherited from strong, full-blooded, often
reckless and ruthless men, gradually welled to the
surface. She was possessed by a savage desire
for life, a bitter inordinate passion for life.
Why not, when life might be extinguished at any moment?
What was there in life but life? Farcical that
anything else could ever have mattered.
Civilization—by which men
meant the varied and pleasant times of peace—seemed
incredibly insipid and out of date. It had no
more relation to this war-zone than her youth to this
swift and terrible maturity.
She was in many hospitals—rushed
where an indomitable and tireless auxiliary nurse
was most in demand—some under the direction
of the noblesse division of the Red Cross, others
under the bourgeois; and in more than one were English
and American girls, long resident in France, or, in
the latter case, come from America like herself to
serve the country for which they had a romantic passion.
The majority, of course, were Frenchwomen, young (in
their first freedom), middle-aged, elderly.
Of these some were placid, emotionless,
extinguished, consistently noble, selfless, profoundly
and simply religious, as correct in every thought and
deed as the best bourgeois peace society of any land.
But others! Alexina had been
horrified at first at the wanderings off after nightfall
of women who had nursed like scientific angels by day,
accompanied by men who were never more men than when
any moment might turn them into carrion. But
with her mental suppleness she had quickly readjusted
her point of view. There is nothing as sensual
as war. It is the quintessential carnality.
Renan once wrote a story of the French Revolution,
“The Abbess Juarre,” in which his thesis
was that if warning were given that the world would
end in three days the entire population of the globe
would give itself over to an orgy of sex; sex being
life itself. It is the obsession of the doomed
consumptive, the doomed spinster, the last thought
of a man with the rope round his neck.
How much more under the terrific stimulation
of war, the constant heedless annihilation of life
in its flower and its maturity? Man’s inveterate
enemy, death, shrieking its derision in the very shells
of man’s one inviolable right, the right to
drift into eternity through the peaceful corridors
of old age. War is a monstrous anachronism and
a monstrous miscarriage of justice. The ignorant
feel it less. It is the enlightened, the intelligent,
accustomed to the higher delights of civilization,
to the perfecting of such endowments, however modest,
as their ancestors have transmitted and peace has
encouraged, with ambitions and hopes and dreams, that
resent however sub-consciously the constant snarling
of death at their heels. All the forces of mind
and body and spirit become formidable in a reckless
hatred of the gross injustice of a fate that individually
not one of them has deserved.
But the moment remains. They
compress into it the desires of a lifetime. After
years of proud individualism they have learned that
they are atoms, cogs, helpless, the sport of iron
and steel and powder and the ambitions and stupidities
of men whose lives are never risked. Very well,
turn the ego loose to find what it can. If all
they have learned from civilization is as useless
in this shrieking hell, as impotent as the dumb resentment
of the clod, they can at least be animals.
To talk of the ennobling influences
of war is one of the lies of the conventionalized
mind anxious to avoid the truths of life and to extract
good from all evil—worthy but unintelligent.
How can men in the trenches, foul with dirt and vermin,
stench forever in their nostrils, callous to death
and suffering, wallowing like pigs in a trough, compulsorily
obscene, be ennobled? Courage is the commonest
attribute of man, a universal gift of Nature that
he may exist in a world bristling with dangers to frail
human life; never to be commended, only to be remarked
when absent. If men lose it in the city, the
sedentary life, they recover it quickly in the camp.
The exceptions, the congenital cowards, slink out of
war on any pretext, but if drafted are likely to acquit
themselves decently unless neurotic. The cases
of cowardice in active warfare are extremely rare;
a mechanical chattering of teeth, or shaking of limbs,
but practically never a refusal to obey the command
to advance. But it is this very courage which
breeds callousness, and, combined with bestial conditions,
inevitably brutalizes.
When good people (far, oh far, from
the zones of danger) can no longer in the face of
accumulating evidence, cling to their sentimental theory
that war ennobles, they take refuge in the vague but
plausible substitute that at least it makes the good
better and the bad worse. Possibly, but it is
to be remembered that there is bad in the best even
where there is no good in the worst.
Indubitably it leaves its indelible
mark in a collection of hideous memories, on the just
and the unjust, alike; as it is more difficult (Nature
having made human nature in an ironical mood) to recall
the pleasant moments of life than the poignantly unpleasant,
so is it far more difficult to recall the moments
of exaltation, of that intense spiritual desire which
visits the high and low alike, to give their all for
the safety of their country and the honor of their
flag. Moreover, the sublime indifference in the
face of certain death often has its origin in a still
deeper necessity to relieve the insufferable strain
on scarified nerves, and forever. As for the
much vaunted recrudescence of the religious spirit
which is one of the recurring phenomena of war, it
is merely an instinct of the subtle mind, in its subtlest
depths called soul, to indulge in the cowardice of
dependence since the body must know no fear.
If men who have been temperate and
moral all their lives, or at the worst indulging in
moderation, spend their leaves of absence from the
front like swine, it is not a reaction from the monotony
of trench life, or from the nerve-racking din of war,
but merely an extension of the fearful stimulation
of a purely carnal existence, even where the directing
mind is ever on the alert.
The aggressors of war should be pilloried
in life and in history. Men must defend their
country if attacked; to do less would be to sink lower
than the beasts that defend their lairs; and for that
reason all pacifists, and conscientious objectors,
are abject, mean, and shabby. In times of national
danger no man has a right to indulge his own conscience;
it merges, if he be a normal courageous man, into
the national conscience. But that very fact lowers
the deliberate seekers of war so far below the high
plane of civilization as we know it, that they should
be blotted out of existence.
III
As regards women Alexina was not likely
to remain shocked for long at any erratic manifestations
of temperament. Pride and fastidiousness and the
steel armor fused by circumstances had protected her
heretofore from any divagations of her own; nor had
crystallized temptation ever approached her.
But her education had been liberal.
Several of her intimate friends and more that she
associated with daily made what she euphemistically
termed a cult of men. The naïve deliberate immorality
of young things not only in the best society but in
all walks of life is far more prevalent than the good
people of this world will ever believe. Those
with much to lose seldom lose it; the instinct of
self-protection envelops them as a mantle; although
in small towns, where concealments are less simple,
the majority of scandals are not about married women
as in a less sophisticated era, but about girls.
Alexina had possessed numerous confidences,
helped more than once to throw dust, amiably replaced
the post. She had never approved, but she was
philosophical. She took life as she found it;
although the fact stood out that Aileen, who was indifferent
to men, remained always her favorite friend.
An individualist, she felt it no part
of her philosophy to criticize the acts of women with
different desires, weaknesses, temptations, equipment
from her own; all other things being equal. That
was the point. These girls who made use of their
most secret and personal possession as they saw fit
were as well-bred as herself, honorable in all their
dealings with one another and with society at large,
generous, tolerant, exquisite in their habits, often
highly intelligent and studious. Sex was an incident.
With the peccadillos of married women
who were wives she had little tolerance as they were
a breach of faith, a deliberate violation of contract,
and indecent to boot. She was quite aware that
Sibyl for all her posturings, and avidness for sex
admiration, and “acting oriental” as the
phrase went, was entirely devoted to Frank. Such
of her married friends as had severed all but the
nominal and public bond with their legal husbands,
she placed in the same category as girls as far as
her personal attitude toward them went.
IV
Therefore not only did she understand
these young women driven by the horrid stimulus of
war; women (or girls) heretofore sheltered, virtuous,
romantic, sentimental, now merely filled with the lust
of life. They were, like herself, devoted and
meticulous nurses, brave, high-minded, tender; practically
all, if not from the upper, at least from the educated
ranks of life. But they lived under the daily
shadow of death. Even when safe from the shells
of the big guns, the murderous aircraft paid them daily
visits, singling out hospitals with diabolical precision.
They were in daily contact with young torn human bodies
from which had gone forever the purpose for which
one generation precedes another. Life was horror.
Blood and death and shattered bodies were their daily
portion. No matter how brave, they heard death
scream in every shell. The world beyond existed
as a mirage. No wonder they became primeval.
Alexina had met Alice Thorndyke in
one of these hospitals and observed her with some
curiosity. But Alice was, to use her own vernacular,
the best little bourgeoise of them all. She had
had her fling. Men repelled her. She never
meant to marry, even for substance. When the war
was over she should live the completely independent
life. Nobody would care what economic liberties
a woman took in the new era. The war had liberalized
the most conservative old bunch of relatives a girl
was ever inflicted with.
V
As Alexina sat huddled in her warm
coat—the periwinkle blue to which she was
still faithful—her dark fine hair, hanging
about her, a mantle in itself, she recalled those
days when she, too, had vibrated to that savage lust
for life; those days of concentrated egoism, of deep
and powerful passions whose existence she had only
dimly begun to suspect after she dismissed her husband.
What had held her back? She had
had a no more fastidious inheritance than most of
those women, a no more cultivated intelligence, nor
proud instinct of selection, nor ingrained habit of
self-control.
She had put it down at first to fastidiousness,
possibly a still lurking desire to be able to give
all to one man; that hope of the complete mating which
no woman relinquishes until toothless, certainly not
in the mere zone of death.
She had concluded that it was neither
of these, or at least that they had but played a part,
and alone would never have won. It was a furious
mental revolt at the terrific power of the body, the
mind, frightened and cornered, determined to dominate;
a fierce delight in the battle raging behind her serene
and smiling mask to the accompaniment of that vulgar
blare of war where mind over matter was as powerless
in the death throe as incantations during an eruption
of Vesuvius.
This internal silent warfare between
her long reed-like body as little sensible to fatigue
as if made of flexible steel and her extremely cold
proud chaste-looking head had grown to be of such absorbing
interest that the knowledge of its cessation was almost
a shock. It was after a prolonged experience
in a hospital where they were short of nurses and rest
was almost unknown and the inroads upon her vitality
so severe and menacing that she was finally ordered
to Paris to rest, and there found a complete change
of habit in an oeuvre founded by the equally exhausted
but always valiant Olive de Morsigny, that she suddenly
realized that somewhere sometime the battle had finished
and mind and body were acting in complete harmony.
VI
To-night she wondered if her imagination,
turned loose, stimulated, had not missed the whole
point. There had been no man who had made the
direct irresistible appeal. No concrete temptation….She
had after all been a degree too civilized…or…romantic
idealism?
There had been little to stimulate
and excite since she had settled down to office work
in the summer of nineteen-sixteen. Her nerves,
always strong, had become too case-hardened to be
affected by avions or the immense uncertainties of
Big Bertha; although the light on the horizon at night
during the last German Drive and the bellow of the
guns had shaken her with a sort of reminiscent excitement.
But for the most part she had felt
frozen, torpid, a cog in the vast military machine
of France, dedicating herself like hundreds of other
women to the succor of men she never saw. That
extraordinary abominable experience at the front was
overlaid, almost forgotten. And such news as
one had in Paris was quite enough to exercise the mind….There
had been the downfall of the Russian dynasty…the
still more sinister downfall of the true revolutionists…the
Bolshevik monster projecting its murderous shadow
over all Europe, exposing the instability of the entire
social structure….
VII
Was it? Could such an experience
ever be forgotten? The grass might grow over
the dead on the battlefields, but the corruption fed
the wheat, and the peogle of France ate the bread.
This uninvited thought had intruded itself the first
time she had driven by the Marne battlefields and seen
the numberless crosses in the rich abundant fields.
She smiled, a small, secret, ruthless
smile….That was her residue: ruthlessness.
She may have left behind her in the turbulent war-zone
the savage elementary lust for living at any cost,
but she had ineradicably learned the value of life,
its brevity at best, the still more tragic brevity
of youth; she had a store of hideous memories which
could only be submerged first in the performance of
duty if duty were imperative; then, duty discharged
and finished, in the one thing that during its brief
time gave life any meaning, made this earthly sojourn
bearable. If she met the man she wanted she would
have him if she had to fight for him tooth and nail.
It was four o ’clock. She went to bed.