§ 1
From that moment when I insulted old Mrs. Verrall I became representative, I
was a man who stood for all the disinherited of the world. I had no hope of
pride or pleasure left in me, I was raging rebellion against God and mankind.
There were no more vague intentions swaying me this way and that; I was
perfectly clear now upon what I meant to do. I would make my protest and die.
I would make my protest and die. I was going to kill Nettie—Nettie who
had smiled and promised and given herself to another, and who stood now for all
the conceivable delightfulnesses, the lost imaginations of the youthful heart,
the unattainable joys in life; and Verrall who stood for all who profited by
the incurable injustice of our social order. I would kill them both. And that
being done I would blow my brains out and see what vengeance followed my blank
refusal to live.
So indeed I was resolved. I raged monstrously. And above me, abolishing the
stars, triumphant over the yellow waning moon that followed it below, the giant
meteor towered up towards the zenith.
“Let me only kill!” I cried. “Let me only kill!”
So I shouted in my frenzy. I was in a fever that defied hunger and fatigue; for
a long time I had prowled over the heath towards Lowchester talking to myself,
and now that night had fully come I was tramping homeward, walking the long
seventeen miles without a thought of rest. And I had eaten nothing since the
morning.
I suppose I must count myself mad, but I can recall my ravings.
There were times when I walked weeping through that brightness that was neither
night nor day. There were times when I reasoned in a topsy-turvy fashion with
what I called the Spirit of All Things. But always I spoke to that white glory
in the sky.
“Why am I here only to suffer ignominies?” I asked. “Why have
you made me with pride that cannot be satisfied, with desires that turn and
rend me? Is it a jest, this world—a joke you play on your guests?
I—even I—have a better humor than that!”
“Why not learn from me a certain decency of mercy? Why not undo? Have I
ever tormented—day by day, some wretched worm—making filth for it
to trail through, filth that disgusts it, starving it, bruising it, mocking it?
Why should you? Your jokes are clumsy. Try—try some milder fun up there;
do you hear? Something that doesn’t hurt so infernally.”
“You say this is your purpose—your purpose with me. You are making
something with me—birth pangs of a soul. Ah! How can I believe you? You
forget I have eyes for other things. Let my own case go, but what of that frog
beneath the cart-wheel, God?—and the bird the cat had torn?”
And after such blasphemies I would fling out a ridiculous little debating
society hand. “Answer me that!”
A week ago it had been moonlight, white and black and hard across the spaces of
the park, but now the light was livid and full of the quality of haze. An
extraordinarily low white mist, not three feet above the ground, drifted
broodingly across the grass, and the trees rose ghostly out of that phantom
sea. Great and shadowy and strange was the world that night, no one seemed
abroad; I and my little cracked voice drifted solitary through the silent
mysteries. Sometimes I argued as I have told, sometimes I tumbled along in
moody vacuity, sometimes my torment was vivid and acute.
Abruptly out of apathy would come a boiling paroxysm of fury, when I thought of
Nettie mocking me and laughing, and of her and Verrall clasped in one
another’s arms.
“I will not have it so!” I screamed. “I will not have it
so!”
And in one of these raving fits I drew my revolver from my pocket and fired
into the quiet night. Three times I fired it.
The bullets tore through the air, the startled trees told one another in
diminishing echoes the thing I had done, and then, with a slow finality, the
vast and patient night healed again to calm. My shots, my curses and
blasphemies, my prayers—for anon I prayed—that Silence took them
all.
It was—how can I express it?—a stifled outcry tranquilized, lost,
amid the serene assumptions, the overwhelming empire of that brightness. The
noise of my shots, the impact upon things, had for the instant been enormous,
then it had passed away. I found myself standing with the revolver held up,
astonished, my emotions penetrated by something I could not understand. Then I
looked up over my shoulder at the great star, and remained staring at it.
“Who are you?” I said at last.
I was like a man in a solitary desert who has suddenly heard a voice. . . .
That, too, passed.
As I came over Clayton Crest I recalled that I missed the multitude that now
night after night walked out to stare at the comet, and the little preacher in
the waste beyond the hoardings, who warned sinners to repent before the
Judgment, was not in his usual place.
It was long past midnight, and every one had gone home. But I did not think of
this at first, and the solitude perplexed me and left a memory behind. The
gas-lamps were all extinguished because of the brightness of the comet, and
that too was unfamiliar. The little newsagent in the still High Street had shut
up and gone to bed, but one belated board had been put out late and forgotten,
and it still bore its placard.
The word upon it—there was but one word upon it in staring
letters—was: “WAR.”
You figure that empty mean street, emptily echoing to my footsteps—no
soul awake and audible but me. Then my halt at the placard. And amidst that
sleeping stillness, smeared hastily upon the board, a little askew and
crumpled, but quite distinct beneath that cool meteoric glare, preposterous and
appalling, the measureless evil of that word—
“WAR!”
§ 2
I awoke in that state of equanimity that so often follows an emotional
drenching.
It was late, and my mother was beside my bed. She had some breakfast for me on
a battered tray.
“Don’t get up yet, dear,” she said. “You’ve been
sleeping. It was three o’clock when you got home last night. You must
have been tired out.”
“Your poor face,” she went on, “was as white as a sheet and
your eyes shining. . . . It frightened me to let you in. And you stumbled on
the stairs.”
My eyes went quietly to my coat pocket, where something still bulged. She
probably had not noticed. “I went to Checkshill,” I said.
“You know—perhaps—?”
“I got a letter last evening, dear,” and as she bent near me to put
the tray upon my knees, she kissed my hair softly. For a moment we both
remained still, resting on that, her cheek just touching my head.
I took the tray from her to end the pause.
“Don’t touch my clothes, mummy,” I said sharply, as she moved
towards them. “I’m still equal to a clothes-brush.”
And then, as she turned away, I astonished her by saying, “You dear
mother, you! A little—I understand. Only—now—dear mother; oh!
let me be! Let me be!”
And, with the docility of a good servant, she went from me. Dear heart of
submission that the world and I had used so ill!
It seemed to me that morning that I could never give way to a gust of passion
again. A sorrowful firmness of the mind possessed me. My purpose seemed now as
inflexible as iron; there was neither love nor hate nor fear left in
me—only I pitied my mother greatly for all that was still to come. I ate
my breakfast slowly, and thought where I could find out about Shaphambury, and
how I might hope to get there. I had not five shillings in the world.
I dressed methodically, choosing the least frayed of my collars, and shaving
much more carefully than was my wont; then I went down to the Public Library to
consult a map.
Shaphambury was on the coast of Essex, a long and complicated journey from
Clayton. I went to the railway-station and made some memoranda from the
time-tables. The porters I asked were not very clear about Shaphambury, but the
booking-office clerk was helpful, and we puzzled out all I wanted to know. Then
I came out into the coaly street again. At the least I ought to have two
pounds.
I went back to the Public Library and into the newspaper room to think over
this problem.
A fact intruded itself upon me. People seemed in an altogether exceptional stir
about the morning journals, there was something unusual in the air of the room,
more people and more talking than usual, and for a moment I was puzzled. Then I
bethought me: “This war with Germany, of course!” A naval battle
was supposed to be in progress in the North Sea. Let them! I returned to the
consideration of my own affairs.
Parload?
Could I go and make it up with him, and then borrow? I weighed the chances of
that. Then I thought of selling or pawning something, but that seemed
difficult. My winter overcoat had not cost a pound when it was new, my watch
was not likely to fetch many shillings. Still, both these things might be
factors. I thought with a certain repugnance of the little store my mother was
probably making for the rent. She was very secretive about that, and it was
locked in an old tea-caddy in her bedroom. I knew it would be almost impossible
to get any of that money from her willingly, and though I told myself that in
this issue of passion and death no detail mattered, I could not get rid of
tormenting scruples whenever I thought of that tea-caddy. Was there no other
course? Perhaps after every other source had been tapped I might supplement
with a few shillings frankly begged from her. “These others,” I
said to myself, thinking without passion for once of the sons of the Secure,
“would find it difficult to run their romances on a pawnshop basis.
However, we must manage it.”
I felt the day was passing on, but I did not get excited about that.
“Slow is swiftest,” Parload used to say, and I meant to get
everything thought out completely, to take a long aim and then to act as a
bullet flies.
I hesitated at a pawnshop on my way home to my midday meal, but I determined
not to pledge my watch until I could bring my overcoat also.
I ate silently, revolving plans.
§ 3
After our midday dinner—it was a potato-pie, mostly potato with some
scraps of cabbage and bacon—I put on my overcoat and got it out of the
house while my mother was in the scullery at the back.
A scullery in the old world was, in the case of such houses as ours, a damp,
unsavory, mainly subterranean region behind the dark living-room kitchen, that
was rendered more than typically dirty in our case by the fact that into it the
coal-cellar, a yawning pit of black uncleanness, opened, and diffused small
crunchable particles about the uneven brick floor. It was the region of
“washing-up,” that greasy, damp function that followed every meal;
its atmosphere had ever a cooling steaminess and the memory of boiled cabbage,
and the sooty black stains where saucepan or kettle had been put down for a
minute, scraps of potato-peel caught by the strainer of the escape-pipe, and
rags of a quite indescribable horribleness of acquisition, called
“dish-clouts,” rise in my memory at the name. The altar of this
place was the “sink,” a tank of stone, revolting to a refined
touch, grease-filmed and unpleasant to see, and above this was a tap for cold
water, so arranged that when the water descended it splashed and wetted whoever
had turned it on. This tap was our water supply. And in such a place you must
fancy a little old woman, rather incompetent and very gentle, a soul of
unselfishness and sacrifice, in dirty clothes, all come from their original
colors to a common dusty dark gray, in worn, ill-fitting boots, with hands
distorted by ill use, and untidy graying hair—my mother. In the winter
her hands would be “chapped,” and she would have a cough. And while
she washes up I go out, to sell my overcoat and watch in order that I may
desert her.
I gave way to queer hesitations in pawning my two negotiable articles. A weakly
indisposition to pawn in Clayton, where the pawnbroker knew me, carried me to
the door of the place in Lynch Street, Swathinglea, where I had bought my
revolver. Then came an idea that I was giving too many facts about myself to
one man, and I came back to Clayton after all. I forget how much money I got,
but I remember that it was rather less than the sum I had made out to be the
single fare to Shaphambury. Still deliberate, I went back to the Public Library
to find out whether it was possible, by walking for ten or twelve miles
anywhere, to shorten the journey. My boots were in a dreadful state, the sole
of the left one also was now peeling off, and I could not help perceiving that
all my plans might be wrecked if at this crisis I went on shoe leather in which
I could only shuffle. So long as I went softly they would serve, but not for
hard walking. I went to the shoemaker in Hacker Street, but he would not
promise any repairs for me under forty-eight hours.
I got back home about five minutes to three, resolved to start by the five
train for Birmingham in any case, but still dissatisfied about my money. I
thought of pawning a book or something of that sort, but I could think of
nothing of obvious value in the house. My mother’s silver—two
gravy-spoons and a salt-cellar—had been pawned for some weeks, since, in
fact, the June quarter day. But my mind was full of hypothetical opportunities.
As I came up the steps to our door, I remarked that Mr. Gabbitas looked at me
suddenly round his dull red curtains with a sort of alarmed resolution in his
eye and vanished, and as I walked along the passage he opened his door upon me
suddenly and intercepted me.
You are figuring me, I hope, as a dark and sullen lout in shabby, cheap,
old-world clothes that are shiny at all the wearing surfaces, and with a
discolored red tie and frayed linen. My left hand keeps in my pocket as though
there is something it prefers to keep a grip upon there. Mr. Gabbitas was
shorter than I, and the first note he struck in the impression he made upon any
one was of something bright and birdlike. I think he wanted to be birdlike, he
possessed the possibility of an avian charm, but, as a matter of fact, there
was nothing of the glowing vitality of the bird in his being. And a bird is
never out of breath and with an open mouth. He was in the clerical dress of
that time, that costume that seems now almost the strangest of all our
old-world clothing, and he presented it in its cheapest form—black of a
poor texture, ill-fitting, strangely cut. Its long skirts accentuated the
tubbiness of his body, the shortness of his legs. The white tie below his
all-round collar, beneath his innocent large-spectacled face, was a little
grubby, and between his not very clean teeth he held a briar pipe. His
complexion was whitish, and although he was only thirty-three or four perhaps,
his sandy hair was already thinning from the top of his head.
To your eye, now, he would seem the strangest figure, in the utter disregard of
all physical beauty or dignity about him. You would find him extraordinarily
odd, but in the old days he met not only with acceptance but respect. He was
alive until within a year or so ago, but his later appearance changed. As I saw
him that afternoon he was a very slovenly, ungainly little human being indeed,
not only was his clothing altogether ugly and queer, but had you stripped the
man stark, you would certainly have seen in the bulging paunch that comes from
flabby muscles and flabbily controlled appetites, and in the rounded shoulders
and flawed and yellowish skin, the same failure of any effort toward clean
beauty. You had an instinctive sense that so he had been from the beginning.
You felt he was not only drifting through life, eating what came in his way,
believing what came in his way, doing without any vigor what came in his way,
but that into life also he had drifted. You could not believe him the
child of pride and high resolve, or of any splendid passion of love. He had
just happened. . . But we all happened then. Why am I taking this tone
over this poor little curate in particular?
“Hello!” he said, with an assumption of friendly ease.
“Haven’t seen you for weeks! Come in and have a gossip.”
An invitation from the drawing-room lodger was in the nature of a command. I
would have liked very greatly to have refused it, never was invitation more
inopportune, but I had not the wit to think of an excuse. “All
right,” I said awkwardly, and he held the door open for me.
“I’d be very glad if you would,” he amplified. “One
doesn’t get much opportunity of intelligent talk in this parish.”
What the devil was he up to, was my secret preoccupation. He fussed about me
with a nervous hospitality, talking in jumpy fragments, rubbing his hands
together, and taking peeps at me over and round his glasses. As I sat down in
his leather-covered armchair, I had an odd memory of the one in the Clayton
dentist’s operating-room—I know not why.
“They’re going to give us trouble in the North Sea, it
seems,” he remarked with a sort of innocent zest. “I’m glad
they mean fighting.”
There was an air of culture about his room that always cowed me, and that made
me constrained even on this occasion. The table under the window was littered
with photographic material and the later albums of his continental souvenirs,
and on the American cloth trimmed shelves that filled the recesses on either
side of the fireplace were what I used to think in those days a quite
incredible number of books—perhaps eight hundred altogether, including
the reverend gentleman’s photograph albums and college and school
text-books. This suggestion of learning was enforced by the little wooden
shield bearing a college coat-of-arms that hung over the looking-glass, and by
a photograph of Mr. Gabbitas in cap and gown in an Oxford frame that adorned
the opposite wall. And in the middle of that wall stood his writing-desk, which
I knew to have pigeon-holes when it was open, and which made him seem not
merely cultured but literary. At that he wrote sermons, composing them himself!
“Yes,” he said, taking possession of the hearthrug, “the war
had to come sooner or later. If we smash their fleet for them now; well,
there’s an end to the matter!”
He stood on his toes and then bumped down on his heels, and looked blandly
through his spectacles at a water-color by his sister—the subject was a
bunch of violets—above the sideboard which was his pantry and tea-chest
and cellar. “Yes,” he said as he did so.
I coughed, and wondered how I might presently get away.
He invited me to smoke—that queer old practice!—and then when I
declined, began talking in a confidential tone of this “dreadful
business” of the strikes. “The war won’t improve that
outlook,” he said, and was very grave for a moment.
He spoke of the want of thought for their wives and children shown by the
colliers in striking merely for the sake of the union, and this stirred me to
controversy, and distracted me a little from my resolution to escape.
“I don’t quite agree with that,” I said, clearing my throat.
“If the men didn’t strike for the union now, if they let that be
broken up, where would they be when the pinch of reductions did come?”
To which he replied that they couldn’t expect to get top-price wages when
the masters were selling bottom-price coal. I replied, “That isn’t
it. The masters don’t treat them fairly. They have to protect
themselves.”
To which Mr. Gabbitas answered, “Well, I don’t know. I’ve
been in the Four Towns some time, and I must say I don’t think the
balance of injustice falls on the masters’ side.”
“It falls on the men,” I agreed, wilfully misunderstanding him.
And so we worked our way toward an argument. “Confound this
argument!” I thought; but I had no skill in self-extraction, and my
irritation crept into my voice. Three little spots of color came into the
cheeks and nose of Mr. Gabbitas, but his voice showed nothing of his ruffled
temper.
“You see,” I said, “I’m a socialist. I don’t
think this world was made for a small minority to dance on the faces of every
one else.”
“My dear fellow,” said the Rev. Gabbitas, “I’m a
socialist too. Who isn’t. But that doesn’t lead me to class
hatred.”
“You haven’t felt the heel of this confounded system. I
have.”
“Ah!” said he; and catching him on that note came a rap at the
front door, and, as he hung suspended, the sound of my mother letting some one
in and a timid rap.
“Now,” thought I, and stood up, resolutely, but he would not
let me. “No, no, no!” said he. “It’s only for the
Dorcas money.”
He put his hand against my chest with an effect of physical compulsion, and
cried, “Come in!”
“Our talk’s just getting interesting,” he protested; and
there entered Miss Ramell, an elderly little young lady who was mighty in
Church help in Clayton.
He greeted her—she took no notice of me—and went to his bureau, and
I remained standing by my chair but unable to get out of the room.
“I’m not interrupting?” asked Miss Ramell.
“Not in the least,” he said; drew out the carriers and opened his
desk. I could not help seeing what he did.
I was so fretted by my impotence to leave him that at the moment it did not
connect at all with the research of the morning that he was taking out money. I
listened sullenly to his talk with Miss Ramell, and saw only, as they say in
Wales, with the front of my eyes, the small flat drawer that had, it seemed,
quite a number of sovereigns scattered over its floor. “They’re so
unreasonable,” complained Miss Ramell. Who could be otherwise in a social
organization that bordered on insanity?
I turned away from them, put my foot on the fender, stuck my elbow on the
plush-fringed mantelboard, and studied the photographs, pipes, and ash-trays
that adorned it. What was it I had to think out before I went to the station?
Of course! My mind made a queer little reluctant leap—it felt like being
forced to leap over a bottomless chasm—and alighted upon the sovereigns
that were just disappearing again as Mr. Gabbitas shut his drawer.
“I won’t interrupt your talk further,” said Miss Ramell,
receding doorward.
Mr. Gabbitas played round her politely, and opened the door for her and
conducted her into the passage, and for a moment or so I had the fullest sense
of proximity to those—it seemed to me there must be ten or
twelve—sovereigns. . . .
The front door closed and he returned. My chance of escape had gone.
§ 4
“I must be going,” I said, with a curiously reinforced
desire to get away out of that room.
“My dear chap!” he insisted, “I can’t think of it.
Surely—there’s nothing to call you away.” Then with an
evident desire to shift the venue of our talk, he asked, “You never told
me what you thought of Burble’s little book.”
I was now, beneath my dull display of submission, furiously angry with him. It
occurred to me to ask myself why I should defer and qualify my opinions to him.
Why should I pretend a feeling of intellectual and social inferiority toward
him. He asked what I thought of Burble. I resolved to tell him—if
necessary with arrogance. Then perhaps he would release me. I did not sit down
again, but stood by the corner of the fireplace.
“That was the little book you lent me last summer?” I said.
“He reasons closely, eh?” he said, and indicated the armchair with
a flat hand, and beamed persuasively.
I remained standing. “I didn’t think much of his reasoning
powers,” I said.
“He was one of the cleverest bishops London ever had.”
“That may be. But he was dodging about in a jolly feeble case,”
said I.
“You mean?”
“That he’s wrong. I don’t think he proves his case. I
don’t think Christianity is true. He knows himself for the pretender he
is. His reasoning’s—Rot.”
Mr. Gabbitas went, I think, a shade paler than his wont, and propitiation
vanished from his manner. His eyes and mouth were round, his face seemed to get
round, his eyebrows curved at my remarks.
“I’m sorry you think that,” he said at last, with a catch in
his breath.
He did not repeat his suggestion that I should sit. He made a step or two
toward the window and turned. “I suppose you will admit—” he
began, with a faintly irritating note of intellectual condescension. . . . .
I will not tell you of his arguments or mine. You will find if you care to look
for them, in out-of-the-way corners of our book museums, the shriveled cheap
publications—the publications of the Rationalist Press Association, for
example—on which my arguments were based. Lying in that curious limbo
with them, mixed up with them and indistinguishable, are the endless
“Replies” of orthodoxy, like the mixed dead in some hard-fought
trench. All those disputes of our fathers, and they were sometimes furious
disputes, have gone now beyond the range of comprehension. You younger people,
I know, read them with impatient perplexity. You cannot understand how sane
creatures could imagine they had joined issue at all in most of these
controversies. All the old methods of systematic thinking, the queer
absurdities of the Aristotelian logic, have followed magic numbers and mystical
numbers, and the Rumpelstiltskin magic of names now into the blackness of the
unthinkable. You can no more understand our theological passions than you can
understand the fancies that made all ancient peoples speak of their gods only
by circumlocutions, that made savages pine away and die because they had been
photographed, or an Elizabethan farmer turn back from a day’s expedition
because he had met three crows. Even I, who have been through it all, recall
our controversies now with something near incredulity.
Faith we can understand to-day, all men live by faith, but in the old time
every one confused quite hopelessly Faith and a forced, incredible Belief in
certain pseudo-concrete statements. I am inclined to say that neither believers
nor unbelievers had faith as we understand it—they had insufficient
intellectual power. They could not trust unless they had something to see and
touch and say, like their barbarous ancestors who could not make a bargain
without exchange of tokens. If they no longer worshipped stocks and stones, or
eked out their needs with pilgrimages and images, they still held fiercely to
audible images, to printed words and formulae.
But why revive the echoes of the ancient logomachies?
Suffice it that we lost our tempers very readily in pursuit of God and Truth,
and said exquisitely foolish things on either side. And on the whole—from
the impartial perspective of my three and seventy years—I adjudicate that
if my dialectic was bad, that of the Rev. Gabbitas was altogether worse.
Little pink spots came into his cheeks, a squealing note into his voice. We
interrupted each other more and more rudely. We invented facts and appealed to
authorities whose names I mispronounced; and, finding Gabbitas shy of the
higher criticism and the Germans, I used the names of Karl Marx and Engels as
Bible exegetes with no little effect. A silly wrangle! a preposterous
wrangle!—you must imagine our talk becoming louder, with a developing
quarrelsome note—my mother no doubt hovering on the staircase and
listening in alarm as who should say, “My dear, don’t offend it!
Oh, don’t offend it! Mr. Gabbitas enjoys its friendship. Try to think
whatever Mr. Gabbitas says”—though we still kept in touch with a
pretence of mutual deference. The ethical superiority of Christianity to all
other religions came to the fore—I know not how. We dealt with the matter
in bold, imaginative generalizations, because of the insufficiency of our
historical knowledge. I was moved to denounce Christianity as the ethic of
slaves, and declare myself a disciple of a German writer of no little vogue in
those days, named Nietzsche.
For a disciple I must confess I was particularly ill acquainted with the works
of the master. Indeed, all I knew of him had come to me through a two-column
article in The Clarion for the previous week. . . . But the Rev.
Gabbitas did not read The Clarion.
I am, I know, putting a strain upon your credulity when I tell you that I now
have little doubt that the Rev. Gabbitas was absolutely ignorant even of the
name of Nietzsche, although that writer presented a separate and distinct
attitude of attack upon the faith that was in the reverend gentleman’s
keeping.
“I’m a disciple of Nietzsche,” said I, with an air of
extensive explanation.
He shied away so awkwardly at the name that I repeated it at once.
“But do you know what Nietzsche says?” I pressed him viciously.
“He has certainly been adequately answered,” said he, still trying
to carry it off.
“Who by?” I rapped out hotly. “Tell me that!” and
became mercilessly expectant.
§ 5
A happy accident relieved Mr. Gabbitas from the embarrassment of that
challenge, and carried me another step along my course of personal disaster.
It came on the heels of my question in the form of a clatter of horses without,
and the gride and cessation of wheels. I glimpsed a straw-hatted coachman and a
pair of grays. It seemed an incredibly magnificent carriage for Clayton.
“Eh!” said the Rev. Gabbitas, going to the window. “Why,
it’s old Mrs. Verrall! It’s old Mrs. Verrall. Really! What
can she want with me?”
He turned to me, and the flush of controversy had passed and his face shone
like the sun. It was not every day, I perceived, that Mrs. Verrall came to see
him.
“I get so many interruptions,” he said, almost grinning. “You
must excuse me a minute! Then—then I’ll tell you about that fellow.
But don’t go. I pray you don’t go. I can assure you. . . .
most interesting.”
He went out of the room waving vague prohibitory gestures.
“I must go,” I cried after him.
“No, no, no!” in the passage. “I’ve got your
answer,” I think it was he added, and “quite mistaken;” and I
saw him running down the steps to talk to the old lady.
I swore. I made three steps to the window, and this brought me within a yard of
that accursed drawer.
I glanced at it, and then at that old woman who was so absolutely powerful, and
instantly her son and Nettie’s face were flaming in my brain. The Stuarts
had, no doubt, already accepted accomplished facts. And I too—
What was I doing here?
What was I doing here while judgment escaped me?
I woke up. I was injected with energy. I took one reassuring look at the
curate’s obsequious back, at the old lady’s projected nose and
quivering hand, and then with swift, clean movements I had the little drawer
open, four sovereigns in my pocket, and the drawer shut again. Then again at
the window—they were still talking.
That was all right. He might not look in that drawer for hours. I glanced at
his clock. Twenty minutes still before the Birmingham train. Time to buy a pair
of boots and get away. But how I was to get to the station?
I went out boldly into the passage, and took my hat and stick. . . . Walk past
him?
Yes. That was all right! He could not argue with me while so important a person
engaged him. . . . I came boldly down the steps.
“I want a list made, Mr. Gabbitas, of all the really deserving
cases,” old Mrs. Verrall was saying.
It is curious, but it did not occur to me that here was a mother whose son I
was going to kill. I did not see her in that aspect at all. Instead, I was
possessed by a realization of the blazing imbecility of a social system that
gave this palsied old woman the power to give or withhold the urgent
necessities of life from hundreds of her fellow-creatures just according to her
poor, foolish old fancies of desert.
“We could make a provisional list of that sort,” he was
saying, and glanced round with a preoccupied expression at me.
“I must go,” I said at his flash of inquiry, and added,
“I’ll be back in twenty minutes,” and went on my way. He
turned again to his patroness as though he forgot me on the instant. Perhaps
after all he was not sorry.
I felt extraordinarily cool and capable, exhilarated, if anything, by this
prompt, effectual theft. After all, my great determination would achieve
itself. I was no longer oppressed by a sense of obstacles, I felt I could grasp
accidents and turn them to my advantage. I would go now down Hacker Street to
the little shoemaker’s—get a sound, good pair of boots—ten
minutes—and then to the railway-station—five minutes more—and
off! I felt as efficient and non-moral as if I was Nietzsche’s Over-man
already come. It did not occur to me that the curate’s clock might have a
considerable margin of error.
§ 6
I missed the train.
Partly that was because the curate’s clock was slow, and partly it was
due to the commercial obstinacy of the shoemaker, who would try on another pair
after I had declared my time was up. I bought the final pair however, gave him
a wrong address for the return of the old ones, and only ceased to feel like
the Nietzschean Over-man, when I saw the train running out of the station.
Even then I did not lose my head. It occurred to me almost at once that, in the
event of a prompt pursuit, there would be a great advantage in not taking a
train from Clayton; that, indeed, to have done so would have been an error from
which only luck had saved me. As it was, I had already been very indiscreet in
my inquiries about Shaphambury; for once on the scent the clerk could not fail
to remember me. Now the chances were against his coming into the case. I did
not go into the station therefore at all, I made no demonstration of having
missed the train, but walked quietly past, down the road, crossed the iron
footbridge, and took the way back circuitously by White’s brickfields and
the allotments to the way over Clayton Crest to Two-Mile Stone, where I
calculated I should have an ample margin for the 6.13 train.
I was not very greatly excited or alarmed then. Suppose, I reasoned, that by
some accident the curate goes to that drawer at once: will he be certain to
miss four out of ten or eleven sovereigns? If he does, will he at once think I
have taken them? If he does, will he act at once or wait for my return? If he
acts at once, will he talk to my mother or call in the police? Then there are a
dozen roads and even railways out of the Clayton region, how is he to know
which I have taken? Suppose he goes straight at once to the right station, they
will not remember my departure for the simple reason that I didn’t
depart. But they may remember about Shaphambury? It was unlikely.
I resolved not to go directly to Shaphambury from Birmingham, but to go thence
to Monkshampton, thence to Wyvern, and then come down on Shaphambury from the
north. That might involve a night at some intermediate stopping-place but it
would effectually conceal me from any but the most persistent pursuit. And this
was not a case of murder yet, but only the theft of four sovereigns.
I had argued away all anxiety before I reached Clayton Crest.
At the Crest I looked back. What a world it was! And suddenly it came to me
that I was looking at this world for the last time. If I overtook the fugitives
and succeeded, I should die with them—or hang. I stopped and looked back
more attentively at that wide ugly valley.
It was my native valley, and I was going out of it, I thought never to return,
and yet in that last prospect, the group of towns that had borne me and dwarfed
and crippled and made me, seemed, in some indefinable manner, strange. I was,
perhaps, more used to seeing it from this comprehensive view-point when it was
veiled and softened by night; now it came out in all its weekday reek, under a
clear afternoon sun. That may account a little for its unfamiliarity. And
perhaps, too, there was something in the emotions through which I had been
passing for a week and more, to intensify my insight, to enable me to pierce
the unusual, to question the accepted. But it came to me then, I am sure, for
the first time, how promiscuous, how higgledy-piggledy was the whole of that
jumble of mines and homes, collieries and potbanks, railway yards, canals,
schools, forges and blast furnaces, churches, chapels, allotment hovels, a vast
irregular agglomeration of ugly smoking accidents in which men lived as happy
as frogs in a dustbin. Each thing jostled and damaged the other things about
it, each thing ignored the other things about it; the smoke of the furnace
defiled the potbank clay, the clatter of the railway deafened the worshipers in
church, the public-house thrust corruption at the school doors, the dismal
homes squeezed miserably amidst the monstrosities of industrialism, with an
effect of groping imbecility. Humanity choked amidst its products, and all its
energy went in increasing its disorder, like a blind stricken thing that
struggles and sinks in a morass.
I did not think these things clearly that afternoon. Much less did I ask how I,
with my murderous purpose, stood to them all. I write down that realization of
disorder and suffocation here and now as though I had thought it, but indeed
then I only felt it, felt it transitorily as I looked back, and then stood with
the thing escaping from my mind.
I should never see that country-side again.
I came back to that. At any rate I wasn’t sorry. The chances were I
should die in sweet air, under a clean sky.
From distant Swathinglea came a little sound, the minute undulation of a remote
crowd, and then rapidly three shots.
That held me perplexed for a space. . . . Well, anyhow I was leaving it all!
Thank God I was leaving it all! Then, as I turned to go on, I thought of my
mother.
It seemed an evil world in which to leave one’s mother. My thoughts
focused upon her very vividly for a moment. Down there, under that afternoon
light, she was going to and fro, unaware as yet that she had lost me, bent and
poking about in the darkling underground kitchen, perhaps carrying a lamp into
the scullery to trim, or sitting patiently, staring into the fire, waiting tea
for me. A great pity for her, a great remorse at the blacker troubles that
lowered over her innocent head, came to me. Why, after all, was I doing this
thing?
Why?
I stopped again dead, with the hill crest rising between me and home. I had
more than half a mind to return to her.
Then I thought of the curate’s sovereigns. If he has missed them already,
what should I return to? And, even if I returned, how could I put them back?
And what of the night after I renounced my revenge? What of the time when young
Verrall came back? And Nettie?
No! The thing had to be done.
But at least I might have kissed my mother before I came away, left her some
message, reassured her at least for a little while. All night she would listen
and wait for me. . . . .
Should I send her a telegram from Two-Mile Stone?
It was no good now; too late, too late. To do that would be to tell the course
I had taken, to bring pursuit upon me, swift and sure, if pursuit there was to
be. No. My mother must suffer!
I went on grimly toward Two-Mile Stone, but now as if some greater will than
mine directed my footsteps thither.
I reached Birmingham before darkness came, and just caught the last train for
Monkshampton, where I had planned to pass the night.
