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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75675 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ FOLLOWING
+ DARKNESS
+
+ BY
+ FORREST REID
+
+ AUTHOR OF “THE BRACKNELS,” ETC.
+
+
+ “Lost, lost, for ever lost,
+ In the wide pathless desert of dim sleep,
+ That beautiful shape!”
+
+ SHELLEY.
+
+
+ LONDON
+ EDWARD ARNOLD
+ 1912
+
+ [_All Rights Reserved_]
+
+
+
+
+ TO E. M. F.
+
+
+
+
+ FOLLOWING DARKNESS
+
+
+It is not without some hesitation that I offer to the public the
+following fragment of an autobiography, even though in doing so I am
+but obeying the obvious intention of its author. When the papers of
+Mr. Peter Waring came into my possession I had indeed no idea of its
+existence, and I have now no means of telling when it was written.
+The fact that he left it unfinished proves nothing. He may have begun
+it and abandoned it years ago: he may have been working at it shortly
+before his death. That he intended to carry it to completion, there is,
+I think, abundant evidence in a mass of detached notes and impressions
+bearing on a later period of his life. These, rightly or wrongly, I
+have not printed, partly because the earlier portion has in itself a
+certain unity and completeness, which would be marred were I to add
+anything to it, and partly because they never received his personal
+revision. Moreover, many of them are in the highest degree fantastic
+and exotic, so that it is at times difficult to take them literally,
+especially if the simplicity and directness of the earlier pages be
+borne in mind.
+
+Those who are familiar with Mr. Waring’s writings published during his
+lifetime――writings in which the personal element is so slight――will
+hardly be prepared for anything so intimate as this journal. His
+critical methods were entirely scientific. Of their value I am not the
+proper person to speak, having neither the necessary knowledge, nor,
+to tell the whole truth, the necessary sympathy. Our paths, if they
+seemed to run parallel for a moment, diverged very early in life, and
+I could never take much interest in the work to which he devoted his
+real, though, I venture to think, somewhat narrow gifts. He was still a
+young man――barely thirty-six――when he died, but he had already become
+eminent in his own particular line, that of the newer art criticism,
+invented, I believe, by the Italian, Morelli. It was scarcely a career
+to bring him much under the public eye, but his “Study of the Drawings
+of the Early Italian Masters” gained him, I understand, the recognition
+of a small number of persons, of various nationalities, occupied in
+making similar researches. He was busy with the proofs of the second
+and larger edition of this work when, on the 10th of September, 1911,
+he died under tragic circumstances. The mystery of his death, about
+which there was some noise in the papers at the time, will, I think,
+never now be cleared up, though, to my own mind, it is perfectly clear
+that he was murdered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In relation to the autobiography, a word or two of comment and
+explanation is possibly due to the reader. To begin with, I have
+altered all the proper names save two――my own, and that of Mrs.
+Carroll, of Derryaghy, Newcastle, County Down, his oldest friend, which
+I have allowed to remain. I feel this, myself, to be unsatisfactory,
+but I cannot see how at present it is to be avoided. Again, though I
+have added nothing, I have left out a few pages――only a few――and none,
+I believe, of importance, so far as the understanding of the whole is
+concerned. For this I have no excuse to offer, except that it seemed to
+me that he himself should have omitted them.
+
+In the main the portrait he has given of himself coincides with my
+own impression of him in early life. I can remember very well when
+I first came to know him at school. I was more struck by his gifts
+then, perhaps, than I was later, though even at that time he seemed to
+me to be intensely one-sided. He was very intelligent, but from the
+beginning his whole manner of looking upon life was, in my opinion,
+unfortunate. It may sound harsh to say so, but as the years passed I
+do not think he improved. Latterly, he appeared to me to have little
+but his fine taste. It was as if everything had become subservient to
+an æsthetic sense, which was extraordinarily, morbidly acute. Yet even
+while I write this I have a suspicion that I am not doing him justice.
+If he had been nothing but what I say he was, I should not be able to
+look back with tenderness upon the friendship of those early days,
+whereas the recollection of that friendship will always remain one
+of the pleasantest memories of my life. I regret that it should have
+been broken, but that was almost inevitable. It came about slowly and
+naturally, though no doubt the actual break was hastened by a mutual
+friend of ours, who informed me that Waring had described me as borné
+and tedious. That is the kind of thing which rankles. You may say to
+yourself it is of no consequence, but to have an uneasy feeling that
+your friend finds your company dull quickly becomes unendurable. A man
+would rather be thought almost anything than a bore; hence it was that
+for a long time I entirely ceased to see him. I regret it now, for he
+may never have made the fatal remark, and even if he did, judging from
+his journal, it need not have been inconsistent with affection.
+
+The last time I saw him was at Mrs. Carroll’s house, about a year
+before his death. She had asked me down, I suppose by Waring’s request,
+and I went, though I stayed only one night. I had not seen him for
+years until this occasion, and I was struck, and even shocked, by his
+altered appearance, and still more by his manner, which was that,
+I imagined, of a man haunted by some secret thought that has come
+between him and everything about him. This impression, though I do
+not desire to lay stress upon it, may throw a light on certain of the
+later notes I have not printed, and these, in turn, may afford some
+clue as to the mystery surrounding his death, for it is evident that
+he had come under the influence of strange and disreputable persons,
+who professed to experiment in occult sciences――spiritualism, and
+even magic. His hair had turned quite white at the temples. He seemed
+restless and dissatisfied; and, whatever else he may have found in his
+long wanderings, I could not believe he had found peace.
+
+Late in the evening we sat together. He was so silent that I looked at
+him to see if he had fallen asleep. The room we were sitting in――the
+morning-room――gave on to a garden at the side of the house, into which
+one could easily pass through tall French windows. The night was warm,
+and one of these windows stood wide open, letting in the scent of
+flowers, but with a curtain drawn across it to keep out moths and other
+winged creatures attracted by lamplight. I did not speak, but waited
+for him to talk or to keep silent as he chose. After a while I got up
+to examine a few black-framed etchings that hung upon the walls. These,
+with some pieces of china, formed the only decorations. I drew back
+the curtain and looked out into the night. The moon was high above
+the trees, and I could hear the low sound of waves breaking on the
+shore. When I turned round he was watching me, and I was struck by his
+expression, which was that of a man on the point of making some very
+private communication. But perhaps my sudden movement disconcerted him,
+for he said nothing, and in a little I could see the impulse had left
+him. I began to talk, not of my own work, which I thought would have no
+interest for him, but of his, which I was surprised to find he seemed
+to regard as equally unimportant. I asked him what had first led him to
+take it up.
+
+“There was nothing else,” he answered.
+
+Seeing that I waited for him to go on, he made an effort to shake off
+his abstraction. “If I hadn’t found it I should have bored myself to
+death. What is there for a boy of eighteen, with no taste for society,
+and left to wander about Europe alone, to do? Fortunately, I had always
+cared for pictures, and early Italian art appealed to me particularly.”
+
+“Of course, you had your writing.”
+
+“I never wrote a line except to take notes. I was nearly thirty before
+it occurred to me to publish anything. Even then, it was only for a
+few pedants more or less like myself that I wrote. My writings are of
+no account. The only people I can imagine it pleasant to write for
+are quite young people. They might lend your work a sort of charm by
+reading their own youth and enthusiasm into it. But it is not easy to
+arouse enthusiasm by describing how Bernardino de’ Conti paints ears,
+or how Pontormo models hands. For one thing, nobody wants to know. All
+that it leads to is that presently you find yourself approaching the
+most innocent work of art with the mind of a detective, revelling in
+clues and the æsthetically unimportant. Nine-tenths of your enjoyment
+comes from the gratified sense of your own ingenuity. Of course it is
+wrong. When I was a boy I fell in love with one of Giotto’s frescoes
+in the Upper Church at Assisi, a thing half-peeled from the wall, and
+representing Saint Francis preaching to the birds. But why I liked it
+had nothing in the world to do either with Giotto or Saint Francis. I
+simply saw a bit of decoration, a Japanese print in gray and blue....
+That is the proper spirit. One day, however, a year or so later, I
+was in the Louvre, in the Salle des Primitifs, and before me was a
+beautiful little picture which hangs on the side wall, near the door.
+Below it was printed an artist’s name, Gentile da Fabriano. I looked
+at the picture again, and I said to myself, ‘Why Gentile, when it is
+obviously by Jacopo Bellini?’ That was the beginning.”
+
+“You don’t think, then, it matters very much?”
+
+“About Gentile? Not in the least. I haven’t even persuaded them to make
+the alteration in the catalogue.”
+
+But I could see he was talking merely not to be silent, so I got up and
+we lit our candles. At the top of the staircase I said good-night, for
+our bedrooms were on opposite sides of the house, but he pushed open a
+door. “There is a picture here,” he said.
+
+I followed him into the big, dark room, black shadows that seemed
+almost solid gliding away before us. He took my candle and held both
+up so that their light flickered across a small canvas that hung
+just above the level of our eyes. The painting represented the head
+of a quite young girl, and I recognised it at once as a portrait of
+Katherine Dale. I am no judge of pictures, so I will only say that this
+picture gave me pleasure. Yet I should have hesitated to call the face
+beautiful, and it certainly was not pretty. It reminded me rather of
+an early Millais――that is to say, the subject reminded me of a Millais
+type. There was the same breadth of forehead, the same rich colouring
+and steadfast, serious eyes that were more like the eyes of a boy than
+of a girl. I wondered why he had brought me in to look at it just now,
+and thought it had perhaps been painted by a celebrated artist.
+
+“Whose is it?” I asked, and was greatly surprised when he told me he
+had done it himself, from memory. I had never seen any of his work
+before, and I congratulated him on his success, which seemed to me
+to be really a genuine one. I asked another question, but he did not
+reply. He merely returned me my candle, which I held up for another
+look. The small, wavering, uncertain flame lent a curious air of life
+to the portrait, and I continued to regard it, for the frankness and
+simplicity of the young face gave me great pleasure. When I glanced
+round I discovered I was alone. My companion had disappeared without
+my noticing it, and evidently he had gone out, not by the way we had
+entered, but by another door at the farther end of the room. That
+this was the case I had more positive proof next moment, for a sudden
+draught extinguished my candle so swiftly and unexpectedly that I had
+an odd feeling that somebody had stolen up behind me and blown it out.
+
+ OWEN GILL.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+What is there in this house, in these surroundings, so utterly
+different from those I was born amongst, that revives a swarm of
+memories of my childhood and youth? My notes are piled up on the table
+before me, they have been there for several days, and I have not
+touched them, though I came here to work. A warm Italian sun floods
+the stiff and formal garden stretching from my window, with its pale
+paved walks, its fountain, and dark cypress-trees; but when I shut my
+eyes, it is quite another garden that I see, and now, when I have at
+last taken up my pen to write, it is not to fulfil the task I had set
+myself, but to chatter idly of a boyhood passed under other skies,
+grayer, softer, and colder. The odd fact is that ever since my arrival
+here, in spite of my being upon “classic soil,” in a district rich
+in historical suggestion, and full, too, of the colour and odour of
+the south, I have been communing daily, hourly almost, with my own
+youth. I should like to set down simply what that youth was, without
+embroidery, without suppression, though, on the other hand, a mere bald
+enumeration of the outward facts will be little to my purpose. The
+facts in themselves are nothing. Unless I can recapture the spirit that
+hovered behind them, my task will have been fruitless, and even though
+in my effort to do so I shall probably accentuate it, alter it, clip
+its wings and make it heavy, yet that must be my aim if I am to write
+at all. I have little eloquence, and perhaps no power of evocation, but
+the whole great, soft, time-toned picture is before me at this moment,
+and I cannot resist the temptation to linger over it. If I linger over
+it pen in hand, what matter?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the foreground there must be the portrait of a boy, but painted in
+the manner of Rembrandt rather than Bronzino. By this I mean there will
+be less of firm, clear outline, than of light and shadow. The danger is
+that in the end there may be too much shadow; but at least I shall not,
+in the manner of a writer of fiction, have sacrificed my subject for
+the sake of gaining an additional brightness and vivacity. The spirit
+of youth is not merely bright and vivacious; above all, it is not
+merely thoughtless and noisy. It is melancholy, dreamy, passionate; it
+is admirable, and it is base; it is full of curiosity; it is healthy,
+and it is morbid; it is animal, and it is spiritual; sensual, yet
+filled with vague half-realised yearnings after an ideal――that is to
+say, it is the spirit of life itself, which can never be adequately
+indicated by the description of a fight or of a football match.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+
+Of my earliest childhood I can form no consecutive picture; I shall
+therefore pass over it quickly. Certain incidents stand out with
+extraordinary vividness, but the chain uniting them is wanting, and
+it is even impossible for me to be quite sure as to the order in
+which they occurred. Some are so trivial that I do not know why I
+should remember them; others, at the time, doubtless, more important,
+have now lost their significance; and countless others, again, I
+must have completely forgotten. But it occurs to me, on looking back
+deliberately, that I have changed very little from what I was in those
+first years. I have developed, but what I was then I am now, what I
+cared for then I care for now. In other words, like everybody else,
+I came into this world a mere bundle of inherited instincts, for the
+activity of which I was no more responsible than for the falling of
+last night’s rain.
+
+Of the dawning of consciousness I have no recollection whatever. Back
+farther than anything else there reach two impressions――one, of being
+set to dance naked on a table, amid the laughter of women, and the
+rhythmic clapping of their hands; the other, probably later in date,
+of what must have been a house-cleaning, stamped on my mind by an
+inexplicable fear of those flakey collections of dust which gather
+under furniture that has not been moved for a long time. By then I had
+certainly learned to talk, for those flakes of dust I called “quacks.”
+I do not know where the name came from, nor why I should have disliked
+“quacks,” but they affected me with a strange dread, and here was a
+whole army of them where I had never seen but one or two. Some stupid
+person running after me with a broom pretended to sweep them over me,
+and I started bawling at the top of my voice. Then, for consolation,
+I was lifted up to bury my nose in a bowl of violets, and the colour
+and sweetness of the flowers took away my trouble. Probably it was
+later than this that I first became aware of a peculiar sensibility to
+dress――not to underclothing, but to my outer garments. To be dressed in
+a new suit of clothes gave me a curious physical pleasure――a feeling
+purely sensual, and that must, I imagine, have been connected with the
+dawn of obscure sex instincts. Such things can be of little interest
+save to the student of psychology, and it would be tedious to catalogue
+them in full, but I have no doubt myself that if they, and others,
+had been intelligently observed, the whole of my future could have
+been cast from them. To me, I confess, they throw a disquieting light
+upon all human affairs, reviving that sombre figure of destiny which
+overshadowed the antique world.
+
+Another and happier instinct which I brought with me from the unknown
+was an intense sympathy with animals. There was not a cat or dog or
+goat or donkey in the village that I had not struck up a friendship
+with. I even carried this sympathy so far as to insist on feeding daily
+the ridiculous stone lions which flanked the doorsteps at Derryaghy
+House. I don’t think I ever actually believed that their morning meal
+of stale bread gave much pleasure to these patient beasts, and I had
+with my own eyes seen sparrows and thrushes――who very soon came to look
+out for me――snatch it from them before my back was turned; still, I
+persevered, stroking their smooth backs, kissing their cold muzzles,
+just as I lavished depths of affection on a stuffed, dilapidated,
+velvet elephant who for many years was my nightly bed-fellow.
+
+My only impressions of my mother go back to those days or, possibly,
+earlier――a voice singing gay songs to the piano, while I dropped
+asleep in my bed upstairs――and then, again, somebody lifting me out of
+this bed to kiss me, the close contact of a face wet with tears, the
+pressure of arms that held me clasped tightly, that even hurt a little.
+That is all. I cannot remember how she looked, or anything else. On the
+evening when she said good-bye to me and left our house, I knew she was
+crying, but, though it called up in me a sort of solemn wonder, I did
+not understand it, and went to sleep almost as soon as she put me back
+into my bed. It was not till next day that my own tears came, with the
+first real sorrow I had known.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There follows now a sort of blank in my recollections, which continues
+on to my ninth or tenth year. I do not know why this period should
+have been so unproductive of lasting impressions. It is like a
+tranquil water over which I bend in the hope of seeing some face or
+vision ripple to the surface, but my hope is disappointed. Nothing
+emerges――not even a memory of any of those ailments, measles and what
+not, from which, in common with other children, I suppose I must have
+suffered. Nor can I recollect learning to read. I can remember quite
+well when I couldn’t read, for I have a very distinct recollection of
+lying on my stomach, on the parlour floor, a book open in front of
+me, along whose printed, meaningless lines I drew my finger, turning
+page after page till the last was reached, though what solemn pleasure
+I could have got from so dull a game――surely the most tedious ever
+invented――I now utterly fail to comprehend.
+
+I was always very fond of being read to, except when the story had
+a moral, or was about pious children, when I hated it. The last of
+these moral tales I listened to was called “Cassy.” I particularly
+disliked it, but I can remember now only one scene, where Cassy comes
+into an empty house at night, and discovers a corpse there. This had an
+effect on my mind which for several days made me extremely reluctant
+to go upstairs by myself after dark. “Jessica’s First Prayer,”
+“Vinegar Hill,” “The Golden Ladder”――how I loathed them all! Every
+Sunday, after dinner, my father would take some such volume from the
+shelf, open it, and put on his spectacles. Holding the book at a long
+distance from his eyes, he would read aloud in a monotonous, unanimated
+voice, while I sat on a high-backed chair and listened, for I was
+not allowed to play the most innocent game, nor even to go out for a
+walk. These miserable tales were full of the conversions of priggish
+children; of harrowing scenes in public-houses or squalid city dens.
+Some of them were written to illustrate the Ten Commandments; others
+to illustrate the petitions in the Lord’s Prayer. They contained not
+the faintest glimmer of imagination or life: from cover to cover they
+were ugly, dull, unintelligent, full of death, poverty and calamity.
+On the afternoon when “Cassy’s” successor was produced――I forget its
+name――in a state of exasperation, brought about by mingled boredom and
+depression, I snatched the book out of my father’s hands and flung it
+on the fire. I was whipped and sent to bed, but anything was better
+than “Vinegar Hill,” and next Sunday, also, I refused to listen. Again,
+with tingling buttocks, I was banished to the upper regions, but really
+I had triumphed, for when the fateful day came round once more, the
+book-case was not opened, and I had never again to listen to one of
+those sanctimonious tales.
+
+Fairy stories and animal stories were what I liked best, while some of
+the old nursery rhymes and jingles had a fascination for me.
+
+ “How many miles to Babylon?
+ Three score and ten.
+ Can I get there by candlelight?――
+ Yes, and back again.”
+
+Was it some magical suggestion in the word “candlelight” that
+invariably evoked in a small child’s mind a definite picture of an old
+fantastic town of towers and turrets, lit by waving candles, and with
+windows all ablaze in dark old houses? Many of these rhymes had this
+quality of picture making:
+
+ “Hey, diddle diddle,
+ The cat and the fiddle,
+ The cow jumped over the moon:
+ The little dog laughed
+ To see such sport
+ When the dish ran away with the spoon.”
+
+That, I suppose, is pure nonsense, yet the magic was there. Before and
+after the cow made her amazing leap the stuff was a mere jingle: it
+was the word “Moon” that brought up the picture: and I saw the white,
+docile beast, suddenly transformed, pricked by the sting of midsummer
+madness, with lowered head and curling horns, poised for flight, for
+the wonderful upward leap, while a monstrous, glowing moon hung like a
+great scarlet Chinese lantern in the clouds, low against a black night.
+
+At this time I had few books I cared for, but as I grew older, and my
+powers of understanding increased, I found more, for up at Derryaghy
+House was a whole library in which I might rummage without any other
+interference than that my father could exercise from a distance.
+Sometimes when I brought a book home which he did not approve of, he
+would send me back with it; but if I had begun it I always finished it.
+I had made this a rule; though, on the other hand, if I had not begun
+it, I let my father have his way.
+
+Everything connected with the East had a deep attraction for me――or,
+shall I say, what I imagined the East to be――a country of magicians and
+mysterious talismans, of crouching Sphinxes and wonderful gardens. I
+delighted in the more marvellous stories in the “Arabian Nights,” and
+I regretted infinitely that life was really not like that. To go for a
+walk and fall straightway on some wonderful adventure, that was what I
+should have loved. I remember poring over a big folio of photographs of
+Eastern monuments. Those mystical, winged beasts with human heads, in
+their attitude of eternal waiting and listening, touched some chord in
+my imagination: they had that strangeness which I adored, and at the
+same time they had an odd familiarity. I appeared to remember――but, oh,
+so dimly!――having seen them before, not in pictures, but under a hot,
+heavy, languid sun, long, long ago. The luxuriousness, the softness and
+sleepy charm of the Asiatic temper――I had something in common with it,
+I could understand it. The melodious singing of a voice through the
+cool twilight; the notes of a lute dying slowly into silence; another
+voice, low and clear and musical, reading from the “Koran”――where
+had I heard all that? I pictured great coloured bazaars, where grave
+merchants with long white beards sat cross-legged and silent, where
+beautiful, naked, golden-skinned slaves stood waiting for a purchaser,
+where you could buy silken carpets that would carry you over the world,
+and black, ebony horses, swifter than light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Carroll had given me one of the upstairs rooms at Derryaghy to
+be my very own, and had let me furnish it myself from a store of
+old, out-moded furniture, which, for I know not how long, had been
+gathering dust and cobwebs in a kind of immense, low attic called the
+lumber-room. Everything was more or less threadbare and worn, but I had
+plenty to choose from, and the actual rummaging was as exciting as an
+adventure on a desert island. I had discovered a quaint little piano,
+with but two or three octaves of notes, and most of those silent, save
+for a twangling of wires. This I thought must be Prudence Carroll’s
+spinet, for it looked exactly like the one in her portrait; indeed,
+that had been my principal reason for bringing it downstairs. With
+Prudence Carroll I had been in love all my life, and sometimes, in the
+dusk, when I struck very softly one of the cracked treble notes of the
+spinet, I would imagine her spirit stealing on tip-toe up behind me
+to listen. Another discovery, and perhaps the most exciting, was of
+an old davenport, with a secret drawer at the back of it――not so very
+secret, perhaps, since I had found it without looking for it, owing to
+the weakness of the spring, and my own energetic dusting. Inside was
+nothing more interesting than some old accounts, written on discoloured
+paper, but anybody who opened it to-day would, I fancy, find more
+appropriate documents....
+
+There was a cushioned window-seat, low and deep, and from it I could
+look out over the sea. In summer, with the window wide open, I could
+listen to it also, and to all kinds of lovely songs coming through
+it, dreamy and happy and sad. For there was a sort of undercurrent of
+dreaming that ran through my life. The romance surrounding the picture
+of Prudence Carroll, that peculiar, brooding quality of mind by which
+I could give to such things a kind of spiritual life that had for me
+an absolute reality, was, perhaps, only too characteristic of a mental
+condition which might unsympathetically be called that of perpetual
+wool-gathering. Though I played cricket and football, and bathed and
+knocked about generally with the other boys in the village, I had no
+close friend, and I dreamed of an imaginary playmate. For this playmate
+and myself I invented appropriate adventures. He had a name, which I
+shall not write here, and I still think he was an extraordinarily nice
+boy, but he dropped out of my existence about my fifteenth year. I
+had my secret world, too, where such adventures took place. Behind
+this inner, imaginative life must have lurked a vague dissatisfaction
+with life as I actually found it. Now and then I read something which
+appeared to me to describe my other world, and, as I chanced on such
+suggestions more frequently in verse than in prose, I became a great
+reader of poetry. The passages that echoed so familiarly, though so
+faintly, from my mysterious, lovely land, brought it up before me very
+much as the scent of a flower may call up a vision of a high-walled
+summer garden. Whether any reality lay behind it, I don’t know that I
+even asked myself; but, on drowsy summer afternoons, dream and reality
+would float and mingle together, and I would feel intensely happy.
+
+As I write I would give much to be able to live over again one of those
+summer afternoons, when the air hung heavy with the scent of mignonette
+and roses, and Mrs. Carroll sat reading or working, while I lay in the
+grass on my back at her feet, and the low sound of the sea splashed
+through the silence of my sleepy thoughts, and the booming of a bee
+was the slumberous soul of June or July heat turned to music. In those
+hours my other world was very, very near.
+
+Afterwards I sometimes wondered if there were a place where those lived
+days were laid away, or if their beauty, happiness and peace, must be
+quite lost. They had a quality of peacefulness that for me no later
+days have had: I seemed to dip deep into their cleansing dreamy quiet,
+as into a clear sea.
+
+Other dreams I had, that were not so pleasant, but they came only
+at night. One I still remember vividly was unfortunately typical of
+many. I seemed to be walking down a street with another boy, when
+our attention was attracted by the high, bare wall of a house. There
+was something, I know not what, about this house, which made it
+different from its neighbours and aroused our curiosity. We noticed
+in the wall, almost on the street level, a small window. This window
+was open, and a fatal fascination drew us to it at once. I watched my
+friend crawl through, for we knew the house was empty; then I followed
+him, the opening being just wide enough to admit me. Inside, we found
+ourselves on a gigantic marble staircase, spiral in form, and winding
+up and down as far as we could follow it with our eyes. There were
+no windows except the one we had entered by, and it, somehow, was
+invisible from inside, yet the place was perfectly lighted. There
+were no landings, no doors, nothing but this staircase, absolutely
+uniform in its construction, with low, broad, marble steps which wound
+down and down, and up and up. The place resembled a vast, still well,
+and we could not hear the slightest sound as we stood listening. The
+steps were very shallow, and we ran lightly down. The other boy went
+more quickly than I did, and in a little while I lost sight of him,
+though I still heard his footsteps, growing ever fainter, till at last
+they died away, and the stillness closed in about me with a strange
+heaviness. I continued to follow him, but all at once I noticed that
+the stairs I trod were darker and stained with damp. A faint chill
+odour and feeling of damp and decay rose, too, into my face, and the
+light was growing dimmer. I knew I was going down into a great vault
+or tomb far below the ground, a charnel-house, an unknown place of
+death. I caught sight far below me of a light as of a lamp burning, and
+I had an intuition, a consciousness that came to me in a flash, that
+my companion had awakened something. This knowledge brought with it
+a memory of mysterious horror, a memory that I had been here before.
+Then, with an ever increasing terror, I began to run up the steps I
+had just run down, but my feet had grown heavy and my limbs weak. Up
+and up I hurried, seeing nothing before me but an endless stretch of
+winding marble stairs. I did not know where my window was, I might even
+now have passed it. I heard nothing, but I knew I was being followed,
+and that whatever it was that followed me was gaining on me rapidly. I
+could hardly breathe: an agony of fear shook me. Then I heard close to
+my ear the bark of a dog. It was the window. I dropped on my knees and
+squeezed my head and shoulders through; I was almost free when I felt
+myself grasped from behind and with a scream I woke, shaking, panting,
+bathed in sweat.
+
+There came a time when these nightmares occurred so frequently that
+I got to be able to waken myself out of them. While I was actually
+dreaming――when I would have run a few steps down the stair, for
+example――a sudden foresight of what was coming would dawn upon me, and
+by a violent struggle I would break through the net of sleep and sit
+up in bed. Many of these dreams were connected with a dark, mahogany
+wardrobe which stood in my father’s bedroom. When I had begun to dream
+and found myself in that room I knew something evil was going to
+happen, and I would watch the wardrobe door and struggle violently to
+wake myself before it should open. Even when I was wide awake, and in
+broad daylight, this so ordinary piece of furniture came to have, for
+me, a sinister aspect. It was odd that I should have suffered so from
+these grisly nocturnal terrors, for in ordinary life I was not in any
+way a coward. A feeling of shame made me keep them a profound secret,
+and as I grew older they diminished, till by the time I was fifteen
+they had practically ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Perhaps I should here attempt some slight description of my father,
+whom I have already mentioned, and of my home. My father was the
+National schoolmaster at Newcastle, County Down, and our house was next
+door to the school. My bedroom window looked out over the sea, about
+a hundred yards away, and behind the house were the Mourne Mountains,
+and the Derryaghy estate, which took in the lower slopes of Slieve
+Donard. Our house, when the Virginian creeper that covered it was red,
+looked pretty enough from the road, but was poorly and even meagrely
+furnished. The most that could be said for it was that it was clean
+and tidy. The few attempts at ornamentation would have been better
+away――the two or three pictures, the hideous vases on the mantelpiece.
+My father had a strong liking for illuminated texts, and there were
+several of these, in gilt frames, in every room in the house, including
+the kitchen and the bath-room. What furniture there was was modern,
+cheap, and objectionable: it was characteristic of my father that he
+had never even bought himself a comfortable arm-chair.
+
+He was a tall man, thin and grizzled, pale, and dressed always in an
+ill-cut, ready-made, black tail-coat and waistcoat, with dark gray
+trousers. I always disliked his clothes, especially the two shining
+buttons at the back of his coat. He wore a beard and moustache, both
+somewhat ragged, and his brown eyes were indescribably melancholy. His
+hands and feet were very coarse and large. There was power in his face,
+but there was a depressing lack of anything approaching geniality. He
+gave me the impression that he did everything from a sense of duty,
+and nothing because he took a pleasure in it. The seriousness of his
+expression was truly portentous: it was impossible that anything in
+the world could matter so much as that. He was not well-off――that is
+obvious from the position he occupied――but he lived in a way that was
+unnecessarily economical. He was by no means ungenerous if it were
+some case of distress that had come to his knowledge, but in ordinary
+life he was excessively near. The only luxuries he had ever permitted
+himself were these coloured texts, and they cost little.
+
+When I was with him I never felt quite at my ease, and this made me
+sulky and perpetually on the defensive. I was not more with him than
+I could help, and as we lived alone together, with only an old woman
+who came in every day to look after the house and do the cooking, it
+must have been easy for him to see that I avoided his society. I never
+pretended to myself to have any particular affection for him, and I
+don’t even know that it would have mended matters if I had.
+
+One night, when I was about fourteen, I woke up in the dark, with the
+consciousness that it was very late and that I was not alone in my
+room. The next moment I knew my father was there, kneeling beside my
+bed. I lay absolutely quiet: I knew he was praying, and praying for me.
+Presently I heard him sigh, and then rise noiselessly to his feet, but
+I gave no sign. I heard him move away, I heard my door being softly
+closed, the faint click of the latch as it slipped into its place. I
+lay on with my eyes wide open, wondering why he had come in like this.
+I did not like it. It made me feel uncomfortable, as all emotions do
+when we are unable to respond to them. I believed my father cared for
+me far more than for anything else in the world, yet somehow that did
+not help matters. It was not the sort of love that begets love in
+return. Though he loved me, I felt he did not trust me, or rather that
+he believed I had an infinite capacity for yielding to temptation. By
+this time I understood that when my mother left home she had gone to
+somebody else. I knew at any rate that she was living, for she had sent
+a sum of money for my education, which my father had returned, though
+some scruple of conscience had made him think it right to tell me he
+had done so. But he explained nothing and I asked no questions. As I
+lay awake that night I thought of all this, and it occurred to me
+that it might have much to do with his extraordinary anxiety about my
+religious and moral life. He was afraid, and I lay awake for a long
+time trying to puzzle out what it was he was afraid of.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was quite impossible for him to make me religious. For one thing,
+it was not in my nature. It was not so much that I disbelieved what
+I was taught of religion, as that these instructions aroused in me
+an implacable antagonism. I did not like the notion of an all-seeing
+God, for instance. Imperfectly grasped, this conception represented
+to my mind a kind of tyranny, a kind of espionage, which I strongly
+resented. Moreover, I detested Sundays and everything connected with
+them. When I went to church it was with a face like a thunder-cloud,
+and once there, with an incredible obstinacy, I would shut my ears to
+all that went on, prayers, hymns, and sermon. This fact, combined with
+so many others, tended, as time passed, to make my relations with my
+father more and more strained, for he was religious in the narrowest
+and severest fashion. I remember his taking me, one Sunday evening,
+when I was between twelve and thirteen, to hear a preacher who had come
+from a considerable distance to hold two special services. The occasion
+stands out from all others, because it was the only one upon which I
+was startled out of my habitual attitude of sulky defiance. For the
+first three-quarters of an hour all went as usual, and when the sermon
+was about to begin I prepared myself to think of other things. But the
+text, or texts, delivered in a quiet, impressive voice, arrested my
+attention.
+
+“For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:
+and great earthquakes shall be in divers places, and famines, and
+pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from
+heaven.... Your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young
+men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and I will
+show wonders in heaven above, and signs in the earth beneath; blood and
+fire, and vapour of smoke: the sun shall be turned into darkness, and
+the moon into blood.... And then shall they see the Son of Man coming
+in a cloud, with power and great glory.”
+
+In spite of myself the words thrilled me with their vivid, menacing
+suggestiveness, and I listened intently to what followed. It seemed
+apparent that the end of the world was at hand. The signs were taken
+up one by one, and it was shown, to my growing discomfiture, that all
+had been fulfilled: nothing remained but the sounding of the last
+trumpet, which, according to the preacher――he seemed even to regard
+it as highly probable――might take place that very night. By the time
+he had reached this point my disquietude had become abject fear, and
+I joined fervently in the last prayer. But why had I never been told
+of this imminent danger? When we got back from church, it was a very
+subdued boy who sat by his father’s side, a Bible open on the parlour
+table in front of him. I read with a feverish haste to prove my changed
+way of life, and, it must be confessed, also to keep off as long as
+possible the hour of bed-time. There was a horrible plausibility about
+what I had heard. The concluding words kept ringing in my ears. “I see
+no reason why it should not be this very night.” “Wouldn’t it, in fact,
+be just the kind of thing that _would_ happen at night?” I asked myself
+piteously; and I was tormented by a dread of the hideous trumpet note,
+by a bloody moon, and by the apparition of dead and shrouded bodies,
+rising up with glaring eyeballs and tied jaws and all the mouldering
+signs of the grave――dreadful, galvanized corpses, risen from their
+wormy beds to meet their Lord in the air. At length I could put off my
+bed-time no longer. I could see my father was not convinced by the open
+Bible, and, with his usual suspiciousness, had become curious as to
+what passages I was so interested in. Ten minutes later, on my knees
+in my small, candle-lit bedroom, I was lying to my God of a tremendous
+love I had begun to feel for Him; but in spite of this I passed an
+abominable night. In the morning I continued my miserable hypocrisy,
+grovelling before this frightful Deity for Whom I had developed so
+sudden and demonstrative an affection, and Whom, at the same time, I
+begged naïvely not to come. Gradually, but not for several days, these
+terrors faded, receiving their death-blow when my father told me that
+all Jews must return to Jerusalem before the last day. Now there was a
+Jewish family living at Castlewellan, whom I thought I could keep my
+eye on, and as I had heard nothing of their moving I felt fairly safe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Very quickly I became more emancipated as I began to think things
+out for myself, and a year later I could laugh at these early fears.
+My father told me a crude anecdote which he had read, I think, in
+Mark Pattison’s “Memoirs.” A man in a public-house in Leicestershire
+had used the oath, “God strike me blind,” and instantly he had been
+struck blind by a flash of lightning. On becoming converted he had
+recovered his sight while taking the Sacrament. This edifying tale was,
+I believe, vouched for by a friend and disciple of Cardinal Newman’s,
+but to me, I confess, it seemed as stupid and revolting as anything
+I had ever heard. My father declared it to be true, yet I secretly
+doubted it, and that afternoon, in my own room, standing by the window,
+I said aloud, and very deliberately, “God strike me blind! God strike
+me blind!” I waited with a mingled trepidation and incredulity, as if
+I had thrown some mysterious bomb into the unknown. A sea-gull flew
+past the window, white against the dark autumn sky: the leaves of the
+Virginian creeper trembled and grew still. I said again and in a louder
+voice, “God strike me blind!” But no flash of lightning followed. Down
+below, on the beach, the gray waves curled over with a slow musical
+splash. I looked into the sky, but it was calm and untroubled, and I
+decided that the story was a myth.
+
+Most of my religious difficulties were, however, metaphysical. The
+conception of eternity was one I could not grasp. I could, in a vague
+way, figure myself as living on for ever, but I could not with the
+same facility move my mind backward. I seemed able to imagine that
+there might be no end, but I could not imagine that there had been no
+beginning. “If there had been no beginning, how could we ever have
+got as far as this?” I asked myself. “Where I am now――this particular
+moment――must be at a certain distance from something, or it cannot be
+anywhere. But if there is no beginning, then this moment cannot be any
+further on than yesterday was!” My brain grew dizzy with vain efforts
+to think impossible thoughts. I would break a stick and say, “God can
+make it that I haven’t broken it. But if I shut my eyes, and when I
+open them the stick is whole, that will only show He has mended it. Yet
+He is all-powerful!” And so on, and so on; for whatever point I took
+up, sooner or later I was met by an insoluble problem. These problems
+were, nevertheless, just what fascinated me. The practical ethics
+of religion, that I should simply be good and encourage in myself a
+variety of Christian virtues――that kind of thing did not interest me
+in the least. As a matter of fact, I possessed singularly few of these
+virtues. It is true that I detested any kind of meanness or cruelty,
+that I was truthful, straightforward, and, in certain directions,
+loving and gentle enough; but I was egotistical, proud, and ludicrously
+self-conscious, quick tempered, flying into violent passions for very
+little, and, above all, I had a stubbornness nothing could move.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+
+It is difficult, as I have said, in looking back over those days, to
+see things in any fixed order. It is as if one’s memories floated in
+a kind of haze, appearing and disappearing, melting into one another.
+But there is a definite point from which my story becomes consecutive,
+and I can carry it back as far as that cold, clear January morning,
+the morning of Mr. Carroll’s funeral, when I stood beside my father,
+at some distance from the grave, among a group of people I did not
+know, and whom I should never see again. I examined them all with a
+mild and impartial curiosity, and was struck by the fact that none of
+them showed the slightest emotion, though all alike wore a grave and
+decorous demeanour. I could not blame them, for I did not feel sad
+myself. Mr. Carroll had always been perfectly amiable to me, but I had
+seen little of him, and when we did meet he had looked at me vaguely,
+as if he were unable to remember who I was. I had only known him as
+an invalid, occasionally hobbling about with the aid of two black,
+silver-headed sticks, but for the most part keeping pretty closely
+to his own rooms. He seemed to me to be very old, yet at his death
+I learned that he was not old at all, his appearance of decrepitude
+being simply the result of an excessively disorderly life, imposed upon
+a naturally wretched constitution. I learned, at the same time, the
+history of Mrs. Carroll’s marriage; how, before the first year was
+out, she had ceased to see much of her husband, and a little later had
+ceased to see him altogether. It was fifteen years afterwards, when
+he had become the futile person I knew, that he had returned to her.
+As the coffin, bared of its covering of sickly-smelling flowers, was
+lowered into the ugly, gaping grave, and the damp red earth rattled
+heavily on the lid with a hollow, brutal sound, I recalled the strange,
+white face, the watery blue eyes, the fixed smile, the soft, polite
+manner; but I was not in the least grieved to know I should never see
+them again. And when, a week or so later, I was once more in and out of
+the house just as of old, I had already ceased to think of him. Once
+or twice, passing the closed door of his room in the dusk, the thought
+of meeting his ghost, of hearing the tap, tap of his stick coming
+toward me down the long passage, gave me a momentary thrill; but even
+these poor tributes to his memory faded swiftly, passed into a total
+oblivion.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Scarlatina broke out in the village in the spring of that year, a week
+or two before my sixteenth birthday. There were not many cases, and all
+were mild, but there was much talk of closing the school. My father,
+for I know not what reason, was against this, and in the end got his
+own way, but about a month later he had the satisfaction of seeing me
+catch the infection just when everybody else was getting better. I can
+remember quite distinctly the day I took ill. I had not been feeling
+well the day before, but had said nothing about it, and that morning I
+went to school as usual. I might as well have stayed at home for all
+the work I did. I sat there with a book before me, my head aching, my
+throat dry and painful. The noise of the classes saying their lessons
+at the tops of their voices, especially the junior class, to whom
+Miss McWaters was repeating a stanza of poetry, line by line, while
+they screamed it after her, irritated, even while it amused, me. Miss
+McWaters was a thin and angular person, no longer young, endowed by
+nature with a high-pitched voice, prominent teeth, and a red nose, and
+by art with a yellow, fuzzy fringe. All these qualities now loomed
+particularly large in my vision of her, though at other times I knew
+she was a kind and friendly person. Her red nose and her fringe haunted
+me, her whole face seemed to undergo extraordinary, kaleidoscopic
+changes; she became a sort of fantastic witch who was exercising
+horrible spells on these small children standing in a circle round her
+chair; her mouth grew larger, her big white teeth seemed thirsting to
+bury themselves in their soft little throats. This impression grew
+suddenly so sharp that I had to shake myself and sit back in my seat
+to get rid of it. Then once more she was only Miss McWaters, to whom
+years ago I had repeated this same verse of poetry in that same shrill
+sing-song tone which now was going through and through my head....
+
+I looked about the room with heavy eyes――at the white walls, the torn,
+ink-stained maps, the scored desks and forms, the wooden floor――and
+the whole place seemed to move round and round like a wheel. I saw my
+father, with a pointer in his hand, indicating differently shaped areas
+on a large blank map of England, and asking a row of youngsters what
+counties they represented. That was the kind of lesson I had always
+detested myself and had never even attempted to learn. I knew from my
+father’s angry, “Next――next――next,” that nobody in the class was giving
+satisfaction. And then they all seemed to shrink and float back, while
+the room shot out like a telescope, and I watched them from somewhere
+miles and miles away. And the high, clear voice of Miss McWaters
+proclaimed:
+
+ “Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,
+ And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”
+
+And a dozen shrill voices replied:
+
+ “Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,
+ And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”
+
+The words seemed mere nonsense in my ears, and I had a sort of
+delirious vision of a big star, with a red nose and a fringe and large
+white teeth, pointing out the time on a huge clock, while a lot of
+little stars stood round in a ring and pulled watches out of their
+waistcoat pockets and set them to the time told by the big clock. This
+seemed funny to me, and I began to laugh; and then, next moment, I
+wanted to lie down somewhere and be quiet. My head was throbbing like
+a steamboat with a too powerful engine, and there was a dull aching at
+the back of my eyeballs. I got up and tip-toed across the room, but my
+foot caught the end of a form, and I nearly pitched through the door,
+head first.
+
+I had intended going home, but with my hand on the latch of the gate I
+decided to go up to Derryaghy instead. Singularly enough, the thought
+that I might be sickening for scarlatina never occurred to me. The
+distance to Derryaghy was not more than a quarter of a mile, yet it
+seemed to me long, and before I arrived I regretted having started.
+The hall-door being open when I reached the house, I went in without
+ringing. I knew they would be at lunch, but I had no appetite, and as
+I did not want to answer questions or talk, I went straight on up the
+broad, low stairs, with the intention of going to my own room. At the
+head of the staircase, full in the light, hangs the celebrated portrait
+people come from far to admire. I sat down on the wide couch before it,
+not because I wanted to look at what I had already seen thousands of
+times, but because my head swam. I leaned against the back of the couch
+and closed my eyes. When I opened them, the portrait being in front
+of me, I could not help staring at it, in a dull way. It represents a
+young man standing bare-headed on a hill-side, holding a gun in his
+hand, and with an elderly dog seated sedately by him. The curiously
+long, oval face, with its high forehead and narrow, pointed chin, has
+much distinction, though little beauty, and its pallor contrasts oddly
+with the faded red of the full sensuous lips, completely revealed
+beneath the light, curled moustache. The eyes are dark, the hair light
+brown. The hands are hidden by brown gauntlet gloves, and over the
+dark brown doublet falls a lace collar. The trousers would look black
+but for the darker shade of the long boots, and this darker note is
+carried through to the trees behind, sombre and heavy against a yellow
+sky. Both man and dog are obviously posing for their portraits――the
+whole thing is a work of art, that is to say, it is something utterly
+beyond nature. The highest light is in the face, but there is no white
+anywhere, and, with the exception of the faint red of the lips, no
+colour save the browns and blacks, the creamy flesh-tints. Over all,
+the mellow tone of time has cast a kind of golden softness. I had been
+told that it was by a great Spanish artist called Velasquez――his name,
+indeed, was there, in large black letters on the dull gilt frame――and
+that it was a very valuable painting, worth fabulous sums. I can affirm
+to-day that it is really a fine work; but it is not by Velasquez. It is
+by Mazo, and is, in fact, only a slightly modified copy of Velasquez’s
+famous portrait of Philip in the Louvre.
+
+This picture had always had an odd fascination for me, though there
+was something about the face I did not like, something cold and proud,
+which I knew I should have detested in actual life. I gazed at it now
+stupidly enough, and then I had a nervous thrill, for it seemed to me
+to have come all at once to life. One part of my brain knew this to
+be nonsense, and that I had been seeing queer things all day, but the
+other part of my brain continued to watch it, with a half expectation
+of seeing it descend out of its frame. The eyes had begun to move, and
+the lips trembled; the mouth opened slowly in a yawn which the brown
+gloved hand was raised languidly to conceal; and then from behind the
+picture I heard a little mocking laugh. These things bewildered me,
+but did not startle me; and through them I became conscious that Mrs.
+Carroll was coming up the stair and that she was speaking to me. I
+answered her in words which I knew were perfectly idiotic, and which
+moreover sounded husky and strange, as if some other voice than my own
+were speaking through my lips. Again I heard the little mocking laugh.
+This time I thought it came from the top of the picture, and glancing
+up I saw, sure enough, a black imp, like a small, naked, negro boy,
+perched cross-legged, on the top of the frame, from which he grinned
+down at me impudently, raising his fingers to his snub nose, and
+spreading them out in a derisive and very familiar grimace. I began to
+talk about the picture, about school, and about Miss McWaters. Then
+a cloud waved back from my brain; the portrait slid into its place,
+the imp disappeared, and everything was once more as it should be.
+But I felt a burning thirst, and when Mrs. Carroll opened the door of
+a large, bright, sunny room, I was glad to fling myself down on the
+bed. Almost immediately I was seized by a deadly sickness. I managed
+to get off the bed in time to avoid making a mess, but the vomiting
+returned again and again, till I collapsed into a state of exhaustion.
+Heavy clouds waved across my brain, obscuring my thoughts, and again
+clearing, leaving consciousness to flicker up, like the flame in a
+dying lamp, so that I knew I had been undressed and was safe in bed.
+And all the time I wanted to drink――to drink.... More than one person
+was in the room with me; Mrs. Carroll was there, and old Doctor
+O’Brian. In the open doorway Miss Dick hovered. And then suddenly I
+was alone. I could hear a fire crackling in the grate, and it had
+grown darker. A lamp was burning on a table somewhere over beside the
+fireplace. I listened to the fire, and presently it seemed to me I
+could hear the lamp burning too. It burned with a soft low continuous
+sound that was like the note of a flute, and it occurred to me that
+everything in the world was only sound――the bed I was lying on, the
+shadows flickering across the ceiling, the dancing firelight――all were
+but notes of a tune. This appeared so strikingly obvious that I could
+not understand why I had never noticed it before. I tried to make out
+what the tune was, but it eluded me, flickering away from me like a
+butterfly. I turned round in my bed, for I had heard a slight noise
+at the door. All seemed now to have grown silent. I could not hear
+the lamp burning, nor even the fire. This silence was surely unusual,
+abnormal; it filled me with a vague disquietude. It grew deeper and
+deeper till I could not hear, even when I strained my ears, the
+faintest murmur either without or within the house. The silence was
+like a liquid, luminous atmosphere, through which strange things were
+floating nearer. It was like a sea, and gradually it darkened into
+colour――there was a broad, dark, blue sea before me, in a strange, rich
+light, as if I were watching it through old stained glass. I saw sirens
+swimming about in the warm, swelling waves, appearing and disappearing.
+They followed a high-pooped, fantastic ship, just as I had often seen
+porpoises following a boat out in the bay. The ship moved along slowly,
+and its broad, coloured sails were embroidered with green dragons
+that shone like fire, and at its bow was a green, jewelled serpent’s
+head. Then once more there was nothing but the room, and I heard a
+faint noise as of someone moving in a chair. Another sound immediately
+followed, and I started, for it was curiously different; it was the
+sound one hears before something happens. I watched the handle of the
+door turn, and the door itself open and close quickly yet stealthily.
+Three figures had entered. One was a tall figure in brown, with a gun
+in his gloved hand, and he was followed by a great dark brown dog, who
+at once leaped on to the bed and sat at the foot, watching me with
+sombre, burning eyes. The third figure was Miss McWaters. Her nose
+was longer and redder than I had ever seen it before, and it kept
+twitching from side to side in a curious way; her big teeth flashed
+in an unpleasant grin, and her fringe waved and curled about as if it
+were alive. For the third time I heard the strange little mocking laugh
+that had come from behind the picture, but I could not discover who had
+uttered it. Perhaps it was Miss McWaters, for I knew she was waiting
+for me to say something――a verse of poetry――yes, I remembered:
+
+ “Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,
+ And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”
+
+Then a dense, heavy darkness swept up, blotting out everything.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+
+I awoke in broad sunlight. The room was full of it, and the scent of
+flowers floated in through the open windows and mingled with the faint
+smell of drugs. For some time I lay there quietly, too languid to make
+a movement or to speak. Then the door softly opened, and I saw Mrs.
+Carroll come in and stand beside my bed. “Is he asleep?” I heard her
+ask, for I had closed my eyes. I opened them and looked up at her.
+
+“No,” I answered, smiling.
+
+She smiled, too. “It’s time for you to take your medicine,” and the
+nurse came forward to give it to me. When I had swallowed it, I lay
+back among the soft pillows deliciously....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The memory of my convalescence is a strange one, for it came at a
+time when certain physical changes were taking place within me, and I
+seemed to myself to be somehow different from what I had been before
+I fell ill. My voice had altered; my mind was coloured by vague and
+happy dreams. Sometimes when I turned in bed or stretched myself, the
+contact of the fine linen sheets against my skin gave me a peculiar
+thrill, which ran all down my spine. It appeared I had been very ill,
+that it had been a touch-and-go matter whether I should manage to pull
+through; yet now I did not feel that I wanted to get well too quickly.
+The flowers, the fruit, the brightness, the big delightful room――so
+different from my room at home――the care everybody took of me, the
+books that were read to me, the sense of being here so securely, with
+everything just as I liked it, and with Mrs. Carroll to look after
+me――all that was delicious. The one jarring note was my father’s
+letter, which I read, and then put back in its envelope. It was about
+my escape, how near to death I had been, and how he hoped the mercy
+that had been shown me would make me think seriously. I did not want
+to think seriously: I wanted to bask in the sunshine of these pleasant
+days while they lasted. If I had died it would have been all over by
+this time, and since I hadn’t, why should I be different? It seemed to
+me hardly the time to talk of God’s mercy, seeing that I had barely
+scraped through a severe illness. It was like thanking a man, who has
+just broken your head with a stick, for not killing you outright. My
+father talked of a miracle, but I had slender faith in miracles, and I
+regret to say his entire letter struck me as amazingly unintelligent.
+In a kind of lazy and sublime egotism I began to ponder on the oddity
+of a man like my father having a son such as I was; and while I was
+engaged with these speculations Mrs. Carroll sat beside me, playing
+“patience.” She told me my father could not come to see me for fear of
+carrying the infection to school, and I received these tidings with
+an immense relief, for I had been dreading that he would want to talk
+to me about death, and perhaps make me join in returning thanks for
+my recovery. I watched her as she sat there, her plump hands drawing
+out the cards, her eyes seriously scanning the faces of those already
+turned up. She was a large, placid lady, stout and ruddy. She must
+always, even in her earliest youth, have been plain, but her face
+was filled with an extraordinary kindness that made it infinitely
+pleasant. It was not the sort of kindness which can be simulated; it
+was something that was a natural part of her, and was reflected in all
+she did and said. It had moulded the expression of her countenance,
+just as time and weather will alter the features of a statue. Her
+eyes were small and gray, and she wore gold-rimmed spectacles, which,
+somehow, were becoming to her. I never saw her dressed in anything but
+black, and with a light lace cap on her gray hair. She was extremely
+fond of me, and I knew it, and I’m afraid imposed upon it, though I
+loved her sincerely. At that time it appeared to me perfectly natural
+that she should be fond of me; it was simply a part of the order of
+things; it had always been so, and I couldn’t have imagined anything
+else. It never even occurred to me that I had no claim upon her, except
+that which she herself had established; it never occurred to me that I
+might, in my relation to her, have been just like any of the other boys
+in the village. On the contrary, I looked upon Derryaghy quite as if it
+were a second, and certainly much my best-loved, home.
+
+The “patience” failed, and Mrs. Carroll swept up the cards. “Shall
+I read to you?” she asked me, and, I having graciously given my
+permission, she took up “Huckleberry Finn.” It was a book I rejoiced
+in, but I don’t think Mrs. Carroll cared for it, I don’t think she even
+found it funny. She spoke rather slowly, and it amused me infinitely
+to hear her gentle voice reproduce the talk of Huck, or Pap, or the
+King....
+
+That same day, after lunch, the nurse left. I was getting on very well,
+and was to be allowed up toward the end of the week. In the afternoon
+Mrs. Carroll had gone out, and I found myself alone. I went on with
+“Huck,” but a chapter or two brought me to the end. I began another
+book, “Bevis,” but my eyes grew tired, and I let it drop on the bed
+beside me. As I lay idle I was seized by a desire to get up. I resisted
+it for a few minutes, and then I slid into a sitting posture, with
+my legs hanging over the side of the bed. It struck me that they had
+grown absurdly thin and long, and I felt wretchedly shaky. I stood
+up, all the same, holding on to the bedpost till I got accustomed to
+being on my feet, when I put on my dressing-gown, and walked somewhat
+uncertainly as far as the door. I turned the handle and looked out
+with a strange curiosity into the passage. It was as if I had been
+ill for months, it all somehow seemed so queer and new. The long high
+corridor, off which the rooms opened, was hung with tall portraits
+that appeared, in the mellow sunlight of high far windows, to watch
+me stiffly yet furtively. I liked them, I liked everything about the
+place, I liked to look down the passage with its long row of closed
+doors, which seemed so mysterious, reaching right on to the head of
+the staircase. I listened for footsteps, but heard nothing. Miss Dick
+probably was out, and the servants’ quarters were far away. I had a
+feeling that I was really the son of the house, that everything about
+it, its pictures, its ghosts, were mine. I went to my favourite picture
+and stood beneath it. It was a portrait of a lady with dark hair and
+dark blue eyes, and it was partly this peculiar contrast, I think, this
+contrast of blue eyes and black hair, that had originally pleased me.
+She was young and she had a strange quaint name――Prudence Carroll. The
+artist had painted her as if she were just come in from the garden,
+for she held still a bunch of flowers in her hand. She was standing
+by a queer little piano――or was it a spinet?――the spinet I had now in
+my room? It was open, and in a minute or two she would lay down her
+flowers and play some air on it, or the accompaniment of some forgotten
+ballad. Did the painter intend to show that these were the things she
+was fondest of――music and flowers? Poor Prudence Carroll had been dust
+these hundred years, the notes of her spinet were either cracked or
+dumb, and her tardy lover had arrived a century too late, for she had
+died unmarried, and but a year after this portrait was painted! Why
+had no one cared for her? Perhaps some day, between twilight and dusk,
+she would slip into my room and sing to me, “Rose softly Blooming,”
+or “Voi che sapete!” A rustle of muslin, a ghostly scent of ghostly
+flowers, the twangling notes of the spinet, and a voice singing a song
+that would sound thin and far off, like the sound of wind――that is how
+it would happen.
+
+I was charmed with these fancies, but I stood there only a few
+minutes, for there was something odd in that silence of closed doors
+and listening portraits, and I returned to the sunshine of my room. I
+went to the window and leaned my forehead against the pane and looked
+out. Far away I could see a stretch of sand, streaked with streams and
+pools of water, for the tide was out: and beyond the sand, clear in the
+sunlight, was the sea, blue-green under the soft blue sky, marked with
+indigo and purple where the bottom was formed of rocks and seaweed. At
+the water’s edge some children――from this distance I could not make out
+who they were――were sailing toy boats. With trousers and petticoats
+well rolled up from bare brown legs, with their scarlet jerseys and
+caps and striped cotton dresses, they formed a bright note of colour,
+and brought me into touch again with life out of doors. On the left
+horn of the bay’s crescent the sand-hills, with their sparse covering
+of bleached, wan grass, were pale and iridescent in the sun.
+
+A gardener was mowing the grass just below my window, and the sleepy
+sound of the mowing-machine was delightful, and the smell of the fresh
+green grass, turned over in bright cool heaps. I got back into bed
+again, and took up “Bevis.”
+
+I read for half an hour, when my eyes once more grew tired. The sound
+of the mowing-machine had ceased, and a deep silence filled the
+afternoon. I lay listening to the silence, half-asleep, half-awake,
+when all at once I heard a sound of scraping under my window. It
+flashed across my mind that I was alone here in this part of the
+house, and that burglars were taking the opportunity to break in, and
+perhaps they would murder me. The thing was utterly nonsensical, and
+would never have occurred to me had I been in my normal health, but
+it had hardly entered my head when I saw a ladder shoot up past the
+window, and strike with a grating sound against the wall. My heart
+began to thump. I heard steps on the ladder; somebody was mounting it.
+The next moment Jim’s face, brown and ruddy and grinning, popped in,
+and I gasped with relief. Jim was a boy who worked in the garden, and
+was about the same age as I was. He smiled broadly, and his bright,
+brown eyes gazed at me with evident pleasure. “How are you, Master
+Peter?” he grinned. “They’re nobody about, so I thought I’d look in.”
+
+“Oh, I’m all right,” I answered, “but you mustn’t stay there, or you’ll
+be catching the infection.”
+
+“I wanted to see the skin peeling off you. What like is it underneath?”
+
+I felt disappointed at this callous explanation of what I had imagined
+to be sympathy. “You can’t see it,” I answered crossly. “You’d better
+clear out before somebody catches you.”
+
+Jim disappeared, but I called after him, “I say ... Jim――――”
+
+The round, ruddy-brown face bobbed up again.
+
+“Will you do something for me?” I asked.
+
+“Ay.”
+
+“Will you play something to me. I’m sick of lying here, doing nothing.”
+
+“I darn’t. Oul Thomas’d stop me, an’ I’d get in a row. I be to red up
+all the grass, an’ rake the walk.”
+
+“All right.”
+
+I took no further interest in Jim, and he again vanished. There was a
+further scraping noise, and the ladder, too, disappeared. I lay on in
+a kind of waking-slumber till Mrs. Carroll came in, bringing me my tea.
+When I had finished I once more fell into a doze, but opened my eyes in
+the dusk, when I heard the notes of Jim’s flute under my window, in a
+slow melancholy tune, with an occasional pause, as if the musician was
+not very certain of his music. I recognised the air――the Lorelei. It
+had a curious effect in the gathering twilight, as if the music and the
+fading light were in some subtle way mingled. I knew that the unseen
+musician was Jim, yet none the less the mournful notes, coming slowly
+in a minor key, seemed the very soul of the deepening darkness, and
+called up before me a world of imaginary sorrows, a passionate regret
+for I knew not what, a kind of home-sickness for my dream-land. Tears
+gathered in my eyes and ran down my cheeks. Fortunately nobody could
+see them, but I was ashamed of them myself, though I knew they were
+partly the result of my physical weakness. Still, it was ridiculous
+that I should cry over Jim’s playing. Jim really couldn’t play at all.
+It was stupid, idiotic; and the other day I had cried just in this same
+senseless fashion over a book I had been reading; I had wept my soul
+out in an ecstasy of love and misery.
+
+When Jim’s serenade was ended I lay on in the darkness, my tears drying
+on my cheeks, and thought what a fool I was. Why should I have cried?
+What was the matter with me? It was not that I was unhappy; on the
+contrary, I was extremely happy. Yet somehow I felt dimly that there
+was a greater happiness than any I had ever experienced or probably
+ever should experience. The meaning of my emotions and desires never
+became quite clear, though I seemed on the verge of discovery. It was
+as if there were something stirring within me to which I could not give
+freedom, something which remained unsatisfied even in the midst of my
+keenest pleasures....
+
+On a bright morning early in June I was allowed out for the first time
+since my illness, and I insisted on going alone. As I came out into
+the warmth of the sun I felt a charm as of a mysterious new birth. I
+went straight to the woods. The green alleys winding in front of me
+amid tall old trees, in all the vivid richness of early summer, seemed
+exquisitely beautiful. It was as if I had never realized before how
+lovely the world was. I lay down on my back on the warm, dry moss and
+listened to a skylark singing as it mounted up from the fields near
+the sea into the dark clear sky. No other music ever gave me the same
+pleasure as that passionately joyous singing. It was a kind of leaping,
+exultant ecstasy, a bright, flame-like sound, rejoicing in itself. And
+then a curious experience befell me. It was as if everything that had
+seemed to me external and around me were suddenly within me. The whole
+world seemed to be within me. It was within me that the trees waved
+their green branches, it was within me that the skylark was singing,
+it was within me that the hot sun shone, and that the shade was cool.
+A cloud rose in the sky, and passed in a light shower that pattered on
+the leaves, and I felt its freshness dropping into my soul, and I felt
+in all my being the delicious fragrance of the earth and the grass and
+the plants and the rich brown soil. I could have sobbed with joy, but
+in the midst of it I heard the sound of footsteps, and looked behind
+me quickly, to see the figure of one of the two idiots, who lived in
+a hovel outside the village, approaching. This was the man; there was
+a woman also, his sister. He was perfectly harmless, and he drew near
+now with smiles meant to be ingratiating. He held an empty pipe in his
+hand, and made guttural noises that I knew were asking me for tobacco.
+I told him I had none, but he would not go away. He stood right over
+me, a grin on his deformed face. The big, misshapen head, the horrible,
+slobbering mouth, the stupid persistence, all filled me with a cold
+rage. He had spoiled everything; I hated him, and I could have killed
+him, for it. But he still stood there and jibbered with his ugly,
+dripping mouth. It was only when I struck at him savagely with my stick
+that he moved off, glancing back at every step. And when he was gone
+I felt nothing but a kind of cold disgust and animosity, mingled with
+shame at my own conduct. All the beauty had gone out of the woods, and
+I got up and went home.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+
+When, some time in July, Mrs. Carroll told me that she had invited
+her nephew and niece, Gerald and Katherine Dale, to come on a visit
+to Derryaghy, I became at once very curious to see them. I had never
+even heard of them before, and now I learned such interesting items
+as that they lived in London, were twins, and about my own age, or
+perhaps a year older, Mrs. Carroll could not remember. They arrived
+at the end of the month, and that night I went to dinner to meet
+them. As it happened, I was late. My watch had stopped for half an
+hour or so in the afternoon, and then gone on again, an annoying and
+foolish trick it occasionally played me. I was told they were already
+in the dining-room, but that dinner had only begun. The prospect of
+meeting strangers always produced in me an unconquerable shyness,
+and, to-night, partly because I was late, and partly because these
+particular strangers were so nearly my own age, my shyness was doubled.
+I did not look at either of them as I entered the room where, though
+daylight had not yet quite failed, two softly shaded lamps burned, amid
+a profusion of flowers, upon the white and silver table. I shook hands
+with my hostess and with Miss Dick, mumbling out apologies, and had
+begun a lengthy and involved description of the cause of my delay, when
+Mrs. Carroll cut me short by introducing me to the Dales. I shook hands
+with one and bowed to the other, blushing and incapable of finding a
+word. I should never have guessed they were even brother and sister,
+let alone twins, for in appearance they were utterly unlike. Katherine
+pleased me. She was fresh and bright and attractive; I even thought her
+beautiful, for there was something of the open air about her, something
+of nature. At any rate she gave me that impression; her beauty had
+a kind of grave simplicity; and, if I had been a poet, and had been
+describing her, all my similes would have been taken from nature, from
+open hill-sides, from the wind and the sky. As I sat down beside her,
+her clear, dark, very blue eyes rested on me frankly, and with that she
+suddenly set me puzzling over where I had seen her before, or whom she
+reminded me of. I kept glancing at her furtively, but, seen in profile,
+her face was no longer suggestive, and I decided I had made a mistake.
+She appeared to me friendly and candid and unaffected, but I doubted if
+she were clever. Her brother, on the other hand, probably _was_ clever.
+I did not take to him, he was smaller than she, thin and brown and
+subtle; also he had a way of looking at you that made you want to ask
+him what it was he found amusing.
+
+“Peter will be able to show you everything, and take you everywhere,”
+Mrs. Carroll explained, comprehensively, and then Katherine asked me if
+I played golf.
+
+I answered, “No,” and felt ashamed. I went on to prove that it was not
+my fault, that my father had refused to allow me to join the club, but
+at that point I caught Gerald’s eyes watching me with an expression
+of interest, and I suddenly blushed. “Do _you_ play?” I asked him
+aggressively.
+
+He seemed surprised. His glance just brushed mine and rested on a
+picture above my head. “No,” he answered quietly.
+
+“Gerald is studying music abroad,” said Mrs. Carroll, “at Vienna,
+where I don’t suppose they have ever heard of golf. He is going to be a
+musician.”
+
+“How interesting!” exclaimed Miss Dick. “Fancy, Vienna!”
+
+Miss Dick was Mrs. Carroll’s companion, and was even, in some distant
+way, related to her. Her family, however, had fallen on evil days, and
+she was permanently settled at Derryaghy. She was a gushing, fussy,
+kindly creature, with a minimum allowance of brains, but overflowing
+with good intentions and amazingly loyal in her affections, though
+these latter, I must add, had never been bestowed upon me. I took Mrs.
+Carroll’s word for it that she had once been very pretty, but now her
+thinness, accentuating a peculiar type of feature, gave her an absurd
+resemblance to a lean and restless fowl. I noticed that she had attired
+herself to-night as for a striking festival. She was a person liable
+to these unexpected changes in the degree of her brilliancy, which at
+present was positively dazzling. She began to ask about Vienna, and
+expressed a deep regret at never having visited that city.
+
+“We have had the piano specially tuned for you,” said Mrs. Carroll to
+Gerald.
+
+“Oh you shouldn’t have bothered,” he answered.
+
+“You evidently don’t know what it was like before!” I began, and then
+stopped short. Nobody took any notice.
+
+Miss Dick, who seemed determined, cost what it might, to keep the
+conversation on the subject of music, mentioned that her mother had
+heard Patti in “La Sonnambula,” and how, when that great prima donna
+had paused in the middle of the opera to sing “Home Sweet Home,” the
+entire house had risen to its feet with enthusiasm. “It has always
+seemed to me that music is the most perfect of the arts,” she added,
+fixing her lace collar.
+
+“Painting is the most perfect of the arts,” I contradicted. Somehow,
+when they were uttered, all my remarks sounded unhappy, not to say
+rude, though I was only trying to be agreeable. Miss Dick accentuated
+this last one by helping herself to potatoes in significant silence.
+“You can look at a picture oftener than you can read a book,” I went
+on, addressing Gerald, “and oftener than you can listen to a piece of
+music.”
+
+“I daresay,” he answered, and I resented his politeness. “Why can’t he
+stand up for his own business?” I thought.
+
+I glanced at Katherine, and wanted to say something pleasant to her,
+but that was apparently beyond my power. My solitary “No,” in answer to
+her question about golf, had been the one word I had so far addressed
+to her. I relapsed into silence and did not speak again till dinner was
+over.
+
+When we went to the drawing-room it looked as if we were going to have
+a musical evening, for Miss Dick sat down at the piano with all the air
+of a person opening a concert. She played an arrangement of something
+or other, by Thalberg. All Miss Dick’s pieces were arrangements, except
+those that were fantasias, and it was a feature of them that the
+beginning of the end could be heard about a couple of pages off, in a
+series of frantic rushes and arpeggios. She played now with a fierce
+concentration on the task to be accomplished; her face getting redder
+as Thalberg became more surprising; her mouth screwed up slightly at
+the right corner, through which just the tip of her tongue was visible;
+her eyes glaring, devouring the sheet of music before her, at which
+every now and then she made a frantic grab with her left hand, to turn
+the page――she would never allow anybody to turn for her.
+
+When she had struck the last note, to which she indeed gave an
+astonishing rap, there was a general sigh, as for a danger evaded.
+
+“My dear, I don’t know how you do it!” Mrs. Carroll murmured, almost as
+breathless as the performer.
+
+“It does take it out of one,” Miss Dick panted complacently.
+
+Gerald sat looking on with a barely perceptible smile. “Won’t you play
+something now?” Miss Dick said to him.
+
+His eyebrows twitched slightly. “Not just yet, I think. In a little. I
+want to smoke a cigarette first.” He passed out on to the terrace, and
+we all gazed after him. When he thought, I suppose, that the echoes
+awakened by Miss Dick had had time to subside, he came back, and began
+to fiddle with the music-stool, screwing it up and down. Yet when he
+did commence to play, after many preliminaries, it was in a broken
+fragmentary fashion, beginning things and suddenly dropping them after
+a few bars. I was prepared not to like him, but he had not struck more
+than a note or two when I knew I had never heard the piano really
+played before. In spite of myself I felt the dislike I had conceived
+for him slipping away, and then, just as I was commencing to enjoy
+myself, he stopped abruptly. He got up and walked over to the window
+where I sat.
+
+“You haven’t altered, Gerald,” said Mrs. Carroll dryly.
+
+“Do you mean my playing, Aunt?” he asked sweetly. “It is supposed to
+have got rather better, but I am sure you are right.”
+
+Mrs. Carroll gave something as nearly resembling a sniff as she could
+give. I saw she was not in love with her nephew; but Miss Dick’s cat
+jumped on to his knee and he began to stroke it. There was something
+in his extreme self-possession which, though I knew it to be based on
+a profound sense of superiority to everybody present, I could not help
+admiring, just as I could not help admiring his playing, or, for that
+matter, his personal beauty, which was striking. And I admired the
+way he was dressed. While remaining quite conventional, it managed to
+suggest individuality, and its perfect taste, apparent in the slightest
+details, gave him, as he sat there, something of the finish, of the
+harmony and tone, of an old portrait. Again his glance met mine. I
+believe he knew I had been watching him, and perhaps something of what
+I had been thinking, and I turned away abruptly. Miss Dick, who had
+taken a great fancy to him, begged him to play again. He refused, yet
+a moment later he said, speaking so that nobody but I could hear him,
+“Would you like me to?”
+
+“Not in the least,” I answered rudely. Rather ashamed of myself I got
+up, crossed the room, and boldly took possession of a chair beside his
+sister. But with that my boldness ended, and I could think of nothing
+to say. I had not even sufficient courage to look her in the face, and
+the fact that I had so deliberately come to sit beside her only to
+maintain a fixed and gloomy silence made me feel ridiculous.
+
+“Do you play golf?” I stammered out at last, the inanity of my remark
+only striking me after it had left my lips. “She will think I am a
+fool, and dislike me,” I told myself miserably; but Katherine answered
+as if the subject had never been alluded to before. Her reply only left
+me to rack my brains anew. It was no use; a malignant spell appeared
+to have been cast upon me, holding me tongue-tied, my mind a blank.
+A perspiration broke out all over my body and I could feel my shirt
+sticking to my back. Every minute was like an hour, yet I could think
+of nothing but this accursed golf. I described the links and even the
+Club House, and might have gone on to enumerate the caddies had I
+remembered their names. I became suddenly conscious that my hands and
+feet were enormous. I thrust my hands in my trouser pockets, but my
+feet still remained visible. I knew my thick nose had neither shape nor
+character, that my coarse, brown hair was more like a kind of tropical
+plant than like hair, and that my overhanging brows and the shape of
+my mouth gave me a sullen look. I had tried to alter my appearance
+by doing my hair in different ways, but it was no use. I remembered
+having noticed in the morning, when I was tying my tie, that a slight
+frown made me more thoughtful looking, and I instantly assumed one. I
+compared the appearance I imagined myself to present with Gerald’s, and
+then I saw him watching me with what I believed to be a kind of veiled
+mockery in his eyes. My shyness turned to rage. Katherine tried to talk
+to me, but I answered in monosyllables, and, an hour earlier than I had
+intended, I got up to say good-night.
+
+“We shall see you to-morrow, Peter,” Mrs. Carroll suggested, as I shook
+hands with her. “What would you like to do to-morrow?” she added,
+turning to Katherine.
+
+Katherine smiled at me as if we were quite old friends. “I want to
+climb some of the mountains,” she said. “I planned that the minute I
+saw them.”
+
+Again her face awakened in me the memory of another face I had
+known――but where? when?
+
+“In that case you ought to start early,” Mrs. Carroll went on, “and you
+could take your lunch with you. Peter knows all the different walks for
+miles round.”
+
+I was on the point of declaring that I had an engagement, but I
+overcame the temptation. I promised to come soon after breakfast, and
+made my escape.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+
+I went home in a state of profound depression. I had made a hopeless
+fool of myself; probably they were talking about it now. These thoughts
+were rendered no brighter by being mingled with anticipations of what
+I was returning to. Above all else in the world, perhaps, I hated,
+and almost feared, that atmosphere of dullness and joylessness, which
+hung like a mist over our house. It exasperated me, it seemed to sap
+my vitality, and with all the strength of my nature I tried to resist
+it. It was as if the narrowness and dinginess, the gray, colourless,
+melancholy monotony of my father’s existence, had a hateful power of
+penetrating into my brain, like the fumes of a drug, clouding my mind,
+subduing it to a kind of cold lethargy: there were times when I had a
+feeling that I was struggling for life.
+
+My father was in the parlour when I came in. He glanced up at the
+clock, which meant that he was surprised at my returning so much
+earlier than usual, but he made no remark. I sat down to take off my
+boots; then I took up the book I was reading. My father all this time
+had not spoken a word, and I had returned him silence for silence.
+Sometimes, after a whole evening of this kind of thing, my feeling of
+constraint would become so acute that the effort required to say even
+good-night would appear almost insurmountable, and I would invent all
+sorts of excuses for slipping out of the room without doing so. My
+father was correcting exercises. The books were arranged in two piles
+in front of him――those he had already finished with, and those he
+had not yet touched. Behind him was the wall, with its cheap, ugly,
+flowered paper, and illuminated texts. I glanced at him from time to
+time over the top of my book. There was a perpetual dinginess in his
+appearance; his linen was not often scrupulously clean, and his nails
+never were. Just now I wanted to ask him to stop snuffing. How could I
+read while he kept on making such disgusting noises! He had a peculiar
+way of breathing through his nose so as to produce a sort of whistling
+sound, which I could never get accustomed to. Often I had gone upstairs
+and sat in an ice-cold bedroom merely to be rid of it.
+
+Suddenly he looked up over his spectacles and addressed me across the
+table. “I intended to ask you about that book you have brought home.
+Who gave it to you?”
+
+I at once assumed an air of elaborate nonchalance. “Nobody gave it to
+me. I found it in the book-case.”
+
+“What are you reading in it?”
+
+“‘Venus and Adonis.’”
+
+“I don’t like the books you have been reading lately.”
+
+“But this is Shakespeare!” I exclaimed, feigning tremendous
+astonishment.
+
+“I don’t care who it is. Why can’t you read what other boys read?”
+
+“I thought he was supposed to be the greatest poet in the world!”
+
+“You know very well what I mean. If you _do_ read him, why don’t you
+read the plays――‘Julius Cæsar?’”
+
+“I’d rather have poems than plays. What is the harm in this?”
+
+“The harm is that it is not suited to your age. It is full of all kinds
+of voluptuous images and thoughts. You have been too much at Derryaghy
+lately.”
+
+The train of reasoning which connected voluptuous thoughts with
+Derryaghy was difficult to follow, yet I was not surprised that my
+father had come out there. With him all roads led to Derryaghy,
+and I could never understand what he really felt about my position
+in relation to Mrs. Carroll. When he spoke face to face with her
+his manner always expressed something like a carefully repressed
+disapproval, and at the same time he allowed me to remain under
+countless obligations to her. For example, she looked after, that is
+to say, she paid for, my clothing. Also it had been settled recently
+that she was to pay my school, and later my university, expenses. I
+believe a struggle was perpetually going on within him between his
+consciousness of my interests and a desire to tell her to mind her own
+business and to leave him to look after his son himself. This peculiar
+combination of natural antipathy, a fear to give offence, and a sense
+that it was his duty to be thankful, was singularly ill adapted to
+produce a graceful attitude in his personal dealings with her, and I do
+not think she cared for him.
+
+“Now that Mrs. Carroll has her nephew and niece, there is no need for
+you to go there so often,” he went on. “I was glad to see that you did
+not stay late to-night.” He added the last words in a conciliatory
+tone, even with approval.
+
+“Why don’t you like her?” I asked simply.
+
+He fixed his eyes sternly upon me. “Why don’t I like whom?”
+
+“Mrs. Carroll.”
+
+“Mrs. Carroll! I don’t think I understand you!”
+
+As I gave no further explanation he returned to his exercises, but I
+could see an irrepressible desire to justify himself working in his
+mind. It broke out in another minute. “You don’t appear to realise
+that your question accuses me of both ingratitude and hypocrisy! Or,
+possibly, that is what you intended to do?”
+
+Oh, how well I knew this mood, and how we would go round and round
+the same little circle, and how he would outwardly be so calm and
+reasonable and not in the least annoyed, yet inwardly be perfectly
+furious. “I think I’ll go to bed,” I murmured, getting up, and
+pretending to yawn.
+
+My yawn was only meant to convey sleepiness, but my father saw in it
+impertinence. “Why do you try to vex me?” he asked.
+
+“I don’t try to vex you. Why should I?”
+
+“Mrs. Carroll is different from us. Her position in life is different;
+it alters her view of everything; it is only natural that she should be
+more worldly.”
+
+“Is she very worldly?” I asked, without enthusiasm. Anybody less so, I
+could hardly imagine, but there was no use arguing.
+
+My father branched off in another direction. “To-night, at dinner, were
+you offered wine?”
+
+“I had some claret.”
+
+“You remembered I had told you I would rather you didn’t take anything?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Are you speaking the truth, Peter?”
+
+“I don’t know whether I remembered or not,” I answered petulantly. “I
+didn’t think it important enough to make a fuss about. You always want
+me to do everything differently from other people. If I can’t do as
+other people do, I’d rather not go at all.”
+
+“I’m not aware that I told you anything except what would please me,”
+he answered coldly. “I left you perfectly free.”
+
+“How can you call it ‘leaving me free’ when you’re for ever asking me
+whether I’ve done it? You say you don’t forbid me to do things, but you
+always talk about them afterwards.”
+
+There was a pause. It was broken by my father who seemed now deeply
+offended. “Did you make any arrangement about going back?”
+
+“I promised to go to-morrow, after breakfast.”
+
+“What for?”
+
+“I was asked to take the Dales somewhere.”
+
+“Can’t they find their own way? It isn’t very difficult.”
+
+“Does that mean I’m not to go?”
+
+“You can’t be always going there. You seem to me to live there.”
+
+“It’s easier than living at home,” I muttered.
+
+“It is pleasanter, I daresay; but I don’t want you to make yourself a
+nuisance to strangers.”
+
+“Aren’t they the best judges of whether I’m a nuisance or not?”
+
+“Well, I don’t wish you to go to-morrow.”
+
+“You might have said so sooner,” I burst out. “What reason have you?”
+
+“I hope you don’t intend to be as disrespectful as you are,” my father
+said slowly. “If I had no other reason for not wanting you to go, I
+should have a very good one in the way it seems to make you behave when
+you come back. I _have_ another reason, however: I don’t desire you to
+grow up with an idea that you have nothing to think of in life but your
+own pleasures. You are quite sufficiently inclined that way as it is.”
+
+He spoke quietly, but there was a concentrated feeling behind his
+words. “What have I been doing?” I asked, trying to be equally calm,
+though I knew my eyes were bright, my cheeks flushed, and my lips
+pouting.
+
+“I wasn’t alluding to anything particular so much as to your whole way
+of looking at things. You appear to wish to be absolutely independent,
+to go out and in just as you please. You appear to think you have no
+duty to me or to anybody else. You are becoming utterly selfish.”
+
+“Selfish!” I was too indignant to protest more than by simply repeating
+the word. People always called you selfish, I thought, bitterly, when
+you only wanted to prevent _them_ from being so. I was convinced I was
+capable of making the most sublime sacrifices, if there were any need
+for them. Indeed I had often imagined myself making such sacrifices,
+making them secretly, but to be discovered in the end, when all my
+unsuspected nobility would suddenly be revealed, in some rather public
+way, perhaps, but too late to save those who had wilfully misunderstood
+me from agonies of remorse. It was my father who was selfish, with his
+idea of making everybody think and act exactly as he did. He was not
+only selfish, but he was jealous. That was at the back of all these
+objections to my going to Derryaghy. Only, he never realized his own
+faults; he found moral justifications for them. One thing was certain,
+I was going there to-morrow, whether he allowed me to or not. I was
+so full of these thoughts that I missed a great deal of what he was
+saying, but the gist of it I gathered――and I had heard it frequently
+before――that I should have my living to earn, my way to make in the
+world, that I shouldn’t have Mrs. Carroll always, and that the fewer
+luxurious tastes I acquired, the more chance I should have of being
+happy in the very obscure and humble path that was apparently all my
+father saw before me.
+
+If he really wanted to inspire me with feelings of humility, however,
+he could hardly have wasted his breath on a more thankless task. It
+was not that I saw myself becoming remarkably successful, but simply
+that I seemed to have had a glimpse of what an extraordinary youth
+I was. My interview with my father had made me forget all about my
+unhappy behaviour at Derryaghy, and as soon as I was in bed I began to
+compose a passionate drama, of which I was, naturally, the hero, but
+in which, without any rehearsal, Katherine Dale appeared as heroine. I
+had braved my father’s anger in order to be with her, and now I was
+no longer shy, the right words rushed from me in a torrent. Sometimes
+our love story was happy, more often it was a perfect bath of tears.
+Indeed, I think I must have had some inborn feeling for the stage, so
+frequently did I lead up to the most telling and lime-lit situations,
+on the very weakest of which a curtain could only go down to a thunder
+of applause. In this present drama there was a fathomless well of
+sentiment, of “love interest” of the most uncompromising type. I had
+read lately, in bound volumes of _Temple Bar_, one or two novels by
+Miss Rhoda Broughton, and as I lay there in my small room, with a text
+above my head, I was far from anxious to “keep innocency.” On the
+contrary, I was one of those bold, dark, rugged, cynical creatures, one
+of those splendid ugly men, who carry in their breasts a smouldering
+fire of passion for some girl “with eyes like a shot partridge”; one
+of those men who gnaw the ends of their moustaches, and have behind
+them the remembrance of a fearful life. My name was Dare Stamer, or
+Paul Le Mesurier, and my heart was sombre and volcanic. The plot of our
+romance did not vary a great deal. We met; we loved; we quarrelled. I
+married somebody else――a cold, soulless, blonde beauty with magnificent
+shoulders――and Katherine sometimes went into a consumption, and
+sometimes did not, but in either case there was a last meeting between
+us, when the veils of falsehoods were torn aside, and for one wild,
+mad, delirious moment I held her in my arms, my lips pressed on hers.
+It was these wild, mad, delirious moments that so appealed to me. They
+followed one another thick and fast as rain-drops in a thunder-shower.
+I was ever at a climax. The room was brimmed up with lovers’ tears
+and lovers’ kisses, meetings and partings, yet never perhaps had the
+text above my head, though I was far from thinking so, been obeyed so
+literally and so successfully.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+I was wakened in the morning by Tony scratching at my door. Still
+half-asleep, I got up to let him in, and then returned to bed, where
+he had already taken the most comfortable place. He looked at me for a
+moment or two and then closed his round, dark, innocent eyes till they
+showed only as two slits of dim silver, and set up a loud snoring. I
+was too lazy to get up, and lay idly watching him. He had a curious and
+expressive beauty, resembling that of some wonderful piece of Chinese
+porcelain, at once bizarre and attractive. There was something quaint
+about him, an adorable simplicity. In colour he was white, decorated
+with brindle patches. Leonardo would have made a drawing of him, would
+have delighted in the superb limbs and wide deep chest, the big, broad,
+heavy, wrinkled head, with its massive, low-hanging jaw, its upturned,
+flat, black nose, its silky ears, like the petals of a rose, and those
+dark, lovely eyes, in which, when he was at rest, a profound melancholy
+floated. As a pup, able to walk and no more, he had been a birthday
+present from Mrs. Carroll: now he weighed about sixty pounds and was
+three years old.
+
+As I watched him I tried to make up my mind whether I should say
+anything further about going to Derryaghy. In spite of all last night’s
+bravery I knew well enough that, when it came to the point, it was
+really rather impossible deliberately to disobey my father; and, what
+is more, that I shouldn’t want to do so. I somehow kept seeing the
+thing from his point of view, and this irritated me, because it made me
+powerless to do anything but sit at home and sulk.
+
+“I’ll have to go up to the house and say that I can’t come,” I told
+him after breakfast. He had risen from the table and was in the
+act of taking down our Bibles from the book-shelf, preparatory to
+“worship”――a function which took place every morning and evening, and
+which consisted in my reading aloud a chapter from the Bible, and in
+my father making a prayer. Sometimes he commented on what I read,
+explained a verse, drew a lesson from it――interruptions I secretly
+resented, as they tended to prolong “worship”――sometimes he listened in
+silence.
+
+He put my Bible down beside my tea-cup before replying. Then, when he
+had resumed his seat, and fumbled with his spectacle-case, he said,
+“You may go with them: I have been thinking it over.”
+
+I answered nothing, though I had a sort of uncomfortable feeling that
+thanks might possibly be expected. I wondered what would happen if I
+were to say I didn’t want to go, that I should never go again, that I
+would rather stay here with him quite alone, free from all “worldly
+temptations.” It was really the most perfect opportunity imaginable
+for a thoroughly sentimental scene, like those in the stories he used
+to read to me. I pictured how it would be wrung out to the last drop
+of sloppiness, and be promptly followed by my conversion, or even
+death-bed.
+
+“I think it is the ninth chapter of Isaiah,” my father said,
+interrupting these meditations.
+
+“I read the ninth yesterday,” I replied. “It’s the tenth.”
+
+My father turned another page, and I began:
+
+“‘Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees――’” I felt my cheeks
+grow red, because the verse seemed to me so extraordinarily apt to the
+decree about my not going to Derryaghy. I did not look at my father,
+but keeping my eyes glued to the page went on. The rest of the
+chapter, however, was less pertinent.
+
+ “‘He is come to Aiath, he is passed to Migron; at Michmash he
+ hath laid up his carriages:
+
+ ‘They are gone over the passage: they have taken up their
+ lodging at Geba; Ramah is afraid; Gibeah of Saul is fled.
+
+ ‘Lift up thy voice, O daughter of Gallim; cause it to be heard
+ unto Laish, O poor Anathoth.
+
+ ‘Madmenah is removed; the inhabitants of Gebim gather
+ themselves to flee,’” etc., etc.
+
+It was not wildly exciting in itself, and I cannot say my reading of it
+made it more so. The only good point about it was that it did not lend
+itself to exegesis. The kind of thing my father liked was, “Servants,
+be obedient to them that are your masters.” Then he would interrupt me
+to say, “That means, when their masters tell them to do what is right.
+If we are told to do something we know to be wrong, we must refuse to
+obey.”
+
+When I had finished we knelt down before our chairs. My father prayed
+aloud, and I stared out of the window, and tried to decide whither
+I should take the Dales. Between the sentences my father, as usual,
+kept crossing and uncrossing his feet, and scraping them together, as
+if he were trying to remove a tight pair of slippers. It seemed odd
+to me that he could pray so earnestly and at the same time use such
+artificial language, crammed with “thees” and “thous,” and “hearests”
+and “doests.” Before he had reached “Amen” I was on my feet, dusting
+the knees of my trousers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+
+A quarter of an hour later, as I walked up to Derryaghy, Willie Breen,
+the grocer’s son, a little boy of ten or eleven, ran out from the shop,
+and, after gazing carefully up and down the road, slipped a small piece
+of paper into my hand. One side of this paper was painted black; on the
+other a single word, “Friday,” was printed in red ink. I put it in my
+pocket and walked on without making any sign or uttering a word, which
+was the proper etiquette to observe under these peculiar circumstances;
+and in equal silence Willie returned to the shop.
+
+When I reached the house, though I had been intending all along to ask
+for Katherine, I suddenly asked for Gerald instead.
+
+“Gerald isn’t down yet,” Mrs. Carroll informed me, coming into the hall
+from the dining-room. “Probably he’s not even out of bed. Go up and
+tell him to hurry. He’s in the room next yours. Katherine is seeing
+about your lunch.”
+
+Rather reluctantly I went up to Gerald’s room and tapped at his door.
+“Come in,” he said, sleepily.
+
+He was indeed still in bed, and, in spite of the fact of our
+appointment, did not seem in any hurry to get out of it.
+
+“Oh, it’s you!” he exclaimed. “Good-morning.”
+
+I felt uncomfortable, for I was sure he would think it queer my coming
+into his room when I hardly knew him. “Good-morning,” I answered,
+trying to imitate the tone he had used. “I was told to tell you to
+hurry.”
+
+He sat up and yawned. “It’s late, I suppose,” he murmured. “They hadn’t
+sense enough to send me up my breakfast.”
+
+“Do you always have breakfast in your room?” I asked.
+
+He looked out of the window as if I did not interest him. “No,” he
+answered, after a perceptible pause, “but I have it when I want to.”
+
+I felt snubbed. I didn’t know whether to stay or go, but he decided
+the matter by telling me to wait till he had had his bath, that he
+shouldn’t be long. He put on a dressing-gown, and left me. When he came
+back I didn’t know why he had asked me to stay, for he began to dress
+without taking the slightest notice of me. I sat on the edge of the bed
+and watched him. It seemed to me stupid that I should feel slightly
+in awe of him, but there was no use pretending that I didn’t. I had
+already made up my mind that I disliked him, yet somehow I could not be
+indifferent to him――I wanted him to think me important, to admire me.
+He was only a year older than I was, but he was infinitely more a man
+of the world, and it was this, really, that impressed me. He dressed
+very quickly, yet I noticed that the result was just as harmonious
+as it had been last night. His clothes were of a light brown colour,
+that was exactly the same shade as his hair, and a little darker than
+his skin. A pale violet tie was loosely knotted over a cambric shirt.
+His forehead was broad; his yellow-brown eyes were set widely apart,
+and were neither large nor small; his nose was straight and his mouth
+extraordinarily delicate. His ears seemed to me, too, to have their
+own peculiar beauty. His skin was of a golden-brown colour, but clear
+almost to transparency, and a tiny blue vein was faintly visible on his
+left temple, running from the delicate eyebrow to the cheekbone. When
+he listened his brows slightly wrinkled. I would have given a good
+deal to have looked like him.
+
+Suddenly I caught his eyes in the mirror watching me ironically. “Do
+you know you were extremely rude to me yesterday?” he said, without
+turning round.
+
+I blushed and had nothing to reply.
+
+“Well, I forgive you.” He patted me on the shoulder. “I’m ready now.
+Come along.”
+
+“Why wouldn’t you play properly when you were asked?” I blurted out, as
+we went downstairs.
+
+“I would have played if there had been anybody to play to. Neither
+Katherine nor Aunt Clara knows _God save the Queen_ from the _Moonlight
+Sonata_, and that Dick person is too absurd for words. I’ll play for
+you some time when they aren’t there. And now I must have breakfast; I
+won’t keep you very long.... What do you want all that for?” he asked,
+as Katherine suddenly appeared with a large basket.
+
+“For lunch; we’re not going to starve ourselves.”
+
+“Poor Katherine; evidently you’re not. We can each take our own lunch;
+a basket like that is only a nuisance.”
+
+“You needn’t carry it,” said Katherine. “You and I will carry it by
+turns,” she said to me.
+
+“What’s the use of talking like that,” answered Gerald. “It doesn’t
+mean anything. If that huge thing has to be dragged all the way I
+shan’t go at all.”
+
+He departed to the dining-room, while Katherine and I were left
+standing in the hall, the basket between us.
+
+“We needn’t take any drinkables,” I began, “there’ll be plenty of
+water.”
+
+“I haven’t put in any,” said Katherine.
+
+We sat down in the porch to wait for Gerald. When he rejoined us, which
+he did very leisurely, I glanced at his shoes, and suggested that he
+should change them for something more substantial.
+
+“Why? We’re not going through ploughed fields, are we? I haven’t any
+hob-nails even if we were.” A panama hat shaded his face and he swung
+a light cane in his hand. I knew at once we should have difficulty in
+getting him any distance, and was very nearly proposing he should stay
+at home.
+
+“Why aren’t we driving?” he asked.
+
+“Such nonsense!” exclaimed Katherine. “If Aunt Clara had wanted us to
+drive she would have said so.”
+
+“I don’t mind making inquiries,” Gerald intimated. “I somehow feel it’s
+the proper thing to drive.”
+
+“You’re not to say anything about it; Aunt Clara won’t like it, I know.”
+
+“I’ll drive with our young friend Peter, here,” he said airily, tapping
+me on the shoulder with his cane.
+
+I could see Katherine was becoming impatient; Gerald was the only one
+who was perfectly cool. “About carrying Katherine’s lunch,” he began.
+“Hadn’t we better get a stick and put it through the handle of this
+thing?” He kicked the basket lightly. “Then two of us could struggle
+with it together.”
+
+The idea was a good one, and we put it into practice.
+
+Our road kept all the way by the coast: on the right, the mountains;
+on the left, a strip of waste land, varying in width, and covered with
+dry, sapless grass upon which, nevertheless, there were goats feeding;
+below this, the steep drop down to the sea. Shadowless in the strong
+sun, the road wound on ahead, white with dust, like a pale ribbon on
+the green and russet landscape. We had gone about a mile when Gerald
+suddenly announced, “I’m not going any further; it’s too hot.”
+
+This brought us again to a standstill. “It’s so like you to spoil
+everything,” said Katherine.
+
+“What am I spoiling? I suppose I can please myself. Only, since I’m
+not coming, I’d advise you to chuck some of that grub away.” He took
+his cigarette-case from his pocket and offered me a cigarette, which I
+refused. He lit one himself.
+
+“You know very well that if you go home Aunt Clara will think I
+ought to have come with you, or at any rate be back for lunch,” said
+Katherine quietly.
+
+“How should I know such absurd things? And I can’t help what she
+thinks, can I?”
+
+“We could have stayed out all day.”
+
+Gerald had begun to whistle an air very softly, and I recognized it as
+something he had played last night. His eyes were fixed on the distant
+horizon, and he seemed slightly bored.
+
+“Perhaps if we were to bathe it might make a difference――who knows?
+Suppose young Peter and I bathe while you watch the basket here in this
+pleasant sunny spot; or you could walk on slowly with it, and we might
+in the end even overtake you?”
+
+I turned to Katherine. “Come along,” I said brusquely. “What’s the use
+of bothering about him?”
+
+He looked at me and coloured faintly. “Then I’m to say you won’t be
+home till dinner-time?” he asked, speaking directly to his sister.
+
+Katherine hesitated. “Shall he say that?”
+
+“Let him say what he likes,” I returned, shortly.
+
+We moved on together, and I did not look back, though Katherine did,
+more than once. “I’ll make no more arrangements with your brother,” I
+remarked.
+
+Katherine was silent. “Perhaps we should come another day instead?” she
+began presently, and in a hesitating way.
+
+“You mean you are going to give in to him?” I said, making up my mind
+that there should be no other day, so far as I was concerned.
+
+She was again silent, and meanwhile we continued to walk on. I could
+see she was uncertain as to what she ought to do, that she did not
+want to disappoint me, and that, on the other hand, she was not sure
+about Gerald. “He’s offended at something,” she began. “He takes
+offence very easily.... He thinks you didn’t want him.”
+
+“Why should he think that?”
+
+“I don’t know.... But it is something of that sort, I’m sure.”
+
+I was going to say that I did not care a straw what he thought, but
+checked myself. “He didn’t appear to me to be offended,” I replied. “It
+was simply that he thought it too much fag.”
+
+“You don’t know him,” said Katherine.
+
+And we continued to trudge along, our feet white with dust. It really
+_was_ very hot, and I was glad I had so little clothing on――merely a
+light cotton tennis-shirt under my jacket. When we reached a low grey
+bridge that spanned a shallow mountain stream we branched inland. This
+was the Bloody Bridge, I told Katherine, and a religious massacre had
+once taken place here. I pointed out the remains of an old church,
+with its fallen tombs, and after resting for a few minutes we began
+to climb the valley, which was the walk I had proposed to take them.
+This valley was wonderfully beautiful, widening out gradually, and
+gradually ascending; on each side of it steep dark mountains, covered
+with heather, and grass, and gorse, and hidden streams which flowed
+into the broader, deeper stream we followed. The colouring was rich
+and splendid――dull gold, bronze, dark green and even black, with the
+brighter purple of the heather woven through it, and the long, narrow,
+pale, silver streak of water, glittering and gleaming, far, far up,
+till in the end it was lost over the edge of a higher valley which
+crossed ours at right angles.
+
+“These are the Mourne Mountains?” Katherine asked gazing up at them.
+“I’ve seen them from the Isle of Man. On a clear day you can make them
+out quite distinctly.”
+
+She began to talk to me about mountains, about Switzerland, where she
+had been last spring, and I felt ashamed never to have been anywhere.
+Yet, while she was describing it, I had an instinct that I should not
+like Switzerland. By some chance I indeed pictured it very much as,
+later on, I was actually to find it. Katherine’s enthusiasm could not
+remove this conviction: in fact, what she said, secretly strengthened
+my idea that it must be an odious country, and, years later, amid all
+the showy banality of its picturesqueness, I remembered this particular
+walk, and my own beautiful dark country rose up before me, with its
+sombre hills, its dreamy, changing sky.
+
+But at the time I had nothing to say, I had no comparisons to make, I
+had seen nothing. “I should like to go to a big city like London or
+Paris,” I told her, “not to live there, but to see it.”
+
+“I don’t believe you’d like it.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I don’t know.... You’re so much a part of all this.” She glanced up at
+the hills.
+
+“Do _you_ like cities?”
+
+“Oh, I simply love them; but then I’m quite different.”
+
+“I’d like the picture galleries any way,” I declared.
+
+“Are you fond of pictures?”
+
+“I’ve not seen many――only reproductions.”
+
+“I’m fond of them too. There was a splendid picture in the Academy this
+year of a girl skating. She was holding a muff up to her face so that
+it covered her mouth and chin, but she was awfully pretty, and when you
+came into the room you would just think she was a real person. And the
+snow was so nice, with a sort of pink light on it. If you come over to
+London I’ll take you to see everything.”
+
+But again, just as in the case of Switzerland, my instinct told me I
+should detest this picture. For a moment I had a feeling of depression;
+it seemed to me of infinite importance that Katherine should like the
+things that I liked.
+
+“I don’t care for pretty pictures,” I said. “I hate everything pretty,”
+I went on almost angrily.
+
+“Would you rather have ugly ones?” asked Katherine, laughing, as if
+she had caught me in an absurdity. I had no answer to give, though I
+knew myself exactly what I meant. I felt lonely and melancholy. Then I
+looked at Katherine. She was very beautiful, and in a quite different
+way from her brother. And suddenly I knew where I had seen her
+before――her eyes, at least――they were the eyes of Prudence Carroll....
+I gazed at her, seeking some further resemblance, but could discover
+none. Her skin was very white, save where in her cheeks it flushed to a
+soft radiant glow. Her brown, crisp hair was pulled back straight from
+her forehead, though one or two little tufts had got loose and waved
+in the faint wind. Her nose and mouth had the same delicate beauty as
+Gerald’s, but her expression was quite different, and it was there
+that her greatest beauty lay.... Yes, there again was a resemblance to
+Prudence Carroll――her expression was the same as Prudence Carroll’s.
+She had the same eyes, the same expression ... perhaps, then, the
+same spirit.... A sort of daydream had begun to weave itself into my
+thoughts.
+
+“How far can we go this way?” Katherine interrupted me.
+
+“As far as you can see. There is another valley beyond. We could go
+along it and home over Slieve Donard, but it is a long distance.”
+
+We climbed slowly, not talking very much. It was past noon now, and
+hotter than ever, and when we reached a deep green pool under a
+waterfall we stopped to bathe our hands and faces in it. Its cool
+sweetness was alluring, as if a water-sprite sang up through it into
+the hot sunlight, and the white spray sparkled in the sun. “It would be
+splendid for a bathe,” I murmured.
+
+“Bathe if you want to; I can walk on and you can overtake me.”
+
+I remembered Gerald, however, and refused to do this, being full to the
+brim just now of unselfishness and chivalry. “We might have our lunch
+here,” I suggested. “Then we could hide the basket somewhere, and not
+be bothered by it again till we are going home.”
+
+We spread a napkin on a broad flat stone, and our lunch on top of that.
+I now discovered why the basket had been so heavy, but, though it had
+been a nuisance carrying it, its contents were extremely welcome. We
+had almost finished when a peculiar feeling rather than a sound made
+me look up, and I saw a man standing not more than three or four yards
+from us. It was as if he had risen out of the earth. When you are
+under the impression that you are miles away from any human being,
+such a sudden apparition is a little startling, nor was the appearance
+of this visitor reassuring. He was large and pale, with short brown
+hair, and at the back of his head he wore a cap, like a boy’s cap,
+which was too small for him. His clothes, without being ragged, were
+stained and worn, and of a nondescript, brownish colour. He was young,
+probably between twenty-five and thirty, and strongly built. There was
+something coldly malevolent in the pale, clean-shaved face, something
+indescribably corrupt and cruel, which seemed to stare out of the
+hard brown eyes, and to hover about the smiling lips. He stood before
+us, looking down in obvious enjoyment of our discomfiture, making
+no movement to pass on. It was curious that features so perfectly
+regular, features neither bloated nor disfigured, could give so vivid
+an impression of ugliness. It was the ugliness of something positively
+evil, and my first feeling was one of instinctive repugnance and
+disgust, as if I had been touched by an obscene and noxious creature. I
+felt, I can’t say why, that I was in the presence of something actively
+dangerous, and not only to my body, but reaching beyond that: I felt
+as if I were in the presence of some form of spiritual corruption or
+decay, that I knew nothing about, and that yet I had a horror of, as
+a young rabbit is afraid of a hawk. That prolonged, impudent stare,
+passing over me, seemed to leave a trail of filth, of slime, of
+something that defiled like a loathsome caress. His eyes slid from me
+to Katherine with the same repulsive scrutiny. What was he doing here?
+He was no country man. As my first startled feeling passed, my temper
+began to rise. “What do you want?” I asked. “How much longer are you
+going to stand there?”
+
+He laughed almost noiselessly, though he still neither moved nor spoke.
+It was as if the sound of his laugh touched a spring within me, and I
+lifted a sharp piece of stone lying near my feet. I felt a sudden rage,
+an extraordinary desire to destroy. I could actually feel my lips draw
+back ever so little, just like the lips of an angry terrier. I had no
+longer the faintest sensation of fear: on the contrary, what I wanted
+was for him to make a movement forward, a gesture that I could take
+as threatening. And the rough, natural weapon I had picked up must
+have acquired a sudden appearance of dangerousness, for our visitor
+drew back and his face altered. Then he laughed more loudly and on a
+different note as he passed on his way down the valley. I felt elated.
+Somehow, I was certain my stone would not have missed its mark, and
+that there would have been no hesitation, no lack of force, on the
+part of the wielder. Katherine and I watched him as he retreated, now
+disappearing from our sight, and now again appearing, but always at a
+point farther down.
+
+“Well, he’s gone,” I said. “He was horrible looking.” I faced her with
+a proud consciousness of having behaved very well.
+
+“Do you know what _you_ looked like?” asked Katherine. And before I
+could answer: “You looked just like David when he threw the stone.”
+
+I blushed. Then, “I never cared much for David,” I answered
+ungraciously, and moreover untruly, for I was, secretly, extremely
+pleased and flattered.
+
+“Neither did I till a minute ago, but that was because I didn’t know
+what he was like.”
+
+My blush deepened. “Well, the beast’s gone at any rate,” I said to
+cover my gratification. “I will tell Michael when we get home. He can’t
+be prowling about here for any good.”
+
+“Who is Michael?”
+
+“One of our policemen――the decentest.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We hid the basket under the heather. A quiet had fallen upon us,
+through which the noise of the splashing water seemed to weave itself
+in patterns and arabesques of sound.
+
+“Shall we go up higher?” I asked, and without answering me Katherine
+began to climb the hill-side, and I followed her over dry, springy,
+fragrant heather, and between huge mossy boulders that had lain
+undisturbed for centuries. We stopped to look at a fly-catching plant,
+that curious, unpleasant mixture of the animal and the vegetable.
+Katherine had never seen one before, and she examined the outspread,
+concave disc, with the skeletons, the grey husks of flies, adhering to
+its green surface. We found a bee struggling on his back on the purple
+flower of a thistle, waving his legs in the air, a ridiculous picture
+of intoxication. But in spite of these interruptions the silence
+that had crept over us lingered still. When we reached a place where
+the ground rose steeply for a yard or two I gave Katherine my hand
+to help her, and when we came to more level ground we still went on
+hand in hand. And with this light contact there came to me a strange,
+thrilling pleasure, intense yet dreamy, unlike anything I had ever
+known before. I did not look at my companion. When I spoke, telling her
+to avoid a patch of soft ground that had here spread across the path,
+the sound of my own voice astonished me, so unfamiliar was it, even
+trembling slightly; and I felt my limbs trembling. But why should it be
+so? What was there? Why was I nervous? Nothing had happened but this
+short easy climb hand in hand. I threw my hat from me and flung myself
+down among the heather, lying with my hands clasped behind my head,
+and my face turned up to the dark blue sky. Far, far below us, the
+sea, blue and deep, broad, beautiful and free, lay shimmering in the
+hot sun. I had a sensation of intense happiness, physical and mental,
+into which I seemed to be sinking deep and deeper. I felt my eyes grow
+moist, and I turned away my head that my companion might not see my
+face.
+
+Presently I looked round. Katherine was sitting beside me, gazing
+straight out at the distant sea. The broad brim of her black hat
+shadowed her face. The deep blue of her eyes seemed darker than before;
+they had the blue now of the eyes Renoir so often painted, and that I
+have seen nowhere else. I wanted to say something, I hardly knew what.
+I hovered shyly on the verge of it, like a timid bather on the brink
+of the sea, but there was no one to push me in, and my plunge was not
+taken.
+
+“It’s jolly nice here!” Those feeble words were all I could find to
+express the rapid rush of emotion that had shaken my whole being.
+The vast and complex forces of nature were stirring within me almost
+as unconsciously as the new leaf germinates in the growing plant.
+Yet there was something which, without any words at all, I must
+have expressed, had there been an observer to see it. I mean the
+helplessness of youth, its pathetic credulity and good faith, its
+brightness and briefness in the face of those hoary old hills, and of
+feelings that were almost as ancient.
+
+I sat up and clasped my hands about my knees. “I wonder what it will be
+like living in town?” I said.
+
+“Yes, you’re going away next month, aren’t you? Aunt Clara told me.”
+
+“My father wanted me to try for a post in a Government office. There
+is a boy who lives here who is going to do that: he is working for his
+exam. now.” Then I added, I don’t know why; “Mrs. Carroll is paying for
+me, and will be afterwards, when I go to college. I’m to go to one of
+the English universities――Oxford, I think. Of course my father couldn’t
+afford to send me, and indeed he’d rather I didn’t go at all. He let me
+decide, however, though there was really only one thing that made him
+give in.”
+
+“What?”
+
+“My mother once sent money to be used for my education, and he would
+not take it.”
+
+Katherine was mystified, and, as I saw this, it dawned on me that I
+should not have spoken. I had taken it for granted that she knew all
+about me.
+
+“You know, my mother doesn’t live at home,” I explained; and then, to
+change the subject, I took the piece of paper Willie Breen had given me
+that morning from my pocket.
+
+“Can you guess what that is?” I asked.
+
+She turned it over.
+
+“It means that on Friday there will be a meeting of a kind of club we
+have,” I said. “It is a night club. The whole thing is a secret. We
+have supper round a fire, and talk, and tell yarns, and all that.”
+
+“Outside?”
+
+“Yes; over on the golf-links usually.”
+
+“But why at night?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. Pretty late too――about half-past eleven or twelve. I
+got it up last year with some of the boys who were staying down here.
+And then, afterwards, I kept it up with two or three of the chaps at
+school. This year I got sick of it, and I’ve only been to one meeting.”
+
+“At night! It must be rather queer. I love the sea at night. Are you
+allowed to bring visitors?”
+
+“There is no rule; there are no rules of any kind. Would you like to
+come?”
+
+Katherine hesitated. Then she laughed. “Yes. Would it matter?”
+
+“There’ll be nobody but boys there.”
+
+“But you’d take me; and of course, Gerald would come.”
+
+“I’ll take you if you’ll come by yourself,” I said.
+
+“Without Gerald? I couldn’t. What harm would he do?”
+
+I did not say; but without Gerald I knew I could carry the thing off,
+with him it would be difficult. “You’d have to promise not to tell
+anybody,” I explained.
+
+“Of course. If I told, I shouldn’t be there myself.”
+
+“But I mean even afterwards.”
+
+“I’ll not tell.”
+
+For a minute or two we looked down the hill-side, bathed in the
+afternoon sun; then I made up my mind. “If you can promise that Gerald
+won’t talk about it I’ll take you. But won’t you find it difficult to
+get out?” I added immediately afterwards.
+
+“No; we’ll simply sit up later than the others. They seem to go to bed
+about ten.”
+
+“But the lodge-gate will be locked.”
+
+“I can easily manage about that.”
+
+I regretted having mentioned the matter at all, yet I hadn’t the
+courage to draw back. “I’ll tell you on Friday morning exactly when to
+be ready,” I said.
+
+We sat silent. Katherine had taken off her hat and it lay on the ground
+beside her; she was fastening a bunch of heather into her blue and
+white muslin dress.
+
+“Have you looked at the portraits in the long passage yet?” I asked
+suddenly.
+
+“Yes; not very particularly, but I noticed there were some.”
+
+“Did you see one of a dark lady standing by a spinet, holding a bunch
+of flowers?”
+
+“I don’t remember. Who is she?”
+
+“Prudence Carroll,” I answered. “Look at her when you go in.”
+
+Katherine had completed her task. “Why?” she inquired, turning to me.
+
+“I think she is very like you――or you are very like her.”
+
+“I shall see; but suppose I don’t care for her?”
+
+“Then you can say I’m a fool. But you will care for her――at any rate, I
+do. I don’t mean that your features are just the same as hers.”
+
+“And I’m not dark, am I?”
+
+“No; at all events not _so_ dark. However, you will see what I
+mean――perhaps you will see.”
+
+“You’re not sure? It can’t be so very striking then.”
+
+“That’s just what it is――it _is_ striking. It mayn’t, however, be
+exactly obvious to everybody. When I first saw you, I kept wondering
+who you were like. I couldn’t get at it for a long time――then I knew.”
+
+“Well, I never even heard of her, but I’m shockingly ignorant of my
+ancestors.”
+
+“She wasn’t an ancestor: she was never married; the likeness isn’t
+physical.”
+
+“Oh, then I shan’t see it. Besides, I never _do_ see likenesses, even
+when they’re much less mysterious than this.”
+
+“I don’t know,――perhaps, in a way, it is mysterious. I can see it more
+clearly sometimes than others. I don’t think I should see it at all if
+you were asleep or dead.”
+
+“What a horrid idea!” She laughed, but not quite easily.
+
+“Do you not feel that these hills are familiar to you?” I asked
+dreamily. “I can imagine a person coming to some house like Derryaghy
+for the first time, and then finding that he knew this room and that,
+where this passage led to, what view he should see when he looked out
+through that little window at the top of the stairs. Or it might be
+that two people would come there together, and everything they said
+would sound like an echo from something that had been spoken before,
+and each, while they waited for it, would know the answer, before it
+had left the other’s lips.”
+
+“I’m not sure that I follow you,” said Katherine prosaically, “but I
+imagine you are trying to make out that I may be what-do-you-call-her
+Carroll come to life again. You’re the strangest boy I ever met.”
+
+“You told me I was like David. But――but――pretend it for a moment. Say
+you were Prudence Carroll, then who should I be?”
+
+“I haven’t any idea. Perhaps the apprentice of the artist who painted
+her picture, if he had an apprentice.”
+
+I considered this. It had never occurred to me before. But I could not
+get back, I could not discover even a faint gleam. It was not the time;
+I was too saturated with my actual surroundings.
+
+I did not pursue the subject, for I saw it had no interest for
+Katherine. Besides, I wanted to be quiet. I thought if we sat in
+silence, if I held her hand; above all, if we sat in silence close
+together, her arms about me, my cheek against her cheek, the past might
+swim up into the present, and we should know. But instead of that we
+began to talk, to talk of things that did not matter, until, by and by,
+we got up to return home.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+
+I stayed in the house all the evening, but I could not read, and so I
+sat down to write to Katherine. I wrote for more than an hour, though I
+was very doubtful whether, in the end, I should post my letter. It was
+the first time in my life I had ever written to anybody. Of course I
+cannot remember now what I said: I can remember the sense of it, or the
+nonsense, possibly, but not how I expressed it. Very badly, I suppose,
+for I tore my first attempt up, and began another, over which I must
+have spent an even longer time, since, to finish it, I was obliged to
+get up and light the lamp. When I went out to the post it was quite
+dark, and immediately after I had dropped my letter in the box I had a
+strong desire to get it back again. Why had I been in such a hurry? I
+should have kept it till morning. Then, as I pictured Katherine reading
+it, a thrill of pleasure swept through my timidity.
+
+I did not go home, but strolled, instead, over the golf-links in the
+direction of the sea. At such an hour they were absolutely deserted,
+and the pale sand-hills, stretching away in the moonlight and beside
+a dark waste of water, wore an unfamiliar, a slightly weird aspect,
+suggestive of some desolate lunar landscape. I wandered on, utterly
+oblivious to time, till I found a comfortable spot between two of these
+hills, on a gentle slope that was almost like a couch. I was filled
+with a passionate sense of life, and lying there, with the long thin
+sapless grass about me and above me, and the soft white powdery sand
+beneath, I could look out over the sea, and feel myself perfectly
+alone. The water was a dark mass under the moon, darker than the beach,
+darker than the sky, but not so dark as the Mourne Mountains, which
+rose away on my left in smooth, bold, black curves.
+
+There was no wind. Down in the hollow where I lay I was as sheltered
+as I should have been in bed. The night was washed through with the
+soft sound of the waves as they splashed in a long curving line on
+the flat strand that stretched on round to Dundrum, three miles away.
+Moths hovered above me with a beating of pale delicate wings; and all
+around, like a vast background for the sound of the sea, was the deep,
+rich, summer silence of the slumbering world, a silence of unending
+music, as though the great, living earth were breathing softly in its
+sleep. I lay on my back, and above me was the vast, deep vault of the
+sky, full of a floating darkness, in which the white moon hovered like
+a ghost. And I lay there in luxurious enjoyment of the night, and of
+the life that was running through my own body. It seemed to me at that
+moment as if my spirit were no longer merely passively receptive of
+what was borne in upon it, but that it had actually taken wing, had
+grown lighter, more volatile, were flowing out through the surrounding
+atmosphere, through the sky and the sea, were moving with the movement
+of the water. The earth beneath me was living and breathing, and,
+obedient to some obscure prompting of my body, I turned round and
+pressed my mouth against the dry grass, closer and closer, in a long
+silent embrace.
+
+It was very well there was no one to observe this exhibition of
+primitive and eternal instinct. I felt a passionate happiness and
+excitement. My head was bare, the salt sharp smell of the sea seemed
+to have set all my nerves tingling, and I unfastened my shirt that
+my breast might be bare also. All the past had slipped from me, and I
+lived in this moment, squeezing out its ecstasy to the last drop, as I
+might the juice of some ripe fruit. It seemed to me that I was on the
+brink of finding something for which all my previous existence had been
+but one long preparation and search. I was fumbling at the door of an
+enchanted garden: in a moment it would swing open: already the perfume
+of unknown flowers and fruits was in my nostrils. My feeling was deep
+and pure and clear as a forest pool. In my mind I went over the story
+of Shakespeare’s “Venus and Adonis.” I thought of the shepherd-boy
+Endymion. I imagined myself Endymion, as I lay there half naked in the
+moonlight. My eyes dimmed and the blood raced through my veins; it was
+as if the heart of the summer had suddenly opened out, like a gorgeous
+flower, and brought me some strange rapture....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When I awakened to more commonplace things I knew that it was very late
+indeed. I wondered what had possessed me, and what story I should tell
+my father standing there in the hall, holding up a candle, looking at
+me before he turned round to fasten the chain. I raced home to the
+fulfilment of this vision, but it was already past midnight, and my
+father would not listen to my excuses. He was very angry indeed, but
+his anger could not come between me and my happiness. I listened to
+it in a kind of dream, and as soon as a pause came, slipped away from
+it and on upstairs. In the dark, as I undressed, the delicate scent
+of heather still clinging to my clothes filled the small bedroom,
+and seemed to bring the whole day back to me from the beginning.
+Comfortably between the cool sheets I went over every incident of
+it, while the scent of heather still floated about me; and now I had
+acquired an extraordinary bravery; I gave utterance to every thought
+arising in my mind; the embrace which had been so impossible was
+perfectly easy. One by one exquisite pictures drifted in through the
+windows of my closed eyes; one by one they opened out before me, like
+flowers, full of delicious sweetness, and in the midst of them I fell
+asleep.
+
+But my sleep was only a completer realization of my waking thoughts. I
+was again with Katherine, and again we were alone on the mountain-side.
+We were coming home and I was a little behind her, when she stooped
+to gather a handful of heather. But instead of fastening it into her
+dress she turned and flung it at me, and then ran on down the hill.
+I followed quickly, and all at once she stopped running and we stood
+there, hot and panting and laughing. Then she impulsively lifted her
+face, and I kissed her. I held her close to me and kissed her again and
+again.... And the scent of heather floated about my bed, the heather of
+reality mingling with the heather of my dream.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+
+During the morning my father kept me working in the garden where he
+was erecting a kind of arch of trellis-work above the gate, but after
+our early dinner I went up to Derryaghy. Ever since I had awakened, my
+mind had been filled with the letter I had written, and with guesses as
+to how it would affect Katherine. I hurried along, for our dinner was
+at two, while their lunch was at one, and I had made no appointment,
+so that when I reached the house, and found they were all gone out, I
+was not greatly surprised. Katherine and Gerald had gone out riding;
+they would be back for tea. I left a message to say I would call some
+time in the evening and went upstairs to choose a book. In the silent
+library the faint sound of my feet on the thick carpet made little more
+noise than the rustle of a ghost, and when I had found what I wanted I
+paused with the book unopened in my hand. Through the window I could
+look out into the afternoon garden, sunlit and mellow, but in the house
+itself the silence of those upper rooms struck me, as always, with a
+suggestion of a faint, bygone life, of spiritual presences, unseen,
+yet watching and listening. I walked slowly down the passage, looking
+at the portraits, and trying to picture the lives of those who had sat
+for them. Were they aware of my scrutiny, of my curiosity, possibly
+indiscreet? did I disturb the dust of the past, did they welcome or,
+perchance, resent my intrusion into that delicate dream-life that
+had fallen upon them? I loved to amuse myself with such fancies, idle
+enough, not to be communicated to others. The air seemed heavy with a
+kind of still, intense reverie, through which there came the vibration
+of a hidden mysterious life. Were I the true son of the house, I told
+myself, a sign of recognition might have been given to me; but I was
+a stranger, an intruder, and my robuster, noisier presence could but
+disturb their ethereal existence. There was something almost vulgar in
+being physically alive among that shadowy company. I longed to pass
+the threshold of their world and learn its secrets. Perhaps if I were
+really to love that dark, sweet lady, Prudence Carroll, to declare my
+love, to kiss her painted lips, I might be admitted to it. Would she
+be jealous when I left her? To love a dream, a memory, that was very
+possible; but to be faithful to it? Through the door I had left ajar a
+golden stream of sunlight, filled with floating specks of dust, swam
+across the shadowed passage, and just touched the flowers in her hand.
+But my ghosts had never been afraid of sunlight: they were not afraid
+to walk in the deserted garden or to pass me on the stairs or in the
+hall. Often I had felt them to be there, and some day, I knew, I should
+see them. With this thought there came to me a desire to revisit their
+own garden, a walled place of dark green graves, where they wandered
+undisturbed.
+
+I went out, forgetting after all my book, and took a short cut across
+the fields and down a disused, mossy lane, purple with tall foxgloves,
+and sleepy with droning bees, which brought me out abruptly at the old
+church. Service was still held here, and as I came up I saw the door
+was open. I went inside, and an old woman who was dusting the pews
+wished me good-day. I talked to her for a few minutes and then began to
+wander idly about, trying my Latin on the inscriptions, peeping behind
+doors and through windows. A church on a week-day was for me quite
+a different thing from a church on a Sunday. Its quiet appealed to
+me, a sort of homely, gentle charm that was at once dissipated by the
+entrance of a congregation. I went into the pulpit and imagined myself
+preaching, while the old woman, Margaret Beattie, leaned on the handle
+of her broom and watched me.
+
+“You’d make the queer fine curate, Master Peter,” she said, evidently
+seeing in this exhibition the betrayal of a vocation.
+
+“They’ll never get me, Margaret,” I replied. “The Church is not what it
+was. I believe you are an old witch,” I went on, for she was half-deaf,
+“and when you have done your mischief here, you will ride away on that
+broomstick.”
+
+I went out into the sunshine and pottered about among the graves. All
+were old, for nobody was ever buried here now. Most of the head-stones
+were stained green with age and weather, and the lettering was so worn
+that it was often necessary to peer close to read a name or a date. I
+lingered in the corner where lay the bones of some of those fine ladies
+and gentlemen whose pictures I had been looking at. Well, it was a
+pleasant place....
+
+Margaret came out, locking the door after her. I heard her shambling
+feet on the gravel, followed by the clanging of the iron gate that
+left me to myself. Had my ghosts preceded me here, or did they still
+linger in the upper rooms at Derryaghy? I threaded my way among the
+graves to the low, sun-warmed wall, all golden and green and grey with
+velvet moss on weathered stone. Before me lay the broad open country
+I must cross to go home, rich and dark in the late afternoon light.
+The gleam of water, of pool and stream, shone palely amid long grass
+and darker gorse bushes: and beyond were trees, black and soft against
+the western sky, as if rubbed in by a dusky thumb. Distant hills stood
+out from the grey clouds and the softer, deeper background of luminous
+sky. Everything shimmered and gleamed in a kind of romantic richness
+and divine softness that I was to see later in dreamy landscapes by
+Perugino. And over all was a great sea of light and sky――grey, faint
+green, and deeper, warmer yellow, with clear silver where the water lay.
+
+I turned from it and sat down on the wall, facing the churchyard. It
+was a quiet spot, designed for contemplation. The faint wind in the
+trees was like a low pleasant tune, and there was nothing melancholy
+in its charm. To me it had a kind of happy beauty which I loved. I had
+fallen into a mood when I seemed close to my dreamland. It lay beyond
+an enchanted sea, whose shore was that bright cloud there. I could hear
+the low, continuous sound of surf breaking on the pale glistening sand;
+I could see deep lagoons, and sleepy rivers winding slowly down through
+green lawns and meadowlands. I tried to draw nearer, but it swam away
+from me, leaving only a broken cloud, and beyond that the endless sky.
+Had it already been, or was it still to come? Was all this world,
+apparently so solid under my feet, but my dream, and should I presently
+awaken to that other? I had a sudden temptation to risk everything: the
+fascination of death stole over me, quickening my curiosity to know
+what lay beyond. Only _should_ I know? Death might not really solve
+anything! If I tried to force an entrance I might lose my only chance
+of finding one. A large, splendid butterfly, a red admiral, flitted
+over the wall and perched on one of the grave-stones, spreading his
+gorgeous wings, black and crimson, flat against the grey, sun-baked
+stone. He remained there with the stillness of a painted thing,
+drinking in the heat, knowing nothing save that.
+
+The afternoon was waning. The sun had crept down the sky till he was
+almost hidden, and the violet shadows were blurred on the tangled
+grass. Again one of those strange, breathless silences seemed to wash
+up as from some depth of Time, and I listened――listened for a sign,
+a word, for in the stillness the faintest whisper would have reached
+me. What were they, these strange pauses in life, in everything――these
+feelings of suspense, of expectation? A kind of ineffable happiness
+and peace descended upon me. A delicate spirit of beauty seemed to
+be wandering through the unmown grass, which bent beneath its feet,
+wandering under the broad-leaved trees, beside the grey old church.
+Surely there was something of which all this was only the reflection!
+I could feel it; I knew it. What did it mean? what was I waiting for?
+what was it I desired? I thought of my soul as a little candle-flame,
+hovering at my lips, ready to take flight. If I blew it from me it
+might flicker away over the grass, down into the graves, up into the
+air, a tiny tongue of flame, no bigger than a piece of thistledown. I
+thought of the old, silent, listening house, darkening now to twilight,
+mysterious, haunted, with its closed doors and brown portraits: a
+dream-thing that, too, and all the ghosts who lived there.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+
+It was half-past eight when I left home to go to Derryaghy, but at the
+corner of the Bryansford Road I met Willie Breen and stopped to get
+particulars about our meeting to-morrow night. I did not mention the
+Dales because I was almost sure that in the end Katherine would not
+come, and in the midst of our talk he broke off abruptly with: “Here’s
+your fine friends,” delivered half-contemptuously. At the same time he
+stuck his hands in his pockets and strolled off whistling.
+
+I wheeled round to face Miss Dick and Katherine and Gerald coming
+towards me. I raised my straw hat.
+
+“We’re just going as far as the station and back,” said Katherine. “We
+thought we’d meet you.”
+
+I dropped with her a little behind the others and walked as slowly as I
+could.
+
+“I got your letter,” she went on, simply. “It was very nice of you to
+write, but I hope you didn’t want an answer. Letters are beyond me.”
+
+“You weren’t angry?” I asked, timidly.
+
+“No. What was there to be angry about? Of course, I couldn’t make out
+what it all meant: you didn’t intend me, I suppose, to take it quite
+seriously: but it seemed very flattering and poetic.... I was sorry we
+weren’t in when you came for us. Tell me what you did with yourself all
+afternoon.”
+
+“I walked out to the old graveyard and sat there,” I replied.
+
+“How cheerful!”
+
+“It was rather: at any rate I liked it.... Let us go along here,” I
+added. “We can get home round this way. It is a good deal longer, but――
+Do you mind?”
+
+“Not if it doesn’t keep us too late.”
+
+“I have been thinking about the artist’s apprentice,” I began. “Do you
+smell the meadow-sweet?”
+
+“The artist’s apprentice? Oh, yes! Well, what were you thinking about
+him?”
+
+“That he must paint your portrait.”
+
+“But can he?”
+
+“He can try, like other apprentices.”
+
+“When?”
+
+“Any time. To-morrow.”
+
+“Really? Do you paint?”
+
+“Only a little in water-colours. I’ve not had any lessons.”
+
+“And you’ve made pictures?”
+
+“No, just a few sketches. I never finish anything. Just something to
+remind me of――things.”
+
+“You must show them to me.”
+
+“If you like; but you won’t see anything in them; nobody ever does.
+They’re only meant for myself――and they’re no use anyway.”
+
+“What did you really mean by your letter, Peter?”
+
+“I don’t know――burn it. I meant everything that’s there, but I’m not
+sure now what _is_ there. After I had written it I went out and lay
+down on the golf-links and listened to the sea.... Would you like me to
+take you to my old graveyard? I expect you’ll be going to church there
+on Sunday.”
+
+“Do you mean now?”
+
+“Yes. It’s not far away――just across those fields.”
+
+We walked on through the scented darkness.
+
+“I don’t know that I like graveyards,” said Katherine, doubtfully.
+
+“I don’t either――new ones――but this is very old.”
+
+I helped her across the stile. Out of the shadow of the tall hedge, the
+grassy country lay grey and unsubstantial under the rising moon. The
+black spire of the church showed through the trees, and in a little
+while we reached the low wall where I had sat all the afternoon. But
+how changed the place was! Flooded with fantastic moonlight, only the
+shadows now seemed real.
+
+“You do not want to go inside?” Katherine asked, dissuasively.
+
+“No; we can see it from here.” And I leaned over the low wall. “It
+is not like a modern cemetery,” I again told her. “There is nothing
+horrid here. There are no bodies;――nothing but a little dust, and a few
+spirits, perhaps, that have not gone away.”
+
+“Ghosts? Are you not afraid of them?”
+
+“I don’t know. Not now, at any rate; these ghosts are friendly; they
+are so old.”
+
+“Have you seen them?”
+
+“No. I saw one at home in my bedroom when I was a little chap, but it
+was not nice; it was not like these.... You are buried here,” I added,
+smiling.
+
+But Katherine turned away quickly. “Don’t,” she said. “Why do you like
+to be so morbid? Besides, I don’t think it is right.”
+
+I could see that I had vexed her, and I changed the subject.
+
+Down by the grave just below us the tiny green light of a glow-worm
+glimmered, but I did not point it out to Katherine. A fairy tale
+of Hans Andersen’s came into my mind, and I saw Death, like an old
+gardener, floating over the wall with a soul, like a baby, folded in
+his arms; and I watched him lay it softly to sleep under the trees.
+I had forgotten all the details of the story, but I made a story
+for myself, and the moonlight on the grass and on the weather-worn
+grave-stones, and the black, lurking shadows, and the still,
+moon-drenched church, wove into it a mysterious beauty. It seemed to me
+that something might happen now that would make, for me at least, all
+things different for ever after, that would push the boundaries of life
+infinitely further back, by bringing a dimmer, vaster world directly
+into relation with me. In that world, perhaps, they dreamed of this,
+just as I was now dreaming of it.
+
+I was aroused by Katherine. “We must go, Peter.” She laid her hand on
+my arm.
+
+“All right.”
+
+I took a last look, and then stepped out briskly beside her.
+
+“I oughtn’t to have brought you here,” I said, “out of your way.”
+
+“I enjoyed coming. I am not in any hurry myself, but you know how early
+they go to bed, and it must be getting late.”
+
+“Do you like me, Katherine,” I asked, pleasantly.
+
+“If I had disliked you I don’t suppose I should have tramped all these
+miles with you.”
+
+“You are sure I don’t bore you, or anything?”
+
+“Not up to the present. Why do you ask?” she smiled.
+
+“I just wanted to make sure. Girls, as a rule, would rather have older
+people than I am――wouldn’t they――fellows like the curate? I only
+mention him because you happen to have met him. You’re seventeen, which
+means that you’re grown up, and――――”
+
+“I can’t make up my mind what you are,” Katherine interrupted, laughing
+aloud. “The first night I saw you you were frightened to open your
+mouth, and now you’re saying all kinds of things.”
+
+“That shouldn’t be said?”
+
+“No; I like them. I daresay in ten years’ time I won’t care to be told
+how old I am, but at present it’s all right.”
+
+“I didn’t mean anything except that there’s a difference between us.
+Girls often get married at seventeen.”
+
+“I think, you know, you’re rather a dear in your own way,” she said,
+thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+It was late, and the house was quiet. When I leaned out of my window I
+could hear the sound of the waves, but no other sound; then I opened my
+bedroom door softly, and crept out into the passage. From my father’s
+room there came a heavy, muffled snoring as I made my way downstairs.
+The hall-door I unfastened with the same elaborate precautions against
+noise, but I left it open behind me, only slipping in the door-mat to
+keep it from slamming. Once outside, I felt safe.
+
+The night was clear and full of moonlight, and my black shadow danced
+fantastically before me on the white, bare road. Not a soul was abroad,
+and as I walked I had a curious sense of freedom and exhilaration; old
+songs of romance and adventure hummed in my ears, and I wanted them
+to come true. Contrary to my expectation and to my desire, Katherine
+and Gerald were waiting for me at the lodge-gate, in the shadow of the
+hawthorn hedge, and Katherine held a parcel in her hand.
+
+We did not talk very much as we went quickly on, following the same
+road we had taken on the morning of our picnic. I kept a sharp
+look-out, but could see no sign of any of the other boys. Below us,
+on our left, the sea murmured and splashed through the warm delicious
+night; on the right, the Mourne Mountains rose, black against the sky.
+
+“I’m afraid we’re rather late,” I remarked after a while. Then I added,
+“You’ll have to take an oath of secrecy.”
+
+I had already told them all they would have to do, but I was a little
+nervous, for I had no idea what kind of reception they would get, and
+to help to tide matters over I had recommended Katherine, if she came,
+to bring a supply of provisions, which would always be so much in their
+favour. For myself I didn’t care a straw, though I knew what I was
+doing would make me unpopular.
+
+We had walked for about a quarter of an hour and had left the village
+well behind us when down towards Maggie’s Leap I saw the red glow of a
+bonfire. We turned to the sea, clambering over the rough ground, till
+presently, in a hollow, we saw them, seven or eight boys, sitting round
+a fire. Thirty feet below, the sea looked black and strange; and the
+mysterious night floated about us, a night of wonderful beauty.
+
+There was an awkward moment when we advanced into the firelight, and
+before I introduced them. A silence followed my very lame speech, in
+the chill of which Gerald lit a cigarette, and we took our seats,
+slightly beyond the main circle. Nobody made room for us, and when
+Katherine produced her contributions to the supper I feared at first
+they were going to be refused. We seemed to have dissipated the
+romantic atmosphere of the gathering, nor was anything said about the
+Dales taking a vow of secrecy, which was, nevertheless, one of the
+rules of the club. I could see Sam Geoghegan, a boy whom I had never
+liked, but who was the biggest boy there, whispering to his right-hand
+neighbour, and I knew he was talking about us.
+
+However, as supper progressed, the atmosphere thawed somewhat, and I
+began to hope things would turn out all right. Willie Breen, who had
+been fumbling in his pocket, now produced a small bottle filled with
+some bright red liquid and held it up to the light, gazing at it in
+silence. Suddenly, when everybody’s attention was fixed on him, his
+face stiffened into an expression of suppressed agony, and he gasped
+for breath, drawing his hand across his forehead.
+
+“What’s the matter, Billy? Stomach bad?” asked Sam.
+
+But Willie’s eyes were closed. “If I fall down,” he sighed in a
+whisper, “an’ a deadly pallor creeps over me, force open my teeth
+with a knife, and pour a single drop of this blood-red liquid down my
+throat――――”
+
+“How can you pour a drop?” interrupted Sam.
+
+“Unless it is too late,” said Willie, “you will see the colour slowly
+come back to my cheeks and suffuse them with the glow of life, until at
+last, when you don’t expect it, I’ll open my eyes and say, ‘Where am
+I?’”
+
+“_Does_ he have fits?” Katherine whispered.
+
+“No: it’s only ‘Monte Cristo,’” I told her.
+
+Katherine looked at him wonderingly, but Willie had already his mouth
+crammed with bread and sardines, the sardines she herself had brought.
+
+Most of the boys now lit cigarettes, which Gerald had given them. From
+the darkness below, the sound of the sea rose up, weird and melancholy,
+full of an inexpressible loneliness. The warm, ruddy light of the fire
+flitted across fresh young faces. A dim fragrance seemed to be blown
+down from the woods, and to mingle with the saltness of the sea.
+
+Sam Geoghegan said suddenly, “I’m a socialist.”
+
+This announcement fell rather flat. The beauty of the night had cast a
+vague spell upon the other members of the club, and they were content
+to be silent.
+
+“Do you mean like the chaps who were round last week with the cart?”
+somebody asked indifferently, after a long pause.
+
+“They gave one of the wee books they had with them to my father,” said
+Sam.
+
+“What is it?” asked Willie Breen.
+
+“What’s what?”
+
+“A socialist.”
+
+“It’s not an ‘it,’ it’s a man. It means that everybody ought to get the
+same chance. There should be no privileges nor private property nor
+anythin’.”
+
+“But whenever you’ve got things they’re yours,” said Willie Breen,
+unconvinced.
+
+“You don’t have things――isn’t that what I’m saying? Everything belongs
+to the State――they belong to everybody.”
+
+“Socialists are always poor,” put in Sam’s chum, Robbie McCann,
+unenthusiastically. “Those lads that were round here tried to get up a
+collection.”
+
+“Of course they’re poor,” said Sam, pityingly. “You can’t give up every
+thin’ and be rich, can you? For dear sake have a bit of wit!”
+
+“Would _their_ aunt have to give up her place?” asked Willie Breen,
+jerking his head toward the Dales.
+
+“Why wouldn’t she? Does it belong to her?”
+
+This was a bold idea, and Sam accompanied it with a glare of defiance
+at Gerald, from whom, nevertheless, a minute ago he had accepted a
+second cigarette.
+
+“Of course it belongs to her,” said Willie, wonderingly.
+
+“Not rightly. Man alive, but you’re all thick in the head. The point is
+that nobody has a right to anything――more’n anybody else, I mean.”
+
+“You know all about it, don’t you?” asked Gerald, gently.
+
+“I know more than you, anyway, stink-pot,” said Sam. Two or three of
+the bigger boys laughed, and I began to foresee trouble.
+
+“We needn’t start a row, need we?” I suggested, amicably.
+
+“I’m not startin’ a row; it was him. What call has he to put in his
+jaw. He wasn’t asked to come.”
+
+“He was asked,” I replied.
+
+“Ay――maybe by you――that’s nothin’.”
+
+“Let’s tell stories,” Willie Breen proposed. “Do you know how they make
+castor oil? There’s a woman told me she saw it. It was a big round
+room, and corpses hanging from hooks in the ceiling; and from the ends
+of their toes yellow drops were falling into a basin. That was castor
+oil.”
+
+“I’m sure. Anybody can blether you up, Billy.”
+
+“I’m not saying I believe it.”
+
+“It’s a wonder.”
+
+Suddenly a deep, low boom rose up from the sea, as if coming out of the
+infinite night, swelling, like the heavy bass note of an organ, and
+dying away.
+
+Katherine laid her hand on my arm. “What was that?” she said.
+
+“It’s nothing,” I murmured; but a vague sense of awe had crept over the
+little group.
+
+“It came last summer for the first time, didn’t it?” asked George Edge,
+a boy who had not spoken before. He had been lying on his back, looking
+up at the floating stars, but he now raised himself on his elbow and
+looked out to sea. He was not one of the village boys, but his people
+came down every summer for two months, and I had known him all my life.
+“My mother gets frightened when she hears it,” he went on.
+
+There was a pause, and then the sound came again, floating up, weird
+and mysterious, as from somewhere far out on the water. We drew closer
+round the fire, and began again to talk, but the conversation had grown
+darker.
+
+“It was here that the murder was,” said another boy, hidden in the
+shadow of the rock, so that his voice seemed a disembodied sound
+speaking out of the darkness.
+
+“Just over there,” said George Edge.
+
+“What murder?” asked Gerald.
+
+The voice from the shadow spoke again. “It was a man called Dewar.
+There was two of them comin’ home one winter afternoon from Annalong,
+O’Brian and Dewar. O’Brian had been gettin’ money, and they both had
+their load of drink. It was dirty weather and no one on the road, and
+maybe they fell out about somethin’. Any way, next day they got O’Brian
+down below there on the stones, his face bashed in you wouldn’t know
+him. Him and Dewar were seen leavin’ Annalong together, and they got
+Dewar lying drunk in his own house, and he confessed and was hung for
+it.”
+
+“But how did he do it?” Gerald asked.
+
+“He smashed him on the face with a lump of rock, and then threw him
+down into the sea. They say there are nights when you can hear O’Brian.
+It’s like this.” He gave a low wail that shrilled up to a cry.
+
+“I’m goin’ home,” said Willie Breen, rising to his feet.
+
+“Wee scaldy! You’ll have to go by yourself,” jeered Sam. “And you’ll
+meet him as sure as death. You’ll know him, because he won’t have any
+face on him, only a lock of blood. And Dewar with him, with his neck
+broke.” Sam’s head drooped horribly to his shoulder.
+
+Willie Breen sat down.
+
+“When you talk about ghosts or spirits it’s supposed to bring them
+near,” said George Edge. “It gives them a kind of power over you.”
+
+“For goodness sake stop all that rubbish,” cried Katherine, indignantly.
+“Can’t you see you’re frightening the child out of his wits!”
+
+“Go to her, baby. Hold her hand,” mocked Sam.
+
+Willie turned angrily on his protectress. “I’m not frightened. It’s you
+that’s frightened. You shouldn’t be here at all. There shouldn’t be any
+women in the club.”
+
+“Faith, he’s right there!” Sam exclaimed.
+
+But George Edge, sitting up, pointed out to sea. “Listen,” he said
+impressively.
+
+We all sat still, Willie Breen with wide-open eyes. A moment after,
+with a blade of grass between his thumbs, Sam made an unearthly screech
+in the little boy’s ear. It was too much, and Willie set up a howl.
+
+At the same instant Katherine turned to Sam and he received a
+resounding slap on his fat face. Instantly there was tumult. Sam was
+on his feet, red as a turkey-cock, blustering of all he would do if
+Katherine were not a girl. Then he spied Gerald, and gave him a blow
+on the chest that almost sent him into the fire. “That’s for you, you
+‘get.’”
+
+Gerald drew back, neither speaking, nor returning the blow: the other
+boys had surrounded them. I saw Gerald’s face, and it was very white;
+but he did nothing, he was afraid. That he should be disgusted me, and
+at the same time I was furious with Sam, whom, for that matter, I had
+always detested. I waited just long enough to give Gerald a chance to
+face him, if he wanted to; then I gave Sam a slap with my open hand on
+his cheek. It was the second he had received within two minutes, and
+somehow, even in the excitement, I couldn’t help being amused.
+
+We stripped to our shirts and trousers and moved out into the
+moonlight. Katherine hovered in the background, but made no attempt
+either to interfere or to go away. Gerald had disappeared. I looked at
+Sam’s big fists. I knew he was taller and heavier than I was, but I was
+not afraid of him; instead, I had a cold determination to lick him. I
+felt elated; I was glad Gerald had drawn back, since it gave me this
+chance of showing Katherine what a hero I was. We chose seconds, and
+there was a time-keeper, though no one had a watch, for mine was wound
+up and safe under my pillow at home. We had little science, but were
+mortally in earnest.
+
+At the beginning of the second round the nervous tremor of Sam’s
+mouth as he stepped into the ring gave me a cruel pleasure. I did not
+believe very much in his pluck, and I was now quite confident as to
+the finish. It was in the middle of the third round, and we were both
+panting and bleeding, when Michael, the policeman, appeared on the
+scene, springing up as if from the bowels of the earth. How he came to
+be out of bed at such an hour, and in this particular spot, I never
+discovered, but he stepped in between us and stopped the fight.
+
+“Well now, this is nice goings on! Will you tell me what it’s all
+about?”
+
+“You go quietly to hell,” said Sam in a low voice.
+
+The others chimed in. “It’s none of your business, Michael, we’re not
+in the town.”
+
+“Do you tell me that, now? Well, I’ll be troubling you to go home to
+your beds every one of yous. This is no place for you, Miss,” he added,
+having discovered Katherine in the background, “with a lot of young
+rapscallions. I’ll see you safe home.”
+
+But Katherine did not move.
+
+“Let them finish, Michael. Nobody’ll ever know you were here. There’ll
+be no talk.”
+
+Michael wavered. The presence of Katherine obviously both troubled and
+puzzled him, for of course he knew who she was. He turned to her again,
+but she had withdrawn into the shadow of the rocks, whither he followed
+her, and they whispered together in inaudible tones. Then he came back.
+Katherine had disappeared; possibly she had followed Gerald, who would
+hardly have gone very far without her; at any rate I could not look
+after her now.
+
+“Well, I suppose you’ll be wanting to settle this,” said Michael,
+doubtfully.
+
+His words were received with an outburst of cheers and laughter. A
+faint greyness of dawn was already spreading over the eastern sky.
+“Time!” called George Edge, and I noticed that he had actually borrowed
+Michael’s big silver watch.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+Next morning I got a rowing up from my father. Indeed, as soon as I
+saw my face in the glass, I knew it would be quite useless to try to
+hide what had happened, and I told him frankly I had been fighting.
+Fortunately, it was not necessary for me to say anything about our
+club, nor did I even mention Sam’s name. I simply told him that the
+fight had taken place at night to prevent its being stopped, and
+after that held my peace. My main feeling, in spite of my father’s
+lecture, was that I was extraordinarily glad it _had_ taken place, for
+I had come out of it victorious, even though I was pretty sure I had
+received more punishment than I had given. My state of mind absurdly
+resembled that of a young cock who gets up on a wall to crow, and
+nothing my father could say had the least power to damp my spirits. My
+face――especially all round my forehead and temples――was beautifully and
+variously marked, yet there was nothing I more ardently desired than
+that Katherine should see me in this condition. I even felt amicably
+disposed towards Gerald, who, after all, couldn’t help being a coward.
+Perhaps he would come round this morning to see how I had fared.
+
+But nobody came, and in the afternoon I determined to go up to
+Derryaghy. Willie Breen, who now regarded me in the light of a hero,
+accompanied me. When I left him at the lodge-gate, instead of going to
+the hall-door, I went round to the back of the house, hoping to find
+Katherine on the terrace. She was not there; nobody was there but Miss
+Dick, who cried out at once on seeing my battered condition. Her tone
+was certainly far enough removed from that of Willie Breen to have
+cooled my conceit had such a thing been possible, but fortunately she
+was too much occupied with a letter she kept folding and unfolding to
+bestow any very lengthy attention on my appearance. “My sister, Mrs.
+Arthur Jenkins,” she began, not because I was worthy of her confidence,
+but because there was nobody else, “wants me to go and stay with her. I
+don’t know what to do. Mrs. Carroll may not be able to spare me; though
+I haven’t been there for a long time.”
+
+“Oh, you ought to go,” I said easily. “Where is everybody?” I looked
+round, preparatory to making my escape. Miss Dick regarded me
+doubtfully.
+
+“The last time I was there the youngest child had croup. They were very
+anxious about him; indeed the doctor almost gave him up; though he
+managed to pull through in the end, and is quite strong now. Not that
+any of them are actually what you would call robust. They really take
+after Arthur, Mr. Jenkins that is, though Sissie, that’s my sister,
+always says _he’s_ stronger than he looks. I’m sure I hope so, for he
+looks wretched. The whole family, you know, the whole Jenkins family
+I mean, are vegetarians, and vegetarians, whatever they may feel,
+invariably _look_ ill. When I say that to Sissie she always gets cross,
+as if I could help it! But that’s what people are like. Arthur wants
+to bring up the children in the same way, which is silly, and, to my
+mind, trifling with their lives. Besides, it’s so difficult when you’ve
+only one maid who has to do everything: and they only give fourteen,
+and what can you get for fourteen nowadays, even in the country?
+You certainly can’t expect a girl like that to cook two dinners a
+day, because, you see, Sissie eats meat.” She stopped suddenly, as
+if she had lost the thread of her discourse. “We’re all going to a
+garden-party at Castlewellan. I’m just waiting for the others. Except
+Gerald――he won’t come. You’ll find him over there,”――she waved her
+left hand. “He’s put up a hammock and he’s been sleeping in it all
+day. He’s dreadfully lazy. He won’t even practise. And though he’s so
+polite and gentlemanly, I must say he’s really rather irritable: he got
+quite cross at lunch. I don’t think Katherine understands him. People
+with very artistic feelings, I’m sure, _are_ more easily annoyed than
+others. It’s not as if he were just an ordinary person like you or me.”
+
+Whether I was an ordinary person or not, I didn’t relish being told so,
+even by Miss Dick, and I decided, as I had frequently decided before,
+that she was a stupid creature, and that I didn’t like her. I left
+her referring to the epistle from Mrs. Arthur Jenkins, or Sissie, or
+whatever she was called, and went to look for Gerald.
+
+He had heard me coming, for when I found him he had swung himself out
+of his hammock and was standing beside it.
+
+“Are the others gone yet?” he asked.
+
+“They’re just starting. I only saw Miss Dick.”
+
+“They’re going to some party, thank the Lord!”
+
+“Yes; she told me.”
+
+A pause followed, for I didn’t know what to say, and he himself kept
+silence. What I had intended to do was to put him at his ease, to let
+him know that it was all right about last night, but my magnanimity and
+sympathy were evidently quite superfluous, and I was annoyed at this.
+
+We strolled back slowly to the house. “Wouldn’t it be rather a good
+time to play to me?” I said. “You promised to, and now we have the
+place to ourselves.”
+
+“If you like.”
+
+We entered by the open window, and pulling the sofa over beside it, I
+lay down in supreme laziness among a heap of coloured cushions. Gerald
+went at once to the piano.
+
+“What sort of music do you care for?” he asked me. “Or shall I just
+play anything?”
+
+“Yes; whatever you feel in the mood for.”
+
+His head was bent a little over the key-board, and he seemed to be
+thinking of what he should play. I watched a tendril of clematis that
+waved softly over my head, and every now and again I breathed in
+the sweet scent of a stalk of mignonette I had gathered in passing.
+My thoughts floated away through the quiet afternoon, and I began
+to wonder what things were like when there was no one there to be
+conscious of them.
+
+I know now that it was the fifteenth Prelude, but at the time I had
+never even heard the name of Chopin, and all I was aware of was that
+a soft, very delicate tune, was coming to me across the room, with a
+curious pallor, suggestive of the whiteness of water. I half closed my
+lids and lay absolutely still. Even in my ignorance I knew that the
+beauty of Gerald’s playing was extraordinary. It may have had many
+faults; he may have been incapable of doing all kinds of things that
+professional pianists can do; he may have been, and probably was,
+deficient in power: I do not know. He seemed to caress the notes rather
+than to strike them, he seemed literally to draw the music out, and the
+whole tone had a kind of liquid, singing quality, such as I have never
+heard since save in the playing of Pachmann. As I listened, the music
+gathered force and sombreness, growing louder and darker in a heavily
+marked crescendo, and then once more it passed into the clear soft tune
+with which it had begun.
+
+The sound had stopped. I said nothing; I simply waited. The cool,
+pleasant summer afternoon had become full of lovely voices which
+flickered, like waves of coloured light, across my senses. Pensively,
+a little shyly even, a simple, drooping melody breathed itself out on
+the air with a strange hesitation and indecision, rising and falling,
+faltering, repeating itself, resting on the “F” with a kind of desire
+that gathered intensity as the note swelled and died away, sinking back
+into “D.”
+
+Listening to Gerald playing that sixth Nocturne, listening to him
+playing all that followed it, you would have thought he was a youth
+of the deepest feelings, yet I could never find any trace of those
+feelings at any other time. Somewhere, I suppose, they must have been,
+somewhere below the surface, but I was never able to discover them. It
+was as if his soul only came into being when he sat down at a piano.
+When he played you could see him listening to his own music, you could
+see him drinking it up as if it were the perfume of my mignonette, as
+if there were some finer echo audible only to himself. And his playing
+would alter, would grow gayer, or a kind of weariness would creep into
+it. I offer these only as the impressions I received at the time; what
+I should receive now I cannot tell. Yet I find it hard to believe I was
+utterly mistaken. It was never my fortune to hear him in later years,
+when I had heard many famous pianists――and I suppose I have heard
+practically all those of my time――but I cannot help thinking he might
+have been among the greatest had he not chosen to be something else,
+something I last saw at a café in Berlin. The puffed, horrible face,
+the glazed, sodden eyes――no, there was no music there. Or if there was,
+it was hidden, buried, lost for ever in that desecrated, half-paralysed
+body, buried alive, like a lamp burning in a tomb. Now, I have nothing
+to go upon save those first impressions of a boyish, uncultivated
+taste, and the fact that in after years the playing of Vladimir de
+Pachmann brought back sharply to me the memory of that afternoon.
+
+He played on for nearly two hours. In the end he stopped abruptly and
+got up from the piano, while I thanked him. I knew that he knew he had
+given me a tremendous pleasure, and there was no need to say much. He
+told me the music I had been listening to was all, or nearly all, by
+one composer.
+
+“And that last thing?” I asked.
+
+“That was one of the Studies――the one in A flat. I can’t play anybody
+else. I don’t mean that other things are more difficult, but they don’t
+suit me.” He was silent, until he added, “I may as well tell you that
+I’m not as good as you think.”
+
+“I haven’t told you yet what I think,” I answered, smiling, for I
+was still under the glamour of his mood, and indeed at that moment I
+could have hugged him. I did not want to talk of ordinary things. The
+music had wakened in me a feeling of melancholy, like a memory of some
+delicious thing that had happened long ago, and would never happen
+again.
+
+I tried to explain my very tenuous ideas to Gerald, but they did not
+interest him. And already I felt our relation altering. When he was at
+the piano he had seemed to me a kind of angel; now that other element,
+that element of latent antagonism, was beginning to re-awaken in me.
+
+Tea had meanwhile been laid for us upon the terrace. Tony, who had
+been asleep outside in the sun, threw off drowsiness like an outworn
+garment, and sat up beside my chair, with raised head, and beautiful,
+dark eyes that watched every movement I made, especially those which
+happened to convey a piece of bread and butter or cake into my mouth.
+When I looked at him he instantly gave half a dozen quick wags of his
+tail, and then resumed his former attitude of motionless expectation,
+to which attention was attracted by a variety of queer little highly
+expressive noises he produced from somewhere in his throat. Nobody
+being there to prevent me, I gave him about half the cake, piece by
+piece, each of which he swallowed almost whole, and with a wag of the
+tail to show how he appreciated this delicate pastime.
+
+“Did you get much hurt last night?” Gerald asked me suddenly.
+
+The question was unexpected, for I looked upon the whole incident as
+closed. I glanced up from feeding Tony. “No; not much,” I answered.
+
+“And the other――I forget his name――Sam something?”
+
+“Oh, Sam’s all right.”
+
+“Do you think I should have fought him?”
+
+“One was enough,” I said carelessly.
+
+“Did you think I was afraid?”
+
+I looked away. His question seemed somehow to be all wrong. “I didn’t
+think about it,” I answered, after a slight pause.
+
+“It must have looked as if I were afraid,” he went on. “I thought so
+afterwards.”
+
+I couldn’t imagine what he was trying to get at. I wanted to stop him
+talking like this. It was even less to my taste than his funking Sam
+last night had been.
+
+“Are you working at anything besides music?” I asked him, jerkily.
+
+He shook his head. “Not very much. I have a tutor. Why won’t you talk
+about last night?”
+
+“What is there to talk about? I’m sorry it turned out that way, but I
+can’t help it, though of course it was my fault for taking you without
+letting the others know. I should have told them beforehand.”
+
+“I’m not afraid of that lout, anyway. If I see him again――――”
+
+“Oh, well, what’s the use of worrying about it?” I interrupted,
+disgusted with his persistence.
+
+The pause that followed was an uncomfortable one. If he had deliberately
+tried to efface the impression his music had made upon me he could not
+have succeeded better.
+
+He gave a strange little laugh. “I see you don’t believe me.”
+
+“No: I don’t believe you,” I answered bluntly, “and I don’t know why
+you should want me to.”
+
+“I suppose you think it is pleasant to be taken for a coward?”
+
+“I’m sure it isn’t pleasant; but I can’t imagine that it matters
+greatly to you what I think.”
+
+“Of course, if I hadn’t done what I did, you wouldn’t have had _your_
+particular little swagger!”
+
+“Isn’t that rather a rotten sort of thing to say?” I answered as I got
+up. “I think I’ll move on. Come, Tony.”
+
+Gerald began to apologize.
+
+“Oh, it’s all right,” I said, coldly, leaving him there.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+
+Katherine, who had promised to sit to me for her portrait, kept putting
+me off from day to day, and it was nearly a week later when I made my
+first attempt. By some happy chance on that particular afternoon I had
+found her alone, for as a rule Gerald was there, and even now it was
+almost as if he were with us, since she began at once to talk about him.
+
+“You must take off your hat,” I said, ignoring her remarks.
+
+She obeyed me, and I began to draw in my outline.
+
+“Gerald likes you,” she said. “I wish you would be friends with him.”
+
+“But I am friends with him,” I answered, abstractedly.
+
+“Not very much. You would rather he was not with us.”
+
+“That doesn’t mean I’m not friends with him.”
+
+“He has so few friends,” she went on, still clinging to the subject.
+
+“Has he? I’m afraid, no matter how much I tried, we could never really
+be chums.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I don’t understand him.”
+
+“Why don’t you understand him?”
+
+“I suppose because I’m stupid. Besides, what I do understand I don’t
+greatly like.”
+
+She was not offended; she simply asked, “What is the matter with him?”
+
+I feared I had been horribly rude, but the words had slipped out before
+I could check them. “There is nothing the matter with him,” I answered
+hastily. “I wasn’t thinking of what I was saying. It is only that――that
+we’re not suited to each other: we’re too different. At all events, it
+is of very little importance, seeing that you’re going away in a few
+days.”
+
+“We’ll be back again next year, I expect. Aunt Clara wants me to come.
+_She_ isn’t very friendly to Gerald either.”
+
+“Oh, you only fancy that; of course she is. And there’s Miss Dick, who
+worships the very ground he walks on.”
+
+“Miss Dick’s too silly for anything.”
+
+“There you are! And yet you want me to worship him too!”
+
+“I don’t want anything of the kind; and you know that. But of course if
+you don’t like him I can’t make you. I think that night――the night we
+went with you to your meeting――has something to do with it.”
+
+“Oh that!” I answered lightly. It seemed to me a long time ago, though
+there was a yellow bruise still visible above my left eyebrow.
+
+I finished my outline and began to paint. The other picture had been
+painted indoors, I reflected. I don’t know what made me think of it,
+but I couldn’t get it out of my mind. It kept floating between me and
+my work, and I seemed to see it quite as clearly as I saw Katherine
+herself. Still I persevered, though my progress was slow and from the
+beginning unsatisfactory. I talked to Katherine, or rather I replied to
+her, for what she said penetrated only the fringe of my consciousness.
+She had brought a book out with her, and by and by she began to
+read aloud, but I have no idea what it was she read. I painted away
+most diligently, yet all the time I couldn’t get rid of a foolish
+impression that I was being watched. And this fancy, utterly absurd if
+you like, took possession of me, grew stronger and stronger, till it
+seemed to tremble on the verge of reality.
+
+“What are you looking at?” Katherine asked me suddenly, having reached,
+I suppose, the end of a chapter or a story.
+
+“Nothing,” I answered guiltily.
+
+But she wheeled round in her chair, and stared back at the house. I
+dipped my brush in water, and remarked quite quietly, “It’s only that
+I thought I saw someone at the window――the third window from the left,
+upstairs.”
+
+Katherine shaded her eyes with her hand. “I can’t see anybody: the sun
+catches the glass. It must be one of the maids, for there’s nobody else
+in.” She yawned and took up the book again. “If it _is_ one of the
+maids,” she added, “she might have had sufficient sense to bring us out
+tea. I’ve been simply dying for some for the last half-hour, only I
+didn’t like to disturb you.”
+
+“She hasn’t been there half an hour,” I replied. “I’ll go and tell
+them. Promise you won’t look at what I’ve done while I’m away: it isn’t
+finished.”
+
+“All right. I must see it when it _is_ though: you’re not to tear it up
+or anything.”
+
+“No, of course not.”
+
+I walked back to the house, and not till I was quite close did I glance
+up at the windows above me. Naturally there was nothing. I hesitated
+in the hall. Had I been really sincere in thinking I had seen anything
+or not? I couldn’t be quite sure, for there was no doubt I often
+deliberately gave my imagination a kind of push in a certain definite
+direction, started it off, as it were, and then left it to perform
+all kinds of antics. Before me lay the broad, low staircase. Should
+I go up? I leaned against the balusters and listened, gazing aloft
+into the cool shadow. Suddenly I heard a door open near the kitchen,
+then the rustle of a dress, and one of the servants appeared. I told
+her that Miss Dale would like tea brought outside, and went into the
+morning-room myself for a small folding-table, which I carried back
+with me.
+
+I looked again at my drawing. “Tea will be here in a minute or two,” I
+said. Then I handed the drawing to Katherine, for it was a failure, and
+there was no use going on with it.
+
+“Don’t hold it so close to you,” I cried, and Katherine obediently
+stretched out her arm full length.
+
+“I think it’s quite good, you know, if it wasn’t meant to be my
+portrait,――but it’s no more like me than Adam.”
+
+“Don’t be so rude. Of course it’s like you.”
+
+A servant appeared with a tea-tray, and as soon as she was gone I
+seated myself on the grass at Katherine’s feet. When I had finished tea
+and had handed her back my empty cup I still sat there.
+
+“Do you see that strip of yellow sand down below? It always reminds me
+of a certain poem.”
+
+I knew Katherine was not fond of poetry; she had told me so herself;
+but I repeated the verses aloud for my own pleasure, in a sort of
+sing-song, laying tremendous stress on the rhymes.
+
+ “It was many and many a year ago,
+ In a kingdom by the sea,
+ That a maiden there lived whom you may know
+ By the name of Annabel Lee;
+ And this maiden she lived with no other thought
+ Than to love and be loved by me.
+
+ “_I_ was a child and _she_ was a child,
+ In this kingdom by the sea;
+ But we loved with a love that was more than love――
+ I and my Annabel Lee;
+ With a love that the winged seraphs of heaven
+ Coveted her and me.
+
+ “And this was the reason that, long ago,
+ In this kingdom by the sea,
+ A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling
+ My beautiful Annabel Lee;
+ So that her highborn kinsmen came
+ And bore her away from me,
+ To shut her up in a sepulchre
+ In this kingdom by the sea.
+
+ “The angels, not half so happy in heaven,
+ Went envying her and me――
+ Yes!――that was the reason (as all men know
+ In this kingdom by the sea)
+ That the wind came out of the cloud by night,
+ Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.
+
+ “But our love it was stronger by far than the love
+ Of those who were older than we――
+ Of many far wiser than we――
+ And neither the angels in heaven above,
+ Nor the demons down under the sea,
+ Can ever dissever my soul from the soul
+ Of the beautiful Annabel Lee:
+
+ “For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams
+ Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
+ And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes
+ Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;
+ And so all the night-tide, I lie down by the side
+ Of my darling――my darling――my life and my bride,
+ In her sepulchre there by the sea,
+ In her tomb by the side of the sea.”
+
+I looked up at Katherine and saw that she was smiling. “It was written
+about this place,” I declared, “about just that strip of yellow sand
+and that blue sea.”
+
+“And about just this little boy,” said Katherine, stroking my hair back
+from my forehead.
+
+“Just this little boy,” I answered, narrowing my eyes under her touch,
+“whom you think such a very little boy indeed.”
+
+“Such a dear little boy,” murmured Katherine, lulling me with her
+voice, and all the time stroking my hair.
+
+“Is he dear?” I asked eagerly.
+
+“I think so.”
+
+“And you like him?”
+
+“I like him very much.”
+
+“How much? What do you like about him?”
+
+She laughed. “I like everything about him?”
+
+“But what?”
+
+“The way he is: the way he looks: the way he pouts when he is cross:
+the kind of things he says: the way he asks questions: even the way he
+hesitates before some letters, so that you can see what he is going to
+say in his eyes before he can get it out.”
+
+I was intensely happy. I leaned back my head, and Katherine’s dark
+blue eyes looked straight down into mine. I could see nothing but that
+clear dark blue which seemed to shut me out from the world, yet I knew
+she was smiling. Then she bent lower and her lips lightly touched my
+forehead.
+
+Almost at the same moment I heard the swish of petticoats rustling over
+the grass from behind. I sat up straight, but did not look round till
+the rattle of tea-cups had ceased, and the servant who was bearing them
+off had almost reached the house.
+
+“Gracious! I hope she didn’t see me kissing you!” said Katherine,
+half-laughing.
+
+“What matter?”
+
+“Of course it matters; and it’s your fault too, for pretending to be a
+little boy and all that nonsense. I’m sure she’s telling the cook about
+it at this moment. _She_ doesn’t think you’re a little boy. Get up at
+once.”
+
+I knew Katherine wasn’t really much perturbed, but I got up and began
+to put away my colours, and we went back to the house. I left my
+painting materials on the window-sill, and, having made Katherine a
+present of my drawing, we strolled down to the shore. As we walked
+along the hard sand by the edge of the sea I wanted to tell her how
+much I cared for her. It was an admirable opportunity, and, if I could
+only get the first plunge over, I knew it would be all right. But I
+couldn’t. White sea-gulls were swooping and wheeling over the dark
+blue water, calling their peculiar lonely cry, and the foam of the
+waves was white as snow. “I _will_ tell her: I _will_ tell her,” I kept
+repeating to my soul; and all the time I maintained a most discreet
+silence on the subject, and babbled instead of the regatta that would
+take place on Saturday, and of the chance of a fine day. I had entered
+for two swimming-races and a diving-competition, and Katherine was
+coming to see me. I kept on talking about this, though I knew very well
+everything would happen exactly as it had happened last year; that in
+the swimming-races George Edge would be first and I should be second,
+and that I should win the diving-competition; and moreover I didn’t in
+the least care just then whether the regatta took place or not.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+As a matter of fact I didn’t win the diving-competition; I wasn’t even
+second; and my defeat was brought about simply by my own exceeding
+eagerness to show off.
+
+On that Saturday the village was a holiday village. The men and boys
+perspired freely under heavy, ugly, Sunday clothes, and the women and
+girls were decked out in all kinds of finery――bright dresses, trinkets,
+ribbons, and cheap but brilliant hats. Why was it, I wondered, that all
+these fine garments should have been chosen apparently for a mysterious
+property they had of bringing out in the appearance of their wearers
+a coarseness I never noticed on ordinary occasions? Sam Geoghegan’s
+salmon-pink tie, Mr. McCann’s fancy waistcoat, the peacock-blue
+dress of Annie Breen, with its white lace collar――these were things
+positively bewildering, if one realized that they represented the
+actual taste of the persons they adorned.
+
+Every year the same programme was followed. In the morning the
+water-races――boat-races and swimming-races――took place; in the
+afternoon there were sports――foot-races, tugs-of-war, wrestling――held
+in one of Mrs. Carroll’s fields.
+
+I drifted about in the crowd with a group of boys. Our swimming-races
+came off fairly early, but I was only third in each, and George Edge
+second, for a youth, whom neither of us had ever seen or heard of
+before, turned up and carried off both first prizes. This made me
+anxious about the diving-competition, which he had also entered for.
+We were to go in off the end of the pier, where a platform with a
+spring-board had been erected for us. Then, when we had dived, we swam
+round to the ladder and climbed up to take our turn again. It was the
+last event but one of the morning’s programme, and had always been the
+most popular. When the hour for it came round, having learned in the
+meantime from some of the spectators that the victorious stranger was a
+poor diver, I had regained confidence, and, as the crowd drew in closer
+to watch us, I was fully prepared to show them what was what. As a
+matter of fact, my first two dives were all right, but, before my third
+and last, I caught sight of Katherine standing quite close to me, and
+the result of this was that I determined to excel anything ever seen.
+I took a tremendous race the full length of the platform, but, just at
+the end of the spring-board, my foot slipped and I sprawled in flat on
+my belly. The shock knocked all the wind out of me, and the smack I
+gave the water could have been heard half a mile away. It was extremely
+painful, and it put me out of the competition; yet when I clambered
+up the iron ladder I was greeted by volleys of laughter and humorous
+remarks. My accident, indeed, appeared to be by far the most enjoyable
+event of the morning. It did not seem to occur to anybody, except one
+of the stewards, that I might be badly hurt, and him, when he came to
+ask me if I were all right, I sent about his business. I put on my
+overcoat and went to the dressing-shed in a furious temper.
+
+The field where the sports took place lay about a mile out of
+the village. Mrs. Carroll and some other ladies were dispensing
+refreshments to all comers, and afterwards the prizes would be given
+out. I went up to Derryaghy to call for Katherine and Gerald, to go
+with them, but found they were going to ride over, and were all ready
+to start when I arrived. It was the first time I had seen Katherine
+on horseback, and she looked to me more beautiful than ever. In her
+dark-blue riding-habit, with her sparkling eyes and rosy cheeks,
+her radiant youth and health, she made me think of the girl in the
+equestrian portrait by Millais and Landseer, a coloured reproduction
+of which I had cut out of a Christmas number and tacked up on the wall
+in my bedroom. And straightway I saw in myself the page-boy who stands
+by the gateway in that picture, his eyes fixed in rapt admiration upon
+his mistress. They rode away, an amazingly handsome pair, telling me
+they would see me later up at the field, and to this I answered, “Yes.”
+Mrs. Carroll and Miss Dick had already gone on in the carriage, so I
+was left quite alone. I decided immediately that I wouldn’t go to the
+sports: if they chose to leave me like this I wasn’t going to run after
+them. I mooned about, building a romance on the equestrian portrait
+_motif_. I imagined myself as dying; some accident had happened to me,
+and suddenly Katherine rode up and springing down from her horse threw
+her arms round me, kneeling in the blood and dust of the road. She
+kissed me passionately, careless of all the people who watched her,
+repeating again and again, “I love you――I love you――I love you.”
+
+I gloated over this imaginary scene till I had squeezed the last drop
+of colour out of it, and it ceased, by dint of much repetition, to
+thrill me even faintly: then I went into the house and nosed about for
+a book. A dozen had just come down from the library in town, and, with
+a couple of volumes of “Two on a Tower” under my arm, I made my way to
+the shore.
+
+Gradually, in the warmth of the sunlight, I grew drowsy, and the
+beautiful, breaking sea, and the harsh crying of the gulls, soothed
+me and seemed to build up an enchanted world about me, where I was
+shut in with the romance of the tale I was reading. By and by, after
+perhaps two hours, I closed my book, though still keeping my finger
+in the place. I reflected that nobody up at the field had spent such
+an afternoon as I had spent, and I compared my spiritual pleasure with
+their rough commonplace pleasures, and the extraordinary superiority
+of my soul became immediately apparent. Then my thoughts turned to
+the story I had been reading. My sympathies were entirely enlisted by
+Lady Constantine and her youthful astronomer, but particularly by Lady
+Constantine. Even the fact that she was so much older than her lover
+appealed to me. Her gentleness; her intense femininity; her dark eyes;
+the softness of her skin; the perfume of her hair; and the delight of
+her caresses――these were present to me vividly, almost physically, and
+I rejoiced in the love-scenes in the tower with a frank and innocent
+sensuality, filling in the picture, where it was blurred or vague, from
+my own imaginings.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+During that last week of August, after the Dales had left, “I wandered
+lonely as a cloud.” Up to the eve of their departure I had been happier
+than I had ever been in my life, but as soon as they were gone I became
+a prey to sentimental regret. If Katherine had cared for me as I cared
+for her I might have found more comfort; but she didn’t, and I was
+perfectly aware of the fact. Mingled with it all was an increasing
+dread of the new existence I already saw opening out before me. I
+distrusted it: I had, indeed, that instinctive distrust of life itself,
+which contemplates anything unknown with uneasiness, and clings with
+passion to familiar faces and things.
+
+When the day of my departure, a Saturday, came round, and I saw my
+box all corded and ready in the hall, I felt extremely depressed. Now
+that I had said good-bye to Mrs. Carroll it was as if I had cut myself
+completely adrift from the past, and yet I believe I should have been
+willing to go had I not been going to the McAllisters. The McAllisters
+were our relations; the only ones I knew of. Aunt Margaret was my
+father’s sister, and her husband kept a shop in a street called Cromac
+Street. I had never been to their house, but they had been down a good
+many times to visit us, and I did not care for them. There were four
+children, and I disliked them all, except George, the eldest; and I
+disliked Aunt Margaret in particular; while to Uncle George I was
+indifferent, seeing that he did not very much count one way or the
+other. But to live with them!...
+
+Mrs. Carroll had wanted to send me to a school in England, but my
+father would not permit this. He had an idea, and nothing would ever
+shake it, that English public schools were dens of iniquity. This he
+had gathered from some article that had appeared in a review, and from
+the story “Eric.” I suppose he thought I should fall a particularly
+easy victim to the temptations I might be submitted to; take, like the
+boys in “Eric,” to drink, “little by little,” or even quite rapidly;
+come home disgraced; at any rate he would not run the risk, when, by
+sending me to the McAllisters, he could provide me with the “influence
+of a religious home.” For Uncle George was religious, and so was Aunt
+Margaret; and so, I supposed, were the children――George, at least, I
+had been told, was a communicant――and it was the thought of all this
+that now lay heavy on my soul.
+
+I was not to go up to town till the afternoon, and as we sat down to
+our early dinner I could not, though I knew it was absolutely useless,
+refrain from again taking up the tabooed subject. I suggested how much
+better it would be for me to go into lodgings of my own choosing. If
+they were more expensive, Mrs. Carroll would not mind. “Whether she
+would mind or not,” my father answered, “I should have thought you
+would not have wanted to put her to any unnecessary expense.”
+
+“But she wouldn’t mind doing it,” I repeated, obstinately. “She told
+you she wanted to.”
+
+“You know very well that is not the question,” my father said, more
+coldly. “I have explained why I think it better that you should be
+with those who will look after you. You are not old enough to be by
+yourself.”
+
+“I don’t like the McAllisters,” I answered, sullenly.
+
+My father looked annoyed. “Perhaps you think they are not good enough
+for you?”
+
+“They certainly aren’t,” I replied.
+
+It was a pity that our last meal together should have been somewhat
+embittered by these remarks, but it was not altogether my fault. For
+my father had been too extreme in his measures. Under the impression
+that what I needed was to get into surroundings which would more or
+less counteract the supposed relaxing influence of Mrs. Carroll’s
+indulgence, he had arranged that I was not even to come home for
+weekends, but was to submit myself during the entire term to the
+bracing effect of the McAllister family.
+
+No more was said upon the subject, and my father gave me after dinner
+a little book, called “Daily Light,” which I promised to read every
+night and morning. He came to the station to see me off, and, as we
+were far too early, he was obliged to stand for a quarter of an hour
+at the window of the carriage, while I longed for the train to start,
+and we both tried hard to find something to say. I was tormented by an
+uncertainty as to whether he would expect me to kiss him when I said
+good-bye. At the sound of the guard’s whistle I thrust out my hand. We
+shook hands; that was all; and, with the train beginning to move out of
+the station, I sat back in the corner of the empty third-class carriage.
+
+I had a sense of leaving everything behind me, as if I had been
+starting for the world’s end; and, curiously enough, as much as, or
+more than, by any human face, I was haunted by a vision of the house.
+I had forsaken it, and I felt its low, faint call coming to me through
+the rain. I could see the silent, closed rooms upstairs, the long
+passage with its rows of brown portraits and the tall window at the
+end, and it was as if a dust were dropping down upon these things,
+covering them to sleep till I should return. The shadowy ghosts slipped
+back into their picture-frames; gradually the life died out of their
+eyes; and a cold, unbroken silence, like the chill of death, closed
+over all that hidden under-world. Outside the apples had begun to
+redden on the high brick walls of the fruit-garden, but within the
+house all was frozen and lifeless. They were my spirits, my ghosts, and
+could live only while I loved them. I loved them still, but I was too
+far away, and I might not find them when I came back.
+
+The landscape gliding past me showed through a fine, grayish mist. It
+was cold, and I pulled up the windows, which almost immediately became
+covered with the same mist that drifted in the air outside. I wondered
+where Katherine was, and what she was doing. I had not heard from her,
+though I had written twice. Then I lay back in my uncomfortable corner
+and tried to think of nothing.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+At the other end I was met by my cousin George, a big, red-haired
+hobbledehoy of seventeen, with a curiously small face, bright brown
+eyes with a reddish light in them, and a freckled skin. George, I
+remembered, used to be amusing, and when I saw him standing on the
+platform my spirits rose a little. He proposed that I should send on my
+luggage, and that we ourselves should walk, as he wanted to make a call
+on the way. When we had arranged this we set out. I had not been so
+frequently in Belfast that I did not take an interest in the streets.
+Just now, it being Saturday afternoon, they were full of people, and
+at the end of the Queen’s Bridge some kind of noisy meeting――religious
+or political――was in full swing, but we did not stop to listen.
+Presently we turned to our left into a long straight street lined with
+unattractive, unprosperous-looking shops, and so narrow that in one
+place there was not room for two trams to pass. There was a liberal
+sprinkling of public-houses, of cheap clothiers and greengrocers, while
+here and there the gilded sign of a pawnbroker hung out over the greasy
+pavement. I was about to ask why we had chosen such a disagreeable
+route, when George touched my arm and said cheerfully, “Here we are.”
+
+“Here!” I echoed, with involuntary dismay. “But――――”
+
+“We live over the shop,” George explained. He had noticed my surprise,
+however, and had coloured.
+
+I pretended to have been only astonished that we had reached our
+journey’s end so quickly, but I don’t know that George was deceived.
+Inwardly I was furious with my father for arranging for me to come to
+live in such a place, with a public lavatory hardly ten yards away, and
+facing the windows. The crowded street, the mean, dingy houses, the
+mean, dingy people, the noise and rattle of innumerable trams: it was
+all disgusting, even beyond my expectations! And I was to live here! I
+simply wouldn’t do it.
+
+“We haven’t been here very long,” George continued. “We used to be
+round in Shaftesbury Square.” Then, as I stood motionless on the
+pavement, “Aren’t you coming in?”
+
+I followed him into the shop in silence. As he pushed open the door a
+bell answered with a clear, decisive ping. There was a shop on either
+side of the passage――one stocked with pipes, tobacco, cigarettes, and
+sweets; the other with newspapers, stationery, and cheap editions of
+books in hideous paper bindings. In the tobacco department there was
+nobody; in the stationery department a girl was moving about, fixing
+things. She turned round on our entrance and George introduced me: “My
+cousin, Mr. Peter Waring, Miss Izzy.”
+
+Miss Izzy and I shook hands. She smiled brightly upon me and hoped I
+was in good health. She evidently knew all about me, and had no need of
+George’s introduction. I observed that she had a lot of glossy, brown
+hair, which she wore twisted up in a coil on the top of her head in a
+way I had never seen hair arranged before, and which was kept in its
+place by long things like skewers, with large coloured balls at their
+ends. She wore a pince-nez, and was neatly dressed in dark blue, with
+a white linen collar and white cuffs, rather mannish in type. It was
+very plain to me that Miss Izzy had a great deal of style. She had
+also good features, but her femininity had been slightly eclipsed by
+a tremendous air of business efficiency, and by the severity of her
+pince-nez. I had never yet seen anybody nearly so business-like as Miss
+Izzy looked, and if I had been an employer of labour I should have
+engaged her as manager at a large salary on the spot. Through the open
+door there came the shrill angry voices of small boys playing football
+in an alley at the side of the house. There was a squabble in progress,
+a cross-fire of abusive language suddenly broken by cries of, “Start a
+new match――Start a new match.”
+
+George was standing against the counter, and had begun to pick his
+teeth with a pin extracted from the bottom of his waistcoat. Miss Izzy
+went back to her task of arranging a pile of new books, evidently
+just come in. She was working out an elaborate pattern with their
+pictured covers, and as she did so she read the titles aloud. “‘The
+Hour of Vengeance,’” she proclaimed. “‘In Love’s Sweet Bondage,’”
+she added, more dreamily. “‘The Clue of the Broken Ruby’; ‘Cynthia
+Cyrilhurst’――it’s well for people that have names like that!”
+
+“I don’t think much of it,” said George.
+
+Miss Izzy sighed, “It’s better than some, any way.”
+
+“Don’t you like your own name?” I ventured.
+
+“My Christian name’s all right. But there’s no use being called Althea,
+if it isn’t going to be backed up by anything! Althea Izzy is neither
+one thing nor another.”
+
+“You can easily remedy that!” declared George, gallantly, from the
+midst of his dental experiments.
+
+Miss Izzy scrutinised him. “It wouldn’t be McAllister that would do
+it,” she said.
+
+But George continued placidly to attend to his teeth. “I hear Miss
+Johnson’s getting married at eight o’clock next Friday,” he remarked.
+
+Miss Izzy bounced round, knocking over a box of note-paper. “How do
+_you_ know?” she demanded, glaring at him.
+
+“Oh, I just heard,” said George, calmly. He carefully inspected the pin
+before returning it to his waistcoat.
+
+“‘Just heard!’――through the key-hole, I suppose. It strikes me you
+‘just hear’ a deal you’re not meant to. And they don’t want it talked
+about――mind that!”
+
+“Why don’t they want it talked about,” I asked.
+
+“Because they want a quiet wedding. She’s in a bakery, and he’s a clerk
+in Nicholl’s, and, if it got out, the church would be full.”
+
+The conversation was at this point interrupted by the entrance of
+Uncle George, who appeared in the doorway, coming in from the street.
+He was a quiet, gray little man, and his movements always reminded me
+of those of a small dog in a strange room, wandering about, sniffing
+furtively at the legs of chairs and tables. He was timid, and when
+he spoke to you he rubbed his hands together with an affectation of
+cheerfulness that was directly contradicted by his dark, melancholy
+eyes. He had always struck me as being kind in his intentions, and I
+regretted that they had seemed to count for so little when opposed to
+Aunt Margaret’s. Uncle George was afraid of Aunt Margaret. He had an
+air of assuming that there was perfect harmony between them, but I had
+noticed that he rarely made a remark in her presence without glancing
+at her to see how she would take it. He reminded me of one of those old
+photographs one discovers at the backs of frames, their features almost
+obliterated from long exposure. His whole face, indeed, in its pale
+irregularity, had a suggestion of vagueness, as if it had been softly
+sponged over. His manner too――there was something in it which seemed to
+blur, to rub out, the impression of everything he said. His mind was
+lit by a kind of twilight in which the outlines of things were lost, in
+which opposites ceased to be contradictory, and impossibilities found
+a friendly shelter. And this twilight was reflected in his eyes, in
+their vague credulity, in the mildness of his glance, which peeped
+out innocently from under ridiculously fierce and bushy eyebrows. I
+knew Uncle George had failed in his business some years ago, and it was
+difficult to believe that he could ever be successful. His interest
+was not primarily in such things, but in the church, where he was a
+more perpetual figure than the minister, and in the church meetings,
+which he never missed, and which he sometimes even got up. I rather
+liked him; there was something about him that made it easy to talk to
+him; and though he was desperately religious, and held the same severe
+doctrines as my father, his nature was so little aggressive that in
+practice he was the most kindly and human creature in the world.
+
+“How are you?” he asked, shaking my hand. “We’re very glad to see you.
+How’s your father?” His left eye twitched slightly while he talked,
+giving him a comical appearance of winking very knowingly.
+
+“Quite well, thank you,” I answered.
+
+“Haven’t you been upstairs yet? Haven’t you seen your Aunt Margaret?
+Why didn’t you take him to see mother, George? Well, come along now,
+it’s time for tea. I think you might leave the shop, Miss Izzy, and
+come too――a special occasion, you know, a special occasion!” he laughed
+and patted me on the shoulder.
+
+“Thanks, I’ve had my tea already,” Miss Izzy returned, without
+enthusiasm. “And you’re having yours upstairs to-night,” she added,
+somewhat tartly, seeing him move in the wrong direction.
+
+“Oh! In the parlour; in honour of this young man; a special occasion,
+a special occasion!” He repeated his pleasantry, chuckling softly and
+rubbing his hands, while it was all I could do to keep from returning
+his friendly and unconscious wink.
+
+“I’d rather stay here than run up and down stairs every time the bell
+rings,” Miss Izzy continued, the invitation to tea evidently rankling
+in her mind. From behind his father’s back George blew a kiss to her.
+
+Aunt Margaret welcomed me without effusion. She was an enormous woman,
+dark, middle-aged, and with a peculiar smile that always made me feel
+uneasy. Her lips parted and her teeth became visible, but otherwise
+her face underwent no change, the expression in her hard, shining,
+black eyes did not alter. It was, somehow, not a smile at all, but a
+grimace, and disappeared with a startling suddenness, leaving no trace
+behind it. When her face was at rest, her lips drew in, as if by some
+mysterious suction. She wore a wig, and it was this I think that helped
+to make her look peculiar, and even slightly uncanny. I had been told
+that she suffered from some obscure, internal disease, which at times
+caused her great pain, but though she was white and fat and puffy,
+she presented no appearance of being an invalid. As she kissed me, a
+ceremony I would gladly have dispensed with, I became conscious of a
+vague, sickly odour, reminding me of the smell of a chemist’s shop.
+
+Uncle George asked her if tea would soon be ready, but she gave him
+no answer; she only smiled in her strange fashion, and began to
+question me about my father and my journey――one would have thought I
+had been travelling all day. Two small boys held her by her voluminous
+skirts, my cousins, Gordon and Thomas. They were about six or seven,
+I suppose, and singularly unattractive, the kind of children who have
+perpetual colds and are never provided with an adequate supply of
+pocket-handkerchiefs.
+
+I shook hands with Gordon and Thomas; I really couldn’t do anything
+more; but their mother noticed my omission, for they had raised damp,
+red-nosed, little faces to be kissed, and though she only smiled again,
+I was convinced that already she had taken a dislike to me. Possibly
+her dislike dated back to an earlier period than our present meeting,
+but, with a boy’s subtle instinct, I was certain of its existence.
+Just then the door opened and another child entered the room. This was
+Alice, a little girl of ten. She completed the family, though there
+had been several others, who had died in infancy. Alice I did not kiss
+either. Looking up, I saw my aunt’s hard black eyes fixed upon me. I
+gave her back stare for stare, without flinching, and she turned away,
+with that curious, grimacing smile I now hated.
+
+Alice herself did not appear to resent my coldness; she hung on to my
+arm and laughed up at me as if we were the oldest friends in the world.
+She was a strange, elf-like child, with a pale face and big black eyes
+that were not hard like her mother’s. She looked as if she had been
+allowed all her life to sit up too late. She was small for her age, and
+extraordinarily fragile; she was like a little figure cut out of a Sime
+drawing.
+
+Meanwhile Uncle George, who had been out in the rain, and had removed
+his boots, was sitting before the gas-stove, presenting the soles of
+two large, gray-socked feet to the red bars. A light steam began to
+rise from them, and Uncle George declared that his new boots must
+“let in,” and that he had a good mind to take them back to the man he
+had bought them from, and that it was too bad. I sat down near him
+and talked to him, while I watched the steam float up from his feet.
+Aunt Margaret was getting tea ready in another room, and little Alice
+hovered behind my chair. Every now and again she leaned over the back
+of it and said something. She brought a book to show me, and while I
+looked at it she put her arms round my neck and kissed my cheek.
+
+“Run away, Alice, and quit bothering Peter,” said Uncle George. “It’s
+queer the way she’s taken to you,” he added in a gratified whisper.
+“She’s usually that shy you couldn’t coax her out of a corner!” Alice
+retreated, but almost immediately came back, and again put her arms
+round me. She held her small white face close to mine and looked at
+me with her great black eyes and smiled. She gave me an impression of
+a little house haunted by queer and not altogether pleasant ghosts,
+and yet somehow I felt sorry for her, and I stroked her thin hand that
+rested on my sleeve, delicate and light as a leaf.
+
+“You’re a lovely big boy,” she whispered in my ear, rubbing her face up
+and down against my jacket, as if it had been the fur of an animal.
+
+I couldn’t help laughing, and she cuddled close against me, her chin
+on my shoulder. “She must be awfully nervous,” I thought, for the
+thunderous approach of one of those hideous traction-engines, that I
+was soon to find were a feature of the town, made her tremble.
+
+When we sat down to tea Alice insisted on sitting beside me. I had
+an idea, possibly suggested by Miss Izzy’s words, that the room we
+were in was not often used. I hoped it wasn’t, for it was stuffy and
+uncomfortable, and so small that you felt everywhere beneath the table
+the warm proximity of other people’s limbs. I hated being cramped in
+this way; it seemed to me that all the time I was breathing other
+people’s breaths, and once I got this notion into my head I couldn’t
+forget it. The furniture was cheap, flimsy, and uncomfortable. The
+curtains, the gaudy vases, the hideous wall-paper, were of the
+brightest and least accordant colours, and I even preferred our parlour
+at home, where, if the things were not less ugly, there were fewer of
+them. Several pictures hung on the walls, and one hung directly in
+front of me. It was an engraving, and represented a young man in armour
+visibly torn between a desire for virtue, embodied in a flaxen-haired
+lady in floating white drapery, and a deplorable weakness for all that
+another lady might be taken as symbolising. This latter person was a
+brunette, and rather more scantily, though quite decently, draped. She
+held a glass of champagne in her hand, waving it triumphantly aloft,
+like a torch. I confess that the work fascinated me, for it was my
+first acquaintance with the type of art it represented.
+
+“A fine picture,” murmured Uncle George, seeing me gazing at it. “It’s
+a Royal Academy picture that!”
+
+I said nothing. I did not know what a Royal Academy picture was, nor
+did I admire this example. It was not so much that the figures looked
+like unsuccessful waxworks, as that the banality of the moral irritated
+me. It was the first time I had ever seen art of this extremely ethical
+character, and in its spirit it reminded me of my old friends in the
+“Golden Ladder Series.”
+
+I hoped tea would not last much longer. In the small room, the large
+yellow slices of an extremely odoriferous cheese made the atmosphere
+heavy and unpleasant. Moreover, when this cheese was offered to me
+with hard, pink, sugared biscuits, I didn’t quite know what to do. I
+had refused several things already, and I knew Aunt Margaret thought
+I was turning up my nose at the food provided for me, and provided
+specially, I could guess, from the behaviour of the others, because it
+was my first night. So I accepted the cheese and sugared biscuits, and
+struggled through them.
+
+After tea George asked if we were going to have “worship” now or later?
+We had it “now,” and as soon as we rose from our knees he suggested
+that we should “go out for a bit.”
+
+“Where are you going to?” Aunt Margaret inquired.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know: up the street just. We can’t sit in the house all
+the evenin’. It’s quite fine now.”
+
+I was nothing loath, and clattered down the stairs after him. As soon
+as we were outside George’s uncertainty as to our destination appeared
+to vanish. “Did you ever see a boxing match?” he asked.
+
+“A boxing match?”
+
+“A fight――a prize-fight――whatever you like to call it. Come on an’
+we’ll go to the Comet, only for the Lord’s sake don’t say anythin’
+about it at home!”
+
+“Are you not allowed to go?”
+
+“Allowed! Wait till you know them a bit better. The boss’s idea of an
+enjoyable evenin’ is some Sankey and Moody touch.”
+
+We turned down a side street, and then another and another, till I
+completely lost my bearings; but very soon George said, “There it is,
+Coxy. You’re goin’ to see a bit of life, eh?” and pointed to a small
+theatre at the opposite side of the road. Above the entrance, a round
+purplish globe threw down a pool of light on the dirty pavement. A
+number of men and youths in caps, and with mufflers round their necks,
+hung about the door, talking and spitting, and at the corner some small
+boys looked on. George pushed boldly in and I followed. We took tickets
+for the front seats from an extremely friendly and pock-marked person,
+who wore a black patch over one eye. When we got inside we found there
+were not many spectators in our part of the house, but the pit, at the
+back, was already crowded.
+
+“That’s the thunder and lightning over there,” said George, jocosely,
+“in other words, the nuts. How would you like to be in among them?” But
+the stragglers who kept dropping in and taking seats all round us did
+not seem to me to be very different.
+
+A branch of lights hung from the ceiling, and other lights fell from
+the flies on to the curtainless stage. A kind of gray mist, doubtless
+the accumulated smoke of many nights, floated in the air, and a
+sickly-looking youth was hammering out music-hall tunes on a worn-out,
+toneless piano. The stage was quite bare, save for three double rows
+of yellow wooden chairs, that composed three sides of a parallelogram,
+and within which was a space marked off by a thick rope stretched
+about four stout posts clamped to the floor. Over this rope, at two
+diagonally opposite corners, hung towels, and in each corner was a
+chair, a heap of sawdust, a basin, a sponge, and a water-bottle. There
+was no person on the stage, and these bare accessories, possibly
+because I saw them now for the first time, had to my eyes a most
+suggestive appearance. I began to feel excited: this unadorned stage
+appeared to me to be distinctly thrilling.
+
+By degrees the house filled up. The audience, though mixed, was on the
+whole a very rough one, and there were no women.
+
+“Twig the peelers,” said George, and I noticed half a dozen policemen
+lounge in and take up positions in different parts of the auditorium.
+
+At about five minutes to eight even the chairs on the stage were
+filled, and, at eight sharp, an important person with a cigar stepped
+into the ring, and made a short speech introducing the first pair of
+boxers. He retired amid loud applause, but the boxers, to my surprise,
+turned out to be a couple of half-grown, ill-nourished, ill-washed
+lads, no older than myself. They were naked except for short linen
+drawers, and it seemed to me that it would have been no harm had they
+been put into a bath prior to their appearance. They grinned sheepishly
+at the audience, amongst whom they evidently recognised “pals”; and
+these “pals,” in turn, greeted them with cries of “Go it, Bob,” “Go
+on, the wee lad,” “Go on, the stripes”――this last in allusion to Bob’s
+unambitious costume, which had all the appearance of being simply a
+pair of bathing-drawers. They shook hands in a nerveless way, without
+looking at each other, and began to spar feebly. Bob was so thin you
+could count his ribs, and the big gloves at the ends of his long skinny
+arms looked like gigantic puff-balls. The “wee lad” was sturdier, but
+he seemed to me to be slightly deformed. Even to my inexperienced eye
+it was perfectly obvious that the main concern of both was not to get
+hurt, and they hadn’t finished the first round before the audience
+was shouting, “Take them off them! Take them off them!” This was in
+allusion to the gloves, but they also shouted other things, most of
+which I daresay I had heard before, though never so many at one time,
+and I reflected that George had managed to steer fairly clear of the
+“Sankey and Moody touch.”
+
+The referee cautioned the unfortunate combatants, but the second round
+was no better than the first, and in the middle of the third round the
+fight was stopped. The sleek, well-fed persons occupying the chairs,
+and the more impatient persons occupying the auditorium, had not paid
+their money for stuff of that sort. There followed a fresh pair of
+boxers, older, more experienced, and this time things were sufficiently
+brisk. The battle was a hard, ding-dong struggle, and it was at least
+exciting. At the sight of the first dark ugly streak of blood on one
+of those white faces I felt a little queer, in fact my impulse was
+to go away; but as round after round passed, and I watched the blood
+from the same wound burst out afresh in each, it began to quicken a
+sort of unsuspected lust of cruelty in me, and I took pleasure in it,
+I wanted the fight to be a real one, the thud of a blow that got home
+thrilled me. It was as if I had undergone some transformation. The
+dirty theatre, the low faces, the foul language, ceased to matter. I
+was carried out of myself. I longed at the same time for the fight to
+continue, and for its climax. There would be only three more rounds,
+and I wanted, before the last, to see somebody knocked out. The man
+whose face was bleeding was the heavier of the two, but I thought he
+had little chance. He was out-matched, he must have known it himself,
+and yet he continued to come up with a kind of dogged stupidity. His
+seconds spat water into his face, sponged him, rubbed him and fanned
+him, slapped him with towels and massaged his muscles; but the
+artificial invigoration this produced lasted only a few moments after
+the beginning of each round, and, as I watched him weakening, I could
+feel myself delivering the blows that dazed him, my muscles tightened
+and slackened, I could hardly sit in my seat. “Now he’s got him,” I
+said aloud, as he staggered into the ring for the last time. There was
+a blow and a crash on the boards. The referee was counting over him,
+one――two――three――four――five――six――seven――eight; and then this helpless
+creature, out of whose swollen, hideous face all humanity had been
+battered, staggered up almost blindly. He did not even lift his hands
+to protect himself from the blow that smashed him down again, and with
+that dull thud on the floor the fight came to an end. He lay on after
+the counting had stopped, and as I watched him being supported, almost
+carried, out of the ring, while the victor received congratulations, a
+pang of misgiving assailed me. There was no doubt the whole thing was
+absolutely brutal, and there was equally no doubt that when it had been
+most brutal I had been most pleased.
+
+I should like to be able to add that I got up and left the theatre. I
+did not. I reflected that _the_ fight was still to come: I even waited
+for it eagerly, and when it took place, I was disappointed because
+nobody bled, and because the decision was given on points at the end of
+the twelfth round.
+
+As we walked home I proved to George that boxing matches were really
+all right; that they were infinitely less dangerous than football
+matches. Every one of my arguments convinced George, and after I
+had finished he found some for himself, which I accepted as equally
+incontrovertible. Considering that there was nobody to take up an
+opposite point of view, our apologies might have appeared hardly
+necessary, but George was able to give me, in addition, a list
+of all the good qualities fighting brought out, or even brought
+into existence. Most of these did not exactly fit in with my more
+superficial impression of the audience, and there were others I could
+not help feeling many of them would be better without――courage, for
+instance. I had a dim idea that a little extra courage might result in
+a majority of them figuring at the next Assizes.
+
+But when we were three-quarters way home I said to George, “It was all
+pretty beastly, and that’s why we liked it――eh?”
+
+He got quite offended, telling me that if _he_ had thought it beastly
+he wouldn’t have waited on to the end, as I did.
+
+This was just possible, yet my opinion of George sank. “If you admire
+it so much,” I said, “I’ll give you a turn any time you like.”
+
+George was silent, and flushed slightly.
+
+“Well?” I kept on, pugnaciously.
+
+George mumbled something, I don’t know what, and I saw that I had
+actually frightened him. We walked the rest of the way home in silence.
+George was angry with me, but when we were in the house and had sat
+down to supper he became friendly again. As I discovered later, company
+was the one thing absolutely indispensable to him; he could have kept
+on being angry with me, and, indeed, would have enjoyed doing so, had
+he had anybody else to talk to, but solitude he could not bear. And I,
+on my side, forgot his having sulked on the way home, just as, later
+on, I was to forget more than one unpleasant thing, simply because he
+amused me, because he could always make me laugh.
+
+After supper I said good-night to the others, and George and I went
+upstairs. George went in front of me and lit the gas in the bedroom.
+“Is this my room?” I asked, noticing that there were two beds in it.
+
+“Yours an’ mine,” George answered.
+
+His reply was unexpected. I had never slept with anybody in my life,
+and it had not occurred to me that I should not have a room to myself.
+I said nothing, but George, who was far from stupid, saw I did not like
+the arrangement. “There is no other room,” he admitted frankly. “I
+thought you knew. I thought ma put it in her letter.”
+
+“I didn’t see her letter,” I murmured.
+
+“Oh, we’ll be all right together, won’t we?” George went on,
+pacifically. “You can have your bed moved wherever you would like it
+best.” He had already begun to undress, and, after hanging up his
+jacket, he took a photograph from an inside pocket and handed it to
+me. It was the photograph of a lady extremely lightly clad. “I’ve
+better ones than that,” said George, with a peculiar smile. He went
+to a corner near the window and raised a loose board. From the hollow
+beneath he drew out a large fat envelope, but, as he looked at me, he
+hesitated. “I’ll show them to you some other time,” he suddenly said,
+and returned the envelope to its hiding-place. He undressed rapidly,
+and got into bed.
+
+I took longer, and all the time I felt George’s eyes fixed on me
+curiously. I hated this lack of privacy. It wasn’t that I hadn’t
+undressed hundreds of times before other boys, when we were going to
+bathe; but this was different. I disliked the feeling of not being
+alone. I hated to have somebody watch me all the time I was taking off
+my clothes, or folding them. I determined to write to my father in the
+morning.
+
+When I was in bed and in the dark I wanted to think of Katherine. I did
+this every night; I looked forward to it, because it seemed to me that
+this was the hour when everything became clearer; besides, there was
+always the chance that if I thought of her I might dream of her. But
+now George began to talk.
+
+“Do you know any girls?” he asked.
+
+“No,” I answered, shortly.
+
+“Don’t you like them?” George persisted.
+
+“No.”
+
+“What do you think of Miss Izzy? Not bad――eh?”
+
+“I don’t know anything about her.”
+
+George was silent a few minutes. Then, just as I was beginning to think
+my own thoughts, he began again.
+
+“She’s nothin’ compared to Miss Johnson――the girl we were talkin’ about
+to-day――who’s gettin’ married. Miss Johnson was in the shop before Miss
+Izzy came. Ma sacked her for givin’ lip. Ma sacks them all.”
+
+George continued to talk until he grew sleepy, and I had no choice but
+to listen.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+Next morning I was awakened by somebody singing, and opening my eyes I
+saw George, in his shirt and trousers, strutting up and down the middle
+of the floor, a hair-brush in his hand. It took me half a minute to
+realise where I was, but George, when he saw I was awake, proceeded to
+give me imitations of various music-hall artists, until there was a
+sharp rap at our door, and Aunt Margaret’s voice told him to remember
+what day it was. With that I remembered myself, and simultaneously made
+up my mind that I wasn’t going to church. I determined that now I was
+away from home I would be my own master, and do just what seemed good
+in my own eyes, and that I would begin this policy at once.
+
+Our room was at the back of the house, and from where I lay I could
+see through the window a strip of gray, desolate sky, broken here and
+there by a chimney, and across which the dark branch of an unhealthy
+tree waved. As I watched it, my mind strayed to a book of Japanese
+decorations, and to the library at Derryaghy, and to other things I
+cared for. I had already guessed from the little I had seen of the
+McAllisters that their fortunes were drooping. It was not so much that
+everything in the house was worn out and patched and on its last legs,
+that the children were ill-clad and looked ill-nourished, as that I
+seemed to scent that mysterious atmosphere of anxiety, worry, and
+struggle, which invariably accompanies a decreasing ability to pay
+one’s way. I hated it. I hated all that it implied――sordid economies
+and cheap pleasures, a degrading and enchaining struggle to keep
+things going. It did not awaken pity in me, but only disgust. It was
+like a horrible monster that clung and squeezed with a thousand slimy
+tentacles, sapping your strength, and sucking out your life-blood. I
+could even sympathise with those who had freed themselves from it by
+some bold decisive action, that might lie well outside the laws of
+morality and society.
+
+In the midst of these reflections George informed me that I had better
+get up. He was tying his tie. His red hair was carefully plastered
+down with water, and he was examining his small, freckled face in the
+looking-glass. George had not yet begun to shave, but he had long,
+silly-looking hairs growing out of his chin, and I thought he looked
+extremely ugly and horribly common as he stood there.
+
+When we went downstairs the others were just beginning breakfast. The
+whole family was terribly _endimanchée_. Aunt Margaret was redolent
+of cheap scent. Gordon and Thomas were dressed in green plush with
+white mother-of-pearl buttons. Their little, damp, red, snub noses
+seemed to have been set that very morning accidentally in the middle
+of their round faces, which were of the complexion of fresh putty, and
+their eyes were exactly like blue glass marbles. Uncle George, who was
+breakfasting in his gray shirt sleeves, suggested that I might like to
+go with George to the Bible-class, but I refused. I added, to prevent
+all future trouble, that I preferred to take a walk on Sunday morning.
+
+“Do you go for walks when you are at home?” Aunt Margaret asked me,
+with her strange smile.
+
+“No,” I answered.
+
+“Doesn’t your father expect you to go to church?”
+
+“I don’t know what he expects, I’m sure.”
+
+“And don’t you think yourself you ought to go?”
+
+“No.” I was quite certain about this at all events, and I added that,
+once you were familiar with any particular ideas, no matter how
+valuable, I couldn’t see that you gained very much by listening to them
+being repeated ad infinitum.
+
+This explanation, far from convincing, evidently annoyed, Aunt
+Margaret, though she only said, “I would rather you didn’t talk like
+that before the children. They have been brought up to look upon
+religion with respect.”
+
+I did not reply.
+
+“I think I’ll go for a walk too,” George announced, with a wink at me.
+
+“You’ll do nothing of the sort,” cried Aunt Margaret, flaring up
+into a shrill rage. “You see what comes of such talk! I’ll have no
+Sabbath-breaking in this house.”
+
+“Ssh――ssh,” Uncle George mildly intervened. “To force people to do
+things against their will isn’t the proper way to take.”
+
+“You want your children to give up going to church, then?”
+
+“Nobody is giving up going to church. George is coming of course.
+Young people very often say things without meaning them. If Peter is
+for taking a walk this morning, I expect he will come out with us this
+evening to hear Dr. Russell, won’t you, Peter?”
+
+But, altogether apart from Dr. Russell, that Sunday was a dreary day.
+In the afternoon I accompanied George, and we loafed about in the
+Ormeau Park, where he was evidently accustomed to meet his friends.
+These friends of George’s were all in business, and all looked upon
+themselves as young men. They smoked cheap cigarettes, wore their
+handkerchiefs in their sleeves, and were tremendously knowing and
+rakish, while the larger part of their conversation appeared to be
+concerned with the merits of professional football players. I could
+get on all right with George when he was by himself, but his friends,
+among whom he was remarkably popular, did not improve him. It took no
+great perspicacity to discover that they on their side regarded my
+company as a very questionable acquisition. This feeling, far from
+diminishing, obviously increased as the afternoon advanced. George
+described our adventure of the night before with immense gusto, and
+gave a burlesque imitation of the knock-out. To have an appreciative
+audience was his greatest delight, and the others, for that matter,
+left him a fairly free stage. Now that he had them he ignored me
+utterly, so that, in the end, I was left practically alone. I fulfilled
+a sort of highly disagreeable rôle of silent hanger-on. I did it most
+reluctantly, yet I could not summon up sufficient moral courage to go
+away.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+
+On Monday morning I went to school. I arrived half an hour before the
+proper time, and as my classes had already been arranged, I had nothing
+to do but loiter about and take stock of the place. It stood, a long,
+low, unlovely building of soot-darkened brick, in its own grounds, not
+far from the centre of the town. Just now, on this gray autumn morning,
+it presented an appearance of singular, of almost jail-like dullness,
+though in summer, as I was to learn, when the grass was green, and the
+tall dusty elms waved against a blue sky, and the sun shone through
+narrow, small-paned windows, and splashed on wooden floors, on hacked
+wooden desks and forms, on faded maps, and bare, discoloured walls, it
+could be pleasant enough, in spite of the complete absence of anything
+save the sunlight and the trees that might appeal to a sense of beauty.
+Beside the main building was a Preparatory School, and at the back,
+separated from it by a yard, where a score or so of boys were at
+present kicking about a football, were the Mathematical Schools, and
+beyond these, the larger playing-field. It was really a day-school,
+only two masters living on the premises, with about a couple of dozen
+boarders: the rest of the scholars, numbering between a hundred and
+fifty and two hundred, were day-boys.
+
+As I hung about uneasily, not venturing to join the others, I was
+painfully conscious of my isolation. Not one of those faces had I ever
+seen before, nor had I the slightest knowledge of the school itself,
+for George, who had been at a National School, could tell me nothing
+about it. Nobody took any notice of me. Several masters passed, and
+disappeared through mysterious doors, and when, at ten o’clock, a
+white-haired, white-bearded patriarch rang a huge hand-bell in the
+porch, and I watched the boys scattering with extraordinary rapidity in
+various directions, it looked to me as if I might very easily spend my
+whole day in the yard. I had no idea which door to try, yet at the same
+time I was anxious not to be late. I was still hovering uncertainly
+about the porch, like a soul strayed into the wrong Paradise, when a
+boy, running past, glanced at me, stopped, and asked me where I wanted
+to go to.
+
+I told him I wanted to go to Mr. Lowden’s class.
+
+“It’s the end door on the left over there,” he said, good-humouredly,
+and I thanked him and hurried off.
+
+Coming in, I found the whole class already in their places, but a boy
+at the end of the third form moved up to make room for me, and I sat
+down. Mr. Lowden, who was standing, with a piece of chalk in one hand
+and a duster in the other, close by the black-board, asked me my name,
+and then informed me I was late and that he objected to lateness. I
+said nothing, but took down on the slate in front of me the sum he had
+just written out.
+
+I worked at it, and was struck by the animated conversations that were
+going on all over the room, in spite of Mr. Lowden’s efforts to check
+them.
+
+“Has anybody finished yet?” Mr. Lowden asked, and the boy who had
+moved up to make room for me held up his hand, cracking his fingers. I
+glanced at him. He had a round, merry face, rosy cheeks, bright eyes
+and dimples.
+
+“How often have I told you not to crack your fingers, Knox?” asked Mr.
+Lowden, discontentedly. “Well, what answer do you get?”
+
+“Ten bob, a deuce an’ a make.”
+
+“Come in to-day, Knox, at recess.”
+
+He wrote down another sum, and I had begun to copy it, when something
+went off with a sharp report under my feet. Mr. Lowden was gazing
+straight at me, and he instantly told me to stay in at recess.
+
+I knew well enough what had happened, that I had trodden on a wax match
+softened and rolled up with the head inside. I told Mr. Lowden that I
+hadn’t done it on purpose.
+
+“I can’t help that: you must stay in.”
+
+“But it wasn’t my fault if I didn’t know it was there,” I argued.
+
+“You must stay in,” repeated Mr. Lowden, in a silly, obstinate kind of
+voice, horribly irritating, “and, Knox, you stay in after school as
+well as at recess.”
+
+“I don’t see what _he_ has to do with it, any way,” I muttered.
+
+The boy beside me laughed.
+
+“Oh, yes: Knox put it there,” Mr. Lowden said monotonously.
+
+I had taken a dislike to Mr. Lowden, and at the same time I thought him
+a fool. A few days later something happened to make me dislike him even
+more. He had read aloud a problem which we were to work out mentally,
+putting down our answers when he gave us the word. My answer was right,
+but, unfortunately, when he asked me how I got it, the problem itself
+had gone out of my head. For the life of me I couldn’t remember it; yet
+I was ashamed to say so, and simply sat silent while he repeated two or
+three times, as if it were some kind of refrain, “Well, now, how did
+you work the sum, Waring?”
+
+As I was unable to tell him, he said, “You must have copied the answer
+from Knox.”
+
+“I didn’t,” I protested, angrily.
+
+“Then why can’t you tell me how you got it?”
+
+Again silence.
+
+“You must be telling a lie, I’m afraid,” said Mr. Lowden, in his
+apathetic voice, “and the silliest kind of lie, because it’s obvious to
+everybody.”
+
+“I’m not telling a lie.”
+
+Mr. Lowden shrugged his shoulders; he never seemed to get angry, or
+even moderately interested, no matter what the circumstances. “If
+you’re not, then why can’t you tell me how you worked the sum? If you
+had done it once, you could do it again.”
+
+“I did do it.”
+
+“Well, how?”
+
+Renewed silence.
+
+“You’d better stay in at recess.”
+
+And I stayed in.
+
+Yet Mr. Lowden was really only a mild and inoffensive young man, who
+had been inspired with the unlucky idea that he could earn his living
+by teaching boys, when he had neither the desire nor the capacity
+to understand them. The aversion I felt for him was really founded
+primarily upon grounds less rational than those I have mentioned.
+The secret of the matter was that physically he was repulsive to me.
+He suffered, I imagine, from some affection of the lungs or throat,
+for he wore, winter and summer, a thick white muffler, fastened by
+an opal pin. His face was pale, cadaverous, and hollow-cheeked; his
+moustache scanty; his hair lank and damp; but what I disliked most was
+his peculiar odour. Whether this emanated from his person, or from the
+pastilles he was perpetually sucking, I don’t know. It was something
+sickly and persistent, and for no reason that I know of I associated it
+with death. When he sat down on the form beside me to work out a sum, I
+used to edge gradually away from him, until he would notice it, and ask
+me in a querulous voice what I was doing, and perhaps keep me in. This
+physical repulsion I could never have conquered, even had it not been
+backed up by that kind of mental sickliness which characterized him,
+and which had made him punish me once at least unjustly. He left six
+months later, and nobody among the boys ever knew or cared what became
+of him. Perhaps he went to another school, perhaps the mysterious odour
+which had sickened me had been really the odour of death....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When I think now of those who were in charge of my education, upon my
+word I cannot help but be filled with wonder. What did they teach me?
+What did I ever get from them that I could not have got, with less
+trouble, for myself? Never once did any of my masters show the faintest
+interest in me, or make even the most perfunctory attempt to get to
+know me, to get to know what I was capable of, if I had any definite
+tastes, if I were good or bad, moral or immoral, intelligent or a fool.
+What they did instead was to ask me a couple of questions from a book,
+and, if I failed to answer either of these satisfactorily, keep me in
+to sit for twenty minutes with my lesson-book open on the desk before
+me and my thoughts miles away. Of my masters only one, Mr. Johnson, had
+any distinction, and he, unfortunately, was a mathematician. He had
+written a “Euclid” so perfect in its expression that he had managed to
+get a kind of æsthetic charm into the dry bones of geometry. He was an
+Englishman, but was slightly Jewish in type. He wore a long, flowing
+beard and moustache, like an early northern chief, and he had small,
+sleepy, gray eyes, which during school hours were usually closed. Most
+of his time he passed, either in reverie or slumber, in his chair
+on a daïs at the end of the room; but when aroused he had, for the
+unmathematical, a richly terrifying voice, and a disheartening manner
+of slashing down a long black cane on the desk, within a few inches of
+your nose. His classes were models of order. Never a faintest sound. In
+dead silence you played your game of noughts and crosses, or did your
+Latin composition, or wrote out cricket teams――but you never spoke,
+and rarely moved. Of all those whose business it was to mould my mind
+his figure remains the least spoiled by time. I remember the shock I
+received when, some years after I left school, I came upon Dr. Melling,
+the head English master, in the Campo Santo at Pisa, sucking an orange,
+and dressed in garments that Moses or Ikey would have bid for but
+languidly. When I spoke to him he seemed so narrow, so unimaginative,
+so unintelligent, that I felt half-ashamed, as one might who has
+learned by accident a secret he ought never to have known. Even in
+stature he was curiously shrunken, though he neither stooped nor showed
+signs of decrepitude or age. But Johnson I can see now, as I saw him so
+often then, coming up the path between the two front cricket-fields,
+a large black bag in his hand, which one had been told contained his
+lunch. I can see him leaning back in his chair, his eyes closed, like
+one of those beautiful owls that ignore from their cage in the Zoo the
+staring stranger, his beard spread out over his waistcoat, his hands
+folded on his stomach. Johnson was a gentleman, and, though he knew
+nothing of, and cared little for, boys, if chance brought him into
+temporary relation with one, even a very small and idle one, he took it
+for granted that he was a gentleman too, and in his deep, slow, musical
+voice, and in his sleepy eyes, there would come a curious charm.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+I had formed no definite conception of what my new school would be
+like, but there was a flatness about the reality for which I was
+unprepared. I seemed to slip into my place at once, without attracting
+the slightest attention either of boys or masters, and at a week’s end
+any strangeness there might have been had completely worn off. I did
+not play football, which was the only game played this term. I got to
+know a good many boys, but I formed no friendships. I found my new
+companions to be, on the whole, little, if at all, more congenial than
+the boys at Newcastle, in spite of there being so many more to choose
+from. I liked them well enough, and they were, with one exception,
+perfectly decent to me, but it all ended there: that is to say, in
+my relation with them I had invariably to approach them on their own
+ground, I had to enter into _their_ world, they were incapable of
+entering into mine, or even of meeting me halfway. There was a boy I
+had felt attracted to, purely on account of his good-looks, and as our
+ways home lay in the same direction I joined him one afternoon just as
+he was going out at the gate. But the first words he uttered shattered
+my illusions. He had a harsh, loud voice and spoke through his nose.
+Almost at once he began to tell me what he imagined to be a funny
+story, and before I had been with him five minutes I said good-bye
+abruptly, and left him standing on the pavement, staring after me, nor
+did I ever speak to him again.
+
+Day by day I went to school, neither liking it nor disliking it. Yet
+it was all rather dismal, for life without any kind of human sympathy,
+either given or received, is a dreadful, almost an impossible, thing.
+I thought a good deal of Katherine, and wrote to her, but got only an
+occasional scrappy note in reply. I did not see much of George, for he
+was kept in his business till nearly seven o’clock, and in the evenings
+I had to prepare my work for the next day. George, moreover, had his
+own circle of friends, none of whom, as I have said, were particularly
+eager for my company, while George himself, when he was among them, was
+the least eager of all. Sometimes when I was with him alone I would
+remember this and resent it, but he could always make me forgive him
+when he wanted to: he could be extraordinarily pleasant when he wanted
+to, and it was impossible to be bored in his company.
+
+We still shared the same bedroom, and at night he liked to talk before
+going to sleep. He had obtained a considerable influence over me,
+more than anybody else ever did or was to do, yet it is difficult
+to describe what it consisted in, or why it should have come about.
+I had an extremely poor opinion of him: I knew he had not even a
+rudimentary conscience: frequently he repelled, and even disgusted,
+me: but always, by some instinct, he seemed to know when he had
+done so, and he had a special gift for recovering lost ground. His
+influence was bad――absolutely――and yet what was so harmful to me did
+not, so far as I know, have any particularly disastrous effect upon
+George himself. He had an amazingly licentious imagination, and,
+in this direction, a power of vivid suggestion. As I became more
+accustomed to him, things that had at first jarred upon me ceased to
+do so; but it was doubly unfortunate that I should have been thrown so
+intimately into his society just at this particular time. Had I been
+either older or younger, or had I had any other friends, the effect
+would not have been so injurious. It was not that I had not heard
+my share of Rabelaisian talk before. This was, somehow, different.
+At all events, the other had passed off me easily, awakening no
+after-thoughts, leaving my senses untroubled. It was not so now. My
+mind became disturbed, and, above all, my dreams were coloured by
+certain obsessions which George took a delight in evoking. In my dreams
+his suggestions became realities, and his imagination seemed to brood
+over them like an evil angel. I do not think he was himself conscious
+of it, conscious, that is, that what for him appeared to be no more
+than a sort of intellectual pastime, which he could shake from him as
+easily as one might turn off a tap, assumed with me a darker form. His
+words appeared to touch me physically, and with an appalling directness
+and persistency. He had a trick of re-telling stories he had read,
+twisting them and altering them with an astonishing ingenuity, so as
+to introduce the element he revelled in, and he never became crude
+or brutal till he had carefully prepared his ground. And it was all
+transformed by a curious gift of humour, which was in itself something
+quite inimitable, consisting, as it did, largely in his personality and
+manner, in an unquenchable liveliness, and a faculty of mimicry.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+Two months went by in this fashion, and I had begun to look forward to
+Christmas and to count the weeks that separated me from the holidays,
+when an incident occurred which was the means of my forming an
+acquaintance that was to develop into the most intimate friendship of
+my life. It befell in this way.
+
+A series of thefts had been committed, thefts of school-books. A boy
+would leave his books down on a window-sill, or even in a class-room,
+and when he came to get them again, one would perhaps be missing. I had
+never lost anything myself, and knew nothing of what was going on till
+the afternoon when the matter was divulged to the entire school.
+
+It was not far from three o’clock, I remember, the hour when we broke
+up for the day, and I was in one of the English class-rooms, where,
+every Monday, if you liked to pay half-a-crown a term extra, you had
+the advantage of a lesson in elocution from Mr. (or was it Professor?)
+Lennox. Professor Lennox was a fat, pale, absurd little man, with a
+high-pitched tenor voice that struck against the drum of your ear like
+the blow of a stick. He waxed his moustache, and greased his hair
+into carefully arranged, solid-looking locks, while his skin, by some
+natural process, greased itself. Professor Lennox was an amateur of
+fancy trousers, of coloured waistcoats, of large breast-pins, of spats
+with pearl buttons, and of rings more striking than precious. To-day
+the whole class――some fifty or sixty boys――was reading after him, line
+by line, a poem from Bell’s “Elocution.”
+
+ “In arms, / the Aust / rian phal / anx stood,
+ A liv / ing wall, / a hum / an wood.
+ Impreg / nable / their front / appears,
+ All hor / rent with / project / ing spears.”
+
+Or, as it sounded according to local pronunciation, shared impartially
+by the professor and the majority of his pupils:
+
+ “In arms, / the Orst / rian phah / lanx stude,
+ Ah liv / ing wall, / ah hue / man wude.
+ Imprag / nable / their front / appears,
+ All hoar / rent with / projact / ing spears.”
+
+We had just reached “projacting spears,” when Dr. Melling, better known
+by the name of Limpet, came in, followed by an old woman, who paused on
+the threshold. Limpet turned round and waved her forward impatiently,
+but a couple of yards from the door she stopped again, and all the time
+she stared hard at us with small, sharp, gray eyes. Her bright little
+eyes and hooked nose, taken with her air of timidity, gave her the
+appearance of an innocent and frightened witch who has been dragged
+out of her lair very much against her will. I wondered who she was,
+but Limpet did not leave us long in doubt. It appeared that some boy
+had stolen a number of school-books, the property of various other
+boys, and had sold them to this woman, who was now here to identify
+him. Limpet explained the situation with an air of wishing to get a
+disagreeable duty over as quickly as possible, but to us it was quite
+exciting. Each of us in turn stood up to undergo the witch’s scrutiny.
+She had already, as I afterwards learned, been round the other classes,
+and Limpet, who had accompanied her on this voyage of discovery, was
+by now in rather a bad temper. Evidently he found the whole business
+singularly distasteful, and as one boy after another received her
+head-shake, he fidgeted and frowned nervously. She herself looked
+frightened and bewildered; I expect she was secretly worried about her
+own share in the matter, and considering how she could make the best
+of it. As for me, I felt for the first time as if school-life really
+bore some faint resemblance to the tales of the _Boy’s Own Paper_. Here
+was one of the pet adventures actually taking place, except that the
+old woman should have been a man with a small fur cap. When it came to
+my turn to stand up, I had an extraordinary wish that she would pick
+me out as the culprit. Sure of my innocence, I had a mind to be the
+hero of this adventure, and I stood so long, waiting to be identified,
+that Limpet told me sharply to sit down, and I could see had it on the
+tip of his tongue to give me an imposition. My neighbour tugged me by
+the jacket, and I resumed my seat abruptly amid suppressed laughter.
+One by one each boy rose in his place and sat down again, and then,
+in the back row of all, a boy stood up who _was_ identified. This boy
+I did not know except by name, though he was in all my classes. He
+was called Gill, and I had always looked upon him as rather odd and
+unapproachable. When his turn came, he stood up indifferently, glancing
+out through the window at the clock, which could only be seen when you
+were on your feet. But next moment I saw the old woman say something to
+Limpet, and the latter instantly told Gill to stand out.
+
+Gill stood out, his indifference gone, his face flushed and angry.
+
+“Is that the boy?” Limpet asked, as if daring her to say “Yes,” but the
+old woman mumbled out an affirmative.
+
+“Do you know anything of this, Gill?”
+
+“No.”
+
+I was somehow pleased that he had not added the customary “Sir.” He
+stood with his head up and gazed straight at Limpet and the old woman,
+with a kind of contemptuous wrath, his gray eyes dark and very bright,
+a frown on his face.
+
+The old woman was so obviously uncertain and uncomfortable that the
+whole thing appeared to me ridiculous, and I impulsively gave voice to
+this impression. “She doesn’t know anything about it,” I called out.
+“Anybody could see she’s only trying it on.”
+
+Limpet on the spot gave me two hundred of Sir Walter Scott’s bad verses
+to write out. My remark had the effect, nevertheless, of drawing a
+wavering expression of uncertainty from the old woman herself, which,
+in his now undisguised irritability, Limpet pounced on, as a cat
+pounces on a mouse. “Why did you point to him, if you don’t know?”
+he whipped out, frightening her nearly out of her wits. “Don’t you
+understand that it’s a serious thing to bring an accusation of theft
+against a boy? Sit down, Gill. I want to see you after school.”
+
+He was so angry that he forgot all about the half-dozen remaining boys,
+and conducted his companion unceremoniously from the room.
+
+Gill sat staring straight in front of him. Certainly he did not look
+guilty. He had a dark, narrow face, with a bright complexion. His
+thick, rough, black hair grew low on an oval, narrow forehead, and
+between his clear gray eyes there started a high-bridged, somewhat
+aggressive-looking nose, the most striking feature of his rather
+striking face. He had the reputation of being a peculiar kind of
+chap, and he was sometimes made fun of――mildly, for he was extremely
+quick-tempered and very strong――but anybody could see that he was a
+fine fellow, and that an accusation such as had just been brought
+against him would require a great deal of proof.
+
+When the bell rang he remained on in his seat while the rest of us
+went out, I hung about the porch watching two little fellows playing
+chestnuts, and when they stopped playing I still hung about with
+nothing to watch, and with, indeed, no very definite purpose in view.
+Presently Gill emerged, but whether he saw me or not, he took no
+notice, as he walked on swiftly down toward the gate.
+
+Since I had flung about him the mantle of my protection, however, I had
+begun to take a lively interest in him, and before he had gone fifty
+yards I made up my mind and hurried in pursuit. He looked round at the
+sound of my footsteps and waited, but without smiling. I had an idea
+he had passed me deliberately in the porch, and now he received me
+coldly enough. As we walked along together he made no attempt to defend
+himself against the charge that had been brought against him; he did
+not even refer to it, nor to what had taken place during his subsequent
+interview with Limpet, from whom, nevertheless, he received next
+morning a public apology. Though I was simply dying to hear what had
+happened I couldn’t very well ask, and as we proceeded I had to talk
+about other things. Then, quite suddenly, some change seemed to take
+place within him, and he inquired abruptly if I had read any of the
+writings of Count Tolstoy. I had never even heard of Count Tolstoy, but
+I was not to remain much longer in ignorance. I like enthusiasm, and I
+got it now. Gill had just finished “Anna Karénine,” and offered to lend
+it to me, adding that it was in French. I had been learning French in
+the way one did in those days, and perhaps does still; that is to say,
+I had been learning it for six or seven years, and was now obliged to
+confess I couldn’t read it.
+
+“Aren’t you coming out of your way?” he demanded with the queer
+abruptness that characterized him.
+
+“Oh, no.”
+
+“Do you live up the Malone way?”
+
+“No; I live in the town.”
+
+“Then why isn’t it out of your way?”
+
+“That is only my fashion of telling you I want to come with you,” I
+answered meekly. “Pure politeness.”
+
+He did not smile. “You haven’t been at school long?” he asked. His
+manner was the oddest mixture of stiffness and shyness, and sometimes
+he frowned portentously, while at the slightest thing he blushed.
+
+“No,” I answered. “Have you?”
+
+“Yes――all my life――ever since I was a kid.” He spoke quickly, one would
+have imagined impatiently.
+
+“Have you? I thought, somehow, you hadn’t.”
+
+I don’t know why I should have made this wise remark, nor, apparently,
+did Gill.
+
+“Why?” he asked me at once.
+
+I laughed. “You don’t seem to have very many friends.”
+
+He coloured, and I realized that my remark had been lacking in tact.
+
+“I have as many friends as I want,” he answered shortly.
+
+I saw I had touched him on a tender spot. “Does that mean you don’t
+want any new ones?” I ventured, half-laughing, though I was serious
+enough.
+
+His answer was startling. “Perhaps you think you are doing me a favour
+by walking home with me?”
+
+I did not say anything, but I looked at him with some astonishment. He
+was so odd that his manner had the effect of divesting me of all the
+shyness I usually suffered from myself on making a new acquaintance,
+nor did I even feel angry at his rebuff.
+
+“I came with you,” I said at length, “to please myself.”
+
+He turned crimson, began to speak, was silent, and then apologized.
+
+At the garden gate I would have left him, but he insisted on my coming
+up to the door. “I will get you ‘Anna Karénine’; then we can talk about
+it together――if we’re going to be friends.” He spoke the last words
+shyly, and I knew that he had found a difficulty in saying them at all.
+
+“But I told you I couldn’t read French.”
+
+“You can if you like. Don’t try to translate it; read straight ahead.”
+
+He came back with two books bound in gray-blue paper, which he handed
+to me. “It doesn’t matter if the covers get torn or the books come to
+pieces. My father gets them all rebound in any case. By the way,” once
+more he blushed, “you needn’t bother about those lines Limpet gave you.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because I’ll be doing them.”
+
+“Oh, rot.”
+
+He frowned. “You can do them if you like, but it will be a waste of
+time.”
+
+“I know that.”
+
+“I mean, I’m going to do them in any case, whether you do or not.”
+
+I laughed. “Couldn’t we each do half?”
+
+“I’m going to do them all.”
+
+“All right.”
+
+He strolled back down the garden path with me. “What’s your name?” he
+asked.
+
+“Waring.”
+
+“I know that. I mean your first name.”
+
+“Peter.”
+
+“Mine is Owen. I’ll come part of the way back with you: I told them
+inside.”
+
+“Shall I call you Owen?”
+
+“I don’t care,” he answered quickly, without looking at me. But before
+we had gone another hundred yards he said: “That isn’t the truth. I
+told you my name because I wanted you to call me by it.”
+
+“All right,” I said, smiling.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+That night, for the first time, I felt George’s fascination falter,
+and it is a fact rather melancholy in its significance that this
+consciousness came to me in the form of a sense of freedom, of relief.
+He began to talk to me, just as usual, as soon as he had turned out
+the light, but I told him brusquely to shut up, that I wanted to go to
+sleep, and when he tried to begin again I let him see I was in earnest.
+
+As I lay there I determined that at Christmas I would make another
+effort to get into rooms of my own choosing. If I wanted to ask Owen
+Gill, for instance, to come to see me, how could I do so? For one
+thing, his people would not like him to come here; for another, I
+should not myself care to ask him. I was by this time firmly convinced
+that my aunt was frequently more or less under the influence of drugs.
+It may have been on account of her illness; I could not say; but there
+were times when she seemed hardly to know what she was doing, and
+at such moments her dislike for me, which she usually more or less
+successfully concealed, jumped to the surface. I had no idea how long
+she had been in this condition; I was quite sure my father knew nothing
+about it; yet she appeared to me to have already lost something of her
+hold upon reality. I had heard her make statements so obviously untrue
+that they could have deceived nobody but Uncle George. I had heard her
+repeat a harmless remark made by Miss Izzy, and, by altering it ever
+so slightly, give it a quite new and highly disagreeable meaning. But
+Uncle George never dreamed of contradicting her, whether it was that he
+was afraid of her, or whether he was simply blind, I could not tell.
+
+On the Sunday after my becoming acquainted with Owen I was alone in the
+house with little Alice, who had been unwell and had not gone out with
+the others to morning church. As usual, she had climbed up on my knee,
+and was sitting with her thin brown arms round my neck, and her queer
+little face close to mine.
+
+“Ma looked through all your pockets yesterday morning, when you were at
+school,” she said.
+
+“What pockets?” I asked quietly.
+
+“The pockets of your clothes――every one.”
+
+“Well, did she find anything?” I murmured, in as indifferent a tone as
+I could manage.
+
+“She found a letter――and some other things.”
+
+“And did she read the letter?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“How do you know? Where were you?”
+
+“I saw her.”
+
+“How did you see her?”
+
+“I saw her through the key-hole.”
+
+“Oh; I didn’t think you would look through key-holes.”
+
+“Didn’t you? I do――often.”
+
+“You shouldn’t. It isn’t nice, you know. You must never do it again.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because it’s not a nice thing to do. It’s spying.”
+
+“I’ve often done it,” said Alice, with perfect detachment. “I’ve looked
+at you through the key-hole.”
+
+“You must never do it again. Promise, or I won’t be friends with you
+any more.”
+
+“If I promise, will you be friends?”
+
+“Yes. But you must keep your promise, remember.”
+
+I returned to “Anna Karénine.” “I must buy a desk,” I thought, “or some
+kind of box I can lock up.” Presently little Alice began again. “I’ve
+got a secret.”
+
+I had lugubrious forebodings in regard to this secret. “Have you?” I
+answered dismally.
+
+“Don’t take any soup to-day,” the child said, softly.
+
+I laid down my book. There was something arresting about this
+injunction, something even startling. I looked into the strange dark
+eyes that seemed almost to fill the small elf-like face, and I knew
+that a confidence of a highly unpleasant character was imminent.
+
+“I put a dead mouse into the soup,” little Alice whispered.
+
+“Oh;” I exclaimed feebly. I felt inclined to put her down very abruptly
+from my knee, and it was with difficulty that I controlled this
+impulse. “What made you do such a thing? Now it will all be wasted.”
+
+“Nobody knows about it,” the child continued artlessly, rubbing her
+cheek against mine. “Once I put something in before, when people were
+coming for dinner. It was fun to watch them all looking so stiff and
+solemn, and eating away, and not knowing what was there all the time. I
+laughed so much that ma sent me out of the room. But I wouldn’t do that
+with you, because I love you.”
+
+Her strange little face turned to mine, and her eyes were fixed on me.
+She must have seen the disgust I felt, for she began to tremble and her
+eyes filled with tears. Then she hid her face against my shoulder and
+clung to me. I was frightened to scold her. Even without my having said
+anything she seemed to shrivel up like some bruised and broken plant. I
+patted her head gently, and at once she brightened. She got down from
+my knee and began to dance about the floor.
+
+Meanwhile I was left with the problem of the soup. If the soup were
+strained the mouse, I supposed, would be discovered; but if it were,
+as it was practically certain to be, simply turned out into a tureen,
+the revelation might come too late. On the other hand, were I to turn
+informer, little Alice would most surely be whipped, and, whether she
+deserved it or not, the idea of that was as revolting to me as would
+be the ill-treatment of a sick monkey. There was a young girl in the
+kitchen who looked after the rougher work, and I thought of explaining
+the matter to her, after swearing her to secrecy, but before I had made
+up my mind I heard the others downstairs.
+
+They had evidently got back from church, and now I didn’t know what to
+do. Uncle George, preceded by Gordon and Thomas in their green plush
+suits, came into the parlour. Uncle George began to warm himself before
+the gas-stove. “You should have come out this morning, Peter,” he said,
+in his gentle voice. “You missed a treat.”
+
+I listened to his comments on the sermon, feeling all the time most
+uncomfortable. Gordon and Thomas tried to climb about my chair, but I
+kept them off with a firm hand. The parlour door was open, probably
+the kitchen door too, for all at once there came a scream from that
+department, not very loud, yet distinctly audible. I glanced at Alice.
+The others hadn’t heard it. Uncle George was still in the midst of his
+mild enthusiasm, and Gordon and Thomas, flattening their little round
+red noses with a finger, were practising squinting with remarkable
+success. Alice had become perfectly still, her big black eyes fixed on
+mine: and, as for me, I knew the mouse had been discovered and felt
+vastly relieved. Conceive of my amazement, therefore, when the soup
+after all appeared at table. Alice and I did not take any, and Aunt
+Margaret did not either, so that there was enough left to do Monday’s
+dinner; but of the mouse I never heard again.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+My friendship with Owen was at present the one quite satisfactory
+thing in my life. Neither at school nor at home was I particularly
+successful. I worked very little, merely sufficiently to prevent myself
+from getting into trouble; I did not play games. I had gone to the
+School of Art for a few weeks, but as I was never put to draw anything
+except curves and squares and geometrical flowers, I got sick of this
+and gave it up.
+
+I saw a good deal of Owen, though not so much as I should have liked.
+Of course I saw him every day at school, but I had never been inside
+his house, and I could not ask him to mine. I did not want to let him
+see the kind of people I had sprung from. I was ashamed of them. On
+Saturdays and Sundays we usually went for long walks together, during
+which we threshed out the affairs of the universe, and built it over
+again. It was all quite new to me, just as was the peculiar type of
+Owen’s mind, its extraordinary eagerness in the pursuit of ideas. My
+head already swarmed with an amazing mass of unsettled notions which
+buzzed in it like bees in a shaken hive. It seemed to me we never
+discussed anything less serious than the immortality of the soul. Owen
+was not sure of the existence of God, and I, so far as Christianity
+was concerned, was an Agnostic also. But to Owen it appeared to make
+an enormous difference, he was positively unhappy about it; while to
+me, though I did not let him suspect this, it was a matter of supreme
+indifference. Levine’s acceptance of Christianity, at the end of “Anna
+Karénine,” was for Owen an endless source of dissatisfaction and query.
+We discussed it by the hour. Yet, when actually reading the book, I had
+been far more struck by the appearance in Wronsky’s and Anna’s dreams
+of the strange little man, who seems to pass out of vision into reality
+just before the suicide. What did _that_ mean? Why was he there? Had
+he, like some added flick of colour in the work of a master, been put
+in, not because he was there in Nature, but because he was needed for
+the picture? For me, at any rate, he had the effect of making all the
+rest more convincing, and, while he appeared to be purely fantastic,
+of corresponding to some esoteric reality. Or was the apparition at
+the railway station also only a vision, in that case the vision of a
+vision? To Owen such a question was of no interest whatever, and it was
+Owen’s questions that we principally discussed.
+
+Very often I walked home with him and hung swinging on the iron
+gate while we finished an argument. At such moments he exhibited an
+exhilarating eagerness, and he was never anxious to get the better
+of me in merely verbal dispute, as I frequently was of him. It was
+the thing in itself he saw, and he went at it like a terrier at a
+rabbit-hole, sending up showers of sand into the air, but never getting
+to the bottom. Sometimes, when we were talking, he would catch me by my
+arms and swing me slowly back and forward. Sometimes he would draw me
+close up to him till my face almost touched his, and his eyes seemed to
+look straight into my spirit, and then he would suddenly release me. He
+had a very quick and passionate temper, and was ridiculously sensitive,
+so that, though I employed infinitely more tact with him than I had
+ever done with anybody else, I occasionally offended him. Then he would
+leave me, his face as red as a turkey-cock, and his grey eyes dark and
+bright. Possibly for the rest of that day he would ignore me utterly;
+indeed, the first time it happened, I was sure we had quarrelled for
+ever. But the next morning he came up to me with a shy and shamefaced
+smile, saying he was sorry. At such times there would come into his
+voice so charming a gentleness that it was impossible to remain angry
+with him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Will you come to the opera to-night?” he asked me one morning, looking
+up from an old, ink-stained Virgil. We were sitting in the window-seat,
+where we always sat together, and which just held two. As Dr. Gwynn,
+the head Classical-master, was very old, very blind, and rather deaf,
+it was possible to pass the time quite pleasantly in this retreat.
+
+I had not yet been inside a theatre, and Owen had been but seldom.
+“What is on?” I asked.
+
+“‘Faust.’”
+
+“‘Faust’? All right.”
+
+“I’ll meet you outside the theatre at a quarter to seven.”
+
+“Very well; I’ll be there.”
+
+I went home straight from school, in order to get my work done for the
+next day, but when I pushed open the door I became conscious that an
+altercation between Aunt Margaret and Miss Izzy was in progress in the
+other shop. They were so busy that they did not even hear me enter,
+though the shop-bell had rung, and, as I lingered on the threshold, I
+gathered that the dispute was about a young man, and I guessed who he
+was. I had seen him; his name was Moore; he travelled in the stationery
+line, and he admired Miss Izzy.
+
+I heard Aunt Margaret’s familiar “_some_ people,” with an accent on the
+“some.” It was in this indirect manner that she invariably produced
+her most disagreeable remarks, and it was very much in the air just
+now. Miss Izzy displayed an icy dignity by stiff elbows, an erect head,
+and an elaborate preoccupation with the business of the shop. She
+seemed all collar and cuffs and freezing silence, which she could not
+quite keep up, for every now and again she threw out a retort. Aunt
+Margaret’s ponderous black form filled up the inner doorway. Her large
+face, her drawn-in mouth, her black, shining eyes, her wig, gave her
+an alarming and bizarre appearance, but Miss Izzy was not in the least
+alarmed.
+
+I came in, not wishing to be caught listening. Miss Izzy just cast a
+glance at me, and tossed her head.
+
+I brushed past Aunt Margaret and went upstairs to my dinner, leaving
+the parlour door open, however, so that I might still hear the conflict
+going on below. When the shop-bell rang Aunt Margaret’s voice would
+cease; then, when the customer had departed, it would begin again.
+Presently I heard Uncle George shuffling downstairs, and his entrance
+on the scene was followed by an outburst of both feminine voices
+together. The noise was becoming exciting, but I could no longer make
+out the words, though I hung over the balusters to listen. Then I heard
+Aunt Margaret coming upstairs, and Uncle George following her. She was
+in a violent passion. “Fool――fool――fool,” she screamed at him all along
+the passage. Then came confused remonstrances in Uncle George’s quiet
+voice, but they were interrupted by the banging of a door that shook
+the whole house. I came out into the lobby once more. I heard Uncle
+George trying to get into the room, but the door must have been locked
+from the inside, and through it came a shrill torrent of abuse. Uncle
+George’s face was white and strange as he turned round and caught me
+staring at him. He told me to go away, but almost immediately he came
+after me into the parlour, where I had sat down again to my dinner. He
+told me Aunt Margaret was not well, that she had had a very bad attack
+last night, and been kept awake and in pain all night long. I could see
+that he would have liked to know if I had grasped the nature of several
+of those words that had come out to him through the closed door, but I
+continued stolidly to eat my dinner, without giving any sign. When I
+had finished, I got out my books, but as soon as the coast was clear I
+slipped downstairs to the shop. Miss Izzy was there alone, and affected
+not to see me.
+
+“What’s the matter with Aunt Margaret?” I asked; at which ingenuous
+question Miss Izzy gave a short contemptuous laugh.
+
+A blowzy girl, sucking a sweet, came in to buy a novelette, and when
+she had gone I informed Miss Izzy that I was going that night to hear
+“Faust.” Miss Izzy expressed not the faintest interest in this project.
+
+I turned over a book of views in melancholy silence――views of the
+Linen Hall Library, and of Donegall Place; of the Cave Hill, and the
+Albert Memorial; and I wondered if it would please Katherine were I to
+send her a complete set. I looked at the price, written in Miss Izzy’s
+secret code, on the back, and could not make up my mind.
+
+“When people can’t control themselves there are places where they can
+have people to look after them,” Miss Izzy announced to a bundle of
+“Horner’s Penny Stories,” which she next moment swept viciously into a
+corner.
+
+This cryptic remark I took as referring to Aunt Margaret, but, seeing
+my expectant face, Miss Izzy unkindly refused to follow it up.
+
+I was disheartened, and began to read aloud advertisements of art books
+from the back of a magazine I had bought on my way home. The third of
+these bore the simple title “Michael Angelo,” and Miss Izzy astonished
+me by saying, “That’s one of Marie Corelli’s.”
+
+I ventured to tell her that Michael Angelo was a great painter and
+sculptor, but the information was lost on Miss Izzy, who in the midst
+of it said sharply, “Oh, don’t bother.”
+
+I waited for a while, digesting this snub. Then, “Was she talking about
+Mr. Moore?” I asked, indiscreetly.
+
+Miss Izzy regarded me at first mildly and absently, but as the
+sense of my question slowly forced its way through the meshes of
+her cogitations, suddenly in extreme wrath: “If you’d mind your own
+business,” she snapped, “you’d hear fewer lies. I don’t know what
+you’re doing down here at all!”
+
+“I’m doing nothing,” I answered, crestfallen.
+
+“People talk about girls being curious and gossiping,” Miss Izzy went
+on, scornfully, “but if other boys are like you――――”
+
+I retired upstairs without waiting for the conclusion of the parallel.
+I worked for an hour and a half, and by then it was tea-time. Aunt
+Margaret did not appear, and we were told she was lying down. George,
+who had come home earlier than usual, inquired where I was going to,
+and when I informed him, asked if he might come too. I did not like to
+refuse, though I did not want him, and knew he and Owen would not get
+on together. I told him I was going with Owen.
+
+“Is that the chap you’re so thick with? I don’t suppose he’ll mind me,
+will he?”
+
+I introduced them to each other at the theatre door. We were early,
+and had nearly three-quarters of an hour to wait. Owen and I began to
+talk, but our conversation evidently bored George, who, in the midst of
+it, introduced a characteristic remark of his own, at which I laughed,
+though I did not want to. Owen, who did not always see a joke, and
+who would have detested the best joke in the world of the particular
+kind George most affected, instantly relapsed into silence. He looked
+at George for a moment; then he took a copy of the “Golden Treasury”
+translation of Plato’s “Republic” from his pocket and began to read. I
+had known well enough something of this sort was bound to happen, and I
+made no attempt to bridge it over. George nudged me with his elbow and
+closed his left eye. Owen’s disapproval did not put him about in the
+least, and he continued to chatter quite unabashed.
+
+Presently the fire-proof curtain went up, the lights were raised, and
+the band straggled in and began to tune their fiddles. The conductor
+followed, a fat little German with a bald head which shone like a large
+ostrich egg. He faced the audience and bowed two or three times to
+their applause; then, turning round, he tapped the music stand sharply
+with his baton, and the first phrase was drawn slowly out on the
+’cellos.
+
+With the end of the overture the lights were turned down, and the
+curtain rose on the lonely Faust, seated before a skull, an hour-glass,
+and a large book, in his study. I had already forgotten Owen, George,
+and everything but what I saw before me. I was surprised to find that
+this old, grey-bearded man, who looked, in the dimness, like an Albert
+Durer print, had a fresh, strong, tenor voice. Outside I heard the
+singing of the peasants; then followed the rage and despair of Faust,
+and, in a flaming red light, the apparition of Mephistopheles. Faust
+pleaded for his lost youth, and Mephistopheles tempted him; the wall of
+the study suddenly dissolved like a mist, and the vision of Margaret,
+seated at her spinning-wheel, rose before the unhappy philosopher;
+and the swinging, sensual phrase, repeated again and again in the
+orchestra, lulled me to a dreamy languor.
+
+ _Faust._――“Heavenly vision!”
+
+ _Mephistopheles._――“Shall she love thee?”
+
+There could be but one answer, and I saw Faust yield to the tempter; I
+saw his rejuvenescence; and a triumphant duet between them brought the
+act to a close.
+
+I had become lost in this appealing melodrama, and though my mood was
+broken in the next act, in the third act, in the celebrated garden
+scene, it was revived and intensified. The sugary sweetness of the
+music had an almost hypnotic effect upon me, for I had never heard it
+till now, and the ecstatic sensuality of the duet rapt me into a world
+of love, where everything else was forgotten. It was all utterly new
+to me; it thrilled me; it drowned me in erotic dreams that swept me
+onward like the waves of the sea; and through all, subconsciously, as
+I listened and watched, I was carrying on another love-making of my
+own, with which Faust and Margaret had nothing to do. Through the next
+two acts I followed more closely the fortunes of the unhappy heroine,
+not without a naïve wonder why so much tragedy, so much remorse,
+should attend on what appeared to me――but for the intervention of
+the devil――a quite natural and straightforward courtship. For some
+reason, possibly the fault of the libretto, more probably because I
+could only catch about half the words, I could not discover wherein
+lay the secret of the trouble, nor why the lovers did not get married.
+I accepted the situation however: I accepted, I think, everything but
+the absurd “Soldiers’ Chorus,” and the death-scene of Valentine. This
+latter nearly made me sick at the time, though I forgot all about it
+when the curtain rose to reveal the wretched Margaret in prison. With
+enthusiasm I watched her reject her lover and the demon, and fling
+herself on her knees to pour out her soul in a prayer which finished on
+the high B. At last I saw her released from all the ills of life, her
+body stretched on the miserable straw bed. And with that the walls of
+the prison rolled back, and I had a vision of her soul being borne to
+heaven by angels. It is true those white-clad, flaxen-haired creatures,
+with glistening wings and golden crowns, bore a not remote resemblance
+to several of the livelier persons I had seen mingling with the
+soldiers and students at an earlier stage of the drama; nevertheless I
+beheld them, in this pause on their way to heaven, with respect, if not
+exactly veneration.
+
+“I doubt they’re as near it now as they’ll ever be,” said George,
+cynically, pulling his cap from his jacket pocket.
+
+And out in the street, under the gas-lamp at the corner, I had to
+submit to a deluge of criticism from both my companions. I don’t know
+which I liked least, the scorn of Owen, who revealed the tangible
+source of Margaret’s woes, and would have had it adopted by the State,
+or, after Owen had left, the ribald jibes of George, who found Faust a
+poor creature, requiring a moon, a garden, a casket of jewels, a devil,
+and several incantations, before he could beguile an innocent rustic
+maiden who was already in love with him. I resolved that I would go to
+the opera every night that week, but that I would go alone. Between
+the acts I had eagerly studied my programme, and the delightful,
+unfamiliar, romantic names, “Tannhäuser,” “Il Trovatore,” “Aida,”
+“Lohengrin,” were like syrens singing to me through the darkness, with
+an irresistible and passionate sweetness.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+I went to the opera every night that week, as I had planned to do,
+but the edge of my appetite was blunted, and, save in the case of
+“Tannhäuser,” and of “Lohengrin,” I was disappointed. I had already
+become more critical, and I now doubted if “Faust” were the admirable
+work I had fancied it.
+
+One evening there came a letter for me, and, when I opened the
+envelope, I found inside a card which told me that Miss L. Gill and
+Master E. Gill would be “at home” on Friday, the 23rd of December. My
+own name was written at the top of the card. In the bottom left-hand
+corner was the word “Dancing,” followed by the numerals 8–12; and in
+the corner opposite were four mysterious letters――“R.S.V.P.”
+
+I knew it to be an invitation to a party, but “R.S.V.P.” was puzzling.
+Neither Uncle George nor Aunt Margaret could throw any light upon these
+symbols, though Uncle George pondered over the card half the evening,
+as if it had been a kind of magazine competition. Miss Izzy probably
+would have known, but Miss Izzy had gone, and would not be back till
+to-morrow morning, whereas I had a keen conviction that action should
+be taken to-night.
+
+“Who are they?” Uncle George asked, referring to the Gills.
+
+“Mr. Gill is a solicitor. Owen Gill is in my classes at school.”
+
+Uncle George examined the card anew, bringing this fresh light to bear
+on it. He held it at arm’s length, and then put on his glasses and
+peered at it through them. “Miss L. Gill and Master E. Gill,” he read
+aloud slowly and solemnly.
+
+I laughed. “They’re Owen’s young sister and brother,” I explained.
+
+“A solicitor. I suppose he will have some letters after his name,” said
+Uncle George, weakly.
+
+“Oh, they’re not those,” I answered, impatiently. It seemed to me that
+everybody was very stupid.
+
+“R.S.V.P.” Uncle George threw out thoughtfully. He turned the card
+round and examined the back.
+
+“Reply soon: very pressing,” suggested George.
+
+His father looked at him doubtfully, and laid the card on the table.
+“It can’t be so pressing,” he said, glancing at the calendar, “when
+it’s a fortnight off.”
+
+“You see they have to make sure he’s coming before they ask anybody
+else,” George explained. “Rippin’ spread: veal pie.”
+
+“I suppose you think that funny,” I broke in; whereupon George, seeing
+I was inclined to be cross, kept it up.
+
+“Royal spree: von’t you partake? Refined soirée: veather permittin’.
+That’s it, da, right enough; you can leave the card by.”
+
+But Uncle George continued to regard it searchingly, glancing at me
+every now and again over his spectacles.
+
+Nothing was done that night, and in the morning, before school, I
+approached Miss Izzy on the subject; though when I saw her examine the
+card almost as carefully as the others had done, my faith in her sank.
+
+“You’ll have to answer on a card,” said Miss Izzy, loftily, having at
+any rate settled the first point, and waving aside the sheet of note
+paper I held in my hand.
+
+“I haven’t got one.”
+
+“There’s a box of them in the shop somewhere. They’ve been there since
+the dear knows when. Nobody ever asks for cards.” She hunted about in a
+drawer under the counter, and at length succeeded in finding the box.
+Without breaking the pink paper band that held the cards together she
+carefully extracted one from the bundle. I took it and dipped my pen in
+the ink and waited.
+
+“Just answer it in the usual way,” said Miss Izzy, offhandedly, with
+the air of one who dashes off at least half a dozen such communications
+every day.
+
+“I don’t know the usual way,” I confessed.
+
+Miss Izzy aggravatingly paused to shake out a paper lamp-shade. Then
+she attended to a little boy who came in to buy a “Deadwood Dick” tale.
+
+“Tell me what to say,” I begged, humbly.
+
+“Mr. Peter Waring,” dictated Miss Izzy, with much dignity; and I wrote
+“Mr. Peter Waring,” in terror all the time of making a blot.
+
+Miss Izzy glanced over my shoulder. “You’ve begun too high up,” she
+said, reassuringly. Then, as I made a movement to tear the card, “Oh,
+it’ll do.”
+
+“Mr. Peter Waring begs to thank Miss L. Gill and Master E. Gill for
+their very kind invitation.”
+
+The shop-bell had rung again. It was the little boy back to change his
+story for another he had discovered in the window, and which it took
+Miss Izzy hours to extract. “Corduroy Charlie,” she murmured, as she
+handed it across the counter. It was the title of the work.
+
+“Yes?” I said, trying not to appear impatient.
+
+Miss Izzy came back to my affairs. “Oh! what have you got?”
+
+“Mr. Peter Waring begs to thank Miss L. Gill and Master E. Gill for
+their very kind invitation――――”
+
+“Invitation.... And will be very pleased to accept same for the date
+mentioned.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“That’s all. Don’t be signing your name, stupid!”
+
+I hastily checked myself.
+
+“What do those letters in the corner mean?” I asked timidly. “I suppose
+I oughtn’t to put them on mine?”
+
+“Of course not. They’re French, and mean they want an answer.”
+
+I read over what I had written and thanked Miss Izzy, but secretly I
+was not satisfied. I felt sure there was something wrong somewhere. It
+did not read well. I put it in an envelope, however, and posted it,
+though immediately afterwards I became more unhappy about it than ever.
+I made a mental note to ask Mrs. Carroll for information when I was at
+home at Christmas.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+I had been asked to the Gills’ for eight o’clock, and at half-past
+six I began to dress. After posting my acceptance my next care had
+been in regard to the clothes I should wear. There is no doubt greatly
+increased opportunities had tended to develop in me a latent dandyism.
+At all events I took the matter of my dress quite seriously, and had
+very definite ideas in regard to it. I went to the best tailor in
+town, my bills were sent on to Mrs. Carroll, and that was all I knew
+about them. I tried to get the soft greys and blacks and whites I
+admired in old Spanish and Dutch portraits, with perhaps a colour-note
+of olive green in my neck-tie, but always with the tones kept low
+and harmonious. Dandyism certainly, but it was in its way merely an
+expression of those same sensibilities that enabled me to see the charm
+of the pictures I have mentioned; that is to say, it was not based on
+any feeling of personal vanity, for I had no illusions in regard to my
+beauty. So, in this particular instance, I took immense pains to see
+that everything should be exactly right, and at the same time pleasing
+to myself. The cloth I had chosen was of the very blackest and finest
+and softest. Each garment had to be fitted on me till I could find no
+fault in it. The broad braid down the sides of my trousers seemed to
+me perfectly decorative. It was really in its use of linen that modern
+dress most conspicuously failed: what would Franz Hals or Velasquez
+have thought of the stiff, glazed collar convention obliged me to wear?
+
+When I had finished dressing I looked at myself critically in the
+inadequate glass, beside which I had set two or three candles, standing
+in pools of their own grease. It seemed to me that the peculiar, sullen
+expression of my face, caused by the formation of my forehead and the
+shape of my mouth, must always create an unfavourable impression. If
+I could recognise it myself, it would probably be a great deal more
+striking to other people. It disappeared when I smiled, but as soon as
+I stopped smiling it came back again.
+
+I went downstairs and strutted about before Miss Izzy and little Alice,
+that they might admire my fine feathers, and it was only when I reached
+the Gills that every other feeling was swallowed up in a horrible
+shyness.
+
+The whole house was brilliantly lit up, and I was shown to a room
+already half-filled with boys, who were removing their overcoats,
+putting on their dancing shoes, talking and laughing perfectly easily,
+just as if the most frightful ordeal were not staring them in the
+face. Evidently they all knew each other quite well, whereas I knew
+nobody. Owen came up, indeed, and spoke to me, but forsook me almost
+immediately, as people were arriving every minute, two or three of
+them, I observed, quite grown-up. I wished Owen would come back. When I
+saw a boy I knew slightly and heartily disliked, I was ready to welcome
+him as the oldest and dearest of friends, but, not being in my solitary
+condition, he merely nodded to me, and went over to join a group at
+the other side of the room. I was left standing by myself, not knowing
+what to do; and all the time fresh guests were arriving, and I felt I
+was in the way, but could not summon up courage to make a movement. I
+now bitterly regretted having been such a fool as to come. I noticed
+several other boys with whom I had a casual acquaintance at school, but
+beyond nodding they paid no attention to me, and I became filled with
+rage against them and against Owen himself. Then I heard a voice saying
+over my shoulder, “If you’re ready you may as well come upstairs.”
+
+It was Owen, and I followed him obediently. I passed a group of boys
+loitering outside an open door, and found myself all at once in a
+large room. The light at first half-dazzled me. With a heart furiously
+beating I was led up to a tall, slight lady in black, who was standing
+near the fireplace. This was Owen’s mother. I shook hands with her,
+and with his father, and with one of his elder sisters. But when this
+was accomplished I was again in that horrible position of not knowing
+what to do and being afraid to move. Owen had once more deserted me.
+All about me were a crowd of brightly-dressed girls, chattering and
+laughing among themselves, and pretending not to look at me. The boys,
+with whom I would have liked now to be back again, were hovering near
+the door, and I tried to screw up my courage to the point of crossing
+the room. Then somebody――I think it was Owen’s sister――gave me a
+programme. I stood clasping it tightly in my hand. It seemed to me
+now unthinkably idiotic that I should voluntarily have placed myself
+in this position of torture, when all I had had to do was to refuse
+the invitation and stay at home. At that moment a lady to whom I had
+not been introduced spoke to me, though I was too much upset to hear
+what she said. She had a pleasant smile, a voice soft and attractive,
+and she asked me my name, and told me I must get some partners. Many
+of the other boys, I noticed, had begun to ask for dances, and were
+scribbling down names in their programmes. My new friend bore me off to
+a fair-haired, fair-skinned, demure-looking maiden in a pink, fleecy
+dress, and introduced me. Unfortunately, at this point, one of the
+grown-up persons, a tall young man, called out, “Annie, half a mo,”
+and my protectress turned away, leaving me to make my own advances.
+I could do nothing. How could I ask this wretched girl to dance with
+me when I had never danced in my life? For an agonizing moment I stood
+there; then I stammered out something, turned on my heel abruptly, and
+walked away.
+
+It was dreadful. Before me I saw a conservatory, the door of which
+was open, and I escaped into it as my only refuge. I felt utterly
+miserable. It occurred to me to slip out quietly and go home, but to
+do that I should have to cross the room, and somebody would be sure to
+pounce upon me. Besides, what would the McAllisters think? The first
+dance had commenced, and I saw that my golden-haired maiden had found
+another partner. He happened to be one of the boys I knew, and I was
+certain she would tell him what I had done, and that everybody at
+school would get to know about it.
+
+In the midst of the dance the lady called Annie bore straight down upon
+me, having detected my hiding-place. But she did not seem angry; on the
+contrary, she was laughing. She threaded her way among the palms, while
+I felt my face becoming purple.
+
+“What do you mean by running away like that from the partners I choose
+for you?” she asked gaily. “Elsie told me you wouldn’t ask her to
+dance, and she says it’s my fault, that I made you come when you didn’t
+want to.”
+
+“I can’t dance,” I answered huskily. Nevertheless, Elsie’s explanation
+of my conduct, in spite of the fact that it redoubled its rudeness,
+gave me relief.
+
+The “Annie” lady looked at me, still laughing. Then she said very
+kindly, “Oh, don’t mind; it really doesn’t matter in the least. Come
+and dance with me.”
+
+“But I can’t,” I muttered, “I never tried in my life.”
+
+“Well, come and talk to me then, and we can watch the others.”
+
+She led me back into the room. She asked me all kinds of questions
+about myself, and very soon I was chattering away as if I had known her
+all my life. I had forgotten what an extremely small boy I had been
+only ten minutes ago, as I looked about me boldly, and gave “Annie” my
+opinion on all kinds of things.
+
+We talked of the opera, and when she told me she preferred the
+“Trovatore” to “Lohengrin” I thought her taste very crude. All the
+same I liked her. She laughed in a nice way, and was interested in
+everything you said to her. I pulled up my trousers a little so that
+my delicate silk socks should be more visible. As I glanced round the
+room I decided that I was much better dressed than anybody there, and
+this conviction increased my confidence. I would have liked to ask
+“Annie” what she thought of me from this point of view, but instead,
+she inquired if I was fond of reading. I replied in the affirmative,
+and she asked me if I had read “Tom Brown’s School-days.” I again said,
+“Yes,” and asked her if she had read “Anna Karénine.”
+
+“What a curious book for you to get hold of! I should have thought you
+would have preferred ‘The Coral Island,’ or ‘Midshipman Easy.’ Those
+are the kind of books _my_ brothers like. That is one of my brothers
+there, that fat ugly boy with red hair, dancing with the little girl in
+white.”
+
+I inspected the brother. “‘Anna Karénine’ is a fine book,” I answered.
+“Why didn’t she ask for the divorce at once, do you think? I mean as
+soon as she went away with Wronsky?”
+
+Out of the tail of my eye I saw the young man who had before interfered
+between us again approaching. She saw him too, and immediately called
+out, “Bertie, we’re discussing ‘Anna Karénine.’ I’m sure you haven’t
+read it.”
+
+We didn’t really discuss it, for she changed the subject directly
+afterwards, without even having answered my question, and Bertie,
+who I heard later was a football player of great renown, asked me
+if my school was going to win the cup this year. The first square
+dance “Annie” insisted on my dancing with her, and, so far as I could
+judge, I shuffled through it all right. After that she left me to my
+own resources, and I returned to Bertie. There was something between
+Bertie and her, I believed. I was sure he had only come because she
+had told him she was going to be there to help to look after the kids.
+Bertie had danced all the dances up to this one, but he now told me
+that if he didn’t have a smoke he should die, and asked me to come to
+the billiard-room with him. We played a hundred up, Bertie going two
+to my one, but I beat him, for I had often knocked the balls about
+on the table at Derryaghy, though there was rarely anybody to have a
+game with. Bertie said I should make a good player if I practised,
+and he showed me a lot of strokes. He was very jolly and I liked
+him. Presently he asked me if I didn’t want some supper, and we went
+downstairs. Refreshments had been going on all the evening, but the
+room happened to be empty when we came in. There was a great deal of
+lemonade and stuff, but Bertie secured some champagne, and by the time
+I had had two glasses I began to feel extremely comfortable and jolly.
+Bertie’s jokes were twice as good as they had been before, and my own
+conversation suddenly acquired an interest and brilliancy that made me
+want to talk as much as possible. After my third glass Bertie suggested
+I should try Apollinaris, but I refused. The room had somehow by this
+time got full of people. Bertie told me to keep quiet, but just then he
+was called away, and I was left to finish my supper alone.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+When I got to my feet to go back to the dancing-room, everything swayed
+before my eyes, and I held on to the back of my chair till I had
+steadied myself. I felt now as bold as a lion, and as soon as I clapped
+eyes on Elsie, my golden-haired maiden whom I had insulted earlier
+in the evening, I determined to apologize. I went up to her, looking
+neither to right nor left, and placing myself in front of her asked her
+to give me the next dance.
+
+She looked at me somewhat timidly, and said she was engaged already,
+showing me her programme. I at once stroked the name out.
+
+“Now,” I said, “let’s go and sit down somewhere. He’ll never find us.”
+
+She hesitated, but only for a second or two. Then she rose and put her
+hand lightly on my arm.
+
+“Don’t you think it’s awfully hot in here?” I went on, with amazing
+aplomb. “Besides, we have to hide any way, haven’t we?”
+
+But outside, the landing was full of people. I glanced at the staircase
+before us, seeming to lead up into regions of dim coolness and
+solitude, and proposed we should try to find some place on the next
+floor.
+
+There was indeed a seat there, in the dusk, but Elsie looked at it with
+misgiving. “I don’t think we should have come so high up,” she said.
+“I’m sure we’re not meant to. I think we’d better go down: nobody else
+is coming up here.”
+
+“But isn’t that just the reason we came? It’s all right. If anybody
+else does come we won’t be the only ones, and if they don’t who’s to
+know anything about us?”
+
+I don’t know whether Elsie was convinced by this sophistry, but at any
+rate she sat down. “I want to apologize to you,” I began softly. “Are
+you very angry with me?” I was surprised at the amount of expression I
+was able to throw into my voice, and I had a delightful feeling of not
+caring a straw what I said or did. It was fairly evident that Elsie
+rather admired the mood I was displaying, though I could see she was
+slightly puzzled by it.
+
+“No,” she answered simply. “I knew you were shy.” She lifted her
+innocent grey eyes to mine, and it came over me, very intensely, that
+she was extremely pretty. She looked very soft and demure in her fleecy
+pink dress, and with her hands folded in her lap.
+
+“Do you think I’m shy now?” I asked, smiling.
+
+“No,” she answered sweetly.
+
+I couldn’t help laughing. At the same time I felt a sudden tenderness
+for her, which it seemed most essential that I should put into words.
+
+“You’ve forgiven me then?” I went on.
+
+She laughed. “What nonsense you talk. As if it mattered.”
+
+“It matters to me. Say you forgive me.”
+
+“I won’t. There’s nothing to forgive.” She blushed and looked down.
+
+“Say it,” I persisted, bending towards her. “If you don’t I’ll think
+you dislike me.”
+
+She kept her eyes downcast, and I drew closer still.
+
+“Well?”
+
+“I don’t dislike you,” she whispered.
+
+I kissed her. She blushed a deep delightful blush, but did not move
+away. The swinging melody of a waltz rose up to us through the dim cool
+light.
+
+“Are you angry now?” I asked.
+
+She shook her head. I put my arms round her, and as I felt her yielding
+I had a strong strange pleasure. I held her close to me, kissing her
+again and again, while she closed her eyes like a cat that is being
+stroked. For a moment I felt her lips touch mine, then she struggled
+away from me, and without looking back hurried downstairs.
+
+I followed, but before I could rejoin her Owen caught me by the arm.
+“I’ve been looking for you everywhere. I’ve hardly seen you all the
+evening. What have you been up to?”
+
+I laughed.
+
+He looked at me, slightly perplexed. “What is there so amusing?” he
+inquired.
+
+But I didn’t try to explain.
+
+“What is the matter?” Owen went on, gazing at me.
+
+“Nothing,” I answered.
+
+“Come on upstairs: it’s cooler there. There’s a seat on the next lobby.”
+
+“Is there?” I replied, as I followed him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+“I hope you haven’t been awfully bored?” was Owen’s first remark after
+we sat down.
+
+“No; I think it’s a lovely party.”
+
+There was a silence.
+
+“What _is_ the matter, Peter?” Owen asked again.
+
+“Nothing, Owen, except natural excitement. Don’t be suspicious.”
+
+Owen looked unconvinced, but he decided to change the subject. “Do you
+know the part of the book that I really like best? It is where Levine
+mows the meadows with the peasants.”
+
+I knew we were back again at “Anna Karénine,” but I couldn’t bring my
+mind to bear upon it.
+
+“That is the real kind of life,” Owen pursued, “where all is simple,
+and natural; where there are no balls and clubs and lies and all the
+rest. I hate towns. I shall always live somewhere in the country.”
+
+“It doesn’t suit everybody,” I brilliantly observed.
+
+“It doesn’t suit people like Anna and Wronsky.”
+
+“You’re always down on poor Anna.”
+
+“She’s not poor. She had every chance to be happy. Why couldn’t she
+have been content to be friends with Wronsky? All the rest was pure
+selfishness.”
+
+“You don’t understand,” I replied.
+
+Owen hated to be told this. “Understand what?” he demanded, impatiently.
+
+“The kind of love Anna and Wronsky had for each other.”
+
+“Why, then, as soon as she goes to live with Wronsky, does she begin to
+talk so much of her love for her son? I don’t like her. It seems to me
+that she deliberately spoiled the lives of her husband and her son for
+her own gratification.”
+
+“She didn’t spoil her son’s life. He was only a little boy.”
+
+“But she forsook him.”
+
+“You don’t understand,” I was obliged to repeat. “You never _will_
+understand.”
+
+“Do you want to stick up for that sort of thing?”
+
+“I’m not sticking up for it; but I don’t think it’s the kind of thing
+a person can accept or refuse just as if it were an invitation to a
+party. If you knew anything about it you wouldn’t say they might have
+been content to be friends.”
+
+“And do you like the way she makes fun of her husband to her lover?”
+
+“What has that to do with it?”
+
+“Even when she is making her confession to her husband she thinks only
+of herself. She tells him that she hates him. It does not occur to her
+that he can have any feelings, because his manner is stiff and he has a
+habit of cracking his finger-joints.”
+
+“It didn’t much matter how she made her confession.”
+
+“It did. She needn’t have been brutal.”
+
+“Oh, she wasn’t brutal.”
+
+“And all the lies?”
+
+“But you never seem to think of her situation!”
+
+“I do. She deliberately brought about her own situation, after having
+been warned by her husband. You admire her simply because she loves
+Wronsky; but there is nothing very wonderful about that kind of love.”
+
+“I never said I admired her; I said I understood her. If she sacrificed
+her husband, she sacrificed herself too.”
+
+“Yes――and her lover, and her friend Kitty, and her son, and everything.
+Levine’s brother, who drinks himself to death, also sacrifices himself.
+And Yavshine, who gambles away all his fortune.”
+
+“You don’t see any difference?”
+
+“I don’t see anything fine in the kind of love Anna felt. And when she
+says she won’t have any more children, it seems to me that it becomes
+simply disgusting. Have you thought what it means?”
+
+“Oh, I know what it means,” I answered sulkily. Owen had managed to
+completely alter my mood, and I no longer felt pleased with myself or
+pleased with him. I was irritated because he seemed, now as always, to
+try to judge what was a matter of emotion by reasoning about it.
+
+“If you had ever loved anybody,” I said, “it would make you look at
+such things differently.”
+
+“Perhaps I mightn’t see them any clearer for that.”
+
+“Perhaps not. But to judge human beings you require first of all to
+understand something about human nature.”
+
+“Understand! You’re always harping on that! It’s a very cheap way of
+arguing. Why should I think _you_ understand?”
+
+“Because I have felt what we are talking about, and you haven’t.” I
+suddenly grew violently excited. “You don’t know what it is to care
+for a person so that nothing else in the world matters, so that it is
+like a kind of sickness, preventing you even from sleeping. You know
+nothing, have felt nothing, and yet you bring out your miserable little
+catechism arguments and pretend to pronounce judgment. I’d rather have
+a man who had committed all the crimes on the earth than one of those
+cold, fishy, reasonable creatures you admire, who never did anything
+wrong, and never made anybody happy.”
+
+Owen looked at me in amazement, which is indeed hardly surprising.
+But suddenly my excitement passed, and I felt only a passion of
+home-sickness and regret. It swept over me like a heavy, resistless
+rush of water. All that was here around me grew black as night. I
+longed to get away from everything that could even remind me of my
+life of the past few months. I seemed to have a sudden bright light in
+which I saw myself clearly. In these few months I had deteriorated, the
+quality even of my love for Katherine had deteriorated; it had become
+less of the spirit, more of an obsession. And now, as I stood there
+before Owen, I seemed to hear the soft breaking of waves, infinitely
+peaceful, and I had a vision of my own bedroom, where I went to sleep,
+and wakened up, with the low sound of the sea in my ears. I said
+good-night hurriedly to the astonished Owen. I told him I was sorry for
+speaking as I had done, but that I would explain it all to him another
+time; only now I must go. I ran downstairs to the cloak-room, and a few
+minutes later left the house, without having said good-night to Mrs.
+Gill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When I reached home I let myself in quietly with a latch-key, but as I
+was undressing George wakened up and began to ask me about the party. I
+did not feel in the least like going to sleep, and after I had got into
+bed we lay talking. Presently George got up and lit the gas, which I
+had turned out. I saw him go to the hiding-place he had shown me on the
+night of my arrival, and again take from it that mysterious bundle of
+photographs. He came over and sat down on the side of my bed.
+
+“I don’t want to see them,” I said, pushing him away; but he may have
+detected a note of weakness in my voice, for he only laughed.
+
+“Don’t be a fool,” he answered brutally. “I’m not going to do you any
+harm.”
+
+He drew them from the envelope and showed them to me, one by one, while
+the gas flamed and flared above our heads.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+Owen stepped back off the foot-board on to the platform.
+
+“Good-bye,” I said, leaning out of the carriage window. “There’s no use
+your waiting till the train starts. I hope you’ll have decent holidays.”
+
+He smiled. “I’m sure I will. I wish, all the same, you were going to be
+with me. I thought of it, but then I thought you would rather go home.”
+
+“Yes,” I said.
+
+“Wouldn’t you really? Don’t you want to go home?”
+
+“Yes, of course. Why do you ask?”
+
+“I don’t know. You don’t seem, perhaps, quite so keen as you were――――”
+
+Owen still waited, but I had taken my seat.
+
+“Well, I’ll see you again in a fortnight,” he went on, cheerfully.
+“Write to me, won’t you, if you aren’t too busy?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+Another pause followed, while Owen looked up and down the platform. He
+seemed to me extraordinarily happy.
+
+“Well, good-bye again,” he said.
+
+“Good-bye.”
+
+And this time the guard’s whistle blew, the train jolted forward with
+a clatter of coupling-irons, and then glided steadily on. I waved my
+hand to Owen, catching a last glimpse of his bright, animated face
+before I settled down to the indifferent contemplation of the staler,
+and coarser-looking persons who shared my compartment. What I had
+been looking forward to for many weeks had come to pass; I was on my
+way home; outwardly nothing was wanting; yet not even the thought of
+seeing Mrs. Carroll again seemed to have power to awaken that joy I
+had anticipated, though she had written to ask me to spend part of my
+holidays with her, and I tried now to think of some scheme by which to
+make this part as large as possible.
+
+I looked at the people opposite; I looked out of the window; I turned
+the pages of _Punch’s Almanac_, which Owen had bought for me at the
+bookstall. Then I shut my eyes and tried to doze.
+
+When the train drew in at the station I saw my father standing on the
+platform. Somehow, I had not expected him to be there, and he upset my
+calculations. I opened the carriage door, and as I shook hands with him
+I realized how much easier it is to make plans than to carry them out,
+and hoped Mrs. Carroll herself had approached him on the matter of my
+going to Derryaghy. His careworn, anxious face was lit by a smile as
+he asked me how I was. A porter meanwhile had secured my box and was
+wheeling it on a truck along the platform. But, as we walked behind
+him, that old stupid feeling of constraint had already begun to take
+possession of me, and my replies to my father’s questions sounded, for
+all I could do to the contrary, stiff, and even reluctant.
+
+It was after one o’clock and dinner was ready when we reached the house.
+
+“The train must have been late,” I remarked, indifferently, as we sat
+down; and then I could think of nothing further to say.
+
+It struck me that my father was older and dimmer and shabbier than
+I had remembered him. He presented the picture, drab and dreary, of
+perfectly achieved failure, and I found myself looking out for all
+his old habits, the peculiar noises he made with his nose, his fashion
+of smacking his lips. I noticed that his hands were not very clean,
+and that his coat looked as if he had brushed his hair over it. These
+things struck me all the more forcibly, somehow, because I tried to
+think how superficial and unimportant they were. I had a vision of
+the solitary meals he must have taken for the past four months, and
+I was sorry for him, though subconsciously, at the same time, I was
+considering how soon it would do for me to mention my proposed visit to
+Derryaghy.
+
+After dinner he asked me what I wanted to do. “It is nice and dry for
+walking,” he said. “We have had quite a hard frost.”
+
+It sounded as if he intended coming with me, a thing he seldom or never
+did.
+
+“I was thinking of going up to Derryaghy,” I answered, with an
+assumption of carelessness that did not prevent my noting the immediate
+change that came into his face.
+
+“Had you planned anything?” I asked hastily.
+
+“No, no.”
+
+“Perhaps you would like to go for a walk?”
+
+“No, no. Please yourself,” he replied.
+
+So I went up to Derryaghy, with a guilty sense that I had hurt his
+feelings. It was a pity that I should have begun in this fashion;
+that I could not, for once, have been cheerfully and spontaneously
+unselfish, but my longing to get back to my old haunts was intense, and
+I yielded to it.
+
+After all, when I reached Derryaghy, Mrs. Carroll was not there. She
+had left a message for me to say that she had been obliged to go up
+to town, but that she hoped I should be able to dine with her at the
+usual hour. I wandered out into the winter woods, beautiful with the
+strange and delicate beauty of naked trees. I loved this place really
+with a kind of passion, and I was glad my father was not here, glad
+that I was alone. Dark slender branches traced fantastic arabesques
+against the grey sky above my head. The black- and silver-stemmed
+birches gave the note that was carried out through all the colouring.
+Only the fir-trees, laurels, and an occasional holly-tree, were green.
+I loved the woods in winter; they seemed to me to have then a peculiar
+grace they did not possess at any other season. And the wind whistled
+so hollowly in the leafless trees, and the darting birds were so black
+against the sky, and all was so silent and solitary, with a sort of
+frozen loveliness, that I could conceive of nothing more beautiful even
+in the green pomp and splendour of summer. And behind everything was
+a vision of long, lamp-lit, fire-lit evenings, with dreamy, delicious
+books. The leaves of the laurels and holly were coated with frost;
+the dead fronds of the bracken were a dull brown; here and there the
+sombre colouring was splashed with the red leaves of brambles. There
+was a hint of approaching snow in the air, there was almost a silence
+of snow, and I seemed to feel it drawing closer to me through the cold,
+remote sky. The ground was hard as iron. Sometimes a single leaf,
+pallid and faded, trembled still at the end of a twig, but almost all
+the leaves that were going to fall had fallen long ago. I saw the flash
+of fur, brown and white, in the frozen grass, but Tony, who followed at
+my heels, was indifferent to rabbits.
+
+It was dusk when I returned. A servant preceded me into the
+drawing-room, and lit the lamps, and made up the fire, throwing on
+another log or two. I sat down in one of the big, soft armchairs and
+began to turn over Christmas numbers――the _Graphic_, the _London News_,
+_Holly Leaves_――looking at Caldecott’s, Sambourne’s, and Fred Barnard’s
+drawings. I began to read a story by Bret Harte. It was extraordinarily
+nice to be here again. This dear old house, how I loved it! The huge
+wood fire, the roomy depth of my armchair, the soft, thick carpet,
+all the surroundings of pleasantness and comfort, appealed to me
+after my prolonged and reluctant experience of the McAllisters. The
+fragrant China tea that was brought in to me tasted more deliciously
+than anything I had ever tasted before, and when I had finished my
+story (“The Chatelaine of Burnt Ridge,” I think it was called) and the
+servant had cleared away the tea-things, I sat and dozed.
+
+I had asked after Miss Dick, but of course she had gone home for
+Christmas. I was really to be alone this time――just myself and Mrs.
+Carroll.
+
+As I sat there, looking into the fire, I felt that it would have been
+nicer of me to have gone home on this, the evening of my arrival,
+but six o’clock, our tea hour, had struck ten minutes ago, and still
+I had not budged from my chair. Curious thoughts, thoughts I should
+have been ashamed to tell anybody, came to me unbidden, and for the
+first time. It made a tremendous difference just who happened to be
+one’s father, I reflected; and I thought of how the Dales were Mrs.
+Carroll’s nearest relatives. “She likes me better than anybody else,” I
+said to myself. “If I were by myself she would adopt me. All this――the
+house――everything will belong one day to somebody else; but to whom?...
+The house?” ... And I remembered she did not care for Gerald, and
+that Gerald did not in the least try to make her alter her opinion.
+Probably he had only come over last summer because his people had
+insisted on it. All at once I realized that these speculations were not
+particularly charming, and tried to put them from me. At the same time
+I heard the sharp sound of a horse’s hoofs on the frozen ground, then
+the crunch of gravel under carriage wheels, and I knew Mrs. Carroll had
+returned.
+
+She opened the door and came straight to me, smiling and holding out
+her hand. “You’ve grown so big,” she said, lifting her thick veil, “I
+don’t know whether you want to be kissed or not, but I think I’ll risk
+it.” She kissed me, and then held me at arm’s length to look at me.
+She moved me a little so that the lamp-light fell on my face. “My dear
+child,” she asked, with a sudden anxiety, “aren’t you well? How did
+you get those black lines under your eyes? You can’t be getting enough
+sleep. Have you been working too hard?”
+
+“No,” I answered, “but I was up late last night.”
+
+“You must be more careful: your health is infinitely more important
+than any wretched examination. Well, at all events, I’m very glad to
+see you.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A couple of hours later, after dinner, she again took up the subject of
+my appearance, which evidently did not satisfy her, though I assured
+her there was nothing the matter.
+
+“You’ve altered,” she said, thoughtfully. “It isn’t only that you’ve
+grown, but you, somehow, look older. Do you get your meals properly?
+I expect you stop to play after school instead of coming home to your
+dinner!”
+
+I changed the subject as soon as I could by asking after the Dales.
+“Will they be here next summer?”
+
+“If you would like it I daresay we can manage it. In fact I invited
+Katherine for Christmas, but she couldn’t come.”
+
+“I hope they will come in the summer.”
+
+I inquired after all the other people I could think of: I felt
+interested in everything that had happened since I had gone away. Then
+I sat quiet, and quite suddenly, when I thought she had forgotten all
+about it, Mrs. Carroll said, “I wish you would tell me, Peter, just
+what is troubling you.”
+
+“But there is nothing,” I answered, smiling. “I was only thinking how
+nice it was to be back here again.”
+
+“Remember you are to come to stay for a few days, before the end of
+your holidays. You must stay at least a week. When have you to go
+back?”
+
+“On the eighth.”
+
+“And those people you are with――the What-do-you-call-ems――how do you
+like them?”
+
+“The McAllisters?” I hesitated. “Not very much.”
+
+“Do they look after you properly?”
+
+“Oh yes.”
+
+“I think I’ll come and see you there. I would have gone before this,
+only your father didn’t want it.”
+
+“I’d rather you didn’t,” I said.
+
+“Why?”
+
+I had no answer and she went on: “I must call and have a talk with your
+father before you go back.”
+
+“It won’t do any good so far as that is concerned. He wants me to be
+there. Aunt Margaret is his sister.”
+
+“I know that, but you’d rather be by yourself, wouldn’t you? I can see
+there is something you don’t like.”
+
+“My father wouldn’t let me. He has some idea about a home
+influence――but I told you before, and of course he told you himself.”
+
+“Home fiddlesticks! You’d have been far better at a good
+boarding-school. This, it seems to me, is neither one thing nor
+another. I must speak to him.”
+
+“There is no use really,” I said, for I knew that if she were to take
+the matter up again it might end in my not even being allowed to come
+to stay at Derryaghy next week.
+
+“Your father is far too anxious about you. If there had been two or
+three more of you it would have been much better.”
+
+“It isn’t that.” I waited a while before I brought it out: “He doesn’t
+trust me.”
+
+“Doesn’t trust you? In what way doesn’t he trust you?”
+
+“In every way. He thinks I’m inclined naturally to――to do things――”
+
+“To do things? What sort of things?”
+
+“To be bad,” I said abruptly.
+
+Mrs. Carroll stared at me. “Nonsense, child,” she answered. “I don’t
+know what can have put such an idea into your head!”
+
+“_He_ did,” I muttered. “There are times when I think he may be right,”
+I went on dejectedly, “that he must surely have some reason. I don’t
+know.... He is always thinking about my mother.”
+
+Mrs. Carroll had been on the point of speaking, but at this she paused.
+
+“I know nothing about her,” I pursued. “I can’t remember her at all,
+and there is not even a photograph at home. What _is_ there? Do _you_
+know nothing?”
+
+Mrs. Carroll hesitated. “Nothing,” she then said. “Nothing more than
+you know yourself, Peter dear,” she added.
+
+“You have never heard? I should like to go to see her.”
+
+“Yes?” There was a note of doubt in this monosyllable which made me
+look up.
+
+“I should like to judge for myself,” I continued, impetuously. But the
+question was, or to Mrs. Carroll appeared to be, an impossible one for
+us to discuss together, and she made no reply.
+
+“And how do you like your school?” she asked presently, holding up a
+magazine between her face and the blazing fire. “Tell me all about
+it――about all your friends and everything you do.”
+
+I began to tell her, giving, as I went along a kind of rough, rambling
+account of my ordinary day. I told of how I had come to know Owen; how
+the real thief had never been discovered. I described Owen to her; I
+said he was the only friend I had made. I told her of the party last
+night, leaving out the episode of Elsie.
+
+“It makes such a difference when you find somebody who is more or less
+like yourself.”
+
+“I don’t think he is very like me,” I answered. “I don’t think we’re
+a bit alike, but――” I tried to puzzle it out: “I suppose we must have
+some things in common.”
+
+“Tell me about him,” she encouraged me.
+
+“He’s a very good chap,” I said lamely. Then, as this didn’t in the
+least express my meaning: “I mean he’s very straight, and decent, and
+all that. He’s not like anybody else.”
+
+“What is the difference?”
+
+“Well, for one thing, he’s awfully serious. I don’t mean dull――but
+serious about what things really mean and that sort of thing.”
+
+“Is he clever?”
+
+“I don’t know. He’s very simple.”
+
+“And George――isn’t that his name? the name of your cousin?――what is
+_he_ like? Are you friends with him?”
+
+“Oh, yes.”
+
+“Tell me about George too.”
+
+“There’s nothing to tell. He’s in business. You wouldn’t much care for
+him.”
+
+“Why not? Don’t you?”
+
+“Yes, very well.” And it suddenly struck me as strange that I did so,
+that I did not positively detest him.
+
+“You do not seem enthusiastic. Is he not nice?”
+
+“Oh, he’s all right. He’s nice enough, I daresay――just as nice as I am.”
+
+“Why won’t you tell me what is the matter, Peter?”
+
+“There is nothing.”
+
+“You haven’t done anything wrong, have you?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+I closed my eyes for a minute as I leaned back in my chair. A
+silence had fallen on the room with my last words. Then suddenly my
+self-control deserted me, and I hid my face against the arm of the
+chair, just as if I had been a child.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+It was a beautiful, clear, winter night when I walked home. Over the
+low wall I looked out at the dark, smooth sea, stretching away, almost
+black, save where the moonlight touched it. I trailed my right hand
+on the wall as I walked, heedless of the cold, though it was freezing
+keenly. The tide was in, and the chill, listless splash of the small
+waves, running through my thoughts, seemed to increase their sadness.
+On the verge of the distant golf-links a ruddy light from the big hotel
+shone out into the night.
+
+As I turned up the Bryansford Road, I saw, in the moonlight, my father
+standing leaning over the garden gate, and behind him the house door
+was open. Unconsciously I slackened my pace. He was looking for me,
+perhaps. He must have already heard me, for the sound of my footsteps
+rang out sharply on the hard road.
+
+“Where have you been all this time?” he asked abruptly, as I came up.
+
+There was a hardness in his voice that, in my present mood, I shrank
+from more than I should have from physical violence. I knew he knew
+where I had been, and I thought he might have let the matter pass.
+“I didn’t intend to stay so late,” I said, apologetically, “but Mrs.
+Carroll had gone up to town and left a message for me, asking me to
+wait. After dinner she wanted me to tell her all I had been doing since
+I left home.”
+
+“I hope you were more communicative than you were to me. You hadn’t
+time, I suppose, to come back and say you were staying. I waited tea
+for you for nearly an hour.”
+
+“I didn’t think it mattered,” I mumbled. “I’m very sorry. I thought you
+would understand.”
+
+I had already climbed half a dozen stairs on my way to bed, when my
+father called me back.
+
+“Why are you rushing off like that, now?”
+
+I hastily returned. “I was going to bed: I didn’t know you wanted to
+sit up.” I went on into the parlour, where there was a smoky fire in
+the grate, just large enough to make you realize how cold it was, and
+on the table some bread and butter, a jug of milk and a tumbler. I sat
+down beside the fire.
+
+“I’m not going to sit up; but I don’t want you to treat your home as if
+it were an hotel, a place where you come merely to sleep. I’ve no doubt
+things are more to your taste at Derryaghy, but while this _is_ your
+home, you must try to make the best of it.”
+
+I looked at my father helplessly, but I said nothing. I had an
+uncomfortable vision of his sitting here all evening by himself. If he
+would only make friends with somebody! I wondered if he had been happy
+before mamma went away.
+
+“Seeing that it was your first day at home,” he went on, putting down
+my silence to sulkiness, “you might at least have been content to be
+out all the afternoon. Now that we are on the subject, I had better
+let you know that Mrs. Carroll asked me to allow you to spend part of
+your holidays at Derryaghy, but I told her you must decide that for
+yourself.” He paused, with the intention of letting me say I didn’t
+want to go.
+
+“She told me to-night,” I murmured.
+
+“Well?”
+
+“I think I’d like to go.”
+
+There was a silence, and I wondered how long we were going to sit
+shivering here.
+
+“I had a letter to-night from your Aunt Margaret. She says you have
+made friends with some people called Gill, and have been to a party at
+their house.”
+
+“Yes: it was last night.”
+
+“Why do you never tell me of any of these things yourself? One would
+think I was a total stranger to you!”
+
+“I didn’t know it would interest you.”
+
+All at once I remembered my visits to the opera, and I couldn’t
+understand how my father had not heard of them. He had not mentioned my
+laxity in regard to church either, and both these omissions puzzled me
+greatly, seeing Aunt Margaret had made such a fuss about them at the
+time.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+After breakfast I screwed up my courage to the point of broaching
+the subject I had most on my mind. “There is something I want to say
+to you,” I began, and my father instantly adopted an attitude of
+motionless attention, so excessively attentive that it had the effect
+of putting me out, and I forgot the phrases I had prepared beforehand,
+and could only stammer awkwardly that it was my desire to leave the
+McAllisters and choose some lodging for myself.
+
+A return to this question I saw was not pleasing to him, and I had
+hardly expected it to be so.
+
+“You are very self-willed,” he said, slowly.
+
+I knew from the tone in which this opinion was uttered that he had
+already made up his mind about my request, yet some obscure instinct
+of self-preservation still kept me from giving in. I don’t suppose I
+could have satisfactorily explained that instinct to my father, even
+had I become perfectly confidential, and certainly no such thought ever
+crossed my mind. The result was that he looked upon my wish as a mere
+caprice.
+
+“It seems to me we have already fully discussed the question,” he
+remarked unsympathetically.
+
+“I didn’t know then.... I mean I don’t like sleeping with George.”
+
+“Why? You have your own bed, haven’t you?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“George is your cousin.”
+
+“I know he is my cousin,” I answered wearily. “What difference does
+that make?” Already I felt the whole thing was hopeless.
+
+“It is just this sort of nonsense which makes me object to your going
+to stay at Derryaghy,” my father began impatiently. “You are pampered
+with every luxury there, till you begin to dislike and look down upon
+everybody who hasn’t had your advantages.”
+
+“I’m not thinking of advantages,” I muttered, with a sort of irony.
+
+“I didn’t know when I arranged for you to stay with them that they
+would not be able to give you a room to yourself. On the other hand, I
+don’t see that it is at all a sufficient reason for your leaving now
+you are there. I told you so when I wrote to you. It is only an excuse
+to get your own way. You have always been like that; though I should
+have thought you would hardly have considered it worth while to bring
+the matter up again after all these months.”
+
+I accepted my father’s decision without further protest. As a matter
+of fact, a kind of listlessness had come upon me, an apathetic
+indifference to whatever might happen.
+
+It was Christmas Eve. A heavy fall of snow had occurred during the
+night, and on the hard, frozen ground it lay unmelted to the dark
+border of the sea. All the morning I spent beside the fire reading
+“Richard Feverel,” but about half-past three I went out for a walk
+over the golf-links. The snow was several inches deep, but being
+perfectly hard was not unpleasant for walking. I had slept badly last
+night, a sleep broken by wretched dreams, and I had a mind to go for
+a really long walk and tire myself out. In spite of being at home
+again, in spite of this beautiful, bright, exhilarating weather, in
+spite of the fact that I would be getting a Christmas-box from Mrs.
+Carroll to-morrow, and a letter from Katherine, and another from
+Owen, my spirits were of the gloomiest. Never before had I looked
+so closely into my own soul, and never before had I found so little
+there to comfort me. I knew that for months past my mind had been
+gradually submitted to a poisonous influence that had filtered through
+my blood, like a vapour from some fever-breeding marsh. Yet certain
+seeds, I thought, could perhaps only have taken root within me, could
+perhaps only so quickly have sprung to tall dark flower, because they
+had found a soil already apt to receive them: and I remembered my
+father’s suspicions in the past. I thought of a book I had been reading
+lately――a book written for boys, and all about boys――and I compared
+myself with its heroes. I compared the gloom that weighed upon me now
+with the troubles they had experienced, and it seemed to me I must be
+different, not in degree but in kind, from every boy in that book, from
+the bad just as much as from the good. I remembered hours, whole days,
+when I had been like them, like the decent ones I mean, for with the
+others I had nothing in common――I had never wanted to shirk games; and
+bullying, gambling, dishonesty, and “pubs,” had no attraction for me.
+But it was just because there were bits of the book in which I could
+see a part of myself that I was troubled by the absence of other parts,
+of so many other feelings that none of these boys shared. I wondered
+if I were quite abnormal, but how could I ever find out even that;
+for just as nobody knew what I was, I knew nothing really of anybody
+else, save what they cared to show me or took no trouble to hide. I was
+hopelessly shut in to the little circle of my own sensations, desires,
+and emotions. Owen, whom I knew better than any other boy,――what, after
+all, did I know of him? I knew no one but myself, and of myself I knew
+much that filled me with shame.
+
+A deep silence overshadowed all things, the silence of the fallen
+snow. I had come to a stand-still. Around me was an infinite stretch of
+whiteness, almost unbroken, save where the sea was dark and restless
+under the whip of the rising wind. Dusk had crept up imperceptibly,
+and more light now rose from the ground than fell from the leaden
+sky overhead. Snow had again begun to fall. A few flakes turned and
+fluttered down out of the darkness, but I knew this was only the
+beginning. I walked to the edge of the black, desolate sea, and watched
+the waves rolling in to break at my feet, and at that moment I felt
+infinitely alone, and indeed for miles round there was probably no
+other human being. But it was as if I were alone in a dead world. The
+whirling flakes of snow fell ever faster out of the winter sky; the
+barren, frozen land was wrapped in a stillness that was more like the
+stillness of death than of sleep; the only sounds there were came from
+the waves breaking at my feet, and from an occasional sweep of wind
+forlorn as though no ears were there to listen. The creeping on of
+night seemed to be the shutting out for ever of all life, and one could
+imagine there would never be anything more, that the end had at last
+been reached.
+
+And the thought of death came to me, without terror, came, rather, as a
+solution. All that bound me to existence seemed now attenuated to the
+thinnest cobweb. If I just lay down here and waited....
+
+Tony, who had grown restless at my long delay, suddenly broke into
+my consciousness. He began to urge me to come on, with a peculiar,
+eager, discontented note in his voice. He jumped up with his large
+paws against me. I knelt in the snow and hugged him in my arms, while
+his warm red tongue passed rapidly over my face. I held him close, and
+his black nose was pressed into my cheek, and he wagged his tail and
+nibbled at my ears.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+Two or three days before, I had sent off a small picture to Katherine
+as a Christmas-box. It had taken me a long time to choose something I
+thought she might care for, and which at the same time pleased myself.
+In the end I had got her a photograph of Francia’s portrait of the
+boy Federigo Gonzaga, the son of Isabella d’Este――the Miserden Park
+picture. I had had it framed in a flat, dull, dark frame, and very
+carefully packed; and over and over again I had pictured her opening
+the parcel, her surprise. It was two days after Christmas when the
+postman brought me a letter from her, but instead of reading it, I
+put it in my pocket. It was a fairly thick packet, so, though her
+writing was very large, I knew it must be a long letter. I could feel
+it as it lay in the inner pocket of my jacket, and a dozen times that
+day I drew it out and inspected it, but no more than that, for I had
+determined not to read it till I went to bed. All day long I thought of
+the pleasure I should have, and in the end I became so impatient that I
+went to bed about nine o’clock.
+
+I put the letter on my pillow, and placed a lighted candle on the
+painted, deal chest-of-drawers beside my bed. I undressed, got into
+bed, and only then, with eager fingers, tore open the envelope and drew
+out its contents.
+
+I looked at them as they lay upon the bright, patch-work counterpane,
+a single sheet of note-paper, and a New Year card in the form of a
+pocket calendar. My disappointment was so great that for a little I did
+not even read the letter, but lay on my back and stared dismally at the
+iron rail at the foot of my bed. My thoughts were bitter. I recalled
+the many letters I had written to her, undiscouraged by her brief
+replies. Some of these had been pages long; the one I had sent with
+my present, for instance, I had given a whole evening to. I glanced
+at what she had written――three sides of a sheet of note-paper hastily
+scrawled over in huge characters, about two words to a line. She
+thanked me for my picture, which was very pretty. She would have liked
+to write me a really long letter, but there were some people staying in
+the house, and she had to look after them, and had only been able to
+snatch a moment to wish me a happy New Year. That was all.
+
+I blew out the candle and lay with my eyes wide open staring into the
+darkness. The few, conventional phrases of her letter were vivid in
+my mind. To begin with, the picture was not pretty; if it had been,
+I shouldn’t have bought it. If she had wanted me to have a happy New
+Year it would have been very easy for her to make it so. But it had
+been too much trouble. I thought of how I had sat up far into the night
+to finish my Christmas letter to her. I heard my father’s step on the
+stairs, the shutting of his bedroom door. I pulled the bed-clothes
+up to my chin, and as I did so my hand touched something――the
+pocket-calendar. I tore it in two and flung the pieces at the opposite
+wall.
+
+My mind was divided between despondency and anger. I pictured her
+enjoying herself with a houseful of her own and Gerald’s friends,
+while I was forgotten. Of course there was no particular reason why
+she should remember me. Still, the irony of those foolish New Year’s
+wishes might almost have been intentional had the whole letter not been
+so thoughtless. She knew well enough how happy I must be now, stuck
+in this wretched hole by myself; and I asked myself how anybody could
+be so completely devoid of imagination, of sympathy, even of tact? I
+began to compose a letter to be written to-morrow, a letter expressing
+what I felt. I imagined her reading it in the midst of her friends, and
+realizing how she had wounded me. I tossed and turned till I was almost
+in a fever. Sleep was out of the question, for I knew it must be nearly
+morning already, and I had half a mind to get up and dress....
+
+When I opened my eyes it was broad daylight. I sprang out of bed and
+hurried into my clothes. The first thing after breakfast I sat down
+to write my letter of reproach, and wrote it at furious speed, a fire
+burning in my soul. Yet when I came to read it over, it seemed childish
+and stilted, and in my haste I had left out so many words and mis-spelt
+so many others that I was obliged to make a fair copy of the whole.
+This I posted, but had two days more of impatience before a reply
+reached me. When it came, it had the effect of turning away my anger.
+Katherine seemed really sorry; at any rate she said she was. She told
+me that she cared far more for me than for any of the people I imagined
+she found so delightful, and that I might have known this by now, even
+if her letters _had_ been short. She said it had been horrid of her to
+write such a miserable scrawl, but that, if she had guessed I should
+mind it so much, she would have written me a whole book.
+
+I sat down to reply at once, but I cannot account for the unfortunate
+tone my letter took. It was morbid and self-conscious, without being
+in the least frank. I begged her forgiveness; I made a parade of a
+melancholy that bore no resemblance to the kind of melancholy I really
+felt; I talked vaguely about not being as good as she believed me to
+be, and the whole production was a little sickening. I don’t know, or
+rather I do know, what she made of it. She replied that she had never
+for a moment thought me good, and that she should prefer not to hear
+from me at all to getting letters like the last I had written.
+
+It was not, perhaps, extremely sympathetic, but I knew well enough
+myself I had done the wrong thing. My letter had been odiously
+self-conscious. I had accused myself of not being good, but what on
+earth did that mean? It might mean that I went into the pantry at night
+and stole the jam!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+About this time, influenced by Amiel, whom I had come across in Mrs.
+Humphry Ward’s translation, I had begun to keep a diary, or journal,
+of my “sensations and ideas.” I unearthed it the other day, with the
+paper time-staled as the sensations, and the ink faded as the ideas.
+On reading it over I found it so unbalanced, so one-sided, that I can
+scarce quote a passage as really expressive of what I actually was.
+It expresses only what I was when I sat down to write my journal, and
+I never appear to have done this except when I was in a particularly
+unhealthy mood. Some of this journal is descriptive, some of it merely
+notes certain thoughts that came to me and that I evidently, the
+Lord knows why, imagined worthy of preservation. A single entry, the
+description of a dream, will, I fancy, give an idea of the whole.
+
+“Last night I went out and wandered about the streets for a while, and
+when I came home I went straight to bed. I did not go to sleep for a
+long time. I remember hearing the clock strike two, and when I awoke
+it was just four, but of course I cannot really tell how long my dream
+lasted.
+
+“I was in a room with some people I knew very well. My father was
+there, and Aunt Margaret and Uncle George. I was laughing at something,
+I cannot remember what, only that it had to do with a question of
+religion, when suddenly the figure of Christ appeared, in a long,
+purple, velvet robe――a slight figure, with narrow effeminate face,
+pointed beard, and a soft treacherous expression in the slanting eyes.
+Everybody in the room except myself fell on their knees in fear, but
+I stood still. He watched me and then came closer, holding out his
+pierced hands and making the sign of the cross. He did not speak, but
+I knew what he meant, and I detested him. He drew still nearer and
+still I would not kneel. My defiance filled me with a mingled fear and
+exultation, and, as he was about to touch me, I cried out, invoking
+Satan, offering myself to him. A horrible look of baffled rage and
+malice distorted the face of the Christ. Outside a storm was raging and
+the wide window was a black square. With a shrill scream the Christ
+vanished, and a man, naked, superb, the colour of dark, greenish
+bronze, shot through the window as though propelled by some invisible
+force. (From this on, an undertone of strange music floated through my
+dream, rising and falling with the rise and fall of my emotions.)
+
+“The face of this dark angel was beautiful and proud. His forehead was
+broad and low and slightly overhanging, giving him a stern and brooding
+expression, but although I was afraid of him I loved him, and felt an
+irresistible longing to put myself in his power. We were now alone
+together in the room, which had suddenly grown dark, and he seized me.
+I struggled, but in his grasp I was helpless as a young bird in the
+clutches of a boy. He stripped me naked and rubbed my body over with
+some kind of ointment that left no mark. And somehow I knew he was
+going to send me down into hell, and that after a while I should return
+again to earth, but that I should be his for ever.
+
+“‘I shall not be tortured?’ I asked him, and he answered in a deep
+voice, ‘There are no tortures such as you are thinking of.’
+
+“‘When I come back,’ I said, ‘I shall have forgotten all I saw there;
+I shall think I have been only dreaming. Can you not mark me in some
+way?’
+
+“He placed me in front of the mirror that was at one end of the room,
+and which seemed to shine in the dark as with fire. And in the glass
+I saw over my right breast a red flush, and upon this a white streak,
+broad and long as his fore-finger. He took my hand, and suddenly the
+room I was in seemed to be dropping. Down and down it rushed, so
+rapidly that the walls glowed red hot, but because of the ointment with
+which I had been covered I felt nothing. And we seemed to be sinking
+down through a bottomless sea that hissed in steam against the walls.
+Then the speed increased a thousandfold and I lost consciousness.
+
+“I do not know what interval had elapsed, but it was evening and I was
+back again in the room, our parlour at home. My father was kneeling
+down and calling upon me in desperation to pray to God before it was
+too late――to pray――to pray. But I would not pray. Mrs. Carroll was
+there and she was crying. Then a voice said aloud above our heads, ‘It
+was all only a dream,’ and for a little we believed this; and then all
+at once I knew the voice was lying. My father read in my face what was
+passing in my mind, and his own face grew white as paper. But I knew;
+and I exulted and wept at the same moment. I tore away my shirt from my
+breast. ‘Look――look! It is his mark!’
+
+“A loud cry rang through the room, and I awoke, bathed in perspiration,
+to the silence and darkness of night. I could hear George breathing
+quietly in his sleep. Then I got up and lit the gas and looked to see
+if the mark were indeed there upon my breast, but there was nothing.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Could I have been mentally, morally, even physically, well when I
+had this dream? Childish and foolish, perhaps, it had at the time an
+intensity the effect of which lingered on long after I had awakened.
+There is something disquieting in the thought that so slender a
+veil should separate the world of order and sanity from a world of
+disorder and delirium such as my eyes were opened to then. Yet that
+other world is always there, waiting, and the veil may be torn at any
+moment, letting tongues of the dreadful, flaming light shoot through.
+The Christ of my dream was not a blasphemous creation of my own mind,
+but a sort of distorted memory of one or two pictures in a book about
+Byzantine wall-paintings I had looked at years before. The main fact,
+however, psychologically, is, I suppose, the fact that I kept a journal
+at all. Probably what was at the bottom of it was an idea of confession
+which now haunted me. It came to me in several relations. I thought of
+Owen, thought it was my duty to tell him everything about myself, and
+that in this way we might make our friendship perfect. At other times
+I feared that instead of doing this it might do just the opposite. I
+was not sure, either, what my motive really was――whether it really
+proceeded from a sense of duty, or only from a desire of personal
+relief. It was strange that while in many respects I continued to have
+an exaggerated opinion of myself, I should yet have been so frequently
+visited just now by hours of despondency, when I imagined my life as
+already irretrievably doomed to failure. I did not look upon myself
+as an ordinary person, or the crisis through which I was passing as
+an ordinary crisis. I began to ponder over the meaning of sin and
+damnation, and I figured this latter quality as a condition of mind
+which attracts evil, and from which no evil can be hidden. When I was
+with Owen my troubles grew fainter, and even disappeared. Mentally,
+morally, he had upon me much the same effect as, physically, a draught
+of fresh air would have had, after long confinement in a stifling
+atmosphere. I admired him; I envied him his freedom from all that made
+my own life just now so difficult. I discussed the question of free
+will with him, but I no more believed in it than did my Arabian Nights
+heroes. I was as closely imprisoned in my own physical temperament as a
+rat in a trap. And if I were to die? For the first time it dawned upon
+me that one might pass into a spiritual world as dark and dreadful as
+any I had ever seen in a dream. With this appalling thought it occurred
+to me that a priest might be the best person to confess to, and I began
+to consider to whom I could go.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+The matter, as I soon perceived, was not at all so simple as in the
+first flush of discovery it appeared to be. But one excellent effect it
+had, and that was to make Sunday, which had been the dullest, the most
+interesting, day of the week, while I went from church to church in
+search of my confessor. In almost every case I could tell at once that
+I had not found him, and I was on the point of giving up the whole idea
+as hopeless, when one Sunday evening I went to St. Mary Magdalene’s.
+The clergyman who took the service was already well past middle-age.
+He was delicate and ascetic-looking, with a peculiar expression
+on his worn face, as of one who had had to make a fight against
+something――possibly it had only been ill-health――and who had come out
+of the struggle victorious if not unscarred. He preached a sermon which
+may have been slightly vague, but which appealed to my imagination.
+Even the weakness of his voice and the almost colourlessness of his
+manner had the curious effect of making what he said to me more real.
+Listening to him was like listening to a spirit, to a disembodied
+voice; and through all there flickered a kind of nervous exaltation,
+like a tremulous, uncertain flame. There were no signs of that mental
+and imaginative poverty which had so frequently discouraged me. But he
+struck me, above all, as a man who had been unhappy, and therefore,
+if he had found peace, there must be some reason for it. I returned
+to hear him several times, and although my first impression was not
+strengthened, it was not effaced. I persuaded Owen to come with me to
+hear him, but Owen did not like him at all.
+
+Far from shaking me in my view, this unfavourable opinion helped to
+confirm me. Not through any perversity, but simply because I knew the
+person I was in search of would not particularly appeal to Owen. I
+did not want a purely reasonable being, I did not perhaps even want
+one whom Owen would consider quite healthy――I wanted one who would
+understand. That night I wrote a letter to Henry Applin, asking if I
+might come to him, and, if I might, would he tell me when.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+As I walked home with Owen next day after school I wanted to tell him
+what I had done, but it was somehow difficult to do so quite abruptly.
+I turned the conversation to Roman Catholicism, and from that to the
+general subject of confession to a priest, but to Owen this idea
+appeared to be so distasteful that I did not attempt to introduce my
+own particular case.
+
+On our way we met his mother, who told me to go on in and get something
+to eat now, and to stay and dine with them at seven. I refused, having
+an idea Owen didn’t particularly want me. I knew it was only because he
+wished to finish an epitome he was making of Herbert Spencer’s “First
+Principles” (he had told me he had reached the last chapter) and as I
+had a strong desire to stay I felt annoyed. I came to the door with him.
+
+“You’d better come in,” he said.
+
+“What’s the use of my coming in when you don’t want me?” I replied.
+
+He laughed. “Of course I want you; don’t be an ass.”
+
+I came in. While we were having tea I looked over the epitome. It
+represented a good deal of work, and I remembered having asked him to
+read Blake’s “Songs,” and his refusing because he hadn’t time. It was
+the same with nearly everything I recommended to him, though I was
+always reading books to please him. He offered now to lend me the
+“First Principles” as soon as he should have finished it.
+
+“I don’t want it,” I answered, discontentedly. “I’m sick of all that
+stodgy stuff. You’re always complaining about not being able to be
+religious, yet you’re never happy unless you’re reading something
+against religion.”
+
+“I’m not anxious for a religion that won’t bear examination,” replied
+Owen, coldly.
+
+“No religion _will_ bear it,” I said, and both speeches had that
+infinite priggishness which not infrequently characterized our
+conversation.
+
+“People who have read a hundred times more philosophy than I have have
+been able to remain Christians,” Owen continued, with a naïveté that
+was quite lost on me. He was particularly fond just now of talking
+about people who had or had not read philosophy.
+
+“You’re thinking of Levine in ‘A.K.,’” I answered disrespectfully, a
+decreasing enthusiasm having led me to abbreviate the title of this
+work.
+
+“I’m not,” said Owen.
+
+“You are. And Levine doesn’t remain a Christian. He drops it and then
+takes it up again, and, as he hasn’t any more reason for doing one than
+the other, I don’t see what it proves.”
+
+“Why do you say he has no reason?”
+
+“I don’t call half a dozen words spoken by an ignorant peasant a
+reason. If you claim religion to be the most valuable thing in life, it
+oughtn’t to be at the mercy of a chance phrase. At any rate the words
+that affected Levine seem far from wonderful to me.”
+
+“I don’t know that they aren’t wonderful,” Owen declared.
+
+“‘One man lives for his stomach,’” I jeeringly quoted, “‘another for
+his soul, for God, in truth.’ You’d find the same thing in any tract.
+And why should it turn you to Christianity particularly? A man who
+believed in Pan could live just as much for his soul as a Christian.”
+
+“I don’t believe anybody ever believed in Pan,” said Owen, “any more
+than they believe in Father Christmas. Because certain words happened
+to help Levine, Tolstoy does not mean that they will help everyone.”
+
+“He does. Only you’re nearly as bad as Levine yourself.”
+
+Owen was not listening; he was working out an argument he would produce
+as soon as I had done; but I was beginning to be tired of Tolstoy, and
+I wanted to express my own point of view. “If one were to see a ghost,
+it would make an enormous difference,” I admitted. “It would open your
+eyes to a new world, to a deeper, finer world.”
+
+“Isn’t this one deep enough for you? And I don’t see that it
+would necessarily be any finer. It might very well be extremely
+objectionable. All that would happen if you saw a ghost is that it
+would frighten you very much at the time, and afterwards you wouldn’t
+believe in it.”
+
+“I don’t think it would frighten me. I don’t think it would frighten
+anybody, if it were the ghost of somebody they had cared for a great
+deal.”
+
+Owen considered this. “I don’t suppose the ghost of your mother would
+frighten you. _Your_ mother is dead, isn’t she?” he added, and then
+stopped short. “I’m awfully sorry,” he stammered, “I wasn’t thinking of
+what I was saying.”
+
+I laughed. “It’s all right. My mother isn’t dead. Shall we go out
+before dinner?”
+
+Owen got up.
+
+We walked by the road as far as Shaw’s Bridge, where we branched off
+on to the river bank. It was already well on in April. The brilliant
+tender green of the opening leaves had spread like a delicate green
+flame over the black branches of the trees. The sky was clear, and
+there was a sharpness in the air that made us walk quickly. Owen’s
+dogs, two rough-haired Irish terriers, ran along the bank, sniffing
+among the coarse grass, alert, eager to hunt anything, whether a rat or
+a stick.
+
+Owen’s remark about my mother had reminded me that I had told him
+singularly little about myself, or rather, about my people. He did not
+know anything beyond the fact that we lived at Newcastle, and, from the
+way I had spoken of it, he might easily have imagined that Derryaghy
+was my home. I’m afraid an unconscious snobbery had kept me from
+revealing the obscurity of my origin, and I was suddenly struck by the
+stupidity and odiousness of this, especially with Owen, for whom such
+things meant nothing.
+
+“Why did you think my mother was dead?” I asked him.
+
+“I don’t know. I suppose because you never――I don’t know, I’m sure.”
+
+“I want to tell you about my people.”
+
+Curiously enough, though I had been so reluctant to mention that my
+father was a National schoolmaster, it did not trouble me in the least
+to talk about my mother. I even had some dim notion that it made me
+rather interesting; so I told him all I knew. “I have not seen her
+since,” I wound up, “and perhaps my father is not my real father.” Why
+I should have thrown in this after-touch I cannot conceive, as I had
+never in my life had the faintest doubts concerning my legitimacy; but
+I suppose it was to heighten the romance.
+
+“Do you think I ought to try to find out something more?” I asked.
+
+“You never did try!” exclaimed Owen.
+
+“Never very much. I don’t know who to ask. I can’t very well ask my
+father.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I can’t.”
+
+“There must be somebody else who knows. Your friend, Mrs. Carroll.”
+
+“She won’t tell me.”
+
+“Have you asked her?”
+
+“I asked her the last time I was at home.”
+
+“And what did she say?”
+
+“She doesn’t like her.”
+
+“She said she didn’t like her?”
+
+“No, of course not; but I know it all the same.”
+
+“The whole thing,” Owen began, but tailed off abruptly “――it seems
+rather queer.”
+
+We walked on for a long time in silence. I was determined to tell him
+about Mr. Applin, but it was not till we were coming home that I began
+my explanation.
+
+“And you’re really going to him!” Owen marvelled.
+
+“I’ll have to go now. That is, if he does not tell me not to.”
+
+“He can hardly do that. You’re not making fun?”
+
+“Fun?”
+
+Owen was silent.
+
+“I didn’t know whether you meant it,” he said. “What are you going
+_for_?” he suddenly asked. “Just to talk to him?”
+
+“Yes, I suppose so.”
+
+“But what about?”
+
+“About?... Do you remember talking of confession?”
+
+“But it’s not that, is it?” said Owen, very seriously. “You’re not――――”
+
+“Why not?” I smiled dimly.
+
+“But what is the matter? Why should you? What have you done? And if you
+have done anything, what is it to him?”
+
+We had come to a standstill on the lonely river bank. Owen’s eyes were
+fixed upon me questioningly. I had nothing to say, or, rather, I could
+not say it. I stood before him, looking on the ground, my hands in my
+trouser pockets.
+
+Owen hesitated. He put his hands on my shoulders, but I did not look up.
+
+Presently I raised my head, but I looked away from him, and across the
+fields. “Come along,” I said, quietly. “It’s getting late, and we must
+hurry.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When I reached home at about half-past nine little Alice came running
+to meet me. Her white face, her bright black eyes, and long straight
+black hair, brushed back from her forehead and spreading out on either
+side of her face in the shape of a fan, were vivid in the gas-light,
+under which she stood looking up at me while I opened the letter she
+had brought me. It was from Mr. Applin, asking me to call on Wednesday
+evening between nine and ten, or on Friday between the same hours, if
+Wednesday did not suit me.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+Since Christmas I had been working harder than I had ever done in my
+life. The Intermediate examinations would be coming on in June, but
+it was not any particular anxiety to shine in them that had goaded me
+to this unprecedented industry; merely I had discovered that on the
+plea of work I could sit in my bedroom in the evenings, and that the
+work itself kept me from thinking of other things. To-night I went
+straight upstairs as usual, but after writing to Mr. Applin to say I
+would come on Wednesday, I sat idle. So it was all the next day, and
+the next night: I had an open book in front of me, but I read without
+comprehending what I read: I was intensely excited: a kind of emotional
+cloud had descended upon my mind, and I could think of nothing but my
+approaching interview.
+
+Ideas, words, shot across this mental haze like meteors, but I could
+not follow them in their swift flight. On Wednesday afternoon when I
+got home from school and had had my dinner I went out into the streets
+and wandered aimlessly about. I had said to myself that I would not
+think about the matter any more, but, needless to say, I thought of
+nothing else, and so it was that when I came to a Roman Catholic church
+and saw the door was open, I could not help going inside and sitting
+down before one of the confessionals. The name of the priest, Father
+Dempsey, was printed in large letters above it. I had a faint hope of
+seeing somebody come out or go in, but in this I was disappointed.
+Three little girls were busy with their beads, but they suspended their
+acts of devotion to cast glances at me, and whisper, and even giggle. A
+woman was kneeling before an altar that shone with ornaments suggestive
+of decorations from a Christmas tree. Her eyes were fixed on a bright
+oleograph of the Virgin, and her lips never ceased moving. A couple
+of lighted candles seemed to sweat ugly yellow tears, which ran down
+over dirty candlesticks. And then I saw a fat little sallow priest, his
+chin, upper lip, and cheeks, blue from much shaving, come waddling down
+the aisle, and I wondered if this were Father Dempsey. As he passed
+he stared at me, and I saw in his dull little eyes that expression of
+invulnerable stupidity I had noticed in the faces of so many of his
+brothers when I met them in the street.
+
+The fascination that had drawn me into the church had disappeared.
+Everything――the smell of stale incense, the cheap decorations, the bad
+pictures, the kneeling woman, the girls with their beads――had become
+almost nauseating. The appalling unintelligence of it all shocked me,
+much as the display of a diseased body had now and then shocked me. It
+was wrong, it was gross, anything less spiritual I could not imagine.
+And my idea of confessing to a priest was wrong. I got up and left the
+church, the last thing I saw being the thick sediment of dirt at the
+bottom of the stoup.
+
+After tea I went up to my bedroom, George’s and mine, and got out my
+books to do some work. At first I thought I would not go to Mr. Applin,
+but as time passed this decision grew weaker, and presently, instead
+of reading, I tried to make up my mind on the point. Then when it
+drew near to nine o’clock I was no longer even uncertain. What had my
+impressions of this afternoon to do with the step I was about to take?
+Besides, they had been very superficial, and to be influenced by them
+would be as stupid as to refuse to read a book because its binding
+happened to be soiled.
+
+I walked quickly to Mr. Applin’s house and knocked boldly at the door.
+It opened with a startling promptitude; evidently the servant had been
+in the hall.
+
+“Is Mr. Applin at home?” I asked, my stammer suddenly beginning to
+manifest itself.
+
+“He is. Who shall I say wants him?”
+
+“It doesn’t matter. He expects me.” I felt reluctant to give my name.
+
+The servant did not press me to, but disappeared upstairs. She came
+back very soon and asked me to “step this way,” and I obeyed her
+nervously.
+
+I entered a room and heard the door close behind me, as a man rose from
+a table near the window, removing a green shade from his forehead.
+I was conscious of tired eyes that looked at me out of a pale, dim,
+emaciated face, but the flickering light that had seemed to shine
+through them when he was preaching was not there, and his manner of
+greeting me struck me as a little distant, a little chilly. I sat down
+on the extreme edge of a chair and my impressions grew clearer.
+
+“You are Peter Waring, are you not?”
+
+“Yes,” I answered.
+
+He had taken the chair opposite mine, and he leaned a little forward,
+the tips of his fingers joined, and blue veins showing under the loose
+yellow skin of his hands. He was much older than I had imagined. He
+was wearing a threadbare jacket which I did not like, and I noticed
+that one of the buttons near the top was not the same as the others.
+My confidence had suddenly drooped. I glanced round at the unfamiliar
+room, at the book-shelves which made but a poor show, and maintained
+an idiotic silence. It struck me that he might think I had come for a
+subscription towards a cricket club.
+
+“I got your letter,” he said. “You want to speak to me? You are not a
+member of my congregation, I think?”
+
+“No――I come sometimes in the evening.”
+
+I was glad I had said nothing in my letter but that I wanted to speak
+to him, and he evidently hadn’t the least suspicion of the truth.
+
+“Yes――yes――I understand. Well, don’t be afraid. If I can do anything
+for you I shall be very glad, very glad.”
+
+I thanked him and again became silent. It would have been absolutely
+impossible for me to have said what I had come to say. He was too old,
+too far away. It would have been like stretching out one’s hands to
+warm them at the ashes in an early morning grate. I knew he wanted to
+be kind, but I felt, somehow, that if I sat very still he would, in a
+minute or two, forget I was in the room.
+
+“I think I had better write,” I murmured.
+
+“Write? But why? What is it about?” he spoke almost testily.
+
+There was a tap at the door, and a thin, middle-aged lady, possibly a
+daughter, came in with a little tray on which were some biscuits and
+a tumbler of hot milk. She bowed to me and wished me good-evening. I
+wanted nothing now but to get away as quickly as possible, and I envied
+her as she went out, closing the door softly behind her. Suppose I
+had been in the middle of my confession when the hot milk came in, I
+thought. The whole thing was somehow becoming lugubriously comic.
+
+“Are you in business or at school?” Mr. Applin asked, between two sips
+of milk. “I hope you’ll excuse me taking this while it is hot, but I
+had a funeral this afternoon, and I’m afraid I caught a slight chill.”
+
+“Certainly,” I answered hastily. “I’m sorry for disturbing you. I have
+really nothing to say. It is only that I liked your sermons so much,
+and that I wanted to tell you so. I hope you’ll forgive me.” I got up.
+
+“Sit down――sit down,” he murmured. “It was a very kind and charming
+impulse, and I’m glad you yielded to it.”
+
+I resumed my seat and he continued to drink his milk. He was quite
+pleased with me. He asked me to what church I belonged; where I went to
+school; all kinds of questions. I told him that I thought he must be
+lonely sitting here by himself, and that he should have a dog, or even
+a cat. I told him about Tony, and all the wonderful things he could do.
+Before I came away he made me promise I would come to see him again.
+Yet just as I was going out a sort of vague suspicion of other things
+appeared to float into his consciousness. He detained me, with his hand
+on my shoulder. “When you first came in,” he said, “I thought something
+perhaps was worrying you, that you had something on your mind.” He
+paused. For an instant I had seen in him what I had seen when I had
+listened to him preach; for an instant I was on the point of resuming
+my seat, and telling him all I had come to tell him, but he himself
+broke the charm next moment by saying good-night. “And when you come
+again you won’t be shy?” he added, smiling wanly.
+
+He did not accompany me downstairs, but stood on the landing till I had
+opened the hall-door. And as I pulled it after me, and ran down the
+steps, I knew I should never go back.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+Spring gave place to summer, and still I kept studiously to my books. I
+saw less of Owen, for in the afternoons I played cricket, and Owen did
+not. On the thirteenth of June my examination commenced, and from the
+first I did well, having good luck with the papers. On Tuesday evening
+when I went home I had only one more exam. in front of me, and it would
+take place the following afternoon. After that I should be free for the
+summer.
+
+It was a hot, breathless kind of night, and I did not intend to work
+too much. I loafed about the shop after tea, talking to Miss Izzy. She
+had asked me to go to the Free Library to get her a book, but nothing
+on the list she had given me, though it was a fairly long one, was in,
+and I had come back with a tale of my own selecting.
+
+“You might have got one of Annie Swan’s,” Miss Izzy said, eyeing the
+work I had chosen, dubiously, “but of course you couldn’t tell what
+ones I’d read.”
+
+“Annie Swan’s?”
+
+“Yes; they’re all good. Mr. Spicer mentioned ‘Carlowrie’ from the
+pulpit on Sunday, and you don’t often hear _him_ praise a novel.”
+
+“When he does it’s a spicy one,” said George, who was going out.
+
+Miss Izzy took no notice.
+
+“I’ve got to meet the girl at a quarter-to-eight, so I can’t stop,”
+George threw back gaily from the door, which next moment swung after
+him, as he stepped into the street, fixing a flower in his button-hole.
+
+“You get ‘Aldersyde’ and read it,” said Miss Izzy, “or ‘Across Her
+Path.’”
+
+“I thought you said Carl-something-or-other.”
+
+“You’ll maybe like the others better. If George McAllister would join
+the literary society instead of running about the streets at nights it
+would answer him better. Who’s this girl he’s going to meet?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+“It’s only talk, I suppose. Girls have more sense than to bother with
+the likes of him.”
+
+“Do you think so?” I murmured sceptically. “The kind that George cares
+for I don’t imagine have very much.”
+
+“You know nothing about them. If you’d any sisters you’d know more.”
+
+“I’m very glad I haven’t,” I replied.
+
+Miss Izzy bounced round. “Why?” she demanded sharply. “Girls can do
+everything as well as men can; only they never get the chance.”
+
+“That’s all rot,” I said ungallantly. “They’re quite different. You
+might as well compare cats and dogs.”
+
+“And we’re the cats, I suppose? It’s well you’re still a puppy.”
+
+“I didn’t mean you, Miss Izzy. I know there are exceptions. But most
+girls don’t think; or if they do, it’s only about who’s going to marry
+them.”
+
+“Don’t think! Well, of all!――And you and George McAllister and the
+others――you think a lot, don’t you?”
+
+“George doesn’t,” I admitted.
+
+“But _you_ do――especially about yourself. Do you know this, Peter
+Waring, you’re about as conceited and full of yourself as a monkey
+that’s been taught a few tricks!”
+
+“Well, I’m going away to-morrow, and you’ll not see me again for a long
+time.”
+
+This was not fair, as I knew it would soften Miss Izzy, and it had
+indeed this result. “I don’t mind seeing you,” she confessed, with
+a sigh, “if that’s all. It’s hearing you talk. You may give me your
+photograph if you like.”
+
+I had had my photograph taken quite recently for Mrs. Carroll’s
+birthday, and I ran upstairs and brought one down. Miss Izzy examined
+it critically. “I’ve got a red plush frame at home that’s about your
+mark.”
+
+“Don’t put me in red plush,” I begged.
+
+Miss Izzy looked up from the photograph to the original. “Is red plush
+not good enough for you? You’d like a gold frame, maybe?”
+
+“It’s not that,” I said hastily. “It’s only that I don’t care much for
+red plush. Can’t you get a plain frame? I will get one for you.”
+
+“No, thanks. I always put a plain person in an ornamental frame: it
+gives them a better chance.”
+
+“All right.”
+
+There was never any use trying to get an advantage over Miss Izzy
+in verbal skirmishes, so I gave in, and, as the shop appeared to be
+comparatively deserted to-night, I sat down on an empty wooden box, and
+read aloud to her the first two chapters of the novel I had brought
+from the library. It was Hardy’s “Two on a Tower,” and as I turned the
+pages, the circumstances, so different, under which I had read them
+before, kept floating into my mind. When I had finished the second
+chapter, and drummed for a while with my heels against the box, I went
+upstairs, and got out my notes on French composition to look them over
+before to-morrow’s examination. The room, although the window was wide
+open, seemed to me unbearably stuffy, and moreover I had a slight
+headache and felt tired and irritable. I put up with the heat for half
+an hour, and then undressed and sat down in my nightshirt close to the
+window, which looked out on to a dirty strip of back garden, threaded
+with clothes-lines, and forming, after dark, a kind of debased Paradise
+for dissipated cats.
+
+At half-past ten or so George stepped jauntily in. “Hello! Not done
+yet?” He took the now withered flower from his button-hole and flung it
+out among the cats; then he began to turn over some papers I had laid
+down on the table in the exact order I required them.
+
+“You’ll mix those up,” I said crossly. “Leave them alone.”
+
+George threw the papers down. “All right. Keep your wool on!” Two or
+three of the sheets fluttered to the floor.
+
+I picked them up in a very bad temper, and George began to whistle――the
+same few bars over and over again. “Oh, shut up,” I cried. “Can’t you
+see I’m working?”
+
+“Temper! Temper!” said George, cheerfully. “I’ll have to tell Katherine
+about this!”
+
+He was standing before the looking-glass, and had begun to remove
+his dickey; but at the very moment of speaking he knew he had made a
+mistake. He looked round with a sort of foolish, apologetic grin. I,
+too, knew that his words had slipped out unintentionally, for I had
+never mentioned Katherine’s name to him. There were, in fact, only
+two ways in which he could have come by his information: either Aunt
+Margaret had managed to get hold of some of my letters again, or else
+he had read one of them himself.
+
+“What do you mean?” I asked coldly, looking steadily into his eyes as
+they were reflected in the glass.
+
+George tried to laugh it off. “I was only joking,” he said, nervously.
+
+But I wanted a better explanation than this.
+
+“Who told you about Katherine?” I asked, getting up from my chair
+deliberately, and walking over to him, while he spun round to meet me
+with bright eyes and a forced smile.
+
+“What’s the matter? What are you losin’ your rag about? I don’t want to
+annoy you.”
+
+“The matter is this: I want to know if you have been reading my
+letters? If you have, you must have unlocked the box I keep them in.”
+
+“I never unlocked any box.” George backed away from me, his eyes not
+leaving mine.
+
+“You’d better tell me,” I said, but George would say nothing further.
+He stood with his back now against the wall. I struck him on the cheek
+with my open hand. “Answer,” I said.
+
+I saw his eyes turn to the door, and anticipated the spring he made
+to get past me. The next moment I had him by the throat and we were
+struggling together. Suddenly I released my hold, flinging him from me.
+He struck out at me as I came toward him again, but it was the feeble,
+half-hearted blow of a coward, and I felt my fist in contact with his
+face, almost as if he had run up against it. He staggered back, and a
+crimson stream poured down over his chin and on to his shirt, making
+a horrible mess, while he stood blubbering like a baby. I did not hit
+him again, but simply watched him. I knew he was really more frightened
+than hurt, for though his nose was bleeding profusely, I had seen it
+do that on several occasions before, quite spontaneously. We must, all
+the same, have kicked up a considerable racket, for I heard the sound
+of quick footsteps in the passage, and then our door was flung open
+and a wild figure rushed in. It was Aunt Margaret, in a stained, red
+dressing-gown, her black eyes blazing in her big, puffy face. Her huge
+loose body shook and panted with rage as she turned from George to
+me. I stepped quickly out of her way, for there was something rather
+fearful in the great white mask of hate she turned on me. She said not
+a word, but shooting out an arm, like a shoulder of mutton, gripped
+me by the collar of my nightshirt, and began to rain down a torrent of
+heavy blows on my head and uplifted arms. I protected myself as well
+as I could, and at last, with a violent wrench, tore myself out of her
+grasp, my nightshirt ripping down to the hem, a considerable portion of
+it remaining in Aunt Margaret’s hand. “Stop that!” I shouted furiously,
+but she came at me again, her fat body panting yet displaying an
+incredible activity, her eyes shining with madness.
+
+I knew there would be mischief done, for I saw her catch up an iron rod
+that was part of George’s trouser-stretcher. I was really frightened
+now, and made a dive to get past her and out of the door. I felt her
+nails tear my naked shoulder; at the same moment I flung up my arm and,
+it may be, saved my life, for something crashed down over my elbow,
+striking on the back of my head with a sickening jar that I seemed to
+hear as the floor swept up to meet me.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+
+When I opened my eyes I was lying in bed, with a hot jar at my feet,
+and the pungent irritation of smelling-salts in my nostrils. Uncle
+George was in the room, and there was a stranger there also. I knew
+what had taken place, and, if I hadn’t remembered, there was an
+atrocious pain in my head to remind me. I put up my hand and discovered
+my head was bandaged.
+
+“Well,” said the stranger, drawing closer. “How do you feel now?”
+
+“My head’s pretty sore,” I answered.
+
+He mixed me something in a glass and I drank it. Uncle George came over
+and began to ask questions, but the doctor pulled him away. “Leave him
+to go to sleep now: he’ll be better able to talk in the morning. It
+might have been a nasty thing. I’ll look in to-morrow.”
+
+I had closed my eyes, and when I opened them again I was alone and
+in the dark. A ray of moonlight floated through the window and lay
+across the floor where George’s bed had been, but the bed itself was
+gone, and I wondered languidly how they had been able to take it away
+without my hearing anything. In spite of an abominable headache I felt
+drowsy――perhaps it was the effect of whatever drug I had taken――and I
+must very soon have lost consciousness.
+
+The first person I saw in the morning was Uncle George, who carried me
+in my breakfast. My head still ached, though not nearly so violently.
+While I drank a cup of tea Uncle George sat in silence, his eyes fixed
+on me, with an expression of anxiety that was almost comic. As for me,
+I felt better, and, when Uncle George had removed the tray, I allowed
+him to tell me how sorry he was, but without replying or giving him any
+encouragement. I could see he was dying for me to say something, but I
+thought a little suspense would not do him any harm, so I maintained a
+discreet quiet. Secretly I was glad, for this disagreeable adventure
+gave me just what I had needed, but I was far from letting Uncle George
+know that.
+
+“She wasn’t responsible,” said Uncle George, dejectedly, and plunging
+straight to the heart of the subject. “You know she has to take drugs
+sometimes on account of the pain she suffers, and they have an effect
+upon her. I tell you this in confidence, and that last night she had
+taken more than she intended to, and didn’t really know what she
+was doin’. But you must forgive her, Peter. And then she is jealous
+of you――I may as well tell you everything――she is jealous when she
+thinks of the difference between you and George, and that you will be
+a gentleman, while George and the others’ll have to get along as best
+they can――and times are so bad, and there’s so few openings for lads
+nowadays. This drug she had taken――――” He stopped and his eyes fastened
+on mine appealingly.
+
+“What do you want me to do?” I asked, smoothing down the sheet.
+
+Uncle George moved nervously in his chair, but did not reply.
+
+“I’m going home to-day,” I went on.
+
+“Home? You’ll be waiting for a day or two――till you get quit of this
+pain in your head, won’t you? And then there’s your examination! Will
+they take marks off if you get a doctor’s certificate?”
+
+“A certificate for what?”
+
+“That you can’t go in for the examination.”
+
+“I’m going in for the exam. And I’m certainly going home.”
+
+Uncle George, who had never ventured to remonstrate with me on any
+subject whatever since my arrival, and who treated me as, if anything,
+slightly older than himself, did not begin now. “And what will you tell
+them?” was all he asked.
+
+“Would you like me to say I fell downstairs?” I suggested innocently.
+
+Uncle George fidgeted. “I don’t want you to tell a lie,” he made
+answer, which was a pretty big one for him.
+
+“Oh, I don’t mind,” I observed, pleasantly.
+
+Uncle George considered this. “I suppose there’s times, maybe, when
+it’s best not to tell all the truth,” he brought out lamely.
+
+“This is one when I should think it would be best not to tell any of
+it,” I replied.
+
+Uncle George was silent. I was not letting him off particularly easily.
+
+“There must, however, be two lies told,” I pursued. “The first by me,
+and the second by you, in a letter saying you can’t take me back after
+the holidays――that you haven’t room――any reason you like.”
+
+“But won’t you come back?” asked Uncle George, dolefully. “You were
+always quite comfortable, quite happy till――till this accident. And
+it wouldn’t have happened if you hadn’t been knocking George about. I
+don’t know what he had done on you.”
+
+“I was never happy,” I said impatiently. “Either you or Aunt Margaret
+will have to write as I say, or I’ll tell my father exactly what
+happened. This accident, as you call it, very nearly did for me: and
+it’s only one thing out of a lot.”
+
+“Your poor aunt wants to come and tell you how sorry she is.”
+
+“My poor aunt needn’t bother. I know exactly how sorry she is. If it
+had been the ceiling that had fallen on me and killed me outright, I
+don’t fancy she’d have minded much――except for the mess.”
+
+Uncle George regarded me mournfully. “You’re very unforgiving,” he
+said. “I know you’ve a right to say hard things, but――――”
+
+It seemed to me that this was going a bit too far. “What do you mean by
+unforgiving?” I asked. “Haven’t I promised not to tell?”
+
+“It’s not that,” said Uncle George.
+
+“What is it then? Do you want me to sacrifice myself simply that
+you may make so much a week out of me? Don’t you know that Aunt
+Margaret has always hated me like poison? Don’t you know she is pretty
+constantly under the influence of whatever it is she takes, though you
+speak as if this were the first time? I’m not such a fool that I can’t
+see what’s going on. She’s always prying about my things and reading my
+letters. Besides, in the very beginning, you know as well as I do that
+I came to live here expecting to have a room to myself and not to be
+stuck with George.”
+
+Uncle George did not reply, but he looked as he sat there, with his
+gray head bent, the picture of dejection.
+
+“I’m sorry if I’ve hurt your feelings, Uncle George, for you’ve been
+always very kind and decent to me, and if there was no one here but you
+and Alice I would come back certainly. But as it is, I can’t; I really
+can’t. I wanted to leave at Christmas, only my father wouldn’t let me.”
+
+As I watched him lift his mild, sheep-like face, and go out, I pitied
+him――almost enough to have promised to do what he wanted, which would
+have been idiotic. “If he’d had any sense,” I told myself, “he’d have
+clapped Aunt Margaret into a ‘home’ or an asylum, or whatever it is,
+long ago. But he’s too soft-hearted to do anything but make himself
+miserable.”
+
+During the morning little Alice came in several times to see me. The
+doctor also called and examined my head, into which he had put a couple
+of stitches last night. It was only a scalp wound, he said, and thought
+I might go back to Newcastle that afternoon if I felt up to it.
+
+At dinner-time George appeared, looking very sheepish, and shuffling
+his feet. “How are you?” he asked. “Ma says you’re goin’ home this
+afternoon, so I thought I’d drop in an’ say good-bye. I’m sorry about
+this. It’s my fault, an’ it’s rotten for your exam. I only read one
+letter. I went to ma’s work-basket for the scissors, an’ I saw it there
+lying open, an’ I read it without thinking. That’s the God’s truth,
+whether you believe it or not, an’ there was nothin’ in it you need
+mind.”
+
+“Oh, it’s all right,” I answered.
+
+“All the same it’s damned putrid luck about the exam.”
+
+“It can’t be helped. Besides, I’m going to have a shot at it.”
+
+“Well, I’ll have to cut on. So long, Peter.” He grinned as he held out
+a big hand, which, like his face, was covered with freckles.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+
+My examination was at three, and at two o’clock I got up. If I hadn’t
+done so well on the other papers, probably I should have let it go,
+but it seemed, in the circumstances, a pity to spoil my results if I
+could possibly avoid it. Yet when I lifted my head from the pillow it
+throbbed so violently that I thought I should have to lie down again. I
+steadied myself, holding on to the bed-post, but presently I was able
+to finish dressing and go downstairs. Miss Izzy was in the shop, alone,
+and she gazed at me with keen curiosity. I smiled, though I was really
+feeling fairly bad.
+
+“Are you better?” Miss Izzy asked, for some reason speaking in a kind
+of hoarse whisper.
+
+“I’ve a beastly headache, that’s all.”
+
+“Not much wonder. _She_ did it, didn’t she?” Miss Izzy was all eyes and
+secrecy.
+
+I nodded.
+
+“She’s getting worse,” Miss Izzy announced in an awed tone. “She’s
+really not in her right senses. I don’t know what she’ll be doing next.
+You’re going to-day, aren’t you?”
+
+“Yes――after the exam. I wish you would ask Alice to pack my things for
+me; she can do it all right.”
+
+“I’ll help her. I’ll tell you this, I’ve been looking out for another
+job this while back, and I think I’ve got one. That’s between
+ourselves; but I can’t put up with her any longer. I’ll drop you a
+postcard; give me your address.”
+
+I scribbled it on a bit of paper she handed me.
+
+Miss Izzy glanced at it and stuffed it in her pocket. “Right oh! Here’s
+somebody coming in; they never give you a minute’s peace―――― Are you
+away?”
+
+“Yes. I think I’ll take a cab.”
+
+The customer had entered, but Miss Izzy only glared at her. “I’m sure
+you shouldn’t be going at all. It may just give you brain fever or
+something!”
+
+“Oh, I don’t think so,” I smiled.
+
+Miss Izzy nodded at me as she advanced reluctantly to her duty. “I’ll
+see you later.”
+
+“Yes. You’ll not forget to tell Alice?”
+
+“No; that’ll be all right.”
+
+At the stand by the gas-works I got into a hansom and drove off. I
+kept my cap on the seat beside me, for any pressure on my head was
+painful. Fortunately I had only a short distance to go, and once in the
+cool airy hall I felt better. But my bandaged appearance created quite
+a sensation. Everybody stared at me, and one of the superintendents
+came to ask me if I had met with an accident. I told him I had fallen
+downstairs, at which he indulged in a somewhat obvious jest.
+
+The paper suited me and did not require any great effort, but when I
+had finished I was glad. Outside, I had to repeat my fiction of falling
+downstairs, and listen to various versions of the superintendent’s
+joke, before I was able to get Owen by himself. We went into the
+Botanic Gardens and sat down on the first vacant bench, where I told
+him what had actually happened. He did not appear to realize that
+I might have been killed, and, in spite of his sympathy and the
+questions he asked, I knew his thoughts were really hovering round
+the examination, and that he was weighing the chances of his having
+retained his last year’s exhibition. We talked of my adventure, but,
+as we did so, unconsciously, he drew the examination paper from his
+pocket and unfolded it. Owen had not been doing so well as I had, and
+a good deal depended on the marks he got this afternoon. “I wouldn’t
+mind,” he said, “only there’s something I’m doing which the pater will
+make me give up if I don’t keep my ‘ex.’”
+
+“If I’d been killed,” I said, “I wonder if you’d have gone over the
+questions with Grimshaw or O’Brian!”
+
+Owen glanced at me to see if I were serious. He had by this time spread
+out the blue sheet on his knees. “What did you put for ‘cane-bottomed
+chair?’” he asked, anxiously.
+
+But my interest in the exam. had vanished. “Oh, I don’t know――‘chaise
+cannée,’ or something. Look here, Owen, will you come and see me off
+at the station? I have to go back to the house, of course, to get my
+things, but I’d rather have somebody with me.”
+
+“‘Chaise cannée?’ How did you think of it? I wonder if it’s right? I
+put ‘au fond de jonc,’ but I’m sure that’s rot. ‘Chaise cannée.’ You
+know, it’s not fair giving things like that! What do you think?”
+
+“Of ‘au fond de jonc’? I don’t think much of it.”
+
+Owen was depressed. “It doesn’t sound right, does it? What did you put
+for ‘fire-dogs?’ O’Brian put ‘chiens de feu.’”
+
+“O’Brian’s a fool,” I answered, truthfully.
+
+Owen laughed, but without merriment, and I was pretty sure he had put
+‘chiens de feu’ himself. “You might drop that beastly paper,” I said,
+“and tell me if you’ll come or not.”
+
+“Of course I’ll come. But tell me just this one thing.”
+
+“What? ‘Fire-dogs?’――‘chenets.’”
+
+“‘Chenets?’ Are you sure? You’re awfully clever at those out-of-the-way
+words!”
+
+“It’s not an out-of-the-way word. ‘Chiens de feu’ are the sort of
+things that’ll be chasing you and O’Brian in the next world.”
+
+Owen laughed ruefully, but another question, in spite of his promise,
+was already hovering on his lips.
+
+“Come along,” I said, getting up. “What good does it do worrying over
+the rotten thing now?” And I tore my paper in two, and let the pieces
+go fluttering down the path on the wind.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+
+In the morning Tony’s familiar scratching at my door reminded me that
+I was home again, and this time for two long, idle months. I was very
+sleepy, but I struggled out of bed with half-open eyes, and let him
+in. As I closed the door again, I trod on one of his paws. He gave a
+sharp yelp, and then a great wagging of his tail to show that he knew
+it had been an accident. Jumping on to the bed he scrambled between the
+sheets, and I followed, taking what room he would give me. I lay trying
+to go to sleep, while he sprawled over me. Then when he had thoroughly
+wakened me up he went to sleep himself.
+
+I lay listening to the sea and thinking of what I should do that
+day. I would bathe after breakfast; I would take Tony with me, which
+would mean bathing off the sand, for Tony could not dive, and had a
+foolish habit, when on the rocks, of trying to lap the sea up to the
+level he wanted it at. But I had forgotten my plastered head; bathing,
+I supposed, would be out of the question for at least a week. So,
+when breakfast was over, I stuffed a book into my jacket pocket, and
+strolled in the direction of Derryaghy woods. I had the long June day
+before me, and perfect freedom to do just as I pleased with it. The
+book I had chosen was “Twelfth Night,” the influence of Count Tolstoy,
+so far as I was concerned, having suffered an eclipse. I had read no
+second work by him, and the questionings stirred up by “Anna Karénine”
+had sunk quietly to sleep. Owen, a day or two ago, had got hold of
+“Katia,” and “The Kreutzer Sonata,” but I, I regret to say, had not a
+line of the master’s in my possession.
+
+In truth, I was but a degenerate disciple, and moreover unfaithful. For
+Owen and I had sent the great man a letter for the New Year, protesting
+allegiance, and had actually received a reply, which, considering
+it had almost moved Owen to tears, I had allowed him to keep. He
+regarded it with the kind of veneration that, in earlier days, a devout
+pilgrim may have regarded some relic of a saint. I shouldn’t have been
+surprised to learn that he wore it, tied up in a little bag, somewhere
+beneath his clothes. Really it had been quite decent; though that a
+man of world-wide fame, who must have been besieged by communications
+of all kinds and from all sorts of persons, should have found time to
+understand and reply kindly to the epistle of a couple of youngsters,
+far away in a benighted island, I’m afraid did not strike me then as
+quite the wonderful thing it was. The letter, however, was not to me,
+and Owen, at all events, had found it wonderful enough. In spite of
+my share in the matter, the spirit of our enterprise had been Owen’s.
+The epistle we had concocted had expressed Owen, and Owen alone, and
+it was delightfully intelligent of the master to have seen behind its
+crudity something worth encouraging. He had actually asked us――that is
+Owen――to write again――not at once and under the immediate influence
+of his letter, but in a month or two. And Owen had written again. By
+that time I had had the sense to recognize that I was only a shadow in
+this matter, and to give him a free field. He had waited the full two
+months, which I, had I felt his enthusiasm, could never have done, and
+had then written the second letter. This letter I had insisted must be
+private. I had refused to take any part in its composition, or even to
+read it when it was finished, though Owen had told me all that was in
+it――a complete account of himself, of his father’s position, of his own
+acquirements and abilities, his prospects, his ideals, ending up with a
+petition for advice as to the direction his studies ought to take, and
+as to what career lay open to him. The reply to this effusion had not
+yet come or I should have heard of it, but I hadn’t the slightest doubt
+that when it did turn up Owen would follow its instructions minutely,
+down to the smallest particulars, even were that to entail the wearing
+of peas in his shoes. It was the sort of thing that was completely
+beyond me. I could not have borne to admit, even to myself, that
+anybody was so much my superior as all that. And then, very softly, at
+the bottom of my soul, I preferred “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” to “Anna
+Karénine.” I not only preferred it, but I was sure it was a work of far
+finer genius. Of course I was always sure that the things I happened
+to prefer were far finer, but in this particular instance I have not
+altered my opinion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As I wandered up into the woods, followed by the lagging Tony, I knew
+it was going to be a very hot day, though it was not nearly so hot at
+present as Tony pretended. I hunted about till I had found a pleasant
+place――where the rising ground formed a kind of natural couch, covered
+with golden moss and bracken, and where the sun at noon would not be
+too strong as it dropped down through thick green beech branches.
+I took my book from my pocket, but it was only to make myself more
+comfortable, not with any intention of reading. I lay there and let
+the green summer morning steal into my soul, staining my mind to its
+own deep cool colour, while Tony gnawed at the trunk of a fallen tree,
+stripping off the bark in sheets, till he was tired and hot, when he
+came over beside me and stretched himself on the bracken, with his red
+tongue hanging out and his eyes nearly closed. And I lay on in the
+enchanted morning, my hands under my head, gazing up through the flat,
+shady branches, and thinking “long, long thoughts.” Already I seemed to
+have cast from me, as a snake his old skin, the weight and grime of a
+year of town life; already I felt better, cleaner, felt the sap of my
+youth fresh and strong within me.
+
+After an hour or two I opened my book and began to read:――
+
+ “If music be the food of love, play on;
+ Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,
+ The appetite may sicken, and so die.
+ That strain again! it had a dying fall;
+ O! it came o’er my ear like the sweet sound
+ That breathes upon a bank of violets,
+ Stealing and giving odour....”
+
+I was lost in that world of poetry and music, of lingering melodies and
+songs, dreamy and happy and sad. Romance! romance! I felt it stirring
+in my blood, singing within me! This play of passion, where passion is
+never stormy, but a kind of dreaming of love, exactly suited my present
+mood. Love was the world I lived in, love was in the rustling of the
+beech-leaves, love was in the breaking of the invisible sea, love was
+even in the snores of Tony.
+
+I closed the book, my mind filled with laughter and love and poetry.
+Beautiful figures glided before me through the sun-washed, leaf-green
+air――Viola in her boy’s clothes――Olivia――moving in an atmosphere of
+sensuous sweetness. I imagined myself a page, visiting Olivia in her
+palace; I imagined her falling in love with me; I began to weave a
+romance of my own, in which scenes from other romances lingered, the
+music of their words....
+
+The sunlight splashed through the beech-leaves on to the green moss,
+and where it fell the green took a hue of gold. Green arcades opened
+out into the heart of the summer woods. Rarely came the note of a
+bird, but the woods were full of life; the flashing whites and grays
+of rabbits appeared on the clearing nearer the house; there were
+mysterious movements in the brushwood. I roused reluctant Tony and we
+went down to the stream. We were out in the broad sunshine here, and
+the rocks were quite hot. The dark green silky waterweed spread out,
+seeming to flow with the rapid, shallow water, and sleepy summer noon
+held me spell-bound. In the shadow of the rocks were deep pools, where
+the water looked almost black. Tony waded out into mid-stream and began
+to lap up the water. Then he lifted his head, his red, dripping tongue
+still hanging out, his dark, beautiful eyes half-closed, and looked at
+me while he panted. The woods on either side were full of green shadow
+and mystery. We walked home over soft turf and across a blazing field
+dotted with fly-tormented cows. Tony was too hot even to give them a
+passing bark. On the right the ground sloped down gently, forming a
+vast meadow, with scattered trees and flaming gorse-bushes; and beyond,
+under the deep blue sky, the great glorious sea danced and gleamed,
+blue also, with a long white line where the surf curled up over the
+flat, sun-drenched sand.
+
+I felt lazy and contented, conscious only of the warmth of the sun
+and the beauty of this world, wrapped in a kind of sleepy happiness.
+In the afternoon I would go in search of some of my old friends; go
+out, perhaps, with Willie Breen in his boat, though as a rule boating
+in any form bored me to death. Trivial and bizarre thoughts passed
+through my mind. I wished the world was the way it is in old romances
+and fairy-tales. I was sure that this was the very day on which some
+wonderful thing would happen; when one might find a magic door leading
+into a strange world that was yet quite close at hand; for all my life
+long I had had the feeling that such a world was there.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+
+During the next three weeks I led a solitary enough life, in the
+woods and by the sea. I read a good deal, and dreamed still more. In
+the mornings, and often in the afternoons as well, I went for long
+swims, and, coming back, lay in the sun on the rocks, sometimes for
+hours at a time, so that the skin all over my body had been tanned to
+a deep golden brown. And I was growing stronger. I could feel it; I
+could even see it in my limbs, which were becoming more muscular. And
+with my increasing physical strength I suppose other alterations took
+place――alterations in my outward appearance, marking the passage from
+boyhood to adolescence. Annie Breen, for instance, had spoken to me
+several times of late in a way that betokened a consciousness of this
+change; and more than one girl whom I met on the road in the evenings,
+when wishing me good-night, had put something into her greetings
+which made it quite different from what it would have been last year.
+Several of the village boys, no older than I, had already sweethearts,
+and I knew I had but to give a sign to any of these girls to have a
+sweetheart also; and while I held myself aloof, and responded with the
+barest politeness, I none the less felt flattered.
+
+I received news of my examination. I had done better than I had
+expected, getting first place in the school and third in Ireland. Owen,
+too, had not done badly; at all events he had retained his exhibition.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+
+I met Owen at the station, and, as he jumped out of the carriage, he
+cried, “I’ve got the letter. It was waiting for me when I reached
+home.” He waved it triumphantly in my face, beaming with the delight of
+it and with the pleasure of showing it to me.
+
+“I can’t possibly read it here,” I said, grasping his bag.
+
+“And I say, you know, you did rippingly in the exams. I knew you would.”
+
+He had come down by the first train, and I wanted to take him for a
+bathe, but he was so excited that he could hardly listen to me. I had
+brought our towels, and I delivered Owen’s bag to a carman outside to
+take up to the house.
+
+“Where are we going now? It was jolly decent of him writing, wasn’t it?”
+
+“Who? Tolstoy? Not bad. But we’re going to bathe: I waited for you.
+It’s some distance away, unless you would rather wade in off the shore;
+there’s plenty of time, however.”
+
+“I’ll do whatever you like.”
+
+“Then I think we’ll go round to Maggie’s Leap.”
+
+As we went we talked of his precious letter. “You won’t like it, I
+daresay,” he said. “It’s not much in your line.”
+
+“I wish you would tell me what my line is. I’ve been trying to discover
+during the last fortnight.”
+
+“I know very well.... There’s one thing he says that I can’t quite――――”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Well, it’s this: He says everything is in the Gospels. What people
+have got to do is to read over the words of Christ, and mark with a red
+pencil everything that is perfectly clear to them.”
+
+“A red pencil?”
+
+Owen was too eager to notice anything. “Yes. What are you amused at?
+Then you cut those bits out, and never bother about the rest. In what
+you cut out you’ll find everything that it is necessary to know in
+order to map out your life and your work. The whole teaching of Christ,
+all that is essential, will be in those bits. Later on you may read
+over the other things, that were obscure, and perhaps some of them
+will by then be plain. I am to consider what kind of work I have a
+taste for, and at the same time the work I devote myself to must fulfil
+certain tests or I am to have nothing to do with it. Work you do with
+your hands is best of all. I haven’t shown the letter at home yet. I
+thought I’d think it quietly over down here and talk about it with you.
+We’ll read the Gospels together. My father wants me to be a solicitor
+and go into his place, but I don’t want that. On the other hand, I must
+make up my mind soon, I suppose. I’m seventeen, you know.”
+
+I took the letter from him, and read it slowly and with some difficulty
+as we walked along. After that, I thought over it for a while.
+
+“Will you have to earn your living?”
+
+“Yes, naturally. There are a good many of us, you know.”
+
+“Then I don’t see how the Gospels are going to help you, no matter what
+way you mark them.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because you’ll have to live as other people do, unless you can afford
+to be different; and other people don’t live according to the Gospels.”
+
+Owen was silent.
+
+“A carpenter, a gardener, for instance,” he began, “couldn’t they live
+in accordance with the teaching of Christ? Tolstoy says I will never be
+happy unless I do.”
+
+“It’s all very well for Tolstoy talking: he is his own master and has
+plenty of money. But how can you be a carpenter or a gardener? Your
+father would never allow you to, and the first thing would be a quarrel
+with him. We go down here, over this wall.”
+
+Owen scrambled after me.
+
+“A man must leave his father and his mother.”
+
+“Yes, Owen dear, but you’re not a bit the kind of man who does, to say
+nothing of leaving your brother and your sisters. At any rate, while
+you are learning to be a gardener your father will have to keep you.”
+
+“I only mentioned those trades because they happened to occur to me;
+there are plenty of others.”
+
+“There are not plenty: that’s just the difficulty I’ve been finding.”
+
+We clambered down on to the rocks, from which the sea stretched away,
+deep and clear and blue, glittering in the hot sunshine, moving with a
+low, smooth swell, like some huge, splendid, living creature.
+
+“You will require a profession in which you can be your own master from
+the very beginning. It wouldn’t do to be subordinate to anybody who
+hadn’t had a letter from Tolstoy, or perhaps even read ‘Anna Karénine.’
+If you go in for the Church, for example, you will have to do what you
+are told until you get a church of your own, when you’ll be always
+having rows with your parishioners and elders, for, of course, you’ll
+have to preach the Tolstoy gospel or the tests will get in the way. If
+you become a doctor you won’t make a living, because you will want to
+doctor the widows and the fatherless, who are no use in the matter of
+fees. I admit the lawyer idea is absurd――even without Tolstoy and the
+Gospels it wouldn’t have done――and no doubt your father only thought
+of it because he’s a solicitor himself. You’ll have to be content with
+something that fulfils perhaps one or two of the tests. Then, when you
+get married and have a swarm of children, your wife will rise in revolt
+against them _all_.”
+
+“I can choose a suitable wife, and there’s no need to have a swarm
+of children. I shall have just as many as I can afford to bring up
+properly.... That reminds me, I brought you down the ‘Kreutzer Sonata.’
+It’s in my bag.”
+
+“That’s all right; but it’s always people like you, frightfully earnest
+and moral and all the rest of it, who have families of twelve or
+thirteen.”
+
+“I tell you I won’t have them,” said Owen, impatiently.
+
+“But Tolstoy himself――――”
+
+“I don’t care a hang about Tolstoy.”
+
+“Oh――h! Owen!”
+
+“Tolstoy could give his children a decent start in life; and if he can
+do that, the more such a man has the better.”
+
+During the latter part of this conversation, all of which Owen was
+taking in dead seriousness, we were undressing, and I now dived into
+the deep, green, glittering water. I turned on my back and lay watching
+Owen, distinctly uneasy, stand hesitating on the edge of the rock.
+
+“Is it cold?” he asked.
+
+“No; come along.”
+
+He pulled his shirt slowly off. “I brought you down some of the short
+stories too.”
+
+I laughed. “All right; I’ll read them when I come out.”
+
+But Owen was really anxious now only about the temperature of the
+water. He floundered in and came up spluttering. I was a much better
+swimmer than he, and circled about him, showing off, delighting in the
+power I felt. We swam out for fifty yards or so, and I timed my stroke
+with Owen’s. He looked very funny. His eyes stared straight before
+him as if he were set on some desperate adventure. On our way back I
+splashed him a little and he got angry, swallowing a lot of water. I
+told him how contrary to the teaching of the Gospels this was; when
+I asked him to drink a pint of salt water he should swallow a quart;
+etc., etc.
+
+When we got to the rocks and he had scrambled out, scraping his knees
+and one of his elbows in doing so, for it was not easy to get out
+unless you knew the way, he was quite offended, and would hardly speak
+to me. I was shaking with laughter, but I said I was sorry and gave
+him some sticking-plaster. He took the sticking-plaster, but would
+have none of my sympathy, and on the way home I had to soothe him into
+a better temper. Then, as usual, the cloud passed quite suddenly, and
+he was all right. As we drew near the house I wondered, uneasily,
+what he would think of my father, and what he would think of my home.
+Before coming to us he had been staying in Scotland with people who
+had evidently possessed yachts and motor-cars and all kinds of things,
+whereas we could not even boast a spare bed, and he would have to sleep
+with me.
+
+When we came in, I introduced him to my father, who was working in the
+garden, and before dinner was over I was delighted to see that they
+were going to get on well together. Owen seemed to notice none of his
+peculiar habits, or, if he did, he was perfectly indifferent to them.
+He displayed an extraordinary interest in the school, asking all kinds
+of questions, and bringing out his own theories of education, which
+may or may not have emanated from the sage in Russia. I let them talk
+together without interfering much. I could see that my father was very
+favourably impressed, though the fact that such an admirable youth
+happened to be a particular friend of mine was naturally perplexing.
+Owen was frightfully polite. He called my father “Sir,” and listened
+deferentially to everything he had to say, never offering his own
+opinion as of any particular value. They talked almost exclusively of
+education. Owen told how he was teaching a boy at home in the evenings,
+the son of their coachman, and how clever this boy was, and how he had
+got Mr. Gill senior to promise to pay his college fees if he did well
+at school during the next year or two. It was the first time I had
+heard of the matter, but I supposed it was the mysterious something
+which had interfered with his own work, and had made him so anxious
+about retaining his exhibition. “Didn’t _he_ do splendidly?” Owen said
+suddenly, nodding his head in my direction.
+
+“Peter can be clever enough when he chooses,” my father answered dryly.
+
+This was to prevent me from exaggerating the merit of my achievement,
+but I did not care, for in my own mind my performance was somewhat
+stale already, and I did not give a fig for such distinctions. It
+occurred to me, as I watched them and listened to them, that Owen and
+my father were perhaps more alike, mentally and spiritually, than Owen
+and I, though my father had but a fraction of Owen’s fineness, and none
+of his generosity. They were related as a coarse weed and a delicate
+flower might be, but I was of a different genus. And then I thought
+that, though I cared little for Gerald, and loved Owen, perhaps it was
+Gerald with whom I had really most in common.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+
+Owen and I were standing by the low sea-wall, looking out across the
+wet brown sands, when I saw her. It was a gray, cloudy day, and the air
+was full of mist and damp, which hung in heavy, livid-coloured veils
+over the black mountain-tops, and sometimes dropped half way down the
+slopes. The tide was out and the noise of the waves sounded remote
+and musical. The broad stretch of wet sand and shingle reached out to
+the cold, gray-green sea, with its white curling line of foam; and
+at the water’s edge, a little bent forward, her light dress floating
+out behind her in the fresh wind, one hand raised, holding the brim
+of her big black hat, she moved along, a solitary figure against the
+broad line of sea and sky. It was Katherine, and as I watched her it
+struck me that the whole picture, from her presence in it, became
+curiously like a Whistler water-colour. The next thing I noticed was
+that Katherine was quite grown-up, which had the effect of producing in
+me a sudden shyness, so that I made no attempt to go to meet her. Yet
+here was the meeting I had lain awake half the night imagining! I had
+an almost overpowering impulse to turn tail and slink away, and perhaps
+I might have done so had I been alone.
+
+Owen, who took no more interest in girls than in octogenarians, asked
+me what I was staring at.
+
+“At Miss Dale,” I answered.
+
+“Who’s Miss Dale?”
+
+“Katherine.”
+
+“And who is Katherine?”
+
+“Mrs. Carroll’s niece.”
+
+Then Owen looked at me in surprise. “Aren’t you going to speak to her?
+I thought you knew her very well?”
+
+“So I do.”
+
+We clambered over the wall and crossed the beach to intercept her
+path. My idiotic nervousness was increased by Owen’s presence. She had
+noticed our approach now, and altered her own course to meet us. As she
+came up she smiled with her bright frank smile and held out her hand.
+She was perfectly natural and easy in her greeting, while I began to
+stammer and splutter. I managed to introduce Owen, saying he had come
+down yesterday, and we all three walked on together.
+
+“I wondered if I should see you,” she said. “We arrived this morning.
+Gerald is up at the house, but I had to come out and get some fresh air
+after our travels.”
+
+“There’s p――plenty of it at all events,” I stuttered.
+
+“I like it. I like wind,” she added, turning her smile upon Owen.
+“Don’t you? It’s very nice to be back here again. I always love coming
+back to any place I know.”
+
+“When the tide is out it looks like a Whistler water-colour,” I went
+on, thinking it a pity that this should be lost.
+
+But probably neither Katherine nor Owen had ever heard of Whistler. “It
+looks to me very like rain,” said the former, glancing at the heavy
+clouds over Slieve Donard. Owen took no notice at all of my remark.
+“Conversation means nothing to Owen,” I reflected, impatiently, “unless
+it takes the form of argument. Anything merely suggestive or decorative
+is lost upon him.” And I felt annoyed because they had both begun to
+chatter commonplaces about Katherine’s journey――what kind of passage
+she had had; as if it mattered!
+
+Then I became lost in contemplation of her. A year had certainly made
+a tremendous difference! “Last winter she probably came out,” I said
+to myself, with vague memories of Miss Broughton’s novels. At all
+events, in twelve months she had managed to put at least five years
+between us. It was quite conceivable that she was already engaged to be
+married, while I was but a timid school-boy, who could only envy from
+afar the happiness of her lover. And the thought that perhaps there
+_was_ a lover cast a vivid illumination on my own feeling for her, made
+plainer than ever the difference, how carefully veiled soever, between
+friendship and love. I loved her with that love which, idealize it as I
+might, was really the expression of a simple law of nature.
+
+Meanwhile she was talking to Owen, who was explaining to her some
+theory of the influence of the tides upon the earth, and of the moon
+on the tides. How, in the first five minutes, he had contrived to get
+on to such a subject I could not guess. It was fearfully like him,
+nevertheless, and Katherine appeared to be interested.
+
+No matter in what company he found himself Owen never talked about
+anything except the things he was interested in. Last night it had
+been a little delicious to hear him discuss Plato’s “Republic” with
+Miss Dick, who, though immensely pleased, was always at her silliest
+when taken seriously. To converse with Miss Dick was like trying to
+get a definite impression from a kaleidoscope; you no sooner fixed
+your attention on one particular idea than it dissolved into something
+quite different. And yet Miss Dick had views――political, religious,
+social,――derived from a deceased parent, who had been an apostle
+of free thought. Only she would interrupt her expression of the
+profoundest of these to wonder if Sissie McIldowie was really engaged
+to young Stevenson.
+
+And now Owen was talking to Katherine about the tides. I watched her
+and knew she liked him. She liked his rough brown mane, his clear eyes,
+with their kindness and innocence, for Owen, in spite of the “Kreutzer
+Sonata” and the rest, was as innocent as a child. There was something
+fine about Owen, and it was very visible in his face.
+
+At present he quite monopolized the conversation, turning it into a
+sort of scientific discourse; and I knew so well that he had been
+reading some little book about tides――probably in the train on his way
+down. I yawned two or three times when he looked in my direction, but
+I might have spared myself the rudeness, for it had not the slightest
+effect upon him while Katherine kept on asking questions as if she
+found what he said absorbing. My apparent indifference simply had the
+result of producing a _tête-à-tête_ between them.
+
+“You ought to become a University Extension lecturer,” I said,
+maliciously. “You should write and ask Tolstoy about it.”
+
+It was a highly disagreeable remark to make, and as soon as I had said
+it I was filled with shame. Owen coloured and stopped talking at once.
+I was very sorry. Inwardly I went down on my knees to him and begged
+his pardon, but outwardly I showed only a sullen stolidity. I said
+something to Katherine, but she answered coldly, and turned again to
+Owen as if to make up to him for my bad manners. And at this my remorse
+degenerated into sulkiness.
+
+Nevertheless, as we walked home together, I had the grace to apologize.
+“I’m sorry for what I said,” I muttered. “It was a most beastly thing
+to say. It’s not so much because it was rude as because it was rotten.”
+
+This distinction I cannot undertake here to explain; let it suffice
+that in my mind it was a very clearly defined one.
+
+“Oh, it doesn’t matter,” said Owen. “I always do talk either too much
+or too little.”
+
+After tea we went for a long walk and discussed all our old subjects.
+But in my present mood they bored me, though I was determined not to
+show it. What I really wanted just then was to be alone, that I might
+recall the past and make plans for the future. We went to bed when we
+came in, but long after Owen had dropped asleep I lay awake, wrapped
+in beautiful, desolating dreams. I gave Owen a gentle kick, for he had
+begun to snore, which troubled the quiet that was necessary for the
+perfect enjoyment of my visions. It woke him up, which was not what I
+had intended, but it couldn’t be helped, and, before he had dropped
+asleep again, I was myself lost in slumber.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+
+I happened on the thing by the merest accident. My father had been
+going through the papers in his desk the night before, tying up old
+letters in bundles, and burning many in the grate. He had been quite
+absorbed in this dusty task when Owen and I had come in from our walk,
+and he had been still absorbed in it when we had left him and gone
+up to bed. This afternoon we were to call for the Dales, and Owen
+was waiting for me now in the garden, sitting on the wall, nibbling
+nasturtium leaves, whistling, and swinging his legs to and fro, while
+I, having broken my shoe-lace, was in the parlour replacing it. And as
+I bent down, through the tail of my eye I caught a glimpse of something
+white between the desk and the wall. I laced up my shoe, and then,
+pushing the desk further to one side, with the help of the poker I
+fished out an envelope. There was no writing on this envelope, and the
+flap was loose, but inside I felt something stiff and flat, like a card
+or a photograph. I pulled it out. It was a photograph, considerably
+faded, and certainly most astonishing if it had fallen from my father’s
+desk, as I supposed it must have. For it represented a person very much
+like the ladies in the chorus at the Christmas pantomime I had gone
+to see with George――better looking, possibly, than most of them, but
+similarly clad, in doublet and tights, and with a velvet cap, with a
+cock’s feather stuck in it, set rakishly at the side of a curly head.
+The face wore the conventional simper such faces seem naturally to
+assume in the presence of photographers, displaying an admirable set
+of teeth. A sword dangled from the waist, a short cloak hung from the
+shoulders, and the right hand was raised to the cap in a dashing and
+coquettish salute. There was something so comical in the idea of my
+father, of all persons in the world, having treasured up this souvenir
+of what I took to be a youthful flight of fancy, that I laughed aloud,
+and was on the point of calling in Owen to show it to him, when I
+turned the photograph round and on the back read, in a sprawling
+feminine hand, “From Milly.”
+
+I stopped short. Owen was still kicking his heels against the
+whitewashed wall, still whistling, but I did not disturb him. I heard
+my father coming downstairs, and my first impulse was to cram both
+envelope and photograph into my pocket. I heard him in the hall, I
+heard him turn the handle of the parlour door, and then I went to meet
+him.
+
+“I found this,” I said, “on the floor.” And I held it out to him.
+
+My father glanced at it indifferently, but when he saw what it was a
+faint flush crept into his face. It was the first time I had ever seen
+him change colour. He took it from me without a word, and, putting it
+back in its envelope, unlocked the desk. He opened a drawer somewhere,
+and I saw him, still without speaking, slip in the envelope. Then he
+pulled down the lid of the desk, which shut with a sharp click, and
+turned to me.
+
+“Do you know who it was?” he asked, abruptly.
+
+I stammered and blushed. “I’m not sure――I think―― Wasn’t it mamma?”
+
+He turned away without answering. “Owen is waiting for you,” he said,
+as I still hung about nervously. “I suppose you won’t be in for tea?”
+
+“No,” I replied, and went out to my friend.
+
+“I’m sorry for keeping you,” I apologized; and as we walked round to
+Derryaghy I half thought of telling him of the incident.
+
+And my mother? I had known vaguely that she had been on the stage in
+some not particularly brilliant capacity, but somehow the real thing,
+in all its callous actuality, to have that suddenly thrust upon one,
+was very different. I did not like it.
+
+Visions of the girls I had seen in the pantomime kept rising before me
+with a disagreeable relevancy. They strutted before my mind’s eye just
+as they had strutted, jaunty and assured, about the stage, their eyes
+boldly seeking the male occupants of boxes. They swaggered by me with a
+peculiar movement of the hips, a perfect self-confidence; one of them
+even winked as she passed. And I saw their fat legs, their bold eyes;
+I heard them laugh, and sing idiotic songs, in shrill falsetto, about
+Bertie, and Charlie, and latch-keys, and staying out till three.
+
+I wished I had never found my mother’s portrait, though I tried to
+persuade myself that she only looked like that because she was dressed
+up for the theatre, and that in ordinary dress she must have been quite
+different. But my attempts to _see_ her as different failed. I had
+nothing to go upon, no memories, no other portrait; for me tights and
+doublet would remain her perpetual garb. I was not disillusioned, for I
+had had no illusions――that is to say, I had thought very little about
+the matter――but I was certainly shocked. I remembered Mrs. Carroll’s
+reserve on the few occasions when I had questioned her. Mrs. Carroll
+must have known, and so must Miss Dick.
+
+It was, doubtless, fortunate that I had never built up any imaginary
+and sentimental picture of my mother, as I might easily have done. Mrs.
+Carroll’s presence in my life probably had prevented this.
+
+“Here we are,” cried Owen, catching me by the arm. “Wake up. I suppose
+you don’t know that you’ve been fast asleep all the way!”
+
+We found Katherine at the lodge, talking to the gardener’s wife, a
+stout, ruddy young woman, with a flaxen-headed little fellow clutching
+her by the skirts, one of my father’s youthful scholars, or, more
+likely, one of Miss McWaters’, since he was still at the age when
+problems connected with “twice times” awaken bewildering difficulties.
+
+We stopped and joined in the conversation.
+
+“Isn’t your brother coming?” Owen asked, after a minute or two.
+
+“He said he was. He’s up at the house; he’s got some new music.”
+Katherine smiled at me. “Do you mind hurrying him up? It’s a shame to
+bother you, but if nobody fetches him he’ll never come.”
+
+I complied with an extremely bad grace. It seemed to me I was always
+chosen for these messages. If Gerald didn’t like to come himself, why
+couldn’t he be left behind? I knew the others wouldn’t even wait for
+us; in fact, when I turned round, they had already begun to walk on
+slowly.
+
+I found Gerald busy with his music, and not looking in the least as if
+he intended to be anything else but busy with it all the afternoon.
+“The others are waiting,” I said, with sulky abruptness. “Are you
+ready?”
+
+He raised his head and his brown eyes rested on mine curiously. “They
+won’t wait very long,” he replied. “Do you really want to climb that
+ridiculous mountain?”
+
+I looked down sullenly. “Why not? We arranged to do so, didn’t we? Owen
+wants to.”
+
+“Let them go alone, then. They’ve begun to study botany. Katherine was
+examining things through a little lens all yesterday evening.”
+
+His drawling irony made me furious. “We must go,” I said, shortly. I
+knew well enough that he knew what was passing in my mind, and that I
+had been fighting against it for the last fortnight. He was the only
+one, I fondly imagined, who _did_ know, and I had begun to think that
+the spectacle of my jealousy was pleasing to him, and that he had his
+own delicate ways of encouraging it. He did not like Owen, yet, for
+some reason I could not fathom, he appeared to regard favourably his
+friendship with Katherine. That friendship had made astonishing strides
+in the past week or two. When we went anywhere together now, it was
+invariably Owen who was Katherine’s escort. Things seemed to arrange
+themselves naturally in that way, and this afternoon was no exception.
+
+It was not till I told him I would follow the others, and was leaving
+the room, that Gerald made up his mind to accompany me, and even then,
+about a quarter way up Slieve Donard, he announced that he had gone
+far enough and would wait here till they came down. Owen and Katherine
+were not in sight, for Gerald had made the ascent at the pace of the
+pilgrims in “Tannhäuser,” and I had had to keep with him. He stretched
+himself full length on the grass, and, as if it were an amusing
+question, asked me what I proposed doing. I did not know myself whether
+to wait with him here or to finish the climb. I stood hesitating, with
+a face like a thunder-cloud.
+
+“I suppose they’re at the top by this time,” said Gerald, casually, and
+his supposition decided me.
+
+I climbed up alone and full of bitter thoughts. Presently I saw
+Owen and Katherine far above me, but they never once looked back. I
+remembered that day, long ago it now seemed when Katherine and I had
+climbed the hill from the Bloody Bridge Valley, and how I had helped
+her over rough places, as I supposed Owen was helping her now, and
+walked hand in hand with her.
+
+When I reached the summit I saw them standing together under the lee
+of a huge gray rock, gazing seaward. They heard my approach and turned
+round.
+
+“Where did you leave Gerald?” Katherine asked, amused. “I didn’t think
+he would get very far!”
+
+“You might have waited for me then,” I answered gruffly. “You were in a
+mighty hurry to start.”
+
+It gave me a sort of stupid pleasure to think I was showing by my
+manner that I considered myself neglected, so I proceeded deliberately
+to be as unpleasant as possible. That I had joined them had obviously
+not annoyed them in the least――Katherine had certainly shown no
+annoyance when she had greeted me――yet I told myself that this was only
+pretence, and that they wished me away. And then, as I thought how
+there might have been some secret understanding between them, and that
+perhaps Katherine had arranged to be down at the lodge when we arrived
+so that she might send me back to the house for Gerald, I felt――though
+I really did not believe in any such scheming――a violent anger against
+them both. When she saw the kind of humour I was in, Katherine ceased
+to take any notice of me, and this made me worse. I had not sense
+enough to leave them. A kind of perversity seemed to force me to do
+everything I could to make myself objectionable. I had an insane desire
+to quarrel with Owen, and presently I contradicted him flatly when he
+said something I knew to be perfectly true. He flushed and his eyes
+brightened angrily, but he controlled himself. “What is the matter with
+you, Peter?” he asked.
+
+“Nothing,” I muttered.
+
+I bounded away from them. I ran down the mountain-side at the risk of
+breaking an ankle, leaping from one point to another. I did not pause
+when I came to where Gerald lay in the grass, but continued my headlong
+descent till I reached the woods. I had come down in an incredibly
+short time, and the violence of my flight had relieved me. I walked now
+at an ordinary pace, wondering what the others would think, conscious
+that I had made a fool of myself, yet laying all the blame on Katherine.
+
+The woods were silent save for the occasional note of a robin or the
+low twitter of a swallow. I stopped by a marshy hollow to look at a
+vivid splash of yellow irises, and I gathered an armful of them for
+Mrs. Carroll.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+
+Owen and I dined at Derryaghy that night, but all through dinner I sat
+very quiet. No allusion was made by the others to my having left them,
+which showed, I thought, that they had discussed it among themselves
+and had agreed not to take any notice.
+
+After dinner Gerald stayed behind to smoke a cigarette, and I stayed
+with him. When we followed the others to the drawing-room, he went to
+the piano and began to play. Owen sat by the window looking out. He
+had not once spoken to me since I had left him and Katherine at the
+top of Slieve Donard; I thought he had even avoided meeting my glance,
+but I was not sure. Katherine and Miss Dick had each some needlework.
+Mrs. Carroll was not with us. From my corner of the room I watched
+Katherine as she worked, her beautiful head bowed in the lamp-light,
+and secretly, in my soul, I knew Owen was more fitted to be her mate
+than I. It is true, I did not believe he could love her so intensely,
+but the love he gave her would be more unselfish. I became lost in
+gloomy thoughts. I knew they both belonged to a world where I was a
+stranger, an outcast. In that hour I recognized my moral inferiority
+to Owen, and suddenly I felt how peaceful and quiet it would be in the
+thick darkness, with the grass over my head, and everything finished
+and forgotten.
+
+Gerald had begun to play the “Moonlight Sonata,” Chopinizing it, as
+he did everything, and perhaps this unhappy vision came to me from his
+music. At all events, it hovered before me in an intensity of sadness
+beneath which I shut my eyes. I got up by-and-by and crossed the room
+to where Katherine sat at her work. I pulled forward a chair and sat
+down near to her, and with my back to the others, so that what I said
+should be heard by her alone.
+
+“Will you come out with me?” I asked, in a low voice.
+
+“Out? _Now_, do you mean?” She looked up in surprise, but she also
+spoke in lowered tones, and with, I thought, a certain coldness. At
+this my anger was stirred afresh.
+
+“Now,” I answered.
+
+She seemed on the point of refusing. “Are you afraid?” I sneered.
+
+She appeared not to understand me. “Afraid! What is there to be afraid
+of?” After a moment she decided. “I will come in a minute or two; I
+want to finish this flower.”
+
+She returned perfectly calmly to her work. She was embroidering a
+table-cloth for her mother’s birthday, and was always saying she should
+never have it finished in time. I, with a burning heart, got up and
+strolled out on to the terrace, my hands in my pockets, and whistling
+below my breath, which I imagined lent an air of off-handedness to my
+exit. Once beyond the windows, however, my whistling ceased abruptly,
+and I hurried round to the other side of the house, where I waited in a
+fever till she should come.
+
+She did not keep me long. She had not put on a hat, nor even a loose
+wrap about her shoulders; evidently she intended our interview to be a
+short one. I hastened from the shadow to meet her.
+
+“Do you know what I want?” I began gloomily.
+
+“You want to speak to me about something, I suppose?” Again I was
+conscious of a coldness in her voice.
+
+“Yes. I have so few opportunities now.”
+
+“I think you have plenty of opportunities, considering you see me every
+day.”
+
+We walked on slowly, side by side. “Are you angry with me?” I asked,
+trying to speak penitently.
+
+“About what?”
+
+There was something in her air of calm deliberation that held me at a
+distance.
+
+“Everything――this afternoon, for instance.”
+
+“I thought you weren’t very nice to your friend.”
+
+“I wasn’t. Nor to you.”
+
+“Oh, it doesn’t matter about me.”
+
+“Why?” I asked miserably.
+
+“Well, it doesn’t matter so much. I’m not your guest――and――I don’t
+suppose I’m as fond of you as he is.”
+
+There was something cruel in those last words, though their cruelty may
+have been unconscious. For a minute or two I could not speak.
+
+“Why have you changed, Katherine?” I said at length, my voice still not
+very secure.
+
+“It is you who have changed.”
+
+“Have I?”
+
+“You were not like this last summer.”
+
+“I think I was.”
+
+“I don’t know what it is, but there is a difference. I suppose it may
+be only that you are growing up. I like people to be either men or
+boys. Why can’t you be natural? Why can’t you be content to be as you
+were?”
+
+“I don’t think you have treated me fairly.”
+
+“I can’t help it. Why should you be so jealous? It’s horrid. Everything
+is changed, as you say. It is not nearly so nice. I first began to
+notice it in your letters, but I thought when I saw you it would be all
+right. If I had known you were going to be like this I wouldn’t have
+come at all.”
+
+There was something in her manner I couldn’t understand, something
+mysterious, as if her words hid a regret, though whether it was for our
+old friendship or not I could not say.
+
+“Tell me what it is you don’t like,” I said, thickly.
+
+Katherine’s dark blue eyes rested on me while she hesitated. “I can’t.
+I’m stupid. Perhaps I don’t really know myself.” Then suddenly she
+broke out, “Don’t speak to me or I shall cry or do something idiotic.
+Let us go back.” Without waiting for me she began to walk hastily in
+the direction of the house. I ran after her; I was lost in wonderment;
+but I made no attempt to detain her or to question her.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+
+No allusion was made to our absence when we returned to the others.
+Gerald was still playing, but he got up as soon as we entered, and
+strolled over to the window, where he stood beside Owen, looking out.
+
+“There should be white peacocks here,” he murmured idly. “I’ve always
+longed to live in a house where there were white peacocks. They are
+the most poetic creatures in the world. They come over the lawn in the
+moonlight, delightful fowls, and knock with their beaks against the
+windows to be fed. They love moonlight. They’re extraordinarily morbid
+and decadent. Their only quite healthy taste is that they want to be
+fed. Shouldn’t you like them, Miss Dick?”
+
+Miss Dick, to whom all Gerald’s words were pearls of wisdom, listened
+to these with close attention. “I’ll speak to Mrs. Carroll about them,”
+she said. “It _would_ be nice to have them.”
+
+Gerald smiled sweetly, and Owen moved away from him, an expression on
+his face of mingled contempt and disgust, which, had I not been so
+miserable, I should have found highly comic. There was nothing, I knew,
+irritated him more than this kind of talk, which Gerald manufactured
+with extreme ingenuity, principally for Owen’s benefit. For Owen’s
+sake he would talk in a world-weary fashion of the “colour” of life,
+and ever since he had discovered that the word “Philistine” was
+peculiarly exasperating, it had figured more frequently than any other
+in his conversation. He dragged it in at every turn, nearly always with
+absolute irrelevancy. He began to talk of Philistines now, à propos of
+some concert at which he declared he had been asked to play――a concert
+he had probably invented for the occasion.
+
+Owen stood with his back against the chimney-piece, his eyes bright,
+his cheeks red. “There is one class, at any rate, that is a good
+deal more disgusting than your Philistines――the people who imagine
+themselves superior to them.”
+
+But Gerald could keep perfectly cool. “These people you mention,” he
+began in his most elaborate manner, “I strongly suspect to be only the
+commanders of the Philistine hosts――their Tolstoys, their chief-priests
+and scribes. It is the Philistine who imagines himself superior to
+other Philistines. This is the one flight his imagination is capable
+of. The artist may be superior, but that, I think, is not what you
+mean?”
+
+“You’re right,” said Owen, fiercely, “it’s not what I mean. And I
+suppose _you_ are an artist?”
+
+“My dear Gill, it is apparent.”
+
+“I’m not your dear Gill,” said Owen, who had lost his temper.
+
+“Shut up, Owen,” I interrupted. “What’s the use of taking everything so
+seriously?”
+
+“Because everything _is_ serious. You may say a lot of chatter about
+white peacocks and Philistines doesn’t mean anything if you like,
+but it does. It is a mask for other things that are real enough――for
+selfishness, and immorality.”
+
+We all gazed at him in silence, almost open-mouthed, Gerald with a
+faint smile on his handsome face. Miss Dick alone found it incumbent
+upon her to say something, and she remarked that the Charity
+Organization Committee to which she belonged had been able to do a
+great deal, and that the lecture with lime-light views had brought in
+over three pounds――she meant even after all expenses had been paid.
+
+These observations could not fill up the breach. Nobody, indeed, took
+any notice of them. Katherine had laid down her work, and her eyes
+were fixed on Owen’s angry face, with, I thought, an expression of
+admiration and sympathy.
+
+“What has morality to do with art?” Gerald asked calmly. “Peter
+supports you because he is not an artist, but only a person of taste,
+who likes to listen to my playing. I _am_ an artist, and I know. You
+not being even a person of――I beg your pardon――you being a person of
+different tastes from Peter, and uninterested in art, naturally are at
+a disadvantage when you discuss it. I do not mean that rudely; I say it
+merely in self-defence. Is anyone coming down in the direction of the
+station?”
+
+He went out, but nobody offered to accompany him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+
+
+Owen and I left shortly afterwards. He was very quiet as we walked
+home, but when we were in bed he said to me, “I’ve decided to go back
+to town to-morrow.”
+
+I heard the words with a thrill of mingled pleasure and misgiving.
+“To-morrow? Why?” I asked. “You must stay till the end of the week in
+any case.” Then something made me add, “Is it because I was rude to you
+this afternoon?”
+
+“No.”
+
+I thought for a little. “Has that nothing to do with it?” I persisted.
+
+“No; at least, not directly. I may as well be quite frank about it.
+I know you would rather I went; that is my reason. I ought to have
+seen it before, but I didn’t, though I had a kind of feeling several
+times that there was something wrong. It is partly your own fault
+that I didn’t guess sooner. You always mentioned Katherine as if you
+were quite indifferent to her; and that first day you seemed even to
+hesitate about going to speak to her. I remember now what you told me
+on the night of our party, but until to-day I never connected it with
+her.”
+
+“You think I’m jealous?” I said in a low voice.
+
+“I know you are, but I didn’t know it until this afternoon. Don’t
+imagine I’m offended or any silly rot of that kind. There is no reason
+why I should be. Of course I should have liked it better if you had
+told me openly――but――well, it doesn’t matter. I don’t understand your
+feeling, but that doesn’t matter, either; if you have it, it is enough.
+I like Katherine, I like her very much, but, after all, it is you who
+are my friend.”
+
+“She won’t want you to go,” I said miserably. At that moment I
+certainly preferred Owen to Katherine.
+
+“She won’t mind very much, and I really can’t knock about with her
+brother. I hate the very sight of him.”
+
+“Couldn’t we knock about by ourselves?”
+
+“I’m afraid it would hardly do to drop them now.”
+
+There was a silence.
+
+“Owen?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I don’t know what to do.”
+
+“About what?”
+
+“About anything. About your going away. About Katherine.”
+
+“But when I’m away won’t it be all right?”
+
+“No; it will be all wrong. I’ve been beastly to you as it is. And she
+doesn’t like me――I mean she only likes me middling――not even as much as
+she did――she told me so, this evening.”
+
+“But you will have plenty of time to make it up.”
+
+“It isn’t that――it isn’t that we’ve quarrelled. And the other――it is no
+use――it only irritates me. I wish I could explain. Things――things come
+into my mind.”
+
+Owen was silent.
+
+“And I’ve been beastly to you,” I went on.
+
+“Oh, nonsense.”
+
+He was silent again till he said, “There’s one way, but I know you
+won’t take it.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“Come back with me, and spend the rest of your holidays with me.”
+
+I lay quiet.
+
+“Will you?”
+
+In the dark I shook my head. Then, remembering he could not see me, I
+answered, “No: I can’t.”
+
+“Why not? It is only a matter of will.”
+
+“But I haven’t any will, except to get what I want.”
+
+“You could try it for a few days.”
+
+“No. There are not a great many days altogether. They will be leaving
+before the end of the month.”
+
+“Well, if you should change your mind, come at any time――I mean without
+bothering to write.”
+
+“Very well.”
+
+Owen was silent so long that I thought he had dropped asleep, when
+suddenly he spoke again.
+
+“Peter?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I didn’t know if you were asleep or not. It is this. I wrote to my
+people about you――about your having to go to lodgings when you come up
+to town after summer; and they want you to come to live with us.”
+
+I felt myself grow hot with shame.
+
+“You see there are plenty of bedrooms,” Owen went on, “and my study, I
+daresay, would do for both of us to work in. I hope you’ll come: they
+all want you to. If you think of it I’ll speak to your father; but of
+course if you’d rather be in ‘digs’ by yourself, it would be better for
+me not to mention it to him.”
+
+“Do you really want me to come?” I asked.
+
+“Of course I want you.”
+
+“I mean, do you really and truly want me?”
+
+He laughed pleasantly. “Of course I really and truly want you.”
+
+“You’re not doing it out of kindness or anything like that?”
+
+“The kindness will be all on your side.”
+
+“No: but I mean it. You must tell me.”
+
+“I suggested it because I’d like to have you. I wasn’t a bit sure
+whether you’d come or not. My reason for asking you is exactly the same
+as my reason for asking you every Sunday to come for a walk with me.”
+
+“I’ll come,” I said. “Thanks awfully.” But my pleasure was spoiled by
+the remorse I felt for my own conduct as host. It seemed to me I was a
+fairly second-rate specimen of humanity, hardly good enough to be taken
+out and drowned.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+
+I do not know whether Katherine attributed Owen’s sudden departure to
+me or not, but I think it extremely probable that she did, although she
+never mentioned it. Yet we sometimes spoke of Owen himself during the
+days that followed. In those days we slipped back more or less into
+our former friendship, and I tried to feel that it was just the same.
+Yet something of the old freedom had gone, and I could not forget what
+Katherine had said to me the night before Owen’s departure. After a few
+days, indeed, it came into my romantic mind that there might be another
+interpretation of her behaviour on that occasion, one I hardly dared
+even to dream of, so much was it what I desired. But it influenced me
+nevertheless. I longed to have another day alone with her――a day such
+as we had had last year, and I determined to ask her to come somewhere
+with me alone, to come, that is, without Gerald.
+
+I went up to Derryaghy one afternoon with this intention, and was shown
+into the morning-room, where I found Mrs. Carroll and Miss Dick. Mrs.
+Carroll informed me that Katherine had been washing her hair, and was
+now drying it at the kitchen fire. She told me to go on in if I wanted
+to speak to her, but I hung back bashfully. In the end I went, all the
+same, and discovered Katherine sitting on a stool, a book open on her
+knee, and her long, thick, dark brown hair hanging loose in the red
+glow of the kitchen range.
+
+“It’s well for you you haven’t to undergo torments of this kind!” she
+exclaimed. “I was baked nearly ten minutes ago. My hair was simply
+full of salt. I don’t know how it gets in under my bathing-cap.”
+
+The situation may seem more homely than romantic, but I thought she
+looked extremely lovely, and gazed at her in silent admiration. Perhaps
+she noticed it, for she coloured as she laughed.
+
+“My dear Peter, aren’t you going to say good-morning to me? I’m not the
+Sleeping Beauty, you know?”
+
+“What beautiful hair you have,” I said, in an awed tone, and
+involuntarily I touched it with my hand.
+
+She laughed again, but drew back. “Did you come in just to admire it?
+It’s very nice of you.”
+
+“I came to ask you to go for a walk with me this afternoon, round
+by the Hilltown Road――by the road under the mountains――just you by
+yourself.”
+
+“‘Me by myself!’ When do you want to go?”
+
+“After lunch.”
+
+“Very well――if it’s not too hot.”
+
+The readiness with which she consented made me consider myself a fool
+for not having asked her sooner, and I began to regret all my lost
+opportunities.
+
+On my way home I met Gerald, who wanted to know if I had bathed yet.
+
+“I bathed before breakfast. Where have you been?”
+
+“Oh, just down to the Club House.”
+
+I turned back with him. I had made up my mind to say something he might
+possibly resent, but I plunged into my subject without beating about
+the bush. “Don’t you think you are rather a fool to go down there so
+often?”
+
+“Down where?” asked Gerald. “To the Club House?”
+
+“Yes; though I was thinking more of the hotel. It seems to me you go to
+the hotel nearly every evening now.”
+
+He smiled, indifferently. “There’s nothing else to do.”
+
+“It seems stupid to chum up with people about twice your age,” I
+persisted.
+
+“They’re not twice my age. Some of them aren’t very much older than I
+am. What harm does it do?”
+
+“Well, I was only with you once, but I didn’t like what I saw there,
+especially towards the end of the evening.”
+
+“What didn’t you like, Peter?” he asked, good-humouredly.
+
+“I thought it looked silly――and a little disgusting. There were you, a
+chap barely eighteen, calling Captain Denby, who’s about fifty, by his
+Christian name. You must know well enough that he’s as gross as a pig.
+What does he care about your playing? And what pleasure, anyway, can it
+give you to play a lot of waltzes and popular songs?”
+
+“He cares as much for my playing as you do.”
+
+“My dear Gerald, if you think that you’re a fool.”
+
+“You sat quiet enough at the time. You were afraid to open your mouth.”
+
+“That may be so, but it doesn’t alter the fact that I was infinitely
+superior to anyone in that room except yourself.”
+
+“I daresay you were, Peter. I never doubt your superiority. There’s one
+thing you forget, however, and that is that any friendship there may be
+between you and me is a pretty one-sided affair.”
+
+“What do you mean?” I asked, uncomfortably.
+
+“Only that you’ve never given it much encouragement.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I don’t know, I’m sure. Partly, I should think, because you rather
+dislike me. That always stands in the way of such things.”
+
+His irony rang unpleasantly true. “Why should you think I dislike you?”
+I said, very weakly.
+
+“It would take too long to explain. It never gave me any particular
+pleasure to think so――at first, just the reverse――and I mention it now
+merely at your request.”
+
+I didn’t quite know what to say. “Isn’t my speaking to you about this
+matter a proof of my not disliking you?” I risked. “I thought we had
+always been friends.”
+
+“No, Peter, your friend is a prig called Owen Gill.”
+
+“Owen isn’t a prig,” I said warmly, glad to have a chance to put him in
+the wrong, but my chance did not last.
+
+“I beg your pardon,” said Gerald, “even if he was, I shouldn’t have
+called him one to you.”
+
+“Better say it to me, if you’re going to say it at all. I can defend
+him.”
+
+“I daresay there is no harm in being a prig.”
+
+“Owen is a good deal finer chap than either you or I.”
+
+“And yet neither of us would change with him! But the point is hardly
+worth discussing.”
+
+“I don’t want to discuss it.”
+
+“You want to give me good advice? Well, fire ahead.”
+
+“Oh, there’s no use in my saying anything. You know it all well enough
+yourself, and if you think it better to go on as you are doing, I can’t
+interfere. But it seems to me stupid to get into bad habits.”
+
+“Have you no bad habits, Peter?”
+
+“I’m not talking about myself.”
+
+“That’s true.”
+
+“You said the other night you were an artist; but you know as well as I
+do, that if you are going to do anything in that way you will have to
+work, and that you won’t work if you begin to loaf about, taking drinks
+with this person and that. I can’t even understand why you should want
+to. If _I_ had any particular gift I would cultivate it for all it was
+worth.”
+
+“Have you no gift?”
+
+“No. As you also remarked, I am a person of taste.”
+
+“I’m sorry if I offended you. I didn’t mean anything.”
+
+“You believed it all the same.”
+
+“I’m not sure that I did. You’re clever enough.”
+
+“Thank you. I’ll not come any further.”
+
+“Won’t you? It was good of you bothering about me, and I took it very
+well, didn’t I?” He smiled.
+
+“You didn’t take it at all; but that’s not my fault.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+
+
+It was a cloudless afternoon when I went back to Derryaghy. Katherine
+was quite ready and we set out immediately. As I walked beside her,
+in her simple cotton dress, and with her gay parasol, I thought her
+adorable.
+
+“Do you remember our picnic?” I asked, for I was for ever harking back
+to it in my mind.
+
+“Which? There have been so many!”
+
+“I mean our own――the one we went together――the first of all.”
+
+“It seems centuries ago. I wonder if Bryansford isn’t too far for this
+afternoon? The others were saying something about driving. That would
+be better.”
+
+“It was a day very like this,” I went on, “a perfect summer day.” And a
+strange thrill passed through me as I recalled its incidents.
+
+The air was as soft as velvet. The August sun streamed over the fields.
+We followed a lane which led us past a long, low house, where an
+immense cherry-tree, with a trunk nine or ten feet in circumference,
+spread its branches in a small green orchard. I repeated aloud some
+lines of a poem I remembered:
+
+ “I know a little garden-close
+ Set thick with lily and red rose,
+ Where I would wander if I might
+ From dewy dawn to dewy night,
+ And have one with me wandering.”
+
+Two friendly dogs wagged their tails, and a cat lounging on the gray
+stone wall unclosed its eyes in sleepy yellow slits.
+
+“Can’t we be friends, Katherine, as we were then?” I pleaded.
+
+“But aren’t we friends?” she asked, with a shade of impatience in her
+voice.
+
+“You know what I mean.”
+
+“I’m afraid I _don’t_ know what you mean, Peter.” Then she unexpectedly
+added: “You’re a very queer mixture. I often wonder how you’ll come out
+in the end.”
+
+“I haven’t an idea,” I replied, somewhat taken aback. The remark
+appeared to me peculiar, and I felt as if she had pushed me farther
+away; and with this my self-confidence began to evaporate.
+
+We walked on in silence. There was, at the particular point we had
+now reached, a certain grandeur in the landscape, which even at that
+agitated moment impressed me with a sense of solemnity. From childhood
+I had imagined it――quite without historical foundation――as the scene
+of ancient Druidical worship. I thought of the dark soil as having
+drunk up the hot, sweet blood of human sacrifice, while the “pale-eyed
+priest” lifted his gaze to the clear autumn sky, and watched against
+it, just that same dark curving line of quiet hills that I was watching
+now.
+
+Yet, when we began to speak again it was of things about which we were
+both profoundly indifferent, and I had a sickening feeling that I was
+failing to interest my companion, and that while she was talking to me
+her thoughts were elsewhere. Somehow it appeared to be impossible to
+raise our conversation out of the rut of deadly commonplace into which
+it had fallen. It seemed to me almost as if Katherine were keeping it
+there on purpose, and before we came to Bryansford, I proposed trying
+to get tea at one of the cottages, for I felt that any interruption
+would be a relief.
+
+When we had finished, and paid for, our refreshment, instead of
+continuing our way round under the mountains, as I had intended,
+Katherine decided that we ought to start for home.
+
+“Let us at least go back through the woods,” I begged. “We don’t want
+to tramp along that dusty road again.”
+
+She yielded to my persuasion, and we entered the estate that lay beyond
+Derryaghy. It was strangely still in the late afternoon. Not a leaf
+stirred. On and on we walked, hardly speaking, and suddenly the dead
+silence, and our complete solitude, became, as it were, visible to
+me; and with that there rose in my mind, with intense vividness, a
+memory――the memory of Elsie at Owen’s party. The whole thing came back
+to me almost with the strength of hallucination: her lips on mine, my
+own kisses, her yielding body as she closed her eyes under my embrace.
+I was horribly nervous. I felt myself trembling and a faint mist swam
+before my eyes. I put out my hand and tried to take Katherine’s, but
+she drew away from me at once. I stopped short, facing her, on the
+narrow path. “I want to speak to you,” I said. “What have I done?”
+
+She made as if to pass me, but I barred the way. I was conscious once
+more, through other things, of a smouldering anger against her. “Why do
+you draw back when I touch you? You once told me you cared for me. You
+wrote to me that you did.”
+
+“So I do,” she answered quietly, though her face had altered. “I don’t
+know what you want, nor why you aren’t satisfied.”
+
+And, all the time, that other vision was acting like an hypnotic
+suggestion upon my mind. “You know that I love you,” I persisted,
+hoarsely, my voice sounding queer, though I tried to speak naturally.
+“Tell me, would you rather have Owen?”
+
+“I don’t think you should speak to me like this. I wish you would allow
+me to pass, please.”
+
+Her dark blue eyes were fixed on me; she was very near. I was
+passionately conscious of her attraction for me; my heart was thumping,
+and the blood began to drum in my temples, while a sort of shadow
+veiled my sight. I threw my arms round her; I could feel her body
+straining away from me, her breath on my face. For a moment she seemed
+to submit as I kissed her, but the next instant she struggled from me,
+and I felt a blow across my face. She had struck me with her parasol,
+which now hung broken in her hand.
+
+Her eyes flashed on me like a withering fire. She was furiously angry.
+“How dare you touch me! Let me pass at once, you――you beast.”
+
+My arms dropped to my sides. A sudden, bitter shame overcame me. I saw
+her pass me with head erect and flaming cheeks, and then I dropped on
+my face on the ground.
+
+When I got up she was out of sight. I did not know how long I had lain
+there, but I made no attempt to follow her. As I brushed mechanically
+the earth and bits of grass and twigs from my clothes, I felt almost
+dazed. It had all passed, and I did not want to think. I heard the
+drowsy prattle of a stream, and became aware that I was hot and
+thirsty. I went down to it and followed the bank till I reached a deep
+green pool, from which, lying flat on my belly, I drank greedily. As
+I raised my head I saw my own image in the water――my bright eyes, my
+dark, flushed face, my coarse, ruffled hair.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER L
+
+
+I had told my father I should be dining at Derryaghy, yet he made no
+remark when, instead, I came in an hour late for tea. Fresh tea simply
+was prepared for me, and again, while I sat at table, I was conscious
+of something peculiar in the way he watched me, so that for an instant
+it even flashed upon me that he might have heard of what had happened
+in the wood.
+
+It was only when I had finished eating that he spoke. “I had a letter
+from your Uncle George this afternoon,” he said, and I knew at once,
+not so much from his voice as from the face he turned to me, that
+something serious had happened.
+
+My thoughts darted straightway to Aunt Margaret, to vague, gruesome
+tragedies, murder or suicide. “What’s the matter?” I asked, uneasily.
+Perhaps it had to do with little Alice? Why couldn’t he tell me at
+once? Then I noticed that he had pushed a bundle of photographs to me
+across the table.
+
+“Do you know anything of these?” he asked, in a strange voice.
+
+I started. A glance at the top one had been sufficient. I recognized
+the photographs George had kept hidden in his room, or others like
+them. I looked at my father watching me, not angrily, but in a kind
+of hopeless way; I looked into his gray, still face while he went on
+speaking. “They were found in your bedroom hidden under the floor.
+Uncle George says that George knows nothing about them, and, that
+being the case, he felt it his duty to tell me. He does not mention
+your name. I don’t know what to do. I have been trying to think.” He
+looked at the wretched things, as they lay there, with a kind of horror.
+
+I sat silent for a moment. “They’re not mine,” I then said. “I have
+nothing to do with them.”
+
+A gleam of relief came into his face, but it faded quickly. “You never
+saw them before?”
+
+I lifted the top one, but immediately put it back again. “I don’t know
+whether I saw them before or not,” I answered. “If I didn’t see these
+particular ones I saw others like them.” My father winced. “But they
+never belonged to me. Even if I had wanted them I wouldn’t have known
+where to get them.”
+
+“Did you know of this hiding place?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And of what was there?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Only you and George occupied that room.”
+
+“And George says they aren’t his.” I looked towards the window.
+
+My father hesitated. Then he said solemnly, “Will you give me your word
+of honour, Peter, that you had nothing to do with their being there?”
+
+“I had nothing to do with it.” I answered quietly. “I knew they were
+there, because George showed them to me. If he was here he would not
+say they were mine. I knew what he was like from the first day I went
+there. Those things were there then, and on the very first night he
+wanted to show them to me, but he was frightened to. I did not see them
+till a long time afterwards. I would never have seen them at all, if
+you had let me leave when I first wrote to ask you to.”
+
+“You gave me no reason,” said my father, sadly. “Do you think I should
+have allowed you to stay an hour in the place if I had known?”
+
+“You might have guessed there was _some_ reason. And at the time I
+couldn’t give any――I didn’t know myself.”
+
+“Had that anything to do with your not wanting to go back there after
+Christmas?”
+
+“In a way――more or less,” I answered. “Not exactly that, but other
+things――――”
+
+My father sighed. He tore the photographs in two, and placed them
+in the empty grate, where he set fire to them. It was like an act
+of purification, and when it was concluded he turned round and said
+gloomily, “I’m sorry if I misjudged you. I accept your word.”
+
+But he didn’t accept it――he couldn’t. Secretly, and underneath
+everything, and, without admitting it even to himself, he couldn’t
+help being doubtful, and I knew he was doubtful. If I had suddenly
+told him the photographs were mine, and expressed appropriate remorse,
+I believe it would have made him happier than my denial did. As I saw
+the wretchedness of his face the injustice of the whole thing became
+intolerable. “Do you believe me, or do you not?” I asked brusquely.
+
+“I have told you I believe you.”
+
+“You don’t look as if you did.”
+
+“I can’t pretend to treat the matter as of no importance. My believing
+you means that I must disbelieve George.”
+
+“Why should you trouble about George? And, at any rate, though he did
+have those things, he’s decent enough in some ways. I’m pretty sure he
+would have burnt them himself after a while.”
+
+I’m afraid this speech did neither George nor myself any good. It
+simply made my father think me callous.
+
+I went out on the golf-links with Tony, and sat looking at the sea.
+I began to think of my father and of the failure of his life. This
+last incident seemed but to fit with all the others into its tragic
+grayness. And I reflected how for him I must compose a large part
+of that failure. Thinking of me could bring him little consolation,
+probably just the reverse. It was a pity. I doubtless was not,
+particularly from his point of view, much to boast of, but I was better
+than he thought me. I might be below the average in most things, but I
+was not below it in all....
+
+And then my natural egotism rose once more to the surface. My mind
+turned to Katherine, and it seemed to me I was making a horrible mess
+of my whole existence. I got up and walked slowly back to the town. A
+wandering troupe of open-air entertainers had arrived during the day,
+and were busy erecting tents and hobby-horse machines in a large field
+not far from our house. Most of the natives, both young and old, were
+superintending these preparations with an unflagging interest which
+had already stretched over hours, but I was in no mood to join them. I
+determined to walk as far as the pier and then go home. I had not gone
+above a hundred yards when I felt my face burning. Before me, coming in
+my direction, were Katherine and Gerald. Nothing but a straight stretch
+of road and footpath lay between us, and it was certain that they must
+have already seen me. I would have liked to turn back, but my pride
+prevented such a step, and I walked on, my head up, a flaming blush on
+my face. Gerald and I raised our caps. My eyes sought Katherine’s, but
+her glance just brushed mine to rest on some distant point beyond me.
+The next moment we had passed. Hot tears rose to my eyes, but I walked
+as far as I had intended to. On the pier steps I sat down and put my
+arms round Tony’s broad back and kissed him. If I had committed the
+greatest crime on earth, I thought, he would have licked my cheek and
+pretended to bite my ear just as he did now.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LI
+
+
+“I want to go up to Belfast to-day,” I said to my father next morning
+at breakfast.
+
+His reply was exactly the one I had anticipated. “What do you want to
+go to Belfast for?”
+
+“I want to see Owen about something.”
+
+“Hadn’t you a whole fortnight when you saw him every day?”
+
+“I want to speak to him,” I answered, very low-spiritedly. I knew he
+was thinking of the railway-fare, and if I had had any money myself I
+should never have asked him.
+
+“Can’t you write?” he demanded, querulously.
+
+“I want to speak to him.”
+
+“Don’t go on repeating the same thing like a child.”
+
+“But why can’t I go?” I asked helplessly.
+
+“Because it is a waste of money.”
+
+“It will only cost five shillings.”
+
+“Five shillings is a great deal too much to spend upon nothing.”
+
+“It isn’t nothing. I want to speak to him. I never asked to go before.”
+
+“You’ll be seeing him very soon――in another fortnight――and you will
+have plenty of time to talk to him then.”
+
+“I want to speak to him now,” I persisted. “Can’t I go?”
+
+“Peter, you are dreadfully obstinate. What do you want to see him about
+that won’t keep for a few days?”
+
+“I sent him a telegram before breakfast, asking him to meet me, and I
+can’t very well not go.”
+
+“It is your own fault if you do things without consulting me.”
+
+Nevertheless, in the end, he allowed me to go, and I caught the first
+train.
+
+I had asked Owen to meet me in the Botanic Gardens, for I did not want
+to call at his house, and, as I arrived some few minutes before the
+appointed time, I began to pace disconsolately up and down one of the
+paths, my head filled with dreary thoughts. Two or three gardeners with
+long rakes were raking the walks, and a man with a pair of clippers
+was trimming the edges of the grass. As they pottered over their work
+they carried on a disjointed conversation, principally about religion,
+or rather about the evils of Roman Catholicism. I listened to their
+idiotic remarks, which at another time might have amused me. The man
+with the clippers was describing some form of service which he called
+“High Rosary,” and the rakers from time to time interpolated words and
+grunts. A few little boys were playing hide-and-seek, and now and then
+a nurse passed, wheeling a perambulator. An old pensioner, sucking an
+empty pipe, hobbled up to the seat I had taken a corner of, though
+all the others were vacant, and began with much fumbling to unfold a
+greasy-looking newspaper. The sight of his futile senility somehow
+irritated me, and I stared at him fiercely, but he sat on. I began to
+think that perhaps Owen would not come: for all I knew he might be away
+from home. Two or three untidy, vulgar, little girls, with smaller
+brothers and sisters in tow, came up to inquire “the right time.” After
+I had satisfied their curiosity they still hovered near me, gazing at
+me in a silence that it was difficult to construe as flattering. At a
+distance of three or four yards they then settled down stolidly to some
+obscure game, in which a great deal of monotonous, rhymed dialogue
+was the principal feature. They intoned this in shrill, unmodulated
+voices, but all the time keeping a sharp look-out on my movements. The
+old pensioner turned his watery eyes on me and made a remark about the
+weather. I pretended not to hear him, but he only made it again, and
+I had to answer. He began to talk politics. His fumbling hands, his
+foolish, empty pipe, his bleared and rheumy eyes, depressed me, and I
+wondered why he couldn’t be put into a lethal chamber. Then I saw Owen
+turn the corner and sprang up to meet him.
+
+“Why didn’t you come to the house? Where are your things?” he asked.
+The little girls had suspended their game to watch us with breathless
+interest.
+
+“I’m not going to stay, Owen. I came up just because I wanted to speak
+to you about something―――― Get away!” This last remark was addressed to
+a child who had drawn nearer, so as not to miss what we were saying.
+She stared at me with an expression of solemn idiocy, but without
+budging an inch from the position she had taken up.
+
+“That’s all right,” said Owen, “but of course you’ll stay now you’re
+here. I can lend you everything you need, and I’ve told them at home to
+expect you.”
+
+“I can’t. My father would hardly let me come; even as it was.”
+
+“Get yer hair cut,” suggested the polite child, putting out her tongue.
+
+“Owen, I want to tell you something: I want your advice.”
+
+He at once became serious. He took my arm and we strolled down toward
+the pond, followed by the whole band of children, who, captained by the
+same odious little girl, screamed now in chorus, “Get yer hair cut! Get
+yer hair cut!”
+
+The din they made was terrific. I waited till we had turned the corner
+and were out of sight of the gardeners and the pensioner. Then I swung
+round quickly and made a grab at the ringleader. In about two seconds,
+kicking and screaming, she was across my knee, and I was administering
+as sound a spanking as she had ever received in her life.
+
+“I say,” cried Owen, “what on earth are you doing?”
+
+I released my captive, who with crimson, tear-drenched face, and open
+mouth, went bawling back in the direction she had come from.
+
+“That’s all right, any way,” I said to the astonished Owen. “There’s
+nothing like taking these things in time.”
+
+The rest of the children had retreated, moving backwards, with round
+eyes fixed on me, but perfectly callous to the woes of their comrade.
+
+“You’ll be having someone coming and kicking up the mischief of a row,”
+said Owen, uneasily.
+
+“I don’t care. Can’t we find a quiet place?”
+
+Owen considered. “Come down the Lagan walk: there’s never anybody
+there.”
+
+I let him take me, and we walked till we were stopped by a low parapet,
+over which we had a charming view of the black mud-banks of the river,
+for the tide was out, and beyond this a strip of waste land, dotted
+with mill chimneys and the backs of dirty houses. It was neither a
+cheerful nor a beautiful outlook, but we both stood gazing over the
+wall, as if beyond it lay the New Jerusalem.
+
+“It’s horribly smelly,” I discovered at length.
+
+“I thought you wanted somewhere quiet,” Owen apologized.
+
+“I didn’t mean this sort of thing. I’m sure there’s a dead cat or dog
+in that sack down there. Come away.”
+
+“I didn’t know the tide was out,” said Owen patiently.
+
+But I found it difficult now to begin my story. Those wretched children
+had upset everything. I was quite unreasonably cross, too, with Owen,
+for bringing me to these hideous mud-banks, with their litter of old
+boots, of empty tins and broken bottles. I even had it on the tip of
+my tongue to tell him it was just like him, but refrained.
+
+We retraced our steps and found a seat near the pond. Here we sat in
+silence, Owen waiting for me to begin my tale.
+
+“Something very unpleasant happened yesterday,” I murmured, branching
+off to a secondary subject.
+
+“Happened to you?”
+
+“Not to me only―――― It was a letter my father got from Uncle George――the
+people I was living with in town here, you know.”
+
+“I know.”
+
+“You remember the chap who came with us to ‘Faust?’”
+
+“Your cousin?”
+
+I nodded. “He had some photographs which he kept hidden under the floor
+in our bedroom.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“So that nobody would get hold of them. They were――that kind. I don’t
+know where he got them from.”
+
+“Bad?”
+
+I nodded again. “And they were found a few days ago, and he denied that
+they were his, so Uncle George wrote to my father.”
+
+“Saying they must be yours?”
+
+“It came to that, though he didn’t actually say it.”
+
+“But you denied it too?”
+
+“Yes――only――I don’t know that my father believes me.”
+
+“Even now?”
+
+“He says he does, but I’m not sure. At any rate it has upset him a lot.”
+
+“He must be an awfully low cad.”
+
+“George? He’s not up to much. But I expect it never occurred to him
+that his people would write, and I suppose he thought, now I was out of
+the way, it wouldn’t much matter to me whether they blamed me or not.
+Neither would it have mattered, if Uncle George hadn’t written.”
+
+“Of course it would have. What is your father going to do?”
+
+“I don’t know. There is nothing he _can_ do, except tell them what I
+say.” I felt suddenly sad and doubtful――doubtful of the quality of
+my own innocence, which had seemed perfectly clear before. “I’m not
+sure that I’m giving you a right impression,” I went on, after a short
+silence. “I knew George had these things: I had looked at them: I knew
+where he kept them.”
+
+“It all seems to me very rotten,” said Owen, disgustedly.
+
+“It is, rather. Aunt Margaret may write to Mrs. Carroll, for instance,
+just out of spite.”
+
+“She can hardly do that now.”
+
+“I don’t know. She hates me. And it would be horrible if she did,
+though Mrs. Carroll wouldn’t believe her.”
+
+I was silent a while. “But that isn’t really what I came up to tell
+you,” I suddenly began. Then I related what had happened yesterday in
+the wood.
+
+Owen stared in front of him at the drab, seedy-looking, little ducks,
+who were paddling about on the dirty sheet of water. A rat stole out,
+and seeing us scuttled back again.
+
+“Why did you behave like that? It was most extraordinary!”
+
+I made no answer.
+
+“It wasn’t very gentlemanly, you know,” Owen continued, “to say the
+least of it.”
+
+“I never said I was a gentleman,” I interrupted. “I’m not one, in the
+ordinary sense of the word, nor even in the other, according to you.”
+
+“Oh, that’s rot.” He sat trying to puzzle it out. He looked at me and
+unexpectedly smiled.
+
+I smiled too, but my heart was heavy as lead. “Well, that’s all I came
+up to tell you,” I muttered, “――not very much!”
+
+He saw I was not happy. “I know I’m not very experienced in matters of
+this kind,” he confessed, “but if I were you, Peter, I should go to
+Derryaghy and ask to see her. Would you like me to do anything?”
+
+“There’s nothing you could do. Would it not be better for me to write?”
+
+“I don’t think so. It might be easier.”
+
+“It would be. And suppose she won’t see me?”
+
+“You can only try.”
+
+“Well, I’ll go back and think it over.”
+
+“But won’t you stay, really?”
+
+“No. I must go.”
+
+“Before this happened she liked you very much――she told me so herself.”
+
+I shook my head. “It is all over. She will never speak to me again.”
+
+“If she doesn’t――――” He stopped.
+
+“What?” I asked.
+
+“She isn’t worth bothering about,” Owen concluded.
+
+“Oh, you don’t know.”
+
+“What was there, after all, so very dreadful? It’s not as if you were
+in any way repulsive!”
+
+He tried to persuade me to change my mind about going home as we walked
+toward the park gate, but I was firm. “Good-bye, Owen,” I said. “Thank
+you for coming. I will write to you if there is anything to write
+about.”
+
+I got on a tram, and he stood on the footpath, looking after me.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LII
+
+
+Owen had cheered me up a little; I was glad I had come; and during my
+return journey I pondered the advice he had given me and decided that
+I must follow it. I waited till nine o’clock, by which hour I thought
+Gerald would probably have gone out, for I wanted to avoid him: then I
+went up to Derryaghy. So far as I could see, the only way was to call
+just as usual, and trust to luck to get a few minutes with Katherine
+alone.
+
+But at the door my courage failed me, and I stepped softly round to
+the terrace, and, standing hidden in the deep shadow of the house,
+looked to see who was in the room. The curtain was as usual undrawn
+and the room was full of lamplight. They were all there. Gerald was
+sprawling on his back on the sofa; Katherine was working at her
+table-cloth, her head bent over it so that I could not see her face;
+Miss Dick was writing; Mrs. Carroll was playing “Patience.” Presently
+Katherine looked up, and, for a moment or two, before she returned to
+her work, I saw her gaze out into the darkness. The others, except
+Mrs. Carroll, had their backs to me; a small fire was burning in the
+grate. I stood there under a kind of fascination. The impression was
+strange, and even slightly weird. Looking in upon them, all so silent
+and so unconscious of my presence, I had a peculiar feeling that, if
+I came right into their line of vision, they would still not see me.
+I had a strange feeling that I was actually invisible, and, moreover,
+that I was not the only watcher there, and, that if we were invisible
+to the inmates of the room, we might not be invisible to each other.
+Other faces, pale and dim, peered in at other windows; the house was
+surrounded by shadowy presences――shadowy forms that hovered outside
+here on the terrace, that glided up and down the wide, dark, creaking
+staircase, or stood motionless in the upper rooms. I stepped back and
+looked up at the long line of black, unlit windows, with just here and
+there a glimmering light. And I felt as if I no longer belonged to the
+same world as the occupants of the room I watched. I was but a memory,
+a ghost; my place was upstairs; in dim passages; by trembling blinds,
+pulled aside for just a moment that we might peep out; in shadowy
+rooms; behind doors whose handles the timid maid, hurrying by in her
+glimmer of unsteady candlelight, feared to turn. I was the breath
+that set the curtains at the bed’s head trembling; the faint sound
+as of a chair pushed back on the upper floor; the draught――was it a
+draught?――that made the lamp-flame flicker; the pale reflection passing
+across the looking-glass and gone before there was time to strike a
+match. I was that mysterious something one turned one’s head quickly to
+see, and did not see; the cold touch that awakened just before dawn;
+the gray, ghostly figure sitting by the window in the first wan light,
+and that was no longer there when one rubbed one’s eyes; the tapping on
+the window-pane as of a leaf――the tapping that must surely be only a
+leaf moved by the wind.
+
+I do not know how long I stood there: it may have been but a few
+minutes, yet it was long enough for me to realize that the simple
+act of entering the room was become an impossibility. It would have
+required too violent an effort, too sharp and brutal a wrench, an
+effort I shrank from as from physical pain. I must write to Katherine.
+How could I go in there as if nothing had happened? If she came out
+on to the terrace I might find courage to speak to her, but she would
+not come. Gerald, on the other hand, almost certainly would; and if he
+discovered me prowling about like this what would he think? I slipped
+away, then, like a veritable ghost, my footsteps making no noise upon
+the faded grass.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LIII
+
+
+I wrote that night to Katherine, but she did not reply to my letter,
+and I had no heart to send a second. Two days passed, during which
+I did not go near Derryaghy, but took to gardening, and when Gerald
+came down on the second afternoon I offered this as my excuse for not
+going with him. The fact was that I felt uncomfortable in his society,
+not knowing how much he knew. He had witnessed my discomfiture on the
+night Katherine had cut me, and of course he must have questioned her
+afterwards.
+
+During these days I made one or two attempts to come to a more cordial
+relation with my father; yet it seemed to me that he suspected the
+genuineness of my timid advances, and at all events his unresponsiveness
+discouraged me from repeating them.
+
+On the evening of the third day, having nothing else to do, I
+strolled listlessly in the direction of the field occupied by the
+booths of the steam-circus proprietors. It was recognizable from
+afar by a luminous cloud that hung above it like a curtain of fire
+against the night. The wind was blowing from that direction, and, as
+I advanced, my ears were filled with the rough music blared out by a
+couple of steam-organs, a music broken every now and again by short
+convulsive shrieks as of demoniac laughter. Swings, shooting-galleries,
+throwing-competitions――all were in the full energy of life when
+I approached; but the chief centres of attraction were the two
+hobby-horse machines, brightly painted and flashing with mirrors and
+gilding. I mingled in the outer ring of spectators about the larger of
+these two wheeling monsters, and stood gazing at it, as it turned round
+swiftly and rhythmically to the throbbing din of brazen pipes. White
+puffs of steam shot up against the black sky in the coloured glare
+of naphtha lamps. Girls with flushed, excited faces, tossed hair and
+shining eyes, leaned sideways from the horses’ backs, laughed, swayed
+in a kind of innocent abandon toward their accompanying sweethearts.
+Arms were round waists, the pops of guns mingled with the blare
+of the music, the shrieks of the steam-whistle, the shrillness of
+feminine voices. Standing there, in lonely contemplation of all this
+Dionysian revelry, I felt as hopelessly out of touch with it, as if I
+had wandered thither from another planet. Suddenly I felt a hand laid
+lightly on my arm, and looking round saw the laughing face of Annie
+Breen.
+
+She asked me if I had seen their Willie, but without waiting for an
+answer went on to chatter about all the people who were here to-night.
+A whole crowd had come over from Castlewellan; and there were a lot of
+excursionists from Belfast, who had missed the last train, and nobody
+knew where they were going to sleep, for there wasn’t a room to be had
+in the hotels. Wasn’t it fun? They would have to stay out all night;
+and if it rained wouldn’t it be awful?
+
+“There’s room for two there,” she cried, “those white horses. Ellen
+Gibson and Brian Seery are getting off.”
+
+I made a half-hearted movement forward, but in my lack of enthusiasm
+was ousted by a more eager couple whose eyes had been as quick as
+Annie’s. There was no hint of reproach, however, in the smile the girl
+turned on me.
+
+“We’ll get them next time, and I’d just as soon watch, any way.
+Wouldn’t you?”
+
+“There’s Willie over there,” I suggested. “Perhaps you would like――――”
+
+But she interrupted me. “I don’t care about the horses. Only maybe I’m
+keeping you: maybe you’re waiting for somebody?”
+
+“No,” I answered, hurriedly.
+
+“Let’s go round the tents then. Will you?”
+
+We moved over to the one which appeared to have attracted the largest
+crowd. In the foreground, just beyond the barrier, was a long counter
+or table covered with cheap ornaments, artificial jewelry, and boxes
+of unhealthy-looking cigars; and behind this, set in tiers against
+the canvas back of the tent itself, were three rows of grotesque,
+painted, wooden busts, waiting to be knocked down. Surrounded by a
+group of encouraging spectators, George Edge was stolidly bombarding
+these figures with a good deal of success, though what he intended to
+do with his prizes it was difficult to imagine. We stood and watched
+him, and every now and again a loud smack was instantly followed by the
+disappearance of one of the dolls.
+
+“Have a throw you,” said Annie. “Go on. I’m sure you can do it better
+than him.”
+
+An obliging lady handed me three wooden balls, about the size of tennis
+balls, in exchange for two pence; but in absence of mind I came within
+an ace of sending the first of these at the head of the proprietor
+himself, which just then bobbed up close to the dolls, and in features,
+colouring, and expression, startlingly resembled them. At my third
+shot I was successful, and Annie chose a gold and turquoise cross. We
+passed on to the next booth, leaving George still pegging away, with a
+perseverance that must have cost him about half-a-crown already. Annie
+herself now won a walking-stick, by throwing a wooden ring over it, and
+this trophy was presented to me.
+
+“Let’s get out of the glare for a minute,” she said unexpectedly. “It’s
+that hot with all the lights and things I can’t hardly breathe.”
+
+We passed behind the tents, and a few steps brought us into shadow,
+and a few steps more to a bank under a hawthorn-hedge, where we sat
+down. I had nothing to say to her, and, as it did not seem to matter
+to Annie whether we talked or not, I pursued my own thoughts. She
+leaned up against me confidingly, but I was hardly more conscious
+of her presence than of the bank upon which I sat. I was thinking,
+and presently I put a question to her, put it perfectly seriously.
+“Suppose, Annie,” I began very deliberately,――“suppose you were friends
+with somebody――somebody like me, say. Suppose you knew he was very fond
+of you, and, one day, when you were alone together, without asking you
+if he might, he put his arms round you and kissed you――would you be
+very angry with him, so angry that you would never speak to him nor
+look at him again?”
+
+I kept my eyes fixed upon the ground as I awaited her reply, and I
+awaited it with some anxiety. It seemed to me a long while coming. All
+at once I felt two warm lips pressed against my cheek. I was so taken
+aback by the unexpected nature of this answer that I’m afraid I drew
+away from it. I understood that poor Annie had seen in my question
+only a somewhat timid method of courtship. It was distinctly awkward.
+She leaned her head sentimentally on my shoulder, and we sat in this
+absurd position for several minutes, while I had time to reflect on the
+hopeless inconsistency of feminine nature. As soon as I could, without
+hurting her feelings, I got up. “We must try the hobby-horses now,” I
+said, with feeble sprightliness, seizing on the only pretext I could
+think of to escape from a disagreeable situation.
+
+Annie rose too, but with no great alacrity: in fact, she remarked that
+she was sick of the hobby-horses. I pretended not to believe her. We
+went back to the spot where she had first spoken to me, and, when the
+machine came to a standstill, secured two riderless steeds. Mine was
+on the outside and Annie’s of course next to it, but we were no sooner
+in possession of them than I became aware of Katherine and Gerald
+among the spectators quite close to us. I looked the other way, and I
+felt my face grow crimson. It seemed to me that the engine-man would
+never set us in motion. Already we appeared to have been waiting for
+an eternity. Annie was laughing and chattering, and I answered at
+random, though, indeed, to the kind of remarks she was making, any sort
+of answer served. Had she, too, seen the Dales? for her vivacity had
+suddenly become much more noisy and familiar, with something about it
+that smacked rather of town than of country? I noticed that all the
+other riders were obviously in couples, and that most of the youths
+were supporting their partners in a strikingly gallant fashion. Annie
+had already given me permission to follow their example by telling me
+half a dozen times she was sure she’d fall off. I didn’t care very much
+whether she did or not. At last, with a shrill and frivolous scream,
+the huge construction began to revolve slowly, and our horses to move
+up and down on their polished brass rods. We swept by within a yard
+or two of Katherine and Gerald, but I looked straight before me, my
+face burning. I would have liked to pretend that I was there for a
+solitary ride, quite independent of Annie, but her manner made any such
+hypocrisy perfectly futile. Round we came a second time, and a third,
+gathering velocity at every moment. Annie had taken off her hat and put
+it on my horse’s head, and her skirts streamed out behind, and flapped
+against my right leg.
+
+“Peter!”
+
+It was Katherine’s voice. She had called my name. It came to me through
+the night, and an indescribable emotion shook me. I could not have
+spoken: my eyes were blinded with tears: and again the huge machine
+swept round. But in the place where Katherine and Gerald had been I
+could no longer see them. Where were they gone? The organ belched its
+coarse music, the steam throbbed, the whistle hooted, we rushed on
+faster and faster. Where were they? She had called me. Perhaps they had
+gone home. I could not wait any longer, but slipped from my horse’s
+back. Annie screamed; the man who was going round collecting the fares
+while the ride was in progress made a grab at me; but I jumped――jumped
+and fell headlong, rolling over and knocking all the breath out of
+my body, though luckily not breaking any bones. Instantly there was
+commotion. A crowd gathered about me, and everybody seemed to think
+I had either gone mad or been seized with a fit. I scrambled to my
+feet as soon as I had pumped a little wind into myself, and, without
+waiting to brush the dust from my clothes, without answering any of the
+questions that poured in upon me from all sides, pushed my way through
+the people, who appeared inclined to detain me by force, and hurried,
+as fast as my still rather breathless condition would allow, in pursuit
+of Katherine and Gerald. Alas, I could see no sign of them. They had
+vanished as completely and mysteriously as Persephone on that summer
+morning in the meadows. I clambered through the hedge out on to the
+road, but there was no one there. I ran on till I reached the turning,
+but there was no one there either, and I knew I had missed them, for
+the road here lay straight and bare in both directions. I stood still
+by the sea-wall. I could not go back. The glare and din were now
+become impossible, to say nothing of Annie, whom I had flouted in so
+unscrupulous a fashion.
+
+I took my old path over the golf-links till I reached the hollow where
+I always came when I wanted to be quite alone. I flung myself down on
+the soft, white, powdery sand, among the thin gray grasses, in the
+pallid starlight. My heart was surging with emotions, at once happy
+and desolating. I could not understand what had occurred; only I heard
+again and again the sound of my name, as it had come to me in that
+loved voice through the night.
+
+I lay there for a long time. I was crying, I think, but I did not know
+I was crying, though I kept wiping my tears away. I was unconscious
+of everything around me, I was blind and deaf, and it was only when
+I felt a hand on my shoulder that I looked up, startled, and saw
+Katherine bending over me.
+
+“Peter, what is the matter? Is it my fault?”
+
+Her voice was all gentleness; in her face a beautiful tenderness; but I
+could not speak.
+
+“It is nothing,” I stammered out at last. “Only I thought――you were
+never going to speak to me again, and――”
+
+“I was horrid. I can’t think now why I was so horrid. Forget about it,
+Peter dear, won’t you? Tell me you will.”
+
+“It was my fault,” I muttered. “It was all my fault.”
+
+“Never mind whose fault it was. Let us forget about it.”
+
+“I can’t forget,” I said. “It was my fault.”
+
+“But why――when I want you to? Can’t you forget, even if you know I love
+you?”
+
+I scrambled to my feet and stood facing her. “Do you really?” I
+faltered. “Don’t say it if――if it is not true.”
+
+“It is true.”
+
+“How is it true?” I asked. “How much? Do you love me as much as you
+love Gerald?”
+
+She hesitated, and it seemed to me that it was because she feared to
+wound me. “Yes,” she said at last, in a low voice. There was something
+that touched me, through all my longing and pain, in her desire to
+be perfectly honest. “Better than Gerald. Better than anybody,” she
+pursued, doubtfully, “better than anybody, I think, except mother.”
+
+I sighed; I could not help it.
+
+She looked at me sadly. “Why aren’t you content, Peter? Why do you
+always want more than I can give, when I have given you so much?”
+
+“And Owen?” I asked, though I was ashamed of myself for doing so.
+
+“I like Owen very much. I think he is very nice, but that is all. And
+now tell me you are content. I must go, and I shan’t be happy unless I
+know _you_ are.”
+
+“I am happy,” I lied most dismally. I saw indeed that it was all
+hopeless, and that she would never understand.
+
+“I will see you to-morrow. I can’t stay now; Gerald is waiting for me
+over at the Club House.”
+
+“Where were you when I looked for you?” I asked. “I heard you call my
+name, and I jumped off, but when I went to look for you, you were gone.”
+
+“Miss Dick was with us, and she wanted to go home; but we went round
+the other way――not by the sea. We had to go all the way back with Miss
+Dick, but I got Gerald to come out again, for I thought, I don’t know
+why, I might find you here. And I’m very glad I came. I couldn’t go on
+any longer without making it up. But I mustn’t really wait now. I told
+Gerald I should only be five minutes. Good-night, Peter. Come to-morrow
+morning.”
+
+“Good-night.”
+
+She was gone, and I was left alone to whatever felicity I might be able
+to discover.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LIV
+
+
+Of the days that followed our reconciliation I tried to make the most.
+Too much time already had been wasted and spoiled by clouds of jealousy
+and other troubles. I knew the kind of love Katherine offered me was
+very different from the kind of love I had desired, and in the old days
+dreamed of, but more than this I did not know, and some instinct kept
+me from trying to find out. We had become again such friends as we
+had been last year, and I lent myself to a certain protective quality
+in her affection for me, because I felt that it was in this way she
+could care for me most. From her point of view I knew that if I could
+have dropped back two or three years nearer to my childhood it would
+really have been preferable. She would have liked to pet me and tell me
+stories.
+
+What her brother thought of our quarrel, and of our making up again, I
+never heard. He gave no sign of having noticed anything. I had ceased,
+indeed, to see very much of him, for he had taken to knocking about
+the Club House and the hotel more and more. This left Katherine and
+me almost wholly to each other’s company. I saw her each morning,
+afternoon, and evening, and I moved through day after day in a kind of
+dream, as if this ideal life were to last for ever.
+
+One afternoon I went up to Derryaghy as usual, but the servant who
+answered the door told me Mrs. Carroll wished to see me, and when I was
+shown into the morning-room I found her there alone.
+
+“Oh, I wanted to speak to you, Peter,” she said. “Katherine is out with
+her mother, who arrived an hour ago. They went out after lunch.”
+
+I stared my surprise. “I didn’t know she was coming!” I murmured.
+
+“Neither did anybody else. She didn’t even send a telegram.”
+
+From her tone I gathered that Mrs. Carroll was not altogether pleased
+by this unexpected visit. “What has she come _for_?” I asked.
+
+“That’s just what I want you to tell me. The woman is raging with me,
+and now we’re alone we’d better have the whole matter out.”
+
+“But what matter?” I inquired innocently. “What have _I_ to do with it?”
+
+“Goodness knows! Sit down, child; I want to talk to you seriously....
+Miss Dick said something to me more than once, but Miss Dick is a
+perfect fool when it comes to questions of this kind, and I paid no
+attention to her.” She looked at me. “Don’t you understand? It is about
+Katherine――about you and Katherine. Mrs. Dale’s visit is the result of
+some letter which Katherine sent to her, and which I haven’t seen. How
+was I to imagine such things? I had always looked upon you as children,
+and now she arrives, simply furious, and accuses me of not looking
+after her daughter.”
+
+I had begun to blush.
+
+“Tell me exactly how much there is in it all?” Mrs. Carroll continued.
+“You are the only person who appears to have any common-sense.”
+
+“What does she say?” I asked ingenuously.
+
+“She says―― Oh! what doesn’t she say? She says she’s going to take
+Katherine home with her to-morrow, and that she thought she should have
+been able to trust me!”
+
+I looked at her helplessly, but made no reply.
+
+“I knew you liked Katherine,” Mrs. Carroll went on, “but it never
+occurred to me there was any particular reason why you shouldn’t like
+her――nor, indeed, do I see any now. They didn’t expect, I suppose, that
+she was going to spend all her time with a couple of old women like me
+and Miss Dick!” She paused. “You _are_ very fond of her, aren’t you?”
+
+“Yes,” I replied, as if I were repeating my catechism.
+
+“And apparently she is fond of you.”
+
+I shook my head. Then, as she looked at me interrogatively, “Not like
+that――not in the same way,” I murmured.
+
+Mrs. Carroll continued to regard me. “Not like what? What do you mean?”
+
+“She doesn’t even understand,” I pursued.
+
+Mrs. Carroll’s face altered, grew graver, though not less kind. “Then
+there _is_ something in it? You really care――very much?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“But――――” her perplexity seemed to increase.
+
+I waited, twirling my straw-hat on my knee, and only now and then
+glancing up. She eyed me thoughtfully. “You know it is all quite
+impossible,” she brought out slowly. “And you’re so ridiculously
+young!” For a moment she smiled. Then she put her hand sympathetically
+upon mine, which rested on the arm of my chair. Yet I could see she
+still more or less regarded the affair in the light of a sentimental
+fancy that would dissolve as quickly as dew under the sun.
+
+I got up. “I think I’ll go now,” I said, plucking at the ribbon of my
+hat.
+
+“I’ll not keep you, Peter, if you want to go. Remember, I’m not
+scolding you, or angry with you in any way,” she added. “As I told
+you, I see no reason why you shouldn’t be fond of Katherine. I can
+perfectly trust you. It is just that you are a boy, and of course such
+things can come to nothing so far as you are concerned; whereas, in
+Katherine’s case, and especially since she is a year older than you, it
+is quite different. Her mother probably has her eye on a husband for
+her already. That, I am afraid, is the secret of all this indignation.
+However, I’ve taken your part. I told her exactly what you are――that
+you are a gentleman, and would never do anything dishonourable; that
+a word would be enough; and that it was perfectly ridiculous to talk
+of taking Katherine home before the natural end of her visit, which
+will be on Friday or Saturday of this week. If she _does_ take her,
+not one of them shall ever enter this house again. That, at least, is
+certain. I’m not going to have any nonsense about it. Will you dine
+here to-night?”
+
+I shook my head.
+
+“Where are you going now?”
+
+“Out into the woods just.”
+
+She kissed me. “Well, whatever happens, I’ll promise that Katherine
+shan’t go without saying good-bye to you. Be a good boy, and come to
+see me to-morrow.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LV
+
+
+When I left Mrs. Carroll I did not go out at once, but scribbled first
+a note to Katherine, telling her I had gone to the summer-house, and
+should wait for her there all afternoon. I then went in search of Jim,
+who had always been my friend, and whom I could rely upon absolutely.
+I found him working with Thomas in the greenhouses, and, as soon as
+I could attract his attention, I beckoned him outside. He was a very
+different Jim from the one who had climbed a ladder to see my skin
+peeling off, though he had the same round rosy candid face, like a ripe
+russet apple, and though he still played doleful tunes on his flute.
+But he had developed amazingly: he had grown into a strapping big
+fellow, with limbs like a youthful Hercules. When I explained to him
+that I wanted him to give a note to Miss Dale, but that nobody must see
+him do it, he promised to try his best.
+
+I went on to the summer-house and lay down among the bracken close by.
+I had been there fully two hours before I saw Katherine coming. She
+smiled brightly as I rose from my ferny bed to greet her.
+
+“Why did I come without an umbrella?” she exclaimed gaily. “It’s just
+going to pour!” And she turned to look at the heavy clouds that were
+gliding up rapidly against the wind.
+
+“You can shelter in the summer-house,” I said, laconically.
+
+“I loathe summer-houses, especially when they’re like this old thing,
+crammed with earwigs and spiders.”
+
+“The rain is going to be heavy: you’d better come in now,” I went on,
+without attempting to emulate her lightness of manner. I dusted the
+rough seat for her with my pocket-handkerchief, in silence, just as the
+first big drops came pattering down on the leaves.
+
+She sat down, and I stood near the door, looking at her. “Mrs. Carroll
+told me your mother arrived to-day, because of some letter of yours
+about me.”
+
+Katherine coloured a little. “I know,” she answered, eagerly. “It’s
+awfully silly of mamma. I’ve been talking to her about it.”
+
+“And you are to go home at once――to-morrow――perhaps this evening.”
+
+She laughed. “Certainly not this evening. How could we? And at any
+rate, we should have been going in a few days. But I told mamma she was
+taking it all absurdly seriously, and behaving exactly like a furious
+parent in a novel.”
+
+“It is serious to me,” I said, quietly, “though to you it may be
+amusing.” That she should laugh in this way hurt me deeply.
+
+It had grown rapidly dark, and now a heavy rain began, cold and
+sad, sweeping through the trees, very soon making it plain that the
+summer-house was in need of repair. From the distance there came the
+crying of a sea-gull, a mournful, solitary note.
+
+“Don’t be angry with me, Peter,” said Katherine, coming to the door and
+looking out. “I know it was stupid of me to write, but I never dreamt
+of mamma coming over like this.... Why has it got so dark?”
+
+Before I could answer there came a blinding flash of lightning,
+accompanied, nearly instantaneously, by a hideous din of thunder,
+which seemed to burst out just over us. A blank silence succeeded this
+ear-splitting crash, and Katherine said, “Some tree must have gone!”
+
+“I wish it had been this summer-house,” I muttered bitterly.
+
+She looked at me, her face grown graver. The flash was followed by no
+other, but the rain continued in a fierce downpour, beating through our
+flimsy shelter, and streaming down the paths in brown muddy rivulets.
+
+“I can’t understand why mamma should have made such a fuss,” Katherine
+went on, but no longer in the same tone, though I knew well enough the
+alteration in it was due merely to what I had said. “She is usually
+very sensible.”
+
+“How can you be so indifferent?” I asked, in a rough voice, for her
+calmness exasperated me.
+
+“I’m not indifferent. I’m sorry I wrote. But we should have been going
+in three or four days, at any rate. You know that.” Her manner was
+tinged with a faint reproach.
+
+I answered nothing, and she went on. “It is getting lighter――the rain
+will soon be over.”
+
+“Do you want to go?” I asked furiously. “Don’t let me keep you if you
+do!”
+
+“Why do you speak like that, Peter? I told you I was sorry.”
+
+“This is the last time I shall see you alone.”
+
+“Nonsense.”
+
+“If you are going to-morrow, will you promise to meet me to-night
+somewhere――here――or on the golf-links?”
+
+“I can’t possibly. There are people coming to dinner. Won’t _you_
+come――or come in afterwards, at least?”
+
+“Shall I see you by yourself if I do?”
+
+“By myself?”
+
+“Will you come out here with me?”
+
+She sighed at my unreasonableness. “How can I? You know mamma and the
+others will be there, and how can I leave them? But say you’ll come.”
+
+“I certainly won’t,” I answered sullenly. “What does it matter to you
+whether I do or not?”
+
+I felt her lips touch my cheek. Her face was wet and cold with the
+rain. I put my arms round her very gently, and kissed her hair and
+her cheek, but no more than that, for I knew her own embrace had been
+given merely to console me, and because it was for the last time. Her
+dark eyes caressed me, and she smiled a little. She laid her hand on my
+shoulder. “Will you walk back to the house with me now, Peter? You are
+not angry with me?”
+
+“No,” I answered.
+
+“I can’t stay any longer, because mamma knows I came out, and she will
+suspect it was to meet you. She is not so bad about it as she was when
+she first arrived. I managed to convince her that she had been alarming
+herself unnecessarily.”
+
+“Very unnecessarily,” I thought, but I said nothing.
+
+I walked back with her, and then on down the drive and home.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LVI
+
+
+I was writing to Owen when my father brought me Katherine’s letter.
+It was to say good-bye to me, and there was a veiled reproach at my
+not having come to the station to see them off. She had looked out for
+me up to the last moment; so that in the end it was really I who had
+failed! I smiled dimly.
+
+As I write it now, in this quiet, gray, autumn morning, it appears to
+me that the thought then hovering at the back of my mind was, after
+all, not so very foolish. Death, coming without disease, without
+weakness, before life has grown stale, before illusions have been
+shattered and innocence marred;――simply upon the bright, fresh comedy
+of life, the dropping of a dark, rapid curtain.
+
+I finished my letter to Owen, and addressed it; but when that was done
+I still sat on at the table, holding my pen, on which the ink had long
+since dried. Then I bent down and leaned my forehead upon Katherine’s
+open letter. When I looked up the sun was shining in the garden, and
+shining in on me through the window; nothing had changed....
+
+In the afternoon I went up to Derryaghy, where Mrs. Carroll received
+me. I spoke quite quietly to her, just as usual; but all I remember now
+is that there were some red dahlias in a bowl on the table, and that
+Mrs. Carroll proposed taking me to Paris for my Christmas holidays.
+
+It was when I had left her and had gone out to walk in the woods, that
+I suddenly felt the full reality of what had happened. It meant that
+everything was finished, that I should never see Katherine again. I was
+filled with desolation, with a kind of sick feeling that my love had
+been superfluous, wasted, and perhaps distasteful. Last year I had been
+sorry to say good-bye to her; I had dreaded the new life opening out
+before me; but I had had the prospect of meeting her again at a year’s
+end, and the belief that she cared for me and would remember me. Now
+there was nothing――nothing.
+
+My grief was mingled with a kind of bitter, impotent rage against I
+knew not what. I kicked a stick that lay in my path savagely out of
+the way, cursing it under my breath. I flung myself down among the
+bracken. Sometimes a kind of blank would come into my mind, and I would
+find myself staring stupidly at the trees, while for a few moments an
+altogether different thought would slip into my brain; then my grief
+would overwhelm me once more, and blot out the world.
+
+But was this grief I felt? I do not know. It was different from what
+I felt later. It was something violent and maddening, sweeping over
+me in paroxysms, leaving me intervals of cold insensibility. And late
+that night, when, thoroughly wearied out, I went to bed, and from sheer
+exhaustion would be dropping off to sleep, from time to time it would
+pierce through my numbing senses, and waken me sharply, as if some one
+had violently pulled me, so that I would start up, yet for a moment not
+realize what it was that had wakened me.
+
+I did not go back to Derryaghy on the next day or the next. I took
+long walks, and it was during these solitary rambles that the thought
+of death came irresistibly to me. I felt that my life was become an
+intolerable burden, and in my inexperience I imagined that the pain I
+felt now I should feel always. I thought of shooting myself, of taking
+poison, only I disliked the idea of other people knowing. Was there
+not a better way? I thought of swimming out so far that it would be
+impossible to return, but I dreaded the pain of suffocation. Then, two
+days before my time for leaving home, and when Owen had written saying
+that they expected me and that he would be at the station to meet me,
+there came a night of wind and rain, and it seemed to me I had found
+the solution to my problem.
+
+Shortly before midnight, when my father’s snores had become deep and
+regular, I stole out of the house, as I had so often done in the old
+days of our club. I had put on my overcoat, but under it I wore only
+my night-shirt, and I hurried down the road and across the golf-links
+in the cold, driving rain. When I reached an exposed spot, I took off
+my coat and lay down on the soaking ground, letting the wind and rain
+sweep over me. I lay there till morning. It did not matter if I were
+seen returning to the house then; it would simply be thought that I had
+gone out for an early bathe. As I staggered to my feet my limbs were so
+stiff and cramped that at first I could hardly hobble along, but after
+I had gone a little way it became easier.
+
+I got into bed in my wet night-shirt, but I could not go to sleep. My
+head ached and I was shivering; yet a few minutes later I no longer
+felt cold; on the contrary, a burning heat seemed like a fire under my
+skin. I could not lie for two minutes without altering my position; and
+when I got up to dress I knew I was really ill. At breakfast I only
+pretended to eat. My father noticed there was something the matter and
+questioned me, when I answered that I was all right, and presently he
+left me to go to the school, which was being whitewashed and made ready
+for the re-opening next week. As for me, I was glad I should not have
+to repeat my experiment twice, and I had even a naïve curiosity as to
+the precise nature of my illness.
+
+Before night I began to feel much worse. My father went out to a
+meeting in connection with church matters, and I was left alone. I
+should have gone to bed, had not the task of climbing two flights of
+stairs and undressing appeared almost insurmountable; so I half sat,
+half lay, in a chair, with my eyes shut and my head leaning back. I was
+extremely thirsty, and at every breath I drew my side hurt me, the pain
+being increased by the fact that I had begun to cough a little. It had
+all come on so quickly that I wondered if I should die that night.
+
+When my father came in he immediately saw I was worse, and sent me to
+bed, giving me something hot to drink; but all that night I hardly
+slept, and in the morning he went for Doctor O’Brian. By that time
+I had almost forgotten the cause of my illness; what had led me to
+seek it; whether I desired it to be fatal or not. I was examined,
+stethoscoped, asked questions, gazed at. “Acute pneumonia.” I caught
+the words through a kind of lethargy into which I had fallen. They
+were talking together, my father and the doctor, but neither could
+understand how the disease had developed so rapidly....
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER LVII
+
+
+And, after all, I failed! I did not die. I got better, though not quite
+well, for my lungs remained delicate, and in October Mrs. Carroll took
+me to be examined by a specialist. I was examined, sounded, tapped, a
+sample of my blood taken, and other odious things done to me, before it
+was finally decided that I must go abroad. I listened to the discussion
+that followed, taking no part in it myself, but simply sitting on the
+sofa in the consulting-room.
+
+“For the winter, I suppose?”
+
+“For the winter certainly.”
+
+“And afterwards?”
+
+“Afterwards? I’m afraid it is impossible to say. There is no use making
+promises which may never be fulfilled. Would there be anything to
+prevent his living abroad always, supposing it should be the best thing
+for him?”
+
+“There is only the difficulty of his future――that is, of a profession.
+He was to have gone to Oxford next year.”
+
+“I see. It is certainly unfortunate. But apart from that, there is
+nothing?”
+
+“To prevent his living abroad? Not that I know of.”
+
+There were such things as tutors, it then appeared; young gentlemen
+of excellent scholastic attainments, just fresh from one or other
+of the Universities, who could be induced to combine the rôles of
+travelling-companion, mentor, and pedagogue.
+
+And on this hopeful note we came away. We had lunch in town, and
+caught the next train home. When we arrived at Newcastle we took
+one of the station cars. I was staying at Derryaghy to complete my
+convalescence; so Mrs. Carroll stopped at our house to give my father
+the news, telling me to drive on by myself. The October sunlight, still
+with a little of the warmth of summer in it, slanted through the trees,
+as I drove in at the lodge-gate. There was a charming autumnal languor
+in the still air――a kind of dreamy, happy beauty, which made me think
+of some verses of La Fontaine’s:――
+
+ “J’étais libre et vivais seul et sans amour;
+ L’innocente beauté des jardins et des jours
+ Allait faire à jamais le charme de ma vie.”
+
+And, far out on the dark sea, a white sail gleamed in the sun.
+
+The thought of leaving it all behind me, and of passing the rest of my
+life in exile, was too painful to dwell upon; yet I knew that, once I
+went away, I might very easily never be back. It had struck me that the
+doctor had been anything but optimistic, and I knew this meant that my
+chance must be a pretty poor one.
+
+I went upstairs to my own room. I sat down in my old window-seat and
+began a letter to Owen, which I did not finish, for it occurred to me
+that, later on, I might have more definite news to give him; and, at
+any rate, if I were going away, he must come down first to stay with
+me. With my incomplete letter before me I sat dreaming. I wondered
+if, in years to come, another boy would have this room as his own,
+and sit in this window-seat; and if his thoughts would for a moment
+perhaps touch mine? All _my_ thoughts would be dead then; my dreams
+vanished; the life that had unfolded here be gone out. A feeling of
+sadness stole over me. I had been a very little chap when I had first
+taken possession of this room. If the ghost of that little boy, who
+had been me, could only come back, how I should have hugged him! For I
+loved him: he seemed quite different from the “me” who was thinking
+about him now. Only he was gone, and just one person in the world knew
+anything about him, and he, too, I supposed, as years passed would
+forget....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Why are you sitting up here in the cold, child?”
+
+Mrs. Carroll had opened the door and was speaking to me. “How long have
+you been here? Come down to tea.”
+
+I looked round and saw that the room had filled with dusk. “Oh, not
+very long.” I smiled. “I’m not cold.” But I shivered slightly as I
+spoke.
+
+“That means you have been here ever since you came in. It is really
+very wrong of you, Peter. The fire is laid, and all you had to do was
+to put a match to it.”
+
+I followed her downstairs. There was no one in the drawing-room, and
+I was glad we were going to be by ourselves. I sat on the hearth-rug,
+hugging my knees, gazing into the red, glowing grate.
+
+“Is Miss Dick out?” I asked.
+
+“She went out to tea.”
+
+I waited till the servant had come in and cleared away the tea-things.
+Then I said, “I have something to tell you.”
+
+Mrs. Carroll, her plump, rather large hands moving swiftly and deftly
+amid soft, fleecy wool, was knitting what looked remarkably like an
+under-garment for me. “Yes, dear,” she replied.
+
+But instead of proceeding I asked a question: “Won’t it cost a great
+deal, my going away――with a tutor, and all that?”
+
+“Not very much. It is of no importance.”
+
+“But you will be paying for it, won’t you?” I urged.
+
+“My dear child, why do you want to discuss such things now?”
+
+“I have a reason.”
+
+“I don’t think it can be a good one.”
+
+“If I were related to you――if I were your nephew――it would be
+different.”
+
+“What would be different?”
+
+“If I were worth it it would be different too. But I’m not.”
+
+“Aren’t you?” Her needles clicked placidly.
+
+“Why should you think me so?”
+
+“Because, I suppose, from the days when you were quite a little boy,
+you have been the principal thing I have had to think about. There was
+a time when I tried very hard, and very selfishly, I’m afraid, to be
+allowed to look after you altogether, when I wanted this house to be
+your home.”
+
+“Suppose I told you that all this――all my illness――was not accidental?”
+
+Mrs. Carroll displayed no alarm. “I don’t know what you mean, Peter,
+I’m sure,” she said, gently, disengaging her ball of wool from Miss
+Dick’s cat, who had stretched out a tentative paw.
+
+“I mean that I did it myself,” I answered, bringing it all out at last.
+“I did it on purpose.... I wanted to die, to kill myself, and I thought
+of this way. I went out and lay on the golf-links one whole night, in
+the rain, with nothing on but my night-shirt; and next morning I took
+ill.”
+
+Mrs. Carroll said nothing, but she had stopped knitting. I felt her
+hand rest on my head.
+
+“Is that true, Peter?” she asked at last, after a long pause, and in a
+low voice.
+
+“It’s true.” I stared into the fire.
+
+She was again silent, but she did not draw away her hand. “Why did you
+do this?” she asked presently.
+
+“Because I felt miserable.”
+
+“But――but it was a dreadful thing to do! Don’t you know that?” Her
+voice trembled slightly.
+
+I got on my knees. I put my arms round her neck and pressed my
+cheek against hers. “I have spoiled everything, I made a mess of
+everything,” I muttered quickly. “I am not very old, but I have made a
+mess of any life I have had.”
+
+She drew my head down on her breast and held me close. For some time
+she did not speak.
+
+“It will all come right, if you try,” she said at last. “The beginning
+is not everything.”
+
+“It is not for myself I care. It is for you.”
+
+“For me, then.” She paused. “But for me you are what you have always
+been and always will be, since I have no boy of my own. You are my son,
+the one being whom I love. Your future is what I think of and make
+plans for; and whenever I pray it is that you may be happy.”
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ _Wyman & Sons Ltd., Printers, London and Reading._
+
+
+
+
+ SELECTIONS FROM
+ MR. EDWARD ARNOLD’S
+ LIST OF
+ NEW AND RECENT BOOKS
+
+
+ NEW FICTION
+
+Bella. _By EDWARD CHARLES BOOTH, Author of “The Cliff End,” “The
+Doctor’s Lass,” etc. 6s._
+
+A story of life at Spathorpe――perhaps the most beautiful and attractive
+of all the watering-places on the English East Coast. Rupert Brandor, a
+young and wealthy man, and a poet with some pretension to fame, comes
+to Spathorpe to spend a few weeks of the season. Under rather amusing
+circumstances he makes the acquaintance on the beach of a young and
+very fascinating little girl, by name Bella Dysart, who is staying
+with her mother at Cromwell Lodge――a large and well-known villa on the
+esplanade. Bella’s personal charm and the unsophisticated frankness
+of her disposition win the poet’s interest and affection. Shortly he
+makes the acquaintance of Mrs. Dysart, and with her enters the new, and
+deeper, and more dangerous element into the poet’s story. As the days
+go by, the poet and Bella and Mrs. Dysart draw into a closer circle of
+friendship. Meanwhile, they have come to be noted by Spathorpe’s busy
+eyes. This beautiful woman and her scarcely less beautiful daughter,
+and the handsome boy, attract a large measure of public notice; and the
+inevitable whispers arise. Mrs. Dysart’s reputation suffers tarnish;
+her acquaintance with the poet is construed according to the canons of
+the world. Their uncloaked intimacy acquires the character of scandal.
+From this point onward the action of the story accelerates. In the
+final chapters it is a study in temptation, and the story occupies
+itself with the youthful and poetic temperament under influence of
+seductive womanly beauty and the counter-influences of a pure and
+girlish friendship.
+
+
+Following Darkness. _By FORREST REID. 6s._
+
+A study of boyhood and adolescence. The hero is the son of a National
+schoolmaster in a village on the north coast of Ireland, and the
+contrast of temperaments between father and son is from the beginning
+strongly marked. A domestic tragedy having culminated in the
+disappearance of his mother, the boy becomes the protégé of a wealthy
+lady living in the neighbourhood. Her influence, and still more the
+influence of her surroundings, of the house above all, which occupies
+a distinct place in the story, tend to widen still further the breach
+between him and his father. The advent of this lady’s niece, a charming
+girl who comes on a visit, and by her presence transforms everything,
+introduces the element of romance, and is the prelude to a story of
+first love, really the central theme of the book.
+
+
+ _BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+The Bracknels. A Family Chronicle. 6s.
+
+“A work of rare distinction.”――_Daily News._
+
+“An admirable novel, from which one has had no ordinary amount of
+pleasure.”――_Manchester Guardian._
+
+
+The Soul of Unrest. _By EMILY JENKINSON, Author of “Silverwool,” etc.
+6s._
+
+In her new book, “The Soul of Unrest,” Miss Jenkinson amply fulfils
+the promise shown in her first novel, “Silverwool,” which was so
+favourably received by the public two years ago. Here once again the
+author delineates her various characters with great sympathy and
+understanding, while her descriptions of their environment is marked by
+that quiet strength and charm which so distinguished her earlier work.
+
+
+Tinker’s Hollow. _By Mrs. F. E. CRICHTON, Author of “The Soundless
+Tide,” “Peep-in-the-World,” etc. 6s._
+
+The story moves in a Presbyterian village in Co. Antrim, in Victorian
+days. Here Sally Bruce’s childhood is passed amid the kindly austerity
+of old servants and an elderly uncle and aunts. Her acquaintance with
+the Beausires, an old Huguenot family settled in the same county,
+leads to the discovery of a kindred spirit in Anthony, the last of the
+line. Their few meetings are the only outward events of her life, and
+one spring morning in the Tinker’s Hollow they realize their love for
+each other. Their lives throughout are interwoven with those of the
+Irish country people――Rachael, the old nurse, Mrs. McGovern of the
+post-office, and the unhappy young school-mistress, Esther Conway.
+
+
+ _BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+The Soundless Tide. _6s._
+
+“The book is one to be really read, and by most people to be really
+loved.”――_Morning Post._
+
+“Here is a wholly delightful novel written by a delightful personality.
+This story will be read and re-read, and there is much wisdom in
+it.”――_British Weekly._
+
+
+Tante. _By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK, Author of “Franklin Kane,” “Valérie
+Upton,” etc. 6s. Fifth Impression._
+
+“I stand amazed by the qualities of the author’s genius. She really
+can create characters, quite original, and, as it were, not fanciful,
+not fantastic, but solid samples of human nature. When one lights on
+something really good in contemporary fiction one has pleasure in
+saying how excellent one finds the rarity.”――Mr. ANDREW LANG in the
+_Illustrated London News_.
+
+
+The Ministry of Poll Poorman. _By Lt.-Col. D. C. PEDDER. 6s._
+
+“A very interesting book, original, strong, and conclusive.”――_Morning
+Post._
+
+“A quarter of a century ago such a book as this would scarcely have
+been written or read; but the advance in ideas will cause this
+account to be not only acceptable, but highly attractive to most
+readers.”――_Daily Telegraph._
+
+
+ TRAVEL AND WAR
+
+Campaigns of a War Correspondent. _By MELTON PRIOR. Illustrated from
+the author’s sketches. One volume, 15s. net._
+
+The late Melton Prior was undoubtedly the most experienced as well
+as one of the most gifted artist war correspondents of his time. He
+represented the _Illustrated London News_ in the field for thirty years.
+
+
+The Holy War in Tripoli. _By G. F. ABBOTT, Author of “A Tale of a Tour
+in Macedonia.” With Illustrations and Maps. 15s. net._
+
+This volume is a record of first-hand impressions. Mr. Abbott spent
+about four months with the Turco-Arab warriors in the desert outside
+Tripoli, shared their hardships, and entered into their spirit as only
+a European can who is already familiar with the East and its peoples.
+
+
+The Passing of the Manchus. _By PERCY H. KENT, Author of “Railway
+Enterprise in China.” With Illustrations and Maps. 15s. net._
+
+This important book will throw a flood of light upon the intricate
+and mysterious chain of events that have disorganized China since the
+abdication of the child-Emperor. Mr. Kent has resided in Tientsin
+for many years, and has had unrivalled facilities for acquiring
+information, which he has turned to the best advantage.
+
+
+Germany and the Next War (“Deutschland und der Nächste Krieg”). _By
+General F. VON BERNHARDI. With Map. 10s. 6d. net._
+
+This book has caused a great sensation in Germany, where it has passed
+through many editions in a very short time.
+
+
+A Staff-Officer’s Scrap-Book during the Russo-Japanese War. _By General
+Sir IAN HAMILTON, G.C.B., D.S.O. With all the original Maps and Plans.
+New and Popular Edition. 7s. 6d. net._
+
+
+ SPORT
+
+The Trinity Foot Beagles. A History of the famous Cambridge University
+Hunt. _Compiled by F. C. KEMPSON. With numerous Illustrations. 10s. 6d.
+net._
+
+This history of the Trinity Beagles, with which so many sportsmen and
+public men first learned the handling of hounds, should appeal to an
+unusually wide circle, especially at a time when the sport of hunting
+the hare afoot is so much on the increase.
+
+
+ _A SUMPTUOUS EDITION IN TWO VOLUMES_
+
+Handley Cross; or, Mr. Jorrocks’s Hunt. _By R. S. SURTEES. With 24
+Plates in Colour and 100 Black-and-White Illustrations by CECIL ALDIN.
+Edition de Luxe, £3 3s. net; General Edition, £1 1s. net._
+
+
+Shipmates. _by A. E. LOANE. 6s._
+
+“Shipmates” gives the social and service history of a characteristic
+group of naval officers who were born between Trafalgar and Navarino.
+
+
+Jock Scott, Midshipman: His Log. _By “AURORA.” Illustrated by S. VALDA.
+5s. net._
+
+
+Wellington’s Army. _By C. W. OMAN, Chichele Professor of Modern History
+at Oxford. With Illustrations, 7s. 6d. net._
+
+
+Walking Essays. _By ARTHUR HUGH SIDGWICK. 5s. net._
+
+Walking is viewed in its relation to other pursuits, to sport and
+athletics, to hygiene, to music and dancing, to eating and drinking,
+and in its effect on the mind.
+
+
+The Perfect Gentleman. _By HARRY GRAHAM, Author of “Ruthless Rhymes
+from Heartless Homes.” Illustrated by LEWIS BAUMER. 6s. Second
+Impression._
+
+
+Memories of Victorian London. _By Mrs. L. B. WALFORD, Author of “Mr.
+Smith,” “Recollections of a Scottish Novelist,” etc. One Volume. 12s.
+6d. net._
+
+Mrs. Walford, in this volume of “Memories,” deals with certain aspects
+of London social life during the latter part of the last century. Her
+anecdotes are excellently fresh and pointed; and, told in the manner
+which delighted readers of “Mr. Smith” and “The Baby’s Grandmother,”
+cannot fail to attract and charm them once again.
+
+
+Old Days and Ways. _By JANE CONNOLLY. 6s._
+
+
+The English Housewife of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century. _By
+ROSE BRADLEY. With Illustrations. 12s. 6d. net._
+
+Miss Bradley is a daughter of the late Dean of Westminster and sister
+of Mrs. Woods, the well-known novelist.
+
+
+An African Year. _By CULLEN GOULDSBURY. With Illustrations. 5s. net._
+
+In “An African Year” the author has endeavoured to depict, month by
+month, the domestic side of life on the Outer Fringe of Colonization,
+disregarding the heavier political questions, avoiding the weightier
+matters of ethnology and native social problems, and laying stress
+rather upon the theme that women as well as men may find a congenial
+place in the frontier life, provided that they are of the right calibre.
+
+
+The Life of an Elephant. _By SIR S. EARDLEY-WILMOT, K.C.I.E., Author of
+“Forest Life and Sport in India.” With nearly 150 Illustrations. 7s.
+6d. net._
+
+A companion volume to the same author’s “Life of a Tiger,” which was
+such a success when published a year ago.
+
+
+The Autobiography and Life of Father Tyrrell. _By MAUD PETRE. With
+numerous Illustrations. Two Volumes. 21s. net._
+
+The chief aim of the writer has been to describe the part which Father
+Tyrrell played in the “modernist” movement, and the successive stages
+of his mental development as he brought his scholastic training to bear
+on the modern problems that confronted him.
+
+
+Through Facts to Faith. _By the Rev. J. M. THOMPSON, Fellow and Dean
+of Divinity, Magdalen College, Oxford; Author of “Miracles of the New
+Testament.” 3s. 6d. net._
+
+These lectures form a constructive sequel to the critical argument
+of the author’s previous book. Not retracting a word of his former
+contentions, Mr. Thompson tries to show that the essence of the
+Christian faith is not weakened, but strengthened, by accepting the
+conclusions of historical and scientific criticism.
+
+
+Politics and Religion. _By the Rev. GABRIEL GILLETT. 3s. 6d. net._
+
+
+The Church and Nonconformity. _By the Ven. J. H. GREIG, Archdeacon of
+Worcester. 3s. 6d. net._
+
+
+Ten Great and Good Men. _By Dr. H. MONTAGU BUTLER, Master of Trinity
+College, Cambridge. New and Cheaper Edition. 3s. 6d. net._
+
+
+Across the Bridges. _A Study of Social Life in South London. By
+ALEXANDER PATERSON. Cloth, 2s. net; paper, 1s. net._
+
+“An extraordinarily valuable book on the life of the children of the
+poor in South London. In its way it is the most remarkable work seen
+for years.”――_Evening News._
+
+
+Darling Dogs. _By Mrs. M. L. WILLIAMS, Author of “A Manual of Toy
+Dogs.” Illustrated. 5s. net._
+
+
+The Graven Palm. A Manual of the Science of Palmistry. _By Mrs.
+ROBINSON. With about 250 Original Illustrations. 10s. 6d. net._
+
+
+Scottish Gardens. _By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart. With
+32 Coloured Plates from Pastel Drawings by Miss M. G. W. WILSON. New
+Edition. 7s. 6d. net._
+
+
+The Cottage Homes of England. _Drawn by HELEN ALLINGHAM and Described
+by STEWART DICK. Containing 64 Coloured Plates. 8vo. (9½ in. by 7 in.),
+21s. net. Also a limited Edition de Luxe, 42s. net._
+
+
+The Sport of Shooting. _By OWEN JONES. With Illustrations, 10s. 6d.
+net._
+
+
+The Dudley Book of Cookery and Household Recipes. _By GEORGIANA,
+COUNTESS OF DUDLEY. Handsomely bound, 7s. 6d. net. Fourth Impression._
+
+
+Common-Sense Cookery. _By Colonel A. KENNEY-HERBERT. Over 500 pages.
+Illustrated. 6s. net._
+
+
+ _BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+Fifty Breakfasts, _2s. 6d._
+
+Fifty Luncheons, _2s. 6d._
+
+Fifty Dinners, _2s. 6d._
+
+
+LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes:
+
+ ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+ ――Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
+
+ ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
+
+ ――Inconsistent hyphenation and compound words were made consistent only
+ when a predominant form was found.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75675 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75675 ***</div>
+
+
+<figure class="figcenter x-ebookmaker-drop" id="cover_sm">
+ <img src="images/cover_sm.jpg" alt="book cover" title="book cover">
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1 class="nobreak">FOLLOWING<br>
+DARKNESS</h1>
+
+<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
+
+<p class="noi author">FORREST REID</p>
+
+<p class="noi works">AUTHOR OF “THE BRACKNELS,” ETC.</p>
+
+<div class="p2 poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry2">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent4">“Lost, lost, for ever lost,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">In the wide pathless desert of dim sleep,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">That beautiful shape!”</div>
+ <div class="right smcap">Shelley.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2 noi adauthor">LONDON</p>
+
+<p class="noi adauthor">EDWARD ARNOLD</p>
+
+<p class="noi adauthor">1912</p>
+
+<p class="noi works">[<i>All Rights Reserved</i>]</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="noic">TO E. M. F.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">LIST OF CHAPTERS</h2>
+
+<p class="noic"><a href="#DARKNESS">FOLLOWING DARKNESS</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_L">CHAPTER L</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LI">CHAPTER LI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LII">CHAPTER LII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LIII">CHAPTER LIII</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LIV">CHAPTER LIV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LV">CHAPTER LV</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LVI">CHAPTER LVI</a><br>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_LVII">CHAPTER LVII</a><br></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="DARKNESS">FOLLOWING DARKNESS</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is not without some hesitation that I offer to the public
+the following fragment of an autobiography, even though
+in doing so I am but obeying the obvious intention of its
+author. When the papers of Mr. Peter Waring came into
+my possession I had indeed no idea of its existence, and
+I have now no means of telling when it was written. The
+fact that he left it unfinished proves nothing. He may
+have begun it and abandoned it years ago: he may have
+been working at it shortly before his death. That he
+intended to carry it to completion, there is, I think, abundant
+evidence in a mass of detached notes and impressions
+bearing on a later period of his life. These, rightly or
+wrongly, I have not printed, partly because the earlier
+portion has in itself a certain unity and completeness,
+which would be marred were I to add anything to it, and
+partly because they never received his personal revision.
+Moreover, many of them are in the highest degree fantastic
+and exotic, so that it is at times difficult to take them
+literally, especially if the simplicity and directness of the
+earlier pages be borne in mind.</p>
+
+<p>Those who are familiar with Mr. Waring’s writings published
+during his lifetime—writings in which the personal
+element is so slight—will hardly be prepared for anything
+so intimate as this journal. His critical methods were
+entirely scientific. Of their value I am not the proper
+person to speak, having neither the necessary knowledge,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
+nor, to tell the whole truth, the necessary sympathy. Our
+paths, if they seemed to run parallel for a moment, diverged
+very early in life, and I could never take much interest in
+the work to which he devoted his real, though, I venture
+to think, somewhat narrow gifts. He was still a young
+man—barely thirty-six—when he died, but he had already
+become eminent in his own particular line, that of the
+newer art criticism, invented, I believe, by the Italian,
+Morelli. It was scarcely a career to bring him much under
+the public eye, but his “Study of the Drawings of the
+Early Italian Masters” gained him, I understand, the recognition
+of a small number of persons, of various nationalities,
+occupied in making similar researches. He was busy with
+the proofs of the second and larger edition of this work
+when, on the 10th of September, 1911, he died under tragic
+circumstances. The mystery of his death, about which
+there was some noise in the papers at the time, will, I think,
+never now be cleared up, though, to my own mind, it is
+perfectly clear that he was murdered.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In relation to the autobiography, a word or two of
+comment and explanation is possibly due to the reader.
+To begin with, I have altered all the proper names save
+two—my own, and that of Mrs. Carroll, of Derryaghy,
+Newcastle, County Down, his oldest friend, which I have
+allowed to remain. I feel this, myself, to be unsatisfactory,
+but I cannot see how at present it is to be avoided. Again,
+though I have added nothing, I have left out a few pages—only
+a few—and none, I believe, of importance, so far as
+the understanding of the whole is concerned. For this I
+have no excuse to offer, except that it seemed to me that
+he himself should have omitted them.</p>
+
+<p>In the main the portrait he has given of himself coincides
+with my own impression of him in early life. I can remember
+very well when I first came to know him at school.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span>
+I was more struck by his gifts then, perhaps, than I was
+later, though even at that time he seemed to me to be
+intensely one-sided. He was very intelligent, but from the
+beginning his whole manner of looking upon life was, in
+my opinion, unfortunate. It may sound harsh to say
+so, but as the years passed I do not think he improved.
+Latterly, he appeared to me to have little but his fine taste.
+It was as if everything had become subservient to an
+æsthetic sense, which was extraordinarily, morbidly acute.
+Yet even while I write this I have a suspicion that I am
+not doing him justice. If he had been nothing but what
+I say he was, I should not be able to look back with tenderness
+upon the friendship of those early days, whereas the
+recollection of that friendship will always remain one of
+the pleasantest memories of my life. I regret that it should
+have been broken, but that was almost inevitable. It
+came about slowly and naturally, though no doubt the
+actual break was hastened by a mutual friend of ours, who
+informed me that Waring had described me as borné and
+tedious. That is the kind of thing which rankles. You
+may say to yourself it is of no consequence, but to have
+an uneasy feeling that your friend finds your company dull
+quickly becomes unendurable. A man would rather be
+thought almost anything than a bore; hence it was that
+for a long time I entirely ceased to see him. I regret it
+now, for he may never have made the fatal remark, and
+even if he did, judging from his journal, it need not have
+been inconsistent with affection.</p>
+
+<p>The last time I saw him was at Mrs. Carroll’s house,
+about a year before his death. She had asked me down,
+I suppose by Waring’s request, and I went, though I stayed
+only one night. I had not seen him for years until this
+occasion, and I was struck, and even shocked, by his altered
+appearance, and still more by his manner, which was that,
+I imagined, of a man haunted by some secret thought that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
+has come between him and everything about him. This
+impression, though I do not desire to lay stress upon it,
+may throw a light on certain of the later notes I have not
+printed, and these, in turn, may afford some clue as to the
+mystery surrounding his death, for it is evident that he
+had come under the influence of strange and disreputable
+persons, who professed to experiment in occult sciences—spiritualism,
+and even magic. His hair had turned quite
+white at the temples. He seemed restless and dissatisfied;
+and, whatever else he may have found in his long wanderings,
+I could not believe he had found peace.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the evening we sat together. He was so silent
+that I looked at him to see if he had fallen asleep. The
+room we were sitting in—the morning-room—gave on to
+a garden at the side of the house, into which one could
+easily pass through tall French windows. The night was
+warm, and one of these windows stood wide open, letting
+in the scent of flowers, but with a curtain drawn across it
+to keep out moths and other winged creatures attracted
+by lamplight. I did not speak, but waited for him to talk
+or to keep silent as he chose. After a while I got up to
+examine a few black-framed etchings that hung upon the
+walls. These, with some pieces of china, formed the only
+decorations. I drew back the curtain and looked out into
+the night. The moon was high above the trees, and I
+could hear the low sound of waves breaking on the shore.
+When I turned round he was watching me, and I was struck
+by his expression, which was that of a man on the point
+of making some very private communication. But perhaps
+my sudden movement disconcerted him, for he said
+nothing, and in a little I could see the impulse had left
+him. I began to talk, not of my own work, which I thought
+would have no interest for him, but of his, which I was
+surprised to find he seemed to regard as equally unimportant.
+I asked him what had first led him to take it up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
+
+<p>“There was nothing else,” he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that I waited for him to go on, he made an effort
+to shake off his abstraction. “If I hadn’t found it I should
+have bored myself to death. What is there for a boy of
+eighteen, with no taste for society, and left to wander about
+Europe alone, to do? Fortunately, I had always cared
+for pictures, and early Italian art appealed to me particularly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, you had your writing.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never wrote a line except to take notes. I was nearly
+thirty before it occurred to me to publish anything. Even
+then, it was only for a few pedants more or less like myself
+that I wrote. My writings are of no account. The only
+people I can imagine it pleasant to write for are quite young
+people. They might lend your work a sort of charm by
+reading their own youth and enthusiasm into it. But it
+is not easy to arouse enthusiasm by describing how Bernardino
+de’ Conti paints ears, or how Pontormo models
+hands. For one thing, nobody wants to know. All that
+it leads to is that presently you find yourself approaching
+the most innocent work of art with the mind of a detective,
+revelling in clues and the æsthetically unimportant. Nine-tenths
+of your enjoyment comes from the gratified sense of
+your own ingenuity. Of course it is wrong. When I was
+a boy I fell in love with one of Giotto’s frescoes in the Upper
+Church at Assisi, a thing half-peeled from the wall, and
+representing Saint Francis preaching to the birds. But
+why I liked it had nothing in the world to do either with
+Giotto or Saint Francis. I simply saw a bit of decoration,
+a Japanese print in gray and blue.... That is the proper
+spirit. One day, however, a year or so later, I was in
+the Louvre, in the Salle des Primitifs, and before me was
+a beautiful little picture which hangs on the side wall, near
+the door. Below it was printed an artist’s name, Gentile
+da Fabriano. I looked at the picture again, and I said to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
+myself, ‘Why Gentile, when it is obviously by Jacopo
+Bellini?’ That was the beginning.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t think, then, it matters very much?”</p>
+
+<p>“About Gentile? Not in the least. I haven’t even
+persuaded them to make the alteration in the catalogue.”</p>
+
+<p>But I could see he was talking merely not to be silent,
+so I got up and we lit our candles. At the top of the
+staircase I said good-night, for our bedrooms were on
+opposite sides of the house, but he pushed open a door.
+“There is a picture here,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>I followed him into the big, dark room, black shadows
+that seemed almost solid gliding away before us. He took
+my candle and held both up so that their light flickered
+across a small canvas that hung just above the level of our
+eyes. The painting represented the head of a quite young
+girl, and I recognised it at once as a portrait of Katherine
+Dale. I am no judge of pictures, so I will only say that
+this picture gave me pleasure. Yet I should have hesitated
+to call the face beautiful, and it certainly was not pretty.
+It reminded me rather of an early Millais—that is to say,
+the subject reminded me of a Millais type. There was the
+same breadth of forehead, the same rich colouring and
+steadfast, serious eyes that were more like the eyes of a
+boy than of a girl. I wondered why he had brought me
+in to look at it just now, and thought it had perhaps been
+painted by a celebrated artist.</p>
+
+<p>“Whose is it?” I asked, and was greatly surprised
+when he told me he had done it himself, from memory.
+I had never seen any of his work before, and I congratulated
+him on his success, which seemed to me to be really
+a genuine one. I asked another question, but he did not
+reply. He merely returned me my candle, which I held up
+for another look. The small, wavering, uncertain flame
+lent a curious air of life to the portrait, and I continued
+to regard it, for the frankness and simplicity of the young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
+face gave me great pleasure. When I glanced round I
+discovered I was alone. My companion had disappeared
+without my noticing it, and evidently he had gone out, not
+by the way we had entered, but by another door at the
+farther end of the room. That this was the case I had
+more positive proof next moment, for a sudden draught
+extinguished my candle so swiftly and unexpectedly that
+I had an odd feeling that somebody had stolen up behind
+me and blown it out.</p>
+
+<p class="right smcap">Owen Gill.<br></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>What is there in this house, in these surroundings, so
+utterly different from those I was born amongst, that
+revives a swarm of memories of my childhood and youth?
+My notes are piled up on the table before me, they have
+been there for several days, and I have not touched them,
+though I came here to work. A warm Italian sun floods
+the stiff and formal garden stretching from my window,
+with its pale paved walks, its fountain, and dark cypress-trees;
+but when I shut my eyes, it is quite another garden
+that I see, and now, when I have at last taken up my pen
+to write, it is not to fulfil the task I had set myself, but to
+chatter idly of a boyhood passed under other skies, grayer,
+softer, and colder. The odd fact is that ever since my
+arrival here, in spite of my being upon “classic soil,” in a
+district rich in historical suggestion, and full, too, of the
+colour and odour of the south, I have been communing
+daily, hourly almost, with my own youth. I should like
+to set down simply what that youth was, without embroidery,
+without suppression, though, on the other hand,
+a mere bald enumeration of the outward facts will be little
+to my purpose. The facts in themselves are nothing.
+Unless I can recapture the spirit that hovered behind them,
+my task will have been fruitless, and even though in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
+effort to do so I shall probably accentuate it, alter it, clip
+its wings and make it heavy, yet that must be my aim if
+I am to write at all. I have little eloquence, and perhaps
+no power of evocation, but the whole great, soft, time-toned
+picture is before me at this moment, and I cannot
+resist the temptation to linger over it. If I linger over it
+pen in hand, what matter?</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the foreground there must be the portrait of a boy,
+but painted in the manner of Rembrandt rather than
+Bronzino. By this I mean there will be less of firm, clear
+outline, than of light and shadow. The danger is that in
+the end there may be too much shadow; but at least I
+shall not, in the manner of a writer of fiction, have sacrificed
+my subject for the sake of gaining an additional brightness
+and vivacity. The spirit of youth is not merely bright and
+vivacious; above all, it is not merely thoughtless and noisy.
+It is melancholy, dreamy, passionate; it is admirable, and
+it is base; it is full of curiosity; it is healthy, and it is
+morbid; it is animal, and it is spiritual; sensual, yet filled
+with vague half-realised yearnings after an ideal—that is
+to say, it is the spirit of life itself, which can never be
+adequately indicated by the description of a fight or of a
+football match.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Of my earliest childhood I can form no consecutive picture;
+I shall therefore pass over it quickly. Certain incidents
+stand out with extraordinary vividness, but the chain
+uniting them is wanting, and it is even impossible for me
+to be quite sure as to the order in which they occurred.
+Some are so trivial that I do not know why I should remember
+them; others, at the time, doubtless, more important,
+have now lost their significance; and countless others,
+again, I must have completely forgotten. But it occurs
+to me, on looking back deliberately, that I have changed
+very little from what I was in those first years. I have
+developed, but what I was then I am now, what I cared
+for then I care for now. In other words, like everybody
+else, I came into this world a mere bundle of inherited
+instincts, for the activity of which I was no more responsible
+than for the falling of last night’s rain.</p>
+
+<p>Of the dawning of consciousness I have no recollection
+whatever. Back farther than anything else there reach
+two impressions—one, of being set to dance naked on a
+table, amid the laughter of women, and the rhythmic
+clapping of their hands; the other, probably later in date,
+of what must have been a house-cleaning, stamped on my
+mind by an inexplicable fear of those flakey collections of
+dust which gather under furniture that has not been moved
+for a long time. By then I had certainly learned to talk,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
+for those flakes of dust I called “quacks.” I do not know
+where the name came from, nor why I should have disliked
+“quacks,” but they affected me with a strange dread, and
+here was a whole army of them where I had never seen but
+one or two. Some stupid person running after me with
+a broom pretended to sweep them over me, and I started
+bawling at the top of my voice. Then, for consolation, I
+was lifted up to bury my nose in a bowl of violets, and the
+colour and sweetness of the flowers took away my trouble.
+Probably it was later than this that I first became aware
+of a peculiar sensibility to dress—not to underclothing, but
+to my outer garments. To be dressed in a new suit of
+clothes gave me a curious physical pleasure—a feeling purely
+sensual, and that must, I imagine, have been connected
+with the dawn of obscure sex instincts. Such things can
+be of little interest save to the student of psychology, and
+it would be tedious to catalogue them in full, but I have
+no doubt myself that if they, and others, had been intelligently
+observed, the whole of my future could have been
+cast from them. To me, I confess, they throw a disquieting
+light upon all human affairs, reviving that sombre figure
+of destiny which overshadowed the antique world.</p>
+
+<p>Another and happier instinct which I brought with me
+from the unknown was an intense sympathy with animals.
+There was not a cat or dog or goat or donkey in the village
+that I had not struck up a friendship with. I even carried
+this sympathy so far as to insist on feeding daily the ridiculous
+stone lions which flanked the doorsteps at Derryaghy
+House. I don’t think I ever actually believed that their
+morning meal of stale bread gave much pleasure to these
+patient beasts, and I had with my own eyes seen sparrows
+and thrushes—who very soon came to look out for me—snatch
+it from them before my back was turned; still, I
+persevered, stroking their smooth backs, kissing their cold
+muzzles, just as I lavished depths of affection on a stuffed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
+dilapidated, velvet elephant who for many years was my
+nightly bed-fellow.</p>
+
+<p>My only impressions of my mother go back to those days
+or, possibly, earlier—a voice singing gay songs to the piano,
+while I dropped asleep in my bed upstairs—and then,
+again, somebody lifting me out of this bed to kiss me, the
+close contact of a face wet with tears, the pressure of arms
+that held me clasped tightly, that even hurt a little. That
+is all. I cannot remember how she looked, or anything
+else. On the evening when she said good-bye to me and
+left our house, I knew she was crying, but, though it called
+up in me a sort of solemn wonder, I did not understand it,
+and went to sleep almost as soon as she put me back into
+my bed. It was not till next day that my own tears came,
+with the first real sorrow I had known.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>There follows now a sort of blank in my recollections,
+which continues on to my ninth or tenth year. I do not
+know why this period should have been so unproductive
+of lasting impressions. It is like a tranquil water over
+which I bend in the hope of seeing some face or vision
+ripple to the surface, but my hope is disappointed. Nothing
+emerges—not even a memory of any of those ailments,
+measles and what not, from which, in common with other
+children, I suppose I must have suffered. Nor can I
+recollect learning to read. I can remember quite well
+when I couldn’t read, for I have a very distinct recollection
+of lying on my stomach, on the parlour floor, a book open
+in front of me, along whose printed, meaningless lines I
+drew my finger, turning page after page till the last was
+reached, though what solemn pleasure I could have got
+from so dull a game—surely the most tedious ever invented—I
+now utterly fail to comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>I was always very fond of being read to, except when
+the story had a moral, or was about pious children, when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
+I hated it. The last of these moral tales I listened to was
+called “Cassy.” I particularly disliked it, but I can remember
+now only one scene, where Cassy comes into an
+empty house at night, and discovers a corpse there.
+This had an effect on my mind which for several days
+made me extremely reluctant to go upstairs by myself after
+dark. “Jessica’s First Prayer,” “Vinegar Hill,” “The
+Golden Ladder”—how I loathed them all! Every Sunday,
+after dinner, my father would take some such volume from
+the shelf, open it, and put on his spectacles. Holding the
+book at a long distance from his eyes, he would read aloud
+in a monotonous, unanimated voice, while I sat on a high-backed
+chair and listened, for I was not allowed to play
+the most innocent game, nor even to go out for a walk.
+These miserable tales were full of the conversions of priggish
+children; of harrowing scenes in public-houses or squalid
+city dens. Some of them were written to illustrate the
+Ten Commandments; others to illustrate the petitions in
+the Lord’s Prayer. They contained not the faintest glimmer
+of imagination or life: from cover to cover they were
+ugly, dull, unintelligent, full of death, poverty and calamity.
+On the afternoon when “Cassy’s” successor was produced—I
+forget its name—in a state of exasperation, brought
+about by mingled boredom and depression, I snatched the
+book out of my father’s hands and flung it on the fire. I
+was whipped and sent to bed, but anything was better
+than “Vinegar Hill,” and next Sunday, also, I refused to
+listen. Again, with tingling buttocks, I was banished to
+the upper regions, but really I had triumphed, for when
+the fateful day came round once more, the book-case was
+not opened, and I had never again to listen to one of those
+sanctimonious tales.</p>
+
+<p>Fairy stories and animal stories were what I liked best,
+while some of the old nursery rhymes and jingles had a
+fascination for me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“How many miles to Babylon?</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Three score and ten.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Can I get there by candlelight?—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Yes, and back again.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">Was it some magical suggestion in the word “candlelight”
+that invariably evoked in a small child’s mind a definite
+picture of an old fantastic town of towers and turrets, lit
+by waving candles, and with windows all ablaze in dark
+old houses? Many of these rhymes had this quality of
+picture making:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Hey, diddle diddle,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">The cat and the fiddle,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">The cow jumped over the moon:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">The little dog laughed</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">To see such sport</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">When the dish ran away with the spoon.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">That, I suppose, is pure nonsense, yet the magic was there.
+Before and after the cow made her amazing leap the stuff
+was a mere jingle: it was the word “Moon” that brought
+up the picture: and I saw the white, docile beast, suddenly
+transformed, pricked by the sting of midsummer madness,
+with lowered head and curling horns, poised for flight, for
+the wonderful upward leap, while a monstrous, glowing
+moon hung like a great scarlet Chinese lantern in the clouds,
+low against a black night.</p>
+
+<p>At this time I had few books I cared for, but as I grew
+older, and my powers of understanding increased, I found
+more, for up at Derryaghy House was a whole library in
+which I might rummage without any other interference
+than that my father could exercise from a distance. Sometimes
+when I brought a book home which he did not approve
+of, he would send me back with it; but if I had begun it
+I always finished it. I had made this a rule; though, on
+the other hand, if I had not begun it, I let my father have
+his way.</p>
+
+<p>Everything connected with the East had a deep attraction<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
+for me—or, shall I say, what I imagined the East to
+be—a country of magicians and mysterious talismans, of
+crouching Sphinxes and wonderful gardens. I delighted in
+the more marvellous stories in the “Arabian Nights,” and
+I regretted infinitely that life was really not like that. To
+go for a walk and fall straightway on some wonderful
+adventure, that was what I should have loved. I remember
+poring over a big folio of photographs of Eastern monuments.
+Those mystical, winged beasts with human heads,
+in their attitude of eternal waiting and listening, touched
+some chord in my imagination: they had that strangeness
+which I adored, and at the same time they had an odd
+familiarity. I appeared to remember—but, oh, so dimly!—having
+seen them before, not in pictures, but under a
+hot, heavy, languid sun, long, long ago. The luxuriousness,
+the softness and sleepy charm of the Asiatic temper—I had
+something in common with it, I could understand it. The
+melodious singing of a voice through the cool twilight; the
+notes of a lute dying slowly into silence; another voice,
+low and clear and musical, reading from the “Koran”—where
+had I heard all that? I pictured great coloured
+bazaars, where grave merchants with long white beards sat
+cross-legged and silent, where beautiful, naked, golden-skinned
+slaves stood waiting for a purchaser, where you
+could buy silken carpets that would carry you over the
+world, and black, ebony horses, swifter than light.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll had given me one of the upstairs rooms at
+Derryaghy to be my very own, and had let me furnish it
+myself from a store of old, out-moded furniture, which, for
+I know not how long, had been gathering dust and cobwebs
+in a kind of immense, low attic called the lumber-room.
+Everything was more or less threadbare and worn, but I
+had plenty to choose from, and the actual rummaging was
+as exciting as an adventure on a desert island. I had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
+discovered a quaint little piano, with but two or three
+octaves of notes, and most of those silent, save for a twangling
+of wires. This I thought must be Prudence Carroll’s
+spinet, for it looked exactly like the one in her portrait;
+indeed, that had been my principal reason for bringing it
+downstairs. With Prudence Carroll I had been in love all
+my life, and sometimes, in the dusk, when I struck very
+softly one of the cracked treble notes of the spinet, I would
+imagine her spirit stealing on tip-toe up behind me to
+listen. Another discovery, and perhaps the most exciting,
+was of an old davenport, with a secret drawer at the back
+of it—not so very secret, perhaps, since I had found it
+without looking for it, owing to the weakness of the spring,
+and my own energetic dusting. Inside was nothing more
+interesting than some old accounts, written on discoloured
+paper, but anybody who opened it to-day would, I fancy,
+find more appropriate documents....</p>
+
+<p>There was a cushioned window-seat, low and deep, and
+from it I could look out over the sea. In summer, with
+the window wide open, I could listen to it also, and to all
+kinds of lovely songs coming through it, dreamy and happy
+and sad. For there was a sort of undercurrent of dreaming
+that ran through my life. The romance surrounding the
+picture of Prudence Carroll, that peculiar, brooding quality
+of mind by which I could give to such things a kind of
+spiritual life that had for me an absolute reality, was, perhaps,
+only too characteristic of a mental condition which
+might unsympathetically be called that of perpetual wool-gathering.
+Though I played cricket and football, and
+bathed and knocked about generally with the other boys
+in the village, I had no close friend, and I dreamed of an
+imaginary playmate. For this playmate and myself I invented
+appropriate adventures. He had a name, which I
+shall not write here, and I still think he was an extraordinarily
+nice boy, but he dropped out of my existence about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
+my fifteenth year. I had my secret world, too, where such
+adventures took place. Behind this inner, imaginative life
+must have lurked a vague dissatisfaction with life as I
+actually found it. Now and then I read something which
+appeared to me to describe my other world, and, as I
+chanced on such suggestions more frequently in verse than
+in prose, I became a great reader of poetry. The passages
+that echoed so familiarly, though so faintly, from my
+mysterious, lovely land, brought it up before me very much
+as the scent of a flower may call up a vision of a high-walled
+summer garden. Whether any reality lay behind it, I don’t
+know that I even asked myself; but, on drowsy summer
+afternoons, dream and reality would float and mingle together,
+and I would feel intensely happy.</p>
+
+<p>As I write I would give much to be able to live over
+again one of those summer afternoons, when the air hung
+heavy with the scent of mignonette and roses, and Mrs.
+Carroll sat reading or working, while I lay in the grass on
+my back at her feet, and the low sound of the sea splashed
+through the silence of my sleepy thoughts, and the booming
+of a bee was the slumberous soul of June or July heat
+turned to music. In those hours my other world was very,
+very near.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards I sometimes wondered if there were a place
+where those lived days were laid away, or if their beauty,
+happiness and peace, must be quite lost. They had a
+quality of peacefulness that for me no later days have had:
+I seemed to dip deep into their cleansing dreamy quiet, as
+into a clear sea.</p>
+
+<p>Other dreams I had, that were not so pleasant, but they
+came only at night. One I still remember vividly was
+unfortunately typical of many. I seemed to be walking
+down a street with another boy, when our attention was
+attracted by the high, bare wall of a house. There was
+something, I know not what, about this house, which made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
+it different from its neighbours and aroused our curiosity.
+We noticed in the wall, almost on the street level, a small
+window. This window was open, and a fatal fascination
+drew us to it at once. I watched my friend crawl through,
+for we knew the house was empty; then I followed him,
+the opening being just wide enough to admit me. Inside,
+we found ourselves on a gigantic marble staircase, spiral
+in form, and winding up and down as far as we could follow
+it with our eyes. There were no windows except the one
+we had entered by, and it, somehow, was invisible from
+inside, yet the place was perfectly lighted. There were no
+landings, no doors, nothing but this staircase, absolutely
+uniform in its construction, with low, broad, marble steps
+which wound down and down, and up and up. The place
+resembled a vast, still well, and we could not hear the
+slightest sound as we stood listening. The steps were very
+shallow, and we ran lightly down. The other boy went
+more quickly than I did, and in a little while I lost sight
+of him, though I still heard his footsteps, growing ever
+fainter, till at last they died away, and the stillness closed
+in about me with a strange heaviness. I continued to
+follow him, but all at once I noticed that the stairs I trod
+were darker and stained with damp. A faint chill odour
+and feeling of damp and decay rose, too, into my face, and
+the light was growing dimmer. I knew I was going down
+into a great vault or tomb far below the ground, a charnel-house,
+an unknown place of death. I caught sight far
+below me of a light as of a lamp burning, and I had an
+intuition, a consciousness that came to me in a flash, that
+my companion had awakened something. This knowledge
+brought with it a memory of mysterious horror, a memory
+that I had been here before. Then, with an ever increasing
+terror, I began to run up the steps I had just run down,
+but my feet had grown heavy and my limbs weak. Up
+and up I hurried, seeing nothing before me but an endless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
+stretch of winding marble stairs. I did not know where
+my window was, I might even now have passed it. I heard
+nothing, but I knew I was being followed, and that whatever
+it was that followed me was gaining on me rapidly.
+I could hardly breathe: an agony of fear shook me. Then
+I heard close to my ear the bark of a dog. It was the
+window. I dropped on my knees and squeezed my head
+and shoulders through; I was almost free when I felt
+myself grasped from behind and with a scream I woke,
+shaking, panting, bathed in sweat.</p>
+
+<p>There came a time when these nightmares occurred so
+frequently that I got to be able to waken myself out of
+them. While I was actually dreaming—when I would
+have run a few steps down the stair, for example—a sudden
+foresight of what was coming would dawn upon me, and
+by a violent struggle I would break through the net of
+sleep and sit up in bed. Many of these dreams were connected
+with a dark, mahogany wardrobe which stood in
+my father’s bedroom. When I had begun to dream and
+found myself in that room I knew something evil was going
+to happen, and I would watch the wardrobe door and
+struggle violently to wake myself before it should open.
+Even when I was wide awake, and in broad daylight, this
+so ordinary piece of furniture came to have, for me, a
+sinister aspect. It was odd that I should have suffered
+so from these grisly nocturnal terrors, for in ordinary life
+I was not in any way a coward. A feeling of shame made
+me keep them a profound secret, and as I grew older they
+diminished, till by the time I was fifteen they had practically
+ceased.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Perhaps I should here attempt some slight description
+of my father, whom I have already mentioned, and of my
+home. My father was the National schoolmaster at Newcastle,
+County Down, and our house was next door to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
+school. My bedroom window looked out over the sea,
+about a hundred yards away, and behind the house were
+the Mourne Mountains, and the Derryaghy estate, which
+took in the lower slopes of Slieve Donard. Our house,
+when the Virginian creeper that covered it was red, looked
+pretty enough from the road, but was poorly and even
+meagrely furnished. The most that could be said for it
+was that it was clean and tidy. The few attempts at
+ornamentation would have been better away—the two or
+three pictures, the hideous vases on the mantelpiece. My
+father had a strong liking for illuminated texts, and
+there were several of these, in gilt frames, in every
+room in the house, including the kitchen and the
+bath-room. What furniture there was was modern,
+cheap, and objectionable: it was characteristic of my
+father that he had never even bought himself a comfortable
+arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tall man, thin and grizzled, pale, and dressed
+always in an ill-cut, ready-made, black tail-coat and waistcoat,
+with dark gray trousers. I always disliked his clothes,
+especially the two shining buttons at the back of his coat.
+He wore a beard and moustache, both somewhat ragged,
+and his brown eyes were indescribably melancholy. His
+hands and feet were very coarse and large. There was
+power in his face, but there was a depressing lack of anything
+approaching geniality. He gave me the impression
+that he did everything from a sense of duty, and nothing
+because he took a pleasure in it. The seriousness of his
+expression was truly portentous: it was impossible that
+anything in the world could matter so much as that. He
+was not well-off—that is obvious from the position he
+occupied—but he lived in a way that was unnecessarily
+economical. He was by no means ungenerous if it were
+some case of distress that had come to his knowledge, but
+in ordinary life he was excessively near. The only luxuries<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
+he had ever permitted himself were these coloured texts,
+and they cost little.</p>
+
+<p>When I was with him I never felt quite at my ease, and
+this made me sulky and perpetually on the defensive. I
+was not more with him than I could help, and as we lived
+alone together, with only an old woman who came in every
+day to look after the house and do the cooking, it must have
+been easy for him to see that I avoided his society. I never
+pretended to myself to have any particular affection for
+him, and I don’t even know that it would have mended
+matters if I had.</p>
+
+<p>One night, when I was about fourteen, I woke up in the
+dark, with the consciousness that it was very late and that
+I was not alone in my room. The next moment I knew my
+father was there, kneeling beside my bed. I lay absolutely
+quiet: I knew he was praying, and praying for me. Presently
+I heard him sigh, and then rise noiselessly to his feet,
+but I gave no sign. I heard him move away, I heard my
+door being softly closed, the faint click of the latch as it
+slipped into its place. I lay on with my eyes wide open,
+wondering why he had come in like this. I did not like it.
+It made me feel uncomfortable, as all emotions do when we
+are unable to respond to them. I believed my father cared
+for me far more than for anything else in the world, yet
+somehow that did not help matters. It was not the sort of
+love that begets love in return. Though he loved me, I
+felt he did not trust me, or rather that he believed I had an
+infinite capacity for yielding to temptation. By this time
+I understood that when my mother left home she had gone
+to somebody else. I knew at any rate that she was living,
+for she had sent a sum of money for my education, which my
+father had returned, though some scruple of conscience had
+made him think it right to tell me he had done so. But he
+explained nothing and I asked no questions. As I lay
+awake that night I thought of all this, and it occurred to me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
+that it might have much to do with his extraordinary
+anxiety about my religious and moral life. He was afraid,
+and I lay awake for a long time trying to puzzle out what it
+was he was afraid of.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was quite impossible for him to make me religious.
+For one thing, it was not in my nature. It was not so much
+that I disbelieved what I was taught of religion, as that
+these instructions aroused in me an implacable antagonism.
+I did not like the notion of an all-seeing God, for instance.
+Imperfectly grasped, this conception represented to my
+mind a kind of tyranny, a kind of espionage, which I strongly
+resented. Moreover, I detested Sundays and everything
+connected with them. When I went to church it was with
+a face like a thunder-cloud, and once there, with an incredible
+obstinacy, I would shut my ears to all that went
+on, prayers, hymns, and sermon. This fact, combined with
+so many others, tended, as time passed, to make my relations
+with my father more and more strained, for he was religious
+in the narrowest and severest fashion. I remember his
+taking me, one Sunday evening, when I was between twelve
+and thirteen, to hear a preacher who had come from a
+considerable distance to hold two special services. The
+occasion stands out from all others, because it was the only
+one upon which I was startled out of my habitual attitude
+of sulky defiance. For the first three-quarters of an hour
+all went as usual, and when the sermon was about to begin I
+prepared myself to think of other things. But the text,
+or texts, delivered in a quiet, impressive voice, arrested my
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>“For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against
+kingdom: and great earthquakes shall be in divers places,
+and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great
+signs shall there be from heaven.... Your sons and your
+daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
+visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and I will
+show wonders in heaven above, and signs in the earth beneath;
+blood and fire, and vapour of smoke: the sun shall
+be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood....
+And then shall they see the Son of Man coming in a cloud,
+with power and great glory.”</p>
+
+<p>In spite of myself the words thrilled me with their vivid,
+menacing suggestiveness, and I listened intently to what
+followed. It seemed apparent that the end of the world
+was at hand. The signs were taken up one by one, and it
+was shown, to my growing discomfiture, that all had been
+fulfilled: nothing remained but the sounding of the last
+trumpet, which, according to the preacher—he seemed even
+to regard it as highly probable—might take place that very
+night. By the time he had reached this point my disquietude
+had become abject fear, and I joined fervently in
+the last prayer. But why had I never been told of this
+imminent danger? When we got back from church, it was
+a very subdued boy who sat by his father’s side, a Bible
+open on the parlour table in front of him. I read with a
+feverish haste to prove my changed way of life, and, it must
+be confessed, also to keep off as long as possible the hour of
+bed-time. There was a horrible plausibility about what I
+had heard. The concluding words kept ringing in my ears.
+“I see no reason why it should not be this very night.”
+“Wouldn’t it, in fact, be just the kind of thing that <em>would</em>
+happen at night?” I asked myself piteously; and I was
+tormented by a dread of the hideous trumpet note, by a
+bloody moon, and by the apparition of dead and shrouded
+bodies, rising up with glaring eyeballs and tied jaws and all
+the mouldering signs of the grave—dreadful, galvanized
+corpses, risen from their wormy beds to meet their Lord in
+the air. At length I could put off my bed-time no longer.
+I could see my father was not convinced by the open Bible,
+and, with his usual suspiciousness, had become curious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
+as to what passages I was so interested in. Ten minutes
+later, on my knees in my small, candle-lit bedroom, I was
+lying to my God of a tremendous love I had begun to feel for
+Him; but in spite of this I passed an abominable night.
+In the morning I continued my miserable hypocrisy, grovelling
+before this frightful Deity for Whom I had developed
+so sudden and demonstrative an affection, and Whom, at the
+same time, I begged naïvely not to come. Gradually, but
+not for several days, these terrors faded, receiving their
+death-blow when my father told me that all Jews must
+return to Jerusalem before the last day. Now there was a
+Jewish family living at Castlewellan, whom I thought I
+could keep my eye on, and as I had heard nothing of their
+moving I felt fairly safe.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Very quickly I became more emancipated as I began to
+think things out for myself, and a year later I could laugh
+at these early fears. My father told me a crude anecdote
+which he had read, I think, in Mark Pattison’s “Memoirs.”
+A man in a public-house in Leicestershire had used the oath,
+“God strike me blind,” and instantly he had been struck
+blind by a flash of lightning. On becoming converted he
+had recovered his sight while taking the Sacrament. This
+edifying tale was, I believe, vouched for by a friend and
+disciple of Cardinal Newman’s, but to me, I confess, it
+seemed as stupid and revolting as anything I had ever
+heard. My father declared it to be true, yet I secretly
+doubted it, and that afternoon, in my own room, standing
+by the window, I said aloud, and very deliberately, “God
+strike me blind! God strike me blind!” I waited with
+a mingled trepidation and incredulity, as if I had thrown
+some mysterious bomb into the unknown. A sea-gull flew
+past the window, white against the dark autumn sky: the
+leaves of the Virginian creeper trembled and grew still. I
+said again and in a louder voice, “God strike me blind!”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
+But no flash of lightning followed. Down below, on the
+beach, the gray waves curled over with a slow musical
+splash. I looked into the sky, but it was calm and untroubled,
+and I decided that the story was a myth.</p>
+
+<p>Most of my religious difficulties were, however, metaphysical.
+The conception of eternity was one I could not
+grasp. I could, in a vague way, figure myself as living on
+for ever, but I could not with the same facility move my
+mind backward. I seemed able to imagine that there might
+be no end, but I could not imagine that there had been
+no beginning. “If there had been no beginning, how could
+we ever have got as far as this?” I asked myself. “Where
+I am now—this particular moment—must be at a certain
+distance from something, or it cannot be anywhere. But
+if there is no beginning, then this moment cannot be any
+further on than yesterday was!” My brain grew dizzy
+with vain efforts to think impossible thoughts. I would
+break a stick and say, “God can make it that I haven’t
+broken it. But if I shut my eyes, and when I open them
+the stick is whole, that will only show He has mended it.
+Yet He is all-powerful!” And so on, and so on; for whatever
+point I took up, sooner or later I was met by an
+insoluble problem. These problems were, nevertheless, just
+what fascinated me. The practical ethics of religion, that
+I should simply be good and encourage in myself a variety
+of Christian virtues—that kind of thing did not interest me
+in the least. As a matter of fact, I possessed singularly
+few of these virtues. It is true that I detested any kind
+of meanness or cruelty, that I was truthful, straightforward,
+and, in certain directions, loving and gentle enough; but
+I was egotistical, proud, and ludicrously self-conscious,
+quick tempered, flying into violent passions for very little,
+and, above all, I had a stubbornness nothing could move.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is difficult, as I have said, in looking back over those
+days, to see things in any fixed order. It is as if one’s
+memories floated in a kind of haze, appearing and disappearing,
+melting into one another. But there is a definite
+point from which my story becomes consecutive, and I can
+carry it back as far as that cold, clear January morning,
+the morning of Mr. Carroll’s funeral, when I stood beside
+my father, at some distance from the grave, among a group
+of people I did not know, and whom I should never see
+again. I examined them all with a mild and impartial
+curiosity, and was struck by the fact that none of them
+showed the slightest emotion, though all alike wore a grave
+and decorous demeanour. I could not blame them, for I
+did not feel sad myself. Mr. Carroll had always been
+perfectly amiable to me, but I had seen little of him, and
+when we did meet he had looked at me vaguely, as if he
+were unable to remember who I was. I had only known
+him as an invalid, occasionally hobbling about with the
+aid of two black, silver-headed sticks, but for the most part
+keeping pretty closely to his own rooms. He seemed to
+me to be very old, yet at his death I learned that he was
+not old at all, his appearance of decrepitude being simply
+the result of an excessively disorderly life, imposed upon a
+naturally wretched constitution. I learned, at the same
+time, the history of Mrs. Carroll’s marriage; how, before<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
+the first year was out, she had ceased to see much of her
+husband, and a little later had ceased to see him altogether.
+It was fifteen years afterwards, when he had become the
+futile person I knew, that he had returned to her. As the
+coffin, bared of its covering of sickly-smelling flowers, was
+lowered into the ugly, gaping grave, and the damp red
+earth rattled heavily on the lid with a hollow, brutal sound,
+I recalled the strange, white face, the watery blue eyes,
+the fixed smile, the soft, polite manner; but I was not in
+the least grieved to know I should never see them again.
+And when, a week or so later, I was once more in and out
+of the house just as of old, I had already ceased to think
+of him. Once or twice, passing the closed door of his room
+in the dusk, the thought of meeting his ghost, of hearing
+the tap, tap of his stick coming toward me down the long
+passage, gave me a momentary thrill; but even these poor
+tributes to his memory faded swiftly, passed into a total
+oblivion.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Scarlatina broke out in the village in the spring of that
+year, a week or two before my sixteenth birthday. There
+were not many cases, and all were mild, but there was much
+talk of closing the school. My father, for I know not what
+reason, was against this, and in the end got his own way,
+but about a month later he had the satisfaction of seeing
+me catch the infection just when everybody else was getting
+better. I can remember quite distinctly the day I took
+ill. I had not been feeling well the day before, but had said
+nothing about it, and that morning I went to school as usual.
+I might as well have stayed at home for all the work I did.
+I sat there with a book before me, my head aching, my
+throat dry and painful. The noise of the classes saying their
+lessons at the tops of their voices, especially the junior class,
+to whom Miss McWaters was repeating a stanza of poetry,
+line by line, while they screamed it after her, irritated, even
+while it amused, me. Miss McWaters was a thin and angular
+person, no longer young, endowed by nature with a high-pitched
+voice, prominent teeth, and a red nose, and by art
+with a yellow, fuzzy fringe. All these qualities now loomed
+particularly large in my vision of her, though at other times
+I knew she was a kind and friendly person. Her red nose
+and her fringe haunted me, her whole face seemed to undergo
+extraordinary, kaleidoscopic changes; she became a sort
+of fantastic witch who was exercising horrible spells on these
+small children standing in a circle round her chair; her
+mouth grew larger, her big white teeth seemed thirsting to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
+bury themselves in their soft little throats. This impression
+grew suddenly so sharp that I had to shake myself and
+sit back in my seat to get rid of it. Then once more she was
+only Miss McWaters, to whom years ago I had repeated this
+same verse of poetry in that same shrill sing-song tone which
+now was going through and through my head....</p>
+
+<p>I looked about the room with heavy eyes—at the white
+walls, the torn, ink-stained maps, the scored desks and
+forms, the wooden floor—and the whole place seemed to
+move round and round like a wheel. I saw my father, with
+a pointer in his hand, indicating differently shaped areas
+on a large blank map of England, and asking a row of
+youngsters what counties they represented. That was the
+kind of lesson I had always detested myself and had never
+even attempted to learn. I knew from my father’s angry,
+“Next—next—next,” that nobody in the class was giving
+satisfaction. And then they all seemed to shrink and float
+back, while the room shot out like a telescope, and I watched
+them from somewhere miles and miles away. And the
+high, clear voice of Miss McWaters proclaimed:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">And a dozen shrill voices replied:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">The words seemed mere nonsense in my ears, and I had a
+sort of delirious vision of a big star, with a red nose and a
+fringe and large white teeth, pointing out the time on a huge
+clock, while a lot of little stars stood round in a ring and
+pulled watches out of their waistcoat pockets and set them
+to the time told by the big clock. This seemed funny to me,
+and I began to laugh; and then, next moment, I wanted to
+lie down somewhere and be quiet. My head was throbbing
+like a steamboat with a too powerful engine, and there was
+a dull aching at the back of my eyeballs. I got up and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
+tip-toed across the room, but my foot caught the end of a
+form, and I nearly pitched through the door, head first.</p>
+
+<p>I had intended going home, but with my hand on the latch
+of the gate I decided to go up to Derryaghy instead. Singularly
+enough, the thought that I might be sickening for
+scarlatina never occurred to me. The distance to Derryaghy
+was not more than a quarter of a mile, yet it seemed
+to me long, and before I arrived I regretted having started.
+The hall-door being open when I reached the house, I went
+in without ringing. I knew they would be at lunch, but I
+had no appetite, and as I did not want to answer questions
+or talk, I went straight on up the broad, low stairs, with
+the intention of going to my own room. At the head of the
+staircase, full in the light, hangs the celebrated portrait
+people come from far to admire. I sat down on the wide couch
+before it, not because I wanted to look at what I had already
+seen thousands of times, but because my head swam. I
+leaned against the back of the couch and closed my eyes.
+When I opened them, the portrait being in front of me,
+I could not help staring at it, in a dull way. It represents
+a young man standing bare-headed on a hill-side, holding
+a gun in his hand, and with an elderly dog seated sedately by
+him. The curiously long, oval face, with its high forehead
+and narrow, pointed chin, has much distinction, though
+little beauty, and its pallor contrasts oddly with the faded
+red of the full sensuous lips, completely revealed beneath
+the light, curled moustache. The eyes are dark, the hair
+light brown. The hands are hidden by brown gauntlet
+gloves, and over the dark brown doublet falls a lace collar.
+The trousers would look black but for the darker shade of
+the long boots, and this darker note is carried through to the
+trees behind, sombre and heavy against a yellow sky. Both
+man and dog are obviously posing for their portraits—the
+whole thing is a work of art, that is to say, it is something
+utterly beyond nature. The highest light is in the face,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
+but there is no white anywhere, and, with the exception of
+the faint red of the lips, no colour save the browns and
+blacks, the creamy flesh-tints. Over all, the mellow tone
+of time has cast a kind of golden softness. I had been told
+that it was by a great Spanish artist called Velasquez—his
+name, indeed, was there, in large black letters on the dull
+gilt frame—and that it was a very valuable painting, worth
+fabulous sums. I can affirm to-day that it is really a fine
+work; but it is not by Velasquez. It is by Mazo, and is,
+in fact, only a slightly modified copy of Velasquez’s famous
+portrait of Philip in the Louvre.</p>
+
+<p>This picture had always had an odd fascination for me,
+though there was something about the face I did not like,
+something cold and proud, which I knew I should have
+detested in actual life. I gazed at it now stupidly enough,
+and then I had a nervous thrill, for it seemed to me to have
+come all at once to life. One part of my brain knew this
+to be nonsense, and that I had been seeing queer things all
+day, but the other part of my brain continued to watch it,
+with a half expectation of seeing it descend out of its frame.
+The eyes had begun to move, and the lips trembled; the
+mouth opened slowly in a yawn which the brown gloved
+hand was raised languidly to conceal; and then from behind
+the picture I heard a little mocking laugh. These
+things bewildered me, but did not startle me; and through
+them I became conscious that Mrs. Carroll was coming up
+the stair and that she was speaking to me. I answered her
+in words which I knew were perfectly idiotic, and which
+moreover sounded husky and strange, as if some other voice
+than my own were speaking through my lips. Again I
+heard the little mocking laugh. This time I thought it
+came from the top of the picture, and glancing up I saw,
+sure enough, a black imp, like a small, naked, negro boy,
+perched cross-legged, on the top of the frame, from which
+he grinned down at me impudently, raising his fingers to his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
+snub nose, and spreading them out in a derisive and very
+familiar grimace. I began to talk about the picture, about
+school, and about Miss McWaters. Then a cloud waved
+back from my brain; the portrait slid into its place, the
+imp disappeared, and everything was once more as it should
+be. But I felt a burning thirst, and when Mrs. Carroll
+opened the door of a large, bright, sunny room, I was glad
+to fling myself down on the bed. Almost immediately I was
+seized by a deadly sickness. I managed to get off the bed in
+time to avoid making a mess, but the vomiting returned
+again and again, till I collapsed into a state of exhaustion.
+Heavy clouds waved across my brain, obscuring my thoughts,
+and again clearing, leaving consciousness to flicker up, like
+the flame in a dying lamp, so that I knew I had been undressed
+and was safe in bed. And all the time I wanted to
+drink—to drink.... More than one person was in the room
+with me; Mrs. Carroll was there, and old Doctor O’Brian.
+In the open doorway Miss Dick hovered. And then suddenly
+I was alone. I could hear a fire crackling in the grate,
+and it had grown darker. A lamp was burning on a table
+somewhere over beside the fireplace. I listened to the fire,
+and presently it seemed to me I could hear the lamp burning
+too. It burned with a soft low continuous sound that was
+like the note of a flute, and it occurred to me that everything
+in the world was only sound—the bed I was lying on,
+the shadows flickering across the ceiling, the dancing firelight—all
+were but notes of a tune. This appeared so
+strikingly obvious that I could not understand why I had
+never noticed it before. I tried to make out what the tune
+was, but it eluded me, flickering away from me like a butterfly.
+I turned round in my bed, for I had heard a slight noise
+at the door. All seemed now to have grown silent. I
+could not hear the lamp burning, nor even the fire. This
+silence was surely unusual, abnormal; it filled me with a
+vague disquietude. It grew deeper and deeper till I could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
+not hear, even when I strained my ears, the faintest murmur
+either without or within the house. The silence was like a
+liquid, luminous atmosphere, through which strange things
+were floating nearer. It was like a sea, and gradually it
+darkened into colour—there was a broad, dark, blue sea
+before me, in a strange, rich light, as if I were watching it
+through old stained glass. I saw sirens swimming about in
+the warm, swelling waves, appearing and disappearing.
+They followed a high-pooped, fantastic ship, just as I had
+often seen porpoises following a boat out in the bay. The
+ship moved along slowly, and its broad, coloured sails were
+embroidered with green dragons that shone like fire, and at
+its bow was a green, jewelled serpent’s head. Then once
+more there was nothing but the room, and I heard a faint
+noise as of someone moving in a chair. Another sound
+immediately followed, and I started, for it was curiously
+different; it was the sound one hears before something
+happens. I watched the handle of the door turn, and the
+door itself open and close quickly yet stealthily. Three
+figures had entered. One was a tall figure in brown, with a
+gun in his gloved hand, and he was followed by a great dark
+brown dog, who at once leaped on to the bed and sat at the
+foot, watching me with sombre, burning eyes. The third
+figure was Miss McWaters. Her nose was longer and redder
+than I had ever seen it before, and it kept twitching from
+side to side in a curious way; her big teeth flashed in an
+unpleasant grin, and her fringe waved and curled about as if
+it were alive. For the third time I heard the strange little
+mocking laugh that had come from behind the picture, but
+I could not discover who had uttered it. Perhaps it was
+Miss McWaters, for I knew she was waiting for me to say
+something—a verse of poetry—yes, I remembered:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Our bugles sang truce, for the night-cloud had lower’d,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">And the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">Then a dense, heavy darkness swept up, blotting out
+everything.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I awoke in broad sunlight. The room was full of it, and
+the scent of flowers floated in through the open windows
+and mingled with the faint smell of drugs. For some time
+I lay there quietly, too languid to make a movement or to
+speak. Then the door softly opened, and I saw Mrs. Carroll
+come in and stand beside my bed. “Is he asleep?” I
+heard her ask, for I had closed my eyes. I opened them
+and looked up at her.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, too. “It’s time for you to take your medicine,”
+and the nurse came forward to give it to me. When
+I had swallowed it, I lay back among the soft pillows
+deliciously....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The memory of my convalescence is a strange one, for it
+came at a time when certain physical changes were taking
+place within me, and I seemed to myself to be somehow
+different from what I had been before I fell ill. My voice
+had altered; my mind was coloured by vague and happy
+dreams. Sometimes when I turned in bed or stretched
+myself, the contact of the fine linen sheets against my skin
+gave me a peculiar thrill, which ran all down my spine.
+It appeared I had been very ill, that it had been a touch-and-go
+matter whether I should manage to pull through;
+yet now I did not feel that I wanted to get well too quickly.
+The flowers, the fruit, the brightness, the big delightful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
+room—so different from my room at home—the care everybody
+took of me, the books that were read to me, the sense
+of being here so securely, with everything just as I liked
+it, and with Mrs. Carroll to look after me—all that was
+delicious. The one jarring note was my father’s letter,
+which I read, and then put back in its envelope. It was
+about my escape, how near to death I had been, and how
+he hoped the mercy that had been shown me would make
+me think seriously. I did not want to think seriously:
+I wanted to bask in the sunshine of these pleasant days
+while they lasted. If I had died it would have been all
+over by this time, and since I hadn’t, why should I be
+different? It seemed to me hardly the time to talk of
+God’s mercy, seeing that I had barely scraped through a
+severe illness. It was like thanking a man, who has just
+broken your head with a stick, for not killing you outright.
+My father talked of a miracle, but I had slender faith in
+miracles, and I regret to say his entire letter struck me as
+amazingly unintelligent. In a kind of lazy and sublime
+egotism I began to ponder on the oddity of a man like my
+father having a son such as I was; and while I was engaged
+with these speculations Mrs. Carroll sat beside me, playing
+“patience.” She told me my father could not come to see
+me for fear of carrying the infection to school, and I received
+these tidings with an immense relief, for I had been dreading
+that he would want to talk to me about death, and
+perhaps make me join in returning thanks for my recovery.
+I watched her as she sat there, her plump hands drawing
+out the cards, her eyes seriously scanning the faces of those
+already turned up. She was a large, placid lady, stout and
+ruddy. She must always, even in her earliest youth, have
+been plain, but her face was filled with an extraordinary
+kindness that made it infinitely pleasant. It was not the
+sort of kindness which can be simulated; it was something
+that was a natural part of her, and was reflected in all she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
+did and said. It had moulded the expression of her countenance,
+just as time and weather will alter the features of
+a statue. Her eyes were small and gray, and she wore
+gold-rimmed spectacles, which, somehow, were becoming
+to her. I never saw her dressed in anything but black,
+and with a light lace cap on her gray hair. She was extremely
+fond of me, and I knew it, and I’m afraid imposed
+upon it, though I loved her sincerely. At that time it
+appeared to me perfectly natural that she should be fond
+of me; it was simply a part of the order of things; it had
+always been so, and I couldn’t have imagined anything
+else. It never even occurred to me that I had no claim
+upon her, except that which she herself had established;
+it never occurred to me that I might, in my relation to her,
+have been just like any of the other boys in the village.
+On the contrary, I looked upon Derryaghy quite as if it
+were a second, and certainly much my best-loved, home.</p>
+
+<p>The “patience” failed, and Mrs. Carroll swept up the
+cards. “Shall I read to you?” she asked me, and, I
+having graciously given my permission, she took up
+“Huckleberry Finn.” It was a book I rejoiced in, but I
+don’t think Mrs. Carroll cared for it, I don’t think she even
+found it funny. She spoke rather slowly, and it amused
+me infinitely to hear her gentle voice reproduce the talk of
+Huck, or Pap, or the King....</p>
+
+<p>That same day, after lunch, the nurse left. I was getting
+on very well, and was to be allowed up toward the end of
+the week. In the afternoon Mrs. Carroll had gone out,
+and I found myself alone. I went on with “Huck,” but
+a chapter or two brought me to the end. I began another
+book, “Bevis,” but my eyes grew tired, and I let it drop
+on the bed beside me. As I lay idle I was seized by a
+desire to get up. I resisted it for a few minutes, and then
+I slid into a sitting posture, with my legs hanging over the
+side of the bed. It struck me that they had grown absurdly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
+thin and long, and I felt wretchedly shaky. I stood up,
+all the same, holding on to the bedpost till I got accustomed
+to being on my feet, when I put on my dressing-gown, and
+walked somewhat uncertainly as far as the door. I turned
+the handle and looked out with a strange curiosity into
+the passage. It was as if I had been ill for months, it all
+somehow seemed so queer and new. The long high corridor,
+off which the rooms opened, was hung with tall portraits
+that appeared, in the mellow sunlight of high far windows,
+to watch me stiffly yet furtively. I liked them, I liked
+everything about the place, I liked to look down the passage
+with its long row of closed doors, which seemed so mysterious,
+reaching right on to the head of the staircase. I
+listened for footsteps, but heard nothing. Miss Dick
+probably was out, and the servants’ quarters were far
+away. I had a feeling that I was really the son of the
+house, that everything about it, its pictures, its ghosts,
+were mine. I went to my favourite picture and stood
+beneath it. It was a portrait of a lady with dark hair and
+dark blue eyes, and it was partly this peculiar contrast, I
+think, this contrast of blue eyes and black hair, that had
+originally pleased me. She was young and she had a
+strange quaint name—Prudence Carroll. The artist had
+painted her as if she were just come in from the garden,
+for she held still a bunch of flowers in her hand. She was
+standing by a queer little piano—or was it a spinet?—the
+spinet I had now in my room? It was open, and in a
+minute or two she would lay down her flowers and play
+some air on it, or the accompaniment of some forgotten
+ballad. Did the painter intend to show that these were
+the things she was fondest of—music and flowers? Poor
+Prudence Carroll had been dust these hundred years, the
+notes of her spinet were either cracked or dumb, and her
+tardy lover had arrived a century too late, for she had
+died unmarried, and but a year after this portrait was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
+painted! Why had no one cared for her? Perhaps some
+day, between twilight and dusk, she would slip into my
+room and sing to me, “Rose softly Blooming,” or “Voi
+che sapete!” A rustle of muslin, a ghostly scent of
+ghostly flowers, the twangling notes of the spinet, and a
+voice singing a song that would sound thin and far off, like
+the sound of wind—that is how it would happen.</p>
+
+<p>I was charmed with these fancies, but I stood there only
+a few minutes, for there was something odd in that silence
+of closed doors and listening portraits, and I returned to
+the sunshine of my room. I went to the window and
+leaned my forehead against the pane and looked out. Far
+away I could see a stretch of sand, streaked with streams
+and pools of water, for the tide was out: and beyond the
+sand, clear in the sunlight, was the sea, blue-green under
+the soft blue sky, marked with indigo and purple where
+the bottom was formed of rocks and seaweed. At the
+water’s edge some children—from this distance I could
+not make out who they were—were sailing toy boats.
+With trousers and petticoats well rolled up from bare brown
+legs, with their scarlet jerseys and caps and striped cotton
+dresses, they formed a bright note of colour, and brought
+me into touch again with life out of doors. On the left
+horn of the bay’s crescent the sand-hills, with their sparse
+covering of bleached, wan grass, were pale and iridescent
+in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>A gardener was mowing the grass just below my window,
+and the sleepy sound of the mowing-machine was delightful,
+and the smell of the fresh green grass, turned over in bright
+cool heaps. I got back into bed again, and took up “Bevis.”</p>
+
+<p>I read for half an hour, when my eyes once more grew
+tired. The sound of the mowing-machine had ceased, and
+a deep silence filled the afternoon. I lay listening to the
+silence, half-asleep, half-awake, when all at once I heard
+a sound of scraping under my window. It flashed across<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
+my mind that I was alone here in this part of the house,
+and that burglars were taking the opportunity to break in,
+and perhaps they would murder me. The thing was
+utterly nonsensical, and would never have occurred to me
+had I been in my normal health, but it had hardly entered
+my head when I saw a ladder shoot up past the window,
+and strike with a grating sound against the wall. My
+heart began to thump. I heard steps on the ladder;
+somebody was mounting it. The next moment Jim’s face,
+brown and ruddy and grinning, popped in, and I gasped
+with relief. Jim was a boy who worked in the garden,
+and was about the same age as I was. He smiled broadly,
+and his bright, brown eyes gazed at me with evident
+pleasure. “How are you, Master Peter?” he grinned.
+“They’re nobody about, so I thought I’d look in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’m all right,” I answered, “but you mustn’t stay
+there, or you’ll be catching the infection.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to see the skin peeling off you. What like
+is it underneath?”</p>
+
+<p>I felt disappointed at this callous explanation of what
+I had imagined to be sympathy. “You can’t see it,” I
+answered crossly. “You’d better clear out before somebody
+catches you.”</p>
+
+<p>Jim disappeared, but I called after him, “I say ...
+Jim——”</p>
+
+<p>The round, ruddy-brown face bobbed up again.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you do something for me?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Ay.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you play something to me. I’m sick of lying
+here, doing nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“I darn’t. Oul Thomas’d stop me, an’ I’d get in a row.
+I be to red up all the grass, an’ rake the walk.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right.”</p>
+
+<p>I took no further interest in Jim, and he again vanished.
+There was a further scraping noise, and the ladder, too,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
+disappeared. I lay on in a kind of waking-slumber till Mrs.
+Carroll came in, bringing me my tea. When I had finished
+I once more fell into a doze, but opened my eyes in the dusk,
+when I heard the notes of Jim’s flute under my window, in
+a slow melancholy tune, with an occasional pause, as if the
+musician was not very certain of his music. I recognised
+the air—the Lorelei. It had a curious effect in the gathering
+twilight, as if the music and the fading light were in some
+subtle way mingled. I knew that the unseen musician was
+Jim, yet none the less the mournful notes, coming slowly
+in a minor key, seemed the very soul of the deepening darkness,
+and called up before me a world of imaginary sorrows,
+a passionate regret for I knew not what, a kind of home-sickness
+for my dream-land. Tears gathered in my eyes
+and ran down my cheeks. Fortunately nobody could see
+them, but I was ashamed of them myself, though I knew
+they were partly the result of my physical weakness. Still,
+it was ridiculous that I should cry over Jim’s playing. Jim
+really couldn’t play at all. It was stupid, idiotic; and the
+other day I had cried just in this same senseless fashion over
+a book I had been reading; I had wept my soul out in an
+ecstasy of love and misery.</p>
+
+<p>When Jim’s serenade was ended I lay on in the darkness,
+my tears drying on my cheeks, and thought what a fool I
+was. Why should I have cried? What was the matter
+with me? It was not that I was unhappy; on the contrary,
+I was extremely happy. Yet somehow I felt dimly
+that there was a greater happiness than any I had ever
+experienced or probably ever should experience. The
+meaning of my emotions and desires never became quite
+clear, though I seemed on the verge of discovery. It was
+as if there were something stirring within me to which I
+could not give freedom, something which remained
+unsatisfied even in the midst of my keenest pleasures....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span></p>
+
+<p>On a bright morning early in June I was allowed out for
+the first time since my illness, and I insisted on going alone.
+As I came out into the warmth of the sun I felt a charm as
+of a mysterious new birth. I went straight to the woods.
+The green alleys winding in front of me amid tall old trees,
+in all the vivid richness of early summer, seemed exquisitely
+beautiful. It was as if I had never realized before how
+lovely the world was. I lay down on my back on the warm,
+dry moss and listened to a skylark singing as it mounted up
+from the fields near the sea into the dark clear sky. No
+other music ever gave me the same pleasure as that passionately
+joyous singing. It was a kind of leaping, exultant
+ecstasy, a bright, flame-like sound, rejoicing in itself. And
+then a curious experience befell me. It was as if everything
+that had seemed to me external and around me were suddenly
+within me. The whole world seemed to be within me.
+It was within me that the trees waved their green branches,
+it was within me that the skylark was singing, it was within
+me that the hot sun shone, and that the shade was cool. A
+cloud rose in the sky, and passed in a light shower that
+pattered on the leaves, and I felt its freshness dropping into
+my soul, and I felt in all my being the delicious fragrance
+of the earth and the grass and the plants and the rich brown
+soil. I could have sobbed with joy, but in the midst of it I
+heard the sound of footsteps, and looked behind me quickly,
+to see the figure of one of the two idiots, who lived in a hovel
+outside the village, approaching. This was the man;
+there was a woman also, his sister. He was perfectly harmless,
+and he drew near now with smiles meant to be ingratiating.
+He held an empty pipe in his hand, and made
+guttural noises that I knew were asking me for tobacco. I
+told him I had none, but he would not go away. He stood
+right over me, a grin on his deformed face. The big, misshapen
+head, the horrible, slobbering mouth, the stupid
+persistence, all filled me with a cold rage. He had spoiled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
+everything; I hated him, and I could have killed him, for it.
+But he still stood there and jibbered with his ugly, dripping
+mouth. It was only when I struck at him savagely with
+my stick that he moved off, glancing back at every step.
+And when he was gone I felt nothing but a kind of cold
+disgust and animosity, mingled with shame at my own
+conduct. All the beauty had gone out of the woods, and I
+got up and went home.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>When, some time in July, Mrs. Carroll told me that she
+had invited her nephew and niece, Gerald and Katherine
+Dale, to come on a visit to Derryaghy, I became at once
+very curious to see them. I had never even heard of
+them before, and now I learned such interesting items as
+that they lived in London, were twins, and about my own
+age, or perhaps a year older, Mrs. Carroll could not remember.
+They arrived at the end of the month, and that night
+I went to dinner to meet them. As it happened, I was
+late. My watch had stopped for half an hour or so in the
+afternoon, and then gone on again, an annoying and foolish
+trick it occasionally played me. I was told they were
+already in the dining-room, but that dinner had only begun.
+The prospect of meeting strangers always produced in me
+an unconquerable shyness, and, to-night, partly because I
+was late, and partly because these particular strangers
+were so nearly my own age, my shyness was doubled. I
+did not look at either of them as I entered the room where,
+though daylight had not yet quite failed, two softly shaded
+lamps burned, amid a profusion of flowers, upon the white
+and silver table. I shook hands with my hostess and
+with Miss Dick, mumbling out apologies, and had begun
+a lengthy and involved description of the cause of my
+delay, when Mrs. Carroll cut me short by introducing me
+to the Dales. I shook hands with one and bowed to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
+other, blushing and incapable of finding a word. I should
+never have guessed they were even brother and sister, let
+alone twins, for in appearance they were utterly unlike.
+Katherine pleased me. She was fresh and bright and
+attractive; I even thought her beautiful, for there was
+something of the open air about her, something of nature.
+At any rate she gave me that impression; her beauty had
+a kind of grave simplicity; and, if I had been a poet, and
+had been describing her, all my similes would have been
+taken from nature, from open hill-sides, from the wind and
+the sky. As I sat down beside her, her clear, dark, very
+blue eyes rested on me frankly, and with that she suddenly
+set me puzzling over where I had seen her before, or whom
+she reminded me of. I kept glancing at her furtively,
+but, seen in profile, her face was no longer suggestive, and
+I decided I had made a mistake. She appeared to me
+friendly and candid and unaffected, but I doubted if she
+were clever. Her brother, on the other hand, probably
+<em>was</em> clever. I did not take to him, he was smaller than
+she, thin and brown and subtle; also he had a way of
+looking at you that made you want to ask him what it
+was he found amusing.</p>
+
+<p>“Peter will be able to show you everything, and take
+you everywhere,” Mrs. Carroll explained, comprehensively,
+and then Katherine asked me if I played golf.</p>
+
+<p>I answered, “No,” and felt ashamed. I went on to
+prove that it was not my fault, that my father had refused
+to allow me to join the club, but at that point I caught
+Gerald’s eyes watching me with an expression of interest,
+and I suddenly blushed. “Do <em>you</em> play?” I asked him
+aggressively.</p>
+
+<p>He seemed surprised. His glance just brushed mine
+and rested on a picture above my head. “No,” he answered
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“Gerald is studying music abroad,” said Mrs. Carroll,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
+“at Vienna, where I don’t suppose they have ever heard
+of golf. He is going to be a musician.”</p>
+
+<p>“How interesting!” exclaimed Miss Dick. “Fancy,
+Vienna!”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dick was Mrs. Carroll’s companion, and was even,
+in some distant way, related to her. Her family, however,
+had fallen on evil days, and she was permanently settled
+at Derryaghy. She was a gushing, fussy, kindly creature,
+with a minimum allowance of brains, but overflowing with
+good intentions and amazingly loyal in her affections,
+though these latter, I must add, had never been bestowed
+upon me. I took Mrs. Carroll’s word for it that she had
+once been very pretty, but now her thinness, accentuating
+a peculiar type of feature, gave her an absurd resemblance
+to a lean and restless fowl. I noticed that she had attired
+herself to-night as for a striking festival. She was a person
+liable to these unexpected changes in the degree of her
+brilliancy, which at present was positively dazzling. She
+began to ask about Vienna, and expressed a deep regret
+at never having visited that city.</p>
+
+<p>“We have had the piano specially tuned for you,” said
+Mrs. Carroll to Gerald.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh you shouldn’t have bothered,” he answered.</p>
+
+<p>“You evidently don’t know what it was like before!”
+I began, and then stopped short. Nobody took any notice.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dick, who seemed determined, cost what it might,
+to keep the conversation on the subject of music, mentioned
+that her mother had heard Patti in “La Sonnambula,” and
+how, when that great prima donna had paused in the middle
+of the opera to sing “Home Sweet Home,” the entire house
+had risen to its feet with enthusiasm. “It has always
+seemed to me that music is the most perfect of the arts,”
+she added, fixing her lace collar.</p>
+
+<p>“Painting is the most perfect of the arts,” I contradicted.
+Somehow, when they were uttered, all my remarks<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
+sounded unhappy, not to say rude, though I was only
+trying to be agreeable. Miss Dick accentuated this last
+one by helping herself to potatoes in significant silence.
+“You can look at a picture oftener than you can read a
+book,” I went on, addressing Gerald, “and oftener than
+you can listen to a piece of music.”</p>
+
+<p>“I daresay,” he answered, and I resented his politeness.
+“Why can’t he stand up for his own business?” I thought.</p>
+
+<p>I glanced at Katherine, and wanted to say something
+pleasant to her, but that was apparently beyond my power.
+My solitary “No,” in answer to her question about golf,
+had been the one word I had so far addressed to her. I
+relapsed into silence and did not speak again till dinner was
+over.</p>
+
+<p>When we went to the drawing-room it looked as if we
+were going to have a musical evening, for Miss Dick sat down
+at the piano with all the air of a person opening a concert.
+She played an arrangement of something or other, by Thalberg.
+All Miss Dick’s pieces were arrangements, except
+those that were fantasias, and it was a feature of them that
+the beginning of the end could be heard about a couple of
+pages off, in a series of frantic rushes and arpeggios. She
+played now with a fierce concentration on the task to be
+accomplished; her face getting redder as Thalberg became
+more surprising; her mouth screwed up slightly at the right
+corner, through which just the tip of her tongue was visible;
+her eyes glaring, devouring the sheet of music before her,
+at which every now and then she made a frantic grab with
+her left hand, to turn the page—she would never allow anybody
+to turn for her.</p>
+
+<p>When she had struck the last note, to which she indeed
+gave an astonishing rap, there was a general sigh, as for a
+danger evaded.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, I don’t know how you do it!” Mrs. Carroll
+murmured, almost as breathless as the performer.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
+
+<p>“It does take it out of one,” Miss Dick panted complacently.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald sat looking on with a barely perceptible smile.
+“Won’t you play something now?” Miss Dick said to him.</p>
+
+<p>His eyebrows twitched slightly. “Not just yet, I think.
+In a little. I want to smoke a cigarette first.” He passed
+out on to the terrace, and we all gazed after him. When
+he thought, I suppose, that the echoes awakened by Miss
+Dick had had time to subside, he came back, and began to
+fiddle with the music-stool, screwing it up and down. Yet
+when he did commence to play, after many preliminaries, it
+was in a broken fragmentary fashion, beginning things and
+suddenly dropping them after a few bars. I was prepared
+not to like him, but he had not struck more than a note or
+two when I knew I had never heard the piano really played
+before. In spite of myself I felt the dislike I had conceived
+for him slipping away, and then, just as I was commencing
+to enjoy myself, he stopped abruptly. He got up and walked
+over to the window where I sat.</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t altered, Gerald,” said Mrs. Carroll dryly.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean my playing, Aunt?” he asked sweetly.
+“It is supposed to have got rather better, but I am sure you
+are right.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll gave something as nearly resembling a sniff as
+she could give. I saw she was not in love with her nephew;
+but Miss Dick’s cat jumped on to his knee and he began to
+stroke it. There was something in his extreme self-possession
+which, though I knew it to be based on a profound sense
+of superiority to everybody present, I could not help admiring,
+just as I could not help admiring his playing, or, for
+that matter, his personal beauty, which was striking. And
+I admired the way he was dressed. While remaining quite
+conventional, it managed to suggest individuality, and its
+perfect taste, apparent in the slightest details, gave him, as
+he sat there, something of the finish, of the harmony and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
+tone, of an old portrait. Again his glance met mine. I
+believe he knew I had been watching him, and perhaps something
+of what I had been thinking, and I turned away
+abruptly. Miss Dick, who had taken a great fancy to him,
+begged him to play again. He refused, yet a moment later
+he said, speaking so that nobody but I could hear him,
+“Would you like me to?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not in the least,” I answered rudely. Rather ashamed
+of myself I got up, crossed the room, and boldly took possession
+of a chair beside his sister. But with that my boldness
+ended, and I could think of nothing to say. I had not even
+sufficient courage to look her in the face, and the fact that I
+had so deliberately come to sit beside her only to maintain a
+fixed and gloomy silence made me feel ridiculous.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you play golf?” I stammered out at last, the inanity
+of my remark only striking me after it had left my lips.
+“She will think I am a fool, and dislike me,” I told myself
+miserably; but Katherine answered as if the subject had
+never been alluded to before. Her reply only left me to
+rack my brains anew. It was no use; a malignant spell
+appeared to have been cast upon me, holding me tongue-tied,
+my mind a blank. A perspiration broke out all over
+my body and I could feel my shirt sticking to my back.
+Every minute was like an hour, yet I could think of nothing
+but this accursed golf. I described the links and even the
+Club House, and might have gone on to enumerate the
+caddies had I remembered their names. I became suddenly
+conscious that my hands and feet were enormous. I
+thrust my hands in my trouser pockets, but my feet still
+remained visible. I knew my thick nose had neither shape
+nor character, that my coarse, brown hair was more like a
+kind of tropical plant than like hair, and that my overhanging
+brows and the shape of my mouth gave me a sullen
+look. I had tried to alter my appearance by doing my hair
+in different ways, but it was no use. I remembered having<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
+noticed in the morning, when I was tying my tie, that a slight
+frown made me more thoughtful looking, and I instantly
+assumed one. I compared the appearance I imagined myself
+to present with Gerald’s, and then I saw him watching me
+with what I believed to be a kind of veiled mockery in his
+eyes. My shyness turned to rage. Katherine tried to talk
+to me, but I answered in monosyllables, and, an hour earlier
+than I had intended, I got up to say good-night.</p>
+
+<p>“We shall see you to-morrow, Peter,” Mrs. Carroll suggested,
+as I shook hands with her. “What would you like
+to do to-morrow?” she added, turning to Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine smiled at me as if we were quite old friends.
+“I want to climb some of the mountains,” she said. “I
+planned that the minute I saw them.”</p>
+
+<p>Again her face awakened in me the memory of another
+face I had known—but where? when?</p>
+
+<p>“In that case you ought to start early,” Mrs. Carroll went
+on, “and you could take your lunch with you. Peter
+knows all the different walks for miles round.”</p>
+
+<p>I was on the point of declaring that I had an engagement,
+but I overcame the temptation. I promised to come soon
+after breakfast, and made my escape.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I went home in a state of profound depression. I had
+made a hopeless fool of myself; probably they were talking
+about it now. These thoughts were rendered no brighter
+by being mingled with anticipations of what I was returning
+to. Above all else in the world, perhaps, I hated, and
+almost feared, that atmosphere of dullness and joylessness,
+which hung like a mist over our house. It exasperated
+me, it seemed to sap my vitality, and with all the strength
+of my nature I tried to resist it. It was as if the narrowness
+and dinginess, the gray, colourless, melancholy monotony
+of my father’s existence, had a hateful power of penetrating
+into my brain, like the fumes of a drug, clouding my mind,
+subduing it to a kind of cold lethargy: there were times
+when I had a feeling that I was struggling for life.</p>
+
+<p>My father was in the parlour when I came in. He
+glanced up at the clock, which meant that he was surprised
+at my returning so much earlier than usual, but he made
+no remark. I sat down to take off my boots; then I took
+up the book I was reading. My father all this time had
+not spoken a word, and I had returned him silence for
+silence. Sometimes, after a whole evening of this kind
+of thing, my feeling of constraint would become so acute
+that the effort required to say even good-night would
+appear almost insurmountable, and I would invent all
+sorts of excuses for slipping out of the room without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
+doing so. My father was correcting exercises. The books
+were arranged in two piles in front of him—those he had
+already finished with, and those he had not yet touched.
+Behind him was the wall, with its cheap, ugly, flowered
+paper, and illuminated texts. I glanced at him from time
+to time over the top of my book. There was a perpetual
+dinginess in his appearance; his linen was not often scrupulously
+clean, and his nails never were. Just now I wanted
+to ask him to stop snuffing. How could I read while he
+kept on making such disgusting noises! He had a peculiar
+way of breathing through his nose so as to produce a sort
+of whistling sound, which I could never get accustomed to.
+Often I had gone upstairs and sat in an ice-cold bedroom
+merely to be rid of it.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he looked up over his spectacles and addressed
+me across the table. “I intended to ask you about that
+book you have brought home. Who gave it to you?”</p>
+
+<p>I at once assumed an air of elaborate nonchalance.
+“Nobody gave it to me. I found it in the book-case.”</p>
+
+<p>“What are you reading in it?”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Venus and Adonis.’”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like the books you have been reading lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“But this is Shakespeare!” I exclaimed, feigning
+tremendous astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care who it is. Why can’t you read what
+other boys read?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought he was supposed to be the greatest poet in
+the world!”</p>
+
+<p>“You know very well what I mean. If you <em>do</em> read him,
+why don’t you read the plays—‘Julius Cæsar?’”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d rather have poems than plays. What is the harm
+in this?”</p>
+
+<p>“The harm is that it is not suited to your age. It is
+full of all kinds of voluptuous images and thoughts. You
+have been too much at Derryaghy lately.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
+
+<p>The train of reasoning which connected voluptuous
+thoughts with Derryaghy was difficult to follow, yet I was
+not surprised that my father had come out there. With
+him all roads led to Derryaghy, and I could never understand
+what he really felt about my position in relation to
+Mrs. Carroll. When he spoke face to face with her his
+manner always expressed something like a carefully repressed
+disapproval, and at the same time he allowed me
+to remain under countless obligations to her. For example,
+she looked after, that is to say, she paid for, my clothing.
+Also it had been settled recently that she was to pay my
+school, and later my university, expenses. I believe a
+struggle was perpetually going on within him between his
+consciousness of my interests and a desire to tell her to
+mind her own business and to leave him to look after his
+son himself. This peculiar combination of natural antipathy,
+a fear to give offence, and a sense that it was his
+duty to be thankful, was singularly ill adapted to produce
+a graceful attitude in his personal dealings with her, and
+I do not think she cared for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Now that Mrs. Carroll has her nephew and niece, there is
+no need for you to go there so often,” he went on. “I was
+glad to see that you did not stay late to-night.” He added
+the last words in a conciliatory tone, even with approval.</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you like her?” I asked simply.</p>
+
+<p>He fixed his eyes sternly upon me. “Why don’t I like
+whom?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Carroll.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Carroll! I don’t think I understand you!”</p>
+
+<p>As I gave no further explanation he returned to his
+exercises, but I could see an irrepressible desire to justify
+himself working in his mind. It broke out in another
+minute. “You don’t appear to realise that your question
+accuses me of both ingratitude and hypocrisy! Or, possibly,
+that is what you intended to do?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
+
+<p>Oh, how well I knew this mood, and how we would go
+round and round the same little circle, and how he would
+outwardly be so calm and reasonable and not in the least
+annoyed, yet inwardly be perfectly furious. “I think I’ll
+go to bed,” I murmured, getting up, and pretending to
+yawn.</p>
+
+<p>My yawn was only meant to convey sleepiness, but my
+father saw in it impertinence. “Why do you try to vex
+me?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t try to vex you. Why should I?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Carroll is different from us. Her position in life
+is different; it alters her view of everything; it is only
+natural that she should be more worldly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is she very worldly?” I asked, without enthusiasm.
+Anybody less so, I could hardly imagine, but there was no
+use arguing.</p>
+
+<p>My father branched off in another direction. “To-night,
+at dinner, were you offered wine?”</p>
+
+<p>“I had some claret.”</p>
+
+<p>“You remembered I had told you I would rather you
+didn’t take anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you speaking the truth, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know whether I remembered or not,” I answered
+petulantly. “I didn’t think it important enough to make
+a fuss about. You always want me to do everything differently
+from other people. If I can’t do as other people do,
+I’d rather not go at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not aware that I told you anything except what
+would please me,” he answered coldly. “I left you perfectly
+free.”</p>
+
+<p>“How can you call it ‘leaving me free’ when you’re for
+ever asking me whether I’ve done it? You say you don’t
+forbid me to do things, but you always talk about them
+afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a pause. It was broken by my father who
+seemed now deeply offended. “Did you make any arrangement
+about going back?”</p>
+
+<p>“I promised to go to-morrow, after breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“What for?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was asked to take the Dales somewhere.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t they find their own way? It isn’t very difficult.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does that mean I’m not to go?”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t be always going there. You seem to me to
+live there.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s easier than living at home,” I muttered.</p>
+
+<p>“It is pleasanter, I daresay; but I don’t want you to
+make yourself a nuisance to strangers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t they the best judges of whether I’m a nuisance or
+not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I don’t wish you to go to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“You might have said so sooner,” I burst out. “What
+reason have you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you don’t intend to be as disrespectful as you
+are,” my father said slowly. “If I had no other reason for
+not wanting you to go, I should have a very good one in the
+way it seems to make you behave when you come back.
+I <em>have</em> another reason, however: I don’t desire you to grow
+up with an idea that you have nothing to think of in life but
+your own pleasures. You are quite sufficiently inclined
+that way as it is.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke quietly, but there was a concentrated feeling
+behind his words. “What have I been doing?” I asked,
+trying to be equally calm, though I knew my eyes were
+bright, my cheeks flushed, and my lips pouting.</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t alluding to anything particular so much as to
+your whole way of looking at things. You appear to wish
+to be absolutely independent, to go out and in just as you
+please. You appear to think you have no duty to me or to
+anybody else. You are becoming utterly selfish.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Selfish!” I was too indignant to protest more than by
+simply repeating the word. People always called you
+selfish, I thought, bitterly, when you only wanted to prevent
+<em>them</em> from being so. I was convinced I was capable of
+making the most sublime sacrifices, if there were any need
+for them. Indeed I had often imagined myself making such
+sacrifices, making them secretly, but to be discovered in the
+end, when all my unsuspected nobility would suddenly be
+revealed, in some rather public way, perhaps, but too late
+to save those who had wilfully misunderstood me from
+agonies of remorse. It was my father who was selfish, with
+his idea of making everybody think and act exactly as he
+did. He was not only selfish, but he was jealous. That
+was at the back of all these objections to my going to
+Derryaghy. Only, he never realized his own faults; he
+found moral justifications for them. One thing was certain,
+I was going there to-morrow, whether he allowed me to or not.
+I was so full of these thoughts that I missed a great deal of
+what he was saying, but the gist of it I gathered—and I
+had heard it frequently before—that I should have my living
+to earn, my way to make in the world, that I shouldn’t have
+Mrs. Carroll always, and that the fewer luxurious tastes I
+acquired, the more chance I should have of being happy in
+the very obscure and humble path that was apparently all
+my father saw before me.</p>
+
+<p>If he really wanted to inspire me with feelings of humility,
+however, he could hardly have wasted his breath on a more
+thankless task. It was not that I saw myself becoming remarkably
+successful, but simply that I seemed to have had
+a glimpse of what an extraordinary youth I was. My interview
+with my father had made me forget all about my unhappy
+behaviour at Derryaghy, and as soon as I was in bed
+I began to compose a passionate drama, of which I was,
+naturally, the hero, but in which, without any rehearsal,
+Katherine Dale appeared as heroine. I had braved my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
+father’s anger in order to be with her, and now I was no
+longer shy, the right words rushed from me in a torrent.
+Sometimes our love story was happy, more often it was a
+perfect bath of tears. Indeed, I think I must have had
+some inborn feeling for the stage, so frequently did I lead up
+to the most telling and lime-lit situations, on the very weakest
+of which a curtain could only go down to a thunder of
+applause. In this present drama there was a fathomless
+well of sentiment, of “love interest” of the most uncompromising
+type. I had read lately, in bound volumes of
+<cite>Temple Bar</cite>, one or two novels by Miss Rhoda Broughton,
+and as I lay there in my small room, with a text above my
+head, I was far from anxious to “keep innocency.” On the
+contrary, I was one of those bold, dark, rugged, cynical
+creatures, one of those splendid ugly men, who carry in their
+breasts a smouldering fire of passion for some girl “with eyes
+like a shot partridge”; one of those men who gnaw the ends
+of their moustaches, and have behind them the remembrance
+of a fearful life. My name was Dare Stamer, or Paul Le
+Mesurier, and my heart was sombre and volcanic. The plot
+of our romance did not vary a great deal. We met; we
+loved; we quarrelled. I married somebody else—a cold,
+soulless, blonde beauty with magnificent shoulders—and
+Katherine sometimes went into a consumption, and sometimes
+did not, but in either case there was a last meeting
+between us, when the veils of falsehoods were torn aside,
+and for one wild, mad, delirious moment I held her in my
+arms, my lips pressed on hers. It was these wild, mad,
+delirious moments that so appealed to me. They followed
+one another thick and fast as rain-drops in a thunder-shower.
+I was ever at a climax. The room was brimmed
+up with lovers’ tears and lovers’ kisses, meetings and partings,
+yet never perhaps had the text above my head, though
+I was far from thinking so, been obeyed so literally and so
+successfully.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I was wakened in the morning by Tony scratching at my
+door. Still half-asleep, I got up to let him in, and then
+returned to bed, where he had already taken the most comfortable
+place. He looked at me for a moment or two and
+then closed his round, dark, innocent eyes till they showed
+only as two slits of dim silver, and set up a loud snoring. I
+was too lazy to get up, and lay idly watching him. He had
+a curious and expressive beauty, resembling that of some
+wonderful piece of Chinese porcelain, at once bizarre and
+attractive. There was something quaint about him, an
+adorable simplicity. In colour he was white, decorated
+with brindle patches. Leonardo would have made a drawing
+of him, would have delighted in the superb limbs and
+wide deep chest, the big, broad, heavy, wrinkled head, with
+its massive, low-hanging jaw, its upturned, flat, black nose,
+its silky ears, like the petals of a rose, and those dark, lovely
+eyes, in which, when he was at rest, a profound melancholy
+floated. As a pup, able to walk and no more, he had been
+a birthday present from Mrs. Carroll: now he weighed
+about sixty pounds and was three years old.</p>
+
+<p>As I watched him I tried to make up my mind whether
+I should say anything further about going to Derryaghy.
+In spite of all last night’s bravery I knew well enough that,
+when it came to the point, it was really rather impossible
+deliberately to disobey my father; and, what is more, that I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
+shouldn’t want to do so. I somehow kept seeing the thing
+from his point of view, and this irritated me, because it made
+me powerless to do anything but sit at home and sulk.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have to go up to the house and say that I can’t
+come,” I told him after breakfast. He had risen from the
+table and was in the act of taking down our Bibles from the
+book-shelf, preparatory to “worship”—a function which
+took place every morning and evening, and which consisted
+in my reading aloud a chapter from the Bible, and in my
+father making a prayer. Sometimes he commented on
+what I read, explained a verse, drew a lesson from it—interruptions
+I secretly resented, as they tended to prolong
+“worship”—sometimes he listened in silence.</p>
+
+<p>He put my Bible down beside my tea-cup before replying.
+Then, when he had resumed his seat, and fumbled with his
+spectacle-case, he said, “You may go with them: I have
+been thinking it over.”</p>
+
+<p>I answered nothing, though I had a sort of uncomfortable
+feeling that thanks might possibly be expected. I wondered
+what would happen if I were to say I didn’t want to go, that
+I should never go again, that I would rather stay here with
+him quite alone, free from all “worldly temptations.” It
+was really the most perfect opportunity imaginable for a
+thoroughly sentimental scene, like those in the stories he
+used to read to me. I pictured how it would be wrung out
+to the last drop of sloppiness, and be promptly followed by
+my conversion, or even death-bed.</p>
+
+<p>“I think it is the ninth chapter of Isaiah,” my father said,
+interrupting these meditations.</p>
+
+<p>“I read the ninth yesterday,” I replied. “It’s the tenth.”</p>
+
+<p>My father turned another page, and I began:</p>
+
+<p>“‘Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees—’”
+I felt my cheeks grow red, because the verse seemed to me
+so extraordinarily apt to the decree about my not going to
+Derryaghy. I did not look at my father, but keeping my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
+eyes glued to the page went on. The rest of the chapter,
+however, was less pertinent.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>“‘He is come to Aiath, he is passed to Migron; at
+Michmash he hath laid up his carriages:</p>
+
+<p>‘They are gone over the passage: they have taken up their
+lodging at Geba; Ramah is afraid; Gibeah of Saul is fled.</p>
+
+<p>‘Lift up thy voice, O daughter of Gallim; cause it to be
+heard unto Laish, O poor Anathoth.</p>
+
+<p>‘Madmenah is removed; the inhabitants of Gebim gather
+themselves to flee,’” etc., etc.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was not wildly exciting in itself, and I cannot say my
+reading of it made it more so. The only good point about
+it was that it did not lend itself to exegesis. The kind of
+thing my father liked was, “Servants, be obedient to them
+that are your masters.” Then he would interrupt me to
+say, “That means, when their masters tell them to do what
+is right. If we are told to do something we know to be
+wrong, we must refuse to obey.”</p>
+
+<p>When I had finished we knelt down before our chairs.
+My father prayed aloud, and I stared out of the window,
+and tried to decide whither I should take the Dales. Between
+the sentences my father, as usual, kept crossing and uncrossing
+his feet, and scraping them together, as if he were
+trying to remove a tight pair of slippers. It seemed odd to
+me that he could pray so earnestly and at the same time
+use such artificial language, crammed with “thees” and
+“thous,” and “hearests” and “doests.” Before he had
+reached “Amen” I was on my feet, dusting the knees of my
+trousers.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>A quarter of an hour later, as I walked up to Derryaghy,
+Willie Breen, the grocer’s son, a little boy of ten or eleven,
+ran out from the shop, and, after gazing carefully up and
+down the road, slipped a small piece of paper into my hand.
+One side of this paper was painted black; on the other a single
+word, “Friday,” was printed in red ink. I put it in my
+pocket and walked on without making any sign or uttering
+a word, which was the proper etiquette to observe under
+these peculiar circumstances; and in equal silence Willie
+returned to the shop.</p>
+
+<p>When I reached the house, though I had been intending
+all along to ask for Katherine, I suddenly asked for Gerald
+instead.</p>
+
+<p>“Gerald isn’t down yet,” Mrs. Carroll informed me,
+coming into the hall from the dining-room. “Probably
+he’s not even out of bed. Go up and tell him to hurry.
+He’s in the room next yours. Katherine is seeing about
+your lunch.”</p>
+
+<p>Rather reluctantly I went up to Gerald’s room and tapped
+at his door. “Come in,” he said, sleepily.</p>
+
+<p>He was indeed still in bed, and, in spite of the fact of our
+appointment, did not seem in any hurry to get out of it.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s you!” he exclaimed. “Good-morning.”</p>
+
+<p>I felt uncomfortable, for I was sure he would think it
+queer my coming into his room when I hardly knew him.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
+“Good-morning,” I answered, trying to imitate the tone he
+had used. “I was told to tell you to hurry.”</p>
+
+<p>He sat up and yawned. “It’s late, I suppose,” he murmured.
+“They hadn’t sense enough to send me up my
+breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you always have breakfast in your room?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He looked out of the window as if I did not interest him.
+“No,” he answered, after a perceptible pause, “but I have
+it when I want to.”</p>
+
+<p>I felt snubbed. I didn’t know whether to stay or go,
+but he decided the matter by telling me to wait till he had
+had his bath, that he shouldn’t be long. He put on a
+dressing-gown, and left me. When he came back I didn’t
+know why he had asked me to stay, for he began to dress
+without taking the slightest notice of me. I sat on the edge
+of the bed and watched him. It seemed to me stupid that
+I should feel slightly in awe of him, but there was no use
+pretending that I didn’t. I had already made up my mind
+that I disliked him, yet somehow I could not be indifferent
+to him—I wanted him to think me important, to admire me.
+He was only a year older than I was, but he was infinitely
+more a man of the world, and it was this, really, that impressed
+me. He dressed very quickly, yet I noticed that
+the result was just as harmonious as it had been last night.
+His clothes were of a light brown colour, that was exactly
+the same shade as his hair, and a little darker than his skin.
+A pale violet tie was loosely knotted over a cambric shirt.
+His forehead was broad; his yellow-brown eyes were set
+widely apart, and were neither large nor small; his nose
+was straight and his mouth extraordinarily delicate. His ears
+seemed to me, too, to have their own peculiar beauty. His
+skin was of a golden-brown colour, but clear almost to
+transparency, and a tiny blue vein was faintly visible on his
+left temple, running from the delicate eyebrow to the cheekbone.
+When he listened his brows slightly wrinkled. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
+would have given a good deal to have looked like
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly I caught his eyes in the mirror watching me
+ironically. “Do you know you were extremely rude to me
+yesterday?” he said, without turning round.</p>
+
+<p>I blushed and had nothing to reply.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I forgive you.” He patted me on the shoulder.
+“I’m ready now. Come along.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why wouldn’t you play properly when you were
+asked?” I blurted out, as we went downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>“I would have played if there had been anybody to play
+to. Neither Katherine nor Aunt Clara knows <cite>God save the
+Queen</cite> from the <cite>Moonlight Sonata</cite>, and that Dick person is
+too absurd for words. I’ll play for you some time when
+they aren’t there. And now I must have breakfast;
+I won’t keep you very long.... What do you want all
+that for?” he asked, as Katherine suddenly appeared with
+a large basket.</p>
+
+<p>“For lunch; we’re not going to starve ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor Katherine; evidently you’re not. We can each
+take our own lunch; a basket like that is only a nuisance.”</p>
+
+<p>“You needn’t carry it,” said Katherine. “You and I
+will carry it by turns,” she said to me.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the use of talking like that,” answered Gerald.
+“It doesn’t mean anything. If that huge thing has to be
+dragged all the way I shan’t go at all.”</p>
+
+<p>He departed to the dining-room, while Katherine and I
+were left standing in the hall, the basket between us.</p>
+
+<p>“We needn’t take any drinkables,” I began, “there’ll be
+plenty of water.”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t put in any,” said Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>We sat down in the porch to wait for Gerald. When he
+rejoined us, which he did very leisurely, I glanced at his
+shoes, and suggested that he should change them for something
+more substantial.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Why? We’re not going through ploughed fields, are
+we? I haven’t any hob-nails even if we were.” A panama
+hat shaded his face and he swung a light cane in his hand.
+I knew at once we should have difficulty in getting him any
+distance, and was very nearly proposing he should stay at
+home.</p>
+
+<p>“Why aren’t we driving?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Such nonsense!” exclaimed Katherine. “If Aunt
+Clara had wanted us to drive she would have said so.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t mind making inquiries,” Gerald intimated. “I
+somehow feel it’s the proper thing to drive.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re not to say anything about it; Aunt Clara won’t
+like it, I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll drive with our young friend Peter, here,” he said
+airily, tapping me on the shoulder with his cane.</p>
+
+<p>I could see Katherine was becoming impatient; Gerald
+was the only one who was perfectly cool. “About carrying
+Katherine’s lunch,” he began. “Hadn’t we better get a
+stick and put it through the handle of this thing?” He
+kicked the basket lightly. “Then two of us could struggle
+with it together.”</p>
+
+<p>The idea was a good one, and we put it into practice.</p>
+
+<p>Our road kept all the way by the coast: on the right,
+the mountains; on the left, a strip of waste land, varying in
+width, and covered with dry, sapless grass upon which,
+nevertheless, there were goats feeding; below this, the steep
+drop down to the sea. Shadowless in the strong sun, the
+road wound on ahead, white with dust, like a pale ribbon on
+the green and russet landscape. We had gone about a mile
+when Gerald suddenly announced, “I’m not going any
+further; it’s too hot.”</p>
+
+<p>This brought us again to a standstill. “It’s so like you
+to spoil everything,” said Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>“What am I spoiling? I suppose I can please myself.
+Only, since I’m not coming, I’d advise you to chuck some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
+of that grub away.” He took his cigarette-case from his
+pocket and offered me a cigarette, which I refused. He lit
+one himself.</p>
+
+<p>“You know very well that if you go home Aunt Clara
+will think I ought to have come with you, or at any rate be
+back for lunch,” said Katherine quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“How should I know such absurd things? And I can’t
+help what she thinks, can I?”</p>
+
+<p>“We could have stayed out all day.”</p>
+
+<p>Gerald had begun to whistle an air very softly, and I
+recognized it as something he had played last night. His
+eyes were fixed on the distant horizon, and he seemed
+slightly bored.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps if we were to bathe it might make a difference—who
+knows? Suppose young Peter and I bathe while you
+watch the basket here in this pleasant sunny spot; or you
+could walk on slowly with it, and we might in the end even
+overtake you?”</p>
+
+<p>I turned to Katherine. “Come along,” I said brusquely.
+“What’s the use of bothering about him?”</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me and coloured faintly. “Then I’m to
+say you won’t be home till dinner-time?” he asked, speaking
+directly to his sister.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine hesitated. “Shall he say that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Let him say what he likes,” I returned, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>We moved on together, and I did not look back, though
+Katherine did, more than once. “I’ll make no more arrangements
+with your brother,” I remarked.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine was silent. “Perhaps we should come another
+day instead?” she began presently, and in a hesitating way.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean you are going to give in to him?” I said,
+making up my mind that there should be no other day, so
+far as I was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>She was again silent, and meanwhile we continued to
+walk on. I could see she was uncertain as to what she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
+ought to do, that she did not want to disappoint me, and
+that, on the other hand, she was not sure about Gerald.
+“He’s offended at something,” she began. “He takes
+offence very easily.... He thinks you didn’t want him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why should he think that?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.... But it is something of that sort, I’m
+sure.”</p>
+
+<p>I was going to say that I did not care a straw what he
+thought, but checked myself. “He didn’t appear to me
+to be offended,” I replied. “It was simply that he thought
+it too much fag.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t know him,” said Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>And we continued to trudge along, our feet white with
+dust. It really <em>was</em> very hot, and I was glad I had so little
+clothing on—merely a light cotton tennis-shirt under my
+jacket. When we reached a low grey bridge that spanned a
+shallow mountain stream we branched inland. This was
+the Bloody Bridge, I told Katherine, and a religious massacre
+had once taken place here. I pointed out the remains
+of an old church, with its fallen tombs, and after resting for
+a few minutes we began to climb the valley, which was the
+walk I had proposed to take them. This valley was wonderfully
+beautiful, widening out gradually, and gradually
+ascending; on each side of it steep dark mountains, covered
+with heather, and grass, and gorse, and hidden streams which
+flowed into the broader, deeper stream we followed. The
+colouring was rich and splendid—dull gold, bronze, dark
+green and even black, with the brighter purple of the heather
+woven through it, and the long, narrow, pale, silver streak
+of water, glittering and gleaming, far, far up, till in the end
+it was lost over the edge of a higher valley which crossed
+ours at right angles.</p>
+
+<p>“These are the Mourne Mountains?” Katherine asked
+gazing up at them. “I’ve seen them from the Isle of Man.
+On a clear day you can make them out quite distinctly.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
+
+<p>She began to talk to me about mountains, about Switzerland,
+where she had been last spring, and I felt ashamed
+never to have been anywhere. Yet, while she was describing
+it, I had an instinct that I should not like Switzerland.
+By some chance I indeed pictured it very much as, later on,
+I was actually to find it. Katherine’s enthusiasm could
+not remove this conviction: in fact, what she said, secretly
+strengthened my idea that it must be an odious country,
+and, years later, amid all the showy banality of its picturesqueness,
+I remembered this particular walk, and my
+own beautiful dark country rose up before me, with its
+sombre hills, its dreamy, changing sky.</p>
+
+<p>But at the time I had nothing to say, I had no comparisons
+to make, I had seen nothing. “I should like to go to a big
+city like London or Paris,” I told her, “not to live there,
+but to see it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe you’d like it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.... You’re so much a part of all
+this.” She glanced up at the hills.</p>
+
+<p>“Do <em>you</em> like cities?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I simply love them; but then I’m quite different.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like the picture galleries any way,” I declared.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you fond of pictures?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve not seen many—only reproductions.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m fond of them too. There was a splendid picture in
+the Academy this year of a girl skating. She was holding
+a muff up to her face so that it covered her mouth and chin,
+but she was awfully pretty, and when you came into the
+room you would just think she was a real person. And the
+snow was so nice, with a sort of pink light on it. If you come
+over to London I’ll take you to see everything.”</p>
+
+<p>But again, just as in the case of Switzerland, my instinct
+told me I should detest this picture. For a moment I
+had a feeling of depression; it seemed to me of infinite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
+importance that Katherine should like the things that I
+liked.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care for pretty pictures,” I said. “I hate
+everything pretty,” I went on almost angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you rather have ugly ones?” asked Katherine,
+laughing, as if she had caught me in an absurdity. I had
+no answer to give, though I knew myself exactly what I
+meant. I felt lonely and melancholy. Then I looked at
+Katherine. She was very beautiful, and in a quite different
+way from her brother. And suddenly I knew where I had
+seen her before—her eyes, at least—they were the eyes of
+Prudence Carroll.... I gazed at her, seeking some further
+resemblance, but could discover none. Her skin was very
+white, save where in her cheeks it flushed to a soft radiant
+glow. Her brown, crisp hair was pulled back straight from
+her forehead, though one or two little tufts had got loose and
+waved in the faint wind. Her nose and mouth had the
+same delicate beauty as Gerald’s, but her expression was
+quite different, and it was there that her greatest beauty lay....
+Yes, there again was a resemblance to Prudence
+Carroll—her expression was the same as Prudence Carroll’s.
+She had the same eyes, the same expression ... perhaps,
+then, the same spirit.... A sort of daydream had begun
+to weave itself into my thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>“How far can we go this way?” Katherine interrupted me.</p>
+
+<p>“As far as you can see. There is another valley beyond.
+We could go along it and home over Slieve Donard, but it
+is a long distance.”</p>
+
+<p>We climbed slowly, not talking very much. It was past
+noon now, and hotter than ever, and when we reached a deep
+green pool under a waterfall we stopped to bathe our hands
+and faces in it. Its cool sweetness was alluring, as if a water-sprite
+sang up through it into the hot sunlight, and the white
+spray sparkled in the sun. “It would be splendid for a
+bathe,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Bathe if you want to; I can walk on and you can overtake
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>I remembered Gerald, however, and refused to do this,
+being full to the brim just now of unselfishness and chivalry.
+“We might have our lunch here,” I suggested. “Then we
+could hide the basket somewhere, and not be bothered by it
+again till we are going home.”</p>
+
+<p>We spread a napkin on a broad flat stone, and our lunch on
+top of that. I now discovered why the basket had been so
+heavy, but, though it had been a nuisance carrying it, its
+contents were extremely welcome. We had almost finished
+when a peculiar feeling rather than a sound made me look
+up, and I saw a man standing not more than three or
+four yards from us. It was as if he had risen out of the
+earth. When you are under the impression that you are
+miles away from any human being, such a sudden apparition
+is a little startling, nor was the appearance of this visitor
+reassuring. He was large and pale, with short brown hair,
+and at the back of his head he wore a cap, like a boy’s cap,
+which was too small for him. His clothes, without being
+ragged, were stained and worn, and of a nondescript,
+brownish colour. He was young, probably between twenty-five
+and thirty, and strongly built. There was something
+coldly malevolent in the pale, clean-shaved face, something
+indescribably corrupt and cruel, which seemed to stare out
+of the hard brown eyes, and to hover about the smiling lips.
+He stood before us, looking down in obvious enjoyment of
+our discomfiture, making no movement to pass on. It was
+curious that features so perfectly regular, features neither
+bloated nor disfigured, could give so vivid an impression of
+ugliness. It was the ugliness of something positively evil,
+and my first feeling was one of instinctive repugnance and
+disgust, as if I had been touched by an obscene and noxious
+creature. I felt, I can’t say why, that I was in the presence
+of something actively dangerous, and not only to my body,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
+but reaching beyond that: I felt as if I were in the presence
+of some form of spiritual corruption or decay, that I knew
+nothing about, and that yet I had a horror of, as a young
+rabbit is afraid of a hawk. That prolonged, impudent stare,
+passing over me, seemed to leave a trail of filth, of slime, of
+something that defiled like a loathsome caress. His eyes
+slid from me to Katherine with the same repulsive scrutiny.
+What was he doing here? He was no country man. As
+my first startled feeling passed, my temper began to rise.
+“What do you want?” I asked. “How much longer are
+you going to stand there?”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed almost noiselessly, though he still neither
+moved nor spoke. It was as if the sound of his laugh
+touched a spring within me, and I lifted a sharp piece of
+stone lying near my feet. I felt a sudden rage, an extraordinary
+desire to destroy. I could actually feel my lips
+draw back ever so little, just like the lips of an angry terrier.
+I had no longer the faintest sensation of fear: on the
+contrary, what I wanted was for him to make a movement
+forward, a gesture that I could take as threatening. And
+the rough, natural weapon I had picked up must have
+acquired a sudden appearance of dangerousness, for our
+visitor drew back and his face altered. Then he laughed
+more loudly and on a different note as he passed on his
+way down the valley. I felt elated. Somehow, I was
+certain my stone would not have missed its mark, and
+that there would have been no hesitation, no lack of force,
+on the part of the wielder. Katherine and I watched
+him as he retreated, now disappearing from our sight,
+and now again appearing, but always at a point farther
+down.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, he’s gone,” I said. “He was horrible looking.”
+I faced her with a proud consciousness of having behaved
+very well.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know what <em>you</em> looked like?” asked Katherine.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
+And before I could answer: “You looked just like David
+when he threw the stone.”</p>
+
+<p>I blushed. Then, “I never cared much for David,” I
+answered ungraciously, and moreover untruly, for I was,
+secretly, extremely pleased and flattered.</p>
+
+<p>“Neither did I till a minute ago, but that was because
+I didn’t know what he was like.”</p>
+
+<p>My blush deepened. “Well, the beast’s gone at any rate,”
+I said to cover my gratification. “I will tell Michael
+when we get home. He can’t be prowling about here for
+any good.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is Michael?”</p>
+
+<p>“One of our policemen—the decentest.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>We hid the basket under the heather. A quiet had
+fallen upon us, through which the noise of the splashing
+water seemed to weave itself in patterns and arabesques
+of sound.</p>
+
+<p>“Shall we go up higher?” I asked, and without answering
+me Katherine began to climb the hill-side, and I
+followed her over dry, springy, fragrant heather, and
+between huge mossy boulders that had lain undisturbed
+for centuries. We stopped to look at a fly-catching plant,
+that curious, unpleasant mixture of the animal and the
+vegetable. Katherine had never seen one before, and she
+examined the outspread, concave disc, with the skeletons,
+the grey husks of flies, adhering to its green surface. We
+found a bee struggling on his back on the purple flower of
+a thistle, waving his legs in the air, a ridiculous picture of
+intoxication. But in spite of these interruptions the silence
+that had crept over us lingered still. When we reached
+a place where the ground rose steeply for a yard or two
+I gave Katherine my hand to help her, and when we came
+to more level ground we still went on hand in hand. And
+with this light contact there came to me a strange, thrilling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
+pleasure, intense yet dreamy, unlike anything I had ever
+known before. I did not look at my companion. When
+I spoke, telling her to avoid a patch of soft ground that had
+here spread across the path, the sound of my own voice
+astonished me, so unfamiliar was it, even trembling slightly;
+and I felt my limbs trembling. But why should it be so?
+What was there? Why was I nervous? Nothing had
+happened but this short easy climb hand in hand. I threw
+my hat from me and flung myself down among the heather,
+lying with my hands clasped behind my head, and my face
+turned up to the dark blue sky. Far, far below us, the sea,
+blue and deep, broad, beautiful and free, lay shimmering
+in the hot sun. I had a sensation of intense happiness,
+physical and mental, into which I seemed to be sinking
+deep and deeper. I felt my eyes grow moist, and I turned
+away my head that my companion might not see my face.</p>
+
+<p>Presently I looked round. Katherine was sitting beside
+me, gazing straight out at the distant sea. The broad brim
+of her black hat shadowed her face. The deep blue of her
+eyes seemed darker than before; they had the blue now of
+the eyes Renoir so often painted, and that I have seen
+nowhere else. I wanted to say something, I hardly knew
+what. I hovered shyly on the verge of it, like a timid
+bather on the brink of the sea, but there was no one to push
+me in, and my plunge was not taken.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s jolly nice here!” Those feeble words were all I
+could find to express the rapid rush of emotion that had
+shaken my whole being. The vast and complex forces of
+nature were stirring within me almost as unconsciously
+as the new leaf germinates in the growing plant. Yet there
+was something which, without any words at all, I must have
+expressed, had there been an observer to see it. I mean
+the helplessness of youth, its pathetic credulity and good
+faith, its brightness and briefness in the face of those hoary
+old hills, and of feelings that were almost as ancient.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
+
+<p>I sat up and clasped my hands about my knees. “I
+wonder what it will be like living in town?” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you’re going away next month, aren’t you?
+Aunt Clara told me.”</p>
+
+<p>“My father wanted me to try for a post in a Government
+office. There is a boy who lives here who is going to do
+that: he is working for his exam. now.” Then I added, I
+don’t know why; “Mrs. Carroll is paying for me, and will
+be afterwards, when I go to college. I’m to go to one of
+the English universities—Oxford, I think. Of course my
+father couldn’t afford to send me, and indeed he’d rather I
+didn’t go at all. He let me decide, however, though there
+was really only one thing that made him give in.”</p>
+
+<p>“What?”</p>
+
+<p>“My mother once sent money to be used for my education,
+and he would not take it.”</p>
+
+<p>Katherine was mystified, and, as I saw this, it dawned
+on me that I should not have spoken. I had taken it for
+granted that she knew all about me.</p>
+
+<p>“You know, my mother doesn’t live at home,” I explained;
+and then, to change the subject, I took the piece
+of paper Willie Breen had given me that morning from my
+pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“Can you guess what that is?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>She turned it over.</p>
+
+<p>“It means that on Friday there will be a meeting of a
+kind of club we have,” I said. “It is a night club. The
+whole thing is a secret. We have supper round a fire, and
+talk, and tell yarns, and all that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Outside?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; over on the golf-links usually.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why at night?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know. Pretty late too—about half-past
+eleven or twelve. I got it up last year with some of the
+boys who were staying down here. And then, afterwards,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
+I kept it up with two or three of the chaps at school. This
+year I got sick of it, and I’ve only been to one meeting.”</p>
+
+<p>“At night! It must be rather queer. I love the sea at
+night. Are you allowed to bring visitors?”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no rule; there are no rules of any kind. Would
+you like to come?”</p>
+
+<p>Katherine hesitated. Then she laughed. “Yes. Would
+it matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“There’ll be nobody but boys there.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you’d take me; and of course, Gerald would
+come.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take you if you’ll come by yourself,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Without Gerald? I couldn’t. What harm would he
+do?”</p>
+
+<p>I did not say; but without Gerald I knew I could carry
+the thing off, with him it would be difficult. “You’d
+have to promise not to tell anybody,” I explained.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course. If I told, I shouldn’t be there myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I mean even afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll not tell.”</p>
+
+<p>For a minute or two we looked down the hill-side, bathed
+in the afternoon sun; then I made up my mind. “If you
+can promise that Gerald won’t talk about it I’ll take you.
+But won’t you find it difficult to get out?” I added immediately
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>“No; we’ll simply sit up later than the others. They
+seem to go to bed about ten.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the lodge-gate will be locked.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can easily manage about that.”</p>
+
+<p>I regretted having mentioned the matter at all, yet I
+hadn’t the courage to draw back. “I’ll tell you on Friday
+morning exactly when to be ready,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>We sat silent. Katherine had taken off her hat and
+it lay on the ground beside her; she was fastening a bunch of
+heather into her blue and white muslin dress.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Have you looked at the portraits in the long passage
+yet?” I asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; not very particularly, but I noticed there were
+some.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you see one of a dark lady standing by a spinet,
+holding a bunch of flowers?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t remember. Who is she?”</p>
+
+<p>“Prudence Carroll,” I answered. “Look at her when
+you go in.”</p>
+
+<p>Katherine had completed her task. “Why?” she
+inquired, turning to me.</p>
+
+<p>“I think she is very like you—or you are very like her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall see; but suppose I don’t care for her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you can say I’m a fool. But you will care for
+her—at any rate, I do. I don’t mean that your features are
+just the same as hers.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I’m not dark, am I?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; at all events not <em>so</em> dark. However, you will see
+what I mean—perhaps you will see.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re not sure? It can’t be so very striking then.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just what it is—it <em>is</em> striking. It mayn’t, however,
+be exactly obvious to everybody. When I first saw
+you, I kept wondering who you were like. I couldn’t get at
+it for a long time—then I knew.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I never even heard of her, but I’m shockingly
+ignorant of my ancestors.”</p>
+
+<p>“She wasn’t an ancestor: she was never married; the
+likeness isn’t physical.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, then I shan’t see it. Besides, I never <em>do</em> see likenesses,
+even when they’re much less mysterious than this.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,—perhaps, in a way, it is mysterious. I
+can see it more clearly sometimes than others. I don’t
+think I should see it at all if you were asleep or dead.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a horrid idea!” She laughed, but not quite
+easily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Do you not feel that these hills are familiar to you?”
+I asked dreamily. “I can imagine a person coming to some
+house like Derryaghy for the first time, and then finding that
+he knew this room and that, where this passage led to, what
+view he should see when he looked out through that little
+window at the top of the stairs. Or it might be that two
+people would come there together, and everything they said
+would sound like an echo from something that had been
+spoken before, and each, while they waited for it, would
+know the answer, before it had left the other’s lips.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sure that I follow you,” said Katherine prosaically,
+“but I imagine you are trying to make out that I
+may be what-do-you-call-her Carroll come to life again.
+You’re the strangest boy I ever met.”</p>
+
+<p>“You told me I was like David. But—but—pretend
+it for a moment. Say you were Prudence Carroll, then who
+should I be?”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t any idea. Perhaps the apprentice of the artist
+who painted her picture, if he had an apprentice.”</p>
+
+<p>I considered this. It had never occurred to me before.
+But I could not get back, I could not discover even a faint
+gleam. It was not the time; I was too saturated with my
+actual surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>I did not pursue the subject, for I saw it had no interest for
+Katherine. Besides, I wanted to be quiet. I thought
+if we sat in silence, if I held her hand; above all, if we sat in
+silence close together, her arms about me, my cheek against
+her cheek, the past might swim up into the present, and we
+should know. But instead of that we began to talk, to talk
+of things that did not matter, until, by and by, we got up
+to return home.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I stayed in the house all the evening, but I could not read,
+and so I sat down to write to Katherine. I wrote for more
+than an hour, though I was very doubtful whether, in the
+end, I should post my letter. It was the first time in my
+life I had ever written to anybody. Of course I cannot
+remember now what I said: I can remember the sense of
+it, or the nonsense, possibly, but not how I expressed it.
+Very badly, I suppose, for I tore my first attempt up, and
+began another, over which I must have spent an even longer
+time, since, to finish it, I was obliged to get up and light
+the lamp. When I went out to the post it was quite dark,
+and immediately after I had dropped my letter in the box
+I had a strong desire to get it back again. Why had I been
+in such a hurry? I should have kept it till morning. Then,
+as I pictured Katherine reading it, a thrill of pleasure swept
+through my timidity.</p>
+
+<p>I did not go home, but strolled, instead, over the golf-links
+in the direction of the sea. At such an hour they were
+absolutely deserted, and the pale sand-hills, stretching
+away in the moonlight and beside a dark waste of water,
+wore an unfamiliar, a slightly weird aspect, suggestive of
+some desolate lunar landscape. I wandered on, utterly
+oblivious to time, till I found a comfortable spot between
+two of these hills, on a gentle slope that was almost like a
+couch. I was filled with a passionate sense of life, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
+lying there, with the long thin sapless grass about me and
+above me, and the soft white powdery sand beneath, I
+could look out over the sea, and feel myself perfectly
+alone. The water was a dark mass under the moon, darker
+than the beach, darker than the sky, but not so dark as
+the Mourne Mountains, which rose away on my left in
+smooth, bold, black curves.</p>
+
+<p>There was no wind. Down in the hollow where I lay
+I was as sheltered as I should have been in bed. The night
+was washed through with the soft sound of the waves as
+they splashed in a long curving line on the flat strand that
+stretched on round to Dundrum, three miles away. Moths
+hovered above me with a beating of pale delicate wings;
+and all around, like a vast background for the sound of the
+sea, was the deep, rich, summer silence of the slumbering
+world, a silence of unending music, as though the great,
+living earth were breathing softly in its sleep. I lay on my
+back, and above me was the vast, deep vault of the sky,
+full of a floating darkness, in which the white moon hovered
+like a ghost. And I lay there in luxurious enjoyment of
+the night, and of the life that was running through my own
+body. It seemed to me at that moment as if my spirit
+were no longer merely passively receptive of what was
+borne in upon it, but that it had actually taken wing, had
+grown lighter, more volatile, were flowing out through the
+surrounding atmosphere, through the sky and the sea, were
+moving with the movement of the water. The earth beneath
+me was living and breathing, and, obedient to some
+obscure prompting of my body, I turned round and pressed
+my mouth against the dry grass, closer and closer, in a long
+silent embrace.</p>
+
+<p>It was very well there was no one to observe this exhibition
+of primitive and eternal instinct. I felt a passionate
+happiness and excitement. My head was bare, the salt
+sharp smell of the sea seemed to have set all my nerves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
+tingling, and I unfastened my shirt that my breast might
+be bare also. All the past had slipped from me, and I
+lived in this moment, squeezing out its ecstasy to the last
+drop, as I might the juice of some ripe fruit. It seemed to
+me that I was on the brink of finding something for which
+all my previous existence had been but one long preparation
+and search. I was fumbling at the door of an enchanted
+garden: in a moment it would swing open: already the
+perfume of unknown flowers and fruits was in my nostrils.
+My feeling was deep and pure and clear as a forest pool.
+In my mind I went over the story of Shakespeare’s “Venus
+and Adonis.” I thought of the shepherd-boy Endymion.
+I imagined myself Endymion, as I lay there half naked in
+the moonlight. My eyes dimmed and the blood raced
+through my veins; it was as if the heart of the summer
+had suddenly opened out, like a gorgeous flower, and
+brought me some strange rapture....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When I awakened to more commonplace things I knew
+that it was very late indeed. I wondered what had possessed
+me, and what story I should tell my father standing there
+in the hall, holding up a candle, looking at me before he
+turned round to fasten the chain. I raced home to the
+fulfilment of this vision, but it was already past midnight,
+and my father would not listen to my excuses. He was
+very angry indeed, but his anger could not come between
+me and my happiness. I listened to it in a kind of dream,
+and as soon as a pause came, slipped away from it and
+on upstairs. In the dark, as I undressed, the delicate scent
+of heather still clinging to my clothes filled the small bedroom,
+and seemed to bring the whole day back to me from
+the beginning. Comfortably between the cool sheets I
+went over every incident of it, while the scent of heather
+still floated about me; and now I had acquired an extraordinary
+bravery; I gave utterance to every thought arising<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
+in my mind; the embrace which had been so impossible was
+perfectly easy. One by one exquisite pictures drifted
+in through the windows of my closed eyes; one by one
+they opened out before me, like flowers, full of delicious
+sweetness, and in the midst of them I fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>But my sleep was only a completer realization of my
+waking thoughts. I was again with Katherine, and again
+we were alone on the mountain-side. We were coming
+home and I was a little behind her, when she stooped to
+gather a handful of heather. But instead of fastening it
+into her dress she turned and flung it at me, and then ran on
+down the hill. I followed quickly, and all at once she
+stopped running and we stood there, hot and panting and
+laughing. Then she impulsively lifted her face, and I
+kissed her. I held her close to me and kissed her again
+and again.... And the scent of heather floated about
+my bed, the heather of reality mingling with the heather
+of my dream.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>During the morning my father kept me working in the
+garden where he was erecting a kind of arch of trellis-work
+above the gate, but after our early dinner I went up to
+Derryaghy. Ever since I had awakened, my mind had
+been filled with the letter I had written, and with guesses as
+to how it would affect Katherine. I hurried along, for our
+dinner was at two, while their lunch was at one, and I had
+made no appointment, so that when I reached the house,
+and found they were all gone out, I was not greatly surprised.
+Katherine and Gerald had gone out riding; they would be
+back for tea. I left a message to say I would call some
+time in the evening and went upstairs to choose a book.
+In the silent library the faint sound of my feet on the thick
+carpet made little more noise than the rustle of a ghost,
+and when I had found what I wanted I paused with the
+book unopened in my hand. Through the window I could
+look out into the afternoon garden, sunlit and mellow, but
+in the house itself the silence of those upper rooms struck
+me, as always, with a suggestion of a faint, bygone life, of
+spiritual presences, unseen, yet watching and listening. I
+walked slowly down the passage, looking at the portraits,
+and trying to picture the lives of those who had sat for
+them. Were they aware of my scrutiny, of my curiosity,
+possibly indiscreet? did I disturb the dust of the past, did
+they welcome or, perchance, resent my intrusion into that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
+delicate dream-life that had fallen upon them? I loved to
+amuse myself with such fancies, idle enough, not to be
+communicated to others. The air seemed heavy with a
+kind of still, intense reverie, through which there came the
+vibration of a hidden mysterious life. Were I the true son
+of the house, I told myself, a sign of recognition might have
+been given to me; but I was a stranger, an intruder, and
+my robuster, noisier presence could but disturb their
+ethereal existence. There was something almost vulgar in
+being physically alive among that shadowy company. I
+longed to pass the threshold of their world and learn its
+secrets. Perhaps if I were really to love that dark, sweet
+lady, Prudence Carroll, to declare my love, to kiss her painted
+lips, I might be admitted to it. Would she be jealous when
+I left her? To love a dream, a memory, that was very
+possible; but to be faithful to it? Through the door I
+had left ajar a golden stream of sunlight, filled with floating
+specks of dust, swam across the shadowed passage, and just
+touched the flowers in her hand. But my ghosts had never
+been afraid of sunlight: they were not afraid to walk in the
+deserted garden or to pass me on the stairs or in the hall.
+Often I had felt them to be there, and some day, I knew, I
+should see them. With this thought there came to me a
+desire to revisit their own garden, a walled place of dark
+green graves, where they wandered undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>I went out, forgetting after all my book, and took a short
+cut across the fields and down a disused, mossy lane, purple
+with tall foxgloves, and sleepy with droning bees, which
+brought me out abruptly at the old church. Service was
+still held here, and as I came up I saw the door was open.
+I went inside, and an old woman who was dusting the pews
+wished me good-day. I talked to her for a few minutes
+and then began to wander idly about, trying my Latin on
+the inscriptions, peeping behind doors and through windows.
+A church on a week-day was for me quite a different thing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
+from a church on a Sunday. Its quiet appealed to me, a
+sort of homely, gentle charm that was at once dissipated
+by the entrance of a congregation. I went into the pulpit
+and imagined myself preaching, while the old woman,
+Margaret Beattie, leaned on the handle of her broom and
+watched me.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d make the queer fine curate, Master Peter,” she
+said, evidently seeing in this exhibition the betrayal of a
+vocation.</p>
+
+<p>“They’ll never get me, Margaret,” I replied. “The
+Church is not what it was. I believe you are an old witch,”
+I went on, for she was half-deaf, “and when you have done
+your mischief here, you will ride away on that broomstick.”</p>
+
+<p>I went out into the sunshine and pottered about among
+the graves. All were old, for nobody was ever buried here
+now. Most of the head-stones were stained green with age
+and weather, and the lettering was so worn that it was often
+necessary to peer close to read a name or a date. I lingered
+in the corner where lay the bones of some of those fine ladies
+and gentlemen whose pictures I had been looking at. Well,
+it was a pleasant place....</p>
+
+<p>Margaret came out, locking the door after her. I heard
+her shambling feet on the gravel, followed by the clanging
+of the iron gate that left me to myself. Had my ghosts
+preceded me here, or did they still linger in the upper rooms
+at Derryaghy? I threaded my way among the graves to the
+low, sun-warmed wall, all golden and green and grey with
+velvet moss on weathered stone. Before me lay the broad
+open country I must cross to go home, rich and dark in
+the late afternoon light. The gleam of water, of pool and
+stream, shone palely amid long grass and darker gorse
+bushes: and beyond were trees, black and soft against the
+western sky, as if rubbed in by a dusky thumb. Distant
+hills stood out from the grey clouds and the softer, deeper
+background of luminous sky. Everything shimmered and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
+gleamed in a kind of romantic richness and divine softness
+that I was to see later in dreamy landscapes by Perugino.
+And over all was a great sea of light and sky—grey, faint
+green, and deeper, warmer yellow, with clear silver where
+the water lay.</p>
+
+<p>I turned from it and sat down on the wall, facing the
+churchyard. It was a quiet spot, designed for contemplation.
+The faint wind in the trees was like a low pleasant
+tune, and there was nothing melancholy in its charm. To
+me it had a kind of happy beauty which I loved. I had
+fallen into a mood when I seemed close to my dreamland.
+It lay beyond an enchanted sea, whose shore was that bright
+cloud there. I could hear the low, continuous sound of
+surf breaking on the pale glistening sand; I could see deep
+lagoons, and sleepy rivers winding slowly down through
+green lawns and meadowlands. I tried to draw nearer, but
+it swam away from me, leaving only a broken cloud, and
+beyond that the endless sky. Had it already been, or was it
+still to come? Was all this world, apparently so solid under
+my feet, but my dream, and should I presently awaken to
+that other? I had a sudden temptation to risk everything:
+the fascination of death stole over me, quickening my
+curiosity to know what lay beyond. Only <em>should</em> I know?
+Death might not really solve anything! If I tried to force
+an entrance I might lose my only chance of finding one. A
+large, splendid butterfly, a red admiral, flitted over the wall
+and perched on one of the grave-stones, spreading his
+gorgeous wings, black and crimson, flat against the grey,
+sun-baked stone. He remained there with the stillness of
+a painted thing, drinking in the heat, knowing nothing save
+that.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon was waning. The sun had crept down
+the sky till he was almost hidden, and the violet shadows
+were blurred on the tangled grass. Again one of those
+strange, breathless silences seemed to wash up as from some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
+depth of Time, and I listened—listened for a sign, a word,
+for in the stillness the faintest whisper would have reached
+me. What were they, these strange pauses in life, in
+everything—these feelings of suspense, of expectation?
+A kind of ineffable happiness and peace descended upon
+me. A delicate spirit of beauty seemed to be wandering
+through the unmown grass, which bent beneath its feet,
+wandering under the broad-leaved trees, beside the grey old
+church. Surely there was something of which all this was
+only the reflection! I could feel it; I knew it. What
+did it mean? what was I waiting for? what was it I
+desired? I thought of my soul as a little candle-flame,
+hovering at my lips, ready to take flight. If I blew it
+from me it might flicker away over the grass, down into
+the graves, up into the air, a tiny tongue of flame, no bigger
+than a piece of thistledown. I thought of the old, silent,
+listening house, darkening now to twilight, mysterious,
+haunted, with its closed doors and brown portraits: a
+dream-thing that, too, and all the ghosts who lived there.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It was half-past eight when I left home to go to Derryaghy,
+but at the corner of the Bryansford Road I met Willie
+Breen and stopped to get particulars about our meeting
+to-morrow night. I did not mention the Dales because
+I was almost sure that in the end Katherine would not
+come, and in the midst of our talk he broke off abruptly
+with: “Here’s your fine friends,” delivered half-contemptuously.
+At the same time he stuck his hands in his
+pockets and strolled off whistling.</p>
+
+<p>I wheeled round to face Miss Dick and Katherine and
+Gerald coming towards me. I raised my straw hat.</p>
+
+<p>“We’re just going as far as the station and back,” said
+Katherine. “We thought we’d meet you.”</p>
+
+<p>I dropped with her a little behind the others and walked
+as slowly as I could.</p>
+
+<p>“I got your letter,” she went on, simply. “It was very
+nice of you to write, but I hope you didn’t want an answer.
+Letters are beyond me.”</p>
+
+<p>“You weren’t angry?” I asked, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>“No. What was there to be angry about? Of course,
+I couldn’t make out what it all meant: you didn’t intend
+me, I suppose, to take it quite seriously: but it seemed
+very flattering and poetic.... I was sorry we weren’t
+in when you came for us. Tell me what you did with
+yourself all afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I walked out to the old graveyard and sat there,” I
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>“How cheerful!”</p>
+
+<p>“It was rather: at any rate I liked it.... Let us
+go along here,” I added. “We can get home round this
+way. It is a good deal longer, but— Do you mind?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if it doesn’t keep us too late.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have been thinking about the artist’s apprentice,”
+I began. “Do you smell the meadow-sweet?”</p>
+
+<p>“The artist’s apprentice? Oh, yes! Well, what were
+you thinking about him?”</p>
+
+<p>“That he must paint your portrait.”</p>
+
+<p>“But can he?”</p>
+
+<p>“He can try, like other apprentices.”</p>
+
+<p>“When?”</p>
+
+<p>“Any time. To-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really? Do you paint?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only a little in water-colours. I’ve not had any
+lessons.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you’ve made pictures?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, just a few sketches. I never finish anything.
+Just something to remind me of—things.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must show them to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you like; but you won’t see anything in them;
+nobody ever does. They’re only meant for myself—and
+they’re no use anyway.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did you really mean by your letter, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know—burn it. I meant everything that’s
+there, but I’m not sure now what <em>is</em> there. After I had
+written it I went out and lay down on the golf-links and
+listened to the sea.... Would you like me to take you
+to my old graveyard? I expect you’ll be going to church
+there on Sunday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. It’s not far away—just across those fields.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
+
+<p>We walked on through the scented darkness.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know that I like graveyards,” said Katherine,
+doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t either—new ones—but this is very old.”</p>
+
+<p>I helped her across the stile. Out of the shadow of the
+tall hedge, the grassy country lay grey and unsubstantial
+under the rising moon. The black spire of the church
+showed through the trees, and in a little while we reached
+the low wall where I had sat all the afternoon. But how
+changed the place was! Flooded with fantastic moonlight,
+only the shadows now seemed real.</p>
+
+<p>“You do not want to go inside?” Katherine asked,
+dissuasively.</p>
+
+<p>“No; we can see it from here.” And I leaned over the
+low wall. “It is not like a modern cemetery,” I again told
+her. “There is nothing horrid here. There are no bodies;—nothing
+but a little dust, and a few spirits, perhaps, that
+have not gone away.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ghosts? Are you not afraid of them?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. Not now, at any rate; these ghosts are
+friendly; they are so old.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you seen them?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I saw one at home in my bedroom when I was a
+little chap, but it was not nice; it was not like these....
+You are buried here,” I added, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>But Katherine turned away quickly. “Don’t,” she said.
+“Why do you like to be so morbid? Besides, I don’t think
+it is right.”</p>
+
+<p>I could see that I had vexed her, and I changed the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>Down by the grave just below us the tiny green light of a
+glow-worm glimmered, but I did not point it out to Katherine.
+A fairy tale of Hans Andersen’s came into my mind, and
+I saw Death, like an old gardener, floating over the wall with
+a soul, like a baby, folded in his arms; and I watched him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
+lay it softly to sleep under the trees. I had forgotten all
+the details of the story, but I made a story for myself, and
+the moonlight on the grass and on the weather-worn grave-stones,
+and the black, lurking shadows, and the still, moon-drenched
+church, wove into it a mysterious beauty. It
+seemed to me that something might happen now that would
+make, for me at least, all things different for ever after, that
+would push the boundaries of life infinitely further back,
+by bringing a dimmer, vaster world directly into relation
+with me. In that world, perhaps, they dreamed of this, just
+as I was now dreaming of it.</p>
+
+<p>I was aroused by Katherine. “We must go, Peter.”
+She laid her hand on my arm.</p>
+
+<p>“All right.”</p>
+
+<p>I took a last look, and then stepped out briskly beside her.</p>
+
+<p>“I oughtn’t to have brought you here,” I said, “out of
+your way.”</p>
+
+<p>“I enjoyed coming. I am not in any hurry myself, but
+you know how early they go to bed, and it must be getting
+late.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you like me, Katherine,” I asked, pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>“If I had disliked you I don’t suppose I should have
+tramped all these miles with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are sure I don’t bore you, or anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not up to the present. Why do you ask?” she smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“I just wanted to make sure. Girls, as a rule, would
+rather have older people than I am—wouldn’t they—fellows
+like the curate? I only mention him because you
+happen to have met him. You’re seventeen, which means
+that you’re grown up, and——”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t make up my mind what you are,” Katherine
+interrupted, laughing aloud. “The first night I saw you
+you were frightened to open your mouth, and now you’re
+saying all kinds of things.”</p>
+
+<p>“That shouldn’t be said?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No; I like them. I daresay in ten years’ time I won’t
+care to be told how old I am, but at present it’s all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean anything except that there’s a difference
+between us. Girls often get married at seventeen.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think, you know, you’re rather a dear in your own
+way,” she said, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It was late, and the house was quiet. When I leaned out
+of my window I could hear the sound of the waves, but no
+other sound; then I opened my bedroom door softly, and
+crept out into the passage. From my father’s room there
+came a heavy, muffled snoring as I made my way downstairs.
+The hall-door I unfastened with the same elaborate
+precautions against noise, but I left it open behind me, only
+slipping in the door-mat to keep it from slamming. Once
+outside, I felt safe.</p>
+
+<p>The night was clear and full of moonlight, and my black
+shadow danced fantastically before me on the white, bare
+road. Not a soul was abroad, and as I walked I had a
+curious sense of freedom and exhilaration; old songs of
+romance and adventure hummed in my ears, and I wanted
+them to come true. Contrary to my expectation and to my
+desire, Katherine and Gerald were waiting for me at the
+lodge-gate, in the shadow of the hawthorn hedge, and
+Katherine held a parcel in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>We did not talk very much as we went quickly on,
+following the same road we had taken on the morning of our
+picnic. I kept a sharp look-out, but could see no sign of any
+of the other boys. Below us, on our left, the sea murmured
+and splashed through the warm delicious night; on the
+right, the Mourne Mountains rose, black against the
+sky.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid we’re rather late,” I remarked after a while.
+Then I added, “You’ll have to take an oath of secrecy.”</p>
+
+<p>I had already told them all they would have to do, but I
+was a little nervous, for I had no idea what kind of reception
+they would get, and to help to tide matters over I had
+recommended Katherine, if she came, to bring a supply of
+provisions, which would always be so much in their favour.
+For myself I didn’t care a straw, though I knew what I was
+doing would make me unpopular.</p>
+
+<p>We had walked for about a quarter of an hour and had
+left the village well behind us when down towards Maggie’s
+Leap I saw the red glow of a bonfire. We turned to the
+sea, clambering over the rough ground, till presently, in
+a hollow, we saw them, seven or eight boys, sitting round
+a fire. Thirty feet below, the sea looked black and strange;
+and the mysterious night floated about us, a night of
+wonderful beauty.</p>
+
+<p>There was an awkward moment when we advanced into
+the firelight, and before I introduced them. A silence
+followed my very lame speech, in the chill of which Gerald
+lit a cigarette, and we took our seats, slightly beyond the
+main circle. Nobody made room for us, and when Katherine
+produced her contributions to the supper I feared at
+first they were going to be refused. We seemed to have
+dissipated the romantic atmosphere of the gathering, nor
+was anything said about the Dales taking a vow of secrecy,
+which was, nevertheless, one of the rules of the club. I
+could see Sam Geoghegan, a boy whom I had never liked,
+but who was the biggest boy there, whispering to his right-hand
+neighbour, and I knew he was talking about us.</p>
+
+<p>However, as supper progressed, the atmosphere thawed
+somewhat, and I began to hope things would turn out all
+right. Willie Breen, who had been fumbling in his pocket,
+now produced a small bottle filled with some bright red
+liquid and held it up to the light, gazing at it in silence.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
+Suddenly, when everybody’s attention was fixed on him,
+his face stiffened into an expression of suppressed agony,
+and he gasped for breath, drawing his hand across his
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter, Billy? Stomach bad?” asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>But Willie’s eyes were closed. “If I fall down,” he
+sighed in a whisper, “an’ a deadly pallor creeps over me,
+force open my teeth with a knife, and pour a single drop
+of this blood-red liquid down my throat——”</p>
+
+<p>“How can you pour a drop?” interrupted Sam.</p>
+
+<p>“Unless it is too late,” said Willie, “you will see the
+colour slowly come back to my cheeks and suffuse them with
+the glow of life, until at last, when you don’t expect it, I’ll
+open my eyes and say, ‘Where am I?’”</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Does</em> he have fits?” Katherine whispered.</p>
+
+<p>“No: it’s only ‘Monte Cristo,’” I told her.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine looked at him wonderingly, but Willie had
+already his mouth crammed with bread and sardines, the
+sardines she herself had brought.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the boys now lit cigarettes, which Gerald had
+given them. From the darkness below, the sound of the
+sea rose up, weird and melancholy, full of an inexpressible
+loneliness. The warm, ruddy light of the fire flitted across
+fresh young faces. A dim fragrance seemed to be blown
+down from the woods, and to mingle with the saltness of
+the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Sam Geoghegan said suddenly, “I’m a socialist.”</p>
+
+<p>This announcement fell rather flat. The beauty of the
+night had cast a vague spell upon the other members of the
+club, and they were content to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean like the chaps who were round last week
+with the cart?” somebody asked indifferently, after a long
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>“They gave one of the wee books they had with them to
+my father,” said Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span></p>
+
+<p>“What is it?” asked Willie Breen.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s what?”</p>
+
+<p>“A socialist.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not an ‘it,’ it’s a man. It means that everybody
+ought to get the same chance. There should be no privileges
+nor private property nor anythin’.”</p>
+
+<p>“But whenever you’ve got things they’re yours,” said
+Willie Breen, unconvinced.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t have things—isn’t that what I’m saying?
+Everything belongs to the State—they belong to everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“Socialists are always poor,” put in Sam’s chum, Robbie
+McCann, unenthusiastically. “Those lads that were round
+here tried to get up a collection.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course they’re poor,” said Sam, pityingly. “You
+can’t give up every thin’ and be rich, can you? For dear
+sake have a bit of wit!”</p>
+
+<p>“Would <em>their</em> aunt have to give up her place?” asked
+Willie Breen, jerking his head toward the Dales.</p>
+
+<p>“Why wouldn’t she? Does it belong to her?”</p>
+
+<p>This was a bold idea, and Sam accompanied it with a
+glare of defiance at Gerald, from whom, nevertheless, a
+minute ago he had accepted a second cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it belongs to her,” said Willie, wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not rightly. Man alive, but you’re all thick in the
+head. The point is that nobody has a right to anything—more’n
+anybody else, I mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know all about it, don’t you?” asked Gerald,
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>“I know more than you, anyway, stink-pot,” said Sam.
+Two or three of the bigger boys laughed, and I began to
+foresee trouble.</p>
+
+<p>“We needn’t start a row, need we?” I suggested, amicably.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not startin’ a row; it was him. What call has he
+to put in his jaw. He wasn’t asked to come.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
+
+<p>“He was asked,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>“Ay—maybe by you—that’s nothin’.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s tell stories,” Willie Breen proposed. “Do you
+know how they make castor oil? There’s a woman told me
+she saw it. It was a big round room, and corpses hanging
+from hooks in the ceiling; and from the ends of their toes
+yellow drops were falling into a basin. That was castor oil.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure. Anybody can blether you up, Billy.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not saying I believe it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a wonder.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a deep, low boom rose up from the sea, as if
+coming out of the infinite night, swelling, like the heavy
+bass note of an organ, and dying away.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine laid her hand on my arm. “What was that?”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s nothing,” I murmured; but a vague sense of awe
+had crept over the little group.</p>
+
+<p>“It came last summer for the first time, didn’t it?”
+asked George Edge, a boy who had not spoken before. He
+had been lying on his back, looking up at the floating stars,
+but he now raised himself on his elbow and looked out to
+sea. He was not one of the village boys, but his people
+came down every summer for two months, and I had known
+him all my life. “My mother gets frightened when she
+hears it,” he went on.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause, and then the sound came again,
+floating up, weird and mysterious, as from somewhere far
+out on the water. We drew closer round the fire, and
+began again to talk, but the conversation had grown darker.</p>
+
+<p>“It was here that the murder was,” said another boy,
+hidden in the shadow of the rock, so that his voice seemed
+a disembodied sound speaking out of the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>“Just over there,” said George Edge.</p>
+
+<p>“What murder?” asked Gerald.</p>
+
+<p>The voice from the shadow spoke again. “It was a man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
+called Dewar. There was two of them comin’ home one
+winter afternoon from Annalong, O’Brian and Dewar.
+O’Brian had been gettin’ money, and they both had their
+load of drink. It was dirty weather and no one on the
+road, and maybe they fell out about somethin’. Any way,
+next day they got O’Brian down below there on the stones,
+his face bashed in you wouldn’t know him. Him and
+Dewar were seen leavin’ Annalong together, and they got
+Dewar lying drunk in his own house, and he confessed and
+was hung for it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how did he do it?” Gerald asked.</p>
+
+<p>“He smashed him on the face with a lump of rock, and
+then threw him down into the sea. They say there are
+nights when you can hear O’Brian. It’s like this.” He
+gave a low wail that shrilled up to a cry.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m goin’ home,” said Willie Breen, rising to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>“Wee scaldy! You’ll have to go by yourself,” jeered
+Sam. “And you’ll meet him as sure as death. You’ll
+know him, because he won’t have any face on him, only a
+lock of blood. And Dewar with him, with his neck broke.”
+Sam’s head drooped horribly to his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Willie Breen sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“When you talk about ghosts or spirits it’s supposed to
+bring them near,” said George Edge. “It gives them a kind
+of power over you.”</p>
+
+<p>“For goodness sake stop all that rubbish,” cried Katherine,
+indignantly. “Can’t you see you’re frightening the
+child out of his wits!”</p>
+
+<p>“Go to her, baby. Hold her hand,” mocked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>Willie turned angrily on his protectress. “I’m not
+frightened. It’s you that’s frightened. You shouldn’t be
+here at all. There shouldn’t be any women in the club.”</p>
+
+<p>“Faith, he’s right there!” Sam exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>But George Edge, sitting up, pointed out to sea.
+“Listen,” he said impressively.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
+
+<p>We all sat still, Willie Breen with wide-open eyes. A
+moment after, with a blade of grass between his thumbs,
+Sam made an unearthly screech in the little boy’s ear.
+It was too much, and Willie set up a howl.</p>
+
+<p>At the same instant Katherine turned to Sam and he
+received a resounding slap on his fat face. Instantly there
+was tumult. Sam was on his feet, red as a turkey-cock,
+blustering of all he would do if Katherine were not a girl.
+Then he spied Gerald, and gave him a blow on the chest that
+almost sent him into the fire. “That’s for you, you ‘get.’”</p>
+
+<p>Gerald drew back, neither speaking, nor returning the
+blow: the other boys had surrounded them. I saw Gerald’s
+face, and it was very white; but he did nothing, he was
+afraid. That he should be disgusted me, and at the same
+time I was furious with Sam, whom, for that matter, I had
+always detested. I waited just long enough to give Gerald
+a chance to face him, if he wanted to; then I gave Sam a
+slap with my open hand on his cheek. It was the second he
+had received within two minutes, and somehow, even in the
+excitement, I couldn’t help being amused.</p>
+
+<p>We stripped to our shirts and trousers and moved out into
+the moonlight. Katherine hovered in the background, but
+made no attempt either to interfere or to go away. Gerald
+had disappeared. I looked at Sam’s big fists. I knew he
+was taller and heavier than I was, but I was not afraid of
+him; instead, I had a cold determination to lick him. I
+felt elated; I was glad Gerald had drawn back, since it gave
+me this chance of showing Katherine what a hero I was.
+We chose seconds, and there was a time-keeper, though no
+one had a watch, for mine was wound up and safe under my
+pillow at home. We had little science, but were mortally in
+earnest.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of the second round the nervous tremor
+of Sam’s mouth as he stepped into the ring gave me a cruel
+pleasure. I did not believe very much in his pluck, and I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
+was now quite confident as to the finish. It was in the
+middle of the third round, and we were both panting and
+bleeding, when Michael, the policeman, appeared on the
+scene, springing up as if from the bowels of the earth. How
+he came to be out of bed at such an hour, and in this
+particular spot, I never discovered, but he stepped in
+between us and stopped the fight.</p>
+
+<p>“Well now, this is nice goings on! Will you tell me
+what it’s all about?”</p>
+
+<p>“You go quietly to hell,” said Sam in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>The others chimed in. “It’s none of your business,
+Michael, we’re not in the town.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you tell me that, now? Well, I’ll be troubling you
+to go home to your beds every one of yous. This is no place
+for you, Miss,” he added, having discovered Katherine in
+the background, “with a lot of young rapscallions. I’ll
+see you safe home.”</p>
+
+<p>But Katherine did not move.</p>
+
+<p>“Let them finish, Michael. Nobody’ll ever know you
+were here. There’ll be no talk.”</p>
+
+<p>Michael wavered. The presence of Katherine obviously
+both troubled and puzzled him, for of course he knew who
+she was. He turned to her again, but she had withdrawn
+into the shadow of the rocks, whither he followed her, and
+they whispered together in inaudible tones. Then he came
+back. Katherine had disappeared; possibly she had
+followed Gerald, who would hardly have gone very far
+without her; at any rate I could not look after her now.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I suppose you’ll be wanting to settle this,” said
+Michael, doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>His words were received with an outburst of cheers and
+laughter. A faint greyness of dawn was already spreading
+over the eastern sky. “Time!” called George Edge, and I
+noticed that he had actually borrowed Michael’s big silver
+watch.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Next morning I got a rowing up from my father. Indeed,
+as soon as I saw my face in the glass, I knew it would be
+quite useless to try to hide what had happened, and I told
+him frankly I had been fighting. Fortunately, it was not
+necessary for me to say anything about our club, nor did
+I even mention Sam’s name. I simply told him that the
+fight had taken place at night to prevent its being stopped,
+and after that held my peace. My main feeling, in spite
+of my father’s lecture, was that I was extraordinarily glad
+it <em>had</em> taken place, for I had come out of it victorious, even
+though I was pretty sure I had received more punishment
+than I had given. My state of mind absurdly resembled
+that of a young cock who gets up on a wall to crow, and
+nothing my father could say had the least power to damp
+my spirits. My face—especially all round my forehead and
+temples—was beautifully and variously marked, yet there
+was nothing I more ardently desired than that Katherine
+should see me in this condition. I even felt amicably
+disposed towards Gerald, who, after all, couldn’t help being
+a coward. Perhaps he would come round this morning
+to see how I had fared.</p>
+
+<p>But nobody came, and in the afternoon I determined
+to go up to Derryaghy. Willie Breen, who now regarded
+me in the light of a hero, accompanied me. When I left
+him at the lodge-gate, instead of going to the hall-door,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
+I went round to the back of the house, hoping to find
+Katherine on the terrace. She was not there; nobody
+was there but Miss Dick, who cried out at once on seeing
+my battered condition. Her tone was certainly far enough
+removed from that of Willie Breen to have cooled my
+conceit had such a thing been possible, but fortunately
+she was too much occupied with a letter she kept folding
+and unfolding to bestow any very lengthy attention on
+my appearance. “My sister, Mrs. Arthur Jenkins,” she
+began, not because I was worthy of her confidence, but
+because there was nobody else, “wants me to go and stay
+with her. I don’t know what to do. Mrs. Carroll may
+not be able to spare me; though I haven’t been there for
+a long time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you ought to go,” I said easily. “Where is everybody?”
+I looked round, preparatory to making my
+escape. Miss Dick regarded me doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“The last time I was there the youngest child had
+croup. They were very anxious about him; indeed the
+doctor almost gave him up; though he managed to pull
+through in the end, and is quite strong now. Not that
+any of them are actually what you would call robust.
+They really take after Arthur, Mr. Jenkins that is, though
+Sissie, that’s my sister, always says <em>he’s</em> stronger than he
+looks. I’m sure I hope so, for he looks wretched. The
+whole family, you know, the whole Jenkins family I mean,
+are vegetarians, and vegetarians, whatever they may feel,
+invariably <em>look</em> ill. When I say that to Sissie she always
+gets cross, as if I could help it! But that’s what people
+are like. Arthur wants to bring up the children in the
+same way, which is silly, and, to my mind, trifling with
+their lives. Besides, it’s so difficult when you’ve only one
+maid who has to do everything: and they only give fourteen,
+and what can you get for fourteen nowadays, even
+in the country? You certainly can’t expect a girl like that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
+to cook two dinners a day, because, you see, Sissie eats
+meat.” She stopped suddenly, as if she had lost the thread
+of her discourse. “We’re all going to a garden-party at
+Castlewellan. I’m just waiting for the others. Except
+Gerald—he won’t come. You’ll find him over there,”—she
+waved her left hand. “He’s put up a hammock and
+he’s been sleeping in it all day. He’s dreadfully lazy. He
+won’t even practise. And though he’s so polite and
+gentlemanly, I must say he’s really rather irritable: he
+got quite cross at lunch. I don’t think Katherine understands
+him. People with very artistic feelings, I’m sure, <em>are</em>
+more easily annoyed than others. It’s not as if he were
+just an ordinary person like you or me.”</p>
+
+<p>Whether I was an ordinary person or not, I didn’t relish
+being told so, even by Miss Dick, and I decided, as I had
+frequently decided before, that she was a stupid creature,
+and that I didn’t like her. I left her referring to the
+epistle from Mrs. Arthur Jenkins, or Sissie, or whatever
+she was called, and went to look for Gerald.</p>
+
+<p>He had heard me coming, for when I found him he
+had swung himself out of his hammock and was standing
+beside it.</p>
+
+<p>“Are the others gone yet?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“They’re just starting. I only saw Miss Dick.”</p>
+
+<p>“They’re going to some party, thank the Lord!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; she told me.”</p>
+
+<p>A pause followed, for I didn’t know what to say, and
+he himself kept silence. What I had intended to do was
+to put him at his ease, to let him know that it was all right
+about last night, but my magnanimity and sympathy were
+evidently quite superfluous, and I was annoyed at this.</p>
+
+<p>We strolled back slowly to the house. “Wouldn’t it
+be rather a good time to play to me?” I said. “You
+promised to, and now we have the place to ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you like.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
+
+<p>We entered by the open window, and pulling the sofa
+over beside it, I lay down in supreme laziness among a
+heap of coloured cushions. Gerald went at once to the
+piano.</p>
+
+<p>“What sort of music do you care for?” he asked me.
+“Or shall I just play anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; whatever you feel in the mood for.”</p>
+
+<p>His head was bent a little over the key-board, and he
+seemed to be thinking of what he should play. I watched
+a tendril of clematis that waved softly over my head, and
+every now and again I breathed in the sweet scent of a
+stalk of mignonette I had gathered in passing. My thoughts
+floated away through the quiet afternoon, and I began
+to wonder what things were like when there was no one
+there to be conscious of them.</p>
+
+<p>I know now that it was the fifteenth Prelude, but at the
+time I had never even heard the name of Chopin, and all
+I was aware of was that a soft, very delicate tune, was
+coming to me across the room, with a curious pallor, suggestive
+of the whiteness of water. I half closed my lids
+and lay absolutely still. Even in my ignorance I knew
+that the beauty of Gerald’s playing was extraordinary. It
+may have had many faults; he may have been incapable of
+doing all kinds of things that professional pianists can do;
+he may have been, and probably was, deficient in power:
+I do not know. He seemed to caress the notes rather than
+to strike them, he seemed literally to draw the music out,
+and the whole tone had a kind of liquid, singing quality,
+such as I have never heard since save in the playing of
+Pachmann. As I listened, the music gathered force and
+sombreness, growing louder and darker in a heavily marked
+crescendo, and then once more it passed into the clear soft
+tune with which it had begun.</p>
+
+<p>The sound had stopped. I said nothing; I simply
+waited. The cool, pleasant summer afternoon had become<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
+full of lovely voices which flickered, like waves of coloured
+light, across my senses. Pensively, a little shyly even, a
+simple, drooping melody breathed itself out on the air with
+a strange hesitation and indecision, rising and falling, faltering,
+repeating itself, resting on the “F” with a kind of
+desire that gathered intensity as the note swelled and died
+away, sinking back into “D.”</p>
+
+<p>Listening to Gerald playing that sixth Nocturne, listening
+to him playing all that followed it, you would have thought
+he was a youth of the deepest feelings, yet I could never
+find any trace of those feelings at any other time. Somewhere,
+I suppose, they must have been, somewhere below
+the surface, but I was never able to discover them. It
+was as if his soul only came into being when he sat down
+at a piano. When he played you could see him listening
+to his own music, you could see him drinking it up as if it
+were the perfume of my mignonette, as if there were some
+finer echo audible only to himself. And his playing would
+alter, would grow gayer, or a kind of weariness would creep
+into it. I offer these only as the impressions I received
+at the time; what I should receive now I cannot tell. Yet
+I find it hard to believe I was utterly mistaken. It was
+never my fortune to hear him in later years, when I had
+heard many famous pianists—and I suppose I have heard
+practically all those of my time—but I cannot help thinking
+he might have been among the greatest had he not chosen
+to be something else, something I last saw at a café in
+Berlin. The puffed, horrible face, the glazed, sodden eyes—no,
+there was no music there. Or if there was, it was
+hidden, buried, lost for ever in that desecrated, half-paralysed
+body, buried alive, like a lamp burning in a tomb.
+Now, I have nothing to go upon save those first impressions
+of a boyish, uncultivated taste, and the fact that in after
+years the playing of Vladimir de Pachmann brought back
+sharply to me the memory of that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
+
+<p>He played on for nearly two hours. In the end he stopped
+abruptly and got up from the piano, while I thanked him.
+I knew that he knew he had given me a tremendous
+pleasure, and there was no need to say much. He told me
+the music I had been listening to was all, or nearly all, by
+one composer.</p>
+
+<p>“And that last thing?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“That was one of the Studies—the one in A flat. I
+can’t play anybody else. I don’t mean that other things
+are more difficult, but they don’t suit me.” He was silent,
+until he added, “I may as well tell you that I’m not as
+good as you think.”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t told you yet what I think,” I answered,
+smiling, for I was still under the glamour of his mood, and
+indeed at that moment I could have hugged him. I did
+not want to talk of ordinary things. The music had
+wakened in me a feeling of melancholy, like a memory of
+some delicious thing that had happened long ago, and
+would never happen again.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to explain my very tenuous ideas to Gerald, but
+they did not interest him. And already I felt our relation
+altering. When he was at the piano he had seemed to me
+a kind of angel; now that other element, that element
+of latent antagonism, was beginning to re-awaken in me.</p>
+
+<p>Tea had meanwhile been laid for us upon the terrace.
+Tony, who had been asleep outside in the sun, threw off
+drowsiness like an outworn garment, and sat up beside my
+chair, with raised head, and beautiful, dark eyes that watched
+every movement I made, especially those which happened
+to convey a piece of bread and butter or cake into my
+mouth. When I looked at him he instantly gave half a
+dozen quick wags of his tail, and then resumed his former
+attitude of motionless expectation, to which attention was
+attracted by a variety of queer little highly expressive
+noises he produced from somewhere in his throat. Nobody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
+being there to prevent me, I gave him about half the cake,
+piece by piece, each of which he swallowed almost whole,
+and with a wag of the tail to show how he appreciated
+this delicate pastime.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you get much hurt last night?” Gerald asked me
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>The question was unexpected, for I looked upon the
+whole incident as closed. I glanced up from feeding Tony.
+“No; not much,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“And the other—I forget his name—Sam something?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Sam’s all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I should have fought him?”</p>
+
+<p>“One was enough,” I said carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you think I was afraid?”</p>
+
+<p>I looked away. His question seemed somehow to be all
+wrong. “I didn’t think about it,” I answered, after a
+slight pause.</p>
+
+<p>“It must have looked as if I were afraid,” he went on.
+“I thought so afterwards.”</p>
+
+<p>I couldn’t imagine what he was trying to get at. I
+wanted to stop him talking like this. It was even less to
+my taste than his funking Sam last night had been.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you working at anything besides music?” I asked
+him, jerkily.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. “Not very much. I have a tutor.
+Why won’t you talk about last night?”</p>
+
+<p>“What is there to talk about? I’m sorry it turned out
+that way, but I can’t help it, though of course it was my
+fault for taking you without letting the others know. I
+should have told them beforehand.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not afraid of that lout, anyway. If I see him
+again——”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well, what’s the use of worrying about it?” I
+interrupted, disgusted with his persistence.</p>
+
+<p>The pause that followed was an uncomfortable one. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
+he had deliberately tried to efface the impression his music
+had made upon me he could not have succeeded better.</p>
+
+<p>He gave a strange little laugh. “I see you don’t believe
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“No: I don’t believe you,” I answered bluntly, “and
+I don’t know why you should want me to.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you think it is pleasant to be taken for a
+coward?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure it isn’t pleasant; but I can’t imagine that
+it matters greatly to you what I think.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, if I hadn’t done what I did, you wouldn’t
+have had <em>your</em> particular little swagger!”</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t that rather a rotten sort of thing to say?” I
+answered as I got up. “I think I’ll move on. Come,
+Tony.”</p>
+
+<p>Gerald began to apologize.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s all right,” I said, coldly, leaving him there.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Katherine, who had promised to sit to me for her portrait,
+kept putting me off from day to day, and it was nearly a
+week later when I made my first attempt. By some happy
+chance on that particular afternoon I had found her alone,
+for as a rule Gerald was there, and even now it was almost
+as if he were with us, since she began at once to talk about
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“You must take off your hat,” I said, ignoring her
+remarks.</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed me, and I began to draw in my outline.</p>
+
+<p>“Gerald likes you,” she said. “I wish you would be
+friends with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am friends with him,” I answered, abstractedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not very much. You would rather he was not with
+us.”</p>
+
+<p>“That doesn’t mean I’m not friends with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“He has so few friends,” she went on, still clinging to the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>“Has he? I’m afraid, no matter how much I tried, we
+could never really be chums.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you understand him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose because I’m stupid. Besides, what I do
+understand I don’t greatly like.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
+
+<p>She was not offended; she simply asked, “What is the
+matter with him?”</p>
+
+<p>I feared I had been horribly rude, but the words had
+slipped out before I could check them. “There is nothing
+the matter with him,” I answered hastily. “I wasn’t
+thinking of what I was saying. It is only that—that
+we’re not suited to each other: we’re too different. At all
+events, it is of very little importance, seeing that you’re
+going away in a few days.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll be back again next year, I expect. Aunt Clara
+wants me to come. <em>She</em> isn’t very friendly to Gerald either.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you only fancy that; of course she is. And there’s
+Miss Dick, who worships the very ground he walks on.”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Dick’s too silly for anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“There you are! And yet you want me to worship him
+too!”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want anything of the kind; and you know
+that. But of course if you don’t like him I can’t make
+you. I think that night—the night we went with you to
+your meeting—has something to do with it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh that!” I answered lightly. It seemed to me a long
+time ago, though there was a yellow bruise still visible above
+my left eyebrow.</p>
+
+<p>I finished my outline and began to paint. The other
+picture had been painted indoors, I reflected. I don’t
+know what made me think of it, but I couldn’t get it out
+of my mind. It kept floating between me and my work,
+and I seemed to see it quite as clearly as I saw Katherine
+herself. Still I persevered, though my progress was slow
+and from the beginning unsatisfactory. I talked to
+Katherine, or rather I replied to her, for what she said
+penetrated only the fringe of my consciousness. She had
+brought a book out with her, and by and by she began to
+read aloud, but I have no idea what it was she read. I
+painted away most diligently, yet all the time I couldn’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
+get rid of a foolish impression that I was being watched.
+And this fancy, utterly absurd if you like, took possession
+of me, grew stronger and stronger, till it seemed to tremble
+on the verge of reality.</p>
+
+<p>“What are you looking at?” Katherine asked me suddenly,
+having reached, I suppose, the end of a chapter or a
+story.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” I answered guiltily.</p>
+
+<p>But she wheeled round in her chair, and stared back at
+the house. I dipped my brush in water, and remarked
+quite quietly, “It’s only that I thought I saw someone at
+the window—the third window from the left, upstairs.”</p>
+
+<p>Katherine shaded her eyes with her hand. “I can’t see
+anybody: the sun catches the glass. It must be one of
+the maids, for there’s nobody else in.” She yawned and
+took up the book again. “If it <em>is</em> one of the maids,” she
+added, “she might have had sufficient sense to bring us
+out tea. I’ve been simply dying for some for the last half-hour,
+only I didn’t like to disturb you.”</p>
+
+<p>“She hasn’t been there half an hour,” I replied. “I’ll
+go and tell them. Promise you won’t look at what I’ve
+done while I’m away: it isn’t finished.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right. I must see it when it <em>is</em> though: you’re not
+to tear it up or anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not.”</p>
+
+<p>I walked back to the house, and not till I was quite close
+did I glance up at the windows above me. Naturally there
+was nothing. I hesitated in the hall. Had I been really
+sincere in thinking I had seen anything or not? I couldn’t
+be quite sure, for there was no doubt I often deliberately
+gave my imagination a kind of push in a certain definite
+direction, started it off, as it were, and then left it to perform
+all kinds of antics. Before me lay the broad, low staircase.
+Should I go up? I leaned against the balusters and
+listened, gazing aloft into the cool shadow. Suddenly I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
+heard a door open near the kitchen, then the rustle of a
+dress, and one of the servants appeared. I told her that
+Miss Dale would like tea brought outside, and went into
+the morning-room myself for a small folding-table, which
+I carried back with me.</p>
+
+<p>I looked again at my drawing. “Tea will be here in a
+minute or two,” I said. Then I handed the drawing to
+Katherine, for it was a failure, and there was no use going
+on with it.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t hold it so close to you,” I cried, and Katherine
+obediently stretched out her arm full length.</p>
+
+<p>“I think it’s quite good, you know, if it wasn’t meant to
+be my portrait,—but it’s no more like me than Adam.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be so rude. Of course it’s like you.”</p>
+
+<p>A servant appeared with a tea-tray, and as soon as she
+was gone I seated myself on the grass at Katherine’s feet.
+When I had finished tea and had handed her back my empty
+cup I still sat there.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you see that strip of yellow sand down below? It
+always reminds me of a certain poem.”</p>
+
+<p>I knew Katherine was not fond of poetry; she had told
+me so herself; but I repeated the verses aloud for my own
+pleasure, in a sort of sing-song, laying tremendous stress
+on the rhymes.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“It was many and many a year ago,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In a kingdom by the sea,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">That a maiden there lived whom you may know</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">By the name of Annabel Lee;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And this maiden she lived with no other thought</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Than to love and be loved by me.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“<em>I</em> was a child and <em>she</em> was a child,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In this kingdom by the sea;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">But we loved with a love that was more than love—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">I and my Annabel Lee;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">With a love that the winged seraphs of heaven</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Coveted her and me.</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“And this was the reason that, long ago,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In this kingdom by the sea,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">My beautiful Annabel Lee;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">So that her highborn kinsmen came</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">And bore her away from me,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">To shut her up in a sepulchre</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In this kingdom by the sea.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“The angels, not half so happy in heaven,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Went envying her and me—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Yes!—that was the reason (as all men know</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In this kingdom by the sea)</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">That the wind came out of the cloud by night,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“But our love it was stronger by far than the love</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Of those who were older than we—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Of many far wiser than we—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And neither the angels in heaven above,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Nor the demons down under the sea,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Can ever dissever my soul from the soul</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Of the beautiful Annabel Lee:</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">Of the beautiful Annabel Lee;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And so all the night-tide, I lie down by the side</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Of my darling—my darling—my life and my bride,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In her sepulchre there by the sea,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent3">In her tomb by the side of the sea.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I looked up at Katherine and saw that she was smiling.
+“It was written about this place,” I declared, “about just
+that strip of yellow sand and that blue sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“And about just this little boy,” said Katherine, stroking
+my hair back from my forehead.</p>
+
+<p>“Just this little boy,” I answered, narrowing my eyes
+under her touch, “whom you think such a very little boy
+indeed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Such a dear little boy,” murmured Katherine, lulling
+me with her voice, and all the time stroking my hair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Is he dear?” I asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“I think so.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you like him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I like him very much.”</p>
+
+<p>“How much? What do you like about him?”</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. “I like everything about him?”</p>
+
+<p>“But what?”</p>
+
+<p>“The way he is: the way he looks: the way he pouts
+when he is cross: the kind of things he says: the way he
+asks questions: even the way he hesitates before some
+letters, so that you can see what he is going to say in his
+eyes before he can get it out.”</p>
+
+<p>I was intensely happy. I leaned back my head, and
+Katherine’s dark blue eyes looked straight down into mine.
+I could see nothing but that clear dark blue which seemed
+to shut me out from the world, yet I knew she was smiling.
+Then she bent lower and her lips lightly touched my forehead.</p>
+
+<p>Almost at the same moment I heard the swish of petticoats
+rustling over the grass from behind. I sat up straight,
+but did not look round till the rattle of tea-cups had ceased,
+and the servant who was bearing them off had almost
+reached the house.</p>
+
+<p>“Gracious! I hope she didn’t see me kissing you!”
+said Katherine, half-laughing.</p>
+
+<p>“What matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it matters; and it’s your fault too, for
+pretending to be a little boy and all that nonsense. I’m
+sure she’s telling the cook about it at this moment. <em>She</em>
+doesn’t think you’re a little boy. Get up at once.”</p>
+
+<p>I knew Katherine wasn’t really much perturbed, but I
+got up and began to put away my colours, and we went back
+to the house. I left my painting materials on the window-sill,
+and, having made Katherine a present of my drawing,
+we strolled down to the shore. As we walked along the
+hard sand by the edge of the sea I wanted to tell her how<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
+much I cared for her. It was an admirable opportunity,
+and, if I could only get the first plunge over, I knew it would
+be all right. But I couldn’t. White sea-gulls were swooping
+and wheeling over the dark blue water, calling their
+peculiar lonely cry, and the foam of the waves was white as
+snow. “I <em>will</em> tell her: I <em>will</em> tell her,” I kept repeating
+to my soul; and all the time I maintained a most discreet
+silence on the subject, and babbled instead of the regatta
+that would take place on Saturday, and of the chance of a
+fine day. I had entered for two swimming-races and a
+diving-competition, and Katherine was coming to see me.
+I kept on talking about this, though I knew very well everything
+would happen exactly as it had happened last year;
+that in the swimming-races George Edge would be first and
+I should be second, and that I should win the diving-competition;
+and moreover I didn’t in the least care just then
+whether the regatta took place or not.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>As a matter of fact I didn’t win the diving-competition;
+I wasn’t even second; and my defeat was brought about
+simply by my own exceeding eagerness to show off.</p>
+
+<p>On that Saturday the village was a holiday village. The
+men and boys perspired freely under heavy, ugly, Sunday
+clothes, and the women and girls were decked out in all
+kinds of finery—bright dresses, trinkets, ribbons, and cheap
+but brilliant hats. Why was it, I wondered, that all these
+fine garments should have been chosen apparently for a
+mysterious property they had of bringing out in the appearance
+of their wearers a coarseness I never noticed on ordinary
+occasions? Sam Geoghegan’s salmon-pink tie, Mr. McCann’s
+fancy waistcoat, the peacock-blue dress of Annie Breen,
+with its white lace collar—these were things positively
+bewildering, if one realized that they represented the actual
+taste of the persons they adorned.</p>
+
+<p>Every year the same programme was followed. In the
+morning the water-races—boat-races and swimming-races—took
+place; in the afternoon there were sports—foot-races,
+tugs-of-war, wrestling—held in one of Mrs. Carroll’s fields.</p>
+
+<p>I drifted about in the crowd with a group of boys. Our
+swimming-races came off fairly early, but I was only third
+in each, and George Edge second, for a youth, whom neither
+of us had ever seen or heard of before, turned up and carried
+off both first prizes. This made me anxious about the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
+diving-competition, which he had also entered for. We
+were to go in off the end of the pier, where a platform with
+a spring-board had been erected for us. Then, when we
+had dived, we swam round to the ladder and climbed up
+to take our turn again. It was the last event but one of
+the morning’s programme, and had always been the most
+popular. When the hour for it came round, having learned
+in the meantime from some of the spectators that the
+victorious stranger was a poor diver, I had regained
+confidence, and, as the crowd drew in closer to watch us,
+I was fully prepared to show them what was what. As
+a matter of fact, my first two dives were all right, but, before
+my third and last, I caught sight of Katherine standing
+quite close to me, and the result of this was that I determined
+to excel anything ever seen. I took a tremendous
+race the full length of the platform, but, just at the end of
+the spring-board, my foot slipped and I sprawled in flat on
+my belly. The shock knocked all the wind out of me, and
+the smack I gave the water could have been heard half a
+mile away. It was extremely painful, and it put me out
+of the competition; yet when I clambered up the iron ladder
+I was greeted by volleys of laughter and humorous remarks.
+My accident, indeed, appeared to be by far the most enjoyable
+event of the morning. It did not seem to occur to
+anybody, except one of the stewards, that I might be badly
+hurt, and him, when he came to ask me if I were all right,
+I sent about his business. I put on my overcoat and went
+to the dressing-shed in a furious temper.</p>
+
+<p>The field where the sports took place lay about a mile
+out of the village. Mrs. Carroll and some other ladies were
+dispensing refreshments to all comers, and afterwards the
+prizes would be given out. I went up to Derryaghy to
+call for Katherine and Gerald, to go with them, but found
+they were going to ride over, and were all ready to start
+when I arrived. It was the first time I had seen Katherine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
+on horseback, and she looked to me more beautiful than
+ever. In her dark-blue riding-habit, with her sparkling
+eyes and rosy cheeks, her radiant youth and health, she
+made me think of the girl in the equestrian portrait by
+Millais and Landseer, a coloured reproduction of which I
+had cut out of a Christmas number and tacked up on the
+wall in my bedroom. And straightway I saw in myself
+the page-boy who stands by the gateway in that picture,
+his eyes fixed in rapt admiration upon his mistress. They
+rode away, an amazingly handsome pair, telling me they
+would see me later up at the field, and to this I answered,
+“Yes.” Mrs. Carroll and Miss Dick had already gone on
+in the carriage, so I was left quite alone. I decided immediately
+that I wouldn’t go to the sports: if they chose
+to leave me like this I wasn’t going to run after them. I
+mooned about, building a romance on the equestrian portrait
+<em>motif</em>. I imagined myself as dying; some accident
+had happened to me, and suddenly Katherine rode up and
+springing down from her horse threw her arms round me,
+kneeling in the blood and dust of the road. She kissed me
+passionately, careless of all the people who watched her,
+repeating again and again, “I love you—I love you—I love
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>I gloated over this imaginary scene till I had squeezed the
+last drop of colour out of it, and it ceased, by dint of much
+repetition, to thrill me even faintly: then I went into the
+house and nosed about for a book. A dozen had just come
+down from the library in town, and, with a couple of volumes
+of “Two on a Tower” under my arm, I made my way to the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually, in the warmth of the sunlight, I grew drowsy,
+and the beautiful, breaking sea, and the harsh crying of the
+gulls, soothed me and seemed to build up an enchanted
+world about me, where I was shut in with the romance of
+the tale I was reading. By and by, after perhaps two hours,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
+I closed my book, though still keeping my finger in the place.
+I reflected that nobody up at the field had spent such an
+afternoon as I had spent, and I compared my spiritual
+pleasure with their rough commonplace pleasures, and the
+extraordinary superiority of my soul became immediately
+apparent. Then my thoughts turned to the story I had
+been reading. My sympathies were entirely enlisted by
+Lady Constantine and her youthful astronomer, but particularly
+by Lady Constantine. Even the fact that she was so
+much older than her lover appealed to me. Her gentleness;
+her intense femininity; her dark eyes; the softness
+of her skin; the perfume of her hair; and the delight of her
+caresses—these were present to me vividly, almost physically,
+and I rejoiced in the love-scenes in the tower with a
+frank and innocent sensuality, filling in the picture, where
+it was blurred or vague, from my own imaginings.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>During that last week of August, after the Dales had left,
+“I wandered lonely as a cloud.” Up to the eve of their
+departure I had been happier than I had ever been in my
+life, but as soon as they were gone I became a prey to sentimental
+regret. If Katherine had cared for me as I cared for
+her I might have found more comfort; but she didn’t, and
+I was perfectly aware of the fact. Mingled with it all was
+an increasing dread of the new existence I already saw
+opening out before me. I distrusted it: I had, indeed,
+that instinctive distrust of life itself, which contemplates
+anything unknown with uneasiness, and clings with passion
+to familiar faces and things.</p>
+
+<p>When the day of my departure, a Saturday, came round,
+and I saw my box all corded and ready in the hall, I felt
+extremely depressed. Now that I had said good-bye to
+Mrs. Carroll it was as if I had cut myself completely adrift
+from the past, and yet I believe I should have been willing
+to go had I not been going to the McAllisters. The McAllisters
+were our relations; the only ones I knew of. Aunt
+Margaret was my father’s sister, and her husband kept a
+shop in a street called Cromac Street. I had never been
+to their house, but they had been down a good many times
+to visit us, and I did not care for them. There were four
+children, and I disliked them all, except George, the eldest;
+and I disliked Aunt Margaret in particular; while to Uncle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
+George I was indifferent, seeing that he did not very much
+count one way or the other. But to live with them!...</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll had wanted to send me to a school in England,
+but my father would not permit this. He had an idea, and
+nothing would ever shake it, that English public schools
+were dens of iniquity. This he had gathered from some
+article that had appeared in a review, and from the story
+“Eric.” I suppose he thought I should fall a particularly
+easy victim to the temptations I might be submitted to;
+take, like the boys in “Eric,” to drink, “little by little,” or
+even quite rapidly; come home disgraced; at any rate
+he would not run the risk, when, by sending me to the
+McAllisters, he could provide me with the “influence of a
+religious home.” For Uncle George was religious, and so was
+Aunt Margaret; and so, I supposed, were the children—George,
+at least, I had been told, was a communicant—and it
+was the thought of all this that now lay heavy on my soul.</p>
+
+<p>I was not to go up to town till the afternoon, and as we
+sat down to our early dinner I could not, though I knew it
+was absolutely useless, refrain from again taking up the
+tabooed subject. I suggested how much better it would be
+for me to go into lodgings of my own choosing. If they
+were more expensive, Mrs. Carroll would not mind. “Whether
+she would mind or not,” my father answered, “I should
+have thought you would not have wanted to put her to any
+unnecessary expense.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she wouldn’t mind doing it,” I repeated, obstinately.
+“She told you she wanted to.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know very well that is not the question,” my
+father said, more coldly. “I have explained why I think
+it better that you should be with those who will look after
+you. You are not old enough to be by yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like the McAllisters,” I answered, sullenly.</p>
+
+<p>My father looked annoyed. “Perhaps you think they
+are not good enough for you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
+
+<p>“They certainly aren’t,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>It was a pity that our last meal together should have been
+somewhat embittered by these remarks, but it was not altogether
+my fault. For my father had been too extreme in
+his measures. Under the impression that what I needed was
+to get into surroundings which would more or less counteract
+the supposed relaxing influence of Mrs. Carroll’s indulgence,
+he had arranged that I was not even to come home for weekends,
+but was to submit myself during the entire term to the
+bracing effect of the McAllister family.</p>
+
+<p>No more was said upon the subject, and my father gave
+me after dinner a little book, called “Daily Light,” which
+I promised to read every night and morning. He came to
+the station to see me off, and, as we were far too early, he
+was obliged to stand for a quarter of an hour at the window
+of the carriage, while I longed for the train to start, and we
+both tried hard to find something to say. I was tormented
+by an uncertainty as to whether he would expect me to kiss
+him when I said good-bye. At the sound of the guard’s
+whistle I thrust out my hand. We shook hands; that was
+all; and, with the train beginning to move out of the station,
+I sat back in the corner of the empty third-class carriage.</p>
+
+<p>I had a sense of leaving everything behind me, as if I had
+been starting for the world’s end; and, curiously enough, as
+much as, or more than, by any human face, I was haunted
+by a vision of the house. I had forsaken it, and I felt its
+low, faint call coming to me through the rain. I could see
+the silent, closed rooms upstairs, the long passage with its
+rows of brown portraits and the tall window at the end, and
+it was as if a dust were dropping down upon these things,
+covering them to sleep till I should return. The shadowy
+ghosts slipped back into their picture-frames; gradually the
+life died out of their eyes; and a cold, unbroken silence, like
+the chill of death, closed over all that hidden under-world.
+Outside the apples had begun to redden on the high brick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
+walls of the fruit-garden, but within the house all was frozen
+and lifeless. They were my spirits, my ghosts, and could
+live only while I loved them. I loved them still, but I was
+too far away, and I might not find them when I came back.</p>
+
+<p>The landscape gliding past me showed through a fine,
+grayish mist. It was cold, and I pulled up the windows, which
+almost immediately became covered with the same mist that
+drifted in the air outside. I wondered where Katherine was,
+and what she was doing. I had not heard from her, though
+I had written twice. Then I lay back in my uncomfortable
+corner and tried to think of nothing.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>At the other end I was met by my cousin George, a big,
+red-haired hobbledehoy of seventeen, with a curiously small
+face, bright brown eyes with a reddish light in them, and a
+freckled skin. George, I remembered, used to be amusing,
+and when I saw him standing on the platform my spirits
+rose a little. He proposed that I should send on my luggage,
+and that we ourselves should walk, as he wanted to make a
+call on the way. When we had arranged this we set out.
+I had not been so frequently in Belfast that I did not take an
+interest in the streets. Just now, it being Saturday afternoon,
+they were full of people, and at the end of the Queen’s
+Bridge some kind of noisy meeting—religious or political—was
+in full swing, but we did not stop to listen. Presently
+we turned to our left into a long straight street lined with
+unattractive, unprosperous-looking shops, and so narrow
+that in one place there was not room for two trams to pass.
+There was a liberal sprinkling of public-houses, of cheap
+clothiers and greengrocers, while here and there the gilded
+sign of a pawnbroker hung out over the greasy pavement. I
+was about to ask why we had chosen such a disagreeable
+route, when George touched my arm and said cheerfully,
+“Here we are.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here!” I echoed, with involuntary dismay. “But——”</p>
+
+<p>“We live over the shop,” George explained. He had
+noticed my surprise, however, and had coloured.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
+
+<p>I pretended to have been only astonished that we had
+reached our journey’s end so quickly, but I don’t know that
+George was deceived. Inwardly I was furious with my
+father for arranging for me to come to live in such a place,
+with a public lavatory hardly ten yards away, and facing the
+windows. The crowded street, the mean, dingy houses, the
+mean, dingy people, the noise and rattle of innumerable
+trams: it was all disgusting, even beyond my expectations!
+And I was to live here! I simply wouldn’t do it.</p>
+
+<p>“We haven’t been here very long,” George continued.
+“We used to be round in Shaftesbury Square.” Then, as
+I stood motionless on the pavement, “Aren’t you coming
+in?”</p>
+
+<p>I followed him into the shop in silence. As he pushed
+open the door a bell answered with a clear, decisive ping.
+There was a shop on either side of the passage—one stocked
+with pipes, tobacco, cigarettes, and sweets; the other with
+newspapers, stationery, and cheap editions of books in
+hideous paper bindings. In the tobacco department there
+was nobody; in the stationery department a girl was
+moving about, fixing things. She turned round on our
+entrance and George introduced me: “My cousin, Mr.
+Peter Waring, Miss Izzy.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy and I shook hands. She smiled brightly upon
+me and hoped I was in good health. She evidently knew
+all about me, and had no need of George’s introduction. I
+observed that she had a lot of glossy, brown hair, which she
+wore twisted up in a coil on the top of her head in a way I
+had never seen hair arranged before, and which was kept in
+its place by long things like skewers, with large coloured
+balls at their ends. She wore a pince-nez, and was neatly
+dressed in dark blue, with a white linen collar and white
+cuffs, rather mannish in type. It was very plain to me that
+Miss Izzy had a great deal of style. She had also good
+features, but her femininity had been slightly eclipsed by a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
+tremendous air of business efficiency, and by the severity of
+her pince-nez. I had never yet seen anybody nearly so
+business-like as Miss Izzy looked, and if I had been an
+employer of labour I should have engaged her as manager
+at a large salary on the spot. Through the open door there
+came the shrill angry voices of small boys playing football in
+an alley at the side of the house. There was a squabble in
+progress, a cross-fire of abusive language suddenly broken
+by cries of, “Start a new match—Start a new match.”</p>
+
+<p>George was standing against the counter, and had begun
+to pick his teeth with a pin extracted from the bottom of his
+waistcoat. Miss Izzy went back to her task of arranging a
+pile of new books, evidently just come in. She was working
+out an elaborate pattern with their pictured covers, and as
+she did so she read the titles aloud. “‘The Hour of Vengeance,’”
+she proclaimed. “‘In Love’s Sweet Bondage,’”
+she added, more dreamily. “‘The Clue of the Broken
+Ruby’; ‘Cynthia Cyrilhurst’—it’s well for people that have
+names like that!”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think much of it,” said George.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy sighed, “It’s better than some, any way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you like your own name?” I ventured.</p>
+
+<p>“My Christian name’s all right. But there’s no use being
+called Althea, if it isn’t going to be backed up by anything!
+Althea Izzy is neither one thing nor another.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can easily remedy that!” declared George, gallantly,
+from the midst of his dental experiments.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy scrutinised him. “It wouldn’t be McAllister
+that would do it,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>But George continued placidly to attend to his teeth. “I
+hear Miss Johnson’s getting married at eight o’clock next
+Friday,” he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy bounced round, knocking over a box of note-paper.
+“How do <em>you</em> know?” she demanded, glaring at
+him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I just heard,” said George, calmly. He carefully
+inspected the pin before returning it to his waistcoat.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Just heard!’—through the key-hole, I suppose. It
+strikes me you ‘just hear’ a deal you’re not meant to. And
+they don’t want it talked about—mind that!”</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t they want it talked about,” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Because they want a quiet wedding. She’s in a bakery,
+and he’s a clerk in Nicholl’s, and, if it got out, the church
+would be full.”</p>
+
+<p>The conversation was at this point interrupted by the
+entrance of Uncle George, who appeared in the doorway,
+coming in from the street. He was a quiet, gray little man,
+and his movements always reminded me of those of a small
+dog in a strange room, wandering about, sniffing furtively
+at the legs of chairs and tables. He was timid, and when
+he spoke to you he rubbed his hands together with an affectation
+of cheerfulness that was directly contradicted by his
+dark, melancholy eyes. He had always struck me as being
+kind in his intentions, and I regretted that they had seemed
+to count for so little when opposed to Aunt Margaret’s.
+Uncle George was afraid of Aunt Margaret. He had an air
+of assuming that there was perfect harmony between them,
+but I had noticed that he rarely made a remark in her
+presence without glancing at her to see how she would take
+it. He reminded me of one of those old photographs one
+discovers at the backs of frames, their features almost
+obliterated from long exposure. His whole face, indeed, in
+its pale irregularity, had a suggestion of vagueness, as if it
+had been softly sponged over. His manner too—there was
+something in it which seemed to blur, to rub out, the impression
+of everything he said. His mind was lit by a kind
+of twilight in which the outlines of things were lost, in which
+opposites ceased to be contradictory, and impossibilities
+found a friendly shelter. And this twilight was reflected in
+his eyes, in their vague credulity, in the mildness of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
+glance, which peeped out innocently from under ridiculously
+fierce and bushy eyebrows. I knew Uncle George had
+failed in his business some years ago, and it was difficult to
+believe that he could ever be successful. His interest was
+not primarily in such things, but in the church, where he was
+a more perpetual figure than the minister, and in the church
+meetings, which he never missed, and which he sometimes
+even got up. I rather liked him; there was something
+about him that made it easy to talk to him; and though he
+was desperately religious, and held the same severe doctrines
+as my father, his nature was so little aggressive that in
+practice he was the most kindly and human creature in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>“How are you?” he asked, shaking my hand. “We’re
+very glad to see you. How’s your father?” His left eye
+twitched slightly while he talked, giving him a comical
+appearance of winking very knowingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Quite well, thank you,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Haven’t you been upstairs yet? Haven’t you seen
+your Aunt Margaret? Why didn’t you take him to see
+mother, George? Well, come along now, it’s time for tea.
+I think you might leave the shop, Miss Izzy, and come too—a
+special occasion, you know, a special occasion!” he laughed
+and patted me on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks, I’ve had my tea already,” Miss Izzy returned,
+without enthusiasm. “And you’re having yours upstairs
+to-night,” she added, somewhat tartly, seeing him move in
+the wrong direction.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! In the parlour; in honour of this young man; a
+special occasion, a special occasion!” He repeated his
+pleasantry, chuckling softly and rubbing his hands, while it
+was all I could do to keep from returning his friendly and
+unconscious wink.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d rather stay here than run up and down stairs every
+time the bell rings,” Miss Izzy continued, the invitation to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
+tea evidently rankling in her mind. From behind his father’s
+back George blew a kiss to her.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Margaret welcomed me without effusion. She was
+an enormous woman, dark, middle-aged, and with a peculiar
+smile that always made me feel uneasy. Her lips parted
+and her teeth became visible, but otherwise her face underwent
+no change, the expression in her hard, shining, black
+eyes did not alter. It was, somehow, not a smile at all, but a
+grimace, and disappeared with a startling suddenness, leaving
+no trace behind it. When her face was at rest, her lips drew
+in, as if by some mysterious suction. She wore a wig,
+and it was this I think that helped to make her look peculiar,
+and even slightly uncanny. I had been told that she suffered
+from some obscure, internal disease, which at times caused
+her great pain, but though she was white and fat and puffy,
+she presented no appearance of being an invalid. As she
+kissed me, a ceremony I would gladly have dispensed with,
+I became conscious of a vague, sickly odour, reminding me
+of the smell of a chemist’s shop.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George asked her if tea would soon be ready, but
+she gave him no answer; she only smiled in her strange
+fashion, and began to question me about my father and my
+journey—one would have thought I had been travelling all
+day. Two small boys held her by her voluminous skirts,
+my cousins, Gordon and Thomas. They were about six or
+seven, I suppose, and singularly unattractive, the kind of
+children who have perpetual colds and are never provided
+with an adequate supply of pocket-handkerchiefs.</p>
+
+<p>I shook hands with Gordon and Thomas; I really couldn’t
+do anything more; but their mother noticed my omission,
+for they had raised damp, red-nosed, little faces to be kissed,
+and though she only smiled again, I was convinced that
+already she had taken a dislike to me. Possibly her dislike
+dated back to an earlier period than our present meeting,
+but, with a boy’s subtle instinct, I was certain of its existence.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
+Just then the door opened and another child entered the
+room. This was Alice, a little girl of ten. She completed
+the family, though there had been several others, who had
+died in infancy. Alice I did not kiss either. Looking up, I
+saw my aunt’s hard black eyes fixed upon me. I gave her
+back stare for stare, without flinching, and she turned away,
+with that curious, grimacing smile I now hated.</p>
+
+<p>Alice herself did not appear to resent my coldness; she
+hung on to my arm and laughed up at me as if we were the
+oldest friends in the world. She was a strange, elf-like
+child, with a pale face and big black eyes that were not hard
+like her mother’s. She looked as if she had been allowed
+all her life to sit up too late. She was small for her
+age, and extraordinarily fragile; she was like a little figure
+cut out of a Sime drawing.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Uncle George, who had been out in the rain,
+and had removed his boots, was sitting before the gas-stove,
+presenting the soles of two large, gray-socked feet to the red
+bars. A light steam began to rise from them, and Uncle
+George declared that his new boots must “let in,” and that
+he had a good mind to take them back to the man he had
+bought them from, and that it was too bad. I sat down near
+him and talked to him, while I watched the steam float up
+from his feet. Aunt Margaret was getting tea ready in
+another room, and little Alice hovered behind my chair.
+Every now and again she leaned over the back of it and said
+something. She brought a book to show me, and while
+I looked at it she put her arms round my neck and kissed my
+cheek.</p>
+
+<p>“Run away, Alice, and quit bothering Peter,” said Uncle
+George. “It’s queer the way she’s taken to you,” he added
+in a gratified whisper. “She’s usually that shy you couldn’t
+coax her out of a corner!” Alice retreated, but almost
+immediately came back, and again put her arms round me.
+She held her small white face close to mine and looked at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
+me with her great black eyes and smiled. She gave me
+an impression of a little house haunted by queer and not
+altogether pleasant ghosts, and yet somehow I felt sorry
+for her, and I stroked her thin hand that rested on my
+sleeve, delicate and light as a leaf.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a lovely big boy,” she whispered in my ear,
+rubbing her face up and down against my jacket, as if it
+had been the fur of an animal.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn’t help laughing, and she cuddled close against
+me, her chin on my shoulder. “She must be awfully
+nervous,” I thought, for the thunderous approach of one
+of those hideous traction-engines, that I was soon to find
+were a feature of the town, made her tremble.</p>
+
+<p>When we sat down to tea Alice insisted on sitting beside
+me. I had an idea, possibly suggested by Miss Izzy’s
+words, that the room we were in was not often used. I
+hoped it wasn’t, for it was stuffy and uncomfortable, and
+so small that you felt everywhere beneath the table the
+warm proximity of other people’s limbs. I hated being
+cramped in this way; it seemed to me that all the time
+I was breathing other people’s breaths, and once I got this
+notion into my head I couldn’t forget it. The furniture
+was cheap, flimsy, and uncomfortable. The curtains, the
+gaudy vases, the hideous wall-paper, were of the brightest
+and least accordant colours, and I even preferred our parlour
+at home, where, if the things were not less ugly, there
+were fewer of them. Several pictures hung on the walls,
+and one hung directly in front of me. It was an engraving,
+and represented a young man in armour visibly torn between
+a desire for virtue, embodied in a flaxen-haired lady in
+floating white drapery, and a deplorable weakness for all
+that another lady might be taken as symbolising. This
+latter person was a brunette, and rather more scantily,
+though quite decently, draped. She held a glass of champagne
+in her hand, waving it triumphantly aloft, like a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
+torch. I confess that the work fascinated me, for it was
+my first acquaintance with the type of art it represented.</p>
+
+<p>“A fine picture,” murmured Uncle George, seeing me
+gazing at it. “It’s a Royal Academy picture that!”</p>
+
+<p>I said nothing. I did not know what a Royal Academy
+picture was, nor did I admire this example. It was not
+so much that the figures looked like unsuccessful waxworks,
+as that the banality of the moral irritated me. It was the
+first time I had ever seen art of this extremely ethical
+character, and in its spirit it reminded me of my old friends
+in the “Golden Ladder Series.”</p>
+
+<p>I hoped tea would not last much longer. In the small
+room, the large yellow slices of an extremely odoriferous
+cheese made the atmosphere heavy and unpleasant. Moreover,
+when this cheese was offered to me with hard,
+pink, sugared biscuits, I didn’t quite know what to do.
+I had refused several things already, and I knew Aunt
+Margaret thought I was turning up my nose at the food
+provided for me, and provided specially, I could guess,
+from the behaviour of the others, because it was my first
+night. So I accepted the cheese and sugared biscuits, and
+struggled through them.</p>
+
+<p>After tea George asked if we were going to have “worship”
+now or later? We had it “now,” and as soon as
+we rose from our knees he suggested that we should “go
+out for a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you going to?” Aunt Margaret inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know: up the street just. We can’t sit
+in the house all the evenin’. It’s quite fine now.”</p>
+
+<p>I was nothing loath, and clattered down the stairs after
+him. As soon as we were outside George’s uncertainty as
+to our destination appeared to vanish. “Did you ever
+see a boxing match?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“A boxing match?”</p>
+
+<p>“A fight—a prize-fight—whatever you like to call it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
+Come on an’ we’ll go to the Comet, only for the Lord’s
+sake don’t say anythin’ about it at home!”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you not allowed to go?”</p>
+
+<p>“Allowed! Wait till you know them a bit better. The
+boss’s idea of an enjoyable evenin’ is some Sankey and
+Moody touch.”</p>
+
+<p>We turned down a side street, and then another and
+another, till I completely lost my bearings; but very soon
+George said, “There it is, Coxy. You’re goin’ to see a bit
+of life, eh?” and pointed to a small theatre at the opposite
+side of the road. Above the entrance, a round purplish
+globe threw down a pool of light on the dirty pavement.
+A number of men and youths in caps, and with mufflers
+round their necks, hung about the door, talking and spitting,
+and at the corner some small boys looked on. George
+pushed boldly in and I followed. We took tickets for the
+front seats from an extremely friendly and pock-marked
+person, who wore a black patch over one eye. When we
+got inside we found there were not many spectators in our
+part of the house, but the pit, at the back, was already
+crowded.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the thunder and lightning over there,” said
+George, jocosely, “in other words, the nuts. How would
+you like to be in among them?” But the stragglers who
+kept dropping in and taking seats all round us did not
+seem to me to be very different.</p>
+
+<p>A branch of lights hung from the ceiling, and other lights
+fell from the flies on to the curtainless stage. A kind of gray
+mist, doubtless the accumulated smoke of many nights,
+floated in the air, and a sickly-looking youth was hammering
+out music-hall tunes on a worn-out, toneless piano. The
+stage was quite bare, save for three double rows of yellow
+wooden chairs, that composed three sides of a parallelogram,
+and within which was a space marked off by a thick rope
+stretched about four stout posts clamped to the floor. Over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
+this rope, at two diagonally opposite corners, hung towels,
+and in each corner was a chair, a heap of sawdust, a basin,
+a sponge, and a water-bottle. There was no person on
+the stage, and these bare accessories, possibly because I
+saw them now for the first time, had to my eyes a most
+suggestive appearance. I began to feel excited: this
+unadorned stage appeared to me to be distinctly thrilling.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees the house filled up. The audience, though
+mixed, was on the whole a very rough one, and there were
+no women.</p>
+
+<p>“Twig the peelers,” said George, and I noticed half a
+dozen policemen lounge in and take up positions in different
+parts of the auditorium.</p>
+
+<p>At about five minutes to eight even the chairs on the
+stage were filled, and, at eight sharp, an important person
+with a cigar stepped into the ring, and made a short speech
+introducing the first pair of boxers. He retired amid loud
+applause, but the boxers, to my surprise, turned out to be
+a couple of half-grown, ill-nourished, ill-washed lads, no
+older than myself. They were naked except for short linen
+drawers, and it seemed to me that it would have been no
+harm had they been put into a bath prior to their appearance.
+They grinned sheepishly at the audience, amongst
+whom they evidently recognised “pals”; and these “pals,”
+in turn, greeted them with cries of “Go it, Bob,” “Go on,
+the wee lad,” “Go on, the stripes”—this last in allusion
+to Bob’s unambitious costume, which had all the appearance
+of being simply a pair of bathing-drawers. They shook
+hands in a nerveless way, without looking at each other,
+and began to spar feebly. Bob was so thin you could
+count his ribs, and the big gloves at the ends of his long
+skinny arms looked like gigantic puff-balls. The “wee
+lad” was sturdier, but he seemed to me to be slightly
+deformed. Even to my inexperienced eye it was perfectly
+obvious that the main concern of both was not to get hurt,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
+and they hadn’t finished the first round before the audience
+was shouting, “Take them off them! Take them off them!”
+This was in allusion to the gloves, but they also shouted
+other things, most of which I daresay I had heard before,
+though never so many at one time, and I reflected that
+George had managed to steer fairly clear of the “Sankey
+and Moody touch.”</p>
+
+<p>The referee cautioned the unfortunate combatants, but
+the second round was no better than the first, and in the
+middle of the third round the fight was stopped. The
+sleek, well-fed persons occupying the chairs, and the more
+impatient persons occupying the auditorium, had not paid
+their money for stuff of that sort. There followed a fresh
+pair of boxers, older, more experienced, and this time
+things were sufficiently brisk. The battle was a hard,
+ding-dong struggle, and it was at least exciting. At the
+sight of the first dark ugly streak of blood on one of those
+white faces I felt a little queer, in fact my impulse was to
+go away; but as round after round passed, and I watched
+the blood from the same wound burst out afresh in each,
+it began to quicken a sort of unsuspected lust of cruelty
+in me, and I took pleasure in it, I wanted the fight to be
+a real one, the thud of a blow that got home thrilled me.
+It was as if I had undergone some transformation. The
+dirty theatre, the low faces, the foul language, ceased to
+matter. I was carried out of myself. I longed at the
+same time for the fight to continue, and for its climax.
+There would be only three more rounds, and I wanted,
+before the last, to see somebody knocked out. The man
+whose face was bleeding was the heavier of the two, but
+I thought he had little chance. He was out-matched, he
+must have known it himself, and yet he continued to come
+up with a kind of dogged stupidity. His seconds spat
+water into his face, sponged him, rubbed him and fanned
+him, slapped him with towels and massaged his muscles;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
+but the artificial invigoration this produced lasted only a
+few moments after the beginning of each round, and, as I
+watched him weakening, I could feel myself delivering the
+blows that dazed him, my muscles tightened and slackened,
+I could hardly sit in my seat. “Now he’s got him,” I
+said aloud, as he staggered into the ring for the last time.
+There was a blow and a crash on the boards. The referee
+was counting over him, one—two—three—four—five—six—seven—eight;
+and then this helpless creature, out of
+whose swollen, hideous face all humanity had been battered,
+staggered up almost blindly. He did not even lift his
+hands to protect himself from the blow that smashed him
+down again, and with that dull thud on the floor the fight
+came to an end. He lay on after the counting had stopped,
+and as I watched him being supported, almost carried, out
+of the ring, while the victor received congratulations, a
+pang of misgiving assailed me. There was no doubt the
+whole thing was absolutely brutal, and there was equally
+no doubt that when it had been most brutal I had been
+most pleased.</p>
+
+<p>I should like to be able to add that I got up and left the
+theatre. I did not. I reflected that <em>the</em> fight was still to
+come: I even waited for it eagerly, and when it took place,
+I was disappointed because nobody bled, and because the
+decision was given on points at the end of the twelfth round.</p>
+
+<p>As we walked home I proved to George that boxing
+matches were really all right; that they were infinitely
+less dangerous than football matches. Every one of my
+arguments convinced George, and after I had finished he
+found some for himself, which I accepted as equally incontrovertible.
+Considering that there was nobody to take
+up an opposite point of view, our apologies might have
+appeared hardly necessary, but George was able to give
+me, in addition, a list of all the good qualities fighting
+brought out, or even brought into existence. Most of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
+these did not exactly fit in with my more superficial
+impression of the audience, and there were others I could
+not help feeling many of them would be better without—courage,
+for instance. I had a dim idea that a little extra
+courage might result in a majority of them figuring at the
+next Assizes.</p>
+
+<p>But when we were three-quarters way home I said to
+George, “It was all pretty beastly, and that’s why we
+liked it—eh?”</p>
+
+<p>He got quite offended, telling me that if <em>he</em> had thought
+it beastly he wouldn’t have waited on to the end, as
+I did.</p>
+
+<p>This was just possible, yet my opinion of George sank.
+“If you admire it so much,” I said, “I’ll give you a turn
+any time you like.”</p>
+
+<p>George was silent, and flushed slightly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” I kept on, pugnaciously.</p>
+
+<p>George mumbled something, I don’t know what, and
+I saw that I had actually frightened him. We walked
+the rest of the way home in silence. George was angry
+with me, but when we were in the house and had sat down
+to supper he became friendly again. As I discovered later,
+company was the one thing absolutely indispensable to
+him; he could have kept on being angry with me, and,
+indeed, would have enjoyed doing so, had he had anybody
+else to talk to, but solitude he could not bear. And I, on
+my side, forgot his having sulked on the way home, just
+as, later on, I was to forget more than one unpleasant thing,
+simply because he amused me, because he could always
+make me laugh.</p>
+
+<p>After supper I said good-night to the others, and George
+and I went upstairs. George went in front of me and lit
+the gas in the bedroom. “Is this my room?” I asked,
+noticing that there were two beds in it.</p>
+
+<p>“Yours an’ mine,” George answered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
+
+<p>His reply was unexpected. I had never slept with anybody
+in my life, and it had not occurred to me that I should
+not have a room to myself. I said nothing, but George,
+who was far from stupid, saw I did not like the arrangement.
+“There is no other room,” he admitted frankly.
+“I thought you knew. I thought ma put it in her letter.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t see her letter,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, we’ll be all right together, won’t we?” George
+went on, pacifically. “You can have your bed moved
+wherever you would like it best.” He had already begun
+to undress, and, after hanging up his jacket, he took a photograph
+from an inside pocket and handed it to me. It was
+the photograph of a lady extremely lightly clad. “I’ve
+better ones than that,” said George, with a peculiar smile.
+He went to a corner near the window and raised a loose
+board. From the hollow beneath he drew out a large fat
+envelope, but, as he looked at me, he hesitated. “I’ll show
+them to you some other time,” he suddenly said, and
+returned the envelope to its hiding-place. He undressed
+rapidly, and got into bed.</p>
+
+<p>I took longer, and all the time I felt George’s eyes fixed
+on me curiously. I hated this lack of privacy. It wasn’t
+that I hadn’t undressed hundreds of times before other
+boys, when we were going to bathe; but this was different.
+I disliked the feeling of not being alone. I hated to have
+somebody watch me all the time I was taking off my clothes,
+or folding them. I determined to write to my father in
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in bed and in the dark I wanted to think of
+Katherine. I did this every night; I looked forward to it,
+because it seemed to me that this was the hour when everything
+became clearer; besides, there was always the chance
+that if I thought of her I might dream of her. But now
+George began to talk.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know any girls?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you like them?” George persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you think of Miss Izzy? Not bad—eh?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know anything about her.”</p>
+
+<p>George was silent a few minutes. Then, just as I was
+beginning to think my own thoughts, he began again.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s nothin’ compared to Miss Johnson—the girl we
+were talkin’ about to-day—who’s gettin’ married. Miss
+Johnson was in the shop before Miss Izzy came. Ma sacked
+her for givin’ lip. Ma sacks them all.”</p>
+
+<p>George continued to talk until he grew sleepy, and I
+had no choice but to listen.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Next morning I was awakened by somebody singing, and
+opening my eyes I saw George, in his shirt and trousers,
+strutting up and down the middle of the floor, a hair-brush
+in his hand. It took me half a minute to realise where I
+was, but George, when he saw I was awake, proceeded to
+give me imitations of various music-hall artists, until there
+was a sharp rap at our door, and Aunt Margaret’s voice
+told him to remember what day it was. With that I remembered
+myself, and simultaneously made up my mind
+that I wasn’t going to church. I determined that now I
+was away from home I would be my own master, and do
+just what seemed good in my own eyes, and that I would
+begin this policy at once.</p>
+
+<p>Our room was at the back of the house, and from where
+I lay I could see through the window a strip of gray, desolate
+sky, broken here and there by a chimney, and across which
+the dark branch of an unhealthy tree waved. As I watched
+it, my mind strayed to a book of Japanese decorations, and
+to the library at Derryaghy, and to other things I cared
+for. I had already guessed from the little I had seen of
+the McAllisters that their fortunes were drooping. It was
+not so much that everything in the house was worn out
+and patched and on its last legs, that the children were
+ill-clad and looked ill-nourished, as that I seemed to scent
+that mysterious atmosphere of anxiety, worry, and struggle,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
+which invariably accompanies a decreasing ability to
+pay one’s way. I hated it. I hated all that it implied—sordid
+economies and cheap pleasures, a degrading and
+enchaining struggle to keep things going. It did not
+awaken pity in me, but only disgust. It was like a horrible
+monster that clung and squeezed with a thousand slimy
+tentacles, sapping your strength, and sucking out your
+life-blood. I could even sympathise with those who had
+freed themselves from it by some bold decisive action,
+that might lie well outside the laws of morality and society.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of these reflections George informed me that I
+had better get up. He was tying his tie. His red hair was
+carefully plastered down with water, and he was examining
+his small, freckled face in the looking-glass. George
+had not yet begun to shave, but he had long, silly-looking
+hairs growing out of his chin, and I thought he looked
+extremely ugly and horribly common as he stood there.</p>
+
+<p>When we went downstairs the others were just beginning
+breakfast. The whole family was terribly <i lang="fr">endimanchée</i>.
+Aunt Margaret was redolent of cheap scent. Gordon and
+Thomas were dressed in green plush with white mother-of-pearl
+buttons. Their little, damp, red, snub noses seemed to
+have been set that very morning accidentally in the middle of
+their round faces, which were of the complexion of fresh
+putty, and their eyes were exactly like blue glass marbles.
+Uncle George, who was breakfasting in his gray shirt sleeves,
+suggested that I might like to go with George to the Bible-class,
+but I refused. I added, to prevent all future trouble,
+that I preferred to take a walk on Sunday morning.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you go for walks when you are at home?” Aunt
+Margaret asked me, with her strange smile.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Doesn’t your father expect you to go to church?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what he expects, I’m sure.”</p>
+
+<p>“And don’t you think yourself you ought to go?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No.” I was quite certain about this at all events, and
+I added that, once you were familiar with any particular
+ideas, no matter how valuable, I couldn’t see that you
+gained very much by listening to them being repeated
+ad infinitum.</p>
+
+<p>This explanation, far from convincing, evidently annoyed,
+Aunt Margaret, though she only said, “I would rather you
+didn’t talk like that before the children. They have been
+brought up to look upon religion with respect.”</p>
+
+<p>I did not reply.</p>
+
+<p>“I think I’ll go for a walk too,” George announced, with
+a wink at me.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll do nothing of the sort,” cried Aunt Margaret,
+flaring up into a shrill rage. “You see what comes of such
+talk! I’ll have no Sabbath-breaking in this house.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ssh—ssh,” Uncle George mildly intervened. “To
+force people to do things against their will isn’t the proper
+way to take.”</p>
+
+<p>“You want your children to give up going to church,
+then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nobody is giving up going to church. George is coming
+of course. Young people very often say things without
+meaning them. If Peter is for taking a walk this morning,
+I expect he will come out with us this evening to hear Dr.
+Russell, won’t you, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>But, altogether apart from Dr. Russell, that Sunday was
+a dreary day. In the afternoon I accompanied George, and
+we loafed about in the Ormeau Park, where he was evidently
+accustomed to meet his friends. These friends of George’s
+were all in business, and all looked upon themselves as young
+men. They smoked cheap cigarettes, wore their handkerchiefs
+in their sleeves, and were tremendously knowing and
+rakish, while the larger part of their conversation appeared
+to be concerned with the merits of professional football
+players. I could get on all right with George when he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
+by himself, but his friends, among whom he was remarkably
+popular, did not improve him. It took no great perspicacity
+to discover that they on their side regarded my company as a
+very questionable acquisition. This feeling, far from
+diminishing, obviously increased as the afternoon advanced.
+George described our adventure of the night before with
+immense gusto, and gave a burlesque imitation of the knock-out.
+To have an appreciative audience was his greatest
+delight, and the others, for that matter, left him a fairly
+free stage. Now that he had them he ignored me utterly,
+so that, in the end, I was left practically alone. I fulfilled
+a sort of highly disagreeable rôle of silent hanger-on. I did
+it most reluctantly, yet I could not summon up sufficient
+moral courage to go away.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>On Monday morning I went to school. I arrived half an
+hour before the proper time, and as my classes had already
+been arranged, I had nothing to do but loiter about and take
+stock of the place. It stood, a long, low, unlovely building
+of soot-darkened brick, in its own grounds, not far from the
+centre of the town. Just now, on this gray autumn morning,
+it presented an appearance of singular, of almost jail-like
+dullness, though in summer, as I was to learn, when the
+grass was green, and the tall dusty elms waved against a
+blue sky, and the sun shone through narrow, small-paned
+windows, and splashed on wooden floors, on hacked wooden
+desks and forms, on faded maps, and bare, discoloured
+walls, it could be pleasant enough, in spite of the complete
+absence of anything save the sunlight and the trees that
+might appeal to a sense of beauty. Beside the main building
+was a Preparatory School, and at the back, separated
+from it by a yard, where a score or so of boys were at present
+kicking about a football, were the Mathematical Schools,
+and beyond these, the larger playing-field. It was really
+a day-school, only two masters living on the premises, with
+about a couple of dozen boarders: the rest of the scholars,
+numbering between a hundred and fifty and two hundred,
+were day-boys.</p>
+
+<p>As I hung about uneasily, not venturing to join the others,
+I was painfully conscious of my isolation. Not one of those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
+faces had I ever seen before, nor had I the slightest knowledge
+of the school itself, for George, who had been at a
+National School, could tell me nothing about it. Nobody
+took any notice of me. Several masters passed, and disappeared
+through mysterious doors, and when, at ten o’clock, a
+white-haired, white-bearded patriarch rang a huge hand-bell
+in the porch, and I watched the boys scattering with extraordinary
+rapidity in various directions, it looked to me as if
+I might very easily spend my whole day in the yard. I had
+no idea which door to try, yet at the same time I was anxious
+not to be late. I was still hovering uncertainly about the
+porch, like a soul strayed into the wrong Paradise, when a
+boy, running past, glanced at me, stopped, and asked me
+where I wanted to go to.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I wanted to go to Mr. Lowden’s class.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s the end door on the left over there,” he said, good-humouredly,
+and I thanked him and hurried off.</p>
+
+<p>Coming in, I found the whole class already in their places,
+but a boy at the end of the third form moved up to make
+room for me, and I sat down. Mr. Lowden, who was standing,
+with a piece of chalk in one hand and a duster in the
+other, close by the black-board, asked me my name, and
+then informed me I was late and that he objected to lateness.
+I said nothing, but took down on the slate in front of me the
+sum he had just written out.</p>
+
+<p>I worked at it, and was struck by the animated conversations
+that were going on all over the room, in spite of Mr.
+Lowden’s efforts to check them.</p>
+
+<p>“Has anybody finished yet?” Mr. Lowden asked, and
+the boy who had moved up to make room for me held up his
+hand, cracking his fingers. I glanced at him. He had a
+round, merry face, rosy cheeks, bright eyes and dimples.</p>
+
+<p>“How often have I told you not to crack your fingers,
+Knox?” asked Mr. Lowden, discontentedly. “Well, what
+answer do you get?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Ten bob, a deuce an’ a make.”</p>
+
+<p>“Come in to-day, Knox, at recess.”</p>
+
+<p>He wrote down another sum, and I had begun to copy it,
+when something went off with a sharp report under my feet.
+Mr. Lowden was gazing straight at me, and he instantly told
+me to stay in at recess.</p>
+
+<p>I knew well enough what had happened, that I had trodden
+on a wax match softened and rolled up with the head
+inside. I told Mr. Lowden that I hadn’t done it on purpose.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t help that: you must stay in.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it wasn’t my fault if I didn’t know it was there,”
+I argued.</p>
+
+<p>“You must stay in,” repeated Mr. Lowden, in a silly,
+obstinate kind of voice, horribly irritating, “and, Knox, you
+stay in after school as well as at recess.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see what <em>he</em> has to do with it, any way,” I
+muttered.</p>
+
+<p>The boy beside me laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes: Knox put it there,” Mr. Lowden said monotonously.</p>
+
+<p>I had taken a dislike to Mr. Lowden, and at the same time
+I thought him a fool. A few days later something happened
+to make me dislike him even more. He had read aloud a
+problem which we were to work out mentally, putting down
+our answers when he gave us the word. My answer was
+right, but, unfortunately, when he asked me how I got it, the
+problem itself had gone out of my head. For the life of me
+I couldn’t remember it; yet I was ashamed to say so, and
+simply sat silent while he repeated two or three times, as if
+it were some kind of refrain, “Well, now, how did you
+work the sum, Waring?”</p>
+
+<p>As I was unable to tell him, he said, “You must have
+copied the answer from Knox.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t,” I protested, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“Then why can’t you tell me how you got it?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span></p>
+
+<p>Again silence.</p>
+
+<p>“You must be telling a lie, I’m afraid,” said Mr. Lowden,
+in his apathetic voice, “and the silliest kind of lie, because
+it’s obvious to everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not telling a lie.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lowden shrugged his shoulders; he never seemed to
+get angry, or even moderately interested, no matter what
+the circumstances. “If you’re not, then why can’t you tell
+me how you worked the sum? If you had done it once,
+you could do it again.”</p>
+
+<p>“I did do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, how?”</p>
+
+<p>Renewed silence.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better stay in at recess.”</p>
+
+<p>And I stayed in.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Mr. Lowden was really only a mild and inoffensive
+young man, who had been inspired with the unlucky idea
+that he could earn his living by teaching boys, when he had
+neither the desire nor the capacity to understand them. The
+aversion I felt for him was really founded primarily upon
+grounds less rational than those I have mentioned. The
+secret of the matter was that physically he was repulsive to
+me. He suffered, I imagine, from some affection of the
+lungs or throat, for he wore, winter and summer, a thick
+white muffler, fastened by an opal pin. His face was pale,
+cadaverous, and hollow-cheeked; his moustache scanty;
+his hair lank and damp; but what I disliked most was his
+peculiar odour. Whether this emanated from his person,
+or from the pastilles he was perpetually sucking, I don’t
+know. It was something sickly and persistent, and for no
+reason that I know of I associated it with death. When he
+sat down on the form beside me to work out a sum, I used
+to edge gradually away from him, until he would notice it,
+and ask me in a querulous voice what I was doing, and
+perhaps keep me in. This physical repulsion I could never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
+have conquered, even had it not been backed up by that kind
+of mental sickliness which characterized him, and which
+had made him punish me once at least unjustly. He left
+six months later, and nobody among the boys ever knew
+or cared what became of him. Perhaps he went to another
+school, perhaps the mysterious odour which had sickened
+me had been really the odour of death....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When I think now of those who were in charge of my
+education, upon my word I cannot help but be filled with
+wonder. What did they teach me? What did I ever get
+from them that I could not have got, with less trouble, for
+myself? Never once did any of my masters show the
+faintest interest in me, or make even the most perfunctory
+attempt to get to know me, to get to know what I was
+capable of, if I had any definite tastes, if I were good or bad,
+moral or immoral, intelligent or a fool. What they did instead
+was to ask me a couple of questions from a book, and, if
+I failed to answer either of these satisfactorily, keep me in to
+sit for twenty minutes with my lesson-book open on the desk
+before me and my thoughts miles away. Of my masters
+only one, Mr. Johnson, had any distinction, and he, unfortunately,
+was a mathematician. He had written a “Euclid”
+so perfect in its expression that he had managed to get a
+kind of æsthetic charm into the dry bones of geometry. He
+was an Englishman, but was slightly Jewish in type. He
+wore a long, flowing beard and moustache, like an early
+northern chief, and he had small, sleepy, gray eyes, which
+during school hours were usually closed. Most of his time
+he passed, either in reverie or slumber, in his chair on a daïs
+at the end of the room; but when aroused he had, for the
+unmathematical, a richly terrifying voice, and a disheartening
+manner of slashing down a long black cane on the desk,
+within a few inches of your nose. His classes were models
+of order. Never a faintest sound. In dead silence you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
+played your game of noughts and crosses, or did your Latin
+composition, or wrote out cricket teams—but you never
+spoke, and rarely moved. Of all those whose business it
+was to mould my mind his figure remains the least spoiled
+by time. I remember the shock I received when, some years
+after I left school, I came upon Dr. Melling, the head English
+master, in the Campo Santo at Pisa, sucking an orange, and
+dressed in garments that Moses or Ikey would have bid for
+but languidly. When I spoke to him he seemed so narrow,
+so unimaginative, so unintelligent, that I felt half-ashamed,
+as one might who has learned by accident a secret he ought
+never to have known. Even in stature he was curiously
+shrunken, though he neither stooped nor showed signs of
+decrepitude or age. But Johnson I can see now, as I saw
+him so often then, coming up the path between the two
+front cricket-fields, a large black bag in his hand, which one
+had been told contained his lunch. I can see him leaning
+back in his chair, his eyes closed, like one of those beautiful
+owls that ignore from their cage in the Zoo the staring
+stranger, his beard spread out over his waistcoat, his hands
+folded on his stomach. Johnson was a gentleman, and,
+though he knew nothing of, and cared little for, boys, if
+chance brought him into temporary relation with one, even
+a very small and idle one, he took it for granted that he was
+a gentleman too, and in his deep, slow, musical voice, and in
+his sleepy eyes, there would come a curious charm.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I had formed no definite conception of what my new school
+would be like, but there was a flatness about the reality
+for which I was unprepared. I seemed to slip into my place
+at once, without attracting the slightest attention either of
+boys or masters, and at a week’s end any strangeness there
+might have been had completely worn off. I did not play
+football, which was the only game played this term. I got
+to know a good many boys, but I formed no friendships.
+I found my new companions to be, on the whole, little, if at
+all, more congenial than the boys at Newcastle, in spite of
+there being so many more to choose from. I liked them
+well enough, and they were, with one exception, perfectly
+decent to me, but it all ended there: that is to say, in my
+relation with them I had invariably to approach them on
+their own ground, I had to enter into <em>their</em> world, they were
+incapable of entering into mine, or even of meeting me halfway.
+There was a boy I had felt attracted to, purely on
+account of his good-looks, and as our ways home lay in the
+same direction I joined him one afternoon just as he was
+going out at the gate. But the first words he uttered
+shattered my illusions. He had a harsh, loud voice and
+spoke through his nose. Almost at once he began to tell me
+what he imagined to be a funny story, and before I had been
+with him five minutes I said good-bye abruptly, and left
+him standing on the pavement, staring after me, nor did I
+ever speak to him again.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
+
+<p>Day by day I went to school, neither liking it nor disliking
+it. Yet it was all rather dismal, for life without any kind
+of human sympathy, either given or received, is a dreadful,
+almost an impossible, thing. I thought a good deal of
+Katherine, and wrote to her, but got only an occasional
+scrappy note in reply. I did not see much of George, for he
+was kept in his business till nearly seven o’clock, and in the
+evenings I had to prepare my work for the next day. George,
+moreover, had his own circle of friends, none of whom, as I
+have said, were particularly eager for my company, while
+George himself, when he was among them, was the least
+eager of all. Sometimes when I was with him alone I would
+remember this and resent it, but he could always make me
+forgive him when he wanted to: he could be extraordinarily
+pleasant when he wanted to, and it was impossible to be
+bored in his company.</p>
+
+<p>We still shared the same bedroom, and at night he
+liked to talk before going to sleep. He had obtained a
+considerable influence over me, more than anybody else
+ever did or was to do, yet it is difficult to describe what it
+consisted in, or why it should have come about. I had an
+extremely poor opinion of him: I knew he had not even a
+rudimentary conscience: frequently he repelled, and even
+disgusted, me: but always, by some instinct, he seemed
+to know when he had done so, and he had a special gift for
+recovering lost ground. His influence was bad—absolutely—and
+yet what was so harmful to me did not, so far as I
+know, have any particularly disastrous effect upon George
+himself. He had an amazingly licentious imagination, and,
+in this direction, a power of vivid suggestion. As I became
+more accustomed to him, things that had at first jarred
+upon me ceased to do so; but it was doubly unfortunate
+that I should have been thrown so intimately into his
+society just at this particular time. Had I been either
+older or younger, or had I had any other friends, the effect<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
+would not have been so injurious. It was not that I had
+not heard my share of Rabelaisian talk before. This was,
+somehow, different. At all events, the other had passed
+off me easily, awakening no after-thoughts, leaving my
+senses untroubled. It was not so now. My mind became
+disturbed, and, above all, my dreams were coloured by
+certain obsessions which George took a delight in evoking.
+In my dreams his suggestions became realities, and his
+imagination seemed to brood over them like an evil angel.
+I do not think he was himself conscious of it, conscious, that
+is, that what for him appeared to be no more than a sort
+of intellectual pastime, which he could shake from him as
+easily as one might turn off a tap, assumed with me a darker
+form. His words appeared to touch me physically, and
+with an appalling directness and persistency. He had a
+trick of re-telling stories he had read, twisting them and
+altering them with an astonishing ingenuity, so as to introduce
+the element he revelled in, and he never became crude
+or brutal till he had carefully prepared his ground. And
+it was all transformed by a curious gift of humour, which
+was in itself something quite inimitable, consisting, as it
+did, largely in his personality and manner, in an unquenchable
+liveliness, and a faculty of mimicry.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Two months went by in this fashion, and I had begun to
+look forward to Christmas and to count the weeks that
+separated me from the holidays, when an incident occurred
+which was the means of my forming an acquaintance that
+was to develop into the most intimate friendship of my life.
+It befell in this way.</p>
+
+<p>A series of thefts had been committed, thefts of school-books.
+A boy would leave his books down on a window-sill,
+or even in a class-room, and when he came to get them
+again, one would perhaps be missing. I had never lost
+anything myself, and knew nothing of what was going on
+till the afternoon when the matter was divulged to the
+entire school.</p>
+
+<p>It was not far from three o’clock, I remember, the hour
+when we broke up for the day, and I was in one of the
+English class-rooms, where, every Monday, if you liked
+to pay half-a-crown a term extra, you had the advantage
+of a lesson in elocution from Mr. (or was it Professor?)
+Lennox. Professor Lennox was a fat, pale, absurd little
+man, with a high-pitched tenor voice that struck against
+the drum of your ear like the blow of a stick. He waxed
+his moustache, and greased his hair into carefully arranged,
+solid-looking locks, while his skin, by some natural process,
+greased itself. Professor Lennox was an amateur of fancy
+trousers, of coloured waistcoats, of large breast-pins, of spats<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
+with pearl buttons, and of rings more striking than precious.
+To-day the whole class—some fifty or sixty boys—was reading
+after him, line by line, a poem from Bell’s “Elocution.”</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“In arms, / the Aust / rian phal / anx stood,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">A liv / ing wall, / a hum / an wood.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Impreg / nable / their front / appears,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">All hor / rent with / project / ing spears.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">Or, as it sounded according to local pronunciation, shared
+impartially by the professor and the majority of his pupils:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“In arms, / the Orst / rian phah / lanx stude,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Ah liv / ing wall, / ah hue / man wude.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Imprag / nable / their front / appears,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">All hoar / rent with / projact / ing spears.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>We had just reached “projacting spears,” when Dr.
+Melling, better known by the name of Limpet, came in,
+followed by an old woman, who paused on the threshold.
+Limpet turned round and waved her forward impatiently,
+but a couple of yards from the door she stopped again, and
+all the time she stared hard at us with small, sharp, gray
+eyes. Her bright little eyes and hooked nose, taken with her
+air of timidity, gave her the appearance of an innocent and
+frightened witch who has been dragged out of her lair
+very much against her will. I wondered who she was,
+but Limpet did not leave us long in doubt. It appeared
+that some boy had stolen a number of school-books, the
+property of various other boys, and had sold them to this
+woman, who was now here to identify him. Limpet
+explained the situation with an air of wishing to get a
+disagreeable duty over as quickly as possible, but to us
+it was quite exciting. Each of us in turn stood up to undergo
+the witch’s scrutiny. She had already, as I afterwards
+learned, been round the other classes, and Limpet, who
+had accompanied her on this voyage of discovery, was by
+now in rather a bad temper. Evidently he found the whole<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
+business singularly distasteful, and as one boy after another
+received her head-shake, he fidgeted and frowned nervously.
+She herself looked frightened and bewildered; I expect
+she was secretly worried about her own share in the matter,
+and considering how she could make the best of it. As for
+me, I felt for the first time as if school-life really bore some
+faint resemblance to the tales of the <cite>Boy’s Own Paper</cite>.
+Here was one of the pet adventures actually taking place,
+except that the old woman should have been a man with
+a small fur cap. When it came to my turn to stand up, I
+had an extraordinary wish that she would pick me out as
+the culprit. Sure of my innocence, I had a mind to be the
+hero of this adventure, and I stood so long, waiting to be
+identified, that Limpet told me sharply to sit down, and I
+could see had it on the tip of his tongue to give me an
+imposition. My neighbour tugged me by the jacket, and
+I resumed my seat abruptly amid suppressed laughter.
+One by one each boy rose in his place and sat down again,
+and then, in the back row of all, a boy stood up who <em>was</em>
+identified. This boy I did not know except by name, though
+he was in all my classes. He was called Gill, and I had
+always looked upon him as rather odd and unapproachable.
+When his turn came, he stood up indifferently, glancing
+out through the window at the clock, which could only be
+seen when you were on your feet. But next moment I
+saw the old woman say something to Limpet, and the latter
+instantly told Gill to stand out.</p>
+
+<p>Gill stood out, his indifference gone, his face flushed and
+angry.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that the boy?” Limpet asked, as if daring her to
+say “Yes,” but the old woman mumbled out an affirmative.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know anything of this, Gill?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>I was somehow pleased that he had not added the customary
+“Sir.” He stood with his head up and gazed straight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
+at Limpet and the old woman, with a kind of contemptuous
+wrath, his gray eyes dark and very bright, a frown on his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>The old woman was so obviously uncertain and uncomfortable
+that the whole thing appeared to me ridiculous,
+and I impulsively gave voice to this impression. “She
+doesn’t know anything about it,” I called out. “Anybody
+could see she’s only trying it on.”</p>
+
+<p>Limpet on the spot gave me two hundred of Sir Walter
+Scott’s bad verses to write out. My remark had the effect,
+nevertheless, of drawing a wavering expression of uncertainty
+from the old woman herself, which, in his now undisguised
+irritability, Limpet pounced on, as a cat pounces
+on a mouse. “Why did you point to him, if you don’t
+know?” he whipped out, frightening her nearly out of
+her wits. “Don’t you understand that it’s a serious thing
+to bring an accusation of theft against a boy? Sit down,
+Gill. I want to see you after school.”</p>
+
+<p>He was so angry that he forgot all about the half-dozen
+remaining boys, and conducted his companion unceremoniously
+from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Gill sat staring straight in front of him. Certainly he
+did not look guilty. He had a dark, narrow face, with a
+bright complexion. His thick, rough, black hair grew low
+on an oval, narrow forehead, and between his clear gray
+eyes there started a high-bridged, somewhat aggressive-looking
+nose, the most striking feature of his rather striking
+face. He had the reputation of being a peculiar kind of
+chap, and he was sometimes made fun of—mildly, for he was
+extremely quick-tempered and very strong—but anybody
+could see that he was a fine fellow, and that an accusation
+such as had just been brought against him would require
+a great deal of proof.</p>
+
+<p>When the bell rang he remained on in his seat while the
+rest of us went out, I hung about the porch watching two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
+little fellows playing chestnuts, and when they stopped
+playing I still hung about with nothing to watch, and with,
+indeed, no very definite purpose in view. Presently Gill
+emerged, but whether he saw me or not, he took no notice,
+as he walked on swiftly down toward the gate.</p>
+
+<p>Since I had flung about him the mantle of my protection,
+however, I had begun to take a lively interest in him, and
+before he had gone fifty yards I made up my mind and
+hurried in pursuit. He looked round at the sound of my
+footsteps and waited, but without smiling. I had an idea
+he had passed me deliberately in the porch, and now he
+received me coldly enough. As we walked along together
+he made no attempt to defend himself against the charge
+that had been brought against him; he did not even refer
+to it, nor to what had taken place during his subsequent
+interview with Limpet, from whom, nevertheless, he received
+next morning a public apology. Though I was
+simply dying to hear what had happened I couldn’t very
+well ask, and as we proceeded I had to talk about other
+things. Then, quite suddenly, some change seemed to take
+place within him, and he inquired abruptly if I had read
+any of the writings of Count Tolstoy. I had never even
+heard of Count Tolstoy, but I was not to remain much
+longer in ignorance. I like enthusiasm, and I got it now.
+Gill had just finished “Anna Karénine,” and offered to
+lend it to me, adding that it was in French. I had been
+learning French in the way one did in those days, and
+perhaps does still; that is to say, I had been learning it
+for six or seven years, and was now obliged to confess I
+couldn’t read it.</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t you coming out of your way?” he demanded
+with the queer abruptness that characterized him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you live up the Malone way?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; I live in the town.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Then why isn’t it out of your way?”</p>
+
+<p>“That is only my fashion of telling you I want to come
+with you,” I answered meekly. “Pure politeness.”</p>
+
+<p>He did not smile. “You haven’t been at school long?”
+he asked. His manner was the oddest mixture of stiffness
+and shyness, and sometimes he frowned portentously, while
+at the slightest thing he blushed.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered. “Have you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—all my life—ever since I was a kid.” He spoke
+quickly, one would have imagined impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you? I thought, somehow, you hadn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>I don’t know why I should have made this wise remark,
+nor, apparently, did Gill.</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” he asked me at once.</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. “You don’t seem to have very many friends.”</p>
+
+<p>He coloured, and I realized that my remark had been
+lacking in tact.</p>
+
+<p>“I have as many friends as I want,” he answered shortly.</p>
+
+<p>I saw I had touched him on a tender spot. “Does that
+mean you don’t want any new ones?” I ventured, half-laughing,
+though I was serious enough.</p>
+
+<p>His answer was startling. “Perhaps you think you are
+doing me a favour by walking home with me?”</p>
+
+<p>I did not say anything, but I looked at him with some
+astonishment. He was so odd that his manner had the
+effect of divesting me of all the shyness I usually suffered
+from myself on making a new acquaintance, nor did I even
+feel angry at his rebuff.</p>
+
+<p>“I came with you,” I said at length, “to please myself.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned crimson, began to speak, was silent, and then
+apologized.</p>
+
+<p>At the garden gate I would have left him, but he insisted
+on my coming up to the door. “I will get you ‘Anna
+Karénine’; then we can talk about it together—if we’re
+going to be friends.” He spoke the last words shyly, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
+I knew that he had found a difficulty in saying them
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>“But I told you I couldn’t read French.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can if you like. Don’t try to translate it; read
+straight ahead.”</p>
+
+<p>He came back with two books bound in gray-blue paper,
+which he handed to me. “It doesn’t matter if the covers
+get torn or the books come to pieces. My father gets them
+all rebound in any case. By the way,” once more he
+blushed, “you needn’t bother about those lines Limpet
+gave you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because I’ll be doing them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, rot.”</p>
+
+<p>He frowned. “You can do them if you like, but it will
+be a waste of time.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean, I’m going to do them in any case, whether you
+do or not.”</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. “Couldn’t we each do half?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to do them all.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right.”</p>
+
+<p>He strolled back down the garden path with me. “What’s
+your name?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Waring.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that. I mean your first name.”</p>
+
+<p>“Peter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mine is Owen. I’ll come part of the way back with
+you: I told them inside.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I call you Owen?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care,” he answered quickly, without looking
+at me. But before we had gone another hundred yards
+he said: “That isn’t the truth. I told you my name
+because I wanted you to call me by it.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” I said, smiling.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>That night, for the first time, I felt George’s fascination
+falter, and it is a fact rather melancholy in its significance
+that this consciousness came to me in the form of a sense of
+freedom, of relief. He began to talk to me, just as usual,
+as soon as he had turned out the light, but I told him
+brusquely to shut up, that I wanted to go to sleep, and
+when he tried to begin again I let him see I was in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>As I lay there I determined that at Christmas I would
+make another effort to get into rooms of my own choosing.
+If I wanted to ask Owen Gill, for instance, to come to see
+me, how could I do so? For one thing, his people would
+not like him to come here; for another, I should not myself
+care to ask him. I was by this time firmly convinced
+that my aunt was frequently more or less under the influence
+of drugs. It may have been on account of her illness;
+I could not say; but there were times when she seemed
+hardly to know what she was doing, and at such moments
+her dislike for me, which she usually more or less successfully
+concealed, jumped to the surface. I had no idea how
+long she had been in this condition; I was quite sure my
+father knew nothing about it; yet she appeared to me to
+have already lost something of her hold upon reality. I
+had heard her make statements so obviously untrue that
+they could have deceived nobody but Uncle George. I
+had heard her repeat a harmless remark made by Miss Izzy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
+and, by altering it ever so slightly, give it a quite new and
+highly disagreeable meaning. But Uncle George never
+dreamed of contradicting her, whether it was that he was
+afraid of her, or whether he was simply blind, I could not tell.</p>
+
+<p>On the Sunday after my becoming acquainted with
+Owen I was alone in the house with little Alice, who had
+been unwell and had not gone out with the others to morning
+church. As usual, she had climbed up on my knee, and
+was sitting with her thin brown arms round my neck, and
+her queer little face close to mine.</p>
+
+<p>“Ma looked through all your pockets yesterday morning,
+when you were at school,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“What pockets?” I asked quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“The pockets of your clothes—every one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, did she find anything?” I murmured, in as
+indifferent a tone as I could manage.</p>
+
+<p>“She found a letter—and some other things.”</p>
+
+<p>“And did she read the letter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know? Where were you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw her.”</p>
+
+<p>“How did you see her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw her through the key-hole.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh; I didn’t think you would look through key-holes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’t you? I do—often.”</p>
+
+<p>“You shouldn’t. It isn’t nice, you know. You must
+never do it again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because it’s not a nice thing to do. It’s spying.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve often done it,” said Alice, with perfect detachment.
+“I’ve looked at you through the key-hole.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must never do it again. Promise, or I won’t
+be friends with you any more.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I promise, will you be friends?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes. But you must keep your promise, remember.”</p>
+
+<p>I returned to “Anna Karénine.” “I must buy a desk,”
+I thought, “or some kind of box I can lock up.” Presently
+little Alice began again. “I’ve got a secret.”</p>
+
+<p>I had lugubrious forebodings in regard to this secret.
+“Have you?” I answered dismally.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t take any soup to-day,” the child said, softly.</p>
+
+<p>I laid down my book. There was something arresting
+about this injunction, something even startling. I looked
+into the strange dark eyes that seemed almost to fill the
+small elf-like face, and I knew that a confidence of a highly
+unpleasant character was imminent.</p>
+
+<p>“I put a dead mouse into the soup,” little Alice whispered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh;” I exclaimed feebly. I felt inclined to put her
+down very abruptly from my knee, and it was with difficulty
+that I controlled this impulse. “What made you
+do such a thing? Now it will all be wasted.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nobody knows about it,” the child continued artlessly,
+rubbing her cheek against mine. “Once I put something
+in before, when people were coming for dinner. It was
+fun to watch them all looking so stiff and solemn, and eating
+away, and not knowing what was there all the time. I
+laughed so much that ma sent me out of the room. But
+I wouldn’t do that with you, because I love you.”</p>
+
+<p>Her strange little face turned to mine, and her eyes were
+fixed on me. She must have seen the disgust I felt, for she
+began to tremble and her eyes filled with tears. Then she
+hid her face against my shoulder and clung to me. I was
+frightened to scold her. Even without my having said
+anything she seemed to shrivel up like some bruised and
+broken plant. I patted her head gently, and at once she
+brightened. She got down from my knee and began to
+dance about the floor.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile I was left with the problem of the soup. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
+the soup were strained the mouse, I supposed, would be
+discovered; but if it were, as it was practically certain to be,
+simply turned out into a tureen, the revelation might come
+too late. On the other hand, were I to turn informer, little
+Alice would most surely be whipped, and, whether she deserved
+it or not, the idea of that was as revolting to me as
+would be the ill-treatment of a sick monkey. There was a
+young girl in the kitchen who looked after the rougher
+work, and I thought of explaining the matter to her, after
+swearing her to secrecy, but before I had made up my
+mind I heard the others downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>They had evidently got back from church, and now I
+didn’t know what to do. Uncle George, preceded by
+Gordon and Thomas in their green plush suits, came into
+the parlour. Uncle George began to warm himself before
+the gas-stove. “You should have come out this morning,
+Peter,” he said, in his gentle voice. “You missed a treat.”</p>
+
+<p>I listened to his comments on the sermon, feeling all the
+time most uncomfortable. Gordon and Thomas tried to
+climb about my chair, but I kept them off with a firm hand.
+The parlour door was open, probably the kitchen door too,
+for all at once there came a scream from that department,
+not very loud, yet distinctly audible. I glanced at Alice.
+The others hadn’t heard it. Uncle George was still in the
+midst of his mild enthusiasm, and Gordon and Thomas,
+flattening their little round red noses with a finger, were
+practising squinting with remarkable success. Alice had
+become perfectly still, her big black eyes fixed on mine:
+and, as for me, I knew the mouse had been discovered and
+felt vastly relieved. Conceive of my amazement, therefore,
+when the soup after all appeared at table. Alice and I did
+not take any, and Aunt Margaret did not either, so that
+there was enough left to do Monday’s dinner; but of the
+mouse I never heard again.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>My friendship with Owen was at present the one quite
+satisfactory thing in my life. Neither at school nor at home
+was I particularly successful. I worked very little, merely
+sufficiently to prevent myself from getting into trouble; I
+did not play games. I had gone to the School of Art for a
+few weeks, but as I was never put to draw anything except
+curves and squares and geometrical flowers, I got sick of
+this and gave it up.</p>
+
+<p>I saw a good deal of Owen, though not so much as I
+should have liked. Of course I saw him every day at
+school, but I had never been inside his house, and I could
+not ask him to mine. I did not want to let him see the kind
+of people I had sprung from. I was ashamed of them. On
+Saturdays and Sundays we usually went for long walks
+together, during which we threshed out the affairs of the
+universe, and built it over again. It was all quite new to
+me, just as was the peculiar type of Owen’s mind, its extraordinary
+eagerness in the pursuit of ideas. My head
+already swarmed with an amazing mass of unsettled
+notions which buzzed in it like bees in a shaken hive. It
+seemed to me we never discussed anything less serious than
+the immortality of the soul. Owen was not sure of the
+existence of God, and I, so far as Christianity was concerned,
+was an Agnostic also. But to Owen it appeared to make an
+enormous difference, he was positively unhappy about it;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
+while to me, though I did not let him suspect this, it was a
+matter of supreme indifference. Levine’s acceptance of
+Christianity, at the end of “Anna Karénine,” was for Owen
+an endless source of dissatisfaction and query. We discussed
+it by the hour. Yet, when actually reading the book,
+I had been far more struck by the appearance in Wronsky’s
+and Anna’s dreams of the strange little man, who seems to
+pass out of vision into reality just before the suicide. What
+did <em>that</em> mean? Why was he there? Had he, like some
+added flick of colour in the work of a master, been put in,
+not because he was there in Nature, but because he was
+needed for the picture? For me, at any rate, he had the
+effect of making all the rest more convincing, and, while he
+appeared to be purely fantastic, of corresponding to some
+esoteric reality. Or was the apparition at the railway
+station also only a vision, in that case the vision of a vision?
+To Owen such a question was of no interest whatever, and it
+was Owen’s questions that we principally discussed.</p>
+
+<p>Very often I walked home with him and hung swinging
+on the iron gate while we finished an argument. At such
+moments he exhibited an exhilarating eagerness, and he
+was never anxious to get the better of me in merely verbal
+dispute, as I frequently was of him. It was the thing in
+itself he saw, and he went at it like a terrier at a rabbit-hole,
+sending up showers of sand into the air, but never
+getting to the bottom. Sometimes, when we were talking,
+he would catch me by my arms and swing me slowly back
+and forward. Sometimes he would draw me close up to
+him till my face almost touched his, and his eyes seemed to
+look straight into my spirit, and then he would suddenly
+release me. He had a very quick and passionate temper,
+and was ridiculously sensitive, so that, though I employed
+infinitely more tact with him than I had ever done with
+anybody else, I occasionally offended him. Then he would
+leave me, his face as red as a turkey-cock, and his grey eyes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
+dark and bright. Possibly for the rest of that day he
+would ignore me utterly; indeed, the first time it
+happened, I was sure we had quarrelled for ever. But the
+next morning he came up to me with a shy and shamefaced
+smile, saying he was sorry. At such times there
+would come into his voice so charming a gentleness that
+it was impossible to remain angry with him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Will you come to the opera to-night?” he asked me
+one morning, looking up from an old, ink-stained Virgil.
+We were sitting in the window-seat, where we always sat
+together, and which just held two. As Dr. Gwynn, the head
+Classical-master, was very old, very blind, and rather deaf,
+it was possible to pass the time quite pleasantly in this
+retreat.</p>
+
+<p>I had not yet been inside a theatre, and Owen had been
+but seldom. “What is on?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Faust.’”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Faust’? All right.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll meet you outside the theatre at a quarter to
+seven.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well; I’ll be there.”</p>
+
+<p>I went home straight from school, in order to get my work
+done for the next day, but when I pushed open the door I
+became conscious that an altercation between Aunt Margaret
+and Miss Izzy was in progress in the other shop.
+They were so busy that they did not even hear me enter,
+though the shop-bell had rung, and, as I lingered on the
+threshold, I gathered that the dispute was about a young
+man, and I guessed who he was. I had seen him; his name
+was Moore; he travelled in the stationery line, and he
+admired Miss Izzy.</p>
+
+<p>I heard Aunt Margaret’s familiar “<em>some</em> people,” with an
+accent on the “some.” It was in this indirect manner that
+she invariably produced her most disagreeable remarks,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
+and it was very much in the air just now. Miss Izzy displayed
+an icy dignity by stiff elbows, an erect head, and an
+elaborate preoccupation with the business of the shop. She
+seemed all collar and cuffs and freezing silence, which she
+could not quite keep up, for every now and again she threw
+out a retort. Aunt Margaret’s ponderous black form filled
+up the inner doorway. Her large face, her drawn-in mouth,
+her black, shining eyes, her wig, gave her an alarming and
+bizarre appearance, but Miss Izzy was not in the least
+alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>I came in, not wishing to be caught listening. Miss Izzy
+just cast a glance at me, and tossed her head.</p>
+
+<p>I brushed past Aunt Margaret and went upstairs to my
+dinner, leaving the parlour door open, however, so that I
+might still hear the conflict going on below. When the
+shop-bell rang Aunt Margaret’s voice would cease; then,
+when the customer had departed, it would begin again.
+Presently I heard Uncle George shuffling downstairs, and
+his entrance on the scene was followed by an outburst of
+both feminine voices together. The noise was becoming
+exciting, but I could no longer make out the words, though
+I hung over the balusters to listen. Then I heard Aunt
+Margaret coming upstairs, and Uncle George following her.
+She was in a violent passion. “Fool—fool—fool,” she
+screamed at him all along the passage. Then came confused
+remonstrances in Uncle George’s quiet voice, but they
+were interrupted by the banging of a door that shook the
+whole house. I came out into the lobby once more. I heard
+Uncle George trying to get into the room, but the door
+must have been locked from the inside, and through it came
+a shrill torrent of abuse. Uncle George’s face was white
+and strange as he turned round and caught me staring at
+him. He told me to go away, but almost immediately he
+came after me into the parlour, where I had sat down again
+to my dinner. He told me Aunt Margaret was not well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
+that she had had a very bad attack last night, and been
+kept awake and in pain all night long. I could see that he
+would have liked to know if I had grasped the nature of
+several of those words that had come out to him through
+the closed door, but I continued stolidly to eat my dinner,
+without giving any sign. When I had finished, I got out
+my books, but as soon as the coast was clear I slipped
+downstairs to the shop. Miss Izzy was there alone, and
+affected not to see me.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter with Aunt Margaret?” I asked; at
+which ingenuous question Miss Izzy gave a short contemptuous
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>A blowzy girl, sucking a sweet, came in to buy a novelette,
+and when she had gone I informed Miss Izzy that I was
+going that night to hear “Faust.” Miss Izzy expressed
+not the faintest interest in this project.</p>
+
+<p>I turned over a book of views in melancholy silence—views
+of the Linen Hall Library, and of Donegall Place; of
+the Cave Hill, and the Albert Memorial; and I wondered if
+it would please Katherine were I to send her a complete set.
+I looked at the price, written in Miss Izzy’s secret code, on
+the back, and could not make up my mind.</p>
+
+<p>“When people can’t control themselves there are places
+where they can have people to look after them,” Miss Izzy
+announced to a bundle of “Horner’s Penny Stories,” which
+she next moment swept viciously into a corner.</p>
+
+<p>This cryptic remark I took as referring to Aunt Margaret,
+but, seeing my expectant face, Miss Izzy unkindly refused to
+follow it up.</p>
+
+<p>I was disheartened, and began to read aloud advertisements
+of art books from the back of a magazine I had
+bought on my way home. The third of these bore the
+simple title “Michael Angelo,” and Miss Izzy astonished me
+by saying, “That’s one of Marie Corelli’s.”</p>
+
+<p>I ventured to tell her that Michael Angelo was a great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
+painter and sculptor, but the information was lost on Miss
+Izzy, who in the midst of it said sharply, “Oh, don’t bother.”</p>
+
+<p>I waited for a while, digesting this snub. Then, “Was
+she talking about Mr. Moore?” I asked, indiscreetly.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy regarded me at first mildly and absently, but as
+the sense of my question slowly forced its way through the
+meshes of her cogitations, suddenly in extreme wrath: “If
+you’d mind your own business,” she snapped, “you’d hear
+fewer lies. I don’t know what you’re doing down here at
+all!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m doing nothing,” I answered, crestfallen.</p>
+
+<p>“People talk about girls being curious and gossiping,”
+Miss Izzy went on, scornfully, “but if other boys are like
+you——”</p>
+
+<p>I retired upstairs without waiting for the conclusion of
+the parallel. I worked for an hour and a half, and by then
+it was tea-time. Aunt Margaret did not appear, and we
+were told she was lying down. George, who had come
+home earlier than usual, inquired where I was going to, and
+when I informed him, asked if he might come too. I did
+not like to refuse, though I did not want him, and knew he
+and Owen would not get on together. I told him I was
+going with Owen.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that the chap you’re so thick with? I don’t suppose
+he’ll mind me, will he?”</p>
+
+<p>I introduced them to each other at the theatre door.
+We were early, and had nearly three-quarters of an hour to
+wait. Owen and I began to talk, but our conversation
+evidently bored George, who, in the midst of it, introduced
+a characteristic remark of his own, at which I laughed,
+though I did not want to. Owen, who did not always see a
+joke, and who would have detested the best joke in the
+world of the particular kind George most affected, instantly
+relapsed into silence. He looked at George for a moment;
+then he took a copy of the “Golden Treasury” translation of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
+Plato’s “Republic” from his pocket and began to read. I
+had known well enough something of this sort was bound to
+happen, and I made no attempt to bridge it over. George
+nudged me with his elbow and closed his left eye. Owen’s
+disapproval did not put him about in the least, and he
+continued to chatter quite unabashed.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the fire-proof curtain went up, the lights were
+raised, and the band straggled in and began to tune their
+fiddles. The conductor followed, a fat little German with a
+bald head which shone like a large ostrich egg. He faced
+the audience and bowed two or three times to their applause;
+then, turning round, he tapped the music stand sharply with
+his baton, and the first phrase was drawn slowly out on the
+’cellos.</p>
+
+<p>With the end of the overture the lights were turned down,
+and the curtain rose on the lonely Faust, seated before a
+skull, an hour-glass, and a large book, in his study. I had
+already forgotten Owen, George, and everything but what I
+saw before me. I was surprised to find that this old, grey-bearded
+man, who looked, in the dimness, like an Albert
+Durer print, had a fresh, strong, tenor voice. Outside I
+heard the singing of the peasants; then followed the rage
+and despair of Faust, and, in a flaming red light, the apparition
+of Mephistopheles. Faust pleaded for his lost youth,
+and Mephistopheles tempted him; the wall of the study
+suddenly dissolved like a mist, and the vision of Margaret,
+seated at her spinning-wheel, rose before the unhappy
+philosopher; and the swinging, sensual phrase, repeated
+again and again in the orchestra, lulled me to a dreamy
+languor.</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Faust.</i>—“Heavenly vision!”</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0"><i>Mephistopheles.</i>—“Shall she love thee?”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">There could be but one answer, and I saw Faust yield to
+the tempter; I saw his rejuvenescence; and a triumphant
+duet between them brought the act to a close.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span></p>
+
+<p>I had become lost in this appealing melodrama, and
+though my mood was broken in the next act, in the third
+act, in the celebrated garden scene, it was revived and
+intensified. The sugary sweetness of the music had an
+almost hypnotic effect upon me, for I had never heard it till
+now, and the ecstatic sensuality of the duet rapt me into a
+world of love, where everything else was forgotten. It was
+all utterly new to me; it thrilled me; it drowned me in
+erotic dreams that swept me onward like the waves of the
+sea; and through all, subconsciously, as I listened and
+watched, I was carrying on another love-making of my
+own, with which Faust and Margaret had nothing to do.
+Through the next two acts I followed more closely the
+fortunes of the unhappy heroine, not without a naïve
+wonder why so much tragedy, so much remorse, should
+attend on what appeared to me—but for the intervention of
+the devil—a quite natural and straightforward courtship.
+For some reason, possibly the fault of the libretto, more
+probably because I could only catch about half the words,
+I could not discover wherein lay the secret of the trouble,
+nor why the lovers did not get married. I accepted the
+situation however: I accepted, I think, everything but the
+absurd “Soldiers’ Chorus,” and the death-scene of Valentine.
+This latter nearly made me sick at the time, though I
+forgot all about it when the curtain rose to reveal the
+wretched Margaret in prison. With enthusiasm I watched
+her reject her lover and the demon, and fling herself on her
+knees to pour out her soul in a prayer which finished on the
+high B. At last I saw her released from all the ills of
+life, her body stretched on the miserable straw bed. And
+with that the walls of the prison rolled back, and I had a
+vision of her soul being borne to heaven by angels. It is
+true those white-clad, flaxen-haired creatures, with glistening
+wings and golden crowns, bore a not remote resemblance
+to several of the livelier persons I had seen mingling with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
+the soldiers and students at an earlier stage of the drama;
+nevertheless I beheld them, in this pause on their way to
+heaven, with respect, if not exactly veneration.</p>
+
+<p>“I doubt they’re as near it now as they’ll ever be,” said
+George, cynically, pulling his cap from his jacket pocket.</p>
+
+<p>And out in the street, under the gas-lamp at the corner, I
+had to submit to a deluge of criticism from both my companions.
+I don’t know which I liked least, the scorn of
+Owen, who revealed the tangible source of Margaret’s woes,
+and would have had it adopted by the State, or, after Owen
+had left, the ribald jibes of George, who found Faust a
+poor creature, requiring a moon, a garden, a casket of
+jewels, a devil, and several incantations, before he could
+beguile an innocent rustic maiden who was already in love
+with him. I resolved that I would go to the opera every
+night that week, but that I would go alone. Between the
+acts I had eagerly studied my programme, and the delightful,
+unfamiliar, romantic names, “Tannhäuser,” “Il Trovatore,”
+“Aida,” “Lohengrin,” were like syrens singing to
+me through the darkness, with an irresistible and passionate
+sweetness.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I went to the opera every night that week, as I had planned
+to do, but the edge of my appetite was blunted, and, save
+in the case of “Tannhäuser,” and of “Lohengrin,” I was
+disappointed. I had already become more critical, and I
+now doubted if “Faust” were the admirable work I had
+fancied it.</p>
+
+<p>One evening there came a letter for me, and, when I
+opened the envelope, I found inside a card which told me
+that Miss L. Gill and Master E. Gill would be “at home” on
+Friday, the 23rd of December. My own name was written
+at the top of the card. In the bottom left-hand corner
+was the word “Dancing,” followed by the numerals 8–12;
+and in the corner opposite were four mysterious letters—“R.S.V.P.”</p>
+
+<p>I knew it to be an invitation to a party, but “R.S.V.P.”
+was puzzling. Neither Uncle George nor Aunt Margaret
+could throw any light upon these symbols, though Uncle
+George pondered over the card half the evening, as if it
+had been a kind of magazine competition. Miss Izzy
+probably would have known, but Miss Izzy had gone, and
+would not be back till to-morrow morning, whereas I
+had a keen conviction that action should be taken
+to-night.</p>
+
+<p>“Who are they?” Uncle George asked, referring to the
+Gills.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Gill is a solicitor. Owen Gill is in my classes at
+school.”</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George examined the card anew, bringing this
+fresh light to bear on it. He held it at arm’s length, and
+then put on his glasses and peered at it through them.
+“Miss L. Gill and Master E. Gill,” he read aloud slowly
+and solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. “They’re Owen’s young sister and brother,”
+I explained.</p>
+
+<p>“A solicitor. I suppose he will have some letters after
+his name,” said Uncle George, weakly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, they’re not those,” I answered, impatiently. It
+seemed to me that everybody was very stupid.</p>
+
+<p>“R.S.V.P.” Uncle George threw out thoughtfully.
+He turned the card round and examined the back.</p>
+
+<p>“Reply soon: very pressing,” suggested George.</p>
+
+<p>His father looked at him doubtfully, and laid the card
+on the table. “It can’t be so pressing,” he said, glancing
+at the calendar, “when it’s a fortnight off.”</p>
+
+<p>“You see they have to make sure he’s coming before
+they ask anybody else,” George explained. “Rippin’
+spread: veal pie.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you think that funny,” I broke in; whereupon
+George, seeing I was inclined to be cross, kept
+it up.</p>
+
+<p>“Royal spree: von’t you partake? Refined soirée:
+veather permittin’. That’s it, da, right enough; you can
+leave the card by.”</p>
+
+<p>But Uncle George continued to regard it searchingly,
+glancing at me every now and again over his spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing was done that night, and in the morning, before
+school, I approached Miss Izzy on the subject; though
+when I saw her examine the card almost as carefully as
+the others had done, my faith in her sank.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll have to answer on a card,” said Miss Izzy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
+loftily, having at any rate settled the first point, and waving
+aside the sheet of note paper I held in my hand.</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t got one.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s a box of them in the shop somewhere. They’ve
+been there since the dear knows when. Nobody ever asks
+for cards.” She hunted about in a drawer under the
+counter, and at length succeeded in finding the box.
+Without breaking the pink paper band that held the
+cards together she carefully extracted one from the
+bundle. I took it and dipped my pen in the ink and
+waited.</p>
+
+<p>“Just answer it in the usual way,” said Miss Izzy, offhandedly,
+with the air of one who dashes off at least half
+a dozen such communications every day.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know the usual way,” I confessed.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy aggravatingly paused to shake out a paper
+lamp-shade. Then she attended to a little boy who came
+in to buy a “Deadwood Dick” tale.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me what to say,” I begged, humbly.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Peter Waring,” dictated Miss Izzy, with much
+dignity; and I wrote “Mr. Peter Waring,” in terror all
+the time of making a blot.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy glanced over my shoulder. “You’ve begun
+too high up,” she said, reassuringly. Then, as I made a
+movement to tear the card, “Oh, it’ll do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Peter Waring begs to thank Miss L. Gill and Master
+E. Gill for their very kind invitation.”</p>
+
+<p>The shop-bell had rung again. It was the little boy
+back to change his story for another he had discovered in
+the window, and which it took Miss Izzy hours to extract.
+“Corduroy Charlie,” she murmured, as she handed it
+across the counter. It was the title of the work.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” I said, trying not to appear impatient.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy came back to my affairs. “Oh! what have
+you got?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Peter Waring begs to thank Miss L. Gill and Master
+E. Gill for their very kind invitation——”</p>
+
+<p>“Invitation.... And will be very pleased to accept
+same for the date mentioned.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all. Don’t be signing your name, stupid!”</p>
+
+<p>I hastily checked myself.</p>
+
+<p>“What do those letters in the corner mean?” I asked
+timidly. “I suppose I oughtn’t to put them on mine?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course not. They’re French, and mean they want
+an answer.”</p>
+
+<p>I read over what I had written and thanked Miss Izzy,
+but secretly I was not satisfied. I felt sure there was
+something wrong somewhere. It did not read well. I put
+it in an envelope, however, and posted it, though immediately
+afterwards I became more unhappy about it than
+ever. I made a mental note to ask Mrs. Carroll for information
+when I was at home at Christmas.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I had been asked to the Gills’ for eight o’clock, and at
+half-past six I began to dress. After posting my acceptance
+my next care had been in regard to the clothes I should
+wear. There is no doubt greatly increased opportunities
+had tended to develop in me a latent dandyism. At all
+events I took the matter of my dress quite seriously, and
+had very definite ideas in regard to it. I went to the best
+tailor in town, my bills were sent on to Mrs. Carroll, and
+that was all I knew about them. I tried to get the soft
+greys and blacks and whites I admired in old Spanish and
+Dutch portraits, with perhaps a colour-note of olive green
+in my neck-tie, but always with the tones kept low and
+harmonious. Dandyism certainly, but it was in its way
+merely an expression of those same sensibilities that enabled
+me to see the charm of the pictures I have mentioned;
+that is to say, it was not based on any feeling of personal
+vanity, for I had no illusions in regard to my beauty. So,
+in this particular instance, I took immense pains to see
+that everything should be exactly right, and at the same
+time pleasing to myself. The cloth I had chosen was of
+the very blackest and finest and softest. Each garment
+had to be fitted on me till I could find no fault in it. The
+broad braid down the sides of my trousers seemed to me
+perfectly decorative. It was really in its use of linen that
+modern dress most conspicuously failed: what would Franz<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
+Hals or Velasquez have thought of the stiff, glazed collar
+convention obliged me to wear?</p>
+
+<p>When I had finished dressing I looked at myself critically
+in the inadequate glass, beside which I had set two or three
+candles, standing in pools of their own grease. It seemed
+to me that the peculiar, sullen expression of my face, caused
+by the formation of my forehead and the shape of my mouth,
+must always create an unfavourable impression. If I could
+recognise it myself, it would probably be a great deal more
+striking to other people. It disappeared when I smiled,
+but as soon as I stopped smiling it came back again.</p>
+
+<p>I went downstairs and strutted about before Miss Izzy
+and little Alice, that they might admire my fine feathers,
+and it was only when I reached the Gills that every other
+feeling was swallowed up in a horrible shyness.</p>
+
+<p>The whole house was brilliantly lit up, and I was shown
+to a room already half-filled with boys, who were removing
+their overcoats, putting on their dancing shoes, talking and
+laughing perfectly easily, just as if the most frightful ordeal
+were not staring them in the face. Evidently they all
+knew each other quite well, whereas I knew nobody. Owen
+came up, indeed, and spoke to me, but forsook me almost
+immediately, as people were arriving every minute, two or
+three of them, I observed, quite grown-up. I wished Owen
+would come back. When I saw a boy I knew slightly and
+heartily disliked, I was ready to welcome him as the oldest
+and dearest of friends, but, not being in my solitary condition,
+he merely nodded to me, and went over to join a
+group at the other side of the room. I was left standing
+by myself, not knowing what to do; and all the time fresh
+guests were arriving, and I felt I was in the way,
+but could not summon up courage to make a movement.
+I now bitterly regretted having been such a fool as to come.
+I noticed several other boys with whom I had a casual
+acquaintance at school, but beyond nodding they paid no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
+attention to me, and I became filled with rage against them
+and against Owen himself. Then I heard a voice saying
+over my shoulder, “If you’re ready you may as well come
+upstairs.”</p>
+
+<p>It was Owen, and I followed him obediently. I passed
+a group of boys loitering outside an open door, and found
+myself all at once in a large room. The light at first half-dazzled
+me. With a heart furiously beating I was led up
+to a tall, slight lady in black, who was standing near the
+fireplace. This was Owen’s mother. I shook hands with
+her, and with his father, and with one of his elder sisters.
+But when this was accomplished I was again in that horrible
+position of not knowing what to do and being afraid to
+move. Owen had once more deserted me. All about me
+were a crowd of brightly-dressed girls, chattering and
+laughing among themselves, and pretending not to look
+at me. The boys, with whom I would have liked now to
+be back again, were hovering near the door, and I tried to
+screw up my courage to the point of crossing the room.
+Then somebody—I think it was Owen’s sister—gave me a
+programme. I stood clasping it tightly in my hand. It
+seemed to me now unthinkably idiotic that I should voluntarily
+have placed myself in this position of torture, when
+all I had had to do was to refuse the invitation and stay
+at home. At that moment a lady to whom I had not been
+introduced spoke to me, though I was too much upset to
+hear what she said. She had a pleasant smile, a voice soft
+and attractive, and she asked me my name, and told me
+I must get some partners. Many of the other boys, I
+noticed, had begun to ask for dances, and were scribbling
+down names in their programmes. My new friend bore
+me off to a fair-haired, fair-skinned, demure-looking maiden
+in a pink, fleecy dress, and introduced me. Unfortunately,
+at this point, one of the grown-up persons, a tall young
+man, called out, “Annie, half a mo,” and my protectress<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
+turned away, leaving me to make my own advances. I
+could do nothing. How could I ask this wretched girl to
+dance with me when I had never danced in my life? For
+an agonizing moment I stood there; then I stammered
+out something, turned on my heel abruptly, and walked
+away.</p>
+
+<p>It was dreadful. Before me I saw a conservatory, the
+door of which was open, and I escaped into it as my only
+refuge. I felt utterly miserable. It occurred to me to
+slip out quietly and go home, but to do that I should have
+to cross the room, and somebody would be sure to pounce
+upon me. Besides, what would the McAllisters think?
+The first dance had commenced, and I saw that my golden-haired
+maiden had found another partner. He happened
+to be one of the boys I knew, and I was certain she would
+tell him what I had done, and that everybody at school
+would get to know about it.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the dance the lady called Annie bore
+straight down upon me, having detected my hiding-place.
+But she did not seem angry; on the contrary, she was
+laughing. She threaded her way among the palms, while
+I felt my face becoming purple.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean by running away like that from the
+partners I choose for you?” she asked gaily. “Elsie told
+me you wouldn’t ask her to dance, and she says it’s my fault,
+that I made you come when you didn’t want to.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t dance,” I answered huskily. Nevertheless,
+Elsie’s explanation of my conduct, in spite of the fact that
+it redoubled its rudeness, gave me relief.</p>
+
+<p>The “Annie” lady looked at me, still laughing. Then
+she said very kindly, “Oh, don’t mind; it really doesn’t
+matter in the least. Come and dance with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I can’t,” I muttered, “I never tried in my life.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, come and talk to me then, and we can watch the
+others.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span></p>
+
+<p>She led me back into the room. She asked me all kinds
+of questions about myself, and very soon I was chattering
+away as if I had known her all my life. I had forgotten
+what an extremely small boy I had been only ten minutes
+ago, as I looked about me boldly, and gave “Annie” my
+opinion on all kinds of things.</p>
+
+<p>We talked of the opera, and when she told me she preferred
+the “Trovatore” to “Lohengrin” I thought her
+taste very crude. All the same I liked her. She laughed in
+a nice way, and was interested in everything you said to
+her. I pulled up my trousers a little so that my delicate
+silk socks should be more visible. As I glanced round the
+room I decided that I was much better dressed than anybody
+there, and this conviction increased my confidence. I would
+have liked to ask “Annie” what she thought of me from
+this point of view, but instead, she inquired if I was fond of
+reading. I replied in the affirmative, and she asked me if I
+had read “Tom Brown’s School-days.” I again said,
+“Yes,” and asked her if she had read “Anna Karénine.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a curious book for you to get hold of! I should
+have thought you would have preferred ‘The Coral Island,’
+or ‘Midshipman Easy.’ Those are the kind of books <em>my</em>
+brothers like. That is one of my brothers there, that fat
+ugly boy with red hair, dancing with the little girl in white.”</p>
+
+<p>I inspected the brother. “‘Anna Karénine’ is a fine
+book,” I answered. “Why didn’t she ask for the divorce
+at once, do you think? I mean as soon as she went away
+with Wronsky?”</p>
+
+<p>Out of the tail of my eye I saw the young man who had
+before interfered between us again approaching. She saw
+him too, and immediately called out, “Bertie, we’re discussing
+‘Anna Karénine.’ I’m sure you haven’t read it.”</p>
+
+<p>We didn’t really discuss it, for she changed the subject
+directly afterwards, without even having answered my
+question, and Bertie, who I heard later was a football<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
+player of great renown, asked me if my school was going to
+win the cup this year. The first square dance “Annie”
+insisted on my dancing with her, and, so far as I could
+judge, I shuffled through it all right. After that she left
+me to my own resources, and I returned to Bertie. There
+was something between Bertie and her, I believed. I was
+sure he had only come because she had told him she was
+going to be there to help to look after the kids. Bertie had
+danced all the dances up to this one, but he now told me
+that if he didn’t have a smoke he should die, and asked me
+to come to the billiard-room with him. We played a
+hundred up, Bertie going two to my one, but I beat him, for
+I had often knocked the balls about on the table at Derryaghy,
+though there was rarely anybody to have a game with.
+Bertie said I should make a good player if I practised, and
+he showed me a lot of strokes. He was very jolly and I
+liked him. Presently he asked me if I didn’t want some
+supper, and we went downstairs. Refreshments had been
+going on all the evening, but the room happened to be empty
+when we came in. There was a great deal of lemonade and
+stuff, but Bertie secured some champagne, and by the time
+I had had two glasses I began to feel extremely comfortable
+and jolly. Bertie’s jokes were twice as good as they had
+been before, and my own conversation suddenly acquired
+an interest and brilliancy that made me want to talk as
+much as possible. After my third glass Bertie suggested I
+should try Apollinaris, but I refused. The room had
+somehow by this time got full of people. Bertie told me to
+keep quiet, but just then he was called away, and I was left
+to finish my supper alone.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>When I got to my feet to go back to the dancing-room,
+everything swayed before my eyes, and I held on to the
+back of my chair till I had steadied myself. I felt now as
+bold as a lion, and as soon as I clapped eyes on Elsie, my
+golden-haired maiden whom I had insulted earlier in the
+evening, I determined to apologize. I went up to her,
+looking neither to right nor left, and placing myself in front
+of her asked her to give me the next dance.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me somewhat timidly, and said she was
+engaged already, showing me her programme. I at once
+stroked the name out.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” I said, “let’s go and sit down somewhere. He’ll
+never find us.”</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated, but only for a second or two. Then she
+rose and put her hand lightly on my arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you think it’s awfully hot in here?” I went on,
+with amazing aplomb. “Besides, we have to hide any
+way, haven’t we?”</p>
+
+<p>But outside, the landing was full of people. I glanced at
+the staircase before us, seeming to lead up into regions of
+dim coolness and solitude, and proposed we should try to
+find some place on the next floor.</p>
+
+<p>There was indeed a seat there, in the dusk, but Elsie
+looked at it with misgiving. “I don’t think we should
+have come so high up,” she said. “I’m sure we’re not meant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
+to. I think we’d better go down: nobody else is coming
+up here.”</p>
+
+<p>“But isn’t that just the reason we came? It’s all right.
+If anybody else does come we won’t be the only ones, and
+if they don’t who’s to know anything about us?”</p>
+
+<p>I don’t know whether Elsie was convinced by this
+sophistry, but at any rate she sat down. “I want to
+apologize to you,” I began softly. “Are you very angry
+with me?” I was surprised at the amount of expression I
+was able to throw into my voice, and I had a delightful
+feeling of not caring a straw what I said or did. It was
+fairly evident that Elsie rather admired the mood I was
+displaying, though I could see she was slightly puzzled by it.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered simply. “I knew you were shy.”
+She lifted her innocent grey eyes to mine, and it came over
+me, very intensely, that she was extremely pretty. She
+looked very soft and demure in her fleecy pink dress, and
+with her hands folded in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I’m shy now?” I asked, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn’t help laughing. At the same time I felt a sudden
+tenderness for her, which it seemed most essential that I
+should put into words.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve forgiven me then?” I went on.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. “What nonsense you talk. As if it
+mattered.”</p>
+
+<p>“It matters to me. Say you forgive me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I won’t. There’s nothing to forgive.” She blushed
+and looked down.</p>
+
+<p>“Say it,” I persisted, bending towards her. “If you
+don’t I’ll think you dislike me.”</p>
+
+<p>She kept her eyes downcast, and I drew closer still.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t dislike you,” she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>I kissed her. She blushed a deep delightful blush, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
+did not move away. The swinging melody of a waltz rose
+up to us through the dim cool light.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you angry now?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. I put my arms round her, and as I
+felt her yielding I had a strong strange pleasure. I held her
+close to me, kissing her again and again, while she closed
+her eyes like a cat that is being stroked. For a moment I
+felt her lips touch mine, then she struggled away from me,
+and without looking back hurried downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>I followed, but before I could rejoin her Owen caught me
+by the arm. “I’ve been looking for you everywhere. I’ve
+hardly seen you all the evening. What have you been
+up to?”</p>
+
+<p>I laughed.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me, slightly perplexed. “What is there so
+amusing?” he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>But I didn’t try to explain.</p>
+
+<p>“What is the matter?” Owen went on, gazing at me.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Come on upstairs: it’s cooler there. There’s a seat on
+the next lobby.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is there?” I replied, as I followed him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“I hope you haven’t been awfully bored?” was Owen’s first
+remark after we sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“No; I think it’s a lovely party.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence.</p>
+
+<p>“What <em>is</em> the matter, Peter?” Owen asked
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing, Owen, except natural excitement. Don’t be
+suspicious.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen looked unconvinced, but he decided to change the
+subject. “Do you know the part of the book that I really
+like best? It is where Levine mows the meadows with the
+peasants.”</p>
+
+<p>I knew we were back again at “Anna Karénine,” but I
+couldn’t bring my mind to bear upon it.</p>
+
+<p>“That is the real kind of life,” Owen pursued, “where
+all is simple, and natural; where there are no balls and
+clubs and lies and all the rest. I hate towns. I shall always
+live somewhere in the country.”</p>
+
+<p>“It doesn’t suit everybody,” I brilliantly observed.</p>
+
+<p>“It doesn’t suit people like Anna and Wronsky.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re always down on poor Anna.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s not poor. She had every chance to be happy.
+Why couldn’t she have been content to be friends with
+Wronsky? All the rest was pure selfishness.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t understand,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
+
+<p>Owen hated to be told this. “Understand what?” he
+demanded, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“The kind of love Anna and Wronsky had for each other.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, then, as soon as she goes to live with Wronsky,
+does she begin to talk so much of her love for her son? I
+don’t like her. It seems to me that she deliberately spoiled
+the lives of her husband and her son for her own gratification.”</p>
+
+<p>“She didn’t spoil her son’s life. He was only a little boy.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she forsook him.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t understand,” I was obliged to repeat.
+“You never <em>will</em> understand.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you want to stick up for that sort of thing?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sticking up for it; but I don’t think it’s the
+kind of thing a person can accept or refuse just as if it were
+an invitation to a party. If you knew anything about it you
+wouldn’t say they might have been content to be friends.”</p>
+
+<p>“And do you like the way she makes fun of her husband
+to her lover?”</p>
+
+<p>“What has that to do with it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Even when she is making her confession to her husband
+she thinks only of herself. She tells him that she hates
+him. It does not occur to her that he can have any feelings,
+because his manner is stiff and he has a habit of cracking
+his finger-joints.”</p>
+
+<p>“It didn’t much matter how she made her confession.”</p>
+
+<p>“It did. She needn’t have been brutal.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, she wasn’t brutal.”</p>
+
+<p>“And all the lies?”</p>
+
+<p>“But you never seem to think of her situation!”</p>
+
+<p>“I do. She deliberately brought about her own situation,
+after having been warned by her husband. You admire
+her simply because she loves Wronsky; but there is
+nothing very wonderful about that kind of love.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never said I admired her; I said I understood her.
+If she sacrificed her husband, she sacrificed herself too.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes—and her lover, and her friend Kitty, and her son,
+and everything. Levine’s brother, who drinks himself to
+death, also sacrifices himself. And Yavshine, who gambles
+away all his fortune.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t see any difference?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see anything fine in the kind of love Anna felt.
+And when she says she won’t have any more children, it
+seems to me that it becomes simply disgusting. Have you
+thought what it means?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I know what it means,” I answered sulkily. Owen
+had managed to completely alter my mood, and I no longer
+felt pleased with myself or pleased with him. I was irritated
+because he seemed, now as always, to try to judge what was a
+matter of emotion by reasoning about it.</p>
+
+<p>“If you had ever loved anybody,” I said, “it would make
+you look at such things differently.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps I mightn’t see them any clearer for that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps not. But to judge human beings you require
+first of all to understand something about human nature.”</p>
+
+<p>“Understand! You’re always harping on that! It’s a
+very cheap way of arguing. Why should I think <em>you</em> understand?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because I have felt what we are talking about, and you
+haven’t.” I suddenly grew violently excited. “You don’t
+know what it is to care for a person so that nothing else in
+the world matters, so that it is like a kind of sickness, preventing
+you even from sleeping. You know nothing, have
+felt nothing, and yet you bring out your miserable little
+catechism arguments and pretend to pronounce judgment.
+I’d rather have a man who had committed all the crimes on
+the earth than one of those cold, fishy, reasonable creatures
+you admire, who never did anything wrong, and never made
+anybody happy.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen looked at me in amazement, which is indeed hardly
+surprising. But suddenly my excitement passed, and I felt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
+only a passion of home-sickness and regret. It swept over
+me like a heavy, resistless rush of water. All that was here
+around me grew black as night. I longed to get away from
+everything that could even remind me of my life of the past
+few months. I seemed to have a sudden bright light in
+which I saw myself clearly. In these few months I had
+deteriorated, the quality even of my love for Katherine had
+deteriorated; it had become less of the spirit, more of an
+obsession. And now, as I stood there before Owen, I seemed
+to hear the soft breaking of waves, infinitely peaceful,
+and I had a vision of my own bedroom, where I went to
+sleep, and wakened up, with the low sound of the sea in my
+ears. I said good-night hurriedly to the astonished Owen.
+I told him I was sorry for speaking as I had done, but that
+I would explain it all to him another time; only now I must
+go. I ran downstairs to the cloak-room, and a few minutes
+later left the house, without having said good-night to
+Mrs. Gill.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When I reached home I let myself in quietly with a latch-key,
+but as I was undressing George wakened up and began
+to ask me about the party. I did not feel in the least like
+going to sleep, and after I had got into bed we lay talking.
+Presently George got up and lit the gas, which I had turned
+out. I saw him go to the hiding-place he had shown me on
+the night of my arrival, and again take from it that mysterious
+bundle of photographs. He came over and sat down
+on the side of my bed.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want to see them,” I said, pushing him away;
+but he may have detected a note of weakness in my voice,
+for he only laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be a fool,” he answered brutally. “I’m not going
+to do you any harm.”</p>
+
+<p>He drew them from the envelope and showed them to me,
+one by one, while the gas flamed and flared above our heads.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Owen stepped back off the foot-board on to the platform.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye,” I said, leaning out of the carriage window.
+“There’s no use your waiting till the train starts. I hope
+you’ll have decent holidays.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled. “I’m sure I will. I wish, all the same, you
+were going to be with me. I thought of it, but then I
+thought you would rather go home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Wouldn’t you really? Don’t you want to go home?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course. Why do you ask?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. You don’t seem, perhaps, quite so keen
+as you were——”</p>
+
+<p>Owen still waited, but I had taken my seat.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll see you again in a fortnight,” he went on,
+cheerfully. “Write to me, won’t you, if you aren’t too
+busy?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>Another pause followed, while Owen looked up and down
+the platform. He seemed to me extraordinarily happy.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, good-bye again,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye.”</p>
+
+<p>And this time the guard’s whistle blew, the train jolted
+forward with a clatter of coupling-irons, and then glided
+steadily on. I waved my hand to Owen, catching a last
+glimpse of his bright, animated face before I settled down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
+to the indifferent contemplation of the staler, and coarser-looking
+persons who shared my compartment. What I had
+been looking forward to for many weeks had come to pass;
+I was on my way home; outwardly nothing was wanting;
+yet not even the thought of seeing Mrs. Carroll again seemed
+to have power to awaken that joy I had anticipated, though
+she had written to ask me to spend part of my holidays with
+her, and I tried now to think of some scheme by which to
+make this part as large as possible.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the people opposite; I looked out of the
+window; I turned the pages of <cite>Punch’s Almanac</cite>, which
+Owen had bought for me at the bookstall. Then I shut my
+eyes and tried to doze.</p>
+
+<p>When the train drew in at the station I saw my father
+standing on the platform. Somehow, I had not expected
+him to be there, and he upset my calculations. I opened the
+carriage door, and as I shook hands with him I realized how
+much easier it is to make plans than to carry them out, and
+hoped Mrs. Carroll herself had approached him on the matter
+of my going to Derryaghy. His careworn, anxious face was
+lit by a smile as he asked me how I was. A porter meanwhile
+had secured my box and was wheeling it on a truck
+along the platform. But, as we walked behind him, that old
+stupid feeling of constraint had already begun to take
+possession of me, and my replies to my father’s questions
+sounded, for all I could do to the contrary, stiff, and even
+reluctant.</p>
+
+<p>It was after one o’clock and dinner was ready when we
+reached the house.</p>
+
+<p>“The train must have been late,” I remarked, indifferently,
+as we sat down; and then I could think of nothing
+further to say.</p>
+
+<p>It struck me that my father was older and dimmer and
+shabbier than I had remembered him. He presented the
+picture, drab and dreary, of perfectly achieved failure, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
+I found myself looking out for all his old habits, the peculiar
+noises he made with his nose, his fashion of smacking his lips.
+I noticed that his hands were not very clean, and that his
+coat looked as if he had brushed his hair over it. These
+things struck me all the more forcibly, somehow, because I
+tried to think how superficial and unimportant they were.
+I had a vision of the solitary meals he must have taken for
+the past four months, and I was sorry for him, though
+subconsciously, at the same time, I was considering how
+soon it would do for me to mention my proposed visit to
+Derryaghy.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner he asked me what I wanted to do. “It is
+nice and dry for walking,” he said. “We have had quite a
+hard frost.”</p>
+
+<p>It sounded as if he intended coming with me, a thing he
+seldom or never did.</p>
+
+<p>“I was thinking of going up to Derryaghy,” I answered,
+with an assumption of carelessness that did not prevent my
+noting the immediate change that came into his face.</p>
+
+<p>“Had you planned anything?” I asked hastily.</p>
+
+<p>“No, no.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you would like to go for a walk?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no. Please yourself,” he replied.</p>
+
+<p>So I went up to Derryaghy, with a guilty sense that I had
+hurt his feelings. It was a pity that I should have begun in
+this fashion; that I could not, for once, have been cheerfully
+and spontaneously unselfish, but my longing to get back to
+my old haunts was intense, and I yielded to it.</p>
+
+<p>After all, when I reached Derryaghy, Mrs. Carroll was not
+there. She had left a message for me to say that she had
+been obliged to go up to town, but that she hoped I should
+be able to dine with her at the usual hour. I wandered out
+into the winter woods, beautiful with the strange and delicate
+beauty of naked trees. I loved this place really with a
+kind of passion, and I was glad my father was not here, glad<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
+that I was alone. Dark slender branches traced fantastic
+arabesques against the grey sky above my head. The black-
+and silver-stemmed birches gave the note that was carried
+out through all the colouring. Only the fir-trees, laurels, and
+an occasional holly-tree, were green. I loved the woods in
+winter; they seemed to me to have then a peculiar grace
+they did not possess at any other season. And the wind
+whistled so hollowly in the leafless trees, and the darting
+birds were so black against the sky, and all was so silent and
+solitary, with a sort of frozen loveliness, that I could conceive
+of nothing more beautiful even in the green pomp and
+splendour of summer. And behind everything was a vision
+of long, lamp-lit, fire-lit evenings, with dreamy, delicious
+books. The leaves of the laurels and holly were coated
+with frost; the dead fronds of the bracken were a dull
+brown; here and there the sombre colouring was splashed
+with the red leaves of brambles. There was a hint of
+approaching snow in the air, there was almost a silence of
+snow, and I seemed to feel it drawing closer to me through
+the cold, remote sky. The ground was hard as iron. Sometimes
+a single leaf, pallid and faded, trembled still at the end
+of a twig, but almost all the leaves that were going to fall
+had fallen long ago. I saw the flash of fur, brown and white,
+in the frozen grass, but Tony, who followed at my heels, was
+indifferent to rabbits.</p>
+
+<p>It was dusk when I returned. A servant preceded me
+into the drawing-room, and lit the lamps, and made up the
+fire, throwing on another log or two. I sat down in one of
+the big, soft armchairs and began to turn over Christmas
+numbers—the <cite>Graphic</cite>, the <cite>London News</cite>, <cite>Holly Leaves</cite>—looking
+at Caldecott’s, Sambourne’s, and Fred Barnard’s
+drawings. I began to read a story by Bret Harte. It was
+extraordinarily nice to be here again. This dear old house,
+how I loved it! The huge wood fire, the roomy depth of
+my armchair, the soft, thick carpet, all the surroundings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
+of pleasantness and comfort, appealed to me after
+my prolonged and reluctant experience of the McAllisters.
+The fragrant China tea that was brought in to me tasted
+more deliciously than anything I had ever tasted before,
+and when I had finished my story (“The Chatelaine of Burnt
+Ridge,” I think it was called) and the servant had cleared
+away the tea-things, I sat and dozed.</p>
+
+<p>I had asked after Miss Dick, but of course she had gone
+home for Christmas. I was really to be alone this time—just
+myself and Mrs. Carroll.</p>
+
+<p>As I sat there, looking into the fire, I felt that it would
+have been nicer of me to have gone home on this, the evening
+of my arrival, but six o’clock, our tea hour, had struck ten
+minutes ago, and still I had not budged from my chair.
+Curious thoughts, thoughts I should have been ashamed to
+tell anybody, came to me unbidden, and for the first time. It
+made a tremendous difference just who happened to be one’s
+father, I reflected; and I thought of how the Dales were Mrs.
+Carroll’s nearest relatives. “She likes me better than
+anybody else,” I said to myself. “If I were by myself she
+would adopt me. All this—the house—everything will
+belong one day to somebody else; but to whom?...
+The house?” ... And I remembered she did not care
+for Gerald, and that Gerald did not in the least try to make
+her alter her opinion. Probably he had only come over last
+summer because his people had insisted on it. All at once I
+realized that these speculations were not particularly charming,
+and tried to put them from me. At the same time I
+heard the sharp sound of a horse’s hoofs on the frozen
+ground, then the crunch of gravel under carriage wheels,
+and I knew Mrs. Carroll had returned.</p>
+
+<p>She opened the door and came straight to me, smiling
+and holding out her hand. “You’ve grown so big,” she
+said, lifting her thick veil, “I don’t know whether you want
+to be kissed or not, but I think I’ll risk it.” She kissed me,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
+and then held me at arm’s length to look at me. She moved
+me a little so that the lamp-light fell on my face. “My
+dear child,” she asked, with a sudden anxiety, “aren’t you
+well? How did you get those black lines under your eyes?
+You can’t be getting enough sleep. Have you been working
+too hard?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered, “but I was up late last night.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must be more careful: your health is infinitely
+more important than any wretched examination. Well, at
+all events, I’m very glad to see you.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>A couple of hours later, after dinner, she again took up
+the subject of my appearance, which evidently did not
+satisfy her, though I assured her there was nothing the matter.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve altered,” she said, thoughtfully. “It isn’t only
+that you’ve grown, but you, somehow, look older. Do you
+get your meals properly? I expect you stop to play after
+school instead of coming home to your dinner!”</p>
+
+<p>I changed the subject as soon as I could by asking after
+the Dales. “Will they be here next summer?”</p>
+
+<p>“If you would like it I daresay we can manage it. In
+fact I invited Katherine for Christmas, but she couldn’t
+come.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope they will come in the summer.”</p>
+
+<p>I inquired after all the other people I could think of: I
+felt interested in everything that had happened since I had
+gone away. Then I sat quiet, and quite suddenly, when I
+thought she had forgotten all about it, Mrs. Carroll said,
+“I wish you would tell me, Peter, just what is troubling
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But there is nothing,” I answered, smiling. “I was
+only thinking how nice it was to be back here again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Remember you are to come to stay for a few days, before
+the end of your holidays. You must stay at least a week.
+When have you to go back?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
+
+<p>“On the eighth.”</p>
+
+<p>“And those people you are with—the What-do-you-call-ems—how
+do you like them?”</p>
+
+<p>“The McAllisters?” I hesitated. “Not very much.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do they look after you properly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think I’ll come and see you there. I would have gone
+before this, only your father didn’t want it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d rather you didn’t,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>I had no answer and she went on: “I must call and have
+a talk with your father before you go back.”</p>
+
+<p>“It won’t do any good so far as that is concerned. He
+wants me to be there. Aunt Margaret is his sister.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that, but you’d rather be by yourself, wouldn’t
+you? I can see there is something you don’t like.”</p>
+
+<p>“My father wouldn’t let me. He has some idea about a
+home influence—but I told you before, and of course he told
+you himself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Home fiddlesticks! You’d have been far better at a
+good boarding-school. This, it seems to me, is neither one
+thing nor another. I must speak to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no use really,” I said, for I knew that if she
+were to take the matter up again it might end in my not even
+being allowed to come to stay at Derryaghy next week.</p>
+
+<p>“Your father is far too anxious about you. If there had
+been two or three more of you it would have been much
+better.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t that.” I waited a while before I brought it out:
+“He doesn’t trust me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Doesn’t trust you? In what way doesn’t he trust
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“In every way. He thinks I’m inclined naturally to—to
+do things—”</p>
+
+<p>“To do things? What sort of things?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
+
+<p>“To be bad,” I said abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll stared at me. “Nonsense, child,” she
+answered. “I don’t know what can have put such an idea
+into your head!”</p>
+
+<p>“<em>He</em> did,” I muttered. “There are times when I think
+he may be right,” I went on dejectedly, “that he must surely
+have some reason. I don’t know.... He is always
+thinking about my mother.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll had been on the point of speaking, but at this
+she paused.</p>
+
+<p>“I know nothing about her,” I pursued. “I can’t
+remember her at all, and there is not even a photograph at
+home. What <em>is</em> there? Do <em>you</em> know nothing?”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll hesitated. “Nothing,” she then said.
+“Nothing more than you know yourself, Peter dear,” she
+added.</p>
+
+<p>“You have never heard? I should like to go to see her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes?” There was a note of doubt in this monosyllable
+which made me look up.</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to judge for myself,” I continued, impetuously.
+But the question was, or to Mrs. Carroll appeared to
+be, an impossible one for us to discuss together, and she
+made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>“And how do you like your school?” she asked presently,
+holding up a magazine between her face and the blazing
+fire. “Tell me all about it—about all your friends and
+everything you do.”</p>
+
+<p>I began to tell her, giving, as I went along a kind of
+rough, rambling account of my ordinary day. I told of
+how I had come to know Owen; how the real thief had never
+been discovered. I described Owen to her; I said he was
+the only friend I had made. I told her of the party last
+night, leaving out the episode of Elsie.</p>
+
+<p>“It makes such a difference when you find somebody who
+is more or less like yourself.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think he is very like me,” I answered. “I
+don’t think we’re a bit alike, but—” I tried to puzzle it out:
+“I suppose we must have some things in common.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me about him,” she encouraged me.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s a very good chap,” I said lamely. Then, as this
+didn’t in the least express my meaning: “I mean he’s very
+straight, and decent, and all that. He’s not like anybody
+else.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is the difference?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, for one thing, he’s awfully serious. I don’t mean
+dull—but serious about what things really mean and that
+sort of thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is he clever?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. He’s very simple.”</p>
+
+<p>“And George—isn’t that his name? the name of your
+cousin?—what is <em>he</em> like? Are you friends with him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me about George too.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s nothing to tell. He’s in business. You
+wouldn’t much care for him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? Don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, very well.” And it suddenly struck me as strange
+that I did so, that I did not positively detest him.</p>
+
+<p>“You do not seem enthusiastic. Is he not nice?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, he’s all right. He’s nice enough, I daresay—just
+as nice as I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why won’t you tell me what is the matter, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>“There is nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t done anything wrong, have you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>I closed my eyes for a minute as I leaned back in my
+chair. A silence had fallen on the room with my last
+words. Then suddenly my self-control deserted me, and
+I hid my face against the arm of the chair, just as if I had
+been a child.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It was a beautiful, clear, winter night when I walked home.
+Over the low wall I looked out at the dark, smooth sea,
+stretching away, almost black, save where the moonlight
+touched it. I trailed my right hand on the wall as I walked,
+heedless of the cold, though it was freezing keenly. The
+tide was in, and the chill, listless splash of the small waves,
+running through my thoughts, seemed to increase their
+sadness. On the verge of the distant golf-links a ruddy
+light from the big hotel shone out into the night.</p>
+
+<p>As I turned up the Bryansford Road, I saw, in the moonlight,
+my father standing leaning over the garden gate, and
+behind him the house door was open. Unconsciously I
+slackened my pace. He was looking for me, perhaps. He
+must have already heard me, for the sound of my footsteps
+rang out sharply on the hard road.</p>
+
+<p>“Where have you been all this time?” he asked abruptly,
+as I came up.</p>
+
+<p>There was a hardness in his voice that, in my present
+mood, I shrank from more than I should have from physical
+violence. I knew he knew where I had been, and I thought
+he might have let the matter pass. “I didn’t intend to
+stay so late,” I said, apologetically, “but Mrs. Carroll had
+gone up to town and left a message for me, asking me to
+wait. After dinner she wanted me to tell her all I had been
+doing since I left home.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I hope you were more communicative than you were to
+me. You hadn’t time, I suppose, to come back and say
+you were staying. I waited tea for you for nearly an hour.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t think it mattered,” I mumbled. “I’m very
+sorry. I thought you would understand.”</p>
+
+<p>I had already climbed half a dozen stairs on my way to
+bed, when my father called me back.</p>
+
+<p>“Why are you rushing off like that, now?”</p>
+
+<p>I hastily returned. “I was going to bed: I didn’t know
+you wanted to sit up.” I went on into the parlour, where
+there was a smoky fire in the grate, just large enough to
+make you realize how cold it was, and on the table some
+bread and butter, a jug of milk and a tumbler. I sat down
+beside the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not going to sit up; but I don’t want you to treat
+your home as if it were an hotel, a place where you come
+merely to sleep. I’ve no doubt things are more to your
+taste at Derryaghy, but while this <em>is</em> your home, you must
+try to make the best of it.”</p>
+
+<p>I looked at my father helplessly, but I said nothing. I
+had an uncomfortable vision of his sitting here all evening
+by himself. If he would only make friends with somebody!
+I wondered if he had been happy before mamma
+went away.</p>
+
+<p>“Seeing that it was your first day at home,” he went on,
+putting down my silence to sulkiness, “you might at least
+have been content to be out all the afternoon. Now that
+we are on the subject, I had better let you know that Mrs.
+Carroll asked me to allow you to spend part of your holidays
+at Derryaghy, but I told her you must decide that for
+yourself.” He paused, with the intention of letting me say
+I didn’t want to go.</p>
+
+<p>“She told me to-night,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think I’d like to go.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a silence, and I wondered how long we were
+going to sit shivering here.</p>
+
+<p>“I had a letter to-night from your Aunt Margaret. She
+says you have made friends with some people called Gill,
+and have been to a party at their house.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes: it was last night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you never tell me of any of these things yourself?
+One would think I was a total stranger to you!”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know it would interest you.”</p>
+
+<p>All at once I remembered my visits to the opera, and
+I couldn’t understand how my father had not heard of
+them. He had not mentioned my laxity in regard to
+church either, and both these omissions puzzled me greatly,
+seeing Aunt Margaret had made such a fuss about them
+at the time.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>After breakfast I screwed up my courage to the point of
+broaching the subject I had most on my mind. “There
+is something I want to say to you,” I began, and my father
+instantly adopted an attitude of motionless attention, so
+excessively attentive that it had the effect of putting me
+out, and I forgot the phrases I had prepared beforehand,
+and could only stammer awkwardly that it was my desire
+to leave the McAllisters and choose some lodging for myself.</p>
+
+<p>A return to this question I saw was not pleasing to him,
+and I had hardly expected it to be so.</p>
+
+<p>“You are very self-willed,” he said, slowly.</p>
+
+<p>I knew from the tone in which this opinion was uttered
+that he had already made up his mind about my request,
+yet some obscure instinct of self-preservation still kept
+me from giving in. I don’t suppose I could have satisfactorily
+explained that instinct to my father, even had I
+become perfectly confidential, and certainly no such
+thought ever crossed my mind. The result was that he
+looked upon my wish as a mere caprice.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to me we have already fully discussed the
+question,” he remarked unsympathetically.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know then.... I mean I don’t like sleeping
+with George.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why? You have your own bed, haven’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
+
+<p>“George is your cousin.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know he is my cousin,” I answered wearily. “What
+difference does that make?” Already I felt the whole
+thing was hopeless.</p>
+
+<p>“It is just this sort of nonsense which makes me object
+to your going to stay at Derryaghy,” my father began
+impatiently. “You are pampered with every luxury there,
+till you begin to dislike and look down upon everybody
+who hasn’t had your advantages.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not thinking of advantages,” I muttered, with a
+sort of irony.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know when I arranged for you to stay with
+them that they would not be able to give you a room to
+yourself. On the other hand, I don’t see that it is at all
+a sufficient reason for your leaving now you are there. I
+told you so when I wrote to you. It is only an excuse to
+get your own way. You have always been like that;
+though I should have thought you would hardly have
+considered it worth while to bring the matter up again
+after all these months.”</p>
+
+<p>I accepted my father’s decision without further protest.
+As a matter of fact, a kind of listlessness had come upon
+me, an apathetic indifference to whatever might happen.</p>
+
+<p>It was Christmas Eve. A heavy fall of snow had occurred
+during the night, and on the hard, frozen ground it lay
+unmelted to the dark border of the sea. All the morning I
+spent beside the fire reading “Richard Feverel,” but about
+half-past three I went out for a walk over the golf-links.
+The snow was several inches deep, but being perfectly hard
+was not unpleasant for walking. I had slept badly last
+night, a sleep broken by wretched dreams, and I had a
+mind to go for a really long walk and tire myself out. In
+spite of being at home again, in spite of this beautiful, bright,
+exhilarating weather, in spite of the fact that I would be
+getting a Christmas-box from Mrs. Carroll to-morrow, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
+a letter from Katherine, and another from Owen, my spirits
+were of the gloomiest. Never before had I looked so
+closely into my own soul, and never before had I found so
+little there to comfort me. I knew that for months past my
+mind had been gradually submitted to a poisonous influence
+that had filtered through my blood, like a vapour from some
+fever-breeding marsh. Yet certain seeds, I thought, could
+perhaps only have taken root within me, could perhaps
+only so quickly have sprung to tall dark flower, because
+they had found a soil already apt to receive them: and I
+remembered my father’s suspicions in the past. I thought
+of a book I had been reading lately—a book written for boys,
+and all about boys—and I compared myself with its heroes.
+I compared the gloom that weighed upon me now with
+the troubles they had experienced, and it seemed to me I
+must be different, not in degree but in kind, from every
+boy in that book, from the bad just as much as from the
+good. I remembered hours, whole days, when I had been
+like them, like the decent ones I mean, for with the others
+I had nothing in common—I had never wanted to shirk
+games; and bullying, gambling, dishonesty, and “pubs,”
+had no attraction for me. But it was just because there
+were bits of the book in which I could see a part of myself
+that I was troubled by the absence of other parts, of so
+many other feelings that none of these boys shared. I
+wondered if I were quite abnormal, but how could I ever
+find out even that; for just as nobody knew what I was,
+I knew nothing really of anybody else, save what they cared
+to show me or took no trouble to hide. I was hopelessly
+shut in to the little circle of my own sensations, desires,
+and emotions. Owen, whom I knew better than any other
+boy,—what, after all, did I know of him? I knew no one
+but myself, and of myself I knew much that filled me with
+shame.</p>
+
+<p>A deep silence overshadowed all things, the silence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
+the fallen snow. I had come to a stand-still. Around
+me was an infinite stretch of whiteness, almost unbroken,
+save where the sea was dark and restless under the whip
+of the rising wind. Dusk had crept up imperceptibly, and
+more light now rose from the ground than fell from the
+leaden sky overhead. Snow had again begun to fall. A
+few flakes turned and fluttered down out of the darkness,
+but I knew this was only the beginning. I walked to the
+edge of the black, desolate sea, and watched the waves
+rolling in to break at my feet, and at that moment I felt
+infinitely alone, and indeed for miles round there was
+probably no other human being. But it was as if I were
+alone in a dead world. The whirling flakes of snow fell
+ever faster out of the winter sky; the barren, frozen land
+was wrapped in a stillness that was more like the stillness
+of death than of sleep; the only sounds there were came
+from the waves breaking at my feet, and from an occasional
+sweep of wind forlorn as though no ears were there to listen.
+The creeping on of night seemed to be the shutting out for
+ever of all life, and one could imagine there would never
+be anything more, that the end had at last been reached.</p>
+
+<p>And the thought of death came to me, without terror,
+came, rather, as a solution. All that bound me to existence
+seemed now attenuated to the thinnest cobweb. If I
+just lay down here and waited....</p>
+
+<p>Tony, who had grown restless at my long delay, suddenly
+broke into my consciousness. He began to urge me to
+come on, with a peculiar, eager, discontented note in his
+voice. He jumped up with his large paws against me.
+I knelt in the snow and hugged him in my arms, while his
+warm red tongue passed rapidly over my face. I held him
+close, and his black nose was pressed into my cheek, and
+he wagged his tail and nibbled at my ears.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Two or three days before, I had sent off a small picture to
+Katherine as a Christmas-box. It had taken me a long
+time to choose something I thought she might care for,
+and which at the same time pleased myself. In the end
+I had got her a photograph of Francia’s portrait of the boy
+Federigo Gonzaga, the son of Isabella d’Este—the Miserden
+Park picture. I had had it framed in a flat, dull, dark
+frame, and very carefully packed; and over and over
+again I had pictured her opening the parcel, her surprise.
+It was two days after Christmas when the postman brought
+me a letter from her, but instead of reading it, I put it in
+my pocket. It was a fairly thick packet, so, though her
+writing was very large, I knew it must be a long letter. I
+could feel it as it lay in the inner pocket of my jacket, and
+a dozen times that day I drew it out and inspected it, but
+no more than that, for I had determined not to read it
+till I went to bed. All day long I thought of the pleasure
+I should have, and in the end I became so impatient that
+I went to bed about nine o’clock.</p>
+
+<p>I put the letter on my pillow, and placed a lighted candle
+on the painted, deal chest-of-drawers beside my bed. I
+undressed, got into bed, and only then, with eager fingers,
+tore open the envelope and drew out its contents.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at them as they lay upon the bright, patch-work
+counterpane, a single sheet of note-paper, and a New Year<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
+card in the form of a pocket calendar. My disappointment
+was so great that for a little I did not even read the letter,
+but lay on my back and stared dismally at the iron rail
+at the foot of my bed. My thoughts were bitter. I
+recalled the many letters I had written to her, undiscouraged
+by her brief replies. Some of these had been pages long;
+the one I had sent with my present, for instance, I had
+given a whole evening to. I glanced at what she had
+written—three sides of a sheet of note-paper hastily scrawled
+over in huge characters, about two words to a line. She
+thanked me for my picture, which was very pretty. She
+would have liked to write me a really long letter, but there
+were some people staying in the house, and she had to look
+after them, and had only been able to snatch a moment
+to wish me a happy New Year. That was all.</p>
+
+<p>I blew out the candle and lay with my eyes wide open
+staring into the darkness. The few, conventional phrases
+of her letter were vivid in my mind. To begin with, the
+picture was not pretty; if it had been, I shouldn’t have
+bought it. If she had wanted me to have a happy New
+Year it would have been very easy for her to make it so.
+But it had been too much trouble. I thought of how I
+had sat up far into the night to finish my Christmas letter
+to her. I heard my father’s step on the stairs, the shutting
+of his bedroom door. I pulled the bed-clothes up to my
+chin, and as I did so my hand touched something—the
+pocket-calendar. I tore it in two and flung the pieces at
+the opposite wall.</p>
+
+<p>My mind was divided between despondency and anger. I
+pictured her enjoying herself with a houseful of her own and
+Gerald’s friends, while I was forgotten. Of course there
+was no particular reason why she should remember me.
+Still, the irony of those foolish New Year’s wishes might
+almost have been intentional had the whole letter not been
+so thoughtless. She knew well enough how happy I must<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
+be now, stuck in this wretched hole by myself; and I asked
+myself how anybody could be so completely devoid of
+imagination, of sympathy, even of tact? I began to compose
+a letter to be written to-morrow, a letter expressing
+what I felt. I imagined her reading it in the midst of her
+friends, and realizing how she had wounded me. I tossed
+and turned till I was almost in a fever. Sleep was out of
+the question, for I knew it must be nearly morning already,
+and I had half a mind to get up and dress....</p>
+
+<p>When I opened my eyes it was broad daylight. I sprang
+out of bed and hurried into my clothes. The first thing
+after breakfast I sat down to write my letter of reproach,
+and wrote it at furious speed, a fire burning in my soul.
+Yet when I came to read it over, it seemed childish and
+stilted, and in my haste I had left out so many words and
+mis-spelt so many others that I was obliged to make a fair
+copy of the whole. This I posted, but had two days more
+of impatience before a reply reached me. When it came, it
+had the effect of turning away my anger. Katherine seemed
+really sorry; at any rate she said she was. She told me
+that she cared far more for me than for any of the people
+I imagined she found so delightful, and that I might have
+known this by now, even if her letters <em>had</em> been short. She
+said it had been horrid of her to write such a miserable
+scrawl, but that, if she had guessed I should mind it so
+much, she would have written me a whole book.</p>
+
+<p>I sat down to reply at once, but I cannot account for the
+unfortunate tone my letter took. It was morbid and self-conscious,
+without being in the least frank. I begged her
+forgiveness; I made a parade of a melancholy that bore
+no resemblance to the kind of melancholy I really felt; I
+talked vaguely about not being as good as she believed me
+to be, and the whole production was a little sickening. I
+don’t know, or rather I do know, what she made of it.
+She replied that she had never for a moment thought me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
+good, and that she should prefer not to hear from me at all
+to getting letters like the last I had written.</p>
+
+<p>It was not, perhaps, extremely sympathetic, but I knew
+well enough myself I had done the wrong thing. My
+letter had been odiously self-conscious. I had accused
+myself of not being good, but what on earth did that mean?
+It might mean that I went into the pantry at night and
+stole the jam!</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>About this time, influenced by Amiel, whom I had come
+across in Mrs. Humphry Ward’s translation, I had begun
+to keep a diary, or journal, of my “sensations and ideas.”
+I unearthed it the other day, with the paper time-staled as
+the sensations, and the ink faded as the ideas. On reading it
+over I found it so unbalanced, so one-sided, that I can scarce
+quote a passage as really expressive of what I actually was.
+It expresses only what I was when I sat down to write my
+journal, and I never appear to have done this except when
+I was in a particularly unhealthy mood. Some of this
+journal is descriptive, some of it merely notes certain
+thoughts that came to me and that I evidently, the Lord
+knows why, imagined worthy of preservation. A single
+entry, the description of a dream, will, I fancy, give an idea
+of the whole.</p>
+
+<p>“Last night I went out and wandered about the streets
+for a while, and when I came home I went straight to bed.
+I did not go to sleep for a long time. I remember hearing
+the clock strike two, and when I awoke it was just four,
+but of course I cannot really tell how long my dream
+lasted.</p>
+
+<p>“I was in a room with some people I knew very well. My
+father was there, and Aunt Margaret and Uncle George. I
+was laughing at something, I cannot remember what, only
+that it had to do with a question of religion, when suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
+the figure of Christ appeared, in a long, purple, velvet robe—a
+slight figure, with narrow effeminate face, pointed beard,
+and a soft treacherous expression in the slanting eyes.
+Everybody in the room except myself fell on their knees
+in fear, but I stood still. He watched me and then came
+closer, holding out his pierced hands and making the sign of
+the cross. He did not speak, but I knew what he meant,
+and I detested him. He drew still nearer and still I would
+not kneel. My defiance filled me with a mingled fear and
+exultation, and, as he was about to touch me, I cried out,
+invoking Satan, offering myself to him. A horrible look of
+baffled rage and malice distorted the face of the Christ.
+Outside a storm was raging and the wide window was a
+black square. With a shrill scream the Christ vanished,
+and a man, naked, superb, the colour of dark, greenish
+bronze, shot through the window as though propelled by
+some invisible force. (From this on, an undertone of
+strange music floated through my dream, rising and falling
+with the rise and fall of my emotions.)</p>
+
+<p>“The face of this dark angel was beautiful and proud.
+His forehead was broad and low and slightly overhanging,
+giving him a stern and brooding expression, but although I
+was afraid of him I loved him, and felt an irresistible longing
+to put myself in his power. We were now alone together
+in the room, which had suddenly grown dark, and he seized
+me. I struggled, but in his grasp I was helpless as a young
+bird in the clutches of a boy. He stripped me naked and
+rubbed my body over with some kind of ointment that left
+no mark. And somehow I knew he was going to send me
+down into hell, and that after a while I should return again
+to earth, but that I should be his for ever.</p>
+
+<p>“‘I shall not be tortured?’ I asked him, and he answered
+in a deep voice, ‘There are no tortures such as you are
+thinking of.’</p>
+
+<p>“‘When I come back,’ I said, ‘I shall have forgotten all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
+I saw there; I shall think I have been only dreaming. Can
+you not mark me in some way?’</p>
+
+<p>“He placed me in front of the mirror that was at one end
+of the room, and which seemed to shine in the dark as with
+fire. And in the glass I saw over my right breast a red flush,
+and upon this a white streak, broad and long as his fore-finger.
+He took my hand, and suddenly the room I was in seemed
+to be dropping. Down and down it rushed, so rapidly that
+the walls glowed red hot, but because of the ointment with
+which I had been covered I felt nothing. And we seemed
+to be sinking down through a bottomless sea that hissed
+in steam against the walls. Then the speed increased a
+thousandfold and I lost consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>“I do not know what interval had elapsed, but it was
+evening and I was back again in the room, our parlour at
+home. My father was kneeling down and calling upon me
+in desperation to pray to God before it was too late—to pray—to
+pray. But I would not pray. Mrs. Carroll was there
+and she was crying. Then a voice said aloud above our
+heads, ‘It was all only a dream,’ and for a little we believed
+this; and then all at once I knew the voice was lying. My
+father read in my face what was passing in my mind, and
+his own face grew white as paper. But I knew; and I
+exulted and wept at the same moment. I tore away
+my shirt from my breast. ‘Look—look! It is his
+mark!’</p>
+
+<p>“A loud cry rang through the room, and I awoke, bathed
+in perspiration, to the silence and darkness of night. I
+could hear George breathing quietly in his sleep. Then I
+got up and lit the gas and looked to see if the mark were
+indeed there upon my breast, but there was nothing.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Could I have been mentally, morally, even physically,
+well when I had this dream? Childish and foolish, perhaps,
+it had at the time an intensity the effect of which lingered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
+on long after I had awakened. There is something disquieting
+in the thought that so slender a veil should separate the
+world of order and sanity from a world of disorder and
+delirium such as my eyes were opened to then. Yet that
+other world is always there, waiting, and the veil may be
+torn at any moment, letting tongues of the dreadful, flaming
+light shoot through. The Christ of my dream was not a
+blasphemous creation of my own mind, but a sort of distorted
+memory of one or two pictures in a book about
+Byzantine wall-paintings I had looked at years before.
+The main fact, however, psychologically, is, I suppose, the
+fact that I kept a journal at all. Probably what was at
+the bottom of it was an idea of confession which now
+haunted me. It came to me in several relations. I thought
+of Owen, thought it was my duty to tell him everything
+about myself, and that in this way we might make our
+friendship perfect. At other times I feared that instead of
+doing this it might do just the opposite. I was not sure,
+either, what my motive really was—whether it really proceeded
+from a sense of duty, or only from a desire of personal
+relief. It was strange that while in many respects I continued
+to have an exaggerated opinion of myself, I should
+yet have been so frequently visited just now by hours of
+despondency, when I imagined my life as already irretrievably
+doomed to failure. I did not look upon myself as an
+ordinary person, or the crisis through which I was passing
+as an ordinary crisis. I began to ponder over the meaning
+of sin and damnation, and I figured this latter quality as a
+condition of mind which attracts evil, and from which no
+evil can be hidden. When I was with Owen my troubles
+grew fainter, and even disappeared. Mentally, morally,
+he had upon me much the same effect as, physically, a
+draught of fresh air would have had, after long confinement
+in a stifling atmosphere. I admired him; I envied him his
+freedom from all that made my own life just now so difficult.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
+I discussed the question of free will with him, but I no more
+believed in it than did my Arabian Nights heroes. I was
+as closely imprisoned in my own physical temperament
+as a rat in a trap. And if I were to die? For the first
+time it dawned upon me that one might pass into a spiritual
+world as dark and dreadful as any I had ever seen in a
+dream. With this appalling thought it occurred to me that
+a priest might be the best person to confess to, and I began
+to consider to whom I could go.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The matter, as I soon perceived, was not at all so simple as
+in the first flush of discovery it appeared to be. But one
+excellent effect it had, and that was to make Sunday, which
+had been the dullest, the most interesting, day of the week,
+while I went from church to church in search of my confessor.
+In almost every case I could tell at once that I had
+not found him, and I was on the point of giving up the whole
+idea as hopeless, when one Sunday evening I went to St.
+Mary Magdalene’s. The clergyman who took the service
+was already well past middle-age. He was delicate and
+ascetic-looking, with a peculiar expression on his worn face,
+as of one who had had to make a fight against something—possibly
+it had only been ill-health—and who had come
+out of the struggle victorious if not unscarred. He preached
+a sermon which may have been slightly vague, but which
+appealed to my imagination. Even the weakness of his
+voice and the almost colourlessness of his manner had the
+curious effect of making what he said to me more real.
+Listening to him was like listening to a spirit, to a disembodied
+voice; and through all there flickered a kind of
+nervous exaltation, like a tremulous, uncertain flame.
+There were no signs of that mental and imaginative poverty
+which had so frequently discouraged me. But he struck
+me, above all, as a man who had been unhappy, and therefore,
+if he had found peace, there must be some reason for it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
+I returned to hear him several times, and although my first
+impression was not strengthened, it was not effaced. I
+persuaded Owen to come with me to hear him, but Owen
+did not like him at all.</p>
+
+<p>Far from shaking me in my view, this unfavourable
+opinion helped to confirm me. Not through any perversity,
+but simply because I knew the person I was in search of
+would not particularly appeal to Owen. I did not want a
+purely reasonable being, I did not perhaps even want one
+whom Owen would consider quite healthy—I wanted one
+who would understand. That night I wrote a letter to
+Henry Applin, asking if I might come to him, and, if I
+might, would he tell me when.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>As I walked home with Owen next day after school I wanted
+to tell him what I had done, but it was somehow difficult to
+do so quite abruptly. I turned the conversation to Roman
+Catholicism, and from that to the general subject of confession
+to a priest, but to Owen this idea appeared to be so
+distasteful that I did not attempt to introduce my own
+particular case.</p>
+
+<p>On our way we met his mother, who told me to go on in
+and get something to eat now, and to stay and dine with
+them at seven. I refused, having an idea Owen didn’t
+particularly want me. I knew it was only because he wished
+to finish an epitome he was making of Herbert Spencer’s
+“First Principles” (he had told me he had reached the last
+chapter) and as I had a strong desire to stay I felt annoyed.
+I came to the door with him.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better come in,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the use of my coming in when you don’t want
+me?” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. “Of course I want you; don’t be an ass.”</p>
+
+<p>I came in. While we were having tea I looked over the
+epitome. It represented a good deal of work, and I remembered
+having asked him to read Blake’s “Songs,” and his
+refusing because he hadn’t time. It was the same with
+nearly everything I recommended to him, though I was
+always reading books to please him. He offered now to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
+lend me the “First Principles” as soon as he should have
+finished it.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want it,” I answered, discontentedly. “I’m
+sick of all that stodgy stuff. You’re always complaining
+about not being able to be religious, yet you’re never happy
+unless you’re reading something against religion.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not anxious for a religion that won’t bear examination,”
+replied Owen, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“No religion <em>will</em> bear it,” I said, and both speeches had
+that infinite priggishness which not infrequently characterized
+our conversation.</p>
+
+<p>“People who have read a hundred times more philosophy
+than I have have been able to remain Christians,” Owen continued,
+with a naïveté that was quite lost on me. He was
+particularly fond just now of talking about people who had
+or had not read philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re thinking of Levine in ‘A.K.,’” I answered disrespectfully,
+a decreasing enthusiasm having led me to abbreviate
+the title of this work.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not,” said Owen.</p>
+
+<p>“You are. And Levine doesn’t remain a Christian.
+He drops it and then takes it up again, and, as he hasn’t
+any more reason for doing one than the other, I don’t see
+what it proves.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you say he has no reason?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t call half a dozen words spoken by an ignorant
+peasant a reason. If you claim religion to be the most
+valuable thing in life, it oughtn’t to be at the mercy of a
+chance phrase. At any rate the words that affected Levine
+seem far from wonderful to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know that they aren’t wonderful,” Owen
+declared.</p>
+
+<p>“‘One man lives for his stomach,’” I jeeringly quoted,
+“‘another for his soul, for God, in truth.’ You’d find the
+same thing in any tract. And why should it turn you to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
+Christianity particularly? A man who believed in Pan
+could live just as much for his soul as a Christian.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe anybody ever believed in Pan,” said
+Owen, “any more than they believe in Father Christmas.
+Because certain words happened to help Levine, Tolstoy
+does not mean that they will help everyone.”</p>
+
+<p>“He does. Only you’re nearly as bad as Levine yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was not listening; he was working out an argument
+he would produce as soon as I had done; but I was beginning
+to be tired of Tolstoy, and I wanted to express my own
+point of view. “If one were to see a ghost, it would make
+an enormous difference,” I admitted. “It would open
+your eyes to a new world, to a deeper, finer world.”</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t this one deep enough for you? And I don’t see
+that it would necessarily be any finer. It might very well
+be extremely objectionable. All that would happen if you
+saw a ghost is that it would frighten you very much at the
+time, and afterwards you wouldn’t believe in it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think it would frighten me. I don’t think it
+would frighten anybody, if it were the ghost of somebody
+they had cared for a great deal.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen considered this. “I don’t suppose the ghost of
+your mother would frighten you. <em>Your</em> mother is dead,
+isn’t she?” he added, and then stopped short. “I’m
+awfully sorry,” he stammered, “I wasn’t thinking of what
+I was saying.”</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. “It’s all right. My mother isn’t dead.
+Shall we go out before dinner?”</p>
+
+<p>Owen got up.</p>
+
+<p>We walked by the road as far as Shaw’s Bridge, where we
+branched off on to the river bank. It was already well on
+in April. The brilliant tender green of the opening leaves
+had spread like a delicate green flame over the black branches
+of the trees. The sky was clear, and there was a sharpness
+in the air that made us walk quickly. Owen’s dogs, two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
+rough-haired Irish terriers, ran along the bank, sniffing
+among the coarse grass, alert, eager to hunt anything,
+whether a rat or a stick.</p>
+
+<p>Owen’s remark about my mother had reminded me that
+I had told him singularly little about myself, or rather,
+about my people. He did not know anything beyond the
+fact that we lived at Newcastle, and, from the way I had
+spoken of it, he might easily have imagined that Derryaghy
+was my home. I’m afraid an unconscious snobbery had
+kept me from revealing the obscurity of my origin, and I
+was suddenly struck by the stupidity and odiousness of this,
+especially with Owen, for whom such things meant nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“Why did you think my mother was dead?” I asked him.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. I suppose because you never—I don’t
+know, I’m sure.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to tell you about my people.”</p>
+
+<p>Curiously enough, though I had been so reluctant to
+mention that my father was a National schoolmaster, it did
+not trouble me in the least to talk about my mother. I
+even had some dim notion that it made me rather interesting;
+so I told him all I knew. “I have not seen her
+since,” I wound up, “and perhaps my father is not my real
+father.” Why I should have thrown in this after-touch I
+cannot conceive, as I had never in my life had the faintest
+doubts concerning my legitimacy; but I suppose it was to
+heighten the romance.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think I ought to try to find out something
+more?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“You never did try!” exclaimed Owen.</p>
+
+<p>“Never very much. I don’t know who to ask. I can’t
+very well ask my father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“There must be somebody else who knows. Your friend,
+Mrs. Carroll.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span></p>
+
+<p>“She won’t tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you asked her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I asked her the last time I was at home.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what did she say?”</p>
+
+<p>“She doesn’t like her.”</p>
+
+<p>“She said she didn’t like her?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not; but I know it all the same.”</p>
+
+<p>“The whole thing,” Owen began, but tailed off abruptly
+“—it seems rather queer.”</p>
+
+<p>We walked on for a long time in silence. I was determined
+to tell him about Mr. Applin, but it was not till we
+were coming home that I began my explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“And you’re really going to him!” Owen marvelled.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have to go now. That is, if he does not tell me not
+to.”</p>
+
+<p>“He can hardly do that. You’re not making fun?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fun?”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know whether you meant it,” he said.
+“What are you going <em>for</em>?” he suddenly asked. “Just
+to talk to him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I suppose so.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what about?”</p>
+
+<p>“About?... Do you remember talking of confession?”</p>
+
+<p>“But it’s not that, is it?” said Owen, very seriously.
+“You’re not——”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” I smiled dimly.</p>
+
+<p>“But what is the matter? Why should you? What
+have you done? And if you have done anything, what is
+it to him?”</p>
+
+<p>We had come to a standstill on the lonely river bank.
+Owen’s eyes were fixed upon me questioningly. I had
+nothing to say, or, rather, I could not say it. I stood
+before him, looking on the ground, my hands in my
+trouser pockets.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span></p>
+
+<p>Owen hesitated. He put his hands on my shoulders,
+but I did not look up.</p>
+
+<p>Presently I raised my head, but I looked away from him,
+and across the fields. “Come along,” I said, quietly. “It’s
+getting late, and we must hurry.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When I reached home at about half-past nine little Alice
+came running to meet me. Her white face, her bright
+black eyes, and long straight black hair, brushed back from
+her forehead and spreading out on either side of her face in
+the shape of a fan, were vivid in the gas-light, under which
+she stood looking up at me while I opened the letter she
+had brought me. It was from Mr. Applin, asking me to
+call on Wednesday evening between nine and ten, or on
+Friday between the same hours, if Wednesday did not
+suit me.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Since Christmas I had been working harder than I had ever
+done in my life. The Intermediate examinations would be
+coming on in June, but it was not any particular anxiety to
+shine in them that had goaded me to this unprecedented
+industry; merely I had discovered that on the plea of work
+I could sit in my bedroom in the evenings, and that the
+work itself kept me from thinking of other things. To-night
+I went straight upstairs as usual, but after writing to Mr.
+Applin to say I would come on Wednesday, I sat idle. So
+it was all the next day, and the next night: I had an open
+book in front of me, but I read without comprehending
+what I read: I was intensely excited: a kind of emotional
+cloud had descended upon my mind, and I could think of
+nothing but my approaching interview.</p>
+
+<p>Ideas, words, shot across this mental haze like meteors,
+but I could not follow them in their swift flight. On Wednesday
+afternoon when I got home from school and had had
+my dinner I went out into the streets and wandered aimlessly
+about. I had said to myself that I would not think
+about the matter any more, but, needless to say, I thought
+of nothing else, and so it was that when I came to a Roman
+Catholic church and saw the door was open, I could not help
+going inside and sitting down before one of the confessionals.
+The name of the priest, Father Dempsey, was printed in
+large letters above it. I had a faint hope of seeing somebody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
+come out or go in, but in this I was disappointed. Three
+little girls were busy with their beads, but they suspended
+their acts of devotion to cast glances at me, and whisper,
+and even giggle. A woman was kneeling before an altar
+that shone with ornaments suggestive of decorations from a
+Christmas tree. Her eyes were fixed on a bright oleograph
+of the Virgin, and her lips never ceased moving. A couple
+of lighted candles seemed to sweat ugly yellow tears, which
+ran down over dirty candlesticks. And then I saw a fat
+little sallow priest, his chin, upper lip, and cheeks, blue
+from much shaving, come waddling down the aisle, and I
+wondered if this were Father Dempsey. As he passed he
+stared at me, and I saw in his dull little eyes that expression
+of invulnerable stupidity I had noticed in the faces of so
+many of his brothers when I met them in the street.</p>
+
+<p>The fascination that had drawn me into the church had
+disappeared. Everything—the smell of stale incense, the
+cheap decorations, the bad pictures, the kneeling woman,
+the girls with their beads—had become almost nauseating.
+The appalling unintelligence of it all shocked me, much as
+the display of a diseased body had now and then shocked
+me. It was wrong, it was gross, anything less spiritual I
+could not imagine. And my idea of confessing to a priest
+was wrong. I got up and left the church, the last thing I
+saw being the thick sediment of dirt at the bottom of the
+stoup.</p>
+
+<p>After tea I went up to my bedroom, George’s and mine,
+and got out my books to do some work. At first I thought
+I would not go to Mr. Applin, but as time passed this
+decision grew weaker, and presently, instead of reading, I
+tried to make up my mind on the point. Then when it
+drew near to nine o’clock I was no longer even uncertain.
+What had my impressions of this afternoon to do with the
+step I was about to take? Besides, they had been very
+superficial, and to be influenced by them would be as stupid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
+as to refuse to read a book because its binding happened
+to be soiled.</p>
+
+<p>I walked quickly to Mr. Applin’s house and knocked
+boldly at the door. It opened with a startling promptitude;
+evidently the servant had been in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>“Is Mr. Applin at home?” I asked, my stammer suddenly
+beginning to manifest itself.</p>
+
+<p>“He is. Who shall I say wants him?”</p>
+
+<p>“It doesn’t matter. He expects me.” I felt reluctant
+to give my name.</p>
+
+<p>The servant did not press me to, but disappeared upstairs.
+She came back very soon and asked me to “step this way,”
+and I obeyed her nervously.</p>
+
+<p>I entered a room and heard the door close behind me, as a
+man rose from a table near the window, removing a green
+shade from his forehead. I was conscious of tired eyes
+that looked at me out of a pale, dim, emaciated face, but
+the flickering light that had seemed to shine through them
+when he was preaching was not there, and his manner of
+greeting me struck me as a little distant, a little chilly. I
+sat down on the extreme edge of a chair and my impressions
+grew clearer.</p>
+
+<p>“You are Peter Waring, are you not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken the chair opposite mine, and he leaned a
+little forward, the tips of his fingers joined, and blue veins
+showing under the loose yellow skin of his hands. He was
+much older than I had imagined. He was wearing a threadbare
+jacket which I did not like, and I noticed that one of
+the buttons near the top was not the same as the others.
+My confidence had suddenly drooped. I glanced round at
+the unfamiliar room, at the book-shelves which made but
+a poor show, and maintained an idiotic silence. It struck
+me that he might think I had come for a subscription
+towards a cricket club.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I got your letter,” he said. “You want to speak to
+me? You are not a member of my congregation, I think?”</p>
+
+<p>“No—I come sometimes in the evening.”</p>
+
+<p>I was glad I had said nothing in my letter but that I
+wanted to speak to him, and he evidently hadn’t the least
+suspicion of the truth.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—yes—I understand. Well, don’t be afraid. If I
+can do anything for you I shall be very glad, very glad.”</p>
+
+<p>I thanked him and again became silent. It would have
+been absolutely impossible for me to have said what I had
+come to say. He was too old, too far away. It would
+have been like stretching out one’s hands to warm them at
+the ashes in an early morning grate. I knew he wanted to
+be kind, but I felt, somehow, that if I sat very still he
+would, in a minute or two, forget I was in the room.</p>
+
+<p>“I think I had better write,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“Write? But why? What is it about?” he spoke
+almost testily.</p>
+
+<p>There was a tap at the door, and a thin, middle-aged lady,
+possibly a daughter, came in with a little tray on which were
+some biscuits and a tumbler of hot milk. She bowed to me
+and wished me good-evening. I wanted nothing now but
+to get away as quickly as possible, and I envied her as she
+went out, closing the door softly behind her. Suppose I
+had been in the middle of my confession when the hot milk
+came in, I thought. The whole thing was somehow
+becoming lugubriously comic.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you in business or at school?” Mr. Applin asked,
+between two sips of milk. “I hope you’ll excuse me taking
+this while it is hot, but I had a funeral this afternoon, and
+I’m afraid I caught a slight chill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly,” I answered hastily. “I’m sorry for disturbing
+you. I have really nothing to say. It is only that
+I liked your sermons so much, and that I wanted to tell
+you so. I hope you’ll forgive me.” I got up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Sit down—sit down,” he murmured. “It was a very
+kind and charming impulse, and I’m glad you yielded to it.”</p>
+
+<p>I resumed my seat and he continued to drink his milk.
+He was quite pleased with me. He asked me to what
+church I belonged; where I went to school; all kinds of
+questions. I told him that I thought he must be lonely
+sitting here by himself, and that he should have a dog, or
+even a cat. I told him about Tony, and all the wonderful
+things he could do. Before I came away he made me
+promise I would come to see him again. Yet just as I was
+going out a sort of vague suspicion of other things appeared
+to float into his consciousness. He detained me, with his
+hand on my shoulder. “When you first came in,” he said,
+“I thought something perhaps was worrying you, that you
+had something on your mind.” He paused. For an
+instant I had seen in him what I had seen when I had
+listened to him preach; for an instant I was on the point of
+resuming my seat, and telling him all I had come to tell him,
+but he himself broke the charm next moment by saying
+good-night. “And when you come again you won’t be
+shy?” he added, smiling wanly.</p>
+
+<p>He did not accompany me downstairs, but stood on the
+landing till I had opened the hall-door. And as I pulled it
+after me, and ran down the steps, I knew I should never go
+back.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Spring gave place to summer, and still I kept studiously to
+my books. I saw less of Owen, for in the afternoons I played
+cricket, and Owen did not. On the thirteenth of June my
+examination commenced, and from the first I did well,
+having good luck with the papers. On Tuesday evening
+when I went home I had only one more exam. in front of me,
+and it would take place the following afternoon. After that
+I should be free for the summer.</p>
+
+<p>It was a hot, breathless kind of night, and I did not intend
+to work too much. I loafed about the shop after tea, talking
+to Miss Izzy. She had asked me to go to the Free Library
+to get her a book, but nothing on the list she had given me,
+though it was a fairly long one, was in, and I had come back
+with a tale of my own selecting.</p>
+
+<p>“You might have got one of Annie Swan’s,” Miss Izzy
+said, eyeing the work I had chosen, dubiously, “but of
+course you couldn’t tell what ones I’d read.”</p>
+
+<p>“Annie Swan’s?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; they’re all good. Mr. Spicer mentioned ‘Carlowrie’
+from the pulpit on Sunday, and you don’t often
+hear <em>him</em> praise a novel.”</p>
+
+<p>“When he does it’s a spicy one,” said George, who was
+going out.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy took no notice.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got to meet the girl at a quarter-to-eight, so I can’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
+stop,” George threw back gaily from the door, which next
+moment swung after him, as he stepped into the street,
+fixing a flower in his button-hole.</p>
+
+<p>“You get ‘Aldersyde’ and read it,” said Miss Izzy, “or
+‘Across Her Path.’”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you said Carl-something-or-other.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll maybe like the others better. If George McAllister
+would join the literary society instead of running about
+the streets at nights it would answer him better. Who’s
+this girl he’s going to meet?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s only talk, I suppose. Girls have more sense than to
+bother with the likes of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think so?” I murmured sceptically. “The
+kind that George cares for I don’t imagine have very
+much.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know nothing about them. If you’d any sisters
+you’d know more.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m very glad I haven’t,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy bounced round. “Why?” she demanded
+sharply. “Girls can do everything as well as men can;
+only they never get the chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all rot,” I said ungallantly. “They’re quite
+different. You might as well compare cats and dogs.”</p>
+
+<p>“And we’re the cats, I suppose? It’s well you’re still a
+puppy.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean you, Miss Izzy. I know there are exceptions.
+But most girls don’t think; or if they do, it’s
+only about who’s going to marry them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t think! Well, of all!—And you and George
+McAllister and the others—you think a lot, don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“George doesn’t,” I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>“But <em>you</em> do—especially about yourself. Do you know
+this, Peter Waring, you’re about as conceited and full of
+yourself as a monkey that’s been taught a few tricks!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m going away to-morrow, and you’ll not see me
+again for a long time.”</p>
+
+<p>This was not fair, as I knew it would soften Miss Izzy,
+and it had indeed this result. “I don’t mind seeing you,”
+she confessed, with a sigh, “if that’s all. It’s hearing you
+talk. You may give me your photograph if you like.”</p>
+
+<p>I had had my photograph taken quite recently for Mrs.
+Carroll’s birthday, and I ran upstairs and brought one
+down. Miss Izzy examined it critically. “I’ve got a red
+plush frame at home that’s about your mark.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t put me in red plush,” I begged.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy looked up from the photograph to the original.
+“Is red plush not good enough for you? You’d like a
+gold frame, maybe?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not that,” I said hastily. “It’s only that I don’t
+care much for red plush. Can’t you get a plain frame?
+I will get one for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, thanks. I always put a plain person in an ornamental
+frame: it gives them a better chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right.”</p>
+
+<p>There was never any use trying to get an advantage over
+Miss Izzy in verbal skirmishes, so I gave in, and, as the shop
+appeared to be comparatively deserted to-night, I sat down
+on an empty wooden box, and read aloud to her the first
+two chapters of the novel I had brought from the library.
+It was Hardy’s “Two on a Tower,” and as I turned the
+pages, the circumstances, so different, under which I had
+read them before, kept floating into my mind. When I had
+finished the second chapter, and drummed for a while with
+my heels against the box, I went upstairs, and got out my
+notes on French composition to look them over before to-morrow’s
+examination. The room, although the window
+was wide open, seemed to me unbearably stuffy, and
+moreover I had a slight headache and felt tired and irritable.
+I put up with the heat for half an hour, and then undressed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
+and sat down in my nightshirt close to the window, which
+looked out on to a dirty strip of back garden, threaded with
+clothes-lines, and forming, after dark, a kind of debased
+Paradise for dissipated cats.</p>
+
+<p>At half-past ten or so George stepped jauntily in.
+“Hello! Not done yet?” He took the now withered
+flower from his button-hole and flung it out among the
+cats; then he began to turn over some papers I had laid
+down on the table in the exact order I required them.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll mix those up,” I said crossly. “Leave them
+alone.”</p>
+
+<p>George threw the papers down. “All right. Keep
+your wool on!” Two or three of the sheets fluttered to
+the floor.</p>
+
+<p>I picked them up in a very bad temper, and George began
+to whistle—the same few bars over and over again. “Oh,
+shut up,” I cried. “Can’t you see I’m working?”</p>
+
+<p>“Temper! Temper!” said George, cheerfully. “I’ll
+have to tell Katherine about this!”</p>
+
+<p>He was standing before the looking-glass, and had begun
+to remove his dickey; but at the very moment of speaking
+he knew he had made a mistake. He looked round with a
+sort of foolish, apologetic grin. I, too, knew that his words
+had slipped out unintentionally, for I had never mentioned
+Katherine’s name to him. There were, in fact, only two
+ways in which he could have come by his information:
+either Aunt Margaret had managed to get hold of some of
+my letters again, or else he had read one of them himself.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” I asked coldly, looking steadily
+into his eyes as they were reflected in the glass.</p>
+
+<p>George tried to laugh it off. “I was only joking,” he
+said, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>But I wanted a better explanation than this.</p>
+
+<p>“Who told you about Katherine?” I asked, getting up
+from my chair deliberately, and walking over to him, while<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
+he spun round to meet me with bright eyes and a forced
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter? What are you losin’ your rag
+about? I don’t want to annoy you.”</p>
+
+<p>“The matter is this: I want to know if you have been
+reading my letters? If you have, you must have unlocked
+the box I keep them in.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never unlocked any box.” George backed away from
+me, his eyes not leaving mine.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better tell me,” I said, but George would say
+nothing further. He stood with his back now against the
+wall. I struck him on the cheek with my open hand.
+“Answer,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>I saw his eyes turn to the door, and anticipated the spring
+he made to get past me. The next moment I had him by
+the throat and we were struggling together. Suddenly I
+released my hold, flinging him from me. He struck out at
+me as I came toward him again, but it was the feeble, half-hearted
+blow of a coward, and I felt my fist in contact with
+his face, almost as if he had run up against it. He staggered
+back, and a crimson stream poured down over his chin and
+on to his shirt, making a horrible mess, while he stood
+blubbering like a baby. I did not hit him again, but simply
+watched him. I knew he was really more frightened than
+hurt, for though his nose was bleeding profusely, I had seen
+it do that on several occasions before, quite spontaneously.
+We must, all the same, have kicked up a considerable
+racket, for I heard the sound of quick footsteps in the
+passage, and then our door was flung open and a wild figure
+rushed in. It was Aunt Margaret, in a stained, red dressing-gown,
+her black eyes blazing in her big, puffy face. Her
+huge loose body shook and panted with rage as she turned
+from George to me. I stepped quickly out of her way, for
+there was something rather fearful in the great white mask
+of hate she turned on me. She said not a word, but shooting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
+out an arm, like a shoulder of mutton, gripped me by the
+collar of my nightshirt, and began to rain down a torrent of
+heavy blows on my head and uplifted arms. I protected
+myself as well as I could, and at last, with a violent wrench,
+tore myself out of her grasp, my nightshirt ripping down to
+the hem, a considerable portion of it remaining in Aunt
+Margaret’s hand. “Stop that!” I shouted furiously, but
+she came at me again, her fat body panting yet displaying
+an incredible activity, her eyes shining with madness.</p>
+
+<p>I knew there would be mischief done, for I saw her catch
+up an iron rod that was part of George’s trouser-stretcher.
+I was really frightened now, and made a dive to get past her
+and out of the door. I felt her nails tear my naked shoulder;
+at the same moment I flung up my arm and, it may be,
+saved my life, for something crashed down over my elbow,
+striking on the back of my head with a sickening jar that
+I seemed to hear as the floor swept up to meet me.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>When I opened my eyes I was lying in bed, with a hot jar
+at my feet, and the pungent irritation of smelling-salts in
+my nostrils. Uncle George was in the room, and there was
+a stranger there also. I knew what had taken place, and,
+if I hadn’t remembered, there was an atrocious pain in my
+head to remind me. I put up my hand and discovered my
+head was bandaged.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said the stranger, drawing closer. “How do
+you feel now?”</p>
+
+<p>“My head’s pretty sore,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>He mixed me something in a glass and I drank it. Uncle
+George came over and began to ask questions, but the
+doctor pulled him away. “Leave him to go to sleep now:
+he’ll be better able to talk in the morning. It might have
+been a nasty thing. I’ll look in to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>I had closed my eyes, and when I opened them again I
+was alone and in the dark. A ray of moonlight floated
+through the window and lay across the floor where George’s
+bed had been, but the bed itself was gone, and I wondered
+languidly how they had been able to take it away without
+my hearing anything. In spite of an abominable headache
+I felt drowsy—perhaps it was the effect of whatever drug I
+had taken—and I must very soon have lost consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>The first person I saw in the morning was Uncle George,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
+who carried me in my breakfast. My head still ached,
+though not nearly so violently. While I drank a cup of tea
+Uncle George sat in silence, his eyes fixed on me, with an
+expression of anxiety that was almost comic. As for me,
+I felt better, and, when Uncle George had removed the tray,
+I allowed him to tell me how sorry he was, but without
+replying or giving him any encouragement. I could see he
+was dying for me to say something, but I thought a little
+suspense would not do him any harm, so I maintained a
+discreet quiet. Secretly I was glad, for this disagreeable
+adventure gave me just what I had needed, but I was far
+from letting Uncle George know that.</p>
+
+<p>“She wasn’t responsible,” said Uncle George, dejectedly,
+and plunging straight to the heart of the subject. “You
+know she has to take drugs sometimes on account of the
+pain she suffers, and they have an effect upon her. I tell
+you this in confidence, and that last night she had taken
+more than she intended to, and didn’t really know what she
+was doin’. But you must forgive her, Peter. And then
+she is jealous of you—I may as well tell you everything—she
+is jealous when she thinks of the difference between you
+and George, and that you will be a gentleman, while George
+and the others’ll have to get along as best they can—and
+times are so bad, and there’s so few openings for lads nowadays.
+This drug she had taken——” He stopped and his
+eyes fastened on mine appealingly.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you want me to do?” I asked, smoothing
+down the sheet.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George moved nervously in his chair, but did not
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going home to-day,” I went on.</p>
+
+<p>“Home? You’ll be waiting for a day or two—till you
+get quit of this pain in your head, won’t you? And then
+there’s your examination! Will they take marks off if you
+get a doctor’s certificate?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
+
+<p>“A certificate for what?”</p>
+
+<p>“That you can’t go in for the examination.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going in for the exam. And I’m certainly going
+home.”</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George, who had never ventured to remonstrate
+with me on any subject whatever since my arrival, and who
+treated me as, if anything, slightly older than himself, did
+not begin now. “And what will you tell them?” was all
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Would you like me to say I fell downstairs?” I suggested
+innocently.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George fidgeted. “I don’t want you to tell a lie,”
+he made answer, which was a pretty big one for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t mind,” I observed, pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George considered this. “I suppose there’s times,
+maybe, when it’s best not to tell all the truth,” he brought
+out lamely.</p>
+
+<p>“This is one when I should think it would be best not to
+tell any of it,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George was silent. I was not letting him off particularly
+easily.</p>
+
+<p>“There must, however, be two lies told,” I pursued.
+“The first by me, and the second by you, in a letter saying
+you can’t take me back after the holidays—that you haven’t
+room—any reason you like.”</p>
+
+<p>“But won’t you come back?” asked Uncle George,
+dolefully. “You were always quite comfortable, quite
+happy till—till this accident. And it wouldn’t have happened
+if you hadn’t been knocking George about. I don’t
+know what he had done on you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was never happy,” I said impatiently. “Either you
+or Aunt Margaret will have to write as I say, or I’ll tell my
+father exactly what happened. This accident, as you call
+it, very nearly did for me: and it’s only one thing out of a
+lot.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Your poor aunt wants to come and tell you how sorry
+she is.”</p>
+
+<p>“My poor aunt needn’t bother. I know exactly how
+sorry she is. If it had been the ceiling that had fallen on
+me and killed me outright, I don’t fancy she’d have minded
+much—except for the mess.”</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George regarded me mournfully. “You’re very
+unforgiving,” he said. “I know you’ve a right to say hard
+things, but——”</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me that this was going a bit too far. “What
+do you mean by unforgiving?” I asked. “Haven’t I
+promised not to tell?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not that,” said Uncle George.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it then? Do you want me to sacrifice myself
+simply that you may make so much a week out of me?
+Don’t you know that Aunt Margaret has always hated me
+like poison? Don’t you know she is pretty constantly
+under the influence of whatever it is she takes, though you
+speak as if this were the first time? I’m not such a fool
+that I can’t see what’s going on. She’s always prying about
+my things and reading my letters. Besides, in the very
+beginning, you know as well as I do that I came to live here
+expecting to have a room to myself and not to be stuck with
+George.”</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George did not reply, but he looked as he sat there,
+with his gray head bent, the picture of dejection.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry if I’ve hurt your feelings, Uncle George, for
+you’ve been always very kind and decent to me, and if there
+was no one here but you and Alice I would come back
+certainly. But as it is, I can’t; I really can’t. I wanted
+to leave at Christmas, only my father wouldn’t let
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>As I watched him lift his mild, sheep-like face, and go out,
+I pitied him—almost enough to have promised to do what
+he wanted, which would have been idiotic. “If he’d had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
+any sense,” I told myself, “he’d have clapped Aunt Margaret
+into a ‘home’ or an asylum, or whatever it is, long
+ago. But he’s too soft-hearted to do anything but make
+himself miserable.”</p>
+
+<p>During the morning little Alice came in several times to
+see me. The doctor also called and examined my head, into
+which he had put a couple of stitches last night. It was
+only a scalp wound, he said, and thought I might go back
+to Newcastle that afternoon if I felt up to it.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner-time George appeared, looking very sheepish,
+and shuffling his feet. “How are you?” he asked. “Ma
+says you’re goin’ home this afternoon, so I thought I’d drop
+in an’ say good-bye. I’m sorry about this. It’s my fault,
+an’ it’s rotten for your exam. I only read one letter. I
+went to ma’s work-basket for the scissors, an’ I saw it there
+lying open, an’ I read it without thinking. That’s the God’s
+truth, whether you believe it or not, an’ there was nothin’
+in it you need mind.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it’s all right,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“All the same it’s damned putrid luck about the exam.”</p>
+
+<p>“It can’t be helped. Besides, I’m going to have a shot at
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll have to cut on. So long, Peter.” He grinned
+as he held out a big hand, which, like his face, was covered
+with freckles.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>My examination was at three, and at two o’clock I got up.
+If I hadn’t done so well on the other papers, probably I
+should have let it go, but it seemed, in the circumstances,
+a pity to spoil my results if I could possibly avoid it. Yet
+when I lifted my head from the pillow it throbbed so violently
+that I thought I should have to lie down again. I steadied
+myself, holding on to the bed-post, but presently I was able
+to finish dressing and go downstairs. Miss Izzy was in the
+shop, alone, and she gazed at me with keen curiosity. I
+smiled, though I was really feeling fairly bad.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you better?” Miss Izzy asked, for some reason
+speaking in a kind of hoarse whisper.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve a beastly headache, that’s all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not much wonder. <em>She</em> did it, didn’t she?” Miss
+Izzy was all eyes and secrecy.</p>
+
+<p>I nodded.</p>
+
+<p>“She’s getting worse,” Miss Izzy announced in an awed
+tone. “She’s really not in her right senses. I don’t know
+what she’ll be doing next. You’re going to-day, aren’t
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—after the exam. I wish you would ask Alice to
+pack my things for me; she can do it all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll help her. I’ll tell you this, I’ve been looking out
+for another job this while back, and I think I’ve got one.
+That’s between ourselves; but I can’t put up with her any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
+longer. I’ll drop you a postcard; give me your
+address.”</p>
+
+<p>I scribbled it on a bit of paper she handed me.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy glanced at it and stuffed it in her pocket.
+“Right oh! Here’s somebody coming in; they never give
+you a minute’s peace—— Are you away?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I think I’ll take a cab.”</p>
+
+<p>The customer had entered, but Miss Izzy only glared at
+her. “I’m sure you shouldn’t be going at all. It may just
+give you brain fever or something!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t think so,” I smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Izzy nodded at me as she advanced reluctantly to her
+duty. “I’ll see you later.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. You’ll not forget to tell Alice?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; that’ll be all right.”</p>
+
+<p>At the stand by the gas-works I got into a hansom and
+drove off. I kept my cap on the seat beside me, for any
+pressure on my head was painful. Fortunately I had only
+a short distance to go, and once in the cool airy hall I felt
+better. But my bandaged appearance created quite a
+sensation. Everybody stared at me, and one of the superintendents
+came to ask me if I had met with an accident.
+I told him I had fallen downstairs, at which he indulged in
+a somewhat obvious jest.</p>
+
+<p>The paper suited me and did not require any great
+effort, but when I had finished I was glad. Outside, I
+had to repeat my fiction of falling downstairs, and listen
+to various versions of the superintendent’s joke, before I
+was able to get Owen by himself. We went into the Botanic
+Gardens and sat down on the first vacant bench, where
+I told him what had actually happened. He did not appear
+to realize that I might have been killed, and, in spite of his
+sympathy and the questions he asked, I knew his thoughts
+were really hovering round the examination, and that he was
+weighing the chances of his having retained his last year’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
+exhibition. We talked of my adventure, but, as we did so,
+unconsciously, he drew the examination paper from his
+pocket and unfolded it. Owen had not been doing so well
+as I had, and a good deal depended on the marks he got
+this afternoon. “I wouldn’t mind,” he said, “only there’s
+something I’m doing which the pater will make me give up
+if I don’t keep my ‘ex.’”</p>
+
+<p>“If I’d been killed,” I said, “I wonder if you’d have gone
+over the questions with Grimshaw or O’Brian!”</p>
+
+<p>Owen glanced at me to see if I were serious. He had by
+this time spread out the blue sheet on his knees. “What
+did you put for ‘cane-bottomed chair?’” he asked,
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>But my interest in the exam. had vanished. “Oh, I
+don’t know—‘chaise cannée,’ or something. Look here,
+Owen, will you come and see me off at the station? I
+have to go back to the house, of course, to get my things,
+but I’d rather have somebody with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Chaise cannée?’ How did you think of it? I
+wonder if it’s right? I put ‘au fond de jonc,’ but I’m
+sure that’s rot. ‘Chaise cannée.’ You know, it’s not fair
+giving things like that! What do you think?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of ‘au fond de jonc’? I don’t think much of it.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was depressed. “It doesn’t sound right, does it?
+What did you put for ‘fire-dogs?’ O’Brian put ‘chiens
+de feu.’”</p>
+
+<p>“O’Brian’s a fool,” I answered, truthfully.</p>
+
+<p>Owen laughed, but without merriment, and I was pretty
+sure he had put ‘chiens de feu’ himself. “You might
+drop that beastly paper,” I said, “and tell me if you’ll come
+or not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I’ll come. But tell me just this one thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“What? ‘Fire-dogs?’—‘chenets.’”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Chenets?’ Are you sure? You’re awfully clever
+at those out-of-the-way words!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
+
+<p>“It’s not an out-of-the-way word. ‘Chiens de feu’ are
+the sort of things that’ll be chasing you and O’Brian in the
+next world.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen laughed ruefully, but another question, in spite of
+his promise, was already hovering on his lips.</p>
+
+<p>“Come along,” I said, getting up. “What good does
+it do worrying over the rotten thing now?” And I tore
+my paper in two, and let the pieces go fluttering down the
+path on the wind.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>In the morning Tony’s familiar scratching at my door
+reminded me that I was home again, and this time for two
+long, idle months. I was very sleepy, but I struggled out
+of bed with half-open eyes, and let him in. As I closed
+the door again, I trod on one of his paws. He gave a sharp
+yelp, and then a great wagging of his tail to show that he
+knew it had been an accident. Jumping on to the bed he
+scrambled between the sheets, and I followed, taking what
+room he would give me. I lay trying to go to sleep,
+while he sprawled over me. Then when he had thoroughly
+wakened me up he went to sleep himself.</p>
+
+<p>I lay listening to the sea and thinking of what I should
+do that day. I would bathe after breakfast; I would take
+Tony with me, which would mean bathing off the sand, for
+Tony could not dive, and had a foolish habit, when on the
+rocks, of trying to lap the sea up to the level he wanted it
+at. But I had forgotten my plastered head; bathing, I
+supposed, would be out of the question for at least a week.
+So, when breakfast was over, I stuffed a book into my
+jacket pocket, and strolled in the direction of Derryaghy
+woods. I had the long June day before me, and perfect
+freedom to do just as I pleased with it. The book I had
+chosen was “Twelfth Night,” the influence of Count Tolstoy,
+so far as I was concerned, having suffered an eclipse. I
+had read no second work by him, and the questionings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
+stirred up by “Anna Karénine” had sunk quietly to
+sleep. Owen, a day or two ago, had got hold of “Katia,”
+and “The Kreutzer Sonata,” but I, I regret to say, had not
+a line of the master’s in my possession.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, I was but a degenerate disciple, and moreover
+unfaithful. For Owen and I had sent the great man a
+letter for the New Year, protesting allegiance, and had
+actually received a reply, which, considering it had almost
+moved Owen to tears, I had allowed him to keep. He regarded
+it with the kind of veneration that, in earlier days,
+a devout pilgrim may have regarded some relic of a saint.
+I shouldn’t have been surprised to learn that he wore it,
+tied up in a little bag, somewhere beneath his clothes.
+Really it had been quite decent; though that a man of
+world-wide fame, who must have been besieged by communications
+of all kinds and from all sorts of persons, should
+have found time to understand and reply kindly to the
+epistle of a couple of youngsters, far away in a benighted
+island, I’m afraid did not strike me then as quite the
+wonderful thing it was. The letter, however, was not to
+me, and Owen, at all events, had found it wonderful
+enough. In spite of my share in the matter, the spirit
+of our enterprise had been Owen’s. The epistle we had
+concocted had expressed Owen, and Owen alone, and it
+was delightfully intelligent of the master to have seen
+behind its crudity something worth encouraging. He had
+actually asked us—that is Owen—to write again—not at
+once and under the immediate influence of his letter, but
+in a month or two. And Owen had written again. By
+that time I had had the sense to recognize that I was only
+a shadow in this matter, and to give him a free field. He
+had waited the full two months, which I, had I felt his
+enthusiasm, could never have done, and had then written
+the second letter. This letter I had insisted must be private.
+I had refused to take any part in its composition, or even<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
+to read it when it was finished, though Owen had told me
+all that was in it—a complete account of himself, of his
+father’s position, of his own acquirements and abilities,
+his prospects, his ideals, ending up with a petition for advice
+as to the direction his studies ought to take, and as to what
+career lay open to him. The reply to this effusion had
+not yet come or I should have heard of it, but I hadn’t
+the slightest doubt that when it did turn up Owen would
+follow its instructions minutely, down to the smallest particulars,
+even were that to entail the wearing of peas in his
+shoes. It was the sort of thing that was completely beyond
+me. I could not have borne to admit, even to myself, that
+anybody was so much my superior as all that. And then,
+very softly, at the bottom of my soul, I preferred “A
+Midsummer Night’s Dream” to “Anna Karénine.” I
+not only preferred it, but I was sure it was a work of far
+finer genius. Of course I was always sure that the things
+I happened to prefer were far finer, but in this particular
+instance I have not altered my opinion.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>As I wandered up into the woods, followed by the lagging
+Tony, I knew it was going to be a very hot day, though
+it was not nearly so hot at present as Tony pretended.
+I hunted about till I had found a pleasant place—where the
+rising ground formed a kind of natural couch, covered
+with golden moss and bracken, and where the sun at noon
+would not be too strong as it dropped down through thick
+green beech branches. I took my book from my pocket,
+but it was only to make myself more comfortable, not with
+any intention of reading. I lay there and let the green
+summer morning steal into my soul, staining my mind
+to its own deep cool colour, while Tony gnawed at the trunk
+of a fallen tree, stripping off the bark in sheets, till he was
+tired and hot, when he came over beside me and stretched
+himself on the bracken, with his red tongue hanging out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
+and his eyes nearly closed. And I lay on in the enchanted
+morning, my hands under my head, gazing up through the
+flat, shady branches, and thinking “long, long thoughts.”
+Already I seemed to have cast from me, as a snake his old
+skin, the weight and grime of a year of town life; already
+I felt better, cleaner, felt the sap of my youth fresh and
+strong within me.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour or two I opened my book and began to
+read:—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“If music be the food of love, play on;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">The appetite may sicken, and so die.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">That strain again! it had a dying fall;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">O! it came o’er my ear like the sweet sound</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">That breathes upon a bank of violets,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Stealing and giving odour....”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I was lost in that world of poetry and music, of lingering
+melodies and songs, dreamy and happy and sad. Romance!
+romance! I felt it stirring in my blood, singing within me!
+This play of passion, where passion is never stormy, but a
+kind of dreaming of love, exactly suited my present mood.
+Love was the world I lived in, love was in the rustling
+of the beech-leaves, love was in the breaking of the invisible
+sea, love was even in the snores of Tony.</p>
+
+<p>I closed the book, my mind filled with laughter and love
+and poetry. Beautiful figures glided before me through
+the sun-washed, leaf-green air—Viola in her boy’s clothes—Olivia—moving
+in an atmosphere of sensuous sweetness.
+I imagined myself a page, visiting Olivia in her palace; I
+imagined her falling in love with me; I began to weave
+a romance of my own, in which scenes from other romances
+lingered, the music of their words....</p>
+
+<p>The sunlight splashed through the beech-leaves on to
+the green moss, and where it fell the green took a hue of
+gold. Green arcades opened out into the heart of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
+summer woods. Rarely came the note of a bird, but the
+woods were full of life; the flashing whites and grays of
+rabbits appeared on the clearing nearer the house; there
+were mysterious movements in the brushwood. I roused
+reluctant Tony and we went down to the stream. We
+were out in the broad sunshine here, and the rocks were
+quite hot. The dark green silky waterweed spread out,
+seeming to flow with the rapid, shallow water, and sleepy
+summer noon held me spell-bound. In the shadow of the
+rocks were deep pools, where the water looked almost black.
+Tony waded out into mid-stream and began to lap up the
+water. Then he lifted his head, his red, dripping tongue
+still hanging out, his dark, beautiful eyes half-closed, and
+looked at me while he panted. The woods on either side
+were full of green shadow and mystery. We walked home
+over soft turf and across a blazing field dotted with fly-tormented
+cows. Tony was too hot even to give them a
+passing bark. On the right the ground sloped down gently,
+forming a vast meadow, with scattered trees and flaming
+gorse-bushes; and beyond, under the deep blue sky, the
+great glorious sea danced and gleamed, blue also, with a
+long white line where the surf curled up over the flat, sun-drenched
+sand.</p>
+
+<p>I felt lazy and contented, conscious only of the warmth
+of the sun and the beauty of this world, wrapped in a kind
+of sleepy happiness. In the afternoon I would go in search
+of some of my old friends; go out, perhaps, with Willie
+Breen in his boat, though as a rule boating in any form
+bored me to death. Trivial and bizarre thoughts passed
+through my mind. I wished the world was the way it is
+in old romances and fairy-tales. I was sure that this was
+the very day on which some wonderful thing would happen;
+when one might find a magic door leading into a strange
+world that was yet quite close at hand; for all my life
+long I had had the feeling that such a world was there.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>During the next three weeks I led a solitary enough life,
+in the woods and by the sea. I read a good deal, and
+dreamed still more. In the mornings, and often in the
+afternoons as well, I went for long swims, and, coming back,
+lay in the sun on the rocks, sometimes for hours at a time,
+so that the skin all over my body had been tanned to a deep
+golden brown. And I was growing stronger. I could feel
+it; I could even see it in my limbs, which were becoming
+more muscular. And with my increasing physical strength
+I suppose other alterations took place—alterations in my
+outward appearance, marking the passage from boyhood to
+adolescence. Annie Breen, for instance, had spoken to me
+several times of late in a way that betokened a consciousness
+of this change; and more than one girl whom I met on
+the road in the evenings, when wishing me good-night, had
+put something into her greetings which made it quite different
+from what it would have been last year. Several of the
+village boys, no older than I, had already sweethearts, and
+I knew I had but to give a sign to any of these girls to
+have a sweetheart also; and while I held myself aloof, and
+responded with the barest politeness, I none the less felt
+flattered.</p>
+
+<p>I received news of my examination. I had done better
+than I had expected, getting first place in the school
+and third in Ireland. Owen, too, had not done badly; at
+all events he had retained his exhibition.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I met Owen at the station, and, as he jumped out of the
+carriage, he cried, “I’ve got the letter. It was waiting for
+me when I reached home.” He waved it triumphantly in
+my face, beaming with the delight of it and with the pleasure
+of showing it to me.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t possibly read it here,” I said, grasping his bag.</p>
+
+<p>“And I say, you know, you did rippingly in the exams.
+I knew you would.”</p>
+
+<p>He had come down by the first train, and I wanted to
+take him for a bathe, but he was so excited that he could
+hardly listen to me. I had brought our towels, and I
+delivered Owen’s bag to a carman outside to take up to the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>“Where are we going now? It was jolly decent of him
+writing, wasn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who? Tolstoy? Not bad. But we’re going to
+bathe: I waited for you. It’s some distance away, unless
+you would rather wade in off the shore; there’s plenty of
+time, however.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll do whatever you like.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I think we’ll go round to Maggie’s Leap.”</p>
+
+<p>As we went we talked of his precious letter. “You won’t
+like it, I daresay,” he said. “It’s not much in your line.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish you would tell me what my line is. I’ve been
+trying to discover during the last fortnight.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I know very well.... There’s one thing he says that
+I can’t quite——”</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it’s this: He says everything is in the Gospels.
+What people have got to do is to read over the words of
+Christ, and mark with a red pencil everything that is
+perfectly clear to them.”</p>
+
+<p>“A red pencil?”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was too eager to notice anything. “Yes. What are
+you amused at? Then you cut those bits out, and never
+bother about the rest. In what you cut out you’ll find
+everything that it is necessary to know in order to map
+out your life and your work. The whole teaching of Christ,
+all that is essential, will be in those bits. Later on you may
+read over the other things, that were obscure, and perhaps
+some of them will by then be plain. I am to consider what
+kind of work I have a taste for, and at the same time the
+work I devote myself to must fulfil certain tests or I am to
+have nothing to do with it. Work you do with your hands
+is best of all. I haven’t shown the letter at home yet. I
+thought I’d think it quietly over down here and talk about
+it with you. We’ll read the Gospels together. My father
+wants me to be a solicitor and go into his place, but I don’t
+want that. On the other hand, I must make up my mind
+soon, I suppose. I’m seventeen, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>I took the letter from him, and read it slowly and with
+some difficulty as we walked along. After that, I thought
+over it for a while.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you have to earn your living?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, naturally. There are a good many of us, you
+know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I don’t see how the Gospels are going to help you,
+no matter what way you mark them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because you’ll have to live as other people do, unless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
+you can afford to be different; and other people don’t live
+according to the Gospels.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“A carpenter, a gardener, for instance,” he began,
+“couldn’t they live in accordance with the teaching of
+Christ? Tolstoy says I will never be happy unless I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all very well for Tolstoy talking: he is his own
+master and has plenty of money. But how can you be a
+carpenter or a gardener? Your father would never allow
+you to, and the first thing would be a quarrel with him. We
+go down here, over this wall.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen scrambled after me.</p>
+
+<p>“A man must leave his father and his mother.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Owen dear, but you’re not a bit the kind of man
+who does, to say nothing of leaving your brother and your
+sisters. At any rate, while you are learning to be a gardener
+your father will have to keep you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I only mentioned those trades because they happened
+to occur to me; there are plenty of others.”</p>
+
+<p>“There are not plenty: that’s just the difficulty I’ve
+been finding.”</p>
+
+<p>We clambered down on to the rocks, from which the sea
+stretched away, deep and clear and blue, glittering in the
+hot sunshine, moving with a low, smooth swell, like some
+huge, splendid, living creature.</p>
+
+<p>“You will require a profession in which you can be your
+own master from the very beginning. It wouldn’t do to be
+subordinate to anybody who hadn’t had a letter from Tolstoy,
+or perhaps even read ‘Anna Karénine.’ If you go in for
+the Church, for example, you will have to do what you are
+told until you get a church of your own, when you’ll be
+always having rows with your parishioners and elders, for, of
+course, you’ll have to preach the Tolstoy gospel or the
+tests will get in the way. If you become a doctor you won’t
+make a living, because you will want to doctor the widows<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
+and the fatherless, who are no use in the matter of fees. I
+admit the lawyer idea is absurd—even without Tolstoy and
+the Gospels it wouldn’t have done—and no doubt your
+father only thought of it because he’s a solicitor himself.
+You’ll have to be content with something that fulfils perhaps
+one or two of the tests. Then, when you get married and
+have a swarm of children, your wife will rise in revolt against
+them <em>all</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can choose a suitable wife, and there’s no need to have
+a swarm of children. I shall have just as many as I can
+afford to bring up properly.... That reminds me, I
+brought you down the ‘Kreutzer Sonata.’ It’s in my bag.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right; but it’s always people like you, frightfully
+earnest and moral and all the rest of it, who have
+families of twelve or thirteen.”</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you I won’t have them,” said Owen, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“But Tolstoy himself——”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care a hang about Tolstoy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh—h! Owen!”</p>
+
+<p>“Tolstoy could give his children a decent start in life;
+and if he can do that, the more such a man has the better.”</p>
+
+<p>During the latter part of this conversation, all of which
+Owen was taking in dead seriousness, we were undressing,
+and I now dived into the deep, green, glittering water. I
+turned on my back and lay watching Owen, distinctly
+uneasy, stand hesitating on the edge of the rock.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it cold?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No; come along.”</p>
+
+<p>He pulled his shirt slowly off. “I brought you down
+some of the short stories too.”</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. “All right; I’ll read them when I come out.”</p>
+
+<p>But Owen was really anxious now only about the
+temperature of the water. He floundered in and came up
+spluttering. I was a much better swimmer than he, and
+circled about him, showing off, delighting in the power<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
+I felt. We swam out for fifty yards or so, and I timed
+my stroke with Owen’s. He looked very funny. His
+eyes stared straight before him as if he were set on some
+desperate adventure. On our way back I splashed him a
+little and he got angry, swallowing a lot of water. I told
+him how contrary to the teaching of the Gospels this was;
+when I asked him to drink a pint of salt water he should
+swallow a quart; etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>When we got to the rocks and he had scrambled out,
+scraping his knees and one of his elbows in doing so, for it was
+not easy to get out unless you knew the way, he was quite
+offended, and would hardly speak to me. I was shaking
+with laughter, but I said I was sorry and gave him some
+sticking-plaster. He took the sticking-plaster, but would
+have none of my sympathy, and on the way home I had to
+soothe him into a better temper. Then, as usual, the cloud
+passed quite suddenly, and he was all right. As we drew
+near the house I wondered, uneasily, what he would think
+of my father, and what he would think of my home. Before
+coming to us he had been staying in Scotland with people
+who had evidently possessed yachts and motor-cars and all
+kinds of things, whereas we could not even boast a spare
+bed, and he would have to sleep with me.</p>
+
+<p>When we came in, I introduced him to my father, who
+was working in the garden, and before dinner was over I
+was delighted to see that they were going to get on well
+together. Owen seemed to notice none of his peculiar
+habits, or, if he did, he was perfectly indifferent to them.
+He displayed an extraordinary interest in the school, asking
+all kinds of questions, and bringing out his own theories of
+education, which may or may not have emanated from the
+sage in Russia. I let them talk together without interfering
+much. I could see that my father was very favourably
+impressed, though the fact that such an admirable youth
+happened to be a particular friend of mine was naturally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
+perplexing. Owen was frightfully polite. He called my
+father “Sir,” and listened deferentially to everything he
+had to say, never offering his own opinion as of any particular
+value. They talked almost exclusively of education.
+Owen told how he was teaching a boy at home in the evenings,
+the son of their coachman, and how clever this boy
+was, and how he had got Mr. Gill senior to promise to pay
+his college fees if he did well at school during the next year
+or two. It was the first time I had heard of the matter,
+but I supposed it was the mysterious something which had
+interfered with his own work, and had made him so anxious
+about retaining his exhibition. “Didn’t <em>he</em> do splendidly?”
+Owen said suddenly, nodding his head in my direction.</p>
+
+<p>“Peter can be clever enough when he chooses,” my father
+answered dryly.</p>
+
+<p>This was to prevent me from exaggerating the merit of
+my achievement, but I did not care, for in my own mind my
+performance was somewhat stale already, and I did not give
+a fig for such distinctions. It occurred to me, as I watched
+them and listened to them, that Owen and my father were
+perhaps more alike, mentally and spiritually, than Owen
+and I, though my father had but a fraction of Owen’s fineness,
+and none of his generosity. They were related as a
+coarse weed and a delicate flower might be, but I was of a
+different genus. And then I thought that, though I cared
+little for Gerald, and loved Owen, perhaps it was Gerald with
+whom I had really most in common.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Owen and I were standing by the low sea-wall, looking out
+across the wet brown sands, when I saw her. It was a gray,
+cloudy day, and the air was full of mist and damp, which
+hung in heavy, livid-coloured veils over the black mountain-tops,
+and sometimes dropped half way down the slopes.
+The tide was out and the noise of the waves sounded remote
+and musical. The broad stretch of wet sand and shingle
+reached out to the cold, gray-green sea, with its white curling
+line of foam; and at the water’s edge, a little bent forward,
+her light dress floating out behind her in the fresh wind, one
+hand raised, holding the brim of her big black hat, she
+moved along, a solitary figure against the broad line of
+sea and sky. It was Katherine, and as I watched her it
+struck me that the whole picture, from her presence in it,
+became curiously like a Whistler water-colour. The next
+thing I noticed was that Katherine was quite grown-up,
+which had the effect of producing in me a sudden shyness,
+so that I made no attempt to go to meet her. Yet here was
+the meeting I had lain awake half the night imagining! I
+had an almost overpowering impulse to turn tail and slink
+away, and perhaps I might have done so had I been
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>Owen, who took no more interest in girls than in octogenarians,
+asked me what I was staring at.</p>
+
+<p>“At Miss Dale,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Who’s Miss Dale?”</p>
+
+<p>“Katherine.”</p>
+
+<p>“And who is Katherine?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Carroll’s niece.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Owen looked at me in surprise. “Aren’t you going
+to speak to her? I thought you knew her very well?”</p>
+
+<p>“So I do.”</p>
+
+<p>We clambered over the wall and crossed the beach to
+intercept her path. My idiotic nervousness was increased
+by Owen’s presence. She had noticed our approach now,
+and altered her own course to meet us. As she came up
+she smiled with her bright frank smile and held out her
+hand. She was perfectly natural and easy in her greeting,
+while I began to stammer and splutter. I managed to
+introduce Owen, saying he had come down yesterday, and
+we all three walked on together.</p>
+
+<p>“I wondered if I should see you,” she said. “We
+arrived this morning. Gerald is up at the house, but I had
+to come out and get some fresh air after our travels.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s p—plenty of it at all events,” I stuttered.</p>
+
+<p>“I like it. I like wind,” she added, turning her smile
+upon Owen. “Don’t you? It’s very nice to be back here
+again. I always love coming back to any place I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“When the tide is out it looks like a Whistler water-colour,”
+I went on, thinking it a pity that this should be lost.</p>
+
+<p>But probably neither Katherine nor Owen had ever
+heard of Whistler. “It looks to me very like rain,” said the
+former, glancing at the heavy clouds over Slieve Donard.
+Owen took no notice at all of my remark. “Conversation
+means nothing to Owen,” I reflected, impatiently,
+“unless it takes the form of argument. Anything merely
+suggestive or decorative is lost upon him.” And I felt
+annoyed because they had both begun to chatter commonplaces
+about Katherine’s journey—what kind of passage
+she had had; as if it mattered!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span></p>
+
+<p>Then I became lost in contemplation of her. A year had
+certainly made a tremendous difference! “Last winter she
+probably came out,” I said to myself, with vague memories
+of Miss Broughton’s novels. At all events, in twelve months
+she had managed to put at least five years between us.
+It was quite conceivable that she was already engaged
+to be married, while I was but a timid school-boy, who
+could only envy from afar the happiness of her lover. And
+the thought that perhaps there <em>was</em> a lover cast a vivid
+illumination on my own feeling for her, made plainer than
+ever the difference, how carefully veiled soever, between
+friendship and love. I loved her with that love which,
+idealize it as I might, was really the expression of a simple
+law of nature.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile she was talking to Owen, who was explaining
+to her some theory of the influence of the tides upon the
+earth, and of the moon on the tides. How, in the first five
+minutes, he had contrived to get on to such a subject I could
+not guess. It was fearfully like him, nevertheless, and
+Katherine appeared to be interested.</p>
+
+<p>No matter in what company he found himself Owen never
+talked about anything except the things he was interested
+in. Last night it had been a little delicious to hear him
+discuss Plato’s “Republic” with Miss Dick, who, though
+immensely pleased, was always at her silliest when taken
+seriously. To converse with Miss Dick was like trying to
+get a definite impression from a kaleidoscope; you no sooner
+fixed your attention on one particular idea than it dissolved
+into something quite different. And yet Miss Dick had
+views—political, religious, social,—derived from a deceased
+parent, who had been an apostle of free thought. Only she
+would interrupt her expression of the profoundest of these
+to wonder if Sissie McIldowie was really engaged to young
+Stevenson.</p>
+
+<p>And now Owen was talking to Katherine about the tides.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
+I watched her and knew she liked him. She liked his
+rough brown mane, his clear eyes, with their kindness and
+innocence, for Owen, in spite of the “Kreutzer Sonata” and
+the rest, was as innocent as a child. There was something
+fine about Owen, and it was very visible in his face.</p>
+
+<p>At present he quite monopolized the conversation, turning
+it into a sort of scientific discourse; and I knew so well
+that he had been reading some little book about tides—probably
+in the train on his way down. I yawned two or
+three times when he looked in my direction, but I might
+have spared myself the rudeness, for it had not the slightest
+effect upon him while Katherine kept on asking questions
+as if she found what he said absorbing. My apparent
+indifference simply had the result of producing a <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i>
+between them.</p>
+
+<p>“You ought to become a University Extension lecturer,”
+I said, maliciously. “You should write and ask Tolstoy
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a highly disagreeable remark to make, and as soon
+as I had said it I was filled with shame. Owen coloured
+and stopped talking at once. I was very sorry. Inwardly
+I went down on my knees to him and begged his pardon, but
+outwardly I showed only a sullen stolidity. I said something
+to Katherine, but she answered coldly, and turned
+again to Owen as if to make up to him for my bad manners.
+And at this my remorse degenerated into sulkiness.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, as we walked home together, I had the
+grace to apologize. “I’m sorry for what I said,” I muttered.
+“It was a most beastly thing to say. It’s not so much
+because it was rude as because it was rotten.”</p>
+
+<p>This distinction I cannot undertake here to explain; let
+it suffice that in my mind it was a very clearly defined one.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it doesn’t matter,” said Owen. “I always do talk
+either too much or too little.”</p>
+
+<p>After tea we went for a long walk and discussed all our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
+old subjects. But in my present mood they bored me,
+though I was determined not to show it. What I really
+wanted just then was to be alone, that I might recall the
+past and make plans for the future. We went to bed when
+we came in, but long after Owen had dropped asleep I lay
+awake, wrapped in beautiful, desolating dreams. I gave
+Owen a gentle kick, for he had begun to snore, which
+troubled the quiet that was necessary for the perfect enjoyment
+of my visions. It woke him up, which was not what
+I had intended, but it couldn’t be helped, and, before he had
+dropped asleep again, I was myself lost in slumber.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I happened on the thing by the merest accident. My father
+had been going through the papers in his desk the night
+before, tying up old letters in bundles, and burning many in
+the grate. He had been quite absorbed in this dusty task
+when Owen and I had come in from our walk, and he had
+been still absorbed in it when we had left him and gone up to
+bed. This afternoon we were to call for the Dales, and Owen
+was waiting for me now in the garden, sitting on the wall,
+nibbling nasturtium leaves, whistling, and swinging his legs
+to and fro, while I, having broken my shoe-lace, was in the
+parlour replacing it. And as I bent down, through the tail
+of my eye I caught a glimpse of something white between
+the desk and the wall. I laced up my shoe, and then,
+pushing the desk further to one side, with the help of the
+poker I fished out an envelope. There was no writing on
+this envelope, and the flap was loose, but inside I felt something
+stiff and flat, like a card or a photograph. I pulled it
+out. It was a photograph, considerably faded, and certainly
+most astonishing if it had fallen from my father’s desk, as I
+supposed it must have. For it represented a person very
+much like the ladies in the chorus at the Christmas pantomime
+I had gone to see with George—better looking, possibly,
+than most of them, but similarly clad, in doublet and tights,
+and with a velvet cap, with a cock’s feather stuck in it, set
+rakishly at the side of a curly head. The face wore the
+conventional simper such faces seem naturally to assume in
+the presence of photographers, displaying an admirable set
+of teeth. A sword dangled from the waist, a short cloak<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
+hung from the shoulders, and the right hand was raised to
+the cap in a dashing and coquettish salute. There was
+something so comical in the idea of my father, of all persons
+in the world, having treasured up this souvenir of what I
+took to be a youthful flight of fancy, that I laughed aloud,
+and was on the point of calling in Owen to show it to him,
+when I turned the photograph round and on the back read,
+in a sprawling feminine hand, “From Milly.”</p>
+
+<p>I stopped short. Owen was still kicking his heels against
+the whitewashed wall, still whistling, but I did not disturb
+him. I heard my father coming downstairs, and my first
+impulse was to cram both envelope and photograph into my
+pocket. I heard him in the hall, I heard him turn the handle
+of the parlour door, and then I went to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>“I found this,” I said, “on the floor.” And I held it out
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>My father glanced at it indifferently, but when he saw
+what it was a faint flush crept into his face. It was the first
+time I had ever seen him change colour. He took it from
+me without a word, and, putting it back in its envelope,
+unlocked the desk. He opened a drawer somewhere, and
+I saw him, still without speaking, slip in the envelope.
+Then he pulled down the lid of the desk, which shut with a
+sharp click, and turned to me.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know who it was?” he asked, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>I stammered and blushed. “I’m not sure—I think—
+Wasn’t it mamma?”</p>
+
+<p>He turned away without answering. “Owen is waiting
+for you,” he said, as I still hung about nervously. “I
+suppose you won’t be in for tea?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I replied, and went out to my friend.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry for keeping you,” I apologized; and as we
+walked round to Derryaghy I half thought of telling him of
+the incident.</p>
+
+<p>And my mother? I had known vaguely that she had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
+on the stage in some not particularly brilliant capacity, but
+somehow the real thing, in all its callous actuality, to have that
+suddenly thrust upon one, was very different. I did not like it.</p>
+
+<p>Visions of the girls I had seen in the pantomime kept
+rising before me with a disagreeable relevancy. They
+strutted before my mind’s eye just as they had strutted,
+jaunty and assured, about the stage, their eyes boldly seeking
+the male occupants of boxes. They swaggered by me
+with a peculiar movement of the hips, a perfect self-confidence;
+one of them even winked as she passed. And I
+saw their fat legs, their bold eyes; I heard them laugh, and
+sing idiotic songs, in shrill falsetto, about Bertie, and Charlie,
+and latch-keys, and staying out till three.</p>
+
+<p>I wished I had never found my mother’s portrait, though
+I tried to persuade myself that she only looked like that
+because she was dressed up for the theatre, and that in
+ordinary dress she must have been quite different. But
+my attempts to <em>see</em> her as different failed. I had nothing
+to go upon, no memories, no other portrait; for me tights
+and doublet would remain her perpetual garb. I was not
+disillusioned, for I had had no illusions—that is to say, I had
+thought very little about the matter—but I was certainly
+shocked. I remembered Mrs. Carroll’s reserve on the few
+occasions when I had questioned her. Mrs. Carroll must
+have known, and so must Miss Dick.</p>
+
+<p>It was, doubtless, fortunate that I had never built up
+any imaginary and sentimental picture of my mother, as
+I might easily have done. Mrs. Carroll’s presence in my
+life probably had prevented this.</p>
+
+<p>“Here we are,” cried Owen, catching me by the arm.
+“Wake up. I suppose you don’t know that you’ve been
+fast asleep all the way!”</p>
+
+<p>We found Katherine at the lodge, talking to the gardener’s
+wife, a stout, ruddy young woman, with a flaxen-headed
+little fellow clutching her by the skirts, one of my father’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
+youthful scholars, or, more likely, one of Miss McWaters’,
+since he was still at the age when problems connected with
+“twice times” awaken bewildering difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>We stopped and joined in the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t your brother coming?” Owen asked, after a
+minute or two.</p>
+
+<p>“He said he was. He’s up at the house; he’s got some
+new music.” Katherine smiled at me. “Do you mind
+hurrying him up? It’s a shame to bother you, but if nobody
+fetches him he’ll never come.”</p>
+
+<p>I complied with an extremely bad grace. It seemed to
+me I was always chosen for these messages. If Gerald
+didn’t like to come himself, why couldn’t he be left behind?
+I knew the others wouldn’t even wait for us; in fact, when
+I turned round, they had already begun to walk on slowly.</p>
+
+<p>I found Gerald busy with his music, and not looking in
+the least as if he intended to be anything else but busy with
+it all the afternoon. “The others are waiting,” I said,
+with sulky abruptness. “Are you ready?”</p>
+
+<p>He raised his head and his brown eyes rested on mine
+curiously. “They won’t wait very long,” he replied. “Do
+you really want to climb that ridiculous mountain?”</p>
+
+<p>I looked down sullenly. “Why not? We arranged to
+do so, didn’t we? Owen wants to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let them go alone, then. They’ve begun to study
+botany. Katherine was examining things through a little
+lens all yesterday evening.”</p>
+
+<p>His drawling irony made me furious. “We must go,”
+I said, shortly. I knew well enough that he knew what was
+passing in my mind, and that I had been fighting against
+it for the last fortnight. He was the only one, I fondly
+imagined, who <em>did</em> know, and I had begun to think that
+the spectacle of my jealousy was pleasing to him, and that
+he had his own delicate ways of encouraging it. He did not
+like Owen, yet, for some reason I could not fathom, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
+appeared to regard favourably his friendship with Katherine.
+That friendship had made astonishing strides in the past
+week or two. When we went anywhere together now, it
+was invariably Owen who was Katherine’s escort. Things
+seemed to arrange themselves naturally in that way, and
+this afternoon was no exception.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till I told him I would follow the others, and
+was leaving the room, that Gerald made up his mind to
+accompany me, and even then, about a quarter way up
+Slieve Donard, he announced that he had gone far enough
+and would wait here till they came down. Owen and
+Katherine were not in sight, for Gerald had made the ascent
+at the pace of the pilgrims in “Tannhäuser,” and I had had
+to keep with him. He stretched himself full length on the
+grass, and, as if it were an amusing question, asked me what
+I proposed doing. I did not know myself whether to wait
+with him here or to finish the climb. I stood hesitating,
+with a face like a thunder-cloud.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose they’re at the top by this time,” said Gerald,
+casually, and his supposition decided me.</p>
+
+<p>I climbed up alone and full of bitter thoughts. Presently
+I saw Owen and Katherine far above me, but they never
+once looked back. I remembered that day, long ago it now
+seemed when Katherine and I had climbed the hill from the
+Bloody Bridge Valley, and how I had helped her over rough
+places, as I supposed Owen was helping her now, and walked
+hand in hand with her.</p>
+
+<p>When I reached the summit I saw them standing together
+under the lee of a huge gray rock, gazing seaward. They
+heard my approach and turned round.</p>
+
+<p>“Where did you leave Gerald?” Katherine asked,
+amused. “I didn’t think he would get very far!”</p>
+
+<p>“You might have waited for me then,” I answered
+gruffly. “You were in a mighty hurry to start.”</p>
+
+<p>It gave me a sort of stupid pleasure to think I was showing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
+by my manner that I considered myself neglected, so I
+proceeded deliberately to be as unpleasant as possible.
+That I had joined them had obviously not annoyed them
+in the least—Katherine had certainly shown no annoyance
+when she had greeted me—yet I told myself that this was
+only pretence, and that they wished me away. And then,
+as I thought how there might have been some secret understanding
+between them, and that perhaps Katherine had
+arranged to be down at the lodge when we arrived so that
+she might send me back to the house for Gerald, I felt—though
+I really did not believe in any such scheming—a
+violent anger against them both. When she saw the kind
+of humour I was in, Katherine ceased to take any notice of
+me, and this made me worse. I had not sense enough
+to leave them. A kind of perversity seemed to force me to
+do everything I could to make myself objectionable. I
+had an insane desire to quarrel with Owen, and presently
+I contradicted him flatly when he said something I knew
+to be perfectly true. He flushed and his eyes brightened
+angrily, but he controlled himself. “What is the matter
+with you, Peter?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” I muttered.</p>
+
+<p>I bounded away from them. I ran down the mountain-side
+at the risk of breaking an ankle, leaping from one point
+to another. I did not pause when I came to where Gerald
+lay in the grass, but continued my headlong descent till I
+reached the woods. I had come down in an incredibly
+short time, and the violence of my flight had relieved me.
+I walked now at an ordinary pace, wondering what the
+others would think, conscious that I had made a fool of
+myself, yet laying all the blame on Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>The woods were silent save for the occasional note of a
+robin or the low twitter of a swallow. I stopped by a
+marshy hollow to look at a vivid splash of yellow irises, and
+I gathered an armful of them for Mrs. Carroll.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Owen and I dined at Derryaghy that night, but all through
+dinner I sat very quiet. No allusion was made by the
+others to my having left them, which showed, I thought,
+that they had discussed it among themselves and had agreed
+not to take any notice.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner Gerald stayed behind to smoke a cigarette,
+and I stayed with him. When we followed the others to
+the drawing-room, he went to the piano and began to play.
+Owen sat by the window looking out. He had not once
+spoken to me since I had left him and Katherine at the top
+of Slieve Donard; I thought he had even avoided meeting
+my glance, but I was not sure. Katherine and Miss Dick
+had each some needlework. Mrs. Carroll was not with us.
+From my corner of the room I watched Katherine as she
+worked, her beautiful head bowed in the lamp-light, and
+secretly, in my soul, I knew Owen was more fitted to be her
+mate than I. It is true, I did not believe he could love her
+so intensely, but the love he gave her would be more unselfish.
+I became lost in gloomy thoughts. I knew they
+both belonged to a world where I was a stranger, an outcast.
+In that hour I recognized my moral inferiority to Owen, and
+suddenly I felt how peaceful and quiet it would be in the
+thick darkness, with the grass over my head, and everything
+finished and forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald had begun to play the “Moonlight Sonata,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
+Chopinizing it, as he did everything, and perhaps this
+unhappy vision came to me from his music. At all events, it
+hovered before me in an intensity of sadness beneath which
+I shut my eyes. I got up by-and-by and crossed the room
+to where Katherine sat at her work. I pulled forward a
+chair and sat down near to her, and with my back to the
+others, so that what I said should be heard by her alone.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you come out with me?” I asked, in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Out? <em>Now</em>, do you mean?” She looked up in surprise,
+but she also spoke in lowered tones, and with, I
+thought, a certain coldness. At this my anger was stirred
+afresh.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>She seemed on the point of refusing. “Are you afraid?”
+I sneered.</p>
+
+<p>She appeared not to understand me. “Afraid! What
+is there to be afraid of?” After a moment she decided.
+“I will come in a minute or two; I want to finish this
+flower.”</p>
+
+<p>She returned perfectly calmly to her work. She was
+embroidering a table-cloth for her mother’s birthday, and
+was always saying she should never have it finished in time.
+I, with a burning heart, got up and strolled out on to the
+terrace, my hands in my pockets, and whistling below my
+breath, which I imagined lent an air of off-handedness to my
+exit. Once beyond the windows, however, my whistling
+ceased abruptly, and I hurried round to the other side of the
+house, where I waited in a fever till she should come.</p>
+
+<p>She did not keep me long. She had not put on a hat, nor
+even a loose wrap about her shoulders; evidently she intended
+our interview to be a short one. I hastened from
+the shadow to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know what I want?” I began gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>“You want to speak to me about something, I suppose?”
+Again I was conscious of a coldness in her voice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I have so few opportunities now.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think you have plenty of opportunities, considering
+you see me every day.”</p>
+
+<p>We walked on slowly, side by side. “Are you angry with
+me?” I asked, trying to speak penitently.</p>
+
+<p>“About what?”</p>
+
+<p>There was something in her air of calm deliberation that
+held me at a distance.</p>
+
+<p>“Everything—this afternoon, for instance.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you weren’t very nice to your friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t. Nor to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it doesn’t matter about me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” I asked miserably.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it doesn’t matter so much. I’m not your guest—and—I
+don’t suppose I’m as fond of you as he is.”</p>
+
+<p>There was something cruel in those last words, though
+their cruelty may have been unconscious. For a minute or
+two I could not speak.</p>
+
+<p>“Why have you changed, Katherine?” I said at length,
+my voice still not very secure.</p>
+
+<p>“It is you who have changed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have I?”</p>
+
+<p>“You were not like this last summer.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think I was.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what it is, but there is a difference. I
+suppose it may be only that you are growing up. I like
+people to be either men or boys. Why can’t you be natural?
+Why can’t you be content to be as you were?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think you have treated me fairly.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t help it. Why should you be so jealous? It’s
+horrid. Everything is changed, as you say. It is not nearly
+so nice. I first began to notice it in your letters, but I
+thought when I saw you it would be all right. If I had
+known you were going to be like this I wouldn’t have come at
+all.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was something in her manner I couldn’t understand,
+something mysterious, as if her words hid a regret, though
+whether it was for our old friendship or not I could not say.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me what it is you don’t like,” I said, thickly.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine’s dark blue eyes rested on me while she hesitated.
+“I can’t. I’m stupid. Perhaps I don’t really
+know myself.” Then suddenly she broke out, “Don’t
+speak to me or I shall cry or do something idiotic. Let us
+go back.” Without waiting for me she began to walk
+hastily in the direction of the house. I ran after her; I
+was lost in wonderment; but I made no attempt to detain
+her or to question her.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>No allusion was made to our absence when we returned to
+the others. Gerald was still playing, but he got up as soon
+as we entered, and strolled over to the window, where he
+stood beside Owen, looking out.</p>
+
+<p>“There should be white peacocks here,” he murmured
+idly. “I’ve always longed to live in a house where there
+were white peacocks. They are the most poetic creatures
+in the world. They come over the lawn in the moonlight,
+delightful fowls, and knock with their beaks against the
+windows to be fed. They love moonlight. They’re extraordinarily
+morbid and decadent. Their only quite healthy
+taste is that they want to be fed. Shouldn’t you like them,
+Miss Dick?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dick, to whom all Gerald’s words were pearls of
+wisdom, listened to these with close attention. “I’ll speak
+to Mrs. Carroll about them,” she said. “It <em>would</em> be nice
+to have them.”</p>
+
+<p>Gerald smiled sweetly, and Owen moved away from him,
+an expression on his face of mingled contempt and disgust,
+which, had I not been so miserable, I should have found
+highly comic. There was nothing, I knew, irritated him
+more than this kind of talk, which Gerald manufactured with
+extreme ingenuity, principally for Owen’s benefit. For
+Owen’s sake he would talk in a world-weary fashion of the
+“colour” of life, and ever since he had discovered that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
+word “Philistine” was peculiarly exasperating, it had
+figured more frequently than any other in his conversation.
+He dragged it in at every turn, nearly always with absolute
+irrelevancy. He began to talk of Philistines now, à propos
+of some concert at which he declared he had been asked to
+play—a concert he had probably invented for the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Owen stood with his back against the chimney-piece, his
+eyes bright, his cheeks red. “There is one class, at any
+rate, that is a good deal more disgusting than your Philistines—the
+people who imagine themselves superior to
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>But Gerald could keep perfectly cool. “These people
+you mention,” he began in his most elaborate manner, “I
+strongly suspect to be only the commanders of the Philistine
+hosts—their Tolstoys, their chief-priests and scribes.
+It is the Philistine who imagines himself superior to other
+Philistines. This is the one flight his imagination is capable
+of. The artist may be superior, but that, I think, is not
+what you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re right,” said Owen, fiercely, “it’s not what I
+mean. And I suppose <em>you</em> are an artist?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Gill, it is apparent.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not your dear Gill,” said Owen, who had lost his
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>“Shut up, Owen,” I interrupted. “What’s the use of
+taking everything so seriously?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because everything <em>is</em> serious. You may say a lot of
+chatter about white peacocks and Philistines doesn’t mean
+anything if you like, but it does. It is a mask for other
+things that are real enough—for selfishness, and immorality.”</p>
+
+<p>We all gazed at him in silence, almost open-mouthed,
+Gerald with a faint smile on his handsome face. Miss Dick
+alone found it incumbent upon her to say something, and
+she remarked that the Charity Organization Committee to
+which she belonged had been able to do a great deal, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
+that the lecture with lime-light views had brought in over
+three pounds—she meant even after all expenses had been
+paid.</p>
+
+<p>These observations could not fill up the breach. Nobody,
+indeed, took any notice of them. Katherine had laid down
+her work, and her eyes were fixed on Owen’s angry face,
+with, I thought, an expression of admiration and sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>“What has morality to do with art?” Gerald asked
+calmly. “Peter supports you because he is not an artist, but
+only a person of taste, who likes to listen to my playing. I
+<em>am</em> an artist, and I know. You not being even a person of—I
+beg your pardon—you being a person of different
+tastes from Peter, and uninterested in art, naturally are at
+a disadvantage when you discuss it. I do not mean that
+rudely; I say it merely in self-defence. Is anyone coming
+down in the direction of the station?”</p>
+
+<p>He went out, but nobody offered to accompany him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Owen and I left shortly afterwards. He was very quiet as
+we walked home, but when we were in bed he said to me,
+“I’ve decided to go back to town to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>I heard the words with a thrill of mingled pleasure and
+misgiving. “To-morrow? Why?” I asked. “You must
+stay till the end of the week in any case.” Then something
+made me add, “Is it because I was rude to you this afternoon?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>I thought for a little. “Has that nothing to do with it?”
+I persisted.</p>
+
+<p>“No; at least, not directly. I may as well be quite
+frank about it. I know you would rather I went; that is
+my reason. I ought to have seen it before, but I didn’t,
+though I had a kind of feeling several times that there was
+something wrong. It is partly your own fault that I didn’t
+guess sooner. You always mentioned Katherine as if you
+were quite indifferent to her; and that first day you seemed
+even to hesitate about going to speak to her. I remember
+now what you told me on the night of our party, but until
+to-day I never connected it with her.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think I’m jealous?” I said in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>“I know you are, but I didn’t know it until this afternoon.
+Don’t imagine I’m offended or any silly rot of that kind.
+There is no reason why I should be. Of course I should<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
+have liked it better if you had told me openly—but—well,
+it doesn’t matter. I don’t understand your feeling, but
+that doesn’t matter, either; if you have it, it is enough. I
+like Katherine, I like her very much, but, after all, it is you
+who are my friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“She won’t want you to go,” I said miserably. At that
+moment I certainly preferred Owen to Katherine.</p>
+
+<p>“She won’t mind very much, and I really can’t knock
+about with her brother. I hate the very sight of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Couldn’t we knock about by ourselves?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid it would hardly do to drop them now.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence.</p>
+
+<p>“Owen?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“About what?”</p>
+
+<p>“About anything. About your going away. About
+Katherine.”</p>
+
+<p>“But when I’m away won’t it be all right?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; it will be all wrong. I’ve been beastly to you as it
+is. And she doesn’t like me—I mean she only likes me
+middling—not even as much as she did—she told me so, this
+evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you will have plenty of time to make it up.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t that—it isn’t that we’ve quarrelled. And the
+other—it is no use—it only irritates me. I wish I could
+explain. Things—things come into my mind.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“And I’ve been beastly to you,” I went on.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p>He was silent again till he said, “There’s one way, but I
+know you won’t take it.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Come back with me, and spend the rest of your holidays
+with me.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span></p>
+
+<p>I lay quiet.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you?”</p>
+
+<p>In the dark I shook my head. Then, remembering he
+could not see me, I answered, “No: I can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? It is only a matter of will.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I haven’t any will, except to get what I want.”</p>
+
+<p>“You could try it for a few days.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. There are not a great many days altogether.
+They will be leaving before the end of the month.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if you should change your mind, come at any time—I
+mean without bothering to write.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well.”</p>
+
+<p>Owen was silent so long that I thought he had dropped
+asleep, when suddenly he spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>“Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know if you were asleep or not. It is this. I
+wrote to my people about you—about your having to go to
+lodgings when you come up to town after summer; and
+they want you to come to live with us.”</p>
+
+<p>I felt myself grow hot with shame.</p>
+
+<p>“You see there are plenty of bedrooms,” Owen went on,
+“and my study, I daresay, would do for both of us to work
+in. I hope you’ll come: they all want you to. If you
+think of it I’ll speak to your father; but of course if you’d
+rather be in ‘digs’ by yourself, it would be better for me not
+to mention it to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you really want me to come?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I want you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean, do you really and truly want me?”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed pleasantly. “Of course I really and truly
+want you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re not doing it out of kindness or anything like
+that?”</p>
+
+<p>“The kindness will be all on your side.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No: but I mean it. You must tell me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suggested it because I’d like to have you. I wasn’t
+a bit sure whether you’d come or not. My reason for asking
+you is exactly the same as my reason for asking you every
+Sunday to come for a walk with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll come,” I said. “Thanks awfully.” But my pleasure
+was spoiled by the remorse I felt for my own conduct as
+host. It seemed to me I was a fairly second-rate specimen
+of humanity, hardly good enough to be taken out and
+drowned.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I do not know whether Katherine attributed Owen’s sudden
+departure to me or not, but I think it extremely probable
+that she did, although she never mentioned it. Yet we
+sometimes spoke of Owen himself during the days that followed.
+In those days we slipped back more or less into our
+former friendship, and I tried to feel that it was just the
+same. Yet something of the old freedom had gone, and I
+could not forget what Katherine had said to me the night
+before Owen’s departure. After a few days, indeed, it
+came into my romantic mind that there might be another
+interpretation of her behaviour on that occasion, one I
+hardly dared even to dream of, so much was it what I desired.
+But it influenced me nevertheless. I longed to have another
+day alone with her—a day such as we had had last
+year, and I determined to ask her to come somewhere with
+me alone, to come, that is, without Gerald.</p>
+
+<p>I went up to Derryaghy one afternoon with this intention,
+and was shown into the morning-room, where I found Mrs.
+Carroll and Miss Dick. Mrs. Carroll informed me that
+Katherine had been washing her hair, and was now drying
+it at the kitchen fire. She told me to go on in if I wanted to
+speak to her, but I hung back bashfully. In the end I
+went, all the same, and discovered Katherine sitting on a
+stool, a book open on her knee, and her long, thick, dark
+brown hair hanging loose in the red glow of the kitchen range.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s well for you you haven’t to undergo torments of
+this kind!” she exclaimed. “I was baked nearly ten<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
+minutes ago. My hair was simply full of salt. I don’t
+know how it gets in under my bathing-cap.”</p>
+
+<p>The situation may seem more homely than romantic, but
+I thought she looked extremely lovely, and gazed at her in
+silent admiration. Perhaps she noticed it, for she coloured
+as she laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Peter, aren’t you going to say good-morning
+to me? I’m not the Sleeping Beauty, you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“What beautiful hair you have,” I said, in an awed tone,
+and involuntarily I touched it with my hand.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again, but drew back. “Did you come in
+just to admire it? It’s very nice of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I came to ask you to go for a walk with me this
+afternoon, round by the Hilltown Road—by the road under
+the mountains—just you by yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Me by myself!’ When do you want to go?”</p>
+
+<p>“After lunch.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well—if it’s not too hot.”</p>
+
+<p>The readiness with which she consented made me consider
+myself a fool for not having asked her sooner, and I began to
+regret all my lost opportunities.</p>
+
+<p>On my way home I met Gerald, who wanted to know if I
+had bathed yet.</p>
+
+<p>“I bathed before breakfast. Where have you been?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, just down to the Club House.”</p>
+
+<p>I turned back with him. I had made up my mind to say
+something he might possibly resent, but I plunged into my
+subject without beating about the bush. “Don’t you think
+you are rather a fool to go down there so often?”</p>
+
+<p>“Down where?” asked Gerald. “To the Club House?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; though I was thinking more of the hotel. It
+seems to me you go to the hotel nearly every evening now.”</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, indifferently. “There’s nothing else to do.”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems stupid to chum up with people about twice
+your age,” I persisted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
+
+<p>“They’re not twice my age. Some of them aren’t very
+much older than I am. What harm does it do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I was only with you once, but I didn’t like what I
+saw there, especially towards the end of the evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“What didn’t you like, Peter?” he asked, good-humouredly.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought it looked silly—and a little disgusting. There
+were you, a chap barely eighteen, calling Captain Denby,
+who’s about fifty, by his Christian name. You must know
+well enough that he’s as gross as a pig. What does he care
+about your playing? And what pleasure, anyway, can it
+give you to play a lot of waltzes and popular songs?”</p>
+
+<p>“He cares as much for my playing as you do.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Gerald, if you think that you’re a fool.”</p>
+
+<p>“You sat quiet enough at the time. You were afraid to
+open your mouth.”</p>
+
+<p>“That may be so, but it doesn’t alter the fact that I was
+infinitely superior to anyone in that room except yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I daresay you were, Peter. I never doubt your superiority.
+There’s one thing you forget, however, and that
+is that any friendship there may be between you and me is a
+pretty one-sided affair.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” I asked, uncomfortably.</p>
+
+<p>“Only that you’ve never given it much encouragement.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, I’m sure. Partly, I should think, because
+you rather dislike me. That always stands in the way of
+such things.”</p>
+
+<p>His irony rang unpleasantly true. “Why should you
+think I dislike you?” I said, very weakly.</p>
+
+<p>“It would take too long to explain. It never gave me
+any particular pleasure to think so—at first, just the reverse—and
+I mention it now merely at your request.”</p>
+
+<p>I didn’t quite know what to say. “Isn’t my speaking
+to you about this matter a proof of my not disliking you?”
+I risked. “I thought we had always been friends.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No, Peter, your friend is a prig called Owen Gill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Owen isn’t a prig,” I said warmly, glad to have a chance
+to put him in the wrong, but my chance did not last.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Gerald, “even if he was, I
+shouldn’t have called him one to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Better say it to me, if you’re going to say it at all. I can
+defend him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I daresay there is no harm in being a prig.”</p>
+
+<p>“Owen is a good deal finer chap than either you or I.”</p>
+
+<p>“And yet neither of us would change with him! But the
+point is hardly worth discussing.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want to discuss it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You want to give me good advice? Well, fire ahead.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, there’s no use in my saying anything. You know
+it all well enough yourself, and if you think it better to go
+on as you are doing, I can’t interfere. But it seems to me
+stupid to get into bad habits.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you no bad habits, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not talking about myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s true.”</p>
+
+<p>“You said the other night you were an artist; but you
+know as well as I do, that if you are going to do anything in
+that way you will have to work, and that you won’t work
+if you begin to loaf about, taking drinks with this person and
+that. I can’t even understand why you should want to. If <em>I</em>
+had any particular gift I would cultivate it for all it was worth.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you no gift?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. As you also remarked, I am a person of taste.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry if I offended you. I didn’t mean anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“You believed it all the same.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sure that I did. You’re clever enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you. I’ll not come any further.”</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you? It was good of you bothering about me,
+and I took it very well, didn’t I?” He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t take it at all; but that’s not my fault.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It was a cloudless afternoon when I went back to Derryaghy.
+Katherine was quite ready and we set out immediately. As
+I walked beside her, in her simple cotton dress, and with her
+gay parasol, I thought her adorable.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you remember our picnic?” I asked, for I was for
+ever harking back to it in my mind.</p>
+
+<p>“Which? There have been so many!”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean our own—the one we went together—the first
+of all.”</p>
+
+<p>“It seems centuries ago. I wonder if Bryansford isn’t
+too far for this afternoon? The others were saying something
+about driving. That would be better.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was a day very like this,” I went on, “a perfect
+summer day.” And a strange thrill passed through me as I
+recalled its incidents.</p>
+
+<p>The air was as soft as velvet. The August sun streamed
+over the fields. We followed a lane which led us past a long,
+low house, where an immense cherry-tree, with a trunk nine
+or ten feet in circumference, spread its branches in a small
+green orchard. I repeated aloud some lines of a poem I
+remembered:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“I know a little garden-close</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Set thick with lily and red rose,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Where I would wander if I might</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">From dewy dawn to dewy night,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And have one with me wandering.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
+
+<p>Two friendly dogs wagged their tails, and a cat lounging
+on the gray stone wall unclosed its eyes in sleepy yellow slits.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t we be friends, Katherine, as we were then?” I
+pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>“But aren’t we friends?” she asked, with a shade of
+impatience in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>“You know what I mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid I <em>don’t</em> know what you mean, Peter.” Then
+she unexpectedly added: “You’re a very queer mixture. I
+often wonder how you’ll come out in the end.”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t an idea,” I replied, somewhat taken aback.
+The remark appeared to me peculiar, and I felt as if she had
+pushed me farther away; and with this my self-confidence
+began to evaporate.</p>
+
+<p>We walked on in silence. There was, at the particular
+point we had now reached, a certain grandeur in the
+landscape, which even at that agitated moment impressed
+me with a sense of solemnity. From childhood I had
+imagined it—quite without historical foundation—as the
+scene of ancient Druidical worship. I thought of the dark
+soil as having drunk up the hot, sweet blood of human sacrifice,
+while the “pale-eyed priest” lifted his gaze to the
+clear autumn sky, and watched against it, just that same
+dark curving line of quiet hills that I was watching now.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, when we began to speak again it was of things about
+which we were both profoundly indifferent, and I had a
+sickening feeling that I was failing to interest my companion,
+and that while she was talking to me her thoughts were
+elsewhere. Somehow it appeared to be impossible to raise
+our conversation out of the rut of deadly commonplace into
+which it had fallen. It seemed to me almost as if Katherine
+were keeping it there on purpose, and before we came to
+Bryansford, I proposed trying to get tea at one of the
+cottages, for I felt that any interruption would be a relief.</p>
+
+<p>When we had finished, and paid for, our refreshment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
+instead of continuing our way round under the mountains,
+as I had intended, Katherine decided that we ought to start
+for home.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us at least go back through the woods,” I begged.
+“We don’t want to tramp along that dusty road again.”</p>
+
+<p>She yielded to my persuasion, and we entered the estate
+that lay beyond Derryaghy. It was strangely still in the late
+afternoon. Not a leaf stirred. On and on we walked,
+hardly speaking, and suddenly the dead silence, and our
+complete solitude, became, as it were, visible to me; and
+with that there rose in my mind, with intense vividness, a
+memory—the memory of Elsie at Owen’s party. The
+whole thing came back to me almost with the strength of
+hallucination: her lips on mine, my own kisses, her yielding
+body as she closed her eyes under my embrace. I was
+horribly nervous. I felt myself trembling and a faint mist
+swam before my eyes. I put out my hand and tried to take
+Katherine’s, but she drew away from me at once. I stopped
+short, facing her, on the narrow path. “I want to speak
+to you,” I said. “What have I done?”</p>
+
+<p>She made as if to pass me, but I barred the way. I was
+conscious once more, through other things, of a smouldering
+anger against her. “Why do you draw back when I touch
+you? You once told me you cared for me. You wrote to
+me that you did.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I do,” she answered quietly, though her face had
+altered. “I don’t know what you want, nor why you
+aren’t satisfied.”</p>
+
+<p>And, all the time, that other vision was acting like an
+hypnotic suggestion upon my mind. “You know that I
+love you,” I persisted, hoarsely, my voice sounding queer,
+though I tried to speak naturally. “Tell me, would you
+rather have Owen?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think you should speak to me like this. I wish
+you would allow me to pass, please.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span></p>
+
+<p>Her dark blue eyes were fixed on me; she was very near.
+I was passionately conscious of her attraction for me; my
+heart was thumping, and the blood began to drum in my
+temples, while a sort of shadow veiled my sight. I threw
+my arms round her; I could feel her body straining away
+from me, her breath on my face. For a moment she seemed
+to submit as I kissed her, but the next instant she struggled
+from me, and I felt a blow across my face. She had struck
+me with her parasol, which now hung broken in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes flashed on me like a withering fire. She was
+furiously angry. “How dare you touch me! Let me pass
+at once, you—you beast.”</p>
+
+<p>My arms dropped to my sides. A sudden, bitter shame
+overcame me. I saw her pass me with head erect and
+flaming cheeks, and then I dropped on my face on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>When I got up she was out of sight. I did not know how
+long I had lain there, but I made no attempt to follow her.
+As I brushed mechanically the earth and bits of grass and
+twigs from my clothes, I felt almost dazed. It had all passed,
+and I did not want to think. I heard the drowsy prattle of
+a stream, and became aware that I was hot and thirsty. I
+went down to it and followed the bank till I reached a deep
+green pool, from which, lying flat on my belly, I drank
+greedily. As I raised my head I saw my own image in the
+water—my bright eyes, my dark, flushed face, my coarse,
+ruffled hair.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_L">CHAPTER L</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I had told my father I should be dining at Derryaghy, yet he
+made no remark when, instead, I came in an hour late for
+tea. Fresh tea simply was prepared for me, and again,
+while I sat at table, I was conscious of something peculiar
+in the way he watched me, so that for an instant it even
+flashed upon me that he might have heard of what had
+happened in the wood.</p>
+
+<p>It was only when I had finished eating that he spoke. “I
+had a letter from your Uncle George this afternoon,” he said,
+and I knew at once, not so much from his voice as from the
+face he turned to me, that something serious had happened.</p>
+
+<p>My thoughts darted straightway to Aunt Margaret, to
+vague, gruesome tragedies, murder or suicide. “What’s
+the matter?” I asked, uneasily. Perhaps it had to do with
+little Alice? Why couldn’t he tell me at once? Then I
+noticed that he had pushed a bundle of photographs to me
+across the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know anything of these?” he asked, in a strange
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>I started. A glance at the top one had been sufficient.
+I recognized the photographs George had kept hidden in his
+room, or others like them. I looked at my father watching
+me, not angrily, but in a kind of hopeless way; I looked
+into his gray, still face while he went on speaking. “They
+were found in your bedroom hidden under the floor. Uncle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
+George says that George knows nothing about them, and,
+that being the case, he felt it his duty to tell me. He does
+not mention your name. I don’t know what to do. I have
+been trying to think.” He looked at the wretched things,
+as they lay there, with a kind of horror.</p>
+
+<p>I sat silent for a moment. “They’re not mine,” I then
+said. “I have nothing to do with them.”</p>
+
+<p>A gleam of relief came into his face, but it faded quickly.
+“You never saw them before?”</p>
+
+<p>I lifted the top one, but immediately put it back again.
+“I don’t know whether I saw them before or not,” I
+answered. “If I didn’t see these particular ones I saw
+others like them.” My father winced. “But they never
+belonged to me. Even if I had wanted them I wouldn’t have
+known where to get them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you know of this hiding place?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“And of what was there?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only you and George occupied that room.”</p>
+
+<p>“And George says they aren’t his.” I looked towards
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>My father hesitated. Then he said solemnly, “Will you
+give me your word of honour, Peter, that you had nothing
+to do with their being there?”</p>
+
+<p>“I had nothing to do with it.” I answered quietly. “I
+knew they were there, because George showed them to me.
+If he was here he would not say they were mine. I knew
+what he was like from the first day I went there. Those
+things were there then, and on the very first night he wanted
+to show them to me, but he was frightened to. I did not
+see them till a long time afterwards. I would never have
+seen them at all, if you had let me leave when I first wrote to
+ask you to.”</p>
+
+<p>“You gave me no reason,” said my father, sadly. “Do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
+you think I should have allowed you to stay an hour in the
+place if I had known?”</p>
+
+<p>“You might have guessed there was <em>some</em> reason. And
+at the time I couldn’t give any—I didn’t know myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Had that anything to do with your not wanting to go
+back there after Christmas?”</p>
+
+<p>“In a way—more or less,” I answered. “Not exactly
+that, but other things——”</p>
+
+<p>My father sighed. He tore the photographs in two, and
+placed them in the empty grate, where he set fire to them.
+It was like an act of purification, and when it was concluded
+he turned round and said gloomily, “I’m sorry if I misjudged
+you. I accept your word.”</p>
+
+<p>But he didn’t accept it—he couldn’t. Secretly, and underneath
+everything, and, without admitting it even to himself,
+he couldn’t help being doubtful, and I knew he was
+doubtful. If I had suddenly told him the photographs
+were mine, and expressed appropriate remorse, I believe it
+would have made him happier than my denial did. As I saw
+the wretchedness of his face the injustice of the whole thing
+became intolerable. “Do you believe me, or do you not?”
+I asked brusquely.</p>
+
+<p>“I have told you I believe you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t look as if you did.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t pretend to treat the matter as of no importance.
+My believing you means that I must disbelieve George.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why should you trouble about George? And, at any
+rate, though he did have those things, he’s decent enough in
+some ways. I’m pretty sure he would have burnt them
+himself after a while.”</p>
+
+<p>I’m afraid this speech did neither George nor myself any
+good. It simply made my father think me callous.</p>
+
+<p>I went out on the golf-links with Tony, and sat looking
+at the sea. I began to think of my father and of the failure
+of his life. This last incident seemed but to fit with all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
+others into its tragic grayness. And I reflected how for
+him I must compose a large part of that failure. Thinking
+of me could bring him little consolation, probably just the
+reverse. It was a pity. I doubtless was not, particularly
+from his point of view, much to boast of, but I was better than
+he thought me. I might be below the average in most
+things, but I was not below it in all....</p>
+
+<p>And then my natural egotism rose once more to the surface.
+My mind turned to Katherine, and it seemed to me
+I was making a horrible mess of my whole existence. I got
+up and walked slowly back to the town. A wandering
+troupe of open-air entertainers had arrived during the day,
+and were busy erecting tents and hobby-horse machines in a
+large field not far from our house. Most of the natives, both
+young and old, were superintending these preparations with
+an unflagging interest which had already stretched over
+hours, but I was in no mood to join them. I determined to
+walk as far as the pier and then go home. I had not gone
+above a hundred yards when I felt my face burning. Before
+me, coming in my direction, were Katherine and Gerald.
+Nothing but a straight stretch of road and footpath lay
+between us, and it was certain that they must have already
+seen me. I would have liked to turn back, but my pride
+prevented such a step, and I walked on, my head up, a
+flaming blush on my face. Gerald and I raised our caps.
+My eyes sought Katherine’s, but her glance just brushed
+mine to rest on some distant point beyond me. The next
+moment we had passed. Hot tears rose to my eyes, but I
+walked as far as I had intended to. On the pier steps I sat
+down and put my arms round Tony’s broad back and kissed
+him. If I had committed the greatest crime on earth, I
+thought, he would have licked my cheek and pretended to
+bite my ear just as he did now.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LI">CHAPTER LI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>“I want to go up to Belfast to-day,” I said to my father
+next morning at breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>His reply was exactly the one I had anticipated. “What
+do you want to go to Belfast for?”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to see Owen about something.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hadn’t you a whole fortnight when you saw him every
+day?”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to speak to him,” I answered, very low-spiritedly.
+I knew he was thinking of the railway-fare, and if I had had
+any money myself I should never have asked him.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t you write?” he demanded, querulously.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to speak to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t go on repeating the same thing like a child.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why can’t I go?” I asked helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>“Because it is a waste of money.”</p>
+
+<p>“It will only cost five shillings.”</p>
+
+<p>“Five shillings is a great deal too much to spend upon
+nothing.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t nothing. I want to speak to him. I never
+asked to go before.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll be seeing him very soon—in another fortnight—and
+you will have plenty of time to talk to him then.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to speak to him now,” I persisted. “Can’t I
+go?”</p>
+
+<p>“Peter, you are dreadfully obstinate. What do you
+want to see him about that won’t keep for a few days?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I sent him a telegram before breakfast, asking him to
+meet me, and I can’t very well not go.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is your own fault if you do things without consulting
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, in the end, he allowed me to go, and I
+caught the first train.</p>
+
+<p>I had asked Owen to meet me in the Botanic Gardens, for
+I did not want to call at his house, and, as I arrived some
+few minutes before the appointed time, I began to pace
+disconsolately up and down one of the paths, my head
+filled with dreary thoughts. Two or three gardeners with
+long rakes were raking the walks, and a man with a pair of
+clippers was trimming the edges of the grass. As they
+pottered over their work they carried on a disjointed conversation,
+principally about religion, or rather about the
+evils of Roman Catholicism. I listened to their idiotic
+remarks, which at another time might have amused me.
+The man with the clippers was describing some form of
+service which he called “High Rosary,” and the rakers
+from time to time interpolated words and grunts. A few
+little boys were playing hide-and-seek, and now and then
+a nurse passed, wheeling a perambulator. An old pensioner,
+sucking an empty pipe, hobbled up to the seat I
+had taken a corner of, though all the others were vacant,
+and began with much fumbling to unfold a greasy-looking
+newspaper. The sight of his futile senility somehow irritated
+me, and I stared at him fiercely, but he sat on. I
+began to think that perhaps Owen would not come: for
+all I knew he might be away from home. Two or three
+untidy, vulgar, little girls, with smaller brothers and sisters
+in tow, came up to inquire “the right time.” After I had
+satisfied their curiosity they still hovered near me, gazing
+at me in a silence that it was difficult to construe as flattering.
+At a distance of three or four yards they then settled
+down stolidly to some obscure game, in which a great deal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
+of monotonous, rhymed dialogue was the principal feature.
+They intoned this in shrill, unmodulated voices, but all the
+time keeping a sharp look-out on my movements. The old
+pensioner turned his watery eyes on me and made a remark
+about the weather. I pretended not to hear him, but he
+only made it again, and I had to answer. He began to talk
+politics. His fumbling hands, his foolish, empty pipe, his
+bleared and rheumy eyes, depressed me, and I wondered why
+he couldn’t be put into a lethal chamber. Then I saw
+Owen turn the corner and sprang up to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you come to the house? Where are your
+things?” he asked. The little girls had suspended their
+game to watch us with breathless interest.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not going to stay, Owen. I came up just because
+I wanted to speak to you about something—— Get away!”
+This last remark was addressed to a child who had drawn
+nearer, so as not to miss what we were saying. She stared
+at me with an expression of solemn idiocy, but without
+budging an inch from the position she had taken up.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right,” said Owen, “but of course you’ll
+stay now you’re here. I can lend you everything you need,
+and I’ve told them at home to expect you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t. My father would hardly let me come; even
+as it was.”</p>
+
+<p>“Get yer hair cut,” suggested the polite child, putting
+out her tongue.</p>
+
+<p>“Owen, I want to tell you something: I want your
+advice.”</p>
+
+<p>He at once became serious. He took my arm and we
+strolled down toward the pond, followed by the whole band
+of children, who, captained by the same odious little girl,
+screamed now in chorus, “Get yer hair cut! Get yer hair
+cut!”</p>
+
+<p>The din they made was terrific. I waited till we had
+turned the corner and were out of sight of the gardeners
+and the pensioner. Then I swung round quickly and made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
+a grab at the ringleader. In about two seconds, kicking
+and screaming, she was across my knee, and I was administering
+as sound a spanking as she had ever received in her
+life.</p>
+
+<p>“I say,” cried Owen, “what on earth are you doing?”</p>
+
+<p>I released my captive, who with crimson, tear-drenched
+face, and open mouth, went bawling back in the direction
+she had come from.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s all right, any way,” I said to the astonished
+Owen. “There’s nothing like taking these things in
+time.”</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the children had retreated, moving backwards,
+with round eyes fixed on me, but perfectly callous
+to the woes of their comrade.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll be having someone coming and kicking up the
+mischief of a row,” said Owen, uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t care. Can’t we find a quiet place?”</p>
+
+<p>Owen considered. “Come down the Lagan walk: there’s
+never anybody there.”</p>
+
+<p>I let him take me, and we walked till we were stopped by
+a low parapet, over which we had a charming view of the
+black mud-banks of the river, for the tide was out, and
+beyond this a strip of waste land, dotted with mill chimneys
+and the backs of dirty houses. It was neither a cheerful
+nor a beautiful outlook, but we both stood gazing over the
+wall, as if beyond it lay the New Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s horribly smelly,” I discovered at length.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you wanted somewhere quiet,” Owen
+apologized.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean this sort of thing. I’m sure there’s a
+dead cat or dog in that sack down there. Come away.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know the tide was out,” said Owen patiently.</p>
+
+<p>But I found it difficult now to begin my story. Those
+wretched children had upset everything. I was quite
+unreasonably cross, too, with Owen, for bringing me to these
+hideous mud-banks, with their litter of old boots, of empty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
+tins and broken bottles. I even had it on the tip of my
+tongue to tell him it was just like him, but refrained.</p>
+
+<p>We retraced our steps and found a seat near the pond.
+Here we sat in silence, Owen waiting for me to begin my
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>“Something very unpleasant happened yesterday,” I
+murmured, branching off to a secondary subject.</p>
+
+<p>“Happened to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not to me only—— It was a letter my father got from
+Uncle George—the people I was living with in town here,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“You remember the chap who came with us to
+‘Faust?’”</p>
+
+<p>“Your cousin?”</p>
+
+<p>I nodded. “He had some photographs which he kept
+hidden under the floor in our bedroom.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“So that nobody would get hold of them. They were—that
+kind. I don’t know where he got them from.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bad?”</p>
+
+<p>I nodded again. “And they were found a few days ago,
+and he denied that they were his, so Uncle George wrote
+to my father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Saying they must be yours?”</p>
+
+<p>“It came to that, though he didn’t actually say it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you denied it too?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes—only—I don’t know that my father believes me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even now?”</p>
+
+<p>“He says he does, but I’m not sure. At any rate it has
+upset him a lot.”</p>
+
+<p>“He must be an awfully low cad.”</p>
+
+<p>“George? He’s not up to much. But I expect it
+never occurred to him that his people would write, and I
+suppose he thought, now I was out of the way, it wouldn’t
+much matter to me whether they blamed me or not.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
+Neither would it have mattered, if Uncle George hadn’t
+written.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it would have. What is your father going to
+do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. There is nothing he <em>can</em> do, except tell
+them what I say.” I felt suddenly sad and doubtful—doubtful
+of the quality of my own innocence, which had
+seemed perfectly clear before. “I’m not sure that I’m
+giving you a right impression,” I went on, after a short
+silence. “I knew George had these things: I had looked
+at them: I knew where he kept them.”</p>
+
+<p>“It all seems to me very rotten,” said Owen, disgustedly.</p>
+
+<p>“It is, rather. Aunt Margaret may write to Mrs. Carroll,
+for instance, just out of spite.”</p>
+
+<p>“She can hardly do that now.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. She hates me. And it would be horrible
+if she did, though Mrs. Carroll wouldn’t believe her.”</p>
+
+<p>I was silent a while. “But that isn’t really what I came
+up to tell you,” I suddenly began. Then I related what had
+happened yesterday in the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Owen stared in front of him at the drab, seedy-looking,
+little ducks, who were paddling about on the dirty sheet of
+water. A rat stole out, and seeing us scuttled back again.</p>
+
+<p>“Why did you behave like that? It was most extraordinary!”</p>
+
+<p>I made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>“It wasn’t very gentlemanly, you know,” Owen continued,
+“to say the least of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never said I was a gentleman,” I interrupted. “I’m
+not one, in the ordinary sense of the word, nor even in the
+other, according to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that’s rot.” He sat trying to puzzle it out. He
+looked at me and unexpectedly smiled.</p>
+
+<p>I smiled too, but my heart was heavy as lead. “Well,
+that’s all I came up to tell you,” I muttered, “—not very
+much!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span></p>
+
+<p>He saw I was not happy. “I know I’m not very experienced
+in matters of this kind,” he confessed, “but if I were
+you, Peter, I should go to Derryaghy and ask to see her.
+Would you like me to do anything?”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s nothing you could do. Would it not be better
+for me to write?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think so. It might be easier.”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be. And suppose she won’t see me?”</p>
+
+<p>“You can only try.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll go back and think it over.”</p>
+
+<p>“But won’t you stay, really?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I must go.”</p>
+
+<p>“Before this happened she liked you very much—she
+told me so herself.”</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. “It is all over. She will never speak
+to me again.”</p>
+
+<p>“If she doesn’t——” He stopped.</p>
+
+<p>“What?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“She isn’t worth bothering about,” Owen concluded.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“What was there, after all, so very dreadful? It’s not
+as if you were in any way repulsive!”</p>
+
+<p>He tried to persuade me to change my mind about going
+home as we walked toward the park gate, but I was firm.
+“Good-bye, Owen,” I said. “Thank you for coming. I
+will write to you if there is anything to write about.”</p>
+
+<p>I got on a tram, and he stood on the footpath, looking
+after me.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LII">CHAPTER LII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Owen had cheered me up a little; I was glad I had come;
+and during my return journey I pondered the advice he
+had given me and decided that I must follow it. I waited
+till nine o’clock, by which hour I thought Gerald would
+probably have gone out, for I wanted to avoid him: then I
+went up to Derryaghy. So far as I could see, the only way
+was to call just as usual, and trust to luck to get a few
+minutes with Katherine alone.</p>
+
+<p>But at the door my courage failed me, and I stepped
+softly round to the terrace, and, standing hidden in the
+deep shadow of the house, looked to see who was in the
+room. The curtain was as usual undrawn and the room
+was full of lamplight. They were all there. Gerald was
+sprawling on his back on the sofa; Katherine was working
+at her table-cloth, her head bent over it so that I could not
+see her face; Miss Dick was writing; Mrs. Carroll was
+playing “Patience.” Presently Katherine looked up, and,
+for a moment or two, before she returned to her work, I saw
+her gaze out into the darkness. The others, except Mrs.
+Carroll, had their backs to me; a small fire was burning in
+the grate. I stood there under a kind of fascination. The
+impression was strange, and even slightly weird. Looking
+in upon them, all so silent and so unconscious of my presence,
+I had a peculiar feeling that, if I came right into their
+line of vision, they would still not see me. I had a strange
+feeling that I was actually invisible, and, moreover, that I
+was not the only watcher there, and, that if we were invisible
+to the inmates of the room, we might not be invisible
+to each other. Other faces, pale and dim, peered in at other
+windows; the house was surrounded by shadowy presences—shadowy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
+forms that hovered outside here on the terrace,
+that glided up and down the wide, dark, creaking staircase,
+or stood motionless in the upper rooms. I stepped back and
+looked up at the long line of black, unlit windows, with just
+here and there a glimmering light. And I felt as if I no
+longer belonged to the same world as the occupants of
+the room I watched. I was but a memory, a ghost; my
+place was upstairs; in dim passages; by trembling blinds,
+pulled aside for just a moment that we might peep out; in
+shadowy rooms; behind doors whose handles the timid
+maid, hurrying by in her glimmer of unsteady candlelight,
+feared to turn. I was the breath that set the curtains at
+the bed’s head trembling; the faint sound as of a chair
+pushed back on the upper floor; the draught—was it a
+draught?—that made the lamp-flame flicker; the pale
+reflection passing across the looking-glass and gone before
+there was time to strike a match. I was that mysterious
+something one turned one’s head quickly to see, and did not
+see; the cold touch that awakened just before dawn; the
+gray, ghostly figure sitting by the window in the first wan
+light, and that was no longer there when one rubbed one’s
+eyes; the tapping on the window-pane as of a leaf—the
+tapping that must surely be only a leaf moved by the wind.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know how long I stood there: it may have been
+but a few minutes, yet it was long enough for me to realize
+that the simple act of entering the room was become an
+impossibility. It would have required too violent an effort,
+too sharp and brutal a wrench, an effort I shrank from as
+from physical pain. I must write to Katherine. How
+could I go in there as if nothing had happened? If she came
+out on to the terrace I might find courage to speak to her,
+but she would not come. Gerald, on the other hand, almost
+certainly would; and if he discovered me prowling about
+like this what would he think? I slipped away, then, like a
+veritable ghost, my footsteps making no noise upon the
+faded grass.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIII">CHAPTER LIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I wrote that night to Katherine, but she did not reply to
+my letter, and I had no heart to send a second. Two days
+passed, during which I did not go near Derryaghy, but took
+to gardening, and when Gerald came down on the second
+afternoon I offered this as my excuse for not going with him.
+The fact was that I felt uncomfortable in his society, not
+knowing how much he knew. He had witnessed my discomfiture
+on the night Katherine had cut me, and of
+course he must have questioned her afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>During these days I made one or two attempts to come to
+a more cordial relation with my father; yet it seemed to me
+that he suspected the genuineness of my timid advances,
+and at all events his unresponsiveness discouraged me from
+repeating them.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the third day, having nothing else to
+do, I strolled listlessly in the direction of the field occupied
+by the booths of the steam-circus proprietors. It was
+recognizable from afar by a luminous cloud that hung above
+it like a curtain of fire against the night. The wind was
+blowing from that direction, and, as I advanced, my ears
+were filled with the rough music blared out by a couple of
+steam-organs, a music broken every now and again by
+short convulsive shrieks as of demoniac laughter. Swings,
+shooting-galleries, throwing-competitions—all were in the
+full energy of life when I approached; but the chief centres
+of attraction were the two hobby-horse machines, brightly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
+painted and flashing with mirrors and gilding. I mingled in
+the outer ring of spectators about the larger of these two
+wheeling monsters, and stood gazing at it, as it turned round
+swiftly and rhythmically to the throbbing din of brazen
+pipes. White puffs of steam shot up against the black sky
+in the coloured glare of naphtha lamps. Girls with flushed,
+excited faces, tossed hair and shining eyes, leaned sideways
+from the horses’ backs, laughed, swayed in a kind of innocent
+abandon toward their accompanying sweethearts. Arms
+were round waists, the pops of guns mingled with the blare
+of the music, the shrieks of the steam-whistle, the shrillness
+of feminine voices. Standing there, in lonely contemplation
+of all this Dionysian revelry, I felt as hopelessly out of touch
+with it, as if I had wandered thither from another planet.
+Suddenly I felt a hand laid lightly on my arm, and looking
+round saw the laughing face of Annie Breen.</p>
+
+<p>She asked me if I had seen their Willie, but without
+waiting for an answer went on to chatter about all the people
+who were here to-night. A whole crowd had come over
+from Castlewellan; and there were a lot of excursionists
+from Belfast, who had missed the last train, and nobody
+knew where they were going to sleep, for there wasn’t a
+room to be had in the hotels. Wasn’t it fun? They
+would have to stay out all night; and if it rained wouldn’t
+it be awful?</p>
+
+<p>“There’s room for two there,” she cried, “those white
+horses. Ellen Gibson and Brian Seery are getting off.”</p>
+
+<p>I made a half-hearted movement forward, but in my lack
+of enthusiasm was ousted by a more eager couple whose eyes
+had been as quick as Annie’s. There was no hint of reproach,
+however, in the smile the girl turned on me.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll get them next time, and I’d just as soon watch,
+any way. Wouldn’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s Willie over there,” I suggested. “Perhaps you
+would like——”</p>
+
+<p>But she interrupted me. “I don’t care about the horses.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
+Only maybe I’m keeping you: maybe you’re waiting for
+somebody?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered, hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s go round the tents then. Will you?”</p>
+
+<p>We moved over to the one which appeared to have attracted
+the largest crowd. In the foreground, just beyond
+the barrier, was a long counter or table covered with cheap
+ornaments, artificial jewelry, and boxes of unhealthy-looking
+cigars; and behind this, set in tiers against the canvas back
+of the tent itself, were three rows of grotesque, painted,
+wooden busts, waiting to be knocked down. Surrounded
+by a group of encouraging spectators, George Edge was
+stolidly bombarding these figures with a good deal of success,
+though what he intended to do with his prizes it was difficult
+to imagine. We stood and watched him, and every now
+and again a loud smack was instantly followed by the disappearance
+of one of the dolls.</p>
+
+<p>“Have a throw you,” said Annie. “Go on. I’m sure
+you can do it better than him.”</p>
+
+<p>An obliging lady handed me three wooden balls, about
+the size of tennis balls, in exchange for two pence; but in
+absence of mind I came within an ace of sending the first
+of these at the head of the proprietor himself, which just
+then bobbed up close to the dolls, and in features, colouring,
+and expression, startlingly resembled them. At my third
+shot I was successful, and Annie chose a gold and turquoise
+cross. We passed on to the next booth, leaving George still
+pegging away, with a perseverance that must have cost him
+about half-a-crown already. Annie herself now won a
+walking-stick, by throwing a wooden ring over it, and this
+trophy was presented to me.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s get out of the glare for a minute,” she said unexpectedly.
+“It’s that hot with all the lights and things I
+can’t hardly breathe.”</p>
+
+<p>We passed behind the tents, and a few steps brought us
+into shadow, and a few steps more to a bank under a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
+hawthorn-hedge, where we sat down. I had nothing to say to
+her, and, as it did not seem to matter to Annie whether we
+talked or not, I pursued my own thoughts. She leaned up
+against me confidingly, but I was hardly more conscious of
+her presence than of the bank upon which I sat. I was
+thinking, and presently I put a question to her, put it perfectly
+seriously. “Suppose, Annie,” I began very deliberately,—“suppose
+you were friends with somebody—somebody
+like me, say. Suppose you knew he was very fond of
+you, and, one day, when you were alone together, without
+asking you if he might, he put his arms round you and
+kissed you—would you be very angry with him, so angry
+that you would never speak to him nor look at him again?”</p>
+
+<p>I kept my eyes fixed upon the ground as I awaited her
+reply, and I awaited it with some anxiety. It seemed to me a
+long while coming. All at once I felt two warm lips pressed
+against my cheek. I was so taken aback by the unexpected
+nature of this answer that I’m afraid I drew away from it.
+I understood that poor Annie had seen in my question
+only a somewhat timid method of courtship. It was
+distinctly awkward. She leaned her head sentimentally on
+my shoulder, and we sat in this absurd position for several
+minutes, while I had time to reflect on the hopeless inconsistency
+of feminine nature. As soon as I could, without
+hurting her feelings, I got up. “We must try the hobby-horses
+now,” I said, with feeble sprightliness, seizing on the
+only pretext I could think of to escape from a disagreeable
+situation.</p>
+
+<p>Annie rose too, but with no great alacrity: in fact, she
+remarked that she was sick of the hobby-horses. I pretended
+not to believe her. We went back to the spot where
+she had first spoken to me, and, when the machine came to
+a standstill, secured two riderless steeds. Mine was on the
+outside and Annie’s of course next to it, but we were no
+sooner in possession of them than I became aware of Katherine
+and Gerald among the spectators quite close to us. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
+looked the other way, and I felt my face grow crimson. It
+seemed to me that the engine-man would never set us in
+motion. Already we appeared to have been waiting for
+an eternity. Annie was laughing and chattering, and I
+answered at random, though, indeed, to the kind of remarks
+she was making, any sort of answer served. Had she, too,
+seen the Dales? for her vivacity had suddenly become much
+more noisy and familiar, with something about it that
+smacked rather of town than of country? I noticed that
+all the other riders were obviously in couples, and that most
+of the youths were supporting their partners in a strikingly
+gallant fashion. Annie had already given me permission to
+follow their example by telling me half a dozen times she
+was sure she’d fall off. I didn’t care very much whether she
+did or not. At last, with a shrill and frivolous scream, the
+huge construction began to revolve slowly, and our horses
+to move up and down on their polished brass rods. We
+swept by within a yard or two of Katherine and Gerald,
+but I looked straight before me, my face burning. I
+would have liked to pretend that I was there for a solitary
+ride, quite independent of Annie, but her manner made any
+such hypocrisy perfectly futile. Round we came a second
+time, and a third, gathering velocity at every moment. Annie
+had taken off her hat and put it on my horse’s head, and her
+skirts streamed out behind, and flapped against my right
+leg.</p>
+
+<p>“Peter!”</p>
+
+<p>It was Katherine’s voice. She had called my name. It
+came to me through the night, and an indescribable emotion
+shook me. I could not have spoken: my eyes were blinded
+with tears: and again the huge machine swept round. But
+in the place where Katherine and Gerald had been I could
+no longer see them. Where were they gone? The organ
+belched its coarse music, the steam throbbed, the whistle
+hooted, we rushed on faster and faster. Where were they?
+She had called me. Perhaps they had gone home. I could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
+not wait any longer, but slipped from my horse’s back.
+Annie screamed; the man who was going round collecting the
+fares while the ride was in progress made a grab at me; but
+I jumped—jumped and fell headlong, rolling over and
+knocking all the breath out of my body, though luckily not
+breaking any bones. Instantly there was commotion.
+A crowd gathered about me, and everybody seemed to think
+I had either gone mad or been seized with a fit. I scrambled
+to my feet as soon as I had pumped a little wind into myself,
+and, without waiting to brush the dust from my clothes,
+without answering any of the questions that poured in upon
+me from all sides, pushed my way through the people, who
+appeared inclined to detain me by force, and hurried, as fast
+as my still rather breathless condition would allow, in pursuit
+of Katherine and Gerald. Alas, I could see no sign of
+them. They had vanished as completely and mysteriously
+as Persephone on that summer morning in the meadows. I
+clambered through the hedge out on to the road, but there
+was no one there. I ran on till I reached the turning, but
+there was no one there either, and I knew I had missed them,
+for the road here lay straight and bare in both directions.
+I stood still by the sea-wall. I could not go back. The
+glare and din were now become impossible, to say
+nothing of Annie, whom I had flouted in so unscrupulous a
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>I took my old path over the golf-links till I reached the
+hollow where I always came when I wanted to be quite alone.
+I flung myself down on the soft, white, powdery sand, among
+the thin gray grasses, in the pallid starlight. My heart was
+surging with emotions, at once happy and desolating. I
+could not understand what had occurred; only I heard
+again and again the sound of my name, as it had come to me
+in that loved voice through the night.</p>
+
+<p>I lay there for a long time. I was crying, I think, but I
+did not know I was crying, though I kept wiping my tears
+away. I was unconscious of everything around me, I was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
+blind and deaf, and it was only when I felt a hand on my
+shoulder that I looked up, startled, and saw Katherine
+bending over me.</p>
+
+<p>“Peter, what is the matter? Is it my fault?”</p>
+
+<p>Her voice was all gentleness; in her face a beautiful
+tenderness; but I could not speak.</p>
+
+<p>“It is nothing,” I stammered out at last. “Only I
+thought—you were never going to speak to me again, and—”</p>
+
+<p>“I was horrid. I can’t think now why I was so horrid.
+Forget about it, Peter dear, won’t you? Tell me you
+will.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was my fault,” I muttered. “It was all my fault.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind whose fault it was. Let us forget about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t forget,” I said. “It was my fault.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why—when I want you to? Can’t you forget,
+even if you know I love you?”</p>
+
+<p>I scrambled to my feet and stood facing her. “Do you
+really?” I faltered. “Don’t say it if—if it is not true.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is true.”</p>
+
+<p>“How is it true?” I asked. “How much? Do you
+love me as much as you love Gerald?”</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated, and it seemed to me that it was because she
+feared to wound me. “Yes,” she said at last, in a low voice.
+There was something that touched me, through all my longing
+and pain, in her desire to be perfectly honest. “Better
+than Gerald. Better than anybody,” she pursued, doubtfully,
+“better than anybody, I think, except mother.”</p>
+
+<p>I sighed; I could not help it.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me sadly. “Why aren’t you content,
+Peter? Why do you always want more than I can give,
+when I have given you so much?”</p>
+
+<p>“And Owen?” I asked, though I was ashamed of myself
+for doing so.</p>
+
+<p>“I like Owen very much. I think he is very nice, but
+that is all. And now tell me you are content. I must
+go, and I shan’t be happy unless I know <em>you</em> are.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I am happy,” I lied most dismally. I saw indeed that
+it was all hopeless, and that she would never understand.</p>
+
+<p>“I will see you to-morrow. I can’t stay now; Gerald
+is waiting for me over at the Club House.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where were you when I looked for you?” I asked. “I
+heard you call my name, and I jumped off, but when I went
+to look for you, you were gone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Dick was with us, and she wanted to go home; but
+we went round the other way—not by the sea. We had to
+go all the way back with Miss Dick, but I got Gerald to come
+out again, for I thought, I don’t know why, I might find
+you here. And I’m very glad I came. I couldn’t go on
+any longer without making it up. But I mustn’t really
+wait now. I told Gerald I should only be five minutes.
+Good-night, Peter. Come to-morrow morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>She was gone, and I was left alone to whatever felicity I
+might be able to discover.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIV">CHAPTER LIV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Of the days that followed our reconciliation I tried to make
+the most. Too much time already had been wasted and
+spoiled by clouds of jealousy and other troubles. I knew
+the kind of love Katherine offered me was very different
+from the kind of love I had desired, and in the old days
+dreamed of, but more than this I did not know, and some
+instinct kept me from trying to find out. We had become
+again such friends as we had been last year, and I lent myself
+to a certain protective quality in her affection for me,
+because I felt that it was in this way she could care for me
+most. From her point of view I knew that if I could have
+dropped back two or three years nearer to my childhood it
+would really have been preferable. She would have liked
+to pet me and tell me stories.</p>
+
+<p>What her brother thought of our quarrel, and of our
+making up again, I never heard. He gave no sign of having
+noticed anything. I had ceased, indeed, to see very much of
+him, for he had taken to knocking about the Club House and
+the hotel more and more. This left Katherine and me almost
+wholly to each other’s company. I saw her each morning,
+afternoon, and evening, and I moved through day after day
+in a kind of dream, as if this ideal life were to last for ever.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon I went up to Derryaghy as usual, but the
+servant who answered the door told me Mrs. Carroll wished
+to see me, and when I was shown into the morning-room I
+found her there alone.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I wanted to speak to you, Peter,” she said. “Katherine
+is out with her mother, who arrived an hour ago.
+They went out after lunch.”</p>
+
+<p>I stared my surprise. “I didn’t know she was coming!” I
+murmured.</p>
+
+<p>“Neither did anybody else. She didn’t even send a
+telegram.”</p>
+
+<p>From her tone I gathered that Mrs. Carroll was not altogether
+pleased by this unexpected visit. “What has she
+come <em>for</em>?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s just what I want you to tell me. The woman is
+raging with me, and now we’re alone we’d better have the
+whole matter out.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what matter?” I inquired innocently. “What
+have <em>I</em> to do with it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Goodness knows! Sit down, child; I want to talk to
+you seriously.... Miss Dick said something to me more
+than once, but Miss Dick is a perfect fool when it comes to
+questions of this kind, and I paid no attention to her.”
+She looked at me. “Don’t you understand? It is about
+Katherine—about you and Katherine. Mrs. Dale’s visit
+is the result of some letter which Katherine sent to her, and
+which I haven’t seen. How was I to imagine such things?
+I had always looked upon you as children, and now she
+arrives, simply furious, and accuses me of not looking after
+her daughter.”</p>
+
+<p>I had begun to blush.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me exactly how much there is in it all?” Mrs.
+Carroll continued. “You are the only person who appears
+to have any common-sense.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does she say?” I asked ingenuously.</p>
+
+<p>“She says— Oh! what doesn’t she say? She says she’s
+going to take Katherine home with her to-morrow, and that
+she thought she should have been able to trust me!”</p>
+
+<p>I looked at her helplessly, but made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew you liked Katherine,” Mrs. Carroll went on,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
+“but it never occurred to me there was any particular
+reason why you shouldn’t like her—nor, indeed, do I see any
+now. They didn’t expect, I suppose, that she was going to
+spend all her time with a couple of old women like me and
+Miss Dick!” She paused. “You <em>are</em> very fond of her,
+aren’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I replied, as if I were repeating my catechism.</p>
+
+<p>“And apparently she is fond of you.”</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. Then, as she looked at me interrogatively,
+“Not like that—not in the same way,” I murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll continued to regard me. “Not like what?
+What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“She doesn’t even understand,” I pursued.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll’s face altered, grew graver, though not less
+kind. “Then there <em>is</em> something in it? You really care—very
+much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“But——” her perplexity seemed to increase.</p>
+
+<p>I waited, twirling my straw-hat on my knee, and only now
+and then glancing up. She eyed me thoughtfully. “You
+know it is all quite impossible,” she brought out slowly.
+“And you’re so ridiculously young!” For a moment she
+smiled. Then she put her hand sympathetically upon mine,
+which rested on the arm of my chair. Yet I could see she
+still more or less regarded the affair in the light of a sentimental
+fancy that would dissolve as quickly as dew under
+the sun.</p>
+
+<p>I got up. “I think I’ll go now,” I said, plucking at the
+ribbon of my hat.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll not keep you, Peter, if you want to go. Remember,
+I’m not scolding you, or angry with you in any way,” she
+added. “As I told you, I see no reason why you shouldn’t
+be fond of Katherine. I can perfectly trust you. It is just
+that you are a boy, and of course such things can come to
+nothing so far as you are concerned; whereas, in Katherine’s
+case, and especially since she is a year older than you, it is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
+quite different. Her mother probably has her eye on a husband
+for her already. That, I am afraid, is the secret of all
+this indignation. However, I’ve taken your part. I told
+her exactly what you are—that you are a gentleman, and
+would never do anything dishonourable; that a word would
+be enough; and that it was perfectly ridiculous to talk of
+taking Katherine home before the natural end of her visit,
+which will be on Friday or Saturday of this week. If she
+<em>does</em> take her, not one of them shall ever enter this house
+again. That, at least, is certain. I’m not going to have any
+nonsense about it. Will you dine here to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>“Where are you going now?”</p>
+
+<p>“Out into the woods just.”</p>
+
+<p>She kissed me. “Well, whatever happens, I’ll promise
+that Katherine shan’t go without saying good-bye to you.
+Be a good boy, and come to see me to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LV">CHAPTER LV</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>When I left Mrs. Carroll I did not go out at once, but
+scribbled first a note to Katherine, telling her I had gone to
+the summer-house, and should wait for her there all afternoon.
+I then went in search of Jim, who had always been
+my friend, and whom I could rely upon absolutely. I found
+him working with Thomas in the greenhouses, and, as soon
+as I could attract his attention, I beckoned him outside. He
+was a very different Jim from the one who had climbed a
+ladder to see my skin peeling off, though he had the same
+round rosy candid face, like a ripe russet apple, and though
+he still played doleful tunes on his flute. But he had
+developed amazingly: he had grown into a strapping big
+fellow, with limbs like a youthful Hercules. When I explained
+to him that I wanted him to give a note to Miss
+Dale, but that nobody must see him do it, he promised to
+try his best.</p>
+
+<p>I went on to the summer-house and lay down among the
+bracken close by. I had been there fully two hours before
+I saw Katherine coming. She smiled brightly as I rose
+from my ferny bed to greet her.</p>
+
+<p>“Why did I come without an umbrella?” she exclaimed
+gaily. “It’s just going to pour!” And she turned to look
+at the heavy clouds that were gliding up rapidly against the
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>“You can shelter in the summer-house,” I said, laconically.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I loathe summer-houses, especially when they’re like
+this old thing, crammed with earwigs and spiders.”</p>
+
+<p>“The rain is going to be heavy: you’d better come in
+now,” I went on, without attempting to emulate her lightness
+of manner. I dusted the rough seat for her with my
+pocket-handkerchief, in silence, just as the first big drops
+came pattering down on the leaves.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down, and I stood near the door, looking at her.
+“Mrs. Carroll told me your mother arrived to-day, because
+of some letter of yours about me.”</p>
+
+<p>Katherine coloured a little. “I know,” she answered,
+eagerly. “It’s awfully silly of mamma. I’ve been talking
+to her about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you are to go home at once—to-morrow—perhaps
+this evening.”</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. “Certainly not this evening. How could
+we? And at any rate, we should have been going in a few
+days. But I told mamma she was taking it all absurdly
+seriously, and behaving exactly like a furious parent in a
+novel.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is serious to me,” I said, quietly, “though to you it
+may be amusing.” That she should laugh in this way hurt
+me deeply.</p>
+
+<p>It had grown rapidly dark, and now a heavy rain began,
+cold and sad, sweeping through the trees, very soon making it
+plain that the summer-house was in need of repair. From
+the distance there came the crying of a sea-gull, a mournful,
+solitary note.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be angry with me, Peter,” said Katherine, coming
+to the door and looking out. “I know it was stupid of me
+to write, but I never dreamt of mamma coming over like
+this.... Why has it got so dark?”</p>
+
+<p>Before I could answer there came a blinding flash of
+lightning, accompanied, nearly instantaneously, by a
+hideous din of thunder, which seemed to burst out
+just over us. A blank silence succeeded this ear-splitting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
+crash, and Katherine said, “Some tree must have
+gone!”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish it had been this summer-house,” I muttered
+bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me, her face grown graver. The flash was
+followed by no other, but the rain continued in a fierce
+downpour, beating through our flimsy shelter, and streaming
+down the paths in brown muddy rivulets.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t understand why mamma should have made such
+a fuss,” Katherine went on, but no longer in the same tone,
+though I knew well enough the alteration in it was due
+merely to what I had said. “She is usually very
+sensible.”</p>
+
+<p>“How can you be so indifferent?” I asked, in a rough
+voice, for her calmness exasperated me.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not indifferent. I’m sorry I wrote. But we should
+have been going in three or four days, at any rate. You
+know that.” Her manner was tinged with a faint reproach.</p>
+
+<p>I answered nothing, and she went on. “It is getting
+lighter—the rain will soon be over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you want to go?” I asked furiously. “Don’t let
+me keep you if you do!”</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you speak like that, Peter? I told you I was
+sorry.”</p>
+
+<p>“This is the last time I shall see you alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you are going to-morrow, will you promise to meet
+me to-night somewhere—here—or on the golf-links?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t possibly. There are people coming to dinner.
+Won’t <em>you</em> come—or come in afterwards, at least?”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I see you by yourself if I do?”</p>
+
+<p>“By myself?”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you come out here with me?”</p>
+
+<p>She sighed at my unreasonableness. “How can I?
+You know mamma and the others will be there, and how
+can I leave them? But say you’ll come.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I certainly won’t,” I answered sullenly. “What does
+it matter to you whether I do or not?”</p>
+
+<p>I felt her lips touch my cheek. Her face was wet and
+cold with the rain. I put my arms round her very gently,
+and kissed her hair and her cheek, but no more than that,
+for I knew her own embrace had been given merely to console
+me, and because it was for the last time. Her dark eyes
+caressed me, and she smiled a little. She laid her hand on
+my shoulder. “Will you walk back to the house with me
+now, Peter? You are not angry with me?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t stay any longer, because mamma knows I came
+out, and she will suspect it was to meet you. She is not so
+bad about it as she was when she first arrived. I managed
+to convince her that she had been alarming herself unnecessarily.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very unnecessarily,” I thought, but I said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>I walked back with her, and then on down the drive and
+home.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVI">CHAPTER LVI</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>I was writing to Owen when my father brought me Katherine’s
+letter. It was to say good-bye to me, and there was a
+veiled reproach at my not having come to the station to see
+them off. She had looked out for me up to the last
+moment; so that in the end it was really I who had failed!
+I smiled dimly.</p>
+
+<p>As I write it now, in this quiet, gray, autumn morning,
+it appears to me that the thought then hovering at the back
+of my mind was, after all, not so very foolish. Death, coming
+without disease, without weakness, before life has grown
+stale, before illusions have been shattered and innocence
+marred;—simply upon the bright, fresh comedy of life, the
+dropping of a dark, rapid curtain.</p>
+
+<p>I finished my letter to Owen, and addressed it; but when
+that was done I still sat on at the table, holding my pen, on
+which the ink had long since dried. Then I bent down and
+leaned my forehead upon Katherine’s open letter. When
+I looked up the sun was shining in the garden, and shining
+in on me through the window; nothing had changed....</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon I went up to Derryaghy, where Mrs. Carroll
+received me. I spoke quite quietly to her, just as usual;
+but all I remember now is that there were some red dahlias
+in a bowl on the table, and that Mrs. Carroll proposed taking
+me to Paris for my Christmas holidays.</p>
+
+<p>It was when I had left her and had gone out to walk in
+the woods, that I suddenly felt the full reality of what had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
+happened. It meant that everything was finished, that I
+should never see Katherine again. I was filled with
+desolation, with a kind of sick feeling that my love had
+been superfluous, wasted, and perhaps distasteful. Last
+year I had been sorry to say good-bye to her; I had dreaded
+the new life opening out before me; but I had had the
+prospect of meeting her again at a year’s end, and the belief
+that she cared for me and would remember me. Now there
+was nothing—nothing.</p>
+
+<p>My grief was mingled with a kind of bitter, impotent rage
+against I knew not what. I kicked a stick that lay in my
+path savagely out of the way, cursing it under my breath.
+I flung myself down among the bracken. Sometimes a
+kind of blank would come into my mind, and I would find
+myself staring stupidly at the trees, while for a few moments
+an altogether different thought would slip into my brain;
+then my grief would overwhelm me once more, and blot out
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>But was this grief I felt? I do not know. It was
+different from what I felt later. It was something violent
+and maddening, sweeping over me in paroxysms, leaving me
+intervals of cold insensibility. And late that night, when,
+thoroughly wearied out, I went to bed, and from sheer
+exhaustion would be dropping off to sleep, from time to time
+it would pierce through my numbing senses, and waken
+me sharply, as if some one had violently pulled me, so that
+I would start up, yet for a moment not realize what it was
+that had wakened me.</p>
+
+<p>I did not go back to Derryaghy on the next day or the
+next. I took long walks, and it was during these solitary
+rambles that the thought of death came irresistibly to me.
+I felt that my life was become an intolerable burden, and
+in my inexperience I imagined that the pain I felt now I
+should feel always. I thought of shooting myself, of taking
+poison, only I disliked the idea of other people knowing.
+Was there not a better way? I thought of swimming out so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
+far that it would be impossible to return, but I dreaded the
+pain of suffocation. Then, two days before my time for
+leaving home, and when Owen had written saying that
+they expected me and that he would be at the station to meet
+me, there came a night of wind and rain, and it seemed to
+me I had found the solution to my problem.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly before midnight, when my father’s snores had
+become deep and regular, I stole out of the house, as I had so
+often done in the old days of our club. I had put on my
+overcoat, but under it I wore only my night-shirt, and I
+hurried down the road and across the golf-links in the cold,
+driving rain. When I reached an exposed spot, I took off
+my coat and lay down on the soaking ground, letting the
+wind and rain sweep over me. I lay there till morning.
+It did not matter if I were seen returning to the house then;
+it would simply be thought that I had gone out for an early
+bathe. As I staggered to my feet my limbs were so stiff
+and cramped that at first I could hardly hobble along, but
+after I had gone a little way it became easier.</p>
+
+<p>I got into bed in my wet night-shirt, but I could not go
+to sleep. My head ached and I was shivering; yet a few
+minutes later I no longer felt cold; on the contrary, a burning
+heat seemed like a fire under my skin. I could not lie
+for two minutes without altering my position; and when I
+got up to dress I knew I was really ill. At breakfast I only
+pretended to eat. My father noticed there was something
+the matter and questioned me, when I answered that I was
+all right, and presently he left me to go to the school, which
+was being whitewashed and made ready for the re-opening
+next week. As for me, I was glad I should not have to repeat
+my experiment twice, and I had even a naïve curiosity
+as to the precise nature of my illness.</p>
+
+<p>Before night I began to feel much worse. My father went
+out to a meeting in connection with church matters, and I
+was left alone. I should have gone to bed, had not the task
+of climbing two flights of stairs and undressing appeared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
+almost insurmountable; so I half sat, half lay, in a chair,
+with my eyes shut and my head leaning back. I was extremely
+thirsty, and at every breath I drew my side hurt
+me, the pain being increased by the fact that I had begun
+to cough a little. It had all come on so quickly that I
+wondered if I should die that night.</p>
+
+<p>When my father came in he immediately saw I was worse,
+and sent me to bed, giving me something hot to drink; but
+all that night I hardly slept, and in the morning he went
+for Doctor O’Brian. By that time I had almost forgotten
+the cause of my illness; what had led me to seek it; whether
+I desired it to be fatal or not. I was examined, stethoscoped,
+asked questions, gazed at. “Acute pneumonia.”
+I caught the words through a kind of lethargy into which
+I had fallen. They were talking together, my father and
+the doctor, but neither could understand how the disease
+had developed so rapidly....</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVII">CHAPTER LVII</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>And, after all, I failed! I did not die. I got better, though
+not quite well, for my lungs remained delicate, and in
+October Mrs. Carroll took me to be examined by a specialist.
+I was examined, sounded, tapped, a sample of my blood
+taken, and other odious things done to me, before it was
+finally decided that I must go abroad. I listened to the
+discussion that followed, taking no part in it myself, but
+simply sitting on the sofa in the consulting-room.</p>
+
+<p>“For the winter, I suppose?”</p>
+
+<p>“For the winter certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>“And afterwards?”</p>
+
+<p>“Afterwards? I’m afraid it is impossible to say. There
+is no use making promises which may never be fulfilled.
+Would there be anything to prevent his living abroad
+always, supposing it should be the best thing for him?”</p>
+
+<p>“There is only the difficulty of his future—that is, of a
+profession. He was to have gone to Oxford next year.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see. It is certainly unfortunate. But apart from
+that, there is nothing?”</p>
+
+<p>“To prevent his living abroad? Not that I know of.”</p>
+
+<p>There were such things as tutors, it then appeared; young
+gentlemen of excellent scholastic attainments, just fresh
+from one or other of the Universities, who could be induced
+to combine the rôles of travelling-companion, mentor, and
+pedagogue.</p>
+
+<p>And on this hopeful note we came away. We had lunch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
+in town, and caught the next train home. When we arrived
+at Newcastle we took one of the station cars. I was staying
+at Derryaghy to complete my convalescence; so Mrs.
+Carroll stopped at our house to give my father the news,
+telling me to drive on by myself. The October sunlight,
+still with a little of the warmth of summer in it, slanted
+through the trees, as I drove in at the lodge-gate. There
+was a charming autumnal languor in the still air—a kind
+of dreamy, happy beauty, which made me think of some
+verses of La Fontaine’s:—</p>
+
+<div class="poetry" lang="fr">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“J’étais libre et vivais seul et sans amour;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">L’innocente beauté des jardins et des jours</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Allait faire à jamais le charme de ma vie.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="noi">And, far out on the dark sea, a white sail gleamed in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of leaving it all behind me, and of passing
+the rest of my life in exile, was too painful to dwell upon;
+yet I knew that, once I went away, I might very easily never
+be back. It had struck me that the doctor had been anything
+but optimistic, and I knew this meant that my chance
+must be a pretty poor one.</p>
+
+<p>I went upstairs to my own room. I sat down in my old
+window-seat and began a letter to Owen, which I did not
+finish, for it occurred to me that, later on, I might have more
+definite news to give him; and, at any rate, if I were going
+away, he must come down first to stay with me. With my
+incomplete letter before me I sat dreaming. I wondered if,
+in years to come, another boy would have this room as his
+own, and sit in this window-seat; and if his thoughts would
+for a moment perhaps touch mine? All <em>my</em> thoughts
+would be dead then; my dreams vanished; the life that
+had unfolded here be gone out. A feeling of sadness stole
+over me. I had been a very little chap when I had first
+taken possession of this room. If the ghost of that little
+boy, who had been me, could only come back, how I
+should have hugged him! For I loved him: he seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
+quite different from the “me” who was thinking about him
+now. Only he was gone, and just one person in the world
+knew anything about him, and he, too, I supposed, as years
+passed would forget....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Why are you sitting up here in the cold, child?”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll had opened the door and was speaking to
+me. “How long have you been here? Come down to
+tea.”</p>
+
+<p>I looked round and saw that the room had filled with
+dusk. “Oh, not very long.” I smiled. “I’m not cold.”
+But I shivered slightly as I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“That means you have been here ever since you came in.
+It is really very wrong of you, Peter. The fire is laid, and
+all you had to do was to put a match to it.”</p>
+
+<p>I followed her downstairs. There was no one in the
+drawing-room, and I was glad we were going to be by ourselves.
+I sat on the hearth-rug, hugging my knees, gazing
+into the red, glowing grate.</p>
+
+<p>“Is Miss Dick out?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“She went out to tea.”</p>
+
+<p>I waited till the servant had come in and cleared away
+the tea-things. Then I said, “I have something to tell
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll, her plump, rather large hands moving swiftly
+and deftly amid soft, fleecy wool, was knitting what looked
+remarkably like an under-garment for me. “Yes, dear,”
+she replied.</p>
+
+<p>But instead of proceeding I asked a question: “Won’t it
+cost a great deal, my going away—with a tutor, and all
+that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not very much. It is of no importance.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you will be paying for it, won’t you?” I urged.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear child, why do you want to discuss such things
+now?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have a reason.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think it can be a good one.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I were related to you—if I were your nephew—it
+would be different.”</p>
+
+<p>“What would be different?”</p>
+
+<p>“If I were worth it it would be different too. But I’m
+not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t you?” Her needles clicked placidly.</p>
+
+<p>“Why should you think me so?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because, I suppose, from the days when you were quite
+a little boy, you have been the principal thing I have had to
+think about. There was a time when I tried very hard,
+and very selfishly, I’m afraid, to be allowed to look after
+you altogether, when I wanted this house to be your home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Suppose I told you that all this—all my illness—was not
+accidental?”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll displayed no alarm. “I don’t know what
+you mean, Peter, I’m sure,” she said, gently, disengaging
+her ball of wool from Miss Dick’s cat, who had stretched
+out a tentative paw.</p>
+
+<p>“I mean that I did it myself,” I answered, bringing it all
+out at last. “I did it on purpose.... I wanted to die, to
+kill myself, and I thought of this way. I went out and lay
+on the golf-links one whole night, in the rain, with nothing
+on but my night-shirt; and next morning I took ill.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carroll said nothing, but she had stopped knitting.
+I felt her hand rest on my head.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that true, Peter?” she asked at last, after a long
+pause, and in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s true.” I stared into the fire.</p>
+
+<p>She was again silent, but she did not draw away her hand.
+“Why did you do this?” she asked presently.</p>
+
+<p>“Because I felt miserable.”</p>
+
+<p>“But—but it was a dreadful thing to do! Don’t you
+know that?” Her voice trembled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>I got on my knees. I put my arms round her neck and
+pressed my cheek against hers. “I have spoiled everything,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
+I made a mess of everything,” I muttered
+quickly. “I am not very old, but I have made a mess of
+any life I have had.”</p>
+
+<p>She drew my head down on her breast and held me close.
+For some time she did not speak.</p>
+
+<p>“It will all come right, if you try,” she said at last. “The
+beginning is not everything.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not for myself I care. It is for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“For me, then.” She paused. “But for me you are
+what you have always been and always will be, since I have
+no boy of my own. You are my son, the one being whom
+I love. Your future is what I think of and make plans for;
+and whenever I pray it is that you may be happy.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="p4 noic">THE END</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi works"><i>Wyman &amp; Sons Ltd., Printers, London and Reading.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p class="noi adauthor">SELECTIONS FROM</p>
+
+<p class="noi adtitle">MR. EDWARD ARNOLD’S</p>
+
+<p class="noi adauthor">LIST OF</p>
+
+<p class="noi adtitle">NEW AND RECENT BOOKS</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2 noi adsection">NEW FICTION</p>
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Bella.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By EDWARD CHARLES BOOTH, Author of
+“The Cliff End,” “The Doctor’s Lass,” etc. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">A story of life at Spathorpe—perhaps the most beautiful and attractive
+of all the watering-places on the English East Coast. Rupert
+Brandor, a young and wealthy man, and a poet with some pretension to
+fame, comes to Spathorpe to spend a few weeks of the season. Under
+rather amusing circumstances he makes the acquaintance on the beach of
+a young and very fascinating little girl, by name Bella Dysart, who is
+staying with her mother at Cromwell Lodge—a large and well-known villa
+on the esplanade. Bella’s personal charm and the unsophisticated frankness
+of her disposition win the poet’s interest and affection. Shortly he
+makes the acquaintance of Mrs. Dysart, and with her enters the new, and
+deeper, and more dangerous element into the poet’s story. As the days
+go by, the poet and Bella and Mrs. Dysart draw into a closer circle of
+friendship. Meanwhile, they have come to be noted by Spathorpe’s busy
+eyes. This beautiful woman and her scarcely less beautiful daughter, and
+the handsome boy, attract a large measure of public notice; and the
+inevitable whispers arise. Mrs. Dysart’s reputation suffers tarnish; her
+acquaintance with the poet is construed according to the canons of the
+world. Their uncloaked intimacy acquires the character of scandal.
+From this point onward the action of the story accelerates. In the final
+chapters it is a study in temptation, and the story occupies itself with the
+youthful and poetic temperament under influence of seductive womanly
+beauty and the counter-influences of a pure and girlish friendship.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Following Darkness.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By FORREST REID. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">A study of boyhood and adolescence. The hero is the son of a
+National schoolmaster in a village on the north coast of Ireland, and
+the contrast of temperaments between father and son is from the beginning
+strongly marked. A domestic tragedy having culminated in the disappearance
+of his mother, the boy becomes the protégé of a wealthy lady
+living in the neighbourhood. Her influence, and still more the influence
+of her surroundings, of the house above all, which occupies a distinct place
+in the story, tend to widen still further the breach between him and his
+father. The advent of this lady’s niece, a charming girl who comes on a
+visit, and by her presence transforms everything, introduces the element
+of romance, and is the prelude to a story of first love, really the central
+theme of the book.</p>
+
+
+<p class="noic"><i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">The Bracknels.</span> <span class="adauthor">A Family Chronicle. 6s.</span></p>
+
+<p>“A work of rare distinction.”—<cite>Daily News.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“An admirable novel, from which one has had no ordinary amount of
+pleasure.”—<cite>Manchester Guardian.</cite></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Soul of Unrest.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By EMILY JENKINSON,
+Author of “Silverwool,” etc. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">In her new book, “The Soul of Unrest,” Miss Jenkinson amply fulfils
+the promise shown in her first novel, “Silverwool,” which was so
+favourably received by the public two years ago. Here once again the
+author delineates her various characters with great sympathy and understanding,
+while her descriptions of their environment is marked by that
+quiet strength and charm which so distinguished her earlier work.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Tinker’s Hollow.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Mrs. F. E. CRICHTON,
+Author of “The Soundless Tide,” “Peep-in-the-World,” etc. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">The story moves in a Presbyterian village in Co. Antrim, in Victorian
+days. Here Sally Bruce’s childhood is passed amid the kindly
+austerity of old servants and an elderly uncle and aunts. Her acquaintance
+with the Beausires, an old Huguenot family settled in the same
+county, leads to the discovery of a kindred spirit in Anthony, the last of
+the line. Their few meetings are the only outward events of her life, and
+one spring morning in the Tinker’s Hollow they realize their love for each
+other. Their lives throughout are interwoven with those of the Irish
+country people—Rachael, the old nurse, Mrs. McGovern of the post-office,
+and the unhappy young school-mistress, Esther Conway.</p>
+
+
+<p class="noic"><i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">The Soundless Tide.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>“The book is one to be really read, and by most people to be really
+loved.”—<cite>Morning Post.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“Here is a wholly delightful novel written by a delightful personality.
+This story will be read and re-read, and there is much wisdom in it.”—<cite>British
+Weekly.</cite></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Tante.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK, Author
+of “Franklin Kane,” “Valérie Upton,” etc. 6s. Fifth Impression.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>“I stand amazed by the qualities of the author’s genius. She really
+can create characters, quite original, and, as it were, not fanciful, not
+fantastic, but solid samples of human nature. When one lights on something
+really good in contemporary fiction one has pleasure in saying how
+excellent one finds the rarity.”—Mr. <span class="smcap">Andrew Lang</span> in the <cite>Illustrated
+London News</cite>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Ministry of Poll Poorman.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Lt.-Col.
+D. C. PEDDER. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>“A very interesting book, original, strong, and conclusive.”—<cite>Morning
+Post.</cite></p>
+
+<p>“A quarter of a century ago such a book as this would scarcely have
+been written or read; but the advance in ideas will cause this account to
+be not only acceptable, but highly attractive to most readers.”—<cite>Daily
+Telegraph.</cite></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi adsection">TRAVEL AND WAR</p>
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Campaigns of a War Correspondent.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By
+MELTON PRIOR. Illustrated from the author’s sketches.
+One volume, 15s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">The late Melton Prior was undoubtedly the most experienced as well
+as one of the most gifted artist war correspondents of his time. He
+represented the <cite>Illustrated London News</cite> in the field for thirty years.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Holy War in Tripoli.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By G. F. ABBOTT,
+Author of “A Tale of a Tour in Macedonia.” With Illustrations
+and Maps. 15s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">This volume is a record of first-hand impressions. Mr. Abbott spent
+about four months with the Turco-Arab warriors in the desert outside
+Tripoli, shared their hardships, and entered into their spirit as only
+a European can who is already familiar with the East and its peoples.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Passing of the Manchus.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By PERCY H.
+KENT, Author of “Railway Enterprise in China.” With
+Illustrations and Maps. 15s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">This important book will throw a flood of light upon the intricate and
+mysterious chain of events that have disorganized China since the
+abdication of the child-Emperor. Mr. Kent has resided in Tientsin for
+many years, and has had unrivalled facilities for acquiring information,
+which he has turned to the best advantage.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Germany and the Next War</span> <span class="adauthor">(“Deutschland
+und der Nächste Krieg”). <i>By General F. VON BERNHARDI.
+With Map. 10s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">This book has caused a great sensation in Germany, where it has
+passed through many editions in a very short time.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">A Staff-Officer’s Scrap-Book during the
+Russo-Japanese War.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By General Sir IAN
+HAMILTON, G.C.B., D.S.O. With all the original Maps
+and Plans. New and Popular Edition. 7s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi adsection">SPORT</p>
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Trinity Foot Beagles.</span> <span class="adauthor">A History of the
+famous Cambridge University Hunt. <i>Compiled by F. C.
+KEMPSON. With numerous Illustrations. 10s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">This history of the Trinity Beagles, with which so many sportsmen
+and public men first learned the handling of hounds, should appeal
+to an unusually wide circle, especially at a time when the sport of hunting
+the hare afoot is so much on the increase.</p>
+
+
+<p class="noic"><i>A SUMPTUOUS EDITION IN TWO VOLUMES</i></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">Handley Cross; or, Mr. Jorrocks’s
+Hunt.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By R. S. SURTEES. With 24 Plates in Colour and 100
+Black-and-White Illustrations by CECIL ALDIN. Edition de
+Luxe, £3 3s. net; General Edition, £1 1s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<hr class="r30">
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">Shipmates.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>by A. E. LOANE. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">“Shipmates” gives the social and service history of a characteristic
+group of naval officers who were born between Trafalgar and
+Navarino.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Jock Scott, Midshipman: His Log.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By
+“AURORA.” Illustrated by S. VALDA. 5s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Wellington’s Army.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By C. W. OMAN, Chichele
+Professor of Modern History at Oxford. With Illustrations,
+7s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Walking Essays.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By ARTHUR HUGH SIDGWICK.
+5s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">Walking is viewed in its relation to other pursuits, to sport and
+athletics, to hygiene, to music and dancing, to eating and drinking,
+and in its effect on the mind.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Perfect Gentleman.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By HARRY
+GRAHAM, Author of “Ruthless Rhymes from Heartless Homes.”
+Illustrated by LEWIS BAUMER. 6s. Second Impression.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Memories of Victorian London.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Mrs.
+L. B. WALFORD, Author of “Mr. Smith,” “Recollections of
+a Scottish Novelist,” etc. One Volume. 12s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">Mrs. Walford, in this volume of “Memories,” deals with certain
+aspects of London social life during the latter part of the last
+century. Her anecdotes are excellently fresh and pointed; and, told in
+the manner which delighted readers of “Mr. Smith” and “The Baby’s
+Grandmother,” cannot fail to attract and charm them once again.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Old Days and Ways.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By JANE CONNOLLY. 6s.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The English Housewife of the Seventeenth
+and Eighteenth Century.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By ROSE
+BRADLEY. With Illustrations. 12s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">Miss Bradley is a daughter of the late Dean of Westminster and
+sister of Mrs. Woods, the well-known novelist.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">An African Year.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By CULLEN GOULDSBURY.
+With Illustrations. 5s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">In “An African Year” the author has endeavoured to depict, month by
+month, the domestic side of life on the Outer Fringe of Colonization,
+disregarding the heavier political questions, avoiding the weightier matters
+of ethnology and native social problems, and laying stress rather upon the
+theme that women as well as men may find a congenial place in the
+frontier life, provided that they are of the right calibre.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Life of an Elephant.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By SIR S. EARDLEY-WILMOT,
+K.C.I.E., Author of “Forest Life and Sport in
+India.” With nearly 150 Illustrations. 7s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">A companion volume to the same author’s “Life of a Tiger,” which
+was such a success when published a year ago.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Autobiography and Life of Father
+Tyrrell.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By MAUD PETRE. With numerous Illustrations.
+Two Volumes. 21s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">The chief aim of the writer has been to describe the part which Father
+Tyrrell played in the “modernist” movement, and the successive
+stages of his mental development as he brought his scholastic training to
+bear on the modern problems that confronted him.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Through Facts to Faith.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By the Rev. J. M.
+THOMPSON, Fellow and Dean of Divinity, Magdalen College,
+Oxford; Author of “Miracles of the New Testament.” 3s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="cap">These lectures form a constructive sequel to the critical argument of
+the author’s previous book. Not retracting a word of his former
+contentions, Mr. Thompson tries to show that the essence of the Christian
+faith is not weakened, but strengthened, by accepting the conclusions of
+historical and scientific criticism.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Politics and Religion.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By the Rev. GABRIEL
+GILLETT. 3s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Church and Nonconformity.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By the
+Ven. J. H. GREIG, Archdeacon of Worcester. 3s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Ten Great and Good Men.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Dr. H.
+MONTAGU BUTLER, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.
+New and Cheaper Edition. 3s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Across the Bridges.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>A Study of Social Life in
+South London. By ALEXANDER PATERSON. Cloth,
+2s. net; paper, 1s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>“An extraordinarily valuable book on the life of the children of the
+poor in South London. In its way it is the most remarkable work seen
+for years.”—<cite>Evening News.</cite></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Darling Dogs.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Mrs. M. L. WILLIAMS,
+Author of “A Manual of Toy Dogs.” Illustrated. 5s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Graven Palm.</span> <span class="adauthor">A Manual of the Science of
+Palmistry. <i>By Mrs. ROBINSON. With about 250 Original
+Illustrations. 10s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Scottish Gardens.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By the Right Hon. Sir
+HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart. With 32 Coloured Plates
+from Pastel Drawings by Miss M. G. W. WILSON. New
+Edition. 7s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Cottage Homes of England.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>Drawn
+by HELEN ALLINGHAM and Described by STEWART
+DICK. Containing 64 Coloured Plates. 8vo. (9½ in. by 7 in.),
+21s. net. Also a limited Edition de Luxe, 42s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Sport of Shooting.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By OWEN JONES.
+With Illustrations, 10s. 6d. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">The Dudley Book of Cookery and Household
+Recipes.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By GEORGIANA, COUNTESS OF
+DUDLEY. Handsomely bound, 7s. 6d. net. Fourth Impression.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noi"><span class="adtitle">Common-Sense Cookery.</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>By Colonel A.
+KENNEY-HERBERT. Over 500 pages. Illustrated. 6s. net.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="noic"><i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</i></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">Fifty Breakfasts,</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>2s. 6d.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">Fifty Luncheons,</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>2s. 6d.</i></span></p>
+
+<p class="noi"><span class="adtitle">Fifty Dinners,</span> <span class="adauthor"><i>2s. 6d.</i></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noic">LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 &amp; 43 MADDOX STREET, W.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap">
+<div class="tnote">
+<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">A List of Chapters has been provided for the convenience of the
+ reader.</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Inconsistent hyphenation and compound words were made consistent only
+ when a predominant form was found.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75675 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this book outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+book #75675 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75675)