Margaret Ogilvy
CHAPTER V
A DAY OF HER LIFE
I should like to call back a day of her life as it was at this
time, when her spirit was as bright as ever and her hand as
eager, but she was no longer able to do much work. It
should not be difficult, for she repeated herself from day to day
and yet did it with a quaint unreasonableness that was ever
yielding fresh delight. Our love for her was such that we
could easily tell what she would do in given circumstances, but
she had always a new way of doing it.
Well, with break of day she wakes and sits up in bed and is
standing in the middle of the room. So nimble was she in
the mornings (one of our troubles with her) that these three
actions must be considered as one; she is on the floor before you
have time to count them. She has strict orders not to rise
until her fire is lit, and having broken them there is a demure
elation on her face. The question is what to do before she
is caught and hurried to bed again. Her fingers are
tingling to prepare the breakfast; she would dearly love to
black-lead the grate, but that might rouse her daughter from
whose side she has slipped so cunningly. She catches sight
of the screen at the foot of the bed, and immediately her soft
face becomes very determined. To guard her from draughts
the screen had been brought here from the lordly east room, where
it was of no use whatever. But in her opinion it was too
beautiful for use; it belonged to the east room, where she could
take pleasant peeps at it; she had objected to its removal, even
become low-spirited. Now is her opportunity. The
screen is an unwieldy thing, but still as a mouse she carries it,
and they are well under weigh when it strikes against the
gas-bracket in the passage. Next moment a reproachful hand
arrests her. She is challenged with being out of bed, she
denies it—standing in the passage. Meekly or
stubbornly she returns to bed, and it is no satisfaction to you
that you can say, ‘Well, well, of all the women!’ and
so on, or ‘Surely you knew that the screen was brought here
to protect you,’ for she will reply scornfully, ‘Who
was touching the screen?’
By this time I have wakened (I am through the wall) and join
them anxiously: so often has my mother been taken ill in the
night that the slightest sound from her room rouses the
house. She is in bed again, looking as if she had never
been out of it, but I know her and listen sternly to the tale of
her misdoings. She is not contrite. Yes, maybe she
did promise not to venture forth on the cold floors of daybreak,
but she had risen for a moment only, and we just t’neaded
her with our talk about draughts—there were no such things
as draughts in her young days—and it is more than she can
do (here she again attempts to rise but we hold her down) to lie
there and watch that beautiful screen being spoilt. I reply
that the beauty of the screen has ever been its miserable defect:
ho, there! for a knife with which to spoil its beauty and make
the bedroom its fitting home. As there is no knife handy,
my foot will do; I raise my foot, and then—she sees that it
is bare, she cries to me excitedly to go back to bed lest I catch
cold. For though, ever careless of herself, she will wander
the house unshod, and tell us not to talk havers when we chide
her, the sight of one of us similarly negligent rouses her
anxiety at once. She is willing now to sign any vow if only
I will take my bare feet back to bed, but probably she is soon
after me in hers to make sure that I am nicely covered up.
It is scarcely six o’clock, and we have all promised to
sleep for another hour, but in ten minutes she is sure that eight
has struck (house disgraced), or that if it has not, something is
wrong with the clock. Next moment she is captured on her
way downstairs to wind up the clock. So evidently we must
be up and doing, and as we have no servant, my sister disappears
into the kitchen, having first asked me to see that ‘that
woman’ lies still, and ‘that woman’ calls out
that she always does lie still, so what are we blethering
about?
She is up now, and dressed in her thick maroon wrapper; over
her shoulders (lest she should stray despite our watchfulness) is
a shawl, not placed there by her own hands, and on her head a
delicious mutch. O that I could sing the pæan of the
white mutch (and the dirge of the elaborate black cap) from the
day when she called witchcraft to her aid and made it out of
snow-flakes, and the dear worn hands that washed it tenderly in a
basin, and the starching of it, and the finger-iron for its
exquisite frills that looked like curls of sugar, and the sweet
bands with which it tied beneath the chin! The honoured
snowy mutch, how I love to see it smiling to me from the doors
and windows of the poor; it is always smiling—sometimes
maybe a wavering wistful smile, as if a tear-drop lay hidden
among, the frills. A hundred times I have taken the
characterless cap from my mother’s head and put the mutch
in its place and tied the bands beneath her chin, while she
protested but was well pleased. For in her heart she knew
what suited her best and would admit it, beaming, when I put a
mirror into her hands and told her to look; but nevertheless the
cap cost no less than so-and-so, whereas—Was that a knock
at the door? She is gone, to put on her cap!
She begins the day by the fireside with the New Testament in
her hands, an old volume with its loose pages beautifully
refixed, and its covers sewn and resewn by her, so that you would
say it can never fall to pieces. It is mine now, and to me
the black threads with which she stitched it are as part of the
contents. Other books she read in the ordinary manner, but
this one differently, her lips moving with each word as if she
were reading aloud, and her face very solemn. The Testament
lies open on her lap long after she has ceased to read, and the
expression of her face has not changed.
I have seen her reading other books early in the day but never
without a guilty look on her face, for she thought reading was
scarce respectable until night had come. She spends the
forenoon in what she calls doing nothing, which may consist in
stitching so hard that you would swear she was an over-worked
seamstress at it for her life, or you will find her on a table
with nails in her mouth, and anon she has to be chased from the
garret (she has suddenly decided to change her curtains), or she
is under the bed searching for band-boxes and asking sternly
where we have put that bonnet. On the whole she is behaving
in a most exemplary way to-day (not once have we caught her
trying to go out into the washing-house), and we compliment her
at dinner-time, partly because she deserves it, and partly to
make her think herself so good that she will eat something, just
to maintain her new character. I question whether one hour
of all her life was given to thoughts of food; in her great days
to eat seemed to her to be waste of time, and afterwards she only
ate to boast of it, as something she had done to please us.
She seldom remembered whether she had dined, but always presumed
she had, and while she was telling me in all good faith what the
meal consisted of, it might be brought in. When in London I
had to hear daily what she was eating, and perhaps she had
refused all dishes until they produced the pen and ink.
These were flourished before her, and then she would say with a
sigh, ‘Tell him I am to eat an egg.’ But they
were not so easily deceived; they waited, pen in hand, until the
egg was eaten.
She never ‘went for a walk’ in her life.
Many long trudges she had as a girl when she carried her
father’s dinner in a flagon to the country place where he
was at work, but to walk with no end save the good of your health
seemed a very droll proceeding to her. In her young days,
she was positive, no one had ever gone for a walk, and she never
lost the belief that it was an absurdity introduced by a new
generation with too much time on their hands. That they
enjoyed it she could not believe; it was merely a form of showing
off, and as they passed her window she would remark to herself
with blasting satire, ‘Ay, Jeames, are you off for your
walk?’ and add fervently, ‘Rather you than
me!’ I was one of those who walked, and though she
smiled, and might drop a sarcastic word when she saw me putting
on my boots, it was she who had heated them in preparation for my
going. The arrangement between us was that she should lie
down until my return, and to ensure its being carried out I saw
her in bed before I started, but with the bang of the door she
would be at the window to watch me go: there is one spot on the
road where a thousand times I have turned to wave my stick to
her, while she nodded and smiled and kissed her hand to me.
That kissing of the hand was the one English custom she had
learned.
In an hour or so I return, and perhaps find her in bed,
according to promise, but still I am suspicious. The way to
her detection is circuitous.
‘I’ll need to be rising now,’ she says, with
a yawn that may be genuine.
‘How long have you been in bed?’
‘You saw me go.’
‘And then I saw you at the window. Did you go
straight back to bed?’
‘Surely I had that much sense.’
‘The truth!’
‘I might have taken a look at the clock
first.’
‘It is a terrible thing to have a mother who
prevaricates. Have you been lying down ever since I
left?’
‘Thereabout.’
‘What does that mean exactly?’
‘Off and on.’
‘Have you been to the garret?’
‘What should I do in the garret?’
‘But have you?’
‘I might just have looked up the garret
stair.’
‘You have been redding up the garret again!’
‘Not what you could call a redd up.’
‘O, woman, woman, I believe you have not been in bed at
all!’
‘You see me in it.’
‘My opinion is that you jumped into bed when you heard
me open the door.’
‘Havers.’
‘Did you?’
‘No.’
‘Well, then, when you heard me at the gate?’
‘It might have been when I heard you at the
gate.’
As daylight goes she follows it with her sewing to the window,
and gets another needleful out of it, as one may run after a
departed visitor for a last word, but now the gas is lit, and no
longer is it shameful to sit down to literature. If the
book be a story by George Eliot or Mrs. Oliphant, her favourites
(and mine) among women novelists, or if it be a Carlyle, and we
move softly, she will read, entranced, for hours. Her
delight in Carlyle was so well known that various good people
would send her books that contained a page about him; she could
place her finger on any passage wanted in the biography as
promptly as though she were looking for some article in her own
drawer, and given a date she was often able to tell you what they
were doing in Cheyne Row that day. Carlyle, she decided,
was not so much an ill man to live with as one who needed a deal
of managing, but when I asked if she thought she could have
managed him she only replied with a modest smile that meant
‘Oh no!’ but had the face of ‘Sal, I would have
liked to try.’
One lady lent her some scores of Carlyle letters that have
never been published, and crabbed was the writing, but though my
mother liked to have our letters read aloud to her, she read
every one of these herself, and would quote from them in her
talk. Side by side with the Carlyle letters, which show him
in his most gracious light, were many from his wife to a friend,
and in one of these a romantic adventure is described—I
quote from memory, and it is a poor memory compared to my
mother’s, which registered everything by a method of her
own: ‘What might be the age of Bell Tibbits? Well,
she was born the week I bought the boiler, so she’ll be
one-and-fifty (no less!) come Martinmas.’ Mrs.
Carlyle had got into the train at a London station and was
feeling very lonely, for the journey to Scotland lay before her
and no one had come to see her off. Then, just as the train
was starting, a man jumped into the carriage, to her regret until
she saw his face, when, behold, they were old friends, and the
last time they met (I forget how many years before) he had asked
her to be his wife. He was very nice, and if I remember
aright, saw her to her journey’s end, though he had
intended to alight at some half-way place. I call this an
adventure, and I am sure it seemed to my mother to be the most
touching and memorable adventure that can come into a
woman’s life. ‘You see he hadna forgot,’
she would say proudly, as if this was a compliment in which all
her sex could share, and on her old tender face shone some of the
elation with which Mrs. Carlyle wrote that letter.
But there were times, she held, when Carlyle must have made
his wife a glorious woman. ‘As when?’ I might
inquire.
‘When she keeked in at his study door and said to
herself, “The whole world is ringing with his fame, and he
is my man!”’
‘And then,’ I might point out, ‘he would
roar to her to shut the door.’
‘Pooh!’ said my mother, ‘a man’s roar
is neither here nor there.’ But her verdict as a
whole was, ‘I would rather have been his mother than his
wife.’
So we have got her into her chair with the Carlyles, and all
is well. Furthermore, ‘to mak siccar,’ my
father has taken the opposite side of the fireplace and is deep
in the latest five columns of Gladstone, who is his
Carlyle. He is to see that she does not slip away fired by
a conviction, which suddenly overrides her pages, that the
kitchen is going to rack and ruin for want of her, and she is to
recall him to himself should he put his foot in the fire and keep
it there, forgetful of all save his hero’s eloquence.
(We were a family who needed a deal of watching.) She is
not interested in what Mr. Gladstone has to say; indeed she could
never be brought to look upon politics as of serious concern for
grown folk (a class in which she scarcely included man), and she
gratefully gave up reading ‘leaders’ the day I ceased
to write them. But like want of reasonableness, a love for
having the last word, want of humour and the like, politics were
in her opinion a mannish attribute to be tolerated, and Gladstone
was the name of the something which makes all our sex such queer
characters. She had a profound faith in him as an aid to
conversation, and if there were silent men in the company would
give him to them to talk about, precisely as she divided a cake
among children. And then, with a motherly smile, she would
leave them to gorge on him. But in the idolising of
Gladstone she recognised, nevertheless, a certain inevitability,
and would no more have tried to contend with it than to sweep a
shadow off the floor. Gladstone was, and there was an end
of it in her practical philosophy. Nor did she accept him
coldly; like a true woman she sympathised with those who suffered
severely, and they knew it and took counsel of her in the hour of
need. I remember one ardent Gladstonian who, as a general
election drew near, was in sore straits indeed, for he
disbelieved in Home Rule, and yet how could he vote against
‘Gladstone’s man’? His distress was so
real that it gave him a hang-dog appearance. He put his
case gloomily before her, and until the day of the election she
riddled him with sarcasm; I think he only went to her because he
found a mournful enjoyment in seeing a false Gladstonian
tortured.
It was all such plain-sailing for him, she pointed out; he did
not like this Home Rule, and therefore he must vote against
it.
She put it pitiful clear, he replied with a groan.
But she was like another woman to him when he appeared before
her on his way to the polling-booth.
‘This is a watery Sabbath to you, I’m
thinking,’ she said sympathetically, but without dropping
her wires—for Home Rule or no Home Rule that stocking-foot
must be turned before twelve o’clock.
A watery Sabbath means a doleful day, and ‘A watery
Sabbath it is,’ he replied with feeling. A silence
followed, broken only by the click of the wires. Now and
again he would mutter, ‘Ay, well, I’ll be going to
vote—little did I think the day would come,’ and so
on, but if he rose it was only to sit down again, and at last she
crossed over to him and said softly, (no sarcasm in her voice
now), ‘Away with you, and vote for Gladstone’s
man!’ He jumped up and made off without a word, but
from the east window we watched him strutting down the
brae. I laughed, but she said, ‘I’m no sure
that it’s a laughing matter,’ and afterwards,
‘I would have liked fine to be that Gladstone’s
mother.’
It is nine o’clock now, a quarter-past nine, half-past
nine—all the same moment to me, for I am at a sentence that
will not write. I know, though I can’t hear, what my
sister has gone upstairs to say to my mother:—
‘I was in at him at nine, and he said, “In five
minutes,” so I put the steak on the brander, but I’ve
been in thrice since then, and every time he says, “In five
minutes,” and when I try to take the table-cover off, he
presses his elbows hard on it, and growls. His supper will
be completely spoilt.’
‘Oh, that weary writing!’
‘I can do no more, mother, so you must come down and
stop him.’
‘I have no power over him,’ my mother says, but
she rises smiling, and presently she is opening my door.
‘In five minutes!’ I cry, but when I see that it
is she I rise and put my arm round her. ‘What a full
basket!’ she says, looking at the waste-paper basket, which
contains most of my work of the night and with a dear gesture she
lifts up a torn page and kisses it. ‘Poor
thing,’ she says to it, ‘and you would have liked so
fine to be printed!’ and she puts her hand over my desk to
prevent my writing more.
‘In the last five minutes,’ I begin, ‘one
can often do more than in the first hour.’
‘Many a time I’ve said it in my young days,’
she says slowly.
‘And proved it, too!’ cries a voice from the door,
the voice of one who was prouder of her even than I; it is true,
and yet almost unbelievable, that any one could have been prouder
of her than I.
‘But those days are gone,’ my mother says
solemnly, ‘gone to come back no more. You’ll
put by your work now, man, and have your supper, and then
you’ll come up and sit beside your mother for a whiley, for
soon you’ll be putting her away in the
kirk-yard.’
I hear such a little cry from near the door.
So my mother and I go up the stair together. ‘We
have changed places,’ she says; ‘that was just how I
used to help you up, but I’m the bairn now.’
She brings out the Testament again; it was always lying within
reach; it is the lock of hair she left me when she died.
And when she has read for a long time she ‘gives me a
look,’ as we say in the north, and I go out, to leave her
alone with God. She had been but a child when her mother
died, and so she fell early into the way of saying her prayers
with no earthly listener. Often and often I have found her
on her knees, but I always went softly away, closing the
door. I never heard her pray, but I know very well how she
prayed, and that, when that door was shut, there was not a day in
God’s sight between the worn woman and the little
child.