The Old Wives' Tale
Book II
CONSTANCE
Chapter II
CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE
I
Mr. Povey was playing a hymn tune on the
harmonium, it having been decided that no one should go to chapel. Constance, in
mourning, with a white apron over her dress, sat on a hassock in front of the
fire; and near her, in a rocking-chair, Mrs. Baines swayed very gently to and
fro. The weather was extremely cold. Mr. Povey's mittened hands were blue and
red; but, like many shopkeepers, he had apparently grown almost insensible to
vagaries of temperature. Although the fire was immense and furious, its
influence, owing to the fact that the mediaeval grate was designed to heat the
flue rather than the room, seemed to die away at the borders of the fender.
Constance could not have been much closer to it without being a salamander. The
era of good old-fashioned Christmases, so agreeably picturesque for the poor,
was not yet at an end.
Yes, Samuel Povey had won the battle concerning the locus of the
family Christmas. But he had received the help of a formidable ally, death. Mrs.
Harriet Maddack had passed away, after an operation, leaving her house and her
money to her sister. The solemn rite of her interment had deeply affected all
the respectability of the town of Axe, where the late Mr. Maddack had been a
figure of consequence; it had even shut up the shop in St. Luke's Square for a
whole day. It was such a funeral as Aunt Harriet herself would have approved, a
tremendous ceremonial which left on the crushed mind an ineffaceable, intricate
impression of shiny cloth, crape, horses with arching necks and long manes, the
drawl of parsons, cake, port, sighs, and Christian submission to the inscrutable
decrees of Providence. Mrs. Baines had borne herself with unnatural calmness
until the funeral was over: and then Constance perceived that the remembered
mother of her girlhood existed no longer. For the majority of human souls it
would have been easier to love a virtuous principle, or a mountain, than to love
Aunt Harriet, who was assuredly less a woman than an institution. But Mrs.
Baines had loved her, and she had been the one person to whom Mrs. Baines looked
for support and guidance. When she died, Mrs. Baines paid the tribute of respect
with the last hoarded remains of her proud fortitude, and weepingly confessed
that the unconquerable had been conquered, the inexhaustible exhausted; and
became old with whitening hair.
She had persisted in her refusal to spend Christmas in Bursley,
but both Constance and Samuel knew that the resistance was only formal. She soon
yielded. When Constance's second new servant took it into her head to leave a
week before Christmas, Mrs. Baines might have pointed out the finger of
Providence at work again, and this time in her favour. But no! With amazing
pliancy she suggested that she should bring one of her own servants to 'tide
Constance over' Christmas. She was met with all the forms of loving solicitude,
and she found that her daughter and son-in-law had 'turned out of' the state
bedroom in her favour. Intensely flattered by this attention (which was Mr.
Povey's magnanimous idea), she nevertheless protested strongly. Indeed she
'would not hear of it.'
"Now, mother, don't be silly," Constance had said firmly. "You
don't expect us to be at all the trouble of moving back again, do you?" And Mrs.
Baines had surrendered in tears.
Thus had come Christmas. Perhaps it was fortunate that, the Axe
servant being not quite the ordinary servant, but a benefactor where a
benefactor was needed, both Constance and her mother thought it well to occupy
themselves in household work, 'sparing' the benefactor as much as possible.
Hence Constance's white apron.
"There he is!" said Mr. Povey, still playing, but with his eye on
the street.
Constance sprang up eagerly. Then there was a knock on the door.
Constance opened, and an icy blast swept into the room. The postman stood on the
steps, his instrument for knocking (like a drumstick) in one hand, a large
bundle of letters in the other, and a yawning bag across the pit of his
stomach.
"Merry Christmas, ma'am!" cried the postman, trying to keep warm
by cheerfulness.
Constance, taking the letters, responded, while Mr. Povey, playing
the harmonium with his right hand, drew half a crown from his pocket with the
left.
"Here you are!" he said, giving it to Constance, who gave it to
the postman.
Fan, who had been keeping her muzzle warm with the extremity of
her tail on the sofa, jumped down to superintend the transaction.
"Brrr!" vibrated Mr. Povey as Constance shut the door.
"What lots!" Constance exclaimed, rushing to the fire. "Here,
mother!
Here, Sam!"
The girl had resumed possession of the woman's body.
Though the Baines family had few friends (sustained hospitality
being little practised in those days) they had, of course, many acquaintances,
and, like other families, they counted their Christmas cards as an Indian counts
scalps. The tale was satisfactory. There were between thirty and forty
envelopes. Constance extracted Christmas cards rapidly, reading their contents
aloud, and then propping them up on the mantelpiece. Mrs. Baines assisted. Fan
dealt with the envelopes on the floor. Mr. Povey, to prove that his soul was
above toys and gewgaws, continued to play the harmonium.
"Oh, mother!" Constance murmured in a startled, hesitant voice,
holding an envelope.
"What is it, my chuck?"
"It's——"
The envelope was addressed to "Mrs. and Miss Baines" in large,
perpendicular, dashing characters which Constance instantly recognised as
Sophia's. The stamps were strange, the postmark 'Paris.' Mrs. Baines leaned
forward and looked.
"Open it, child," she said.
The envelope contained an English Christmas card of a common type,
a spray of holly with greetings, and on it was written, "I do hope this will
reach you on Christmas morning. Fondest love." No signature, nor address.
Mrs. Baines took it with a trembling hand, and adjusted her
spectacles.
She gazed at it a long time.
"And it has done!" she said, and wept.
She tried to speak again, but not being able to command herself,
held forth the card to Constance and jerked her head in the direction of Mr.
Povey. Constance rose and put the card on the keyboard of the harmonium.
"Sophia!" she whispered.
Mr. Povey stopped playing. "Dear, dear!" he muttered.
Fan, perceiving that nobody was interested in her feats, suddenly
stood still.
Mrs. Baines tried once more to speak, but could not. Then, her
ringlets shaking beneath the band of her weeds, she found her feet, stepped to
the harmonium, and, with a movement almost convulsive, snatched the card from
Mr. Povey, and returned to her chair.
Mr. Povey abruptly left the room, followed by Fan. Both the women
were in tears, and he was tremendously surprised to discover a dangerous lump in
his own throat. The beautiful and imperious vision of Sophia, Sophia as she had
left them, innocent, wayward, had swiftly risen up before him and made even him
a woman too! Yet he had never liked Sophia. The awful secret wound in the family
pride revealed itself to him as never before, and he felt intensely the mother's
tragedy, which she carried in her breast as Aunt Harriet had carried a
cancer.
At dinner he said suddenly to Mrs. Baines, who still wept: "Now,
mother, you must cheer up, you know."
"Yes, I must," she said quickly. And she did do.
Neither Samuel nor Constance saw the card again. Little was said.
There was nothing to say. As Sophia had given no address she must be still
ashamed of her situation. But she had thought of her mother and sister. She …
she did not even know that Constance was married … What sort of a place was
Paris? To Bursley, Paris was nothing but the site of a great exhibition which
had recently closed.
Through the influence of Mrs. Baines a new servant was found for
Constance in a village near Axe, a raw, comely girl who had never been in a
'place.' And through the post it was arranged that this innocent should come to
the cave on the thirty-first of December. In obedience to the safe rule that
servants should never be allowed to meet for the interchange of opinions, Mrs.
Baines decided to leave with her own servant on the thirtieth. She would not be
persuaded to spend the New Year in the Square. On the twenty-ninth poor Aunt
Maria died all of a sudden in her cottage in Brougham Street. Everybody was duly
distressed, and in particular Mrs. Baines's demeanour under this affliction
showed the perfection of correctness. But she caused it to be understood that
she should not remain for the funeral. Her nerves would be unequal to the
ordeal; and, moreover, her servant must not stay to corrupt the new girl, nor
could Mrs. Baines think of sending her servant to Axe in advance, to spend
several days in idle gossip with her colleague.
This decision took the backbone out of Aunt Maria's funeral, which
touched the extreme of modesty: a hearse and a one-horse coach. Mr. Povey was
glad, because he happened to be very busy. An hour before his mother-in-law's
departure he came into the parlour with the proof of a poster.
"What is that, Samuel?" asked Mrs. Baines, not dreaming of the
blow that awaited her.
"It's for my first Annual Sale," replied Mr. Povey with false
tranquillity.
Mrs. Baines merely tossed her head. Constance, happily for
Constance, was not present at this final defeat of the old order. Had she been
there, she would certainly not have known where to look.
II
"Forty next birthday!" Mr. Povey exclaimed one day, with an
expression and in a tone that were at once mock-serious and serious. This was on
his thirty-ninth birthday.
Constance was startled. She had, of course, been aware that they
were getting older, but she had never realized the phenomenon. Though customers
occasionally remarked that Mr. Povey was stouter, and though when she helped him
to measure himself for a new suit of clothes the tape proved the fact, he had
not changed for her. She knew that she too had become somewhat stouter; but for
herself, she remained exactly the same Constance. Only by recalling dates and by
calculations could she really grasp that she had been married a little over six
years and not a little over six months. She had to admit that, if Samuel would
be forty next birthday, she would be twenty-seven next birthday. But it would
not be a real twenty-seven; nor would Sam's forty be a real forty, like other
people's twenty-sevens and forties. Not long since she had been in the habit of
regarding a man of forty as senile, as practically in his grave.
She reflected, and the more she reflected the more clearly she saw
that after all the almanacs had not lied. Look at Fan! Yes, it must be five
years since the memorable morning when doubt first crossed the minds of Samuel
and Constance as to Fan's moral principles. Samuel's enthusiasm for dogs was
equalled by his ignorance of the dangers to which a young female of temperament
may be exposed, and he was much disturbed as doubt developed into certainty.
Fan, indeed, was the one being who did not suffer from shock and who had no
fears as to the results. The animal, having a pure mind, was bereft of modesty.
Sundry enormities had she committed, but none to rank with this one! The result
was four quadrupeds recognizable as fox-terriers. Mr. Povey breathed again. Fan
had had more luck than she deserved, for the result might have been simply
anything. Her owners forgave her and disposed of these fruits of iniquity, and
then married her lawfully to a husband who was so high up in the world that he
could demand a dowry. And now Fan was a grandmother, with fixed ideas and
habits, and a son in the house, and various grandchildren scattered over the
town. Fan was a sedate and disillusioned dog. She knew the world as it was, and
in learning it she had taught her owners above a bit.
Then there was Maggie Hollins. Constance could still vividly
recall the self-consciousness with which she had one day received Maggie and the
heir of the Hollinses; but it was a long time ago. After staggering half the
town by the production of this infant (of which she nearly died) Maggie allowed
the angels to waft it away to heaven, and everybody said that she ought to be
very thankful—at her age. Old women dug up out of their minds forgotten
histories of the eccentricities of the goddess Lucina. Mrs. Baines was most
curiously interested; she talked freely to Constance, and Constance began to see
what an incredible town Bursley had always been—and she never suspected it!
Maggie was now mother of other children, and the draggled, lame mistress of a
drunken home, and looked sixty. Despite her prophecy, her husband had conserved
his 'habits.' The Poveys ate all the fish they could, and sometimes more than
they enjoyed, because on his sober days Hollins invariably started his round at
the shop, and Constance had to buy for Maggie's sake. The worst of the worthless
husband was that he seldom failed to be cheery and polite. He never missed
asking after the health of Mrs. Baines. And when Constance replied that her
mother was 'pretty well considering,' but that she would not come over to
Bursley again until the Axe railway was opened, as she could not stand the
drive, he would shake his grey head and be sympathetically gloomy for an
instant.
All these changes in six years! The almanacs were in the right of
it.
But nothing had happened to her. Gradually she had obtained a sure
ascendency over her mother, yet without seeking it, merely as the outcome of
time's influences on her and on her mother respectively. Gradually she had
gained skill and use in the management of her household and of her share of the
shop, so that these machines ran smoothly and effectively and a sudden
contretemps no longer frightened her. Gradually she had constructed a chart of
Samuel's individuality, with the submerged rocks and perilous currents all
carefully marked, so that she could now voyage unalarmed in those seas. But
nothing happened. Unless their visits to Buxton could be called happenings!
Decidedly the visit to Buxton was the one little hill that rose out of the level
plain of the year. They had formed the annual habit of going to Buxton for ten
days. They had a way of saying: "Yes, we always go to Buxton. We went there for
our honeymoon, you know." They had become confirmed Buxtonites, with views
concerning St. Anne's Terrace, the Broad Walk and Peel's Cavern. They could not
dream of deserting their Buxton. It was the sole possible resort. Was it not the
highest town in England? Well, then! They always stayed at the same lodgings,
and grew to be special favourites of the landlady, who whispered of them to all
her other guests as having come to her house for their honeymoon, and as never
missing a year, and as being most respectable, superior people in quite a large
way of business. Each year they walked out of Buxton station behind their
luggage on a truck, full of joy and pride because they knew all the landmarks,
and the lie of all the streets, and which were the best shops.
At the beginning, the notion of leaving the shop to hired custody
had seemed almost fantastic, and the preparations for absence had been very
complicated. Then it was that Miss Insull had detached herself from the other
young lady assistants as a creature who could be absolutely trusted. Miss Insull
was older than Constance; she had a bad complexion, and she was not clever, but
she was one of your reliable ones. The six years had witnessed the slow, steady
rise of Miss Insull. Her employers said 'Miss Insull' in a tone quite different
from that in which they said 'Miss Hawkins,' or 'Miss Dadd.' 'Miss Insull' meant
the end of a discussion. 'Better tell Miss Insull.' 'Miss Insull will see to
that.' 'I shall ask Miss Insull.' Miss Insull slept in the house ten nights
every year. Miss Insull had been called into consultation when it was decided to
engage a fourth hand in the shape of an apprentice.
Trade had improved in the point of excellence. It was now admitted
to be good—a rare honour for trade! The coal-mining boom was at its height, and
colliers, in addition to getting drunk, were buying American organs and
expensive bull-terriers. Often they would come to the shop to purchase cloth for
coats for their dogs. And they would have good cloth. Mr. Povey did not like
this. One day a butty chose for his dog the best cloth of Mr. Povey's shop—at
12s. a yard. "Will ye make it up? I've gotten th' measurements," asked the
collier. "No, I won't!" said Mr. Povey, hotly. "And what's more, I won't sell
you the cloth either! Cloth at 12s. a yard on a dog's back indeed! I'll thank
you to get out of my shop!" The incident became historic, in the Square. It
finally established that Mr. Povey was a worthy son-in-law and a solid and
successful man. It vindicated the old pre-eminence of "Baines's." Some surprise
was expressed that Mr. Povey showed no desire nor tendency towards entering the
public life of the town. But he never would, though a keen satirical critic of
the Local Board in private. And at the chapel he remained a simple private
worshipper, refusing stewardships and trusteeships.
III
Was Constance happy? Of course there was always something on her
mind, something that had to be dealt with, either in the shop or in the house,
something to employ all the skill and experience which she had acquired. Her
life had much in it of laborious tedium—tedium never-ending and monotonous. And
both she and Samuel worked consistently hard, rising early, 'pushing forward,'
as the phrase ran, and going to bed early from sheer fatigue; week after week
and month after month as season changed imperceptibly into season. In June and
July it would happen to them occasionally to retire before the last silver of
dusk was out of the sky. They would lie in bed and talk placidly of their daily
affairs. There would be a noise in the street below. "Vaults closing!" Samuel
would say, and yawn. "Yes, it's quite late," Constance would say. And the Swiss
clock would rapidly strike eleven on its coil of resonant wire. And then, just
before she went to sleep, Constance might reflect upon her destiny, as even the
busiest and smoothest women do, and she would decide that it was kind. Her
mother's gradual decline and lonely life at Axe saddened her. The cards which
came now and then at extremely long intervals from Sophia had been the cause of
more sorrow than joy. The naive ecstasies of her girlhood had long since
departed—the price paid for experience and self-possession and a true vision of
things. The vast inherent melancholy of the universe did not exempt her. But as
she went to sleep she would be conscious of a vague contentment. The basis of
this contentment was the fact that she and Samuel comprehended and esteemed each
other, and made allowances for each other. Their characters had been tested and
had stood the test. Affection, love, was not to them a salient phenomenon in
their relations. Habit had inevitably dulled its glitter. It was like a
flavouring, scarce remarked; but had it been absent, how they would have turned
from that dish!
Samuel never, or hardly ever, set himself to meditate upon the
problem whether or not life had come up to his expectations. But he had, at
times, strange sensations which he did not analyze, and which approached nearer
to ecstasy than any feeling of Constance's. Thus, when he was in one of his dark
furies, molten within and black without, the sudden thought of his wife's
unalterable benignant calm, which nothing could overthrow, might strike him into
a wondering cold. For him she was astoundingly feminine. She would put flowers
on the mantelpiece, and then, hours afterwards, in the middle of a meal, ask him
unexpectedly what he thought of her 'garden;' and he gradually divined that a
perfunctory reply left her unsatisfied; she wanted a genuine opinion; a genuine
opinion mattered to her. Fancy calling flowers on a mantelpiece a 'garden'! How
charming, how childlike! Then she had a way, on Sunday mornings, when she
descended to the parlour all ready for chapel, of shutting the door at the foot
of the stairs with a little bang, shaking herself, and turning round swiftly as
if for his inspection, as if saying: "Well, what about this? Will this do?" A
phenomenon always associated in his mind with the smell of kid gloves!
Invariably she asked him about the colours and cut of her dresses. Would he
prefer this, or that? He could not take such questions seriously until one day
he happened to hint, merely hint, that he was not a thorough-going admirer of a
certain new dress—it was her first new dress after the definite abandonment of
crinolines. She never wore it again. He thought she was not serious at first,
and remonstrated against a joke being carried too far. She said: "It's not a bit
of use you talking, I shan't wear it again." And then he so far appreciated her
seriousness as to refrain, by discretion, from any comment. The incident
affected him for days. It flattered him; it thrilled him; but it baffled him.
Strange that a woman subject to such caprices should be so sagacious, capable,
and utterly reliable as Constance was! For the practical and commonsense side of
her eternally compelled his admiration. The very first example of it—her
insistence that the simultaneous absence of both of them from the shop for half
an hour or an hour twice a day would not mean the immediate downfall of the
business—had remained in his mind ever since. Had she not been obstinate—in her
benevolent way—against the old superstition which he had acquired from his
employers, they might have been eating separately to that day. Then her handling
of her mother during the months of the siege of Paris, when Mrs. Baines was
convinced that her sinful daughter was in hourly danger of death, had been
extraordinarily fine, he considered. And the sequel, a card for Constance's
birthday, had completely justified her attitude.
Sometimes some blundering fool would jovially exclaim to them:
"What about that baby?"
Or a woman would remark quietly: "I often feel sorry you've no
children."
And they would answer that really they did not know what they
would do if there was a baby. What with the shop and one thing or another…! And
they were quite sincere.
IV
It is remarkable what a little thing will draw even the most
regular and serious people from the deep groove of their habits. One morning in
March, a boneshaker, an affair on two equal wooden wheels joined by a bar of
iron, in the middle of which was a wooden saddle, disturbed the gravity of St.
Luke's Square. True, it was probably the first boneshaker that had ever attacked
the gravity of St. Luke's Square. It came out of the shop of Daniel Povey, the
confectioner and baker, and Samuel Povey's celebrated cousin, in Boulton
Terrace. Boulton Terrace formed nearly a right angle with the Baines premises,
and at the corner of the angle Wedgwood Street and King Street left the Square.
The boneshaker was brought forth by Dick Povey, the only son of Daniel, now aged
eleven years, under the superintendence of his father, and the Square soon
perceived that Dick had a natural talent for breaking-in an untrained
boneshaker. After a few attempts he could remain on the back of the machine for
at least ten yards, and his feats had the effect of endowing St. Luke's Square
with the attractiveness of a circus. Samuel Povey watched with candid interest
from the ambush of his door, while the unfortunate young lady assistants, though
aware of the performance that was going on, dared not stir from the stove.
Samuel was tremendously tempted to sally out boldly, and chat with his cousin
about the toy; he had surely a better right to do so than any other tradesman in
the Square, since he was of the family; but his diffidence prevented him from
moving. Presently Daniel Povey and Dick went to the top of the Square with the
machine, opposite Holl's, and Dick, being carefully installed in the saddle,
essayed to descend the gentle paven slopes of the Square. He failed time after
time; the machine had an astonishing way of turning round, running uphill, and
then lying calmly on its side. At this point of Dick's life-history every
shop-door in the Square was occupied by an audience. At last the boneshaker
displayed less unwillingness to obey, and lo! in a moment Dick was riding down
the Square, and the spectators held their breath as if he had been Blondin
crossing Niagara. Every second he ought to have fallen off, but he contrived to
keep upright. Already he had accomplished twenty yards—thirty yards! It was a
miracle that he was performing! The transit continued, and seemed to occupy
hours. And then a faint hope rose in the breast of the watchers that the prodigy
might arrive at the bottom of the Square. His speed was increasing with his
'nack.' But the Square was enormous, boundless. Samuel Povey gazed at the
approaching phenomenon, as a bird at a serpent, with bulging, beady eyes. The
child's speed went on increasing and his path grew straighter. Yes, he would
arrive; he would do it! Samuel Povey involuntarily lifted one leg in his nervous
tension. And now the hope that Dick would arrive became a fear, as his pace grew
still more rapid. Everybody lifted one leg, and gaped. And the intrepid child
surged on, and, finally victorious, crashed into the pavement in front of Samuel
at the rate of quite six miles an hour.
Samuel picked him up, unscathed. And somehow this picking up of
Dick invested Samuel with importance, gave him a share in the glory of the feat
itself.
Daniel Povey same running and joyous. "Not so bad for a start,
eh?" exclaimed the great Daniel. Though by no means a simple man, his pride in
his offspring sometimes made him a little naive.
Father and son explained the machine to Samuel, Dick incessantly
repeating the exceedingly strange truth that if you felt you were falling to
your right you must turn to your right and vice versa. Samuel found himself
suddenly admitted, as it were, to the inner fellowship of the boneshaker,
exalted above the rest of the Square. In another adventure more thrilling events
occurred. The fair-haired Dick was one of those dangerous, frenzied madcaps who
are born without fear. The secret of the machine had been revealed to him in his
recent transit, and he was silently determining to surpass himself. Precariously
balanced, he descended the Square again, frowning hard, his teeth set, and
actually managed to swerve into King Street. Constance, in the parlour, saw an
incomprehensible winged thing fly past the window. The cousins Povey sounded an
alarm and protest and ran in pursuit; for the gradient of King Street is, in the
strict sense, steep. Half-way down King Street Dick was travelling at twenty
miles an hour, and heading straight for the church, as though he meant to
disestablish it and perish. The main gate of the churchyard was open, and that
affrighting child, with a lunatic's luck, whizzed safely through the portals
into God's acre. The cousins Povey discovered him lying on a green grave,
clothed in pride. His first words were: "Dad, did you pick my cap up?" The
symbolism of the amazing ride did not escape the Square; indeed, it was much
discussed.
This incident led to a friendship between the cousins. They formed
a habit of meeting in the Square for a chat. The meetings were the subject of
comment, for Samuel's relations with the greater Daniel had always been of the
most distant. It was understood that Samuel disapproved of Mrs. Daniel Povey
even, more than the majority of people disapproved of her. Mrs. Daniel Povey,
however, was away from home; probably, had she not been, Samuel would not even
have gone to the length of joining Daniel on the neutral ground of the open
Square. But having once broken the ice, Samuel was glad to be on terms of
growing intimacy with his cousin. The friendship flattered him, for Daniel,
despite his wife, was a figure in a world larger than Samuel's; moreover, it
consecrated his position as the equal of no matter what tradesman (apprentice
though he had been), and also he genuinely liked and admired Daniel, rather to
his own astonishment.
Every one liked Daniel Povey; he was a favourite among all ranks.
The leading confectioner, a member of the Local Board, and a sidesman at St.
Luke's, he was, and had been for twenty-five years, very prominent in the town.
He was a tall, handsome man, with a trimmed, greying beard, a jolly smile, and a
flashing, dark eye. His good humour seemed to be permanent. He had dignity
without the slightest stiffness; he was welcomed by his equals and frankly
adored by his inferiors. He ought to have been Chief Bailiff, for he was rich
enough; but there intervened a mysterious obstacle between Daniel Povey and the
supreme honour, a scarcely tangible impediment which could not be definitely
stated. He was capable, honest, industrious, successful, and an excellent
speaker; and if he did not belong to the austerer section of society, if, for
example, he thought nothing of dropping into the Tiger for a glass of beer, or
of using an oath occasionally, or of telling a facetious story—well, in a busy,
broad-minded town of thirty thousand inhabitants, such proclivities are no bar
whatever to perfect esteem. But—how is one to phrase it without wronging Daniel
Povey? He was entirely moral; his views were unexceptionable. The truth is that,
for the ruling classes of Bursley, Daniel Povey was just a little too fanatical
a worshipper of the god Pan. He was one of the remnant who had kept alive the
great Pan tradition from the days of the Regency through the vast, arid
Victorian expanse of years. The flighty character of his wife was regarded by
many as a judgment upon him for the robust Rabelaisianism of his more private
conversation, for his frank interest in, his eternal preoccupation with, aspects
of life and human activity which, though essential to the divine purpose, are
not openly recognized as such—even by Daniel Poveys. It was not a question of
his conduct; it was a question of the cast of his mind. If it did not explain
his friendship with the rector of St. Luke's, it explained his departure from
the Primitive Methodist connexion, to which the Poveys as a family had belonged
since Primitive Methodism was created in Turnhill in 1807.
Daniel Povey had a way of assuming that every male was boiling
over with interest in the sacred cult of Pan. The assumption, though sometimes
causing inconvenience at first, usually conquered by virtue of its inherent
truthfulness. Thus it fell out with Samuel. Samuel had not suspected that Pan
had silken cords to draw him. He had always averted his eyes from the god—that
is to say, within reason. Yet now Daniel, on perhaps a couple of fine mornings a
week, in full Square, with Fan sitting behind on the cold stones, and Mr.
Critchlow ironic at his door in a long white apron, would entertain Samuel Povey
for half an hour with Pan's most intimate lore, and Samuel Povey would not
blench. He would, on the contrary, stand up to Daniel like a little man, and
pretend with all his might to be, potentially, a perfect arch-priest of the god.
Daniel taught him a lot; turned over the page of life for him, as it were, and,
showing the reverse side, seemed to say: "You were missing all that." Samuel
gazed upwards at the handsome long nose and rich lips of his elder cousin, so
experienced, so agreeable, so renowned, so esteemed, so philosophic, and
admitted to himself that he had lived to the age of forty in a state of
comparative boobyism. And then he would gaze downwards at the faint patch of
flour on Daniel's right leg, and conceive that life was, and must be, life.
Not many weeks after his initiation into the cult he was startled
by Constance's preoccupied face one evening. Now, a husband of six years'
standing, to whom it has not happened to become a father, is not easily startled
by such a face as Constance wore. Years ago he had frequently been startled, had
frequently lived in suspense for a few days. But he had long since grown
impervious to these alarms. And now he was startled again—but as a man may be
startled who is not altogether surprised at being startled. And seven endless
days passed, and Samuel and Constance glanced at each other like guilty things,
whose secret refuses to be kept. Then three more days passed, and another three.
Then Samuel Povey remarked in a firm, masculine, fact-fronting tone:
"Oh, there's no doubt about it!"
And they glanced at each other like conspirators who have lighted
a fuse and cannot take refuge in flight. Their eyes said continually, with a
delicious, an enchanting mixture of ingenuous modesty and fearful joy:
"Well, we've gone and done it!"
There it was, the incredible, incomprehensible future—coming!
Samuel had never correctly imagined the manner of its heralding.
He had imagined in his early simplicity that one day Constance, blushing, might
put her mouth to his ear and whisper—something positive. It had not occurred in
the least like that. But things are so obstinately, so incurably
unsentimental.
"I think we ought to drive over and tell mother, on Sunday,"
said
Constance.
His impulse was to reply, in his grand, offhand style: "Oh, a
letter will do!"
But he checked himself and said, with careful deference: "You
think that will be better than writing?"
All was changed. He braced every fibre to meet destiny, and to
help
Constance to meet it.
The weather threatened on Sunday. He went to Axe without
Constance. His cousin drove him there in a dog-cart, and he announced that he
should walk home, as the exercise would do him good. During the drive Daniel, in
whom he had not confided, chattered as usual, and Samuel pretended to listen
with the same attitude as usual; but secretly he despised Daniel for a man who
has got something not of the first importance on the brain. His perspective was
truer than Daniel's.
He walked home, as he had decided, over the wavy moorland of the
county dreaming in the heart of England. Night fell on him in mid-career, and he
was tired. But the earth, as it whirled through naked space, whirled up the moon
for him, and he pressed on at a good speed. A wind from Arabia wandering cooled
his face. And at last, over the brow of Toft End, he saw suddenly the Five Towns
a-twinkle on their little hills down in the vast amphitheatre. And one of those
lamps was Constance's lamp—one, somewhere. He lived, then. He entered into the
shadow of nature. The mysteries made him solemn. What! A boneshaker, his cousin,
and then this!
"Well, I'm damned! Well, I'm damned!" he kept repeating, he who
never swore.